I started writing this novel in 1993 as we were moving away from South Carolina. It was a way to cope with the separation from close friends. It is an unbelievable heady feeling completing a project you have been working on as long as I have been working on Sephina's novel. There is still a lot of editing to be done but all the parts now match up. Sephina has weathered the storm and the many years of neglect from me. I am grateful to all the people who have encouraged me along the way including and especially the Lord for sending me little nudges when I wanted to give it all up. Now all the other stories (and there are many) can get some equal time.
Tuesday, August 22, 2017
Thursday, May 18, 2017
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Written for Writer’s Cramp 5/16/2017 Prompt; end story with She never questioned the cat again.
1,000 words or less.
Zoey
The purring woke Sarah. A tail lashed across her peripheral
vision. She groaned as she turned her head to look at the clock on her night
stand. It read 5:39am and her eyes snapped shut.
“Why must you wake me at this ungodly hour, you mangy bag of
bones?”
A head butted against her face and rubbed across her cheek.
A plaintive meow rang in her ear.
“I’m up, I’m up, don’t you see?” Sarah pushed herself up and
swung her legs off the side of the bed. She braced herself with hands on either
side of her hips and head drooped.
A warm soft body snaked its way between her arm and side and
perched on her lap. Another meow sent warm putrid breath into her face.
“Oh for the love of all that’s holy, what have you been
eating? Seriously?”
She stood and the cat landed softly on the floor and wove
itself between her legs.
Sarah shuffled into the living room and pushed open the
sliding glass door wide enough for the slim feline body to slip through.
“Is this a pee emergency or a tryst with that Tom down the
street.? He knows you’re fixed right?” She quipped as she slid the door back
into place.
The coffee maker on the counter blinked. It wouldn’t start brewing
for another hour and a half. Sarah moved to the couch and curled up waiting for
the inevitable meowing at the door when Zoey was finished with her business.
Whatever it was.
The smell of coffee woke her and she felt the moment of
disorientation as she looked around for Zoey. A stab of guilt propelled her to
her feet and the sliding glass door. She expected to be greeted with a
reproachful look but instead she felt a tiny little panic when she didn’t see
the cat.
The door slid opened easily and Sarah stepped out onto the
back porch.
“Zoey, Zooooo-eeeey,” she called.
The property backed up to an open field with a wooded
stretch behind. Sarah knew there were predators; hawks, owls, coyotes. Her cat
was smart and wary. She was okay. Sarah didn’t understand the hard-lump low in
her chest. Not fear or guilt just feeling a little bit anxious is all.
Sarah found Zoey trapped under a cardboard box in a vacant
lot when she was a ginger fluff of a kitten. Sarah hadn’t wanted a pet or the
responsibility that went with caring for another creature. That was two years
ago.
“Zoey, where are you?”
She left the sliding door cracked wide enough to let the cat
back in just in case. No telling what else would wander in while she got ready
for the day. A shower and a strong cup of coffee would only take a few minutes
and leave enough time for a quick look around the outside of the house before
she needed to leave. She didn’t really have an appointment or a job but she
went every day to the local café to write. It fed her creative juices to sit where
life was happening, if only at a slightly faster pace than her living room.
The blow dryer nearly drowned out the noise but Sarah gave a
sigh of relief. She walked in to the living room to close the sliding door but
Zoey beat her to it and slipped back outside.
“Zoey, what are you doing? Get back in here. I have to go.”
She followed the cat back outside, around the side of the
house and watched her cross the street.
“Get back here you crazy cat.”
Sarah could tell when
she was being ignored.
“I don’t know what you think you are doing.”
This was spoken to a tail as it disappeared around the back
of her neighbor’s house.
“Don’t make me come after you.” Sarah humphed.
She hadn’t met her new neighbors yet. A truck had pulled up
a month ago and several men had unloaded it. The family, or couple or
individual had yet to be seen.
In the moments of indecision before Sarah could cross the
street to pursue her cat, Zoey reappeared.
“What the hell do you think you are doing?”
A kitten hung from Zoey’s mouth.
“Put that back right now.” Sarah commanded with one hand on
her hip the other pointing at the house across the street.
“You and I both know that can’t possibly be yours.”
Zoey didn’t even glance in Sarah’s direction. She was a cat
on a mission. Sarah followed her back around the house, watched her slip
through the door and then reappear sans kitten.
“Oh, no, no, no.” Sarah stepped back through the door,
peered over the back of her couch and three little faces turned in unison to
look at her.
“Oh, for the love of Mike.”
“No, the name is John actually.”
Sarah squeaked as she turned to face the man standing at her
back door.
“I’m your new neighbor.” He put his hand through the opened
doorway and Sarah stared at it and him in confusion. He was tall, dark and
handsome, in fact he was a cliché.
Sarah caught her breath and a voice she had never heard come
out of her mouth before said, “Hi, I’m Sarah.”
“I think your cat is stealing my kittens.”
As if in response Zoey sauntered between his legs and into
the house carrying another kitten.
“Their mother died a few days ago.”
“I’m sorry.” Sarah watched Zoey deposit the latest kitten
beside its siblings.
“They are just old enough to take milk from a bowl.”
“That’s good.”
Zoey wound her way past Sarah and headed back out the door.
Sarah opened her mouth to try to stop her cat.
“Don’t worry,” John interrupted, “there’s only one more.”
He smiled and she felt her knees go weak.
She never questioned
the cat again
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