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A Cat in Black. With a Plan & an Etsy.

Saturday, May 2, 2015

Henry & the Cat


Henry & the Cat

Part One



The cat had startled Henry. Startled him quite a bit.

Young Henry was used to seeing cats while at his morning work. Cats were nothing unusual for a St. Pancras sweep-boy, especially when working such early morning hours. What startled Henry, was not that it was a cat. It was the cat itself, that startled young Henry. The cat was large, the biggest Henry had ever seen outside of a cage in the zoo. The feline’s coat flared with orange and white as the long soft strands stood out and upright as if rippling with static electricity. The beast almost appeared to glow with its own phosphorescence, though Henry was unsure if that was an effect from the animal itself or the splendid collar that around the cat’s neck. It was more a necklace of jewels rather than a badge of ownership. A tube of fine brass with filigree windows cut exactingly into the metal.  Inside this tube were brilliant white gemstones that fired with a dazzling blue opalescence.
The massive, regally adorned cat stared at Henry with eyes the vibrant yellow of copal amber. This stare paralyzed the young street sweeper, and even the morning fog seemed to stop swirling for just a moment. As if it too were afraid to move while under the judgmental gaze of this remarkable feline. Henry suddenly became aware of the silence upon the street as well, for he could hear none of the typical morning murmurs that were the discordant harmony of a city waking up to greet the day. Time felt frozen and Henry’s breath came slow, damp with the fog but yet his heart beat fierce, loud, and rapid in his chest as he returned the cat’s gaze.
This unspoken contest of the stare seemed to linger for an indeterminable moment until the same thing instantly distracted both Henry and the cat. It was a soft noise that thundered in the silence surrounding them, a whir and click that reminded young Henry of the sounds of a wind up toy or a music box.  The sounds came from a small silvery object, which resembled a tortoise except that what would be the shell was open and upside down. It was as if it were a small, automated soup bowl, ambling out of the shadow and fog with steady clicking steps. The cat regarded the object as coolly and impassively as it did Henry, and Henry got the distinct impression the feline was annoyed with both himself and the mechanical tortoise bowl. The cat stared for a brief moment at the wind up oddity, and then looked back over its tail, uttering a surprisingly soft yet sharp meow into the shadows of the street beyond. It was only then that Henry began to breathe normally again, the ferocious pounding of his heart having somehow subsided without his noticing. Even the fog appeared to deem it safe to swirl again like gossamer smoke in the early morning air.
The moment of the unusual was broken, and yet it lingered. This was most evidenced by Henry’s return to being the subject of the cat’s stony regard. While he was almost certain he could move if he wanted to. Run fast away, back to St. Pancras Workhouse, he wasn’t entirely certain he indeed desired to. In part he was fascinated by the whole unusual moment while it was unfolding, and he certainly didn’t want to run back with work unfinished, because of a cat. No matter how daunting the feline, he would never hear the end of it. Mr. Merrick and the other boys would razz him till he was the joke of all Somers Town no doubt. Fueling his resolve with a deep breath, which emboldened the heart, young Henry decided that no matter what he would not be afraid. He would finish his morning sweeping in time for porridge with the other boys at the workhouse. With firm resolve he stiffened his spine straight, taking up his broom and fixed his attention back to preparing the streets of his little part of London, so that it might great the day with a clean and inviting face.
And that is when the man stepped from the very same shadows which the cat had called into with its soft meow. Like a ghost he seemed to issue forth from a shaft of dark shade too small to have hidden his presence. It was if he simply stepped into reality, summoned by the sharp cry of the large feline. Once again Henry’s heart thundered for unknown reasons, and the mist seemed reluctant to churn in the morning air as a static stillness swept over the moment.
And then that moment was gone, just like before, and the cacophony of the morning washed over them, returning them to the river of sound.
            “Ah, Mr. Malice, there you are.” The stranger said in a voice that was soft and comforting. Not at all what Henry might have expected. At first the young street sweeper thought it had been him the man had been addressing, before he realized it was the cat. The enormous feline responded with a soft series of sounds that seemed to combine a deep purr with a singsong little chirping sound. It struck Henry as inquisitive in tone.   “Yes sir, I think we do indeed have all the samples we require. We will be underway soon,” the man replied to the query, giving the enormous feline’s head a friendly ruffle and scritch to the ear. “In the mean time, won’t you introduce me to your friend?” And with those words both the man and the cat turned their attention directly upon young Henry.
            Suddenly the terrified and bewildered young street cleaner felt all his anxiety wash away from him much in the way a wave recedes from a shoreline, and emboldened by this his voice found the ability to speak aloud. Without a moment of hesitation young Henry introduced himself, and proudly noted the workhouse where he was both employed and sheltered. He stuck out his hand to the stranger. Not only because he wanted to earnestly shake the hand of the unusual fellow, as a way of reassuring himself that the moment was one of tactile reality, but also as a friendly way of helping the gentleman to his feet from where he had knelt down to pet Mr. Malice and examine the clockwork bowl.
            And then the wave returned, crashing down upon them. However this time it was not a wave of fear or anxiety, it was a wave of trust and words. Before he even realized, Henry’s life story began to pour from him. He didn’t know why, but he felt compelled to inform this man he had just met of every important moment of his young life. He found himself weaving a picture of words which once confessed seemed to lighten his young shoulders and brighten his eyes. Without knowing why, he was completely certain he wanted to tell this stranger everything. To entrust him with his life’s story.
            And so the tale flowed forth, and Henry could not remember later when or if he even paused for breath as he rapid fired the words in a young man’s manner. He told of his earliest memories, of his father who had been a poor musician. How his strongest memories of the man were the way that he would sing Henry to sleep at night and the day he had to sell the pearl buttons of his suit so that he could pay rent. How, when his father died a tired and broken man, he returned to the workhouse where he had been born and made his home there with the other boys.
He spoke of the challenges and chest puffing that boys living together in such circumstances creates. When he related this he found he laughed, seeing ridiculousness in the endless bullying power struggles, which had always made him bitterly frustrated before. Something else that surprised young Henry was the pride he felt when he spoke of his work. It was true that a sweeper’s life was not an easy one, but it was a good one when compared to many and he was grateful for that.
            As he spoke, it felt like time became quite fluid and mercurial, passing both slowly and swiftly at different moments. When he had finally finished relating all of the things he felt it was important to tell; he discovered that not only had Mr. Malice and the clockwork bowl left their company, but he had completed his whole round of sweeping while he related his story. It even seemed to Henry, that he had done a particularly fine job this morning, as the street seemed to shine when the fog lifted and the first golden rays of morning warmed the bricks and pavers. It made him smile, and he placed his thumb inside his work apron as he gave it an idiosyncratic caress, running his thumb along the secret button he had sewn on its interior. His smile brightened just a bit more.
            That smile faded however, as Henry suddenly realized that while he had finished his work a bit early if he did not hurry back to the workhouse now he might miss porridge, and then have to wait till sundown’s supper to eat. That meant bidding the fascinating stranger farewell. The stranger nodded somberly, his smile also fading for a moment as he tipped his hat to Henry and finally spoke again.
            “Henry Croft, It has been a great honor to have met you and hear your tale.” He said, adding a respectful nod of his head to Henry, “I am Mr. Cat, and I collect tales. I find yours to be one that strikes me as quite fine. Despite the dark and difficult moments, I hear in your telling a young man who’s heart reflects the brightness of the world around him. I admire that, and encourage it. You carry at your breast a heart that can change the world.” And as he spoke he arched an eyebrow so that for a moment it rose from behind the shelter of his dark glasses with an ornery humor, and the smile returned.
             "Walk your world with strength and confidence." Mr. Cat said to young Henry. "Remember too that one should walk with respect. You trod upon a world built of your relations, from stardust to this very second. This second is yours, to take and create. Shape it well."
            And then he was gone. It was as if he simply vanished in the morning crowd that now populated the streets.  Henry hurried back to the workhouse so that he would not miss breakfast. He could not explain it, but the encounter with Mr. Cat had invigorated him, fired his imagination.
            As he settled onto the stool with his porridge, he gave his moment of grace and thanks with a renewed spirit. He ate his breakfast with a measured manner, hoping to set a good example for the younger boys who scarfed at their meals with a ferocious swiftness. When he finished his meal he returned the bowl and spoon to their proper place before stepping out back to the alley where the other boys gathered.
             Young Henry stepped into the small patch of sunbeam, which broke through the maze of Somers Town streets and glanced once again at the secret sewn inside his work apron. A tiny pearl button, the one his father wouldn’t sell.  Henry’s smile returned bold and bright as he planned his future.