BeSwitched, Paranormal Romance (7 page)

Read BeSwitched, Paranormal Romance Online

Authors: Molly Snow

Tags: #Teen & Young Adult, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Children's eBooks, #Growing Up & Facts of Life, #Friendship; Social Skills & School Life, #Girls & Women, #Science Fiction; Fantasy & Scary Stories, #Fantasy & Magic, #Paranormal & Urban

Chapter 9

Pussface had been watching people around the neighborhood for a couple of hours. He saw ordinary situations: men mowing their shaggy lawns, people riding bicycles together in unattractive Speedos, and others gardening.

“I haven’t seen anything unusual so far,” he muttered while passing lovely one-story homes. One had a blooming rose bush and children’s toys in the yard. The
toys were being played with by a little girl with blond pigtails.

“A kitty!” he heard her say. She skipp
ed over to Pussface in her pink-striped dress. He let her pet him a minute with her chubby fingers. “Good kitty-kitty.”

“Okay, I must be going now. I have business to take care of,” the cat said, but before he could walk away, she picked him up, u
nsteadily. Half of his body dragged on the ground. The girl looked like she was of an age of believing in imaginary friends, so a talking cat didn’t surprise her at all.

“Kitty
-kitty, come play with me.” She smiled while rubbing her head on his.

“What have I gotten myself into?” Pussface sighed as t
hey entered the house.

“Shhh,” she whispered and brought him into her bedroom. She dropped him, then closed the door quietly. “My mommy doesn’t like kitties. She-she says they make hew sneeze.” Like most young children, she couldn’t pronounce her Rs.

“Maybe I should go then.” He knew if Idis saw he was wasting time playing, she would be very angry.

“No. Just for an itty bit of time. Stay and play.” The girl pulled a plastic child’s table to the center of the room. She then scooted two little chairs to it. “We awe vewy phosisticated ladies.” She went to her closet after placing Pussface on a chair.

“Can’t I play a sophisticated
man
instead?”

“No!” she demanded and grabbed herself a big hat with a red ribbon
on it. She then took a doll off the bed and began to undress it.

“What are you doing?” he asked
, fearing his assumption.

“Like I said, we awe phosisticated ladies.”

“How old are you?”

“Thwee.” She held up four fingers.

“Okay.” Just then he felt her stuffing the doll’s dress over his head. “Agh! I think that’s the arm-hole,” he choked.

“Oops.” She giggled, then put it on right, Velcroing the back together. “That looks lovely, Emily.” She raised the pitch of her voice in an attempt to sound like a proper woman.

“Thanks.” He looked down to the flowered pattern and puffy shoulders. “But the name is Pussface. My witch calls me Pusface, but it’s Pussface.”

“Okay, Emily.” She sat across from him and smiled. “We awe having a tea pawty. We awe pwincesses.”

“How absolutely splendid,” he mimicked a woman’s voice from England.

The little girl giggled and pretended to take a sip of tea out of thin air. Her pinky finger was sticking straight out.

Pussface began to follow her motion with a paw. “Where’s my pinky?! Oh dear heavens, my pinky is missing!” he joked.

“Silly Emily. Isn’t it a beautiful day out?” She took another imaginary sip.

“Yes, a beautiful day to play cricket. And a beautiful day to find Surla.”

“What?”

“Hey.” Pussface’s orange eyes opened wide. “Maybe you can help me.”

“Help you do what, Emily?”

“Have you seen another black cat around lately? Maybe you’ve had a tea party with another talking cat?”

“Nope. Just you.” Her hand pet the top of his head.

“I look ridiculous in this outfit and it feels tight. I think it might be cutting off some circulation.” One of his back legs was feeling a bit numb.

“You’re not playing wight.” Her bottom lip pouted.

“I’m sorry, but I really must be on my way now.”

“Okay.” She picked him up, still not steadily.

“I can walk you know. In fact, I can walk and talk at the same time.” He hoped she would drop him but she didn’t until he was brought to the porch. “I still haven’t figured out how to talk and chew gum though. Maneuvering words around not only my snaggletooth but also gum is—”

“Bye, bye, kitty.” She waved.

“Wait, can you take off this silly dress first?”

“It’s a gift to you from me.” A kiss was blown, then the door shut.

 

Pussface’s
back legs dragged along Idis’s wooden floors. The tight dress made half of his body numb. “I need this terrible contraption to be taken off me as soon as possible, otherwise I’ll have to go to the vet and have my legs fixed,” he grumbled, while sliding into the living room to where the witch sat on her green velvet couch, as usual.

“What’s this?” Idis stood in surprise. “Like I said earlier, you aren’t taking this job seriously.” She glared at the homely cat. “What have you been doing?”

Pussface dragged himself closer to her. “Please, just take it off.”

“Hee hee he
.” She laughed at the sight. “You are literally a drag queen. Get it? Not only are you wearing a dress, which isn’t your color by the way, you have to drag yourself around. Hee hee he.”

“It’s cutting off my circulation. Please!” he begged.

After finally getting it off, the use of his legs slowly came back and Idis became more serious. “Tomorrow you will go through the other half of the neighborhood you didn’t get to yet.” She sat back down on the couch and pulled a boot off, exposing a gnarly toe poking out through her red sock. “Then there will be no failing in finding Surla. She couldn’t have gone far. I need my magic. I am tired of doing everything the hard way.” She yanked and yanked at her other boot until finally getting it free. That revealed an even bigger gnarly toe sticking through her socks. “If you fail,
Pusface
, you won’t know what hit you!” She threw the boot down hard on the floor for emphasis.

 

“I know. It’s the perfect plan,” Pussface heard while balancing on a tree branch, high enough to see the back of a blond girl, talking on the phone through a second story window. “She has changed so much. You would think someone took over her body.”

“Someone else taking over her body?” the scroungy cat repeated to himself. “This could be a good clue.”

“Yes, she’ll get what she deserves.” The girl laid back on her bed. “Trying to make me look bad. I know. What a tramp. I bet she thinks every guy in school likes her.” She paused. “Well, all the guys do like me.” There was another pause, then laughter. “This should teach her to not be so catty.”

Catty?
Pussface listened. His orange eyes glowed through the window.
Who is this girl she’s speaking of?
He was more than curious to know; he needed to know.

“I’m wondering about Chrissy
, though,” she continued. “You can tell she feels sorry for the nerd. I don’t think I should tell her. It will just be you, me, and Lisa that will know… Yeah, she’ll probably blab to Cathy.”

Cathy! I bet that’s the girl’s name
. Pussface got excited and shifted his weight when suddenly the tree branch was breaking under him.

“Oh no!” he blurted
and hugged the branch with all four legs. Right then it snapped, sending him into the bushes. He laid flat on his back, still holding the branch tight and spitting out a leaf.

“Who’s there?” the girl’s voice called.

Pussface used his last feeling of energy to bolt down the street. He turned, seeing half of the girl’s body leaning out the window, the phone still to her ear.

Chapter
10

Surla was clipping the points off of her fake nails in Cathy’s bedroom. She decided they were getting in her way. It just wasn’t the same having them as a human. Cathy was reading a paperback book on her bed. Her front paws held the pages down. She was on the most suspenseful part of the story.

The sound of the doorknob turning startled them.
Cathy’s mom caught just a glimpse of the book before Cathy shoved it off the bed. She shook her head, like she imagined it, then said, “Cathy, I’m going to walk to the grocery store. Would you like to come?”

Surla turned to Cathy to see no response. “Um, actually, I think I should clean up my room.”

Cat food cans and soda cans were sprawled around the small bedroom. “Okay, I think that’s a good idea.”

“Okay
, bye.”

“Bye, honey.” The door shut and Cathy dropped to the floor to finish the last page to the chapter she was reading.

 

This is the perfect place to watch people
, Pussface thought as he sat on a bench to the bus stop outside of Revere Park. He was still searching for any suspicious actions which would lead to finding Surla.

Pretty soon a man with an obvious toupee, carrying a briefcase, sat down next to the cat. He was one of the first people Idis had handed the missing cat fliers to. His eyes glanced to Pussface, then turned once more
, staring with interest.

“Hey there,” the man spoke. “Are you lost? What are you doing here? Hoping to get
home this way? First you need some money, little guy. I don’t think pets are allowed on board.”

Pussface pondered a moment on how funny it would be if he actually decided to respond.
Yeah, maybe if you hide me in your jacket the bus driver won’t notice… or I’m just waiting here to pick up some girls, ones with long sexy whiskers and a fluffy tail that will have me running in circles around her all day… or maybe even if I just said ‘hi’ to the guy he would go crazy; then maybe that carcass, he thinks is hair, will come back to life and will run away
. But Pussface decided to be a nice kitty and not behave that way.

A long blue and white bus came and took the man away to his home, but before he left he stated, “If I had the time, I would take you home right now, but I have a job to go to.”

Pussface continued to watch passersby. One with ragged clothes and scraggly hair stopped in front of him. The guy was obviously drunk by his behavior. “H-hey, I know you.”

Whatever you say
. Pussface didn’t take the man seriously.

“Yeah, I-I know you. You’re all over the park. Go on home. Be glad you have a home.” With those words, the man hopped the stone wall into the park, which in a way was the strange man’s home.

More people passing by looked at Pussface with curiosity.
Haven’t they ever seen a black cat before?

Soon a lady holding a grocery bag spotted Pussface also, but she walked over to him, and with a sudden grasp, he was held in her free arm.

Oh no, not again. I don’t have time to play another tea party. I’m busy trying to find Surla
, the cat muttered in his head.

“Surla? Is that your name?” she said. On
e of Pussface’s ears turned, alert. He wondered how this woman knew that name.

“I guess you are Surla, by the way you responded.” She started walking again. “Your owner has been looking for you. The park is packed with your picture.”

Pussface looked around, seeing the fliers posted on trees and poles.
If only I was taller, I would have noticed
.

“How about I take you to your home?” She smiled brightly. “But first I’ll feed and clean you.”

A bath!
He imagined himself in the sudsy bubbles.
I hate baths!

Surla and Cathy heard the front door open and a ruffling of a bag being set down in the kitchen. “Cathy, you’ll never guess what I found!” her mother called.

“Probably not,” Surla said while coming down the hall to meet her.

“Have you seen those fliers about a missing cat?”

“Yeah.” Fear swelled up in her body.

What she found was not what she expected, but was as equally horrifying. Surla silently gasped.
What is he doing here? Idis must have something to do with this!

Pussface was cradled in Julie
’s arms. “I just saw fliers everywhere on my way to the grocery store. I bet its owner will be happy that I found her cat. It looks like the streets were brutal to the poor fella.”

He always looks that bad
, Surla wanted to say.

“What’s wrong, Cathy?”

“I think you should take it back home to its owner right now,” Surla said almost rudely.

“That’s not what you said about Licorice.”

“Well, this cat looks like it could have fleas. You don’t want Licorice to catch them, do you?” Her eyebrows went up in exclamation.

Pussface looked down at his unhealthy fur. Surla was afraid that her homely cousin would see Cathy if he stayed long. That would definitely reveal her identity for Idis.

“That’s why I’m going to give him a flea bath first, then feed him.”

“Well you should do it fast before fleas start getting all over the house.”

“I agree.” She started walking down the hallway toward the bathroom.

Surla ran ahead, entered her room and shut
the door before the enemy cat could
catch a glimpse of her cat body. Cathy was sitting on the windowsill.

“Cathy,” Surla whispered.

She turned around and saw the seriousness in her blue eyes. “What’s the matter?” Cathy whispered back.

“Idis is very close to finding us. My cousin is with your mom in the bathroom getting a flea bath.” Surla talked faster. “If he sees me, or ‘you’ I should say, then I don’t know what will happen, but it will be bad.”

“What should we do? Should I hide somewhere?” Cathy’s fur stood up on her back.

“Yeah, that’s a good idea. They’ll be leaving to take Pussface back home to Idis soon
, because she thinks he is me. For now you can hide in…” She looked over the almost bare, neat room.

“How about the closet?” Cathy said.

“All right.” Surla slid open a door and Cathy walked in positioning herself behind a stack of shoe boxes. “Don’t make any noise.”

Pussface had a feeling he was on the right track. He was in the home of a girl named Cathy, whose name he remembered being said the other day by a girl talking on the phone. That girl had mentioned how much Cathy had changed. Also, Cathy was acting very strange when he just saw her.

Cathy’s mom was stretching some yellow gloves over her hands. She poured in the flea bath and ran warm water. This was the moment Pussface would have to endure. He liked his fleas. They were a part of him. In a way, he enjoyed scratching and feeling dirty. In a moment, that freedom would be gone. In fact, he hadn’t had a bath in such a long time, he forgot how it felt.

“Okay, Surla. Come on.” He was lifted off the toilet. Pussface wriggled around, fighting the hold, but stopped suddenly, knowing from experience, it was not worth the fight. Humans are much stronger than cats. He would just have to face his fear: cleanliness.

“Gosh, with the name Surla, you would think you were a girl, wouldn’t you?” She scrubbed his fur around his neck. Muck, dirt, and dandruff was turning the water brown. It felt as if he had lost some weight.
I am actually feeling better
, he thought.

“You are really dirty.” She refilled the sink. “You aren’t anything like the cat we found a while ago, except for the black fur.” She had just let the cat out of the bag, figuratively speaking. Now Pussface was almost positive Surla was living in the house.

She probably was in that girl Cathy’s body
. His fur was the shiniest he had ever seen it. The nice lady began to dry him off with a towel.
If only there was a way I could stay here longer so I could see the cat this lady told me about. Then I would know without a doubt
.

 

“Where are my keys?” Cathy’s mom frantically looked all over the kitchen. What she didn’t know was that Pussface had dragged them onto the floor into the living room, to have more time to finish thinking over his strategy of staying longer.

He sat on the coffee table near the keys. His orange ey
es stared at the flier of Surla in thought
. Aha!
He came to a solution. Grabbing the pen that sat next to it with both paws, he attempted to get the cap off. Finally after chewing it to bits, it came loose. Slowly, he changed the address on the paper from 713 Shadyside Street to 718.

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