"They are your Caretakers," said Alexander.
"Yes," said Thelma. "Well, once James and Harriet returned to the city to visit our dear mother. They found our street in ruins, but hiding in an attic was a young black kitten with wings."
"It was Jane!" said Alexander.
Thelma nodded. "Our little sister, Jane. She was all alone, and the building she was in was about to be destroyed. They rescued her. After they found our mother and visited with her, they brought Jane home to our farm. But little Jane has never said a word, except Me, and when she is frightened, she says, Hate! We think something terrible happened to her when she was a young kitten, separated from our mother."
"When she was hiding in the attic?" Alexander asked.
"Yes," said Thelma. "She won’t even come up to the loft of the barn, where we sleep. It must remind her of that attic. That’s why she sleeps in the hay downstairs. She’s well, and seems happy enough. But she can’t speak."
She's very brave. She rescued me," Alexander said.
"I’m very glad she did," said Thelma, and she gently pushed him down and washed him quite hard all over, just as if she were his own mother.
"Thelma," Alexander said, "my mother will be worried about me."
We’ve talked about that," said Thelma. "Susan and Hank will be here soon. Wait till you meet them!"
And very soon over the hill came a boy and a girl, with a can full of milk and a bag full of kibbles. All the Catwings came swooping about them, and perched on their shoulders and heads and hands and noses, and purred at them, and Susan and Hank laughed at the Catwings and petted them and threw kibbles in the air for them to catch. But then they saw Alexander.
"Look!" they said.
Alexander came towards them rather shyly, waving his tail. It was golden and plumy, like his mother’s tail.
"Oh!" said Susan. "Oh, the poor little kitten! He doesn’t have any wings!"
Her brother, Hank, laughed. "Most kittens don’t, Sooz," he said.
Susan was already holding Alexander and petting him. Alexander was purring madly.
"Listen, Sooz," Hank said. "You know Mother has been saying she’d like to have a cat. But she can’t have one of the Catwings, because visitors might see it. If this is a stray kitten. "
So Alexander found himself being carried on Susan’s shoulder over the hill to the farmhouse where the children lived.
There the children’s mother greeted him. "Oh," she said, "what a wonderful tail! What a wonderful kitten!" And she scratched him under the chin.
"What an intelligent woman," Alexander thought.
"But where do you think he came from?" the children’s mother asked. Nobody knew. And Alexander could not tell them, since cats and human beings don’t talk the same way.
He settled down at the farmhouse, where he was treated very well, though there were no sardines and no feather beds. At night he could sleep with Susan or with Hank. But he was expected to live outdoors during the day, and to catch mice when he grew up.
Every day he trotted over the hill to the old barn and played with Jane and the other Catwings. He was very happy. But he did think about his mother and father and sisters, and so one day, when a red car drove into the farmhouse yard, he grew very excited and came running with his plumy tail waving.
Out of the little red car stepped the Owner.
"Is that you, Alexander?" he said.
Alexander purred and rubbed his head on the Owner’s leg. Then he danced off to the front door, for he wanted him to meet Hank and Susan and their mother and father.
The Owner came in and talked a while with the children’s mother and father. The children’s mother was polite, but her voice trembled a little when she said, "I have become very fond of him, but he is your kitten."
"His sisters have an excellent new home," said the Owner. "I can only come to my country house now and then. Of course Mr. and Mrs. Furby will live there. But if you could keep Alexander, I would be truly grateful.
Oh, I should love to keep him!" cried the children’s mother.
Alexander looked from one to the other, and purred extremely loudly, so that they both laughed.
Every now and then the Owner came by in his red car with Mr. and Mrs. Furby, so that Alexander could see his mother and father again.
Mr. Furby was usually asleep in the back seat, but Mrs. Furby always washed Alexander’s face carefully and told him to be her own wonderful boy.
"Of course," said Alexander.
Life was good at Overhill Farm. Alexander was growing fast. His tail was magnificent. He had nearly caught two mice. Every day he and Jane played all about the old barn and in the woods.
James taught him how to fish in the creek, and Roger taught him to stalk. Thelma told him hair-raising stories about the city where she and the other Catwings had been born. And little Harriet played hide-and-pounce every evening with him and Jane.
But sometimes Alexander sat with his plumy tail around his paws and thought. He remembered how he had left home intending to do wonderful things.
All he had done was get nearly run over by a truck, chased by a dog, stuck in a tree, and lost. Jane had saved him and brought him to this happy home. It was Jane who had done the wonderful thing.
What wonderful thing could he possibly do for Jane?
What could an ordinary cat do for a cat with wings?
He sat with his tail around his paws and watched Jane soaring high, high above him, playing with the swallows in the sunlight of spring.
He went and ate some kibbles — he was always hungry these days — and then trotted to their favorite play-place near the woods and called, "Jane!"
She came swooping down on her beautiful black wings, landed beside him lightly on her little black paws, and smiled at him.
"Jane," said Alexander.
"Purr," said Jane.
"Jane, you can talk."
Jane stopped purring. She lashed her tail.
"I know you were terribly frightened when you were little," Alexander said. "Thelma told me how you and your mother lost each other, and how you hid all alone in the attic of a deserted building and had nothing to eat. And then machines tore down the building. It must have been awful. But there must have been something even worse — something so bad you can’t talk about it — something so bad you can’t talk at all. But if you don’t talk, Jane, how will we ever know what it was?"
Jane said nothing and did not look at Alexander. She began to stalk a grasshopper in the tall grass.
"You showed me that I could get down from that pine tree," Alexander said. "I know you can get away from the bad thing. But I can't help if I don’t know what it was. You have to tell me, Jane."
Jane went on stalking the grasshopper. Alexander put a paw on her tail so that she had to stop. She growled at him.
"You can growl all you like," he said.
"I'm going to stand on your tail till you talk to me;
Jane growled again and bit Alexander, hard enough that it hurt.
"Don’t!" Alexander said. "Don’t bite!
Talk! Tell me. Tell me what frightened you in that attic!"
"HATE!" Jane said, with her eyes round and staring, and her fur all on end. "HATE! HATE!"
"Hate what? What did you hate?"
Jane’s back arched and she stared at Alexander with such rage and terror that his fur, too, stood on end. "Jane!" he said. "Tell me!"