Dorothy, the old lady who'd driven Cat to this place
yesterday, had said the town's name was Miracle. It looked
like a miracle to Cat with all the squirrels, rabbits and
birds outside the back bedroom window. Oh, those juicy,
chirping birds. Flying so close.
They taunted her as if she were invisible. As if they
knew she was locked in this small house, unable to pounce
on them.
But she wouldn't be a prisoner forever.
Somehow, some way, she would escape.
She thought about running free — the sun on her
head, the wind ruffling her fur, a bird in her mouth
— and her heart pitter–pattered.
Behind her, she heard the other cat coming her way, her
steps heavy. So was her belly. Cat sat on the windowsill,
but Queenie peered up from the floor of Dorothy's back
bedroom. Too fat to jump up.
Usually Cat was picky, leaving her food in her dish and
coming back to nibble when it pleased her. But after seeing
Queenie in all her heftiness, Cat knew this morning if she
didn't eat her food right away, Queenie would gobble it up
before Cat could finish grooming her tail.
Cat didn't know how any self–respecting cat
allowed herself to get so out of shape. Humans, yes. They
had less legs and less sense. Otherwise why would they do
such odd things?
Cat suspected some of their problems came from watching
what they called TV and what she called ‘the loud thing.'
Instead of staring at the loud thing, they could go outside
and chase away small invaders. The younger ones could climb
trees. When they were tired of that, they could come inside
and take a nap with their cat.
"Sorry about your human." Queenie's voice was low for a
cat. "Sorry you had to leave your home."
"For a long time she stank of sickness," Cat said.
Vivian had gotten sicker before the first snow. Now the
snow had melted — the second year of snow she could
remember in her life — and it didn't look like it
would come back again soon. The trees were sprouting
leaves, and the squirrels and gophers were taking over this
lawn.
When she escaped this place, the animals would scatter.
She craned her neck toward Queenie. "How do I get out of
here?"
"Get out of here?" Queenie stared at Cat as if a horn
had pushed out between her ears. "You don't want to leave.
This is home."
"It doesn't smell like home."
"That's because it's a new home." Queenie spoke
ponderously, her speech as slow as her swaying walk.
"I've lived in as many homes as I have claws." Cat held
up a front paw and showed her sharp claws. "None of them
smelled like home."
"This smells like home to me." Queenie's voice rose a
bit and the black fur on her neck bristled. Even her face
looked indignant with the slanted white streaks above her
eyes.
"That's because it's your home." This home smelled like
Queenie, too. Old and musky. "Not mine."
"But Mom named you. You're Princess."
Cat restrained herself from leaning down and swiping her
paw across Queenie's wide face. "Princess will never be my
name."
"It matches my name."
No, it didn't match Queenie, it was under. The queen was
first, the princess second. Cat had been second in a home
already. Second after a dog. She didn't ever want to be
second again. "I don't like matching names."
"What name would you like?"
Cat swished her tail. Every family she'd lived with had
given her a different name. No name had felt right. No home
had the right smell.
"Goddess would be fitting. Humans used to worship us.
I'd like to be worshipped."
Queenie backed up, her eyes rounded, and she hissed. As
if Cat had said something so wrong it frightened her.
Cat understood. Queenie feared being powerful.
Not Cat, though she didn't want to be powerful over all
humans. Just a chosen few.