There are times when a plan comes together a little too well, and my search for cats fell in that category.

We have a hobby farm that includes a barn. And mice. Lots and lots of mice. Herds of mice. Pastures of mice.

You think I exaggerate? 

Well, I went in search of some nice cats for the barn. They didn’t need to be sweet lap cats. In fact, barn cats a little on the wild side make great mousers.

So when I saw the poster, I thought I had struck gold. 

Free cats. On the wild side. The photos on the poster were of three lovely orange and gray cats. Cute cats and I was okay with a little on the wild side.

My son and I were running errands when I found this treasure. With just a little searching, we found the girl with the cats. “Do you still have them?” I asked.

Raised eyebrows, wide eyes, and an open mouth should have clued me in. “Do you want them?” She was breathless.

I was still so impressed with the ease of finding free mousers that I just said, “Yes.”

“Great! I’ll tell my dad.” She scampered away, and I turned to my son.

“I’ll finish up here, and you go with them. We can put the cats in the car and go home.”

He followed the girl, and I finished my work. When I walked into the parking lot toward our car, I spotted my son at the edge of a small group

Why was there a small group gathered around a large cardboard box? 

The girl’s father was at the center, snugging the last piece of shipping tape over the flaps on the top of the box. A bystander said, “If they can’t get air in there, they might die.”

The father stepped back from the tap-dancing box and brushed his hands together. “That wouldn’t be the end of the world.”

My son turned to me. “He had welding gloves on when he put the cats in the box.”  Welding gloves are long leather armor against sparks leaping from a welder. Apparently, they are required for cats a little on the wild side. 

I think the gloves should be in my lighting-the-grill repertoire, but I digress.

I didn’t want to think about why the dad needed welding gloves.

By now, I was near enough to hear scratching inside the box. A lot of scratching. The sort of demonic scratching that threatens to claw through trees and steel walls.

“A little wild?” I said.

My son shrugged. He likes cats, and he hoisted the box into the back of the car. “It’ll be okay.” 

I watched the box rattling with cat rebellion and muted yowls.

“What if they get through the cardboard?”

“I guess we open the doors and bail out ’til they escape.”

That was comforting.

The family that advertised the cats had disappeared like Frodo after he slipped on the ring. Poof. I would have, too.

And so we drove home. No sounds until we got to our barn. Some things can’t be explained.

We laid the box on its side in the middle of the barn, so the top faced away from us. We were about to unleash hungry lions. Cheetahs with teeth. Slashing claws and steel teeth. We were fools but not that bad.

I peeled off the tape while my son stood guard. Behind me. He was less a fool than I was. 

I had donned my own leather gloves and goggles like I was going into a snake pit.   Longing for a helmet – or a proxy –  I lifted the flap.

Orange and black exploded before us. A wild yowl rattled the walls, and we saw a cloud of fur and teeth. The cats burst out of the box, across the floor and, in a millisecond, out the open back door.

“I vote we call them Blur and Streak,” my son said.

“I vote we call them gone.”

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