Bluefish Editorial Services
  • Home
  • About
  • Editorial
  • Contact
  • Blog
  • Subscribe

Word of the Week: Vermin

3/23/2015

0 Comments

 
vermin

\ˈvər-mən\

Our firstborn came downstairs looking a little harried. “There was something scroobling around in the ceiling last night,” Arwulf said. “It was freaking me out.” Raccoons on the roof, I said soothingly. They like to use it as a shortcut between the front and back yards. Sometimes I can see them clambering from the eaves into the tree outside the bedroom window. The kids looked at each other doubtfully. “It didn’t sound like that,” Arwulf said. “It was RIGHT over my head. Like, inches from my face.” 
Everett being out of town, I opted for denial. If not perambulating raccoons, perhaps these were benign or even charming creatures? Sweet little bunnies and squirrels, having tea parties! In cunning wee waistcoats! No way was I going to stick my head up into the crawlspace and disturb their adorable revels. 
Picture
"The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse." Project Gutenberg etext 19994. Licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons
A few nights later, up reading at 4 AM, I head it too – skittering, scrabbling, punctuated by the occasional small thump. This was not the familiar raccoon noise. This was closer, louder. Skritchier.

Something was in the ceiling. Several somethings. In fact it sounded like a pretty lively party up there.

I thumped on the ceiling with a broom. The noises stopped dead. I swept the ceiling with the bristles. There was a mad rush overhead as the party relocated to another corner of the attic.

I went back to bed and stared at the ceiling in the dark.  Bunnies and squirrels. Undoubtedly. Enjoying a festive evening of scones. And ninepins. And disco.  Surely not chewing on the wiring. Or gnawing into the cupboards. Or swimming up through toilets. Or leaping out of heating vents onto the beds below, all scrabbly claws and scaly tails. Certainly not!  

As soon as it was light, I called the rodent guy.

This individual proved to be an extremely laid back dude in his early 20s, with a surfer’s lope, pierced ears, and an impressive array of tattoos. He opened the hatch door into the attic and a curiously evocative smell wafted out. Adorable vest-clad squirrels, I said hopefully?  “Nope,” he said, descending the ladder.  “Rats.”

Rats, I thought. Rats. But how bad was that really? After all, Arwulf had pet rats for several years – they were peaceable enough as housepets go, and I eventually became inured to the perpetual hint of rodent pee in the upstairs hallway. (That, I suddenly realized, was the nostalgic pong drifting through the open hatch.) Not that kind of rat, Josh said patiently. “Norway rats. They’re ugly and mean. Diseased. Total vermin.” 
Vermin. The word comes from the Latin vermis, or worm—i.e. maggots–and quickly extended to include all animals “of a noxious or objectionable kind.” The OED includes in this category reptiles and “stealthy or slinking” beasts, as well as creatures of “loathsome or offensive appearance or character” that prey on food  and livestock. I was reminded that “vermin” also gives us the US variant “varmint.” Rats would seem to qualify.

Despite myself I thought of Arwulf’s pets (Brandy, Marbles, and Galadriel). The winsome way they scrunched up their whiskered noses at visitors, hoping for treats. How they held peanuts in their teeny little paws and gnawed at them with long yellow rodenty teeth. The sound of little claws skittering along Arwulf’s floor. And along pantry shelves. And through the vents. House fires. Hantavirus. Plague. 

Get rid of them, I said firmly. 


So Josh set to work around the roofline, using steel mesh to plug up all the holes in the stucco where the varmints were getting in. For all my resolve, I remained ill at ease. As Josh made his way across the roof I tried not to think about the doomed creatures beneath his feet, huddling in terror at his step, hearing the gates slam shut around them as they were walled inexorably into their tomb. (“For the love of God, Montresor!” I muttered to myself, eyeing the bourbon. 11 AM? Still too early. Damn.) 

A couple of hours later, his dreadful work complete, Josh went back up into the attic with a bunch of baited traps. “They’re shut in without food or water,” he explained cheerfully as he pulled the hatch closed. “So the peanut butter is pretty much irresistible. I’ll come back in a few days to see how you’re doing.” 

Off he went. I closed the door behind him and turned to face the empty house, shifting and creaking in the afternoon heat.

I decided at this point that the sun was pretty damn well over the yardarm. I had that drink.

I slept badly that night, dreaming uneasily of roadblocks and broken machinery. Every couple of hours I woke with a start. Was that a snap? a squeak? In the silence I tried not to think of the scene above my head: the rodent family cautiously emerging from hiding, looking for their accustomed way out, only to find it blocked, and the next one, and the next. I tried not to imagine their growing panic and horror as the attic closed in around them, the smell of peanut butter and the sinister gleam of wire. 
Picture
"The Cask of Amontillado." Harry Clarke [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.
I wondered if maybe we should have gone to a hotel.

But a few days later, the scroobling was gone, and a peaceful silence reigned above. Josh returned with rubber gloves and a trash bag and retrieved a single furry corpse. “The others must have been outside for the day when I closed things up,” he said. “Looks like you’re in the clear. I’ll leave you a couple of traps up there. If you smell anything bad give me a call.”   

And that, it seemed, was that.

Alas, that is never that when it comes to vermin. And once you have a brush with “noxious and objectionable beasts,” it is a short leap to “winged insects of a troublesome nature.” Once again it was Arwulf who tipped us off, discovering a pile of what looked like sawdust or tiny seeds behind a dresser. After a fruitless few minutes debating whether this might just possibly be the detritus left by a stuffed animal that had sprung a leak, we resigned ourselves to the inevitable. A few minutes on Google image search taught us a horrid new word:


Frass.

Picture
Frass. By JJ Greive of Home Inspections Of Puget Sound (Own work) [CC BY-SA 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
Frass is the excrement of larvæ, or the refuse left behind by boring insects. It comes from the German frasz, itself from the root fressen, which means to devour.

It is related to our English noun fret (as in fret-work)—presumably the net-like or pierced appearance of fretwork resembles the skeletal remains of a leaf that’s been eaten away by an insect. Or the lacy remnants of a floor joist, or a bearing beam gnawed away until it resembles a pierced medieval rood screen. Not to mention the effect on a homeowner so afflicted. 

I put in a call to the termite man. 

The termite man, as it turned out, might have been the rodent guy’s grandfather. They resembled each other not at all––Ben was short and dark and wiry where Josh was tall and blond and lean––but they shared a keen gaze coupled with an incongruously laid back vibe. (It occurs to me that when your job involves dealing with people whose homes are infested with vermin, a calm and unflappable demeanor is undoubtedly an asset.)

Ben prodded our baseboards and tapped at the walls and the eaves. He went back up into that ghastly crawl space. “Watch out for the rat traps!” I said helpfully. I hoped he didn’t care for peanut butter.

When Ben emerged, his verdict was less dire than we might have expected: rather than fumigating the entire house, we could get along by zapping the little bastards with electricity. I signed this order with equanimity. Termites are unquestionably vermin in my book, not vermin masquerading as pets or vice versa. Termites never have tea parties. (Neither kid ever had an ant farm, thank God.)

Ben returned a few days later, ray gun in hand, and spent a pleasant afternoon sending bolts of electricity along our joists. He claims that the framing is not badly damaged and I am inclined to believe him unless I actually feel the house lurching underfoot. My conscience seems similarly stabilized. I have yet to reprise the long night of the Tell-Tale Scroobling, and I can walk underneath the attic hatch without thinking about vermin as much as 60 percent of the time. I do not brood about the fate of the termites. I do not picture their once-seething nest tucked behind our bookcase, nestled between the studs. Lying in bed at night, I do not imagine them reanimated and swollen to Frankensteinian proportions by mysterious galvanic forces. Not at all.
My candle was nearly burnt out, when, by the glimmer of the half-extinguished light, I saw the dull yellow eye of the creature open; it breathed hard, and a convulsive motion agitated its limbs....
Perhaps I should imagine them in little vests.
0 Comments

Your comment will be posted after it is approved.


Leave a Reply.

    Archives

    April 2018
    January 2018
    August 2017
    July 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    October 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    May 2014
    April 2014

    Isabella Furth

    Not every week has a word, but many words will have their week. See the entire list!

    Subscribe

    Categories

    All
    Bluefish Editorial
    Cycling
    Internet
    Ocean Swimming
    Personal Essay
    Teens
    Word Of The Week

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly