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For awhile, Mr. Snuggles just stared at it, unsure if he even wanted to read it. Finally, he worked up the courage to open it, and inside he found two simple, magic words.

“Thank you”

BURNING BRIGHT by Elaine Cunningham

Mhari had seen smallcats before but seldom in the wild-if indeed the city’s streets and rooftops and small scattered gardens could be so named. Other than the yellow tom the Woman had thoughtfully provided to relieve Mhari of the heat and madness of her first season, she had seen none close at hand. Yet here were three of them-small, short-legged creatures, with tails too long and heads too large for their barrel-shaped bodies-staring fixedly at her from their perches in the talltree just outside Mhari’s home habitat.

The nearest one-a gray-striped tom-thrust his nose close to the strong wire mesh. His whiskers twitched as he tasted her scent. “What are you?” he asked bluntly.

That was rude by Mhari’s standards, but she knew little of the ways of smallcats. She rose and padded across her climbing gym’s top platform to close the distance between them. “I am a Serval cat,” she said politely, turning in profile so they could see the distinctive black bars running the length of her graceful neck, the neat black spots that marked the rest of her long, tawny body. “Daughter of Jahared, a freeborn Serval, out of Ahmriel. I am of Ahmriel’s third litter, and I bear Papers, a thing the humans seem to value. My name is Mhari. And you?”

If the tom heard her question, he gave no sign. He glanced toward a gray female. “Told you so. African wild cat. Not much of a runner, but agile. Likes to swim.”

The third and largest of Mhari’s visitors switched his plumed tail in annoyance. He was rather grand, as his kind went, with long black fur that made him look plump and complacent. The white on his face and throat and belly made him resemble the Man who gave Mhari’s Woman sparkling gifts and sometimes took her away for the evening. For that reason alone, Mhari was inclined to dislike him.

“Please forgive Frank’s abrupt manner of speaking,” the tuxedo-clad tom said in a surprisingly cordial tone. “It is his way; he means no offense. I am called Smithwicks, and this is Minx.”

“Frank and I tend to take our names seriously,” observed the gray queen archly, lifting her hindquarters in a suggestive manner.

Mhari had seen minks before and could perceive no reason for the smallcat’s boast. She turned to the dapper tom. “To what do I owe this visit? It must be a matter of some importance to bring three of you to this part of the city.”

“Maybe I live around here,” Minx said defensively. “Since you’re not a male, maybe you just didn’t notice me. And, hey-like the saying goes, all cats are gray in the dark.”

The Serval did not point out the obvious fallacy in this saying, nor did she observe that the smallcats in this neighborhood, with its fine old trees and walled gardens, were elegant creatures who wore jeweled collars and were seldom seen in the company of common tomcats.

Smithwicks gave the gray female a quelling stare. “It is… complicated. A matter of some delicacy, one requiring expertise we hope you might possess-”

“We need you to go to the zoo and talk to a tiger,” Frank broke in.

A frisson of alarm rippled done Mhari’s spine. She knew that word, zoo. One of the freeborn Serval on the Arizona ranch, her birthplace, had been kept in a zoo for a time following his capture. He claimed the cats were kept in cages of metal and glass, larger perhaps than the elegant habitat Mhari’s Woman provided for her but without the privacy Mhari enjoyed. Humans passed by endlessly, noisy crowds of them, chattering and staring-but never a human a Serval could call her own.

Mhari had no use for humans in general, but she and her Woman shared a bond. There were pleasant evenings at home together, a jeweled leash and harness so that they might take lovely strolls, warm afternoons spent swimming and diving in Mhari’s stone-lined pool, car rides, weekend trips to a woodland cottage or a seaside house. The Woman talked to her in English and Italian, and Mhari responded in Domestic and Serval. The Woman was highly intelligent; at times, she almost seemed to grasp Mhari’s responses. What Mhari had was not freedom, not exactly, but it was not an unpleasant life.

In the zoo, there was only captivity.

“The greatcats can’t talk to you?” she said hesitantly.

“Can’t or won’t,” said Frank. “It’s much the same thing.”

Smithwick narrowed his eyes at the striped tom. “In brief, here is the problem: we cats have been tracking a human, a killer.”

This puzzled Mhari. Humans were predators and could not be faulted for following their nature. Still, there were ways and ways. She often sprawled on the white settee beside the Woman, listening to the talking box. The Woman was fond of something called

Law and Order. It was a wonder to Mhari that humans survived at all, so endlessly and inventively did they kill one another.

“The humans police their own, do they not?”

“Not if they’re just killing cats,” Minx said spitefully, “unless, of course, the cat has

Papers. Or unless we cats make them care.” She met Mhari’s eyes with a challenging stare. “But you wouldn’t know about that, would you? I mean, your daddy being ‘freeborn’ and all…”

“That will do, Minx,” Smithwicks snapped. “We followed this human as far as the zoo and saw him throw a gun into the moat by the tiger habitat. Perhaps the tiger will have noticed something about the man that may help us find him. If not, Frank’s human is a police detective; he can discover what human handled the gun. Again, your expertise is required-we need you to retrieve it from the moat.”

“I see,” she mused. Thanks to the talking box, she knew this to be true. “Because you are tame cats-”

“Domesticated, not tame,” broke in Frank. “No cat is ever tame.”

Mhari twitched her whiskers agreeably. “As domesticated cats, you endeavor to help Frank’s policeman?”

The smallcats exchanged glances. Mhari scented a subtle change in their mood-a note that was both primal and familiar.

“You wish to find this human yourselves,” she said, surprised and impressed. “I did not know smallcats hunted as a pride. It is not the Serval’s usual way, but my sire told me that from time to time the freeborn would band together to bring down larger prey.”

“We would be honored if you would join us in that, as well,” said Smithwicks. “This human must be stopped, and soon.”

The notion of hunting humans made Mhari profoundly uneasy, but the smallcats were right: A rogue had to be stopped, whether he walked on two legs or four. “I would help you if I could, but how would I get to this zoo?”

Three furred heads turned toward the house. Three smallcats sent out a silent, summoning yowl. The light in the Woman’s bedroom flicked on, and in moments she stood on the patio, looking about in puzzlement.

Minx continued to talk to the Woman, but her voice was somehow different-quieter, more compelling. The Woman’s night robe swirled around her legs as she hurried to the gate of Mhari’s habitat. She unlocked it, added kibble to the already-full dish, and left. For the first time since Mhari had come to live in the city, the Woman neglected to lock the gate.

Moments passed as the Serval sat in stunned silence, not entirely sure she could credit her eyes and ears. Suddenly the gray queen’s snide comments made a little sense: apparently the smallcats really could “make” humans do their bidding.

A wave of envy arose from some dark place and emerged as a soft snarl. How was it that a flea-bitten stray would command Mhari’s Woman, when she, a Serval cat born to a line that had kept company with Italian nobility, could speak unheard?