Last House With Too Many Cats
There was a house at the end of the street where the curtains were always half-drawn and the porch sagged slightly toward the earth, as if it were listening for something beneath the soil. Everyone knew it as the last house with too many cats. Twenty. Thirty. No one had ever counted. The cats appeared in windows, on porch rails, beneath azalea bushes, and sometimes on the roof itself, sitting in a row like small judges considering the affairs of mankind. Children slowed their bicycles when they passed. Adults smiled and shook their heads. The house belonged to an old woman named Margaret, who had long ago stopped explaining where the cats came from. The truth was that she had not gone looking for them. They arrived the way lonely things often do. One appeared after her husband died. Another came during a winter storm. A third followed her home from the grocery store as though it had been invited. Years passed. Friends moved away or passed on. Neighbors changed. Storefronts changed. Eve...