You were a friend. And I’ll miss you. You were sort of my writing partner.
Just yesterday morning, you were entwining your little body around my feet while I was working on a writing project. I was sitting on my porch, laptop balanced on my lap, and there you were. We often wrote together.
Your method of getting affection was simple. You’d slip past me, just out of reach. And it was only when I quit paying attention to you that you’d wander back casually, cautiously, and lay at my feet. You’d stay there all day as I tapped away.
Your ears were mangled. Your tail was chewed up. I could tell you were scrappy. But I always got the impression that you were gentle at heart, and you seemed to know something about the nature of reality that I didn’t.
You weren’t mine. You belonged to Mister Bud, our next-door neighbor. The old man who loved you. He lives alone, and you two were the best of friends. You were always at his side. You followed him
everywhere.
But in a way, you sort of belonged to the whole neighborhood.
The thing I remember most about you was how you were always here to greet those who came and went. You sat right in the middle of the street. That was your perpetual spot. The middle of the street. Watching cars.
I’ve seen you there at midnight, beneath the streetlamp, as the taxi dropped me off after a late flight in from New York.
“Uh, there’s a cat in your street,” said my Uber driver. “He’s blocking my way.”
“It’s only Cat,” I’d say.
That was your name. I don’t know how Mister Bud started calling you Cat, but the name stuck. We all called you that.
I got home today around lunchtime to find a police vehicle in our neighborhood, along with an animal control vehicle. All the…