The Old Woman With No Cat

the cat talking to a cane cross mastiff

Maybe Later (Or Curses for Neighbours)

Part One: The Invasion
The cat sits on the windowsill,
tail rigid,
ears flat,
watching the moving van
disgorge strangers into his territory …
the house that was once his,
before the vowel-less traitors
fled to Bwlchgwyn, Wales,
thinking he wouldn’t find them.

“Fools,” he mutters.
“I am cat.
I am eternal.
I am territory.”

The Old Woman sips her tea.
“They’ve brought a dog, cat.”

He freezes.

Part Two: The Name
The new neighbours emerge:
a woman with kind eyes,
a man with a very large creature on a leash.
A dog.
A big dog.
A Cane Corso — Italian mastiff,
the size of a small pony
with the face of a philosopher
and the shoulders of a bouncer.

The cat’s tail puffs.

“That is not a dog.
That is a building
with a nose.”

The neighbour calls:
“Crymych! Come, boy!”

The cat tries to repeat the name.
His throat seizes.
He coughs. Hacks.
Produces a fur ball.

Elegantly, of course.

“Crymych,” he wheezes.
“It’s like swallowing gravel
with a Welsh accent.
No vowels.
Just consonants and menace
and phlegm.”

Part Three: The Standoff
The dog …Crymych,
ambles to the fence.
Sniffs.
Deeply.
Doggedly.

The cat stares from the windowsill,
every hair on his body vertical.

“He’s smelling me,” the cat whispers.
“Mapping.
Cataloguing my essence.
This is strip-search
with nostrils.”

The dog’s tail wags …slowly,
as if it knows something
the cat doesn’t.

“Don’t you wag at me,” the cat hisses.
“I have claws.
I have history.
I have a lawyer — the crow —
who will sue you
for emotional
and olfactory
distress.”

The dog tilts its head.
Licks the fence.

The cat gags.

Part Four: The Strategy
He turns to the Old Woman.

“We must retaliate.
Subtly.
Passive-aggressively.
Cat-appropriate.”

“And how do you propose we do that?”

“First: I will ignore him.
Aggressively.
Second: You will plant lavender
along the fence.
He will smell pretty
and hate himself.
Third: I will claim the upstairs window
as my observatory.
I will watch him.
Always.
Judging.
Never blinking.”

He pauses.

“And if that fails —
we move.
To Ysbyty Ystwyth.
I will learn to pronounce it.
Or die trying.
Probably the latter.”

To Be Continued … Later … Maybe.


The entire series is available to read here: The Old Woman With No Cat. Some images created with Midjourney; all writing is my own original work.©Misky 2006-2026.

15 responses to “The Old Woman With No Cat”

    1. woof! WOOF! 🤣

      Liked by 1 person

  1. WOW! That cat and that great big doggy – this is going to be… hmm we will find out (we hope).

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Oh, yes! Two more coming, and possibly more from time to time.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Loved the last stanza on pronouncing Welsh names lol

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you, Andrew!

      Like

  3. I love this new adventure! I think I am going to need a pronunciation guide though! heheheh

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks.
      His name is pronounced KRUM-ikh (that same ikh sound like Scottish loch). In Welsh it means one who bends rivers. (laughing)

      Liked by 2 people

  4. The face of a philosopher, the shoulders of a bouncer

    ❤️ I am undone!

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Oh, Misky, thank you for this. I needed this today. And I love this part, “No vowels.
    Just consonants and menace
    and phlegm.” Haha!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Glad that it hit the right spot for you, Pamela. Thank you.

      Like

  6. A fun read, Misky! I laughed at the cat’s outrage over Crymych’s name and his very feline confidence that the entire neighborhood belongs to him. The line about “a building with a nose” was priceless. Your humor, wit, and the cat’s dramatic commentary make this series such a delight to follow.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you for subscribing, and welcome. Glad you enjoyed this series.

      Liked by 1 person

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