John Persons Kitty Review

John Persons knelt in the damp soil, ruining the knees of his two-hundred-dollar trousers. He did not hesitate. With trembling hands, he gently pried the plastic free. The kitty didn't run. She licked his thumb, her tiny tongue like a grain of sandpaper.

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

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. John Persons knelt in the damp soil, ruining

He looked at her, now curled in a perfect orange circle on his lap, and said, "You are a disaster." The kitty didn't run

He carried her inside. He didn't put her down. He sat in his "no cats" chair, cradling her against his chest, feeling her tiny heartbeat thrum against his own. For the first time in his adult life, John Persons did not think about being efficient, or proper, or clean.

So he maintained the fiction. "It's not a pet," he told his neighbor, Mrs. Gable, who watched him through her lace curtains. "It's a pest control solution."

One Tuesday, after a brutal day of budget cuts, he came home to find the kitty absent. No mew. No muddy paw prints. No orange fur on the armchair. The silence was heavier than the usual silence. He checked the kitchen, the basement, the backyard. He walked the block, calling out a sound he’d never made before: "Here, kitty. Here, kitty."