She was unreservedly delighted when I let her give fresh food to the cats. When I asked about dance, she’d timidly (then with my encouragement and compliments, not so timidly) showed me some of the moves they were rehearsing for their routine, so damned adorable doing this in my kitchen, I felt even more glow warming me to my bones.
And she didn’t hide how much she liked my house and the studio when I took them on a guided tour of both after the dinner dishes were done, saying to me shyly while standing in the guestroom, “It’ll be fun when we get to sleep over, Millie.”
More glow.
Further adding to this goodness, it seemed that as all this went on, Zadie was studying it, watching Cleo come out of her shell and my reaction to it. And I hoped, in watching, that she’d find she’d want to start building something like that with me too.
Now things were winding down. We were going to hang in front of the TV with a batch of cupcakes from Tessa’s Bakery that I’d picked up on the way back from my meeting. We were going to do something normal that a family would do at the end of the day before Logan had to take them back to their mom’s.
The girls were selecting seats (Zadie, not surprisingly, pulling a princess and getting the cuddle chair, Cleo, not suffering in getting the love seat) and Logan had claimed his, the corner of the couch.
He also claimed me. His hand catching mine, he was pulling me down beside him when I watched Poem struggle up into the love seat with Cleo, unable to jump that height, so she used her claws.
Seeing that, I put tension in my arm to resist Logan’s pull and looked around, asking, “Anyone seen Chief?”
I asked this because I hadn’t. Not since Cleo gave them fresh food before we sat down for dinner.
Chief and Poem had settled in to their new abode, putting up with me loving on them, enjoying me playing with them, and were currently in the throes of figuring out who ruled the roost.
This meant a lot of kitty wrestling.
However, I’d noticed that Chief was winning. Poem was starting to hang back and wait to see where Chief would claim before she decided to challenge his claim or allow it.
It was rare when they weren’t both around, jockeying for position.
Rare as in, it never happened.
But Chief was nowhere to be seen.
“Haven’t seen him, babe,” Logan muttered.
I looked to Cleo, who had a hand stretched to a skittish Poem but her eyes to me. “I haven’t either.”
“Think he went outside when we went to your office,” Zadie stated, and my eyes shot to her, my blood freezing in my veins.
“What?” I whispered.
She stared at me and I was way too freaked to see anything but confusion in her face. “Not sure but I think I saw him wander outside when we went out—”
I tore my hand from Logan’s and raced to the back door, throwing it open and sprinting outside.
It was cold. It was dark.
And my Chief was tiny.
They were not going to be outside cats and not because they cost a fortune and had bushy coats that were hard enough to keep tamed as indoor cats and this would be impossible if they went outdoors.
But because I’d read that indoor cats lived longer than outdoor cats. Way longer. Like...?years.
Further, they’d showed not the first sign of being interested in the outdoors or being bored with the playroom of a house they’d already been given.
So they were good indoors, which was where they were going to stay.
But now Chief had gotten out. A baby, tiny, anything could happen to him. He could get lost. He could be attacked and stand no chance. Not even if a bird swooped down.
Oh God.
God.
How had I not noticed him getting out?
“Chief,” I called, my eyes darting around as I quickly roamed the courtyard. “Come on, baby. You out here? Chief?”
“Chief.” I heard Cleo call. “Here kitty-kitty. Here Chiefy-Chiefy.”
I then heard the gate to the backyard open and looked that way to see Logan prowl through it with a flashlight.
“Chief!” I cried, moving toward the studio. “Come here, kitty. Come to Momma, baby.”
Cleo called. I called. I felt and saw her searching with me. I skirted the entirety of the outside of the studio. Cleo and I then moved down the drive and searched the front of the house. Cleo was edging toward my neighbor’s yard when I headed the opposite way and saw Logan stalking down the drive.
I raced to him.
“Nothing?” I asked, my voice pitched high with panic.
He looked toward his daughter. “Clee-Clee. Come back with me.”
I grabbed on to his thermal for the second time that day but in an entirely different way.
When I got his attention, I cried frantically, “Did you find something?”
“Open space up here, baby,” he said gently. “More hiding places back there. Need two sets of eyes. You keep lookin’ up here.” He glanced around. “Where’s Zadie? She not helpin’ you up here?”
I didn’t know where Zadie was and the only thing on my mind in that moment was where Chief was.
“I don’t know.”
“I’ll go back with you, Daddy,” Cleo said, already rushing up the drive.
“Keep lookin’,” Logan urged to me as I stood frozen and stared after Cleo.
I aimed my eyes to him. “He’s so tiny.”
He lifted a hand to curl it around the side of my neck. “Keep lookin’, baby.”
“He’s so tiny, Low. Just a baby. What if a dog—?”
He gave my neck a squeeze. “Keep lookin’. Hear?”
It was the hear? that got me.
I pulled my shit together, nodded, moved away, and hurried toward my neighbor’s yard. I sensed Logan going back up the drive.
I barely got into the yard, calling out to Chief and heading to my neighbor’s door to knock on it and ask if they’d seen my cat, then beg them to help us look when I heard Logan bellow, “Millie!”
I sprinted toward his voice, which meant up the drive and into my courtyard.
When I arrived, I saw Cleo was standing at the back gate. Logan was standing several feet away from the back door to my house.
Zadie was standing in the opened door, holding Chief tight to her throat.
“I found him—” she started.
She didn’t get it all out. I flew to her and tried (but failed) to keep my shit together as I pulled Chief out of her hold and into mine.