316 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
316 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
"Angel's Fur"
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By
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Piper Sickles
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Har! Har! Har!
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The raucous guffaws made me jump in my seat. Nobody laughs like that outside
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of the funny papers. Besides, "The Bishop's Wife" didn't have any belly laughs
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that I could recall. Especially not (I looked at the screen) in the scene
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where Cary Grant is comforting Loretta Young.
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A snort and loud chuckles followed. It quickly became obvious that the 30
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other people in the university auditorium agreed with me about old Loudmouth's
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sense of humor. But why were they all ssshh!- ing at _me_?
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I forced my attention back to the screen. God, now David Niven was berating
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Loretta again. Damned hypocritical minister, spending all his time and energy
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pushing for promotion and blaming his wife for not being understanding when all
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she wanted was a little love.
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I knew just how she felt. Ray used to pull exactly that sort of garbage on
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me. Staying at the office forever and bringing his work home, but insisting
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that I have supper ready whenever he brought the boss for "pot luck".
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Belittling my political work and anything else I did that wasn't a step toward
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becoming Mrs. Wonderful Corporate Wife.
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Our story hadn't had a happy ending, though.
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Happy endings. I didn't often see the endings of movies these days -- the
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good ones always hit a sore spot and started me thinking about the bad old days
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before the divorce. Or about the good times.
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I only knew this movie had a happy ending because Ray and I'd seen it when we
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were dating, when it seemed as if every story had a happy ending, especially
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ours.
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Har har har to that, I thought sourly.
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Not that Ray would have listened to an angel, anyway. Why listen to an angel
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when you know you have a direct line to God? Not ( as I told him a zillion
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times) that I would want to spend eternity in a heaven run by his smug,
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self-righteous deity. So I wound up in the registrar's office, typing "You'd
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be more than eligible to graduate with honors this semester if you'd just taken
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three more hours at Our Fine University. Since you haven't, tough rocks," to
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students who didn't want to hear that. Not quite hell, but near enough.
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Damn! I'd done it again! -- the credits were scrolling across the screen.
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I reached for my coat. Gee, I thought, if I could just start the film again
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for myself ... If Loretta could have changed her movie, would she have edited
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Niven out before Cary showed up?
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I was thinking about that when somebody touched my shoulder.
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I jumped, stifled a yelp, and realized it was just Al, the manager. The
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theater was empty except for us.
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"Lizbeth, it's time to go. I'm ready to lock up."
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"Sorry Al, I was thinking." I blushed and stood up.
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"Hey kid, you ought to find a friend to come to these movies with, or join
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some of the others at the grill afterwards. I hate to see you hide yourself
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away like this."
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"Al, you know most of the others are kids -- bright-eyed and
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still thinking they can change the world. I know better."
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"Right. You're past your prime. An old lady at 34.
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"By the way, take your damn cat with you."
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"What are you talking about?"
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"Your cat. Right there."
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He pointed to the seat on my other side.
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A sorry-looking grey-and-black tiger was looking up at me. It appeared
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well-fed and wore a dirty collar, but the fur was matted, one ear had been
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chewed and blood was clotted around a messy cut along one side of its face.
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"That is not my cat. It obviously belongs to somebody, though -- look at the
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collar. Keep it here."
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"No way. My wife is allergic and if I bring home any cat dander she won't be
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fit to live with. Give me a break, Liz -- take it for tonight anyway."
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The cat looked at me and gave a plaintive "merowww". Its eyes were running
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and it sneezed.
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"Okay, but put up a notice that you found him. I'll check back after
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Thursday's film."
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"Sure. Thanks a million, Liz."
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I reached for the cat and it seemed to leap into my arms.
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"Okay, angel, come with Liz," I cooed like an idiot. It started to purr as I
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scratched the ear that wasn't mangled.
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I walked home with the cat tucked inside my raincoat, muttering that we'd
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soon need an ark if it kept raining.
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The cat poked its head out, looked up at me and said "I don't think the boss
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has that in mind, actually."
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This was it, I thought -- I'd finally lost my mind.
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I got to my door, put the cat down, went to the kitchen and poured myself a
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large glass of Cella.
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Eyeing the cat, which was looking as smug as an Egyptian statue if somewhat
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less elegant, I placed the glass carefully onto the coffee table. Then I took
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off my dripping coat and hung it up.
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I fell onto the sofa and dug into my purse for my cigarettes, found one, and
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nervously lit it. "You have got to get out with people more," I lectured
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myself. "Look at you, vegetating in this hole, going to fantasy movies -- no
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wonder you think you hear cats talking to you. Get that brochure out and take
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that exercise course. You can meet people and get thin at the same time."
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The cat strolled into the room, looked at me intently, and jumped onto the
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sofa next to me. He stared at me a moment, blinked, and said, "Lizbeth, I'm
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hungry."
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My body went rigid.
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"That's it! A cat talked to me twice. Time to call Dr. Kered," I
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announced.
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Dr. Kered was on staff at the university's psychology department. He did
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private counseling on the side. When my marriage was in trouble, I saw him
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regularly. Ray had refused to go. Eventually, I realized I'd be happier
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without Ray and could manage on my own.
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The cat looked at me again and said "Lizbeth, you are not hallucinating, but
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I'm very hungry and I will not explain a thing to you until I am fed."
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I didn't care what it said. I was hallucinating. However, I decided, I
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might as well play along. The hallucination wanted to eat; OK, I'd get it
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something to eat.
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I went back to the kitchen and rooted around my cluttered cupboards,
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wondering what I could get a cat to eat. I loathed fish, so I knew I didn't
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have any tuna. Finally I found a can of chunk chicken, opened it, and put it
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in an empty cream cheese dish.
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"Thank you. Could I also have something to drink? Some of your Cella would
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be nice."
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"Cat, I know I am hallucinating, but let me tell you -- even in a
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hallucination I am not giving a cat wine. Water for you.!"
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I looked around for another cream cheese dish, found one under my African
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violet, washed it out and filled it with water. I watched the cat eat. He was
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tidy and precise. No gobbling or spilling food all over for this one. He
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cleaned the dish of chicken, drank his fill and said "Let's go back to the
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sofa. We'll be more comfortable."
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I nodded automatically and followed him back to the living room. I was
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getting used to talking to a cat. He jumped up to the sofa, and I sat down
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beside him.
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"First of all I want to reassure you that I am talking to you. I may look
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like a cat on this trip, but you are not crazy. You need help and the boss
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sent me.
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"She figures we can help each other."
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"That's the second time you've mentioned your boss. Who is he?"
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"She" he corrected. "God."
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"God?!" I shouted. "God is female?!"
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"God," he said quietly. "She's been worried about you."
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"You cannot be for real. I don't buy any of that religious claptrap, I don't
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go to church, and I don't think God is going to go out of his way to help me."
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"Her way," the cat corrected gently. "Besides, what do you know about God?
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God doesn't believe in churches either: She often says the most humane people
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are the unlikely ones. She knows a lot of churches are full of people who
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believe in intolerance and war, and have only crocodile tears for Her
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unfortunates."
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"WOW. Do you mean God is a Democrat?"
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"No, I mean God is The Democrat. She likes humans who have 'bleeding heart'
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tendencies. You have them. She likes that."
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"But why me? I'm not happy, heaven knows, but I'm not too badly off. I have
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a roof over my head, a job, and food. Surely there is someone needy out there
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you could be helping."
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"Yeah, and so could you. That's part of the point of this charade. Bleeding
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hearts aren't any use if all they do is drip on the floor."
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"Dammit, cat, don't lecture me. I used to try, and it never got anybody
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anywhere. Especially me. All it ever got me was into fights with Ray."
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"Lizbeth, Lizbeth. As Dr. Kered would say, you're buying into Ray's image
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of you.
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"Dr. Kered would be disappointed in you. He thought you'd developed some
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self esteem. Not to mention some fight."
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"Listen, cat, I do okay. What's this have to do with my self esteem and
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fight?"
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"Lots. You know who's senior senator in this state. God has decided that
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you should help Her elect a better senator. A liberal, fair person."
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"Why doesn't she just turn Creepy Claudette and all her commie -fearing
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followers into liberals?"
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"The rules don't work that way. You must have heard that the Lord helps
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those who help themselves.
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"Anyway, God wants you to help Paul Savits win the election. You have some
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political experience, you have heart, and you're very convincing when you
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believe in somebody. I'm here to help you make the decision to jump into the
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fray."
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"Now I know I'm crazy. I have nothing to offer a big-time politician like
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Savits. Sure, I stuffed envelopes and watched polls, but I haven't been
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involved in politics for years."
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"God knows. She's been watching you and She's convinced you can do it, now
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that you no longer have that insufferable husband around. By the way, why did
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you marry such a conservative fellow? Surely it wasn't to be taken care of?
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You can do that yourself."
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"Yeah, Ray was pretty bad, wasn't he? It used to infuriate me when he ranted
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about how well people lived on welfare. And I _am_ taking care of myself.
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What else do you want me to do?"
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"Just trust yourself. I only stopped by to tell you to trust your instincts,
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and to trust in divine guidance."
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"Divine guidance. What makes you think I would even recognize it?"
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"Lizbeth, for all your romantic tendencies, you always play it safe. You're
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liberal politically, but in your daily life you are more practical and
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constrained than Ray was, or ever thought of being.
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The way will be there. Just grab the opportunity and run with it. Don't
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think of the safety play."
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"What way?"
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"I can't tell you that, but I know it'll be there."
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"By the way, cat, just what are you?"
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"An angel, of course. Har! Har! Har!"
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"You were the one laughing at the film!"
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"Oh, yes, my dear. Cary Grant is charming, but the way angels are portrayed
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in that movie is pure fiction. God doesn't give any of us that much power.
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Besides, what good would it do to have an angel visit you and not be able to
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remember it?"
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Even for a hallucination, something didn't make sense.
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"Look," I said. "If you're an angel, what the hell are you doing all torn up
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like that?"
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"Well, I wouldn't have done any good if I'd shown up in a form you wouldn't
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have any truck with, would I? And as for being torn up ... well, as I said,
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if something's worth believing in, it's worth fighting for. And in this
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incarnation, I discovered that I believed in a female cat.
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"Now, Lizbeth, I must be going. Get a good night's rest and trust yourself."
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He jumped off the sofa, walked to the mat, and said, "Please open the door."
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I moved to the door, turned the handle, felt him rub against my legs in
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farewell and watched him walk down the street. The rain had stopped, the moon
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was full, and the stars were out. It was a beautiful misty night.
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I stood there for awhile, long after the cat had moved out of sight. I
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sighed, went back to the living room, finished my wine, and went to bed.
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I slept fitfully that night. In the morning, I realized it all must have
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been a very strange dream.
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I was thinking about it when the doorbell rang. I threw on a robe and
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answered it. The mailman had a special delivery letter from Jack Black, the
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local Democratic party chairman. Apparently the committeewoman from my
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district had to have an operation. None of the people under her was willing to
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take on her duties, but several had remembered me. My district was a pivotal
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one, he wrote. Would I consider it?
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I shivered at the coincidence. It was as if my dream had turned real. I was
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excited at the thought of getting involved in politics again. I had a lot of
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ideas. Maybe I _could_ contribute some spark and creative suggestions. And
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who knows -- if I pulled the precinct for Savits, maybe I'd get an even better
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offer -- one with pay! Then I could tell the registrar's office what to do
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with its form letters ...
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Instead of falling into a daydream, I stepped briskly into the kitchen to
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brew some strong coffee.
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"Okay, God, I'll give it my best shot," I said out loud, and grinned to
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myself.
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Then I picked up the empty cream cheese dishes and tossed them into the sink.
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