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Pittysing's Lessons
by Mewsette
Pittysing jumped onto her kitty condo to see what all the noise was
outside. Actually, being a plump, middle-aged Persian with short legs, she
scrambled up rather than jumped. Yes, those common, low-class felines were
at it again, she thought, fighting over an apparent piece of edible
garbage. She thwacked her voluminous tail in disapproval, and one of them
looked straight up at her, distracted, while the other ran off with the
bit of food. Skinny fellow, mostly black, with such a hollow look about
him. She stared back until he turned and ran off across the parking lot.
Why hadn't his servant fed him? she wondered. Didn't all cats have a
servant like she did?
She was a little put out at her own servant these days, who was spending
more and more time away from home. Pittysing was so bored and lonely she
had nearly lost her substantial appetite! Every night the rarely-seen tall
lady in glasses had to open several cans of gourmet cat food before
finding one that met with her approval. Worse, she'd seen her servant put
some of her own food - never mind that she had refused it - in a pie plate
outside under that very window. That's why the skinny fellow kept coming
around, hoping for more.
Well, she hoped he didn't qualify as "company". "Company" was what her
servant was threatening her with these days, as in "If you're so bored by
yourself you have to spend your days shredding my quilt, you might need
some company, Sweetheart." Well, yes. As in, you stay home where you
belong.
Then she heard the key in the door and scrambled back down to go and
welcome her servant. About time, she thought, as her servant came in and
set down Pittysing's own carrier. What? With a strange cat hunkered down
in it. What?? Pittysing stopped in her tracks. Not that I have any use
for that thing, she thought, but it is Mine.
"I brought you some company, Sweetheart," her servant had the gall to
announce, before scooping her up to hug and kiss her. Oh, ugh. Lipstick on
the head, too! "I know you're lonely, Precious" the servant went on, "And
I know you'll be happier with another kitty for a friend, somebody to be
with you when I'm gone so much. He's a nice little guy, and he really
needed a home. I got him at the shelter last week. And he's got a clean
bill of health from your very own vet."
He? Well, at least it wasn't another female. That would have been
unforgivable. When the hugging stopped, Pittysing looked into her
carrier. The company cat was stripey brown and white, longish fur but not
as long as hers. "Mrow?" he said politely, and she replied "Mmmf". At
least he wasn't like that riffraff outside, so maybe she'd give him a
chance. It's a good thing for you Persians are a laid-back kind of cat,
she thought to her servant.
Pittysing had a good heart in spite of her regal attitude. Besides, she
was lazy. In the following days, as she and Company Cat got to know each
other, She really couldn't begrudge him anything, not even her gourmet
food. No more went into the pie plate, because he thought it was all
wonderful. He was very well mannered and never touched her dish without
permission. But the main reason she was kind to him was his stories. In
their long hours alone, Company Cat told her what it was like to be
brutally evicted from a home (of sorts), to spend weeks starving in the
streets and then days locked in a cage at a shelter. He'd been one of the
lucky ones, he told her. He was a pretty cat and still young, so his cage
was in a front room where people went to look first, not the dungeon in
back with damp cement floors and multiple dozens of miserable cats just
existing. She had never heard such sad tales in her life. She hadn't even
known that most people were not servants.
Then one day there was yowlng and scuffling under the window again.
"Come with me," she told Company Cat, "I want to show you something."
The skinny black fellow had apparently won that fight, because he was just
finishing off some revolting mess with paper on it. "Is that what happened
to him?" she asked.
"I don't know," he replied. "That guy has a wild, fearful look about
him. I doubt if he ever had a home. He looks feral to me."
Pittysing turned huge golden eyes on him and made Company Cat explain what
feral was. Then she nearly cried. She thwacked her tail on the window and
the black cat looked up. But when he saw two cats there, he ran away in
fear.
"I had no idea", whispered Pittysing. "Can we do anything to help?"
"No", said Company Cat sadly. "I wish we could. We're the ones who would
do things right, because they're our own kind and we feel for them so
deeply. But we have to rely on people to help them." Pittysing thought of
her servant and Company Cat thought of the people in his first home. They
looked at each other silently.
Done
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Sunday, 04-May-2003 22:29:28 EDT