One Scarred Stray Cat Faced a Rattlesnake for a Little Boy-lequyen994groupp - Chainityai

One Scarred Stray Cat Faced a Rattlesnake for a Little Boy-lequyen994groupp

The neighborhood association demanded I remove the “dangerous” one-eared stray cat under my porch.

Yesterday, that ragged stray took a deadly rattlesnake bite to save my toddler grandson’s life.

The fine was going to be $100 a day.

That was the number printed in clean black ink on the notice I found in my mailbox on Tuesday morning.

It was also the number the property manager repeated while standing in my driveway, one polished shoe on the concrete, one hand holding a clipboard, and one manicured finger pointed toward my front porch.

The Arizona heat was already climbing off the pavement.

A leaf blower screamed somewhere two houses down.

Across the street, a neighbor’s little white dog barked from behind a picture-perfect patch of grass that probably cost more to maintain than I spent on groceries in a month.

“Arthur, he’s a liability,” the property manager said.

His name was Grant, and he had the kind of calm voice people use when they are about to make your life harder but want to sound reasonable doing it.

“The neighbors are terrified of him,” he said. “Trap him by Friday, or the association starts levying fines.”

I looked past him at the porch.

Under the boards, in the strip of cool shade where the afternoon sun could not reach, I knew Bruiser was probably tucked into the dirt with one eye open.

He always slept like that.

One eye on rest.

One eye on the world.

I asked Grant if there had been a bite, a scratch, anything I needed to know about.

Grant shifted the clipboard against his hip.

“No confirmed injury,” he said. “But several residents have complained.”

That was neighborhood language for people who did not like looking at him.

Bruiser was not a pretty animal.

He was a big gray tomcat with half of his left ear missing, a jagged white scar across his nose, and a thick neck that made him look more like a tired little mountain lion than a house cat.

His fur never lay right.

One shoulder had a permanent hitch in the way he walked.

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