Miss Luna Kitty Longtail |
Miss Kitty March
14, 2019
Christmas...yay. |
You came to us as a stray that Bessie the Lab chased up a
tree. Michael could tell you were pregnant then. “Don’t feed her,” he said. “She’ll
go home.” Tough talk from the guy who built a pyramid from a ladder, a chair
and a stool to help you get down from that tree. And indeed it was possible that you were a
neighborhood cat. You appeared well cared for so I did as he asked. But you
stayed.
You’d stroll about our back yard as if you’d already claimed it as your
own. You tried on more than one occasion to walk into the house. Five days
later I was hanging sheets on the line and you came rubbing against my ankles. Your
belly bulged with babies but your hips were beginning to look boney. That was
it for me. I sat on the steps and you came over and climbed right up into my
lap, rolled over and dared me not to rub that big pregnant belly.
Pretty Girl |
I decided to call you Miss Kitty because we weren’t going to
keep you. I didn’t want to worry about a real name. That was the day I put food
and water out and made a bed for you in the old dog house behind the shed. It
was out of the wind and rains of Spring; so Michael and I decided that you’d be
an outside cat. That lasted until the chilly day in April when we came home
from the movies and Michael peeked into your little house while he was walking
Bessie. He came inside and announced “Miss Kitty had her kittens but I think
they’re all dead.”
Crossed eyes |
I raced out to the house and crammed myself in as far as I
could. I could see that two of your babies were already gone as they lay cold
on the bare boards. Next to you was a pile of tiny bodies. I’m pretty sure this
was your first litter because you seemed confused. Then I saw one twitch. “We’ve
got a live one,” I called back to Michael. I took each one and warmed it in my
hands before putting them with you and your instincts kicked right in. We took
you and the surviving kittens into the house. And you stayed.
The surviving female kittens were adopted but no one wanted
the male. I advertised you and that boy of yours all over Facebook and the
newspaper but no one wanted either of you. So you stayed. And you and Chaucer
turned me, a confirmed animal lover but avowed dog person, into a cat lover.
You never minded not being the favorite. Chaucer grabbed center stage early on.
But it was you I could count on to cuddle with me on chilly nights, under the
quilt, head sticking out, keeping my feet toasty.
Chaucer and Miss K |
Sleeping Beauty |
I didn’t realize that my heart would break. Seven years was not enough. I wish you’d
stayed.
Writer's Helper |
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