It’s spider season in my house.
They appear in the evenings, marching boldly across the carpet as Flossie and I sit on the sofa watching TV.
Our reactions differ. Mine depends on size. If they are bigger than a pound coin, I have to try not to get shrieky.
Flossie’s reaction is always the same. She flies off the sofa and pounces on them. Usually she misses, the canny spider scuttling under a piece of furniture, just out of reach.
She then lies in wait for it to re-emerge. The spider stays put and Flossie eventually forgets what she’s waiting for.
Early one morning, as I logged onto my laptop, I was alarmed to see a spider crawl across the screen.
I went hot and cold as I remembered a computer virus involving a spider. Surely my computer wasn’t infected?
However, I quickly realised it wasn’t an image on my computer. It was an actual spider, sashaying confidently across my beach scene screen saver.
I flung my laptop down onto the sofa with a squeal. Flossie looked puzzled.
The spider edged down the screen. I was worried it might crawl into my keyboard, to permanently haunt me whenever I typed.
I grabbed the laptop and rushed into the kitchen. Flossie trotted after me, keen not to miss any action.
I flipped the laptop upside down and shook it vigorously over the sink. It probably wasn’t a sensible way to treat a computer but this was an emergency situation.
The spider dropped off the keyboard and landed next to the plughole. I exhaled with relief, my heart pumping. Now I could deal with it.
I put on my rubber gloves, gently scooped it up and walked carefully to the back door, intending to release it to the elements.
Unfortunately, as I grappled with the door, I let go of the spider.
Seizing the opportunity, Flossie sprang on the unsuspecting creature, and ate it.
The best intentions don’t always go to plan.
As published in the Bath Chronicle, 22 October 2020
Suzy Pope is a certified copywriter and newspaper columnist specialising in pets, business and lifestyle. If you would like help with a writing project, please get in touch.