"For digestion's sake" - LOL!
My first Thanksgiving as a married man went off quite a bit differently than Norman Rockwell could have envisioned ...
We had just been married in mid-October and here we were a little over a month later, not even fully moved-in to our little apartment. My wife had invited her entire family (father, mother, brother, aunt and uncle) while I brought in two brothers. So, there were plans for 9 people to attend.
Our cat Pyewacket, a beautiful and criminally-minded calico, had been circling the dining table from 7am trying to figure out how to grab some goodies. The wife and I were in agreement that food should be available all day long on T-Giving, so we had fruit, veggies, cold cuts, nuts, candy, you name it, it served its time on the table before dinner.
Half-way through Mr. Turkey's bath in the oven the electric went out in the entire town. We kept him in the oven but the wife began fretting that the cooking time would be all messed up.
Pyewacket (whom we usually called "Pye") had decided that she didn't like all the hub-bub going on in the kitchen and strolled out the back door into our yard. Meanwhile all 9 of us were trying to do advanced calculus in hopes of saving Tom Turkey.
That's when I finally noticed that Pye hadn't yet returned. I went out in the backyard and called her quietly -
"Pye ... Pye ... Pye ..."
Nothing.
Then the wife came out and called a bit louder.
"PYE ... PYE ... PYE ..."
Within minutes there were 9 people in our backyard all yelling -
"PYE!!! PYE!!! PYE!!!"
I happened to look up, and there sat Pye atop a 20'-tall wooden pole used as a clothesline support, meowing her fool head off. Of course, like the proverbial cat-up-a-tree, she had been able to get up there but couldn't get down.
Having the closest relationship with her (she had been with me before I got married) she decided to start coming down in my direction head-first. That doesn't work well at all, though, since a cat's claws curve inward. She made it about 5' down before she jumped.
Of course, by now there were dozens of neighbors lined up peering over our fence, drawn there by what they later told us was our sing-song offer of pie.
Just then Pye decided to cast her fate to the wind and jumped toward my open arms. I guess that fate-bearing wind had sense of humor or perhaps Pye's trajectory calculations were slightly off, but whatever the reason she came down using my scalp and face as her landing pad, leaving long, gushing claw marks on me. Still, from some unknown fatherly instinct I suppose, I managed to break her fall with my face and catch her in my arms, whereupon she whirled violently and shot back into the house through the back door, leaving my arms bloodied and torn as well.
Miracle of miracles the power came back on at that moment, so we apologized to the neighbors for the lack of free pie and trooped back into the kitchen and dining room. We managed to salvage the turkey and in a short while he was sitting glistening on the table to the admiration of all.
As if I hadn't been punished enough that day, my wife asked me to carve the turkey.
Now, I had never in my life carved a turkey. I'm not a hunter or a butcher, so I don't know anything about cutting up meat. My father had passed away before he had taught me this most primitive of masculine skills.
So there I stood, with dried blood on my head, face and arms, holding a cheap electric knife and some kind of tong-thingie, with 8 people expectantly watching me.
Pye was circling around my legs, waiting for me to drop the turkey. Damned cat.
I swallowed and began to carve in what I thought was the appropriate way, with a fake smile of assurance plastered on my scarred face. Within 20 seconds a noise came from deep within my wife's torso, a low rumbling which quickly grew into a long, loud keening scream of horror.
"YOU'RE KILLING MY TURKEY!!!"
As she said this her eyes turned red and rolled up into her head, her fingernails turned into blood-red talons and the skin melted away from her skull, revealing a fiery vision of Hades.
Both of our families shrank back, attempting to hide behind their chairs or under the table. Pye was looking out the window at the pole in the backyard, no doubt wishing she had never come down.
My wife finally grabbed the tools of destruction from my trembling hands and proceeded to carve up the turkey faster and better than Martha Stewart on methamphetamine. I was left to cower away into the corner, licking my wounds and displaying my lack of manly virtue for all to see.
I DID get to eat some cranberry sauce that night, though ... after everyone had left, of course.
Pye liked it, too.