CHAPTER 1 – A Cold Morning in the Barn
Tiny
Ginger was very hungry. She was always hungry. Her bigger brothers and sisters
pushed ahead whenever Mommy said it was time to eat. So Ginger never got enough.
Ginger was always very cold, too. Because she was so small, she always got
pushed to the edge of the pile when her brothers and sisters curled up together
to keep warm.
Ginger
lived in the barn with her Mommy and her brothers and sisters in a box filled
with straw. Ginger and her Mommy, and her brothers and sisters, were barn cats.
She was the tiny baby in the family. Her mommy called her “Ginger” was because
her fur was yellow with brown highlights.
Today, she
was too cold and hungry to try to sleep at the edge of the group, and she
couldn’t push her way into the center. So Ginger decided that she would go see
if there was milk somewhere else. She peered around the door of the box.
Everything she saw was bigger than she was.
She saw
Tony the horse, and Sally the cow. They were so big! She was smaller
than Tony’s foot. She was smaller than Sally’s foot. She saw piles of hay, a
bucket, and a pitchfork. She didn’t see anything she could eat. She shivered
because she was a little afraid of all those big things. But then she
remembered how hungry she was.
Ginger slowly stepped out of the box.
Ginger was
ready to run back into the box at the slightest noise. She was only three weeks
old, and everything scared her. But she had to find more to eat. So Ginger slowly
crept away from the box. As she got farther and farther away, she began to
notice that it was very cold – even colder than in her box. She started to
shiver again. She looked back at the box. It seemed very far away. What if she
got lost? Maybe she should go back. But she knew there was nothing to eat
there. And Ginger was very hungry.
Ginger
went over to Tony the horse. “Meow,” she said. “Tony, I’m so hungry. Meow.
What can I do?”
Tony
lowered his head and looked at Ginger out of one eye. “Neigh-gh-gh,” he said. “You may have some of my hay.” He pushed
some hay toward Ginger with his nose.
Ginger bit
into a dried, brown grass stem. But it was hard and dry, and it had no taste.
And the sharp hard piece she bit off hurt her mouth when she tried to chew it.
Ginger knew she could never swallow it. “Meow,” she said. “Thank you, Tony, but I can’t eat this.”
Ginger
left Tony and went over to Sally the cow. “Meow,” she said. “Sally, I’m so
hungry. Meow. What can I do?”
Sally
lowered her head and looked at Ginger out of one eye. “Moo-o-o,” she said. “You can have some of my feed.” She
pushed some out of her feed box and down to Ginger with her nose.
Ginger
picked up some of the dry flaky feed with her tongue, and tried to chew it. But
it was dry and it had no taste either. Ginger knew she could never swallow it,
and so she tried to spit it out. But it stuck to her tongue, and she had to
clean it off with her front paws. “Meow,” she said. “Thank you, Sally, but I can’t eat this.”
Sadly, she
turned away. Maybe there would be food somewhere else. She looked around,
wondering if she should just go back to the box. But as she looked around the
barn, Ginger saw light coming through a space in the wall. She went over to the
space and looked out. A cold wind blew through the hole, and it made Ginger
shiver even harder. But it smelled very different from the barn. Maybe the new
smell was food.
The space
was very small, hardly big enough for her head to go through… but it did, and
Ginger’s whole body followed. Cats are like that, you know. A cat’s whole body
can go through anything its head can.
There was
a very narrow ledge outside the wall, and as Ginger forced herself through the
space, she slipped off the ledge and fell.
The fall
was very short, and before she could even be afraid, Ginger landed all sprawled
out in something soft, and fluffy, and white – and very, very cold. It covered
all of her, even her head.
Ginger
scrambled to her feet and stretched her head up as far as she could. She shook
her head and sneezed. The white stuff flew everywhere, and Ginger could see.
But everywhere she looked, Ginger saw only white. And it was falling through
the air!
The white
stuff fell in big soft flakes that tickled her nose and then melted. She licked
her nose and looked around again. There! Right behind her was the barn wall!
Everywhere else there was only white stuff – in the air and on the ground. And
it was cold! So very cold!
CHAPTER 2 – The Farm Lady
Ginger was
very frightened now. She forgot how hungry she was. She wanted to be back in
the box with the bed of straw with her Mommy and her brothers and her sisters.
Maybe Mommy would have more milk. Even if she didn’t, Ginger would at least be
warmer than she was out here in the white stuff.
Ginger
tried to climb back up to the hole through the barn wall. But the stone ledge
below the wall was too tall, and her claws wouldn’t dig in. She couldn’t climb
up.
“Meow! Mommy! Meow! Help!” Ginger cried. She called over and over. “Meow! I’m cold! Meow! Help me, Mommy!”
Suddenly,
she heard Mommy’s answer from inside the barn. “M-r-r-reow! Where are you?” Mommy called.
“Meow-ow-ow!
I’m here!” Ginger called back. “Meow!
I’m cold!”
Mommy
looked out through the hole. “Meow. I see
you,” she called to Ginger. “Meow. Meow. Don’t move. I’ll come for you.”
Soon Mommy
was there. “Meow. Follow me,” she
said. Mommy began walking away from Ginger through the snow. Ginger tried, but
she couldn’t keep up. The snow was too deep, even where Mommy walked.
“Meow! Mommy!” she called. “Meow! I can’t keep up!”
Mommy came
back. “Meow. Meow. I’ll have to carry
you,” she said. She reached past Ginger’s head, and took the skin at the
back of Ginger’s neck in her mouth. Mommy was very gentle, and it didn’t hurt
at all when she picked Ginger up. Turning back, she trotted around the barn to
the door in the front, Ginger swinging below her chin. The door had been closed
when Ginger had gone through the hole in the barn wall, but now it stood open a
few inches.
As Mommy
carried Ginger inside, a voice said, “What’s this?” Ginger didn’t understand
the words, but she looked up when Mommy stopped. Ginger saw her first human
lady. The lady was big, but not as big as Tony the horse or Sally the cow. The
lady had long yellow hair, and was all covered in pretty colors. She bent down
and picked up Mommy and Ginger. She cradled them in her arms with one hand
under Ginger.
“Maggie,”
she said to Mommy, “where have you been with this little one? You’re all
covered with snow.”
“Meow!” “Mommy, I’m scared!” Ginger cried.
“Mr-r-row.
Meow. “This is the human lady who feeds
me,” Mommy said, letting go of the skin of Ginger’s neck. “Meow. She won’t hurt us.”
Ginger
settled into the person’s hand. She hardly filled it. “Meow. Meow. Would the human lady feed me?
Meor-r-row. I’m so hungry!”
Ginger said.
“Maggie,”
the lady said, “this little one is so tiny,
and I can feel her ribs.” She lifted Ginger up to her face. “Such a tiny baby,”
she said. She touched Ginger’s fur to her face, “and so soft.”
The lady
bent down and placed Ginger’s Mommy gently on the barn floor, but she still
held Ginger when she stood up. “Maggie,” she said, “I’m going to take this
little one into the house with me. She’s wet. She’s cold. And she’s hungry.”
“Mrowr-r-r,”
Mommy said, winding around the lady’s ankles, “I think she’s going to feed you, Ginger.”
“It’s OK,
Maggie,” the lady said, completely misunderstanding Mommy, “I’m not going to
hurt her. She’ll be fine.”
Ginger
found herself tucked inside the coat of the lady. Only her nose poked out above
the zipper. Ginger was still hungry, but she wasn’t cold any more. In fact, she
was suddenly almost too warm. She wriggled around until she was comfortable,
and she began to purr. The sound startled her. Ginger had never purred before.
Ginger
peeked out of the front of the lady’s coat. They were moving toward the door of
the barn. When the lady opened the barn door a blast of cold air and snow blew
the fur on Ginger’s face back flat against her skull, and almost froze her
nose. Ginger sneezed and ducked back behind the coat where it was warm and the
wind couldn’t get at her.
Ginger
heard the barn door close and latch. Then she felt a rocking motion as the lady
carried her. She almost went to sleep, but when she heard another door open and
close, she just had to look out again. Ginger was ready to sneeze again, but
when she poked her head out of the front of the lady’s coat, there was no more
snow. And it wasn’t cold anymore.
CHAPTER 3 – Ginger in the House
The lady
reached inside her coat and lifted Ginger out. Holding Ginger up in front of
her face, the lady smiled. “My,” she said, “but you are little, aren’t you? And
you’re so-o-o skinny. We’ll have to feed you.” The lady carried Ginger over to
a big white box and opened the door. Ginger squirmed in the cold air coming
from the box. The lady took something out and closed the door.
“All
right,” the lady said, “we need a pan,” and she bent down and pulled open a
drawer, and took out a pan. “And,” she said “we need a little bowl,” and she
opened another door and took out a bowl. She sat the pan and the bowl on a
counter, and picked up the thing she had gotten from the white box. From it she
poured a white liquid into the pan. It smelled a little like milk, but Ginger
wasn’t sure. She sure hoped so, though!
The lady
sat the pan down and carried Ginger over to it. Ginger watched as the lady put
her finger into the pan. The lady took her finger back out, and touched it to
her tongue. She smiled down at Ginger. “Not quite yet,” she said.
She stood
there, holding Ginger, for a little time, and then put her finger into the pan
again. “Ah-h-h,” she said, “just right, I think.” And she picked up the pan and
poured the liquid into the little bowl. This time, Ginger was sure. It was
milk! “Meow,” she said, in a very small, hopeful voice. “May I have some?” Ginger was always polite.
The lady
sat her down by the little bowl. Ginger looked into the bowl. The smell of warm
milk was wonderful. But Ginger had no idea how to get it from the bowl into her
tummy. She just looked at it, and then at the lady.
“Oh my,”
said the lady, “you don’t know how to drink from a bowl do you? Well, we’ll
just have to teach you.” With that, she dipped her finger into the bowl and
touched it to Ginger’s mouth.
Ginger
licked her mouth. It was milk! She looked up at the lady. “Meow,” she said. “May I have some more?”
The lady
put her finger back into the bowl, but this time she did not quite touch
Ginger’s mouth. Ginger reached out and sniffed the lady’s finger. Then she
licked it. Her stomach made a small noise. The lady laughed and brought more
milk out on her finger, but Ginger had to stretch farther to lick it off. After
a few times, the lady barely brought her finger to the surface of the milk.
Ginger found herself with her face almost in the milk. As she tried to lick the
lady’s finger, it disappeared under the milk!
Ginger
chased the lady’s finger into the milk. Milk went up her nose, and onto her
whiskers. Ginger yanked her head back and sneezed. Then she licked around her
mouth. There was a lot of milk. She
looked back into the bowl. The lady’s finger was still there, just above the
surface of the milk.
Ginger
stretched toward the finger, but more carefully. She touched the lady’s finger
with her tongue.
It disappeared under the milk again. But this time, only
Ginger’s tongue followed it into the milk. When she pulled her tongue back, it
was full of milk. Ginger sat by the
bowl for a minute, thinking about what had just happened. Then she put her head
down, and slo-o-o-wly put her tongue
into the milk. It happened again! Her tongue came back into her mouth full of
milk! She tried it again.
Wonderful!
Every time she put her tongue into the milk, it came back into her mouth full
of milk. She lapped faster. There was all the milk here she could possibly
want!
But then,
an awful thing began to happen. There was lots of milk left, but she couldn’t
put any more in her tummy. She looked sorrowfully at the bowl. She tried to
drink more, but she just couldn’t. But she had been so hungry. She had to
eat!
Suddenly,
Ginger realized that she wasn’t hungry any more. In fact, she was so full her
tummy hurt a little. She stopped worrying about the milk and began washing her
face. She was purring again. She decided she liked it.
“Well,”
said the lady, “looks like you’ve had enough to keep you a while. I think we’d
better take you back home before your mommy begins to worry too much.” She
picked up Ginger and tucked her back into her coat.
Ginger was
feeling much better, so when she peeked out of the coat again, she kept her
face outside the coat, even when they went outside. She was warm, and the snow
tickled her nose. She sneezed again, but she wasn’t afraid anymore, so she
didn’t hide again.
When the
lady took her out of the coat and put her down beside the box, she could hear
her brothers and sisters inside. She licked the lady’s finger one last time and
went inside.
CHAPTER 4 – Back to the Barn
Mommy was
feeding her brothers and sisters. Ginger wasn’t hungry, so she curled up and
went to sleep. When she woke up later, she found herself at the edge of the
pile again, but with her tummy full, she wasn’t so cold, and so she didn’t mind
so much.
The next
day, while she and one of her sisters were playing with a piece of the straw
they slept in, the top of their box was lifted up. Ginger was hungry again,
because her bigger brothers had pushed her away from Mommy while they were all
eating. The cold air came in and made Ginger shiver. She looked up, and she saw
the lady who had given her milk yesterday. “Meow,” Ginger said. “I’m hungry.”
The lady didn’t
understand Ginger, of course, but she reached in and picked Ginger up. “How
would you like some more milk?” she asked. “I’ll bet you’re hungry again.” She
tucked Ginger into her coat again. “You’re still awfully skinny,” she said.
“We’ll have to do something about that.”
Back in
the house, the lady put a saucer down in front of Ginger again. This time,
Ginger knew what to do. Reaching her head daintily toward the milk, she lapped
rapidly. Soon, she wasn’t hungry anymore. She couldn’t put another drop in her
round little tummy. She began to wash her face again.
“Well,”
laughed the lady, looking at Ginger’s tummy, “you look like you ate a tennis
ball.” She picked up Ginger again. “Time to go home,” she said, tucking Ginger
back into her coat.
They went back
to the barn. Ginger went into the box, but everybody was asleep. Ginger curled
up against one of her brothers, and went to sleep, too. When she woke up later,
everybody was moving around the box. Ginger felt crowded, so she went out into
the barn.
“Meow.” “Hello, Tony,” she said to Tony the
horse.
“Neigh-gh-gh.”
“Hello, Ginger,” he said. “Are you hungry? You can have some more of my
hay.”
“Meow.” “No thank you,” she said. “I’m not hungry right now.” She looked
around, shivering. It was very cold
outside her box. Sally the cow was lying down in her bed of straw. Tony was
standing up. White steam blew from his nose. “Aren’t you cold?” she asked them.
“Moo…No,” said Sally the cow, “I’m lying in this warm bed of straw.”
“Mr-row… Why don’t you lie down in your straw bed?”
she asked Tony the horse.
“Neigh… Horses don’t lie down,” said Tony. “We always stand up.”
“Even when you sleep?” Ginger asked.
“Even when we sleep,” Tony said. “It’s just the way we are.”
“But aren’t you cold?” Ginger asked.
“Not really,” Tony said. “I kind of like
it. It makes me feel awake and strong.”
“Oh,” said Ginger. She really didn’t know
what else to say. Finally, she said, “Meo-ow… Well, I’m cold. I think I’ll go back in our box.”
“Whicker… Good-bye,” said Tony.
“Moo-o… Good-bye,” said Sally.
Ginger
looked back at her door. “Mer-row… Good-bye,”
she said, “I’ll see you tomorrow.”
She went into her box.
Ginger was
unhappy, but she wasn’t sure why. The barn seemed cold and cheerless. She
burrowed into the straw and went to sleep.
The next
day, Ginger waited outside her box for the lady to come. It was very cold, and
Ginger was shivering very hard. But she wanted to make sure she was ready when
the lady got there. She was looking forward to cuddling up inside the lady’s
coat for the trip into the place where the lady kept that nice, warm milk. But
this time the lady didn’t pick Ginger up. Instead she sat the little bowl of
milk down in front of Ginger.
At first,
Ginger didn’t understand. She looked up at the lady and waited to be picked up.
But the wonderful smell of the warm milk was too much. Ginger bent her head to
the bowl and began to lap the milk. Every few laps, she looked up at the lady,
but the lady just watched her eat. Finally, Ginger was full.
The lady
reached down for the bowl, and Ginger rubbed her face against the lady’s hand.
“No, dear,” the lady said, “you’re a barn cat. I can’t keep bringing you
inside, or you’ll never learn to be happy living in the barn and hunting mice.”
Ginger, of
course, did not understand people talk. She just looked up, waiting for the
lady to pick her up. But the lady didn’t. “See you tomorrow, dear,” she said,
and she turned and carried the bowl away.
Ginger sat
by where the bowl had been, cold and miserable. Didn’t the lady like her any
more? She watched the barn door close behind the lady. After awhile, she turned
to go back into the box.
CHAPTER 5 – The Stranger
“Neigh. Ginger,” called Tony softly.
“Meowr. Yes, Tony?” Ginger answered, turning
to face him.
“Neigh.
Whicker. Don’t be sad, Ginger,” Tony
Said. “We all have to live here in the
barn. Whinny. It’s where we’re
supposed to be.”
“Meow.
Mrowr. But it’s so cold and dark here,”
Ginger said. “Meow. Mrowrer. And where she took me was so warm. And it
was bright, too. I could see everything. Mrow. Good-bye Tony.” Ginger
turned again, and went into the box.
Ginger
played every day with her brothers and sisters. It was warmer some days, and
some days were cold, but while they were playing it didn’t seem so bad. As time
went on, there were more and more cold days. It was sort of dark, too. But
there were shafts of light from cracks in the wall, and from a small window. It
was fun to bat a piece of straw into the air in the light, and see how long she
could keep it there.
Days
passed, then weeks, although Ginger didn’t know about weeks. Ginger became
resigned to living in the barn. She wasn’t really happy, but she wasn’t really
sad either. She still played with her brothers and sisters, although she
couldn’t always keep up with them, and they could climb higher than she could,
so she was often alone. Tony and Sally tried to cheer her up when she was
alone. Tony offered her some of his hay almost every day. Then he would whinny
with laughter when she politely turned it down. Tony thought he was very funny.
And that’s
the way it was. Every day the lady brought milk for Ginger. And as her brothers
and sisters began to come out of the box, the lady brought two bowls of milk.
One, she kept for Ginger. She would sometimes pet Ginger softly while Ginger
drank, and once in awhile she picked Ginger up when Ginger was done. She never
let the bigger, stronger kittens steal Ginger’s food. Sometimes she even picked
Ginger up, but she never took Ginger back in the house, until….
Ginger was
about two months old. She had even started eating some of the meaty food the
lady brought for Mommy. One day the lady came as she always did, and she picked
Ginger up when she was done eating, as she sometimes did. “Oh-h, you’re still so tiny,” she said. It was true – Ginger was barely half as big as her
smallest sister. “You can’t be a barn cat; you’re way too little,” the lady said. “But I think I have just the place
for you.”
This time,
instead of putting Ginger back down the lady tucked her into her coat, just as
she had done so many, many days ago.
Ginger was
too excited to keep her head inside the coat. She poked her head out above the
top button. As before, snow swirled around them, landing on her nose, tickling
it and making her sneeze. Ginger purred contentedly all the way to the house,
pausing only long enough to sneeze three times. But she didn’t care! The lady
was taking here to the wonderful place she remembered!
Inside the
house, there were a hundred different smells – all of them wonderful! And the
lights! There were bright little lights everywhere! Hundreds of them! This was
so different from what Ginger remembered. The lady put Ginger on the counter
while she took off her coat. Ginger looked around. The place she remembered had
been bright, but quiet; and the smells had been soft to her sensitive nose.
Now, there were sounds and lights everywhere, and too many smells to sort out.
Before she
could even begin, the lady scooped her up again. They went through another
door, and Ginger saw even more light. There was a tree full of lights at one
side of the room, with a pile of packages under it. Ginger didn’t understand at
all. There was another lady there, too. Ginger’s lady walked over to the other
lady, and held Ginger out to her. “What do you think?” she asked.
The other
lady held out her hands, and took Ginger carefully into them. She held Ginger
up to her cheek. “So-o-o tiny,” she said, “and so soft! She’ll do wonderfully!” Ginger found herself tucked into the
front of another coat. This time, she was a little frightened, so she stayed
inside the coat.
CHAPTER 6 – Christmas Kitten
Ginger
heard the door close, the sound muffled by the coat, then more sounds, and
another door closed. After even more sounds, Ginger felt like she was moving.
She stayed hidden in the coat, afraid to look out. It was warm, and she could
feel the lady’s heartbeat. Soon she began to purr softly. It didn’t seem she
was going back to the barn.
When the
movement stopped, Ginger felt the lady stand up. She peeked out, but it was
still snowing, and she could see nothing. Besides, it was getting dark. She
ducked back into the coat. Soon, she heard another door close, and the lady
carefully unbuttoned the coat and took Ginger out. She held Ginger up to her
face again. “So soft,” she said, “so tiny, and so pretty. Yes, you’ll do just
fine.” With that she put Ginger into a small box lined with soft cloths, and
with slits cut into it for air and light. She closed the box, and Ginger
watched through a slit as she walked away and closed the door behind her.
Ginger was
a little frightened, but the box was warm and the cloths were so-o-o soft. Soon
she curled up and slept. Later, she woke to the sounds of paper rustling and
people talking. She peeked out of the box. Two people were sitting in front of
her, wrapping boxes in pretty, brightly colored paper and ribbons. The ribbons
looked like they would be fun to play with.
“Meow.
Meow. May I come out?” Ginger asked politely.
The lady
lifted the top of the box and lifted Ginger out. “We’ll have to keep her
quiet,” she said with a little laugh. “You’ll have to play with her.”
The other
person reached for Ginger and placed her on the floor. He pulled a short piece
of ribbon across in front of her. Ginger pounced! She caught the end of the
ribbon, and rolled over and over, biting it. The people laughed. After awhile,
the lady left the room. She came back with a small bowl of milk, and put it in
Ginger’s box. Lifting Ginger gently, she placed her in the box, saying, “You’ll
have to stay in here, or we’ll never get done.” With that she closed the lid.
Ginger
drank the milk. Then she fell asleep again. Cats sleep very lightly, and Ginger
heard them leave the room and return several times, but she was too warm and
full to investigate. Eventually the lights went out, and Ginger fell into a
deeper sleep. But she awoke when the lights came back on.
The top of
the box went up, and the lady lifted Ginger from the box. “Come on, little
one,” she said, “I think you’d better sleep with me.” She lifted Ginger to a
soft warm surface, and lay down beside her. Ginger cuddled against the lady,
curled into a ball, put her tail over her nose, and promptly went back to
sleep. She didn’t know where she was, but she was warm and full, and the people
were kind. She could worry about it tomorrow. At least she hadn’t been taken
back to the cold, dark barn. Ginger slept.
She was so
comfortable that she almost didn’t wake up when the big hands picked her up in
the morning. The person carried her down the stairs, into a brightly lighted
room. There was another tree full of lights and sparkles, and it too had a
mound of bright packages under it. But they went past the tree and into another
room. Ginger was lifted, and carefully slipped into a tube hanging on the wall.
The tube held her firmly but softly, but she was able to hold her head above
the edge and look around the room.
“Come
down!” called the person who had put her in the tube. “It’s Christmas! Come on
down!”
There was
laughter, and rapid thudding, followed by two smaller persons appearing in the
room, along with the lady and the other person. Suddenly, inches from her face,
appeared the face of one of them. “A kitten,” she squealed! “Oh, how neat! A
kitten in my stocking! What a wonderful Christmas present!” She reached into
the stocking and carefully lifted Ginger out. “She’s so tiny,” she said, “and such a pretty color. I think I’ll call her
Ginger.” She held Ginger against her cheek. “She’s so soft,” she said. Then,
“And listen, she’s purring!”
Ginger
batted softly at a strand of hair falling on the little girl’s cheek. The
little girl laughed. “This,” she declared, “is the best Christmas I’ve ever
had!”
“Well,”
said the lady, “let me tell you a story.” And she told the little girl Ginger’s
story – this story, just as I’ve told it to you.
“…and so,
you see,” the lady finished, “you got a kitten for Christmas, and that’s
wonderful, but Ginger got a whole family for Christmas, and a warm house to
live in. Who do you think had the
better Christmas?”
THE END
Awww. That was the best Christmas kitty story I've ever read, Chuck. <3 <3 <3.
ReplyDeletegreat story. Reminded me of Mr. White, the cat who gave himself to us. Just walked into the house and decided to live with us. Your stories seem to do that to me every time.
ReplyDelete