He never called it by a name. To the world, it was simply "John Persons' kitty." A stray he’d found shivering behind his recycling bin three winters ago, a matted ball of orange fur with one torn ear and eyes the color of sour apple candy. He had intended to call animal control. Instead, he had opened a can of tuna.
That night, he wrote a check to the local animal shelter for five hundred dollars. He ordered a plush cat bed from an online store (it was lavender, a color he had never before allowed into his home). And he finally gave the kitty a name. john persons kitty
John Persons was not a man given to whimsy. His suits were charcoal gray, his ties were navy blue, and his lawn was mowed in mathematically precise stripes. He lived at 42 Maple Drive, a house that looked like every other house on the block, except for the fact that it was marginally cleaner. He never called it by a name
She purred in agreement.
The kitty, of course, did not care. It slept in the sunbeam on his "no cats on the furniture" couch. It knocked his carefully alphabetized DVD collection off the shelf. And at 6:17 every evening, without fail, it sat by the front door and let out a tiny, rusty mew . Instead, he had opened a can of tuna
That was the sound that undid John Persons.
John Persons did not know what to do with love. He knew about quarterly reports, about mortgage rates, about the proper way to fold a fitted sheet. But this scruffy, purring thing that rubbed against his shins while he made his morning coffee? It unnerved him.