Travels With My Cats by Mike Resnick
I found it in the back of a neighbors garage. They were retiring and moving to Florida, and theyd put most of their stuff up for sale rather than pay to ship it south.
I was eleven years old, and I was looking for a Tarzan book, or maybe one of Clarence Mulfords Hopalong Cassidy epics, or perhaps (if my mother was looking the other way) a forbidden Mickey Spillane novel. I found them, tooand then the real world intruded. They were 50 cents each (and a whole dollar for Kiss Me Deadly), and all I had was a nickel.
So I rummaged some more, and finally found the only book that was in my price range. It was called Travels with My Cats, and the author was Miss Priscilla Wallace. Not Priscilla, but Miss Priscilla. For years I thought Miss was her first name.
I thumbed through it, hoping it at least had some photos of half-naked native girls hidden in its pages. There werent any pictures at all, just words. I wasnt surprised; somehow I had known that an author called Miss wasnt going to plaster naked women all over her book.
I decided that the book itself felt too fancy and feminine for a boy who was trying out for the Little League later in the daythe letters on the cover were somehow raised above the rest of the surface, the endpapers were an elegant satin, the boards were covered with a russet, velvet-like cloth, and it even had a bookmark, which was a satin ribbon attached to the binding. I was about to put it back when it fell open to a page that said that this was Number 121 of a Limited Printing of 200.
That put a whole new light on things. My very own limited edition for a nickelhow could I say No? I brought it to the front of the garage, dutifully paid my nickel, and waited for my mother to finish looking (she always looked, never shoppedshopping implied parting with money, and she and my father were Depression kids who never bought what they could rent cheaper, or, better yet, borrow for free).
That night I was faced with a major decision. I didnt want to read a book called Travels with My Cats by a woman called Miss, but Id spent my last nickel on itwell, the last until my allowance came due again next weekand Id read all my other books so often you could almost see the eyetracks all over them.
So I picked it up without much enthusiasm, and read the first page, and then the nextand suddenly I was transported to Kenya Colony and Siam and the Amazon. Miss Priscilla Wallace had a way of describing things that made me wish I was there, and when I finished a section I felt like Id been there.
There were cities Id never heard of before, cities with exotic names like Maracaibo and Samarkand and Addis Ababa, some with names like Constantinople that I couldnt even find on the map.
Her father had been an explorer, back in the days when there still were explorers. She had taken her first few trips abroad with him, and he had undoubtedly give her a taste for distant lands. (My own father was a typesetter. How I envied her!)
I had half hoped the African section would be filled with rampaging elephants and man-eating lions, and maybe it wasbut that wasnt the way she saw it. Africa may have been red of tooth and claw, but to her it reflected the gold of the morning sun, and the dark, shadowy places were filled with wonder, not terror.
She could find beauty anywhere. She would describe two hundred flower sellers lined up along the Seine on a Sunday morning in Paris, or a single frail blossom in the middle of the Gobi Desert, and somehow you knew that each was as wondrous as she said.
And suddenly I jumped as the alarm clock started buzzing. It was the first time Id ever stayed up for the entire night. I put the book away, got dressed for school, and hurried home after school so that I could finish it.
I must have read it six or seven more times that year. I got to the point where I could almost recite parts of it word-for-word. I was in love with those exotic faraway places, and maybe a little bit in love with the author, too. I even wrote her a fan letter addressed to "Miss Priscilla Wallace, Somewhere," but of course it came back.
Then, in the fall, I discovered Robert A. Heinlein and Louis LAmour, and a friend saw Travels with My Cats and teased me about its fancy cover and the fact that it was written by a woman, so I put it on a shelf and over the years I forgot about it.
I never saw all those wonderful, mysterious places she wrote about. I never did a lot of things. I never made a name for myself. I never got rich and famous. I never married.
By the time I was forty, I was finally ready to admit that nothing unusual or exciting was ever likely to happen to me. Id written half of a novel that I was never going to finish or sell, and Id spent twenty years looking fruitlessly for someone I could love. (That was Step One; Step Twofinding someone who could love mewould probably have been even more difficult, but I never got around to it.)
I was tired of the city, and of rubbing shoulders with people who had latched onto the happiness and success that had somehow eluded me. I was Midwestern born and bred, and eventually I moved to Wisconsins North Woods, where the most exotic cities were small towns like Manitowoc and Minnaqua and Wausaua far cry from Macau and Marrakech and the other glittering capitals of Priscilla Wallaces book.
I worked as a copy editor for one of the local weekly newspapersthe kind where getting the restaurant and real estate ads right was more important than spelling the names in the news stories correctly. It wasnt the most challenging job in the world, but it was pleasant enough, and I wasnt looking for any challenges. Youthful dreams of triumph had gone the way of youthful dreams of love and passion; at this late date, Id settled for tranquility.
I rented a small house out on a little nameless lake, some fifteen miles out of town. It wasnt without its share of charm: it had an old-fashioned veranda, with a porch swing that was almost as old as the house. A pier for the boat I didnt own jutted out into the lake, and there was even a water trough for the original owners horses. There was no air-conditioning, but I didnt really need itand in the winter Id sit by the fire, reading the latest paperback thriller.
It was on a late summers night, with just a bit of a Wisconsin chill in the air, as I sat next to the empty fireplace, reading about a rip-roaring gun-blazing car chase through Berlin or Prague or some other city Ill never see, that I found myself wondering if this was my future: a lonely old man, spending his evenings reading pop fiction by a fireplace, maybe with a blanket over his legs, his only companion a tabby cat. . . .
And for some reasonprobably the notion of the tabbyI remembered Travels with My Cats. Id never owned a cat, but she had; there had been two of them, and theyd gone everywhere with her.
I hadnt thought of the book for years. I didnt even know if I still had it. But for some reason, I felt an urge to pick it up and look through it.
I went to the spare room, where I kept all the stuff I hadnt unpacked yet. There were maybe two dozen boxes of books. I opened the first of them, then the next. I rummaged through Bradburys and Asimovs and Chandlers and Hammetts, dug deep beneath Ludlums and Amblers and a pair of ancient Zane Graysand suddenly there it was, as elegant as ever. My one and only Limited Numbered Edition.
So, for the first time in perhaps thirty years, I opened the book and began reading it. And found myself just as captivated as I had been the first time. It was every bit as wonderful as I remembered. And, as I had done three decades ago, I lost all track of the time and finished it just as the sun was rising.
I didnt get much work done that morning. All I could do was think about those exquisite descriptions and insights into worlds that no longer existedand then I began wondering if Priscilla Wallace herself still existed. Shed probably be a very old lady, but maybe I could update that old fan letter and finally send it.
I stopped by the local library at lunchtime, determined to pick up everything else she had written. There was nothing on the shelves or in their card file. (They were a friendly old-fashioned rural library; computerizing their stock was still decades away.)
I went back to the office and had my computer run a search on her. There were thirty-seven distinct and different Priscilla Wallaces. One was an actress in low-budget movies. One taught at Georgetown University. One was a diplomat stationed in Bratislava. One was a wildly successful breeder of show poodles. One was the youthful mother of a set of sextuplets in South Carolina. One was an inker for a Sunday comic strip.
And then, just when I was sure the computer wouldnt be able to find her, the following came up on my screen:
"Wallace, Priscilla, b. 1892, d. 1926. Author of one book: Travels with My Cats."
1926. So much for fan letters, then or now; shed died decades before Id been born. Even so, I felt a sudden sense of loss, and of resentmentresentment that someone like that had died so young, and that all her unlived years had been taken by people who would never see the beauty that she found everywhere she went.
People like me.
There was also a photo. It looked like a reproduction of an old sepia-toned tintype, and it showed a slender, auburn-haired young woman with large dark eyes that seemed somehow sad to me. Or maybe the sadness was my own, because I knew she would die at thirty-four and all that passion for life would die with her. I printed up a hard copy, put it in my desk drawer, and took it home with me at the end of the day. I dont know why. There were only two sentences on it. Somehow a lifeany lifedeserved more than that. Especially one that could reach out from the grave and touch me and make me feel, at least while I was reading her book, that maybe the world wasnt quite as dull and ordinary as it seemed to me.
That night, after I heated up a frozen dinner, I sat down by the fireplace and picked up Travels with My Cats again, just thumbing through it to read my favorite passages here and there. There was the one about the stately procession of elephants against the backdrop of snow-capped Kilimanjaro, and another about the overpowering perfume of the flowers as she walked through the gardens of Versailles on a May morning. And then, toward the end, there was what had become my favorite of all:
"There is so much yet to see, so much still to do, that on days like this I wish I could live forever. I take comfort in the heartfelt belief that long after I am gone, I will be alive again for as long as someone picks up a copy of this book and reads it."
It was a comforting belief, certainly more immortality than I ever aspired to. Id made no mark, left no sign by which anyone would know Id ever been here. Twenty years after my death, maybe thirty at most, no one would ever know that Id even existed, that a man named Ethan Owensmy name; youve never encountered it before, and you doubtless never will againlived and worked and died here, that he tried to get through each day without doing anyone any harm, and that was the sum total of his accomplishments.
Not like her. Or maybe very much like her. She was no politician, no warrior queen. There were no monuments to her. She wrote a forgotten little travel book and died before she could write another. Shed been gone for more than three-quarters of a century. Who remembered Priscilla Wallace?
I poured myself a beer and began reading again. Somehow, the more she described each exotic city and primal jungle, the less exotic and primal they felt, the more they seemed like an extension of home. As often as I read it, I couldnt figure out how she managed to do that.
I was distracted by a clattering on the veranda. Damned raccoons are getting bolder every night, I thoughtbut then I heard a very distinct meow. My nearest neighbor was a mile away, and that seemed a long way for a cat to wander, but I figured the least I could do was go out and look, and if it had a collar and a tag Id call its owner. And if not, Id shoo it away before it got into the wrong end of a disagreement with the local raccoons.
I opened the door and stepped out onto the veranda. Sure enough, there was a cat there, a small white one with a couple of tan markings on its head and body. I reached down to pick it up, and it backed away a couple of steps.
"Im not going to hurt you," I said gently.
"He knows that," said a feminine voice. "Hes just shy."
I turnedand there she was, sitting on my porch swing. She made a gesture, and the cat walked across the veranda and jumped up onto her lap.
Id seen that face earlier in the day, staring at me in sepia tones. Id studied it for hours, until I knew its every contour.
It was her.
"Its a beautiful night, isnt it?" she said as I kept gaping at her. "And quiet. Even the birds are asleep." She paused. "Only the cicadas are awake, serenading us with their symphonies."
I didnt know what to say, so I just watched her and waited for her to vanish.
"You look pale," she noted after a moment.
"You look real," I finally managed to croak.
"Of course I do," she replied with a smile. "I am real."
"Youre Miss Priscilla Wallace, and Ive spent so much time thinking about you that Ive begun hallucinating."
"Do I look like an hallucination?"
"I dont know," I admitted. "I dont think Ive ever had one before, so I dont know what they look likeexcept that obviously they look like you." I paused. "They could look a lot worse. You have a beautiful face."
She laughed at that. The cat jumped, startled, and she began stroking it gently. "I do believe youre trying to make me blush," she said.
"Can you blush?" I asked, and then of course wished I hadnt.
"Of course I can," she replied, "though I had my doubts after I got back from Tahiti. The things they do there!" Then, "You were reading Travels with My Cats, werent you?"
"Yes, I was. Its been one of my most cherished possessions since I was a child."
"Was it a gift?" she asked.
"No, I bought it myself."
"Thats very gratifying."
"Its very gratifying to finally meet the author whos given me so much pleasure," I said, feeling like an awkward kid all over again.
She looked puzzled, as if she was about to ask a question. Then she changed her mind and smiled again. It was a lovely smile, as I had known it would be.
"This is very pretty property," she said. "Is it yours all the way up to the lake?"
"Yes."
"Does anyone else live here?"
"Just me."
"You like your privacy," she said. It was a statement, not a question.
"Not especially," I answered. "Thats just the way things worked out. People dont seem to like me very much."
Now why the hell did I tell you that? I thought. Ive never even admitted it to myself.
"You seem like a very nice person," she said. "I find it difficult to believe that people dont like you."
"Maybe I overstated the case," I admitted. "Mostly they dont notice me." I shifted uncomfortably. "I didnt mean to unburden myself on you."
"Youre all alone. You have to unburden yourself to someone," she replied. "I think you just need a little more self-confidence."
"Perhaps."
She stared at me for a long moment. "You keep looking like youre expecting something terrible to happen."
"Im expecting you to disappear."
"Would that be so terrible?"
"Yes," I said promptly. "It would be."
"Then why dont you simply accept that Im here? If youre wrong, youll know it soon enough."
I noded. "Yeah, youre Priscilla Wallace, all right. Thats exactly the kind of answer shed give."
"You know who I am. Perhaps youll tell me who you are?"
"My name is Ethan Owens."
"Ethan," she repeated. "Thats a nice name."
"You think so?"
"I wouldnt say so if I didnt." She paused. "Shall I call you Ethan, or Mr. Owens?"
"Ethan, by all means. I feel like Ive known you all my life." I felt another embarrassing admission coming on. "I even wrote you a fan letter when I was a kid, but it came back."
"I would have liked that," she said. "I never once got a fan letter. Not from anyone."
"Im sure hundreds of people wanted to write. Maybe they couldnt find your address either."
"Maybe," she said dubiously.
"In fact, just today I was thinking about sending it again."
"Whatever you wanted to say, you can tell me in person." The cat jumped back down onto the veranda. "You look very uncomfortable, perched on the railing like that, Ethan. Why dont you come and sit beside me?"
"Id like that very much," I said, standing up. Then I thought it over. "No, Id better not."
"Im thirty-two years old," she said in amused tones. "I dont need a chaperone."
"Not with me, you dont," I assured her. "Besides, I dont think we have them anymore."
"Then whats the problem?"
"The truth?" I said. "If I sit next to you, at some point my hip will press against yours, or perhaps Ill inadvertently touch your hand. And . . ."
"And what?"
"And I dont want to find out that youre not really here."
"But I am."
"I hope so," I said. "But I can believe it a lot easier from where I am."
She shrugged. "As you wish."
"Ive had my wish for the night," I said.
"Then why dont we just sit and enjoy the breeze and the scents of the Wisconsin night?"
"Whatever makes you happy," I said.
"Being here makes me happy. Knowing my book is still being read makes me happy." She was silent for a moment, staring off into the darkness. "Whats the date, Ethan?"
"April 17."
"I mean the year."
"2004."
She looked surprised. "Its been that long?"
"Since. . . ?" I said hesitantly.
"Since I died," she said. "Oh, I know I must have died a long time ago. I have no tomorrows, and my yesterdays are all so very long ago. But the new millennium? It seems"she searched for the right word"excessive."
"You were born in 1892, more than a century ago," I said.
"How did you know that?"
"I had the computer run a search on you."
"I dont know what a computer is," she said. Then, suddenly: "Do you also know when and how I died?"
"I know when, not how."
"Please dont tell me," she said. "Im thirty-two, and Ive just written the last page of my book. I dont know what comes next, and it would be wrong for you to tell me."
"All right," I said. Then, borrowing her expression, "As you wish."
"Promise me."
"I promise."
Suddenly the little white cat tensed and looked off across the yard.
"He sees his brother," said Priscilla.
"Its probably just the raccoons," I said. "They can be a nuisance."
"No," she insisted. "I know his body language. Thats his brother out there."
And sure enough, I heard a distinct meow a moment later. The white cat leaped off the veranda and headed toward it.
"Id better go get them before they become completely lost," said Priscilla, getting to her feet. "It happened once in Brazil, and I didnt find them for almost two days."
"Ill get a flashlight and come with you," I said.
"No, you might frighten them, and it wouldnt do to have them run away in strange surroundings." She stood up and stared at me. "You seem like a very nice man, Ethan Owens. Im glad we finally met." She smiled sadly. "I just wish you werent so lonely."
She climbed down to the yard and walked off into the darkness before I could lie and tell her I led a rich full life and wasnt lonely at all. Suddenly I had a premonition that she wasnt coming back. "Will we meet again?" I called after her as she vanished from sight.
"That depends on you, doesnt it?" came her answer out of the darkness.
I sat on the porch swing, waiting for her to reappear with the cats. Finally, despite the cold night air, I fell asleep. I woke up when the sun hit the swing in the morning.
I was alone.
It took me almost half the day to convince myself that what had happened the night before was just a dream. It wasnt like any other dream Id ever had, because I remembered every detail of it, every word shed said, every gesture shed made. Of course she hadnt really visited me, but just the same I couldnt get Priscilla Wallace out of my mind, so I finally stopped working and used my computer to try to learn more about her.
There was nothing more to be found under her name except for that single brief entry. I tried a search on Travels with My Cats and came up empty. I checked to see if her father had ever written a book about his explorations; he hadnt. I even contacted a few of the hotels she had stayed at, alone or with her father, but none of them kept records that far back.
I tried one line of pursuit after another, but none of them proved fruitful. History had swallowed her up almost as completely as it would someday swallow me. Other than the book, the only proof I had that she had ever lived was that one computer entry, consisting of ten words and two dates. Wanted criminals couldnt hide from the law any better than shed hidden from posterity.
Finally I looked out the window and realized that night had fallen and everyone else had gone home. (Theres no night shift on a weekly paper.) I stopped by a local diner, grabbed a ham sandwich and a cup of coffee, and headed back to the lake.
I watched the ten oclock news on TV, then sat down and picked up her book again, just to convince myself that she really had lived once upon a time. After a couple of minutes I got restless, put the book back on a table, and walked out for a breath of fresh air.
She was sitting on the porch swing, right where she had been the night before. There was a different cat next to her, a black one with white feet and white circles around its eyes.
She noticed me looking at the cat. "This is Goggle," she said. "I think hes exceptionally well-named, dont you?"
"I suppose," I said distractedly.
"The white one is Giggle, because he loves getting into all sorts of mischief." I didnt say anything. Finally she smiled. "Which of them has your tongue?"
"Youre back," I said at last.
"Of course I am."
"I was reading your book again," I said. "I dont think Ive ever encountered anyone who loved life so much."
"Theres so much to love!"
"For some of us."
"Its all around you, Ethan," she said.
"I prefer seeing it through your eyes. It was like you were born again into a new world each morning," I said. "I suppose thats why I kept your book, and why I find myself re-reading itto share what you see and feel."
"You can feel things yourself."
I shook my head. "I prefer what you feel."
"Poor Ethan," she said sincerely. "Youve never loved anything, have you?"
"Ive tried."
"That isnt what I said." She stared at me curiously. "Have you ever married?"
"No."
"Why not?"
"I dont know." I decided I might as well give her an honest answer. "Probably because none of them ever measured up to you."
"Im not that special," she said.
"To me you are. You always have been."
She frowned. "I wanted my book to enrich your life, Ethan, not ruin it."
"You didnt ruin it," I said. "You made it a little more bearable."
"I wonder . . ." she mused.
"About what?"
"My being here. Its puzzling."
"Puzzling is an understatement," I said. "Unbelievable is more the word for it."
She shook her head distractedly. "You dont understand. I remember last night."
"So do Ievery second of it."
"Thats not what I meant." She stroked the cat absently. "I was never brought back before last night. I wasnt sure then. I thought perhaps I forgot after each episode. But today I remember last night."
"Im not sure I follow you."
"You cant be the only person to read my book since I died. Or even if you were, Ive never been called back before, not even by you." She stared at me for a long moment. "Maybe I was wrong."
"About what?"
"Maybe what brought me here wasnt the fact that I needed to be read. Maybe its because you so desperately need someone."
"I" I began heatedly, and then stopped. For a moment it seemed like the whole world had stopped with me. Then the moon came out from behind a cloud, and an owl hooted off to the left.
"What is it?"
"I was about to tell you that Im not that lonely," I said. "But it would have been a lie."
"Its nothing to be ashamed of, Ethan."
"Its nothing to brag about, either." There was something about her that made me say things Id never said to anyone else, including myself. "I had such high hopes when I was a boy. I was going to love my work, and I was going to be good at it. I was going to find a woman to love and spend the rest of my life with. I was going to see all the places you described. Over the years I saw each of those hopes die. Now I settle for paying my bills and getting regular check-ups at the doctors." I sighed deeply. "I think my life can be described as a fully-realized diminished expectation."
"You have to take risks, Ethan," she said gently.
"Im not like you," I said. "I wish I was, but Im not. Besides, there arent any wild places left."
She shook her head. "Thats not what I meant. Love involves risk. You have to risk getting hurt."
"Ive been hurt," I said. "Its nothing to write home about."
"Maybe thats why Im here. You cant be hurt by a ghost."
The hell I cant, I thought. Aloud I said: "Are you a ghost?"
"I dont feel like one."
"You dont look like one."
"How do I look?" she asked.
"As lovely as I always knew you were."
"Fashions change."
"But beauty doesnt," I said.
"Thats very kind of you to say, but I must look very old-fashioned. In fact, the world I knew must seem primitive to you." Her face brightened. "Its a new millennium. Tell me whats happened."
"Weve walked on the moonand weve landed ships on Mars and Venus."
She looked up into the night sky. "The moon!" she exclaimed. Then: "Why are you here when you could be there?"
"Im not a risk-taker, remember?"
"What an exciting time to be alive!" she said enthusiastically. "I always wanted to see what lay beyond the next hill. But youyou get to see whats beyond the next star!"
"Its not that simple," I said.
"But it will be," she persisted.
"Someday," I agreed. "Not during my lifetime, but someday."
"Then you should die with the greatest reluctance," she said. "Im sure I did." She looked up at the stars, as if envisioning herself flying to each of them. "Tell me more about the future."
"I dont know anything about the future," I said.
"My future. Your present."
I told her what I could. She seemed amazed that hundreds of millions of people now traveled by air, that I didnt know anyone who didnt own a car, and that train travel had almost disappeared in America. The thought of television fascinated her; I decided not to tell her what a vast wasteland it had been since its inception. Color movies, sound movies, computersshe wanted to know all about them. She was eager to learn if zoos had become more humane, if people had become more humane. She couldnt believe that heart transplants were actually routine.
I spoke for hours. Finally I just got so dry I told her I was going to have to take a break for a couple of minutes while I went into the kitchen and got us some drinks. Shed never heard of Fanta or Dr. Pepper, which is what I had, and she didnt like beer, so I made her an iced tea and popped open a Bud for me. When I brought them out to the porch she and Goggle were gone.
I didnt even bother looking for her. I knew she had returned to the somewhere from which she had come.
She was back again the next three nights, sometimes with one cat, sometimes with both. She told me about her travels, about her overwhelming urge to see what there was to see in the little window of time allotted us humans, and I told her about the various wonders she would never see.
It was strange, conversing with a phantom every night. She kept assuring me she was real, and I believed it when she said it, but I was still afraid to touch her and discover that she was just a dream after all. Somehow, as if they knew my fears, the cats kept their distance too; not once in all those evenings did either of them ever so much as brush against me.
"I wish Id seen all the sights theyve seen," I said on the third night, nodding toward the cats.
"Some people thought it was cruel to take them all over the world with me," replied Priscilla, absently running her hand over Goggles back as he purred contentedly. "I think it would have been more cruel to leave them behind."
"None of the catsthese or the ones that came beforeever caused any problems?"
"Certainly they did," she said. "But when you love something, you put up with the problems."
"Yeah, I suppose you do."
"How do you know?" she asked. "I thought you said youd never loved anything."
"Maybe I was wrong."
"Oh?"
"I dont know," I said. "Maybe I love someone who vanishes every night when I turn my back." She stared at me, and suddenly I felt very awkward. I shrugged uncomfortably. "Maybe."
"Im touched, Ethan," she said. "But Im not of this world, not the way you are."
"I havent complained," I said. "Ill settle for the moments I can get." I tried to smile; it was a disaster. "Besides, I dont even know if youre real."
"I keep telling you I am."
"I know."
"What would you do if you knew I was?" she asked.
"Really?"
"Really."
I stared at her. "Try not to get mad," I began.
"I wont get mad."
"Ive wanted to hold you and kiss you since the first instant I saw you on my veranda," I said.
"Then why havent you?"
"I have this . . . this dread that if I try to touch you and youre not here, if I prove conclusively to myself that you dont exist, then Ill never see you again."
"Remember what I told you about love and risk?"
"I remember."
"And?"
"Maybe Ill try tomorrow," I said. "I just dont want to lose you yet. Im not feeling that brave tonight."
She smiled, a rather sad smile I thought. "Maybe youll get tired of reading me."
"Never!"
"But its the same book all the time. How often can you read it?"
I looked at her, young, vibrant, maybe two years from death, certainly less than three. I knew what lay ahead for her; all she could see was a lifetime of wonderful experiences stretching out into the distance.
"Then Ill read one of your other books."
"I wrote others?" she asked.
"Dozens of them," I lied.
She couldnt stop smiling. "Really?"
"Really."
"Thank you, Ethan," she said. "Youve made me very happy."
"Then were even."
There was a noisy squabble down by the lake. She quickly looked around for her cats, but they were on the porch, their attention also attracted by the noise.
"Raccoons," I said.
"Why are they fighting?"
"Probably a dead fish washed up on the shore," I answered. "Theyre not much for sharing."
She laughed. "They remind me of some people I know." She paused. "Some people I knew," she amended.
"Do you miss themyour friends, I mean?"
"No. I had hundreds of acquaintances, but very few close friends. I was never in one place long enough to make them. Its only when Im with you that I realize theyre gone." She paused. "I dont quite understand it. I know that Im here with you, in the new millenniumbut I feel like I just celebrated my thirty-second birthday. Tomorrow Ill put flowers on my fathers grave, and next week I set sail for Madrid."
"Madrid?" I repeated. "Will you watch them fight the brave bulls in the arena?"
An odd expression crossed her face. "Isnt that curious?" she said.
"Isnt what curious?"
"I have no idea what Ill do in Spain . . . but youve read all my books, so you know."
"You dont want me to tell you," I said.
"No, that would spoil it."
"Ill miss you when you leave."
"Youll pick up one of my books and Ill be right back here," she said. "Besides, I went more than seventy-five years ago."
"It gets confusing," I said.
"Dont look so depressed. Well be together again."
"Its only been a week, but I cant remember what I did with my evenings before I started talking to you."
The squabbling at the lake got louder, and Giggle and Goggle began huddling together.
"Theyre frightening my cats," said Priscilla.
"Ill go break it up," I said, climbing down from the veranda and heading off to where the raccoons were battling. "And when I get back," I added, feeling bolder the farther I got from her, "maybe Ill find out just how real you are after all."
By the time I reached the lake, the fight was all but over. One large raccoon, half a fish in its mouth, glared at me, totally unafraid. Two others, not quite as large, stood about ten feet away. All three were bleeding from numerous gashes, but it didnt look as if any of them had suffered a disabling injury.
"Serves you right," I muttered.
I turned and started trudging back up to the house from the lake. The cats were still on the veranda, but Priscilla wasnt. I figured shed stepped inside to get another iced tea, or perhaps use the bathroomone more factor in favor of her not being a ghostbut when she didnt come out in a couple of minutes I searched the house for her.
She wasnt there. She wasnt anywhere in the yard, or in the old empty barn. Finally I went back and sat down on the porch swing to wait.
A couple of minutes latter Goggle jumped up on my lap. Id been idly petting him for a couple of minutes before I realized that he was real.
***
I bought some cat food in the morning. I didnt want to set it out on the veranda, because I was sure the raccoons would get wind of it and drive Giggle and Goggle off, so I put it in a soup bowl and placed it on the counter next to the kitchen sink. I didnt have a litter box, so I left the kitchen window open enough for them to come and go as they pleased.
I resisted the urge to find out any more about Priscilla with the computer. All that was really left to learn was how shed died, and I didnt want to know. How does a beautiful, healthy, world-traveling woman die at thirty-four? Torn apart by lions? Sacrificed by savages? Victim of a disfiguring tropical disease? Mugged, raped, and killed in New York? Whatever it was, it had robbed her of half a century. I didnt want to think of the books she could have written in that time, but rather of the joy she could have felt as she traveled from one new destination to another. No, I very definitely didnt want to know how she died.
I worked distractedly for a few hours, then knocked off in midafternoon and hurried home. To her.
I knew something was wrong the moment I got out of my car. The porch swing was empty. Giggle and Goggle jumped off the veranda, raced up to me, and began rubbing against my legs as if for comfort.
I yelled her name, but there was no response. Then I heard a rustling inside the house. I raced to the door, and saw a raccoon climbing out through the kitchen window just as I entered.
The place was a mess. Evidently he had been hunting for food, and since all I had were cans and frozen meals, he just started ripping the house apart, looking for anything he could eat.
And then I saw it: Travels with My Cats lay in tatters, as if the raccoon had had a temper tantrum at the lack of food and had taken it out on the book, which Id left on the kitchen table. Pages were ripped to shreds, the cover was in pieces, and he had even urinated on what was left.
I worked feverishly on it for hours, tears streaming down my face for the first time since I was a kid, but there was no salvaging itand that meant there would be no Priscilla tonight, or any night until I found another copy of the book.
In a blind fury I grabbed my rifle and a powerful flashlight and killed the first six raccoons I could find. It didnt make me feel any betterespecially when I calmed down enough to consider what she would have thought of my bloodlust.
I felt as if morning would never come. When it did, I raced to the office, activated my computer, and tried to find a copy of Priscillas book at www.abebooks.com and www.bookfinder.com, the two biggest computerized clusters of used book dealers. There wasnt a single copy for sale.
I contacted some of the other book dealers Id used in the past. None of them had ever heard of it.
I called the copyright division at the Library of Congress, figuring they might be able to help me. No luck: Travels with My Cats was never officially copyrighted; there was no copy on file. I began to wonder if I hadnt dreamed the whole thing, the book as well as the woman.
Finally I called Charlie Grimmis, who advertises himself as The Book Detective. He does most of his work for anthologists seeking rights and permissions to obscure, long-out-of-print books and stories, but he didnt care who he worked for, as long as he got his money.
It took him nine days and cost me six hundred dollars, but finally I got a definitive answer:
Dear Ethan:
You led me a merry chase. Id have bet halfway through it that the book didnt exist, but you were right: evidently you did own a copy of a limited, numbered edition.
Travels with My Cats was self-published by one Priscilla Wallace (d. 1926), in a limited, numbered edition of 200. The printer was the long-defunct Adelman Press of Bridgeport, Connecticut. The book was never copyrighted or registered with the Library of Congress.
Now we get into the conjecture part. As near as I can tell, this Wallace woman gave about one hundred and fifty copies away to friends and relatives, and the final fifty were probably trashed after her death. Ive checked back, and there hasnt been a copy for sale anywhere in the past dozen years. Its hard to get trustworthy records farther back than that. Given that she was an unknown, that the book was a vanity press job, and that it went only to people who knew her, the likelihood is that no more than fifteen or twenty copies still exist, if that many.
Best,
Charlie
When its finally time to start taking risks, you dont think about ityou just do it. I quit my job that afternoon, and for the past year Ive been criss-crossing the country, hunting for a copy of Travels with My Cats. I havent found one yet, but Ill keep looking, no matter how long it takes. I get lonely, but I dont get discouraged.
Was it a dream? Was she a hallucination? A couple of acquaintances I confided in think so. Hell, Id think so tooexcept that Im not traveling alone. Ive got two feline companions, and theyre as real and substantial as cats get to be.
So the man with no goal except to get through another day finally has a mission in life, an important one. The woman I love died half a century too soon. Im the only one who can give her back those years, if not all at once then an evening and a weekend at a timebut one way or another shes going to get them. Ive spent all my yesterdays and havent got a thing to show for them; now Im going to start stockpiling her tomorrows.
Anyway, thats the story. My job is gone, and so is most of my money. I havent slept in the same bed twice in close to four hundred days. Ive lost a lot of weight, and Ive been living in these clothes for longer than I care to think. It doesnt matter. All that matters is that I find a copy of that book, and someday I know I will.
Do I have any regrets?
Just one.
I never touched her. Not even once.