<SPAN name="chap04" id="chap04"></SPAN>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/dkchap04.jpg" width-obs="570" height-obs="214" alt="Dixie peeps around an open door" /></div>
<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="smcap">Dixie and the Cottage</span></h2></div>
<p><span class="smcap">Lady</span> was always kind to Dixie when they
were under the trees together, but she had
a way of going into the house and closing
the door which the kitten thought was
rather unfriendly. Some weeks passed;
then, as Lady turned to close the door one
morning, she saw a round black face with
two shining yellow eyes pushing in shyly.
“I don’t know about this, kitty,” said
Lady; but Somebody Else said, “Oh, let
her come in just a minute”; and Lady held
the door ajar. The kitten crept in, but very
timidly, for she had not forgotten that
when she had run into a house before, she
had been sent out at once. She did not
venture very far, but she did put her little
feet on a soft rug, and in a room beyond
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>23]</SPAN></span>
she saw cushions and a sofa that she
thought would be a most delightful place
for a kitten to lie down and have a nap.
She took only one look, then she ran back
to the door and slipped out, for she did
not know what might happen if she stayed
longer.</p>
<p>Every day the kitten became a little less
timid, though she was still easily startled
by anything that was new to her. All cats
like to be rubbed gently under the chin;
but when Lady first rubbed her there,
right over her dainty bit of white fur that
looked so like lace, the kitten drew her
head away and looked back over her shoulder
at Lady’s hand as if it was something
she had never seen before and she did not
know what strange things it might do. It
was not long, however, before she learned
that nothing Lady did would ever hurt
her. She had now grown brave enough
to follow Lady about under the trees and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>24]</SPAN></span>
among the grapevines and roses and syringas;
and when Lady stooped to pick
a spray of forget-me-nots, she was very
likely to feel a smooth black furry head
pushed under her hand, for the wild
little kitten who had made up her mind
never to go near People was fast learning
that to have a good friend among them
was the best thing in all a cat’s little
world.</p>
<p>Before long Lady said to the kitten,
“Little cat, you really must have a name.
Some dear friends of mine once had a
pretty cat whose name was Dixie, and I am
going to call you Dixie. Do you like it?”
The kitten made no answer, for a fly was
creeping slowly up the gate-post, and she
was getting ready to jump for it; but it
was only a short time before she knew
her name as well as anybody. The other
kittens would come if any one called
“Kitty, Kitty,” but this one paid no
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>25]</SPAN></span>
attention to any calling unless she heard
some one say “Dixie.”</p>
<p>So it was that Dixie found a friend and
a name. Mothercat had watched this new
friendship, and she did not seem to disapprove
of it; but she never allowed Lady to
come near herself. People had never been
unkind to her, but still she was afraid of
them. Lady always believed that if she
had lived longer, she would have become
friendly; but about this time Mothercat
got a bone in her throat and could not get
it out. Master and Mistress both tried their
best to help her; but she was so wild and
frightened that she would not let them do
much for her, and before long Mothercat
was dead.</p>
<p>All this time Mothercat and Dixie had
been going to the barn for their food, and
as the weather grew colder, they were
finally obliged to go there to sleep. The
stranger cats had taken the best places, of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>26]</SPAN></span>
course, but they made warm nests for themselves
and were not uncomfortable. After
Mothercat died, Dixie hated to go to the
barn. The stranger cats looked upon it
as their home, and treated Dixie as if she
were the stranger and had no right to
come there. Sometimes they growled at
her, and although she was a stout-hearted
little fighter and was not one bit afraid of
them, it was not at all pleasant to have to
eat and sleep with cats who did not want
her. She began to do some more thinking
in her wise little head. She did not like
the barn, and she did like Lady’s cottage.
There were no other kittens in the cottage,
and there was plenty of room; but would
Lady let her come? She had followed
Lady about the lawn, they had sat on the
piazza together, and once or twice she
had jumped into Lady’s lap. Lady had
always seemed glad to see her, but had
never invited her into the house.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>27]</SPAN></span>
Nevertheless, Dixie meant to see what could be
done.</p>
<p>The result of all this thinking was that
one day, when there was a remarkably
good smell coming from Lady’s kitchen,
a little black nose was stretched up to the
partly open door and a little red mouth
was opened wide. Dixie seldom mewed,
but when other cats would have mewed,
she only opened her mouth appealingly.
“Well, isn’t that cunning!” cried Somebody
Else. “Dixie has come to dinner.”
“Don’t feed her,” said Lady; “she belongs
to Master and Mistress. She must
understand that she can come to visit, but
that the barn is her home.” Lady was
called away just then. If she had not been,
I am afraid that before long she would
have done just what Somebody Else did,
that is, cut off a nice bit of lamb and put it
into the tiny red mouth.</p>
<p>So it went on day after day. At first
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>28]</SPAN></span>
Lady said firmly, “Somebody Else, you
must not feed that cat.” After a while she
said, “I am afraid it will make trouble if
you keep feeding the kitten.” Then she
said, “Somebody Else, we really ought
not to feed Dixie”; and before long she
came to the kitchen after every meal to
make sure that there was a saucer of something
good set down on the floor. At
length matters actually came to the point
where she said one day, “Somebody Else,
we’ll have those oysters fried instead of
scalloped; Dixie likes them much better
fried.”</p>
<p>Dixie was now a happy little cat. She
perched herself on the piazza railing and
ran up the apple trees and played with the
beetles and grasshoppers as much as ever
she chose. When she wanted to come into
the house, she jumped up on the sill of
the piazza window, and there was always
some one ready to let her in. When she
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>29]</SPAN></span>
ate her dinner, no other cat was there to
growl at her, for was she not the one and
only kitten of the house?</p>
<p>Of course the stranger cats had noticed
what was going on, and sometimes they
tried to come in and get a taste of the good
things that smelled so tempting; but this
Dixie would never permit. She did not
growl or spit, but if any other kitten dared
to take bite or sup from her dish, then a
resolute black paw shot out quick as an
arrow and struck the intruder with a hard
little cuff that sent her scampering out of
the door. Once or twice some one of the
stranger cats slipped in first and emptied
the saucer. Then Dixie was so angry that
she dashed out of doors like a little black
whirlwind, ran up the path toward the gate,
and sat down with her back to the house.
She swished her tail angrily and occasionally
looked back over her shoulder
reproachfully at Lady and Somebody Else,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>30]</SPAN></span>
who had permitted such cruel things to
happen.</p>
<p>Room after room, Dixie went over the
house. She examined every foot of the
cellar, for she hoped to find a mouse or
two there. Early one morning she ventured
upstairs for the first time. It was
all new and strange and quiet, and Lady
was nowhere to be seen. Dixie gave a faint
timid mew, which meant, “I am lonesome
and frightened. Lady, where are you?”
Lady called, “Come, Dixie,” and Dixie
sprang upon the great bed, the happiest
little cat in the city. When Mistress came
in, she often saw her kitten lying on the
sofa or in Lady’s lap, or running about from
one room to another, and she said, “You
know she is only a barn cat, and she has
never been taught how to behave. She
may break things or get into the food.”
But Dixie had pretty clear notions in her
small head of how kittens should act, and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>31]</SPAN></span>
she was a charming little visitor. Of course
she made a few mistakes. One day Somebody
Else found her on a shelf in the
pantry having a fine time with a dish of
corn. Dixie glanced at her with a look
that seemed to say, “Of course this is
all right, isn’t it?” and went on eating.
Somebody Else set her down on the floor,
saying, “No, Dixie, you must not touch
that”; and Dixie understood that, no matter
how tempting food might look, she
must not touch it unless it was given to
her. She learned her lesson so well that
never again did she meddle with anything
eatable, not even when she was shut into
the storeroom by mistake one day and left
there for half an hour. Here were corn and
fish and milk, all on low shelves in plain
view, and it was dinner-time; but not one
mouthful did she take. When People sat
down to the table, Dixie curled herself up
on a cushion as if this business of eating
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>32]</SPAN></span>
was a matter with which she had nothing
to do. Just once she broke through her
rule of good behavior. There were guests
at the table. They were busy talking, and
it must have seemed a long, long time for
a hungry kitten to wait for her supper.
One of the guests had just said, “How
well your cat behaves at meal-times,” and
Lady was replying, “Yes, she never pays
the least attention to us when we are eating,”
when, behold, an impatient little cat
made one bound to the sideboard and prepared
for another to the table. This, however,
was the only time that she ever did
such a thing; and there are not many
People who have not made at least one
mistake.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>33]</SPAN></span></p>
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