<SPAN name="chap08" id="chap08"></SPAN>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/dkchap08.jpg" width-obs="570" height-obs="159" alt="Dixie rolling on her back with her paws in the air" /></div>
<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="smcap">A Happy Little Cat</span></h2></div>
<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was a great pity that Dixie could not
have heard and understood the little talk
between Lady and Mistress before Lady
went to the new house. “Master says you
shall have her if you like,” said Mistress.
“But I know that he values her,” replied
Lady, “and if she will only go back to the
barn and be happy, I won’t take her. Suppose
I leave her a few days and see if she
won’t be friendly with the other cats and
live with them comfortably. If she really
won’t, then I will come for her.” If Dixie
had known of this talk, she would not
have been so hurt and angry; but she supposed
Lady had abandoned her, and she
was miserable. She did not forget, but
grew more and more angry as the days
passed. Lady came to see her again. Dixie
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>55]</SPAN></span>
was so glad that she could not help purring
for a minute; then she remembered
Lady’s unkindness, and she walked away
up the path. She sat down with her back
to Lady and looked over her shoulder at
her reproachfully.</p>
<p>Lady meant to come for Dixie on the
following day, but she was called out of
town, and it was three weeks before she
could set off with a rattan extension-case
to get the kitten. When she came to the
gate of the lawn, it was almost dark, and
Dixie was roaming about close to the
house, a lonely little shadow. The People
who now lived in the house had been very
good to the kittens. The Heavenly Twins
had gone to live with a kind-hearted
watchman, who wanted them to keep him
from being lonely at night; but the other
two were living with the People in their
old home. “We wanted to be good to
Dixie,” said one of the People in the house,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>56]</SPAN></span>
“and we tried to pet her. Sometimes after
dark, when the children had gone to bed,
she would come in and wander about from
one room to another. If we paid much
attention to her or tried to take her up,
she would run out again; but if we let her
alone, she would sometimes stay half the
evening.”</p>
<p>Buttercup and Topsy were running
about and playing as if nothing had happened,
for kittens have short memories,
and they had quite forgotten Lady. Indeed,
they had almost forgotten Dixie, for when
kittens grow large, they forget their mothers,
and their mothers forget them, too.
People who are mothers always love their
children, no matter how tall they have
grown; but cats cease to care anything
about their kittens as soon as the kittens
are old enough and big enough to take
care of themselves.</p>
<p>Poor little Dixie was roaming about in
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>57]</SPAN></span>
the gloom, alone and miserable, and too
wretched even to run away. Lady put her
hand upon her, and she was grieved to feel
how thin the little cat had grown. Her silky
fur was rough and harsh, and she did not
seem half so large as she had been before.
“You poor little Dixie kitten,” said Lady,
tenderly, “I shall have to frighten you for
a little while, but I think you will be happy
afterwards.” She held the kitten firmly and
put her into the rattan case. Mistress shut
down the cover in a twinkling, and in half
a minute the straps were fastened and Dixie
was a prisoner. Of course she cried, for she
was terribly alarmed; but Lady talked to
her and soothed her, and before they were
in the car she was quiet.</p>
<p>It was not long before the car stopped
at the Road where the new house was. Lady
got out and carried the extension-case to
the door and into the house. A Caller was
there, for Somebody Else had told her that
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>58]</SPAN></span>
Lady had gone to get Dixie, and she had
waited to see how the kitten would behave.
“Though I don’t believe Lady will be able
to catch her,” she had said. “Cats care
nothing for people. They are selfish little
creatures, and all they want is to be comfortable.
Probably this one has forgotten
all about her by this time.”</p>
<p>When Lady came in, the Caller said,
“You’d better open the case in the kitchen.
The cat will probably be as crazy as a loon,
and she may dash about and tear things and
do a great deal of damage.” So the Caller
and Lady and Somebody Else and the case
with the kitten all went to the kitchen;
and Lady began very slowly and gently to
loosen the straps. It was all so quiet in the
case that she wondered whether it could
have been so close that the poor little cat
was half smothered, and she pulled the last
strap off in a great hurry. “You’d better
be careful,” said the Caller, “and not have
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>59]</SPAN></span>
your face too near. You never can trust a
cat, and no one can tell what she will do.
She may spring right at you.” Lady did
not believe Dixie would do any such thing,
and she took the cover off in a twinkling.
Dixie stepped quietly out of the case and
looked around her. She saw Lady and
Somebody Else, and she saw the Mother
standing in the doorway. They talked to
her, and patted her, and told her they were
glad to see her. Dixie forgot the lonely
days at the old house when she thought
Lady had abandoned her. It was all past;
Lady had remembered her and had brought
her home, and now she was going to live
with Lady and be really her own little cat.
Never was a cat so happy before, and she
purred so, she could be heard far into the
dining-room. As Lady bent over her, she
stretched up and tried to rub her face
against Lady’s. She ran about the room
and touched with her keen little nose the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>60]</SPAN></span>
stove hearth, the chairs, the rugs, the table
cover, one familiar thing after another; and
every minute or two she ran back to Lady
to tell her how glad she was to be with her.</p>
<p>“Dixie dear, how miserable you must
have been,” said Lady, with tears in her
eyes.</p>
<p>“I never knew that just a cat could be
either so happy or so unhappy,” said the
Caller, with tears in her eyes, too. As for
Somebody Else, she had long been wiping
her own eyes when she thought no one was
looking; so it was really quite a tearful time.
By and by Dixie discovered in a corner a
little dish heaped full of the canned salmon
that she especially liked, for on the way
home Lady had stopped a minute to go into
a store to buy it to celebrate the homecoming.
Close beside the salmon was a half-open
package that smelled wonderfully
good. Even Dixie’s small black nose would
not go into it, but it was too tempting to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>61]</SPAN></span>
leave, for it was catnip. At length she
pushed in her little paw, curled it up, and
brought out a mouthful, which she held up
and ate just as a boy would eat a piece of
candy.</p>
<p>It was pretty late in the evening by this
time. The Caller went home, and Lady
called Dixie to go to bed. There was a good
soft bed all made ready for her in the cellar.
It was in a barrel of shavings, for cats like to
sleep high up from the floor. Near the barrel
was a saucer of milk, for fear she might
be thirsty in the night. It was all very comfortable,
but I do not believe that Dixie
went to sleep at once. Cats like to know all
about a place that is new to them, and I
have no doubt that she examined every
corner of the cellar before she curled herself
up to rest. I am almost sure, too, that
she purred herself to sleep, and that she
had happy dreams all night long.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>62]</SPAN></span></p>
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