I’m only a mouse
in the chocolate chip cookies
but I make enough racket
to awaken the dead.
As I scrabble and scratch,
gnawing and chewing.
Which wakes up the people
asleep in the bed.
As I knock over drink cans,
rattle the glasses,
jangle a tea spoon
or fall in the tub.
I scamper and scurry
to get at the package
that calls like a Siren
to my yearning taste buds.
I try to be quiet
but the problem with paper
is it rustles and rattles,
as it puts up a fight.
And I must have a cookie,
with chocolate chips in it.
‘Cos a mouse can get frantic
for that very first bite.
They think I’m a monster,
a tiger, a cougar,
a man eating spider,
a sinuous snake,
a villain, a raccoon,
a vampire, a grizzly.
a wild boar, a hippo,
or a massive earth quake.
But its just little me,
in the chocolate chip cookies.
That they left on the counter,
when they put out the light.
And I’ll try not to wake them
but It’s really a problem,
for a ravenous rodent
in the dead of the night.
David Garlick, Victoria, August, 1991
For Dick and Jeanne Cavaye, in their trailer on Pender Island.