You have to know that Sally and I really don’t plan any of
these things. They just happen.
Really.
Okay, Mom doesn’t believe us either.
On with my story . . .
Sally has been more than her usual irritating in the past
few weeks. I mean, when that girl puts her mind to something, she can really
get going.
Usually, I’m on the same page. Well . . . at least in the
same book. Somewhere.
But this time, she was on her own.
You see, Sally wanted a cat. And not just any cat—the big
orange one that lived just down the road in Mrs. Ames house.
With Mrs. Ames.
And yes, there are just so many things wrong with this . . .
Anyways, Sally reasoned that as Mrs. Ames had myriad cats,
she really wouldn’t miss the single, big orange one. That sat every morning in
lonely glory on Mrs. Ames front porch, waiting to pounce on the paper boy.
Now the words: ‘single orange’, ‘lonely glory’ and ‘pounce’ are
rife with significance. I mean, don’t they just scream to you that, not only
would this cat be missed, but also, it probably wasn’t the sweetest-tempered
animal?
Well, not to Sally.
Mom was still at work when Sally and I finished our shift at
McDonald’s yesterday. She mistakenly thought we would be all right by ourselves
until she got home.
I don’t mean to sound fatalistic, but what’s with that
woman? Doesn’t she know shenanigans only happen when she’s out of the house?
As Sally and I cut across the Prince’s lawn on the corner
and turned into our street, she happened to glance across at Mrs. Ames’. And
there, again in lonely glory (see above), sat Mr. Big Orange.
Sally saw her chance.
Without a word, she darted across the street and scurried up
Mrs. Ames sidewalk and onto her porch in her best sub-rosa fashion. Then she scooped
up the enormous cat and retraced her steps.
I merely stared. What else can you do when your sister loses
her mind?
She raced ahead of me, the deceptively-calm cat clutched in
her arms and, banging the gate open with a foot, skipped into the back yard.
I followed slowly. No way I wanted to be mixed up in this,
but I do, you know, live in the same house.
By the time I reached the back door, Sally was inside and
cuddling her new friend on the living room sofa.
As I stepped inside, the cat turned and looked at me with
slitted, half-open eyes.
I stopped.
“See!” Sally said excitedly. “It was so easy and he’s so . .
.” She didn’t get any further.
Without so much as a twitch of warning, the animal in her
arms suddenly turned into a spitting, clawing whirlwind. It clawed its way up
her arms, perched momentarily on the top of her head, then launched itself to
the floor lamp beside her.
And it was just getting started.
From the lamp, it flew across to the kitchen table, leaving
long claw marks as it slid the length of the shining surface, taking both the
puzzle we had spent the past month fitting together and Mom’s new vase of
flowers with it.
The resulting crash seemed to wake Sally from the daze she
had fallen into and she leaped forward, intent on corralling the out-of-control
feline.
She missed.
At the same moment, thinking only of self-preservation, I fled
to the front door. Then I stood there, frozen, one hand on the knob, and stared as the disaster
continued.
Sally’s reaching hands seemed to provide impetus to the
animal and it continued on to new heights, leaping from the table to the pot rack
above the nearby cupboard.
Turns out those racks can hold a lot of cookware.
But no cats.
The entire frame ripped out of the ceiling and fell with a decisive
clatter.
But even as it fell, the orange harridan had already launched
itself toward the light fixture over the table.
Remember what I said about the pot rack and cats.
Well, ditto for lights.
The metal fixture, hit the table below with a hollow clang,
leaving a deep indent in the formerly pristine and now clawed and dented surface.
At that moment, someone rang the doorbell.
The cat shot up the curtains, shredding them as it went and
finally landed on the back of the sofa. There it paused, likely gathering
itself for future atrocities, just as I swung the front door open.
Perhaps it recognized the rather piqued face of Mrs. Ames in
the opening.
I favour the opinion that it merely glimpsed the outdoors
and freedom.
Whatever the reason, it launched itself at the irritated
women with every orange hair on end and all claws out.
She caught it before it could clear the doorway.
Then, with the spitting, growling creature in her arms, she
gave us a level look, turned and headed out across the lawn.
For a moment, my sister and I watched as the woman continued up
the street and out of sight, a fully-puffed orange tail sticking out from beneath her arm.
Then Sally looked at me. “See? I told you having a cat would be fun!”
Each month, Karen's circle of cronies like-minded writers, engages in an exchange of words.
It's fun, educational and challenging.
And did I mention fun?
My words this month: sub-rosa ~ fatalistic ~ myriad ~ rife ~ kerfuffle
were given to me by https://wannabelinguistics.tumblr.com
Now hop over and see what the others have done with the challenge!
Having THAT cat was definitely not fun. No way. But the story was.
ReplyDeleteI loved this story and I could see it perfectly! No wonder Mrs. Ames kept her cat outside!
ReplyDeleteI would not want to be within 100 miles of that house when Mom gets home . . .
ReplyDeleteOMG. That sounds like one crazy cat. Your next post please... what happened when Mom got home???
ReplyDeleteA one woman cat.
ReplyDeleteHoly mackerel! I can see that big orange cat tearing through the house and making it look like a category 4 hurricane went through. Great job!
ReplyDeleteIt doesn't really sound like Sally learned anything from this little experiment . . . :D
ReplyDeleteI'm willing to bet my last dollar that Sally was the only one who thought that was fun.
ReplyDeleteThat'll teach us not to mess with "Mr. Big Orange" ;-) I have to admit I associated a two legged creature with that name...
ReplyDeleteGreat job using those tough words!
I have this cat. I'm the only one in my house who can touch him and he IS deceptively calm until someone else tries. It's quite a kerfuffle indeed trying to give him his medication hahaha.
ReplyDelete