Ever since we moved into the new house, the cat has acted like an explorer in a kingdom full of locked doors. Every forbidden room is a treasure cave to him, every closet a secret passage. He prowls the halls like a furry outlaw, crying at doors as though they’re keeping him from his destiny.
Upstairs, we have four closets, and he treats them like the crown jewels—especially the linen closet and the master closet. When he begs, I usually play gatekeeper and let him through—except when Dad is near. Dad thunders, “DON’T LET THE CAT IN THE LINEN CLOSET!” like a royal decree. I shout back, “But it’s perfect for him! Blankets! Pillows! A throne fit for a king!”
The master closet, though, is his private ballroom. He refuses to enter without me, his reluctant dance partner. It’s annoying, but one look at that innocent, whiskered face and I’m doomed. So, I follow him in, close the door, and let the magic begin. He parades among the hanging clothes, brushing against them like he’s trying on costumes, a model in a one-cat fashion show.
He also thirsts for bathtub water like it’s nectar of the gods, begs to enter my room, and plots nightly raids, toppling whatever dares to stand. He dreams of the art and sewing room, but that chamber is armed with deadly traps—needles and plastic. A true villain’s lair.
When he hides under my bed, we counterattack with orange perfume, our secret weapon. But he’s clever, far too clever. I once built a thousand-piece puzzle fortress, raised high on a table like a castle on a hill. He stormed the battlements and toppled it with ease. Another time I constructed an epic box fort, and he tore it down brick by cardboard brick. No creation survives his siege.
This cat isn’t just a pet—he’s a trickster spirit in fur, a mischievous king laying claim to every corner of our new world.
