I hope you enjoyed yesterday's post and if you didn't see it, just scroll down when you're done here and enter to win some more prizes! Then hop over to all the other blogs for even more fun and games. There are 59 Blogs most of which have multiple bloggers, so for eight great days, you can hop around and read stories about pets, discover books about pets, and generally have a great time. On this blog, I blogged yesterday, Cat is today, and tomorrow is the wonderful PG Forte.
Today my wonderful Guest Blogger is Cat Cavendish. Cat's books are so scary i can barely read the blurbs but she has devoted readers worldwide who swear by her chills! Cat is going to give away a copy of her new book, The Second Wife! Horror fans, do not miss leaving a comment WITH YOUR EMAIL on this blog.
But first, Cat has the most wonderful story to share:
Penny – The Little Black Cat Who Beat The Odds
She was a tiny little
scrap. Just two weeks old, one of a litter of six semi-feral farm kittens who
had been orphaned when their mother was run over by a tractor.
I was a shy, six year old
child with no siblings and a burning desire to have a kitten of my own to love.
So, when my mother handed me a shoe box, punched full of holes to let the air
in, I felt a movement inside and couldn’t wait to get her home. All the way
home on the bus, I cuddled that shoe box while other passengers looked on, some
a little perplexed and others smiling, as they heard the sound of a very young
kitten’s mewls. Meanwhile, I clutched my little box with its precious treasure
and beamed. I had my kitten. She was mine. I would never be bored or lonely
again.
Finally, we arrived home. I
laid the box down, ever so carefully on the floor and removed the lid. My
mother looked on, ready to step in if needed. Sitting with her tail curled
around her, eyes still blue and round as saucers, the tiniest kitten I had ever
seen turned a bewildered gaze on her new world and opened her mouth.
“Me! Me!” Her mew was
unformed, little more than a squeak. And she was no bigger than a hamster.
At this point, I should
mention that this was September 1960, in an industrial town in the heart of the
West Riding of Yorkshire, England. The pet food companies had not invented
kitten food or any means of nurturing orphaned unweaned kittens. Mum had taken
advice from the local vet, and feeding time consisted of warm milk and glucose
poured into one of my dolls’ feeding bottles, complete with teat. Mum would sit
down with her and hold her while she fed. When Penny had drunk enough, she
would pat the bottle away. She would then scramble off Mum’s lap and trot off,
her little tummy distended.
Over the next couple of
weeks, Penny learned how to wash herself. This took a little practice. Face,
tummy and back presented no problem, but when it came to washing her paws or
nether regions, life took a very different turn. She would tentatively lift a
paw, wobble and then fall over, providing me with hours of harmless
entertainment, until the day she managed it. Needless to say, her expression at
achieving this wondrous feat was one of, ‘I could do it all the time really. Nothing
to it.’ Then off she galloped, tail poker-straight, with just a hint of a kink
at the tip. Happy kitten mode.
Purpose made kitten and cat
toys were also in short supply in those days, but Penny had hours of fun
batting a small, squashy ball across the living room where it would inevitably
roll under the sideboard. Quick as a flash, she would dive over to the other
end and grab it as it emerged.
Mum had the job of weaning
Penny and, one day she decided that now was the right time. She placed a saucer
of milk down on the kitchen floor and waited. The little black kitten turned beseeching
eyes upwards at Mum, then down at the saucer. She repeated this a few times,
while Mum made encouraging noises and hoped for the best.
Then, slowly, Penny inched
forward until she was almost touching the saucer. She lowered her head, stuck
out her little pink tongue and attempted a rather ineffectual lap. Then, to
Mum’s great amusement, she hopped into the saucer, splashing milk over the
floor, and began to lap all around her until the saucer was empty. Then,
satisfied, she stepped daintily out, shook her paws and trotted off to give
herself a bath.
From then on, she never
looked back. Her milk diet was increasingly supplemented by Kit-E-Cat which, in
those days, was all one flavour. I remember it was bright pink and, as
ingredients weren’t listed, I have no idea what was in it, but Penny certainly
loved it.
The years went by and Penny
grew into a beautiful jet black cat with gleaming coat and eyes like emerald
pools. She was my constant companion through childhood illnesses and teenage
angst . She had almost infinite patience, enduring being wheeled around in my
doll’s pram, dressed in a bonnet and shawl. On seeing her, Mum said, “Poor
Penny,” and laughed while the ‘poor’ cat in question gave her a longsuffering
look.
Penny was the one I would
go to when I was upset and she allowed me to drench her fur in my tears before
going off and washing herself from ears to tail tip.
Penny never perfected her
miaou but her purrs were wondrous and she maintained a full set of pearly white
teeth her whole life. She never had a single illness in her long life, but, in
1979, Mum realised she had become stone deaf. Not that my little cat appeared
unduly phased by her disability
In late September 1979, I
was staying at my parents’ house near Liverpool
(where they had moved in the late sixties). I was due to leave shortly to catch
the train back to Leeds where I then lived, but I wanted a little more time
with Penny, so I followed her up the path in the back garden. She suddenly
stopped, turned and gazed at me with those beautiful clear eyes.
“Me-ah-ah-ah-ow”, she mewed a couple of times, (her version of a ‘miaou’).
Something passed between us at that moment and I knew, somehow, that I would
never see her again.
Penny died of renal failure
two weeks later, on October 1st, The vet administered the merciful injection
and, as those amazing eyes closed for the last time, she died in my mother’s
arms. She was 19 years old.
That should be the end of
the story but, for me, there has been a postscript. A couple of years after she
died, I was staying once again in my parent’s house and, as I took some plates
from the dining table out to the kitchen, I saw Penny jump out through the
closed door of the cupboard under the stairs. It was like watching an old black
and white film and the whole experience lasted no more than a second or two. I
stood stock still in disbelief as a sudden feeling of euphoria washed over me.
That feeling stayed with me for days afterwards.
Was she saying a final,
‘goodbye’? Or just letting me know she was still around, in spirit if not in
body? I’ll never know. My mother still lives in that house and I live in hope
that one day, Penny will pay a return visit. Although quite what my present
cat, Mimi, would make of it, I can’t imagine!
Blurb for The Second Wife:
Emily Marchant died on
Valentine’s Day. If only she’d stayed dead…
When Chrissie Marchant first sets eyes on Barton Grove, she feels as if
the house doesn’t want her. But it’s her new husband’s home, so now it’s her
home as well. Sumptuous and exquisitely appointed, the house is filled with
treasures that had belonged to Joe’s first wife, the perfect Emily, whom the
villagers still consider the real mistress of Barton Grove.
A stunning photograph of the first Mrs. Marchant hangs in the living room, an unblemished rose in her hand. There’s something unnerving and impossibly alive about that portrait, but it’s not the only piece of Emily still in the house. And as Chrissie’s marriage unravels around her, she learns that Emily never intended for Joe to take a second wife…
A stunning photograph of the first Mrs. Marchant hangs in the living room, an unblemished rose in her hand. There’s something unnerving and impossibly alive about that portrait, but it’s not the only piece of Emily still in the house. And as Chrissie’s marriage unravels around her, she learns that Emily never intended for Joe to take a second wife…
The Second Wife is available now from:
You can find Cat here:
www.catherinecavendish.comhttp://www.facebook.com/CatherineCavendish
http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4961171.Catherine_Cavendish
http://twitter.com/#!/cat_cavendish
https://plus.google.com/u/0/109439758903132910470/posts
***************************************
Thank you so much, Cat. I'm still sniffling. Now everyone, leave a comment with your email to win a copy of The Second Wife and here is what you need to know about the wonderful Paws With a Cause .
Paws With A Cause® enhances the independence and quality of life for people with disabilities nationally through custom-trained Assistance Dogs.
PAWS® increases awareness of the rights and roles of Assistance Dog teams through education and advocacy. Founded in 1979, Paws With A Cause is dedicated to helping its clients who are challenged by many disabilities, such as Cerebral Palsy, Muscular Dystrophy, Seizure Disorders, and Hearing Disorders to name just some. Each of our dogs are trained to meet the specific needs of our clients. Tasks may include opening and closing doors, picking up objects, pulling a wheelchair, turning lights on and off, and alerting a person to particular sounds like a telephone, doorbell, smoke detector and many others. Our dogs change lives by enhancing the independence of our clients. By just opening a door, a dog opens up the world for a person with a disability and your donations will go to making that happen. PAWS thanks you so much for your donation and allowing us to open more doors.
Paws With A Cause
4646 South Division
Wayland, MI 49348
How to donate:
Comment with your email to win Cat's prize.



Thank you so much for hosting me today, Tara. This is a wonderful cause and I'm proud to support it
ReplyDeletegreat blog Cat as ALWAYS. I see u recoverd from yesterday's mauling........
ReplyDeleteThank you, Shehanne. Purrrrr
DeleteWonderful tale. And yes, animals do remain as spirits sometimes as human ones do. I had one cat "haunt" our place after he had been put to sleep--I would always feel something like a cat jumping onto the bed and walking around. I also had a ghost cat I actually seen in solid form, the second time dissipating before my eyes in daylight in the same room as my living cats, Bast and Ripley. I originally thought it was Ripley I saw the first time kinda saw the back and tail of a gray cat, but it wasn't This time Ripley was asleep on the couch while Bast apparently saw this ghost cat again and reacted with a freaked out expression on her black face. This ghost cat ended up in my nonfiction regional ghost book.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Pamela. That's really interesting. My mother had a similar experience of a ghost cat jumping on her bed and padding around. This wasn't Penny but a later cat of mine - Lucy - who died tragically young. Mum swears to this day that Lucy came to say 'goodbye' to her that night.
DeleteWhat a beautiful story. My cat started her life as a feral kitten. They were going to capture and euthanize them but the music teacher at my school took them in. He allowed me to adopt her.
ReplyDeleteOh how lovely, Debby! Thank goodness you were there to give her a loving home
DeleteIn a lot of ways your story matches the one for our Shadow. A long haired black with green eyes, she showed up at our door when our daughter was 6 months old. And of course I feed her, she never left our porch. And so she became daughter's cat. We found out from the vet that Shadow was the same age as Nikkie. And like Penny, she was diapered and dressed and took it all in good grace. She followed Nikkie everywhere like a dog would do. Off to the neighbors house to play with Nikkie's little friend. And if Nikkie got hurt, Shadow was there for comfort, licking those tears away. We had her for 21 years. And I still miss her.
ReplyDeleteWhat a lovely story, Laurie. You're right, Shadow and Penny had a lot in common, bless their little hearts x
DeleteLovely story.
ReplyDeletebn100candg(at)hotmail(dot)com
Thank you all for dropping by, commenting and lending your support to this wonderful cause. Congratulations to Pamela K. Kinney who has won the free copy of 'The Second Wife'!
ReplyDelete