My cat moves things with his mind. |
At first, Maxwell was nothing more than a comely kitten, a black and white bundle of imp and purr pouring over anything and everything, as cats are want to do. A meow, a trill, a whisker in my face, a tail brushing my cheek, and in fact a feline face so close to my face it might as well have been behind. Ah, Phenomenon enough, I dare say, generating joy and giggles, an elation, a warm feeling in the mid-section of life. Yet things began to move on their own: a pen would roll off the table, newspapers would leaf manic-like as if in November wind, canisters beneath the kitchen cupboards would slide precariously close to the edge, but never did they fall. Even computer mice bolted across the carpet. I looked at Maxwell and noticed a glimmer in his eyes, plus a grin as if he enjoyed my amazement, my disharmony, my awe and my annoyance. He sure did. “Maxwell!” I would demand, my hands on hips, but he, in feline glee, swished his tail and winked an eye (of this I am sure), then moved a lamp, and a knickknack or two, or the latest issue of Time Magazine from the Lazy Boy to the love seat. My new Pet. It’s almost like he knows, somehow, of when John Travolta, in Phenomenon, was struck by by that light from on high and developed telekinesis, and scared the crap out of all the townsfolk. But Maxwell does not scare me. He is phenomenon, all right, yet I can’t get enough. 35 Lines Writer’s Cramp 2-6-16 |