amazing, the way his life had turned out. Who would have imagined when he was living in San Francisco walking home from work that particular evening, when he paused to kneel by the gutter looking at that little bundle of gray fur among the trash and empty wine bottles. Reaching to touch what he was sure was a dead kitten, who could imagine the wonder that lay, barely alive, beneath his reaching hand?
When he took up the little limp bundle and wrapped it in his wool scarf and headed for the nearest vet, who could have dreamed the off-the-wall scenario that would soon change his life? That he was holding in his hand a creature of impossible talents, a beast the like of which maybe no other human had ever seen, at least in this century.
No other human, except Wilma.
It didnât bear pondering on, that Joe Grey and Dulcie had ended up with him and Wilma, who had been fast friends ever since Clyde was eight years old and Wilma was in graduate school. Through all of Wilmaâs moves in her career as a parole officer, and through Clydeâs own several moves, they had remained close.
But how and why had the two cats come to them?
Dulcie said it was preordained. Clyde didnât like to think about that stuff, any more than Joe did. The idea that some power totally beyond his comprehension had placed those two cats where they would meet, not only kept him awake at night but could render him sleepless for weeks.
And yetâ¦
Fate , Dulcie said.
Neither Clyde nor the tomcat believed in predestination, both were quite certain that your life was what you made it. And yetâ¦
Entering the living room and switching on the lowwatt lamp by the front door, he found Joe fast asleep in his well-clawed armchair. The gray tomcat lay on his back, snoring, his white belly and white chest exposed, his four white feet straight up in the air. Obviously overfull of party food. He must have left the reception early and hiked right on home and passed out, a surfeited victim of gluttony. Clyde turned on a second lamp.
Joe woke, staring up at Clyde with blazing eyes. âDid you have to do that? Isnât one lamp enough? I was just drifting off.â
âYou were ten feet under, snoring like a bulldog. Why arenât you hunting? Too stuffed with wedding cake? Whereâs Dulcie?â
âShe took the kit home, she doesnât want her out hunting.â Joe flipped over. Digging his front claws into the arm of his chair, he stretched so deeply that Clyde could feel, in his own spine, every vertebrae separate, every ligament loosen. âSheâs worried about Kit, afraid that old man saw her jump the boy and will come back to find her.â
Clyde sat down on the couch. This thought was not far-fetched. Already Joe and Dulcie had been stalked by a killer because of their unique talents. If the kit had foiled the old manâs plans, wouldnât he wonder what kind of cat this was? Wouldnât his rage lead him back to her? Clyde looked intently at Joe. âSo where are you going to hide her?â
âI was thinking about Cora Lee French, when she gets home from the hospital. Since the play, she and the kit are fast friends. And that big house, that the four senior ladies bought for their retirement, has a thousand hiding places. Sitting there on the edge of the canyon, it would be a cinch for a cat to escape down among the trees and brushesâthat old man would never find her, itâs wild as hell in those canyons.â
âRight. She can just slip away among the bobcats and coyotes, to say nothing of a possible cougar.â
Joe shrugged. âWe hunt that canyon now and then, weâve never had a problem.â
Clyde headed for the bedroom, pulling off his suit jacket and loosening his tie. You couldnât argue with a cat. Behind him Joe hit the floor with a thud, and came trotting past him into the bedroom. Glancing up at Clyde, he clawed impatiently at the sarouk rug, waiting for Clyde