Today's RWISA author spotlight belongs to Amy Reece. I have not had the chance to read one of Amy's books yet, but her book covers are amazing! Here is a short story by Amy. Enjoy! :-)
CRAZY CAT LADY
by Amy Reece
CAT
SITTER NEEDED
$50 CASH—One Night ONLY
Apply in Person
653 Silverwood Ln Apt B
Rita
looked from the folded newspaper to the small adobe duplex in front of her. Well, here goes. My chances of getting
murdered or sold into a sex trafficking ring are pretty good, but I need the
fifty bucks. Need might be overstating it, but she wanted to go to the
concert and she didn’t have the money for the tickets. Her meager paycheck from
her work-study job didn’t stretch much farther than covering the bare
essentials. If she wanted any fun money, she had to find other ways to acquire
it. She’d done it all: research studies, selling her plasma, modeling for art
studio classes. Answering a jinky ad in the college newspaper was nothing. She
had left a note in her dorm room telling her slumbering roommate where she was,
so at the very least maybe they’d be able to recover her body. She shook off
the dark thoughts and approached the house.
A
tall, thin elderly woman answered the door. “Yes? How can I help you?”
Rita
held up the ad. “I’m here about the cat sitting job.”
“Oh,
my dear, yes. Well, come in.” She opened the screen door and stood back to
allow Rita to enter.
The
living room smelled musty but looked tidy, with sagging, old-fashioned
furniture covered with bright, hand-crocheted afghans and doilies. Several cats
raised their heads from where they snoozed on the cushions, then lowered them
disinterestedly. A tray with a flowered china teapot and matching cups was set
on the coffee table.
“Have
a seat and I’ll pour you a cup of nice hot tea. It’s so chilly out this
evening, isn’t it?”
Rita
sat and accepted the cup of steaming tea while she frowned at the woman. “Were
you expecting someone else?”
“Oh,
no,” the woman said breezily. “I was expecting you.” She smiled as she sipped
her tea. “Or someone like you. I put the ad in the paper and I knew someone
would be along presently.” More cats of every color had wandered into the room.
There had to be nearly fifteen cats winding their way around her feet, perching
on the back of her chair, and leaping into her lap.
“Oh.”
Rita nodded dumbly and fumbled with the handle of the delicate cup, spilling
tea into the saucer. “So, when exactly do
you need the cat sitter?”
“Well,
tonight, of course. I need to go visit my sister in Santa Fe. I’ll be back soon
after breakfast tomorrow. Now, let me show you where I keep their food.” She
reached forward to set her cup on the table.
“But,
but,” sputtered Rita, “don’t you want to know about me? About my
qualifications?”
The
woman laughed lightly. “It’s only feeding a few cats, dear. It’s not rocket
science. Come along.” She stood, shooing the cats from her lap, and led the way
into the kitchen. “The dishes are here.” She pointed to a row of small ceramic
bowls lining a dish drain. “And the food is in this cabinet. They like to eat
around nine and then you can wash up.”
“Okay.”
Rita nodded and counted the bowls. There were only six. “Do they take turns eating?
Should I refill the bowls after the first group eats?”
“I
think you’ll find one round is more than enough. Most of these are ghost cats,
of course. Poor dears.”
Rita
stared at her blankly. “Ghost cats?”
“Yes.
They seem to be drawn to me. They just can’t move on quite yet. They’re not
like dogs, you know.”
Rita
didn’t know. In fact, the only thing she was sure of was that this woman was
obviously insane. Ghost cats? What the
hell? But fifty bucks was fifty bucks, and if she had to placate a crazy
woman to get it, she was glad to. “Great. No problem.”
“Now,
feel free to help yourself to anything if you get a little peckish.” She led
the way back to the living room, where she picked up a small, old-fashioned
train case Rita hadn’t noticed before. “Be sure to lock up after me. Have a
good night and I’ll see you early tomorrow.”
Rita
stood in the middle of the living room and watched her leave. “Wait! How do I—”
she wrenched the door open to ask her final question, but the woman was gone.
She stepped onto the porch and looked upon and down the street, noticing red
taillights at the stop sign at the far end. She
must have had a cab or an Uber waiting. She shrugged and closed the door,
locking it as instructed. Then she turned to address the room. “Well, cats and
kittens, I guess it’s just us for the rest of the night. At least she keeps
this place clean. With this many of you it could really reek.” She’d eaten an
early dinner at the cafeteria so she wasn’t hungry. The remote was on a side
table, so she grabbed it up and found a cat-free cushion to sit on. The woman
didn’t have cable, but Rita managed to find a rerun of a show she enjoyed and
sat back to while away the hours until feeding time. The cats, for the most
part, minded their own business and left her alone. A few finally crept close
enough to sniff her, but then stalked away. She’d never been much of a cat
person, so she took no offense. Feeding time went off without a hitch and the
woman had been correct: the six bowls were more than enough. Cats came and
nibbled, but none cleaned out their bowls. Many of the cats simply came and
stared at the food without touching it. Weird.
Maybe they are ghost cats.
She
got hungry around midnight, but found nothing but a few stale crackers in the
cabinet. She took them with her to the couch, pulled one of the crocheted
afghans over her legs, and fell asleep watching an infomercial.
The
key in the lock woke her the next morning. She sat, rubbing sleep from her
eyes.
“Good
morning! I’m sorry I woke you. How did everything go last night?” The woman set
her train case by the door as she walked in.
“Um,
fine. Yeah, everything went great.”
“Oh,
good.” She rummaged in her purse for her checkbook and a pen. “Now, I’ll let
you fill in your name. Here you go.” She handed her the check.
Rita
glanced down at it, noting the spindly handwriting, but satisfied that it was
indeed for fifty dollars. Sweet. Easy
money. She sat up and folded the afghan and laid it across the back of the
sofa. “Thanks. Well, have a nice day.” She waved awkwardly as she let herself
out of the apartment. I’ll just swing by
the bank and cash this, then stop to buy the concert tickets on my way home.
“Can
I help you?” The voice came from the house next door. “What are you doing?”
“Huh?”
Rita turned as the woman marched down her front path to confront her.
“Were
you in that apartment? How did you get in? That door is supposed to be locked!
Oh, I’m going to kill my husband! He never checks!”
“Excuse
me?”
“What
were you doing in there?”
“No-nothing!
I mean, I was watching that lady’s cats for her.” She realized she’d never
asked the woman’s name. “She paid me. See?” She held up the check for the other
woman.
The
woman glanced at the check and frowned. “I don’t know what kind of game you’re
playing, but you better get out of here before I call the cops!”
“What
are you talking about? I didn’t do anything wrong! I answered an ad in the
paper to come and watch that lady’s cats for the night. She paid me fifty
dollars. See?” She showed the check to the woman again.
The
woman snatched the check from her hand. “Nobody lives there! The woman with all
the cats died two years ago! We’ve had a heck of a time getting renters to stay
because they swear it’s haunted or some nonsense! Now, if you’re not here about
renting the place then I’m going to ask you to leave. Now. Before I call the
police.” She glanced down at the check, laughed briefly, and handed it back to
Rita.
Rita
took the check and looked at it to see what could have made the woman laugh.
Her eyes widened as she saw it was not a check at all; it was nothing more than
a piece of torn newsprint. It fluttered to the ground as she ran, the woman’s
laughter echoing behind her.
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Hi Yvette! What a creepy story––I love it! Thanks Amy for the great story and Yvette for hosting.
ReplyDeleteI loved it! Lol! I didn't see it coming, and those are the kinds of stories that get me. :-)
DeleteChilling story to make us think. Thank you for hosting Yvette.
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by, Laurie! :-)
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