Sunday, March 22, 2009

Nine

by Jamie Eyberg

Kiki shuffled through a horde of felines to the front door and knocked, twice, before someone answered.

A couple of cats and an old man answered, not so old that he was decrepit, but old enough to be her father. “Can I help you,” he offered.

“My car broke down. Can I use your phone please?” Several cats rubbed against her legs and mewed softly.

“I’m sorry, honey,” the old man offered. “I don’t have a phone. No one calls and I don’t call anyone. Seemed a waste to pay for it every month.”

“Oh.” She gently kicked at the brood at her feet. She felt her allergies coming on already and she had left her medicine in the car’s glove box. “Could I get a drink of water then, and I’ll get out of your hair.”

The old man patted the bald spot on top of his head. “Don’t worry about that honey.” He smiled and Kiki couldn’t help but feign a smile back. “Come on in. We’d love the company.” He took her gently by the arm and took a step back in the door.

Kiki held back but walked into the small house. The cats followed her in and the old man closed the door behind them. Her nose started to itch but she put her finger under and stifled the sneeze that she knew would probably come anyway.

“Would you like a cookie,” the old man said. He shuffled through the cats, which moved like a living carpet around his feet, on his way to the tiny galley kitchen.

“Oh, no thank you.”

“They are store-bought but very tasty,” he said. He took a plate of crème filled cookies from the counter and held them in front of her. Wisps of fur lay scattered on the tops of the chocolate wafers as he picked one up and took a bite from it. He chewed noisily as he offered the plate to her.

“No, thank you,” Kiki said and held her hand in front of her.

“I just love these things,” he said and took another one before he put the plate back on the counter. “Let me get you your water.”

He took a glass from the sink and blew on it. Black fur went airborne and moist chocolate wafer bits landed on the surface. He wiped it clean on the tail of his shirt.

Kiki took a step back. “That’s okay,” she said. “I’m not really that thirsty.” She started to back out of the kitchen. The cats crowded around her feet. They rubbed their bodies across her legs and jumped on chairs in front of her to get a touch of her hands as she passed by them. “How far is it to the nearest town?”

“Funny question.”

Kiki didn’t think that it was that odd a question at all and certainly not entertaining. “I just want to get my car fixed.”

“What for?”

“So I can get home.”

“You are.”

She grasped for the screen door. “No. This is not home.”

“It should be,” the old man offered. He drew closer as Kiki fumbled with the handle on the screen door.

“Come on,” she cried out, rattling the door on the hinges. The cats seemed to pull at her feet and drag her further from the door. She grasped the handle but all she could hold on to was the air between her fingers.

“Why would you want to leave. I have more cookies if you would like some.”

“I don’t want your cookies. I don’t like cats. I just want to go home.”

The old man put a withered hand on her shoulder. He looked at her with pale unblinking eyes. “I would really hate for anything to happen to you on your way out. It would be a shame. I mean, you only have one life. You could have nine.”

__________



Jamie Eyberg is a full-time father and a part-time writer, although in the past he has been a preschool teacher, a pool hall manager and a carpenter. You can keep up with him at his blog, http://acontinuityofparks.blogspot.com/. He'd love to have you stop by for a visit and maybe have a cookie.

16 comments:

Cate Gardner said...

Eek! Well if she will go into a strangers house. Good stuff, Jamie.

Jodi Lee (Morrighan) said...

Crazy cat people! ;)

Rachel Green said...

Excellent piece! very creepy.

Michael Stone said...

Never trust someone with more than two cats. Hang on, my mum's got three... No more cookies for me, Mum, thank you all the same!

PS. Hope you don't think I'm being snooty, but the editor in me is compelled to point out it should be a shirt tail, not tale. Quite appropriate really, considering. :)

Aaron Polson said...

Michael - the editor in me (the editor) was napping last week. (I won't make a cat-napping pun...)

Thanks for the head's up!

Jameson T. Caine said...

I loved how subtle the creepy factor was for me, just below the surface of the action. The description of the numerous cats, always nearby as she interacts with the old man. Of course, IMO cats are inherently creepy, especially in large numbers.

Jamie Eyberg said...

thank you for the kind comments.

Michael- I have 11 cats, although we didn't ask for any of them and I can't believe I didn't catch that either.

L.R. Bonehill said...

Nice one, Jamie - in a creepy kind of way obviously.

BT said...

Very cool, buddy.

Nice tension, wonderful creepyness, and just the right amount of disgusting.

And I like cats!

Bobbie Metevier said...

EEK! He blew crumbs onto her cup that was already littered with cat hair.

Awesome!

Fox Lee said...

Aww, I knew there was a reason I liked cats : )

Anonymous said...

Awesome. I'm allergic to cats too, so this one REALLY got under my skin. Well done!

Katey said...

Haha that made me extremely happy, as a cat person myself! (I only have one, but I think you've just given me an idea...)

Great fun!

Felicity Dowker said...

Heh. Nice work, Jamie. The thought of a house full of cats (and fur covered biscuits) is horror enough for me...

Jamie Eyberg said...

Thank you, everyone, for the kind words. I look forward to reading what comes tomorrow.

Inkpot said...

What a nice old man and what lovely cats. I don't know what Kiki was worried about. A few hairy biscuits never harmed anyone. :)