Cat Chores
Like my daughter and I, our black Bombay cat named Safa has his chores around the house. (We first named him Satyavan from the Hindu story about a couple similar to the Greek Orpheus and Eurydice, only in the Hindu version the wife Savitri rescues her hubby from the Underworld. According to a young friend of my daughter’s, Safa means clown in Hindi.)
1) Safa’s first chore of the day is to act as a four-legged, furry alarm clock ramming about the house and yowling around seven AM. (He adjusted fairly fast to the recent time change.)
2) Sitting on the microwave, he monitors meal preparation, starting with breakfast. He also sits on the cable box in the family room and observes us while my daughter and I exercise with our online service.
3) He helps us get even more exercise by playing hide and seek with us. Sites he hides in include under the covers of my bed, under chairs, and inside the big cardboard box his multi level cat condo came in. (He mostly ignores the latter.)
4) He spends considerable time during the day warming the seat of his favorite chair in the living room. In the evening, during t. v. time in the family room, he warms my daughter’s lap or mine when she’s not available.
5) Recently, he even volunteered to help me promote my books by posing next to them for a photo.
All the while Safa keeps busy with his chores, he maintains his status as the world’s most adorable cat. This isn’t just idle bragging. A few years ago an employee of the Emergency Vet Clinic said that thirty people had to say goodbye to Safa when he left. And recently our regular vet took pictures of him to share with her daughter. The vet says she would adopt Safa in a heartbeat if for some reason we no longer wanted him. As if . . .
A teacher of writing at the college level for 35 years, Juliet now works as an indie author. To date, she has published four novels and a collection of short pieces in her Calendar Mystery Series that tell the story of business girl Minty Wilcox and detective Daniel Price from newly met to newly wed and beyond in old Kansas City, a place that could get downright deadly a hundred years or so ago; three short story collections and two novels in the Cinderella, P. I. fairy tale mystery series about Cinderella, twenty years, three kids, and a few extra pounds after the ball; and Novel Basics, a concise yet complete guide to writing a novel. All of these are available in print and digital from Amazon. Also, audio books of Cinderella, P. I. and Other Fairy Tale Mystery Stories and Cinderella, P. I. Around the World are available from Audible. To discover more about Juliet’s work, go to her Amazon Author Central Page: www.amazon.com/Juliet-Kincaid/e/B00DB4HWRG