“I found old Whitey behind a gas station,” said the old man, stroking the cat who lingered beside his feet. A white cat.
We were sitting together on John’s porch at dusk on Halloween. The neighborhood was steadily being overtaken by trick-or-treaters with dangerously low blood sugar. I was returning a borrowed weed eater to John’s house when the Pabst loosened the old man’s tongue.
John has a bushy white beard, unruly eyebrows, and he usually has the whole unkempt-old-man thing going on. His hair was disheveled, his shirt was stained, and his ratty sneakers looked like they had more mileage on them than my truck.
Kids in costumes stopped by John’s porch during our conversation, dressed as officially licensed cartoon characters, half blinded my misaligned plastic masks.
John had placed a barrel of candy on his steps and told kids they were free to help themselves.
“We operate on the honor system around here,” said John between swills.
I watched one kid who was dressed as Uncle Fester Addams take an armful of candy the size
of a bowling ball and run like hailfire.
“When I met Whitey,” John went on, “the gas station people were feeding her behind the Dumpster. Only problem was, not all the store employees actually cared about cats. Usually they forgot to feed her.”
The white cat knew we were taking about her. She crawled onto John’s lap and leaned into John. Whenever John stopped moving his hand upon the feline’s slender body the cat would weave beneath his hand and force him to keep stroking.
“She loves to be pet.”
It sounded like Whitey had a small motor beneath her hood.
“Lemme tell ya,” said John. “This girl was hard to catch. Harder than most cats.”
John ought to know. He has fourteen cats including Whitey. They all have stunningly creative names like, Brownie, Blackie, Red, Gray, Yellow, and Susan.
“Why Susan?” I…