And so, John Persons, the man of gray suits and navy ties, became John Persons, the man with the cat. He still didn't know what to do with love. But he was learning. One tiny, rusty mew at a time.
He looked at her, now curled in a perfect orange circle on his lap, and said, "You are a disaster." john persons kitty
He found her—he had secretly decided it was a her—huddled under the rhododendron bush by the mailbox. Her leg was caught in the plastic ring of a six-pack holder. She wasn't struggling. She was just waiting, her sour-apple eyes wide and trusting. And so, John Persons, the man of gray
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. One tiny, rusty mew at a time
The kitty was his polar opposite. It was chaotic. It shed on his freshly pressed slacks. It left muddy paw prints on his spotless kitchen floor. It brought him "gifts"—first a desiccated maple leaf, then a slightly chewed lottery ticket (a loser), and finally, the head of a field mouse, which it deposited delicately on his leather briefcase.
He just held on.
She purred in agreement.