at dawn, John drove the few blocks to the shore to feed the band of feral cats he cared for, Misto rode with him, tucked up in the front seat in a warm blanket. Misto loved the shore and the roiling sea. Those gleaming waters brought back times living among the fishing wharves on the coast of Oregon; the sight of the sea brought back earlier lives, too: a strange life at the edge of the Aegean Sea; the Welsh and Scottish coasts. But the best was here, on the shore of Molena Point where the yellow tom had been born, this very stretch of shore where John now fed the strays.
Here, as a kitten, Misto had been taken far away from the village by a caring Âcouple. Now in old age after so many adventures he had traveled back again to his first home, to the long white beach and the little dock where the ferals still gathered. Now, even in illness, he was satisfied to be back where he was born. Sometimes John carried him up the rocky coast where the waves crashed wild and where, when the tide was out and the sea sucked away, little pools among the rocks reflected the changing sky; where with a careful paw he could tease small rock crabs and tiny, trapped fishes.
Venturing to the shore with John on his better days, he stayed in the cottage with Mary on bad days, tucked up before the fire, and at night he slept warm between them. The Firettis woke each time Misto woke; they doled out pain medication and brought him cool water, offered custards and warm fish broth; they tried not to show their grieving.
But just as the old, speaking cat had come back to the Firettis on his own, the arrival of Mistoâs son Pan, some months later, was a second wonder to John and Mary.
The Firettis had known about speaking cats for many years; John, since he was a boy. They had kept the secret well, but they had longed to share their home with just such a one. Now their family included both Pan and MistoâÂthough the four had had only a short time together before Pan was off on his journey and before Misto began to fail. How deftly the old cat had kept his secret, to give Pan his freedom; and soon now Misto himself would face a new adventure. The yellow tom knew that when his pain grew too severe John would help him sleep, and sleep more deeply until his spirit rose up and he would fly free.
âWe will be together again,â he told John and Mary. âWe will come round together again, in one life or another, as we are meant to do. This is the way of the universe,â Misto told them. Mary had wiped a tear, cuddling him, and she couldnât answer.
Now Misto, alone for the moment in the Firettisâ bedroom, was dozing when Joe Grey and Dulcie padded across the big rag rug, slipped up onto the bed, and settled among the pillows beside him. Only slowly did Mistoâs ragged ears lift, his whiskers twitch. Only when he was alert again did Dulcie touch a soft paw to Mistoâs paw.
âI told him,â she said. âI told Joe about the kittens.â
Misto grinned at Joe Grey. âAbout time you knew.â
Speaking kittens were rare; speaking, mated Âcouples seldom brought little ones into the world. Joe, still shaken, looked back at Misto and smiled foolishly.
âNow,â Dulcie said, slipping closer to the ailing cat, ânow, what else do you have to tell us? What about our girl kitten, that you didnât tell me earlier when you fell asleep? Now you can tell us both.â
Beside her, Joe Grey went rigid with dismay. He didnât want to hear predictions. He was proud and happy about the kittens, but he didnât want Misto to lead Dulcie down some foolish path of what could be, what might be; he didnât want the old cat planting foolish dreams.
Mistoâs voice was weak but filled with pleasure. âThree kittens,â he told Dulcie again. âTwo boy kittens, and a calico girl. It is she I have seen in my dreams. A lovely little creature, a beautiful young cat with a charmed