I breathe deeply at my narrow escape from inadvertent automotive vandalism. Then I scan the parking lot below for witnesses. None but the moon. I swing over the railing and climb down, landing lightly on my feet.
Okay. I do not land so lightly, being a muscular dude with a lot of bone mass.
Twigs and leaves rustle in the tall oleander bushes ringing the lot, warning me of possible unseen e yes. Las Vegas never sleeps, nor does Midnight Louie when he is on a mission.
My teeth snag the white bag and I continue to drag its broken contents away from the Circle Ritz condominium and apartment building. The black marble circular façade gleams in the moonlight like a giant chocolate icing-frosted doughnut. Wait. My home, sweet home is classier than that. It shines like the Coliseum in Rome magically made whole again and enameled Punk Black.
A guilty twinge assails me. These plastic bags are intended to be recycled at the grocery store. I am contributing to unauthorized littering. Yet I must remove the evidence of my crime from the premises and into other custody. I can only hope my contacts are the ones shaking the oleander branches. Every bit of that plant is poisonous, but not as vile to me as the contents of my bag.
A piece of shadow separates itself from the trembling leaves.
“Have you got the goods?” a rough voice asks. Similar shadow figures bunch behind it. I am now confronting a gang.
“Right,” I answer. “Primo stuff, freshly imported.” I flick the bag lying between us open with a razor-sharp nail. “You can do a sniff and taste test, if you like.”
“I like,” Gravel Voice responds, edging near to do just that.
“Hey,” I cannot help noting, “this is Family business. One would think you would trust your own son.”
“Hah!” answers Ma Barker, Cat Pack clowder leader and my long-lost mama. I sometimes wish had remained long lost. A clowder is the feline equivalent of a street gang-cum-extended family, and you do not want to mess with the leader of the pack. So I remain mute as Ma Barker admonishes me as if I were an ignorant kit. “You are sneaking around on your Miss Temple Barr like some craven domestic slave. Why would you be straight with me?”
“I am not owned,” I say. “I am a free and independent roommate.”
“Who freely rips off this expensive domestic-slave gourmet food.”
“For the Cat Pack, Ma. I do not see you turning up your whiskers at my, er, donations.”
“Whadda my whiskers have to do with it?” Ma advances with a growl.
I shrink back slightly. Whiskers are a sore point with Ma. Hers are not only grizzled, but more prominent on her chin than her muzzle now that she has reached a certain age. She is still the only female clowder chief in Vegas, maybe the world, for that matter.
“Punk,” she sniffs. Then the yellows of her eyes narrow as she gazes over my shoulder. “It looks like your roommate is entertaining a gentleman caller. No wonder you snuck out.”
Behind the glass French doors, a pinpoint of bobbling light tailed by a tall, black shadow passes by.
My eyes widen as the Front Four shivs on my limbs curve into asphalt for traction. My brain processes several facts. Mr. Max Kinsella, my Miss Temple’s ex, has headed to Ireland on secret agent business. Mr. Matt Devine, her current and closest, not only works nights, he never sleeps overnight in her condo on religious grounds, although Miss Temple’s religion allows her to visit his quarters on overnights.
“You need backup?” Ma’s harsh voice asks behind me.
“Not hardly.” I yowl. I rake my claws into the nearest oleander trunk for a dose of poison. I am already halfway to the leaning palm tree that is my ladder to our balcony.
I am twenty pounds—give or take sixteen ounces here and there—of snarling defensive fury. If my dereliction of duty tonight causes one glorious red-gold hair on my Miss Temple’s head to acquire a split end, somebody’s epidermis is getting a bone-deep massage.
I am up the palm tree’s rough trunk like a Singer sewing machine set on “Gather”. I bound to the railing, then to the balcony floor, and shoulder the door wide open. It hits the wall loud enough to wake Miss Temple and cause a thumping and shrieking in the bedroom. I hesitate momentarily.
Ma is right, human bedroom activities can be…er, confusing to those of our persuasion. Has Mr. Matt come home early from his Midnight Hour radio gig and paid an amorous visit, despite past restraint? Is this assault or ecstasy? I am sure humans ask the same thing of my own kind’s activities of that nature.
Yet this is no time for inter-species sensibilities to hold me back. With a banshee battle cry (or one of my own courtship wails) I charge into the darkened bedroom.
2
Off-Guard
Temple awoke to a ray of light streaking across her vaulted bedroom ceiling.
Then something like the weight of a dead body fell crosswise onto her bed, pinning her hundred pounds to the mat. Uh, to the mattress.
Was this a nightmare? Was she really awake?
Her heart went into a chorus line of rapid-fire beating, and not because of a welcome but unprecedented surprise post-midnight visit from her fiancé Matt Devine.
A glimpse of the red LED letters on her bedside clock showed 2:15 a.m., too early for Matt to be home from work. So…
Not. A. Dream.
She screamed, bucking and kicking to free any and all limbs. At least the dead weight wasn’t a “corpse”. It jammed an elbow into her side, gave a basso groan, and thrashed across the covers to leave the bed. A California king-size mattress offered a lot of wallowing, mushy territory to leave.
Apparently the invading big lug hadn’t expected a super-long bed and had tripped. Some klutzy cat burglar he was.
Temple’s cries of “Help, fire!” echoed from the ceiling while her churning legs pushed her upright against the upholstered headboard, where Midnight Louie perched atop the tufted-linen, cussing out the intruder. Their combined outraged yowls passed through the—what? Open? How?—French doors to pierce the night silence.
Louie’s infuriated lethal weapon—tail switches—slapped Temple across the face as she lunged for the only defensive weapon available on the bedside table…her red plastic phone shaped like a high-heeled shoe. At least she’d had practice swinging a spike heel like a bludgeon in the past…
Meanwhile, the burglar’s flashlight had fallen onto the bed, casting a narrow beam at no one and nothing.
Someone was in the hall, pounding on her front door.
“Temple, Temple!” Electra Lark, the landlady, shouted while brutalizing the metal lock with frantic scrapes of her passkey.
Temple sensed out-of-place arrangements in her usual nighttime landscape, the most obvious being the large, moving shadow of a man far from dead through the open door to the balcony. Beside her, Louie’s bristled tail gave her one last kisser swipe as he jumped to the mattress foot ready to spring atop the intruder’s vanishing shoulders.
“Louie, Louie!” Temple hollered in counterpoint to Electra’s screams of, “Temple, Temple!”
If the invader had not known the names of the occupant and purported pet by then, he sure did now. At least “Louie” sounded like a resident (and presumably formidable) male instead of only being the resident male…cat.