sovay: (Haruspex: Autumn War)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2018-07-15 02:14 am

It's a new one, dark with the night

I am not going to say that the highlight of my day was petting a hedgehog, because my day has contained quite a lot of nice things: hearing [personal profile] rushthatspeaks read from their novel in progress, loitering in the dealer's room with Jean Gonzalez of Somewhere in Time where I still can't afford the first edition of Nicholas Stuart Gray's The Apple-Stone (1965), loitering in the dealer's room with Steve Berman of Lethe Press who is my publisher and handed out ARCs of my collection until they were gone, eating fried watercress and spicy, seafood-filled fried rice at Lime Leaf with Rush-That-Speaks and [personal profile] ashnistrike, talking about TV shows I mostly don't watch with [personal profile] vandrendehare, [personal profile] kate_nepveu, and [personal profile] handful_ofdust, talking about Jacques Offenbach and Charles Keeping and Stephen Gammell with Michael Cisco and Farah Rose Smith and eventually showing them the first ten minutes of Liam Gavin's A Dark Song (2016), further hanging out with Ashnistrike and [personal profile] nineweaving, and receiving a much-needed back rub from [personal profile] ckd. I had no panels and therefore I slept until from seven in the morning until noon-ish and had a real dinner instead of hotel bar snacks. I did not keep having to run out on conversations.

But on the way out of the green room with Farah, we passed B. Diane Martin carrying some kind of soft pet carrier in one hand and cradling a hedgehog against her breast with the other and what did you expect me to do, walk on? The hedgehog turned out to be named Splanky after the Count Basie song; he is eight months old and his prickles are soft and he can be very gently petted from the middle of his back toward his rump (the head is so defensively spiked that it cannot be petted in any direction without rubbing the prickles against the grain, which is not pleasant for the hedgehog) which he seemed to like, although like a young cat he was very definite about how much attention he wanted from people who were not his people; then he burrowed back into Diane's hand again. His soft snout was so constantly in motion that even allowing for low light and my primitive phone, in almost every picture I tried to take of him his nose was a blur. I understand that entire breeds of hedgehog have been domesticated as pets, but it still felt like something rare and wild: a hedgehog at a convention. Who let me pet him. He has a very sweet face.


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