They carried flyers made from a home printer. A girl and her mother. They stood on my porch, toting a whole stack of them.
“I’m looking for HIM,” the little girl said, pointing to the flyer.
On neon-colored paper was a photo of a cat—white with black spots.
“He’s been gone two days,” added her mother. “My daughter and I are looking all over.”
This isn’t my first lost-animal case. Cats seem to find my house. I have adopted three feral cats in the last year.
I told the lady I hadn’t seen any feline.
“Thank you,” she said. “Call me if you do. Because it was kinda my fault he escaped. I'm a terrible mother.”
The flyer sat on my kitchen table with a pile of junk-mail and bills. I didn’t think much about it. Not even when my dog, Ellie Mae, whined at the back door.
When I opened the door, I saw black-and-white fur, nosing around our bushes.
I called the number on the flyer.
“YOU
FOUND HIM?” were the first words of an excited mother. “I WAS SURE HE WAS DEAD!”
But cats are fickle and skittish. I called the cat. Which was a bad move. To whistle for a cat is like trying to lasso a rabid squirrel.
The animal got spooked. By the time the girl and her mother showed up, there was no cat.
The girl looked through the bushes, calling the animal’s name. She must’ve inspected every shrub, tree, and blade of grass.
The girl suggested leaving a bowl of tuna on the porch.
“He’ll be back,” assured the girl. “Trust me. I already talked to God about it.”
Right.
I woke up the next morning…