About two or three weeks ago, I returned home to find a neighbor from the other side of the street in my side yard, peering into my bushes. When I got out of my car, she approached and said, "Sorry about traipsing all over your yard. But our little gray kitten has gotten out and I saw her run through here."
Oh! no problem at all! She was on the search, her teenage son was on the search, and now I joined the search. In people's front borders we looked and along the back alley. The man on the corner, scraping his porch, agreed to keep an eye out. The lady on the other side of me, just pulling into her garage with her two small children, promised to keep watch. I came out with a little dish of kitten food, to see if the creature could be lured.
I saw nothing of the illusive little feline. Her owner spotted it a time or two, but it always ran away. Maybe, she figured, it hadn't bonded with the family yet-- it was only about five weeks old and they'd only had it a week.
We moved the hunt further down the alley, where we encountered another neighbor. She said, "Yes, I've seen a gray kitten like that around the neighborhood, but it can't be yours. It's been hanging around for a month."
"Really? It looks just like our new kitten!"
"I'm sure the one you saw out here is a stray. Have you checked everywhere in your house for yours?"
So the kitten-owning neighbor and her son went home to make sure. An hour or so later, she appeared at my door. "I was wrong. That wasn't my kitten I saw. My own gray kitten was curled up on the rug in the spare bedroom."
That's a relief, but what about this other tiny catkin? In the following days, I began to see it myself. Standing in the street when I got into my car in the morning. Stalking through the bushes across the alley. And carrying itself always with a massive self-assurance all out of proportion to its infinitesimal frame.
Other neighbors saw it, too. "Have you seen the little gray kitten?" they'd ask. "I set out some cat treats for it the other day."
This evening from next door other side it was, "That kitten was on my porch today. It touched noses through the storm door with one of my cats."
Two evenings ago, it favored me with a visitation, taking up position under the weeping cherry in my front border. I lay down in the grass about five feet away, and tried to get it to come to me. Wasn't interested, but wasn't afraid, either. Just crouched there, staring at me.
It is still so little! So . . .
So I fed it. Correction, I've been feeding it. With some canned kitten food my own year old kittens are too old for. Always in the same place, under the arbor vitae in the side yard. I think it's figured out that's a good place to look for food in the morning.
Me, I'm trying to figure out what's best for it, considering there's No Way I can afford to bring another kitten into the House of the Flying Furballs, let alone another feral one.
The three-year-old next door announced this evening that The Little Black (he thinks it's black) Cat had been in their yard again and his dad is allergic to cats and if they see it again they're going to catch it and take it Far Away Where It Really Lives or something of the sort-- what exactly, I couldn't tell, since yelling over the fence, I can't always hear or understand what the kid is saying.
Does this mean I need to do something right away, whether I really can or not?
Or maybe should I tell myself there are thousands, millions, of abandoned and stray kittehs out there, and if I can't keep this one healthy and happy, that's just how it goes?
Meanwhile, we have company.
5 comments:
Oh, I know you could know more leave that little one to its own devices than I could. Bless the little tiny thing. If you could befriend it (or use of the Humane Society's cages baited with kitten food) it could be caught and a home could found for the little darling. I do hope this turns out well and the allergic father doesn't get to it!
You're right. Come to think of it, my friends whom I got Gwenith and Huw from have access to a humane trap. I could ask them.
I'm idiot enough to think of keeping it, but I have no place to quarantine it.
At least I think I don't . . .
Ohhh! Bless you for at least trying to help with the neighborhood "catkins!" You sound like my sister, Miss Kitty, at Educated & Poor.
But with more self-restraint. :-)
MHP--Well, maybe with more neighbors, closer. If I had more turf of my own for outdoor kittehs, I wouldn't hesitate to take the little gray one "in."
I hope there's good news on your Maddy, next time I check your blog.
What a little love.
It was neat to hear your voice on the tape, now I can read your blogs in your "voice".
Good luck with the kitteh!!!
hugs,
Whiskers
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