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I
have made a lovely napping spot between the headboard and a large pillow on my
master’s bed. I am forming a small
crater of myself to remind him of me.
His scent lingers and I sniff delicately at the air, letting that
exquisite combination of dry musk, clinging sweat and moistened linen drift
through my nostrils. This is the smell
that rouses me in the morning and, later, after the sun has set and we are
bathed in the warm light of his beside lamp, sets me into fits of ecstatic
dreams, cradled in his arms as he reads into the womb of the night. I would nap here forever if I could. My eyes narrow.
I
am impossibly in love with my master.
In
my small, wooden cubicle, dimly lit and flung at the far end of the PetCo
downtown, I used to lie in squalor on a ratty bundle of blankets, trying to
look emaciated and depressed, gazing with big blue eyes at any human who would
pass by and rescue me. The handsy caretaker
came in every morning, with rubber gloves, surgical masks and an apron with
inane illustrations of grinning kitties that read “Who Ever Said Dogs Were Our
Best Friends” written in curly script beneath.
Poor, wretched woman had a terrible allergy to us—an irony nearly as
tragic as my imprisonment in that shelter full of macho toms, obsessed with the
female passersby who would inevitably approach our glass windows and fawn over
how “furry” and “cute” we were. The
ringleader, Ponko, a hazel-eyed tabby with small gray hairs springing out
around his bottom, would crack wise every time one strolled past—“Hey, this
pussy wouldn’t mind that pussy”—and I would pretend that I could roll my eyes.
Occasionally,
one of those yoga-pantsed nymphs would walk into our shelter, determined to be
joined with the cat of her dreams. If
she only knew what went on behind our bored countenances. Ponko, who had preceded me at our
pet-ititentiary, where the smell of fresh litter clung to the air, was the
boldest of us. He worked his technique
with aplomb, leaping down from his locker on the third level, crumpling his
left hind leg slightly as he fell before turning his wide, curious gaze to the
woman, whose shoulders slumped in submission immediately. He would paw over, meowing quietly, gently,
stepping with trepidation to show that he was fearful, but entranced. Every ginger advance, a compliment. By the time he was in range, her hand would
shoot out, a bit quickly, and Ponko would skitter backwards in fear. Her hand would hang in the air, she’d squeak
sweetness at him and he would touch his muzzle for only an instant and ever so
slightly at each of her fingertips, lingering on the last before becoming
engaged with a toy on the ground. This
would send fits of giddiness through the woman she grabbed whatever dangly item
she could find and begin flinging it above Ponko’s head. He would look back at
us, and if he could have winked he would have.
Then he’d begin jumping and batting.
I
would often hang my paw over the edge of my cell and look on in pity as the
master manipulated. He would call out to
us from the lap of his latest victim: “Guys, guys—I can smell her! I can
smell her!” Yet for all of his
mastery, Ponko was never packed up and taken away. Something would inevitably go wrong. He’d suddenly become incontinent, or bite
hard at her hands. There would be brief,
breathy conversation between our warden and the client and she’d be married to
another one of our mates. Ponko would
return to his cage, and I could never tell if he’d been purposeful in his
mistake, or if the sudden, fearful realization that he might be plucked up and
taken away overwhelmed at the key moment.
Regardless,
he’d play his game every time—courting dance and tragic flaw—all the while regaling
us with tales of how many breasts he’d copped a feel at, how close he’d gotten
to simply pushing his face into one of their crotches. On rare instances he’d actually lick their
mouths—and they loved it! I never
understood.
Those
first few weeks went by, and while I did not sleep fitfully, I grew tired. I would lean listlessly against the
plexiglass pane, eyes idly following the tank of darting tropical fish across
the aisle. A few pouty faces came by to
extend their condolences, but I just shifted my gaze away. Somehow, this only seemed to encourage, and I
often found myself switching this way and that, trying to avert my gaze. Many of the kittens were uprooted on the
spot, crying and looking back in fear as they were jostled away in the frilly
arms of girls wearing Sunday school uniforms.
Don’t ask me if I was scared myself, or content.
If
anything, ask me what it was like when he finally arrived, years too late but right
on time. A miracle that shown on high down from
the aisle where I knew the hummingbird feed was, where he looked at some squawking
parakeets. Ask me how it felt when his
girlfriend curled into his arm, nudging towards my shelter and me. Ask how a spring had been coiled in my feet,
where it had come from, how he scrunched his face and wiggled his nose at me
through that oppressive pane—how so suddenly I realized what oppression I had
been under!—before they walked in and I caterwauled over onto the
ground, clumsily catching myself and blushing beneath my fur and whiskers. Ask me this, because you will
never know the answer, how it feels to be a cat and to love a man.
....