The Killer Cat Runs Away Read online




  CONTENTS

  Cover

  About the Book

  Title Page

  1. Silly Pink Babies

  2. Parasite

  3. The Same Old Boring Cat-Chat

  4. One Good Reason to Stay

  5. A Chapter of Sad Farewells

  6. So Spank My Bum

  7. Dead Mice and Birds? Eee-yuk!

  8. Tuffy the Busker

  9. The Wild Cats’ Chorus

  10. The Perfect Home

  11. ‘Come Home So I Can Strangle You.’

  12. I Did Not Kill It!

  13. ‘A Photo of My Beautiful Tuffy!’

  14. Nightmare Stuff!

  15. A Blur of Fur

  16. No Hope of Rescue. None.

  17. ‘Haven’t You Heard?’

  18. All the Usual Rubbish

  19. Reprise

  20. My Precious, Wonderful, Amazing Tuffy!

  21. ‘You Promised You’d Never Forget Me.’

  The Wild Cats’ Chorus

  About the Author

  Also by Anne Fine

  Copyright

  About the Book

  Tuffy no longer feels loved. All the family ever seems to do is fuss about his tiny mistakes – like spitting at next door’s baby and knocking over the new TV. Even Ellie’s too busy cooing over fluff-ball kittens to pay him any attention.

  Who wants to hang around where they’re not wanted? There must be somewhere in town where Tuffy will be treated properly . . .

  1

  Silly Pink Babies

  OK, OK. So twist my tail. I spat at the stupid baby. But it was annoying me, lying there in its frilly basket, chuckling and gurgling. The thing was laughing at me. And no one likes being laughed at. Especially not me. I’m not called Tuffy for nothing. And I didn’t earn the nickname of ‘the killer cat’ from sitting purring on a cushion.

  And then this baby poked its finger in my eye. For heaven’s sake! It could have hurt me. So it was lucky, really. I could have bitten it. Or scratched it. But I only spat. Spit doesn’t hurt at all, so why’s everyone picking on me?

  ‘Tuffy!’ said Ellie. ‘Get away from the baby at once!’

  She rushed to scoop it up. I don’t know why. It wasn’t even yelling. The baby didn’t mind. It was still laughing as if the whole thing was a giant joke. And there was only a tiny bit of dribble running down its face. Nobody in this house has any sense of humour at all. They all go mad about the slightest thing.

  ‘That cat is not to be trusted,’ said Ellie’s father. ‘He’s the most jealous creature under the sun.’

  I like that! Jealous? Me? Of something that can’t even walk or feed itself? I gave the man the slit-eyed stare. But he just stared right back and said to Ellie, ‘Remember poor Tinkerbell?’

  Ellie went pale. Of course she remembered. Tinkerbell was a small kitten the family had to look after for four whole days. You wouldn’t believe the fuss they made of her.

  ‘Isn’t she pretty? So fluffy! And so sweet!’

  ‘Look, Ellie! Tinkerbell’s learned how to flick her tail!’

  ‘See her tiny pink tongue! Look, Mum! Look quickly, while she’s lapping up her milk!’

  ‘She’s not cold, is she? If she’s cold, push Tuffy off the rug and let Tinkerbell sit near the fire instead.’

  ‘I think she’s hungry. Shall we offer her a dish of cream?’

  Offer her cream? She didn’t even live with us! We were just kitten-sitting for a day or so. And I was their real pet, not Tinkerbell. I’d lived with them for years, ever since Ellie got old enough to nag them into getting me. Is it surprising that I got a little testy?

  And that I wouldn’t let Tinkerbell sleep in any of my favourite places.

  And that I accidentally pushed her off the windowsill.

  And ate her special, juicy baby kitten food, all by mistake.

  And all the other stupid, petty things that they complained about. No, I don’t think that Tinkerbell will be in any hurry to come and stay with us again.

  And there’s no room, in any case. Because they clearly prefer silly pink babies now.

  If they’re not careful I shall spit at it again.

  2

  Parasite

  OK, OK. So cover me with jam and put me in a box of wasps. I broke their new television. It was an accident! I didn’t mean to tip the screen over like that. I was after a bumblebee, and if that stupid television hadn’t been in the way, I would have got it too. No one likes being stung by bees. They should have been grateful to me.

  And whose fault was it that the new, slim, wide, high-definition screen wasn’t fixed on its stand more safely in the first place?

  Yes! That’s right. It was Ellie’s dad’s fault, not mine. You only had to watch Mr Oh-That’ll-Probably-Be-All-Right fixing the screen so loosely onto the base to know that it was almost bound to fall off. Even without someone like me crashing into it hard.

  And whose fault was it that I didn’t manage to get over the screen in my amazing leap?

  That’s right. It was Ellie’s mother’s fault. She is the one who feeds me. If she has got it wrong and let me get a smidgeon over my ideal jumping weight, who is to blame?

  Clearly not me.

  You should have heard Ellie’s dad when he came in and saw the damage. Talk about wild! ‘This screen is ruined! Ruined! Claw marks all over, and both the top corners chipped! Look what that great, fat, stupid, tiresome, idiotic, unpleasant, vicious, dangerous parasite has done now!’

  Excuse me? Parasite?

  Now that’s not nice. In case you don’t already know, parasites are all those nasty things like nits and tapeworms and fleas and ticks that do nothing except sponge off other people to stay alive. I am not like that. I let myself be stroked. I let myself be fed. I let myself be cuddled. (Only by Ellie. And only sometimes. But you take my point.)

  I’m not a parasite. How dare he? I won’t put up with rudeness like that. I tell you, next time he looks in his chest of drawers, he’s going to find hairs over everything. On all his socks. And on his pants and vests. Don’t think I can’t lick quite enough hairs off me to make his underwear disgusting.

  I can pay him back.

  3

  The Same Old Boring Cat-Chat

  He was a whole lot crosser than I thought. I slipped out for a quick smell tour around the wheelie bins with Tiger and Bella and Snowball. But when I strolled back in, what should I come across but what he calls ‘a family conference’ and I call ‘The Same Old Boring Cat-Chat that I’ve heard over a thousand times’.

  ‘What shall we do about Tuffy?’

  There they all were, huddled together in the living room: Old Mr Grumpy. The Kitten-Loving Queen. And Ellie.

  I hung around outside the door, eavesdropping as usual.

  ‘So,’ says Mr Football-on-Telly-Addict-Gone-Mad, ‘I say that was the last straw, and we should find another home for Tuffy.’

  Just like she always does, Ellie burst into tears. ‘No! No! You can’t! Tuffy’s my pet!’

  Her mother usually sticks up for me. But not this time. ‘But he’s not safe with babies. Or with kittens.’

  ‘Or televisions,’ Ellie’s dad added bitterly, still harping on about his own sad loss.

  Now Ellie stamped her foot. ‘But he’s my pet!’

  That’s when her father turned even more cunning than usual. ‘Ellie, I know you’re very fond of Tuffy. But we could always find you another pet.’

  ‘Yes,’ said her mother. ‘One that’s a bit more gentle and doesn’t cause quite so much damage.’

  ‘Perhaps a kitten . . .’ said her dad.

  ‘Like Tinkerbell . . .’ her mother said hopefully.

  ‘But what about Tuffy?’ Ellie sa
id through her tears. ‘What will happen to him?’

  ‘Oh, you know cats,’ said Mr Get-What-You-Want-Whichever-Sneaky-Way-You-Can. ‘They’re not like dogs. They don’t adore their owners. So long as they’re warm and comfy, and the grub’s good, cats can be happy anywhere. And there are plenty of other places Tuffy could go.’

  I took a peek round the door and saw Ellie’s mother shaking her head at the pulled threads on her sofa where I like to scratch to keep my claws in trim. ‘Yes,’ she agreed. ‘Homes that are far more suitable than ours.’

  ‘That’s right,’ said Ellie’s father. ‘We’ll find a home where he’ll be just as happy.’

  This is the moment when Ellie always hurls herself face down on the sofa, sobbing and wailing, and threatens to run away if they get rid of me, her precious pet. This is the moment when she’s supposed to shout at them: ‘If you don’t love dear Tuffy enough to keep him, then you don’t love me!’

  But there was silence.

  Just a long, long silence.

  The longest silence ever.

  I peered round the door again and couldn’t believe my eyes! Ellie was dashing away her tears and looking hopeful.

  ‘Really? Another home where Tuffy will be just as happy?’

  ‘That’s right!’ said Mr I-Never-Did-Like-That-Cat-Anyway.

  ‘And I could have another pet? A pretty kitten, just like Tinkerbell?’

  ‘Why not?’

  Shall I tell you what I did then? I sat behind the door and waited. And I didn’t just wait. I counted to myself. One, two, three, four . . .

  And would you like to know how long it took before Ellie burst into tears again and started sticking up for me?

  It took eleven seconds! Can you believe it? Eleven whole seconds before that disloyal child finally remembered who is supposed to be her amazing, precious Tuffy. The Tuffy she even thinks she will be taking to the special ‘My Wonderful Pet’ show in her school hall next Thursday evening. (Ho, ho! She’ll be lucky!) The Tuffy she loves ‘so much and always have and always will, for ever and ever and ever’.

  Eleven great long seconds!

  What a cheek!

  4

  One Good Reason to Stay

  That night I told the gang, ‘I’m going to run away.’

  They all stared. ‘Run away? But why?’

  ‘Because I’m not happy at home.’

  ‘What’s wrong with your home?’ demanded Tiger. ‘The place is warm, isn’t it?’

  ‘Well, yes,’ I had to admit. ‘The place is warm.’

  ‘And comfy enough,’ said Bella.

  ‘Yes, I grant you it’s comfy enough,’ I said reluctantly.

  Snowball said, ‘And the grub in your house is very good indeed.’

  ‘Obviously the grub is good,’ I said, ‘or I wouldn’t still be there.’ I waved an irritable paw. ‘But give me one good reason why I ought to stay.’

  ‘Apart from the fact that it’s warm, and comfy, and the grub is good?’

  ‘Yes,’ I said. ‘Apart from that.’

  They all had a good long think. But none of them could come up with a single reason why I ought to stay (apart from the fact that the house is warm and comfy, and the grub is good).

  ‘Well, there you go,’ I said triumphantly when they had racked their brains. ‘Not one of you can think of anything. So I have no choice but to run away.’

  5

  A Chapter of Sad Farewells

  I went around saying fond farewells to all the things I’ve loved so long.

  ‘Goodbye, dear Pot Plant,’ I said. ‘I expect that you’ll miss me scratching around in your soil when it’s too cold and wet for me to bother to go outside to do my business.’ I brushed away a tear. ‘And I shall miss you too.’

  I went into the kitchen.

  ‘Adieu, my beloved Frying Pan,’ I sighed. ‘How many times have I stood beside you on the counter, licking your leftover bacon fat when no one else was about! We have been friends for so long, Frying Pan. But this is the end.’

  I went upstairs.

  ‘This is the parting of the ways,’ I told Alarm Clock. ‘But we have shared so many happy moments. How often I have crept in here by moonlight when Mr I-Must-Not-Be-Late has set you carefully for seven o’clock. How often I have braved his rattling snores to jump on the bedside table and reach out a silent paw to push your ON button to OFF. And how the two of us have enjoyed his desperate shrieks of panic when he wakes late in the morning. Oh, I shall miss you, Alarm Clock!’

  I slid under Mr I-Do-Not-Snore-I-Just-Breathe-Heavily’s side of the bed.

  ‘So long, Bedroom Slippers,’ I said. ‘If I had a single tear for every dead mouse I’ve slipped into your toes to frighten Mr Oh-My-Lord-What’s-This?, then I could weep a river to say goodbye to you. Please don’t feel lonely and neglected without my little gifts. Goodbye! Goodbye!’

  I went downstairs to the piano.

  ‘Adios, my musical friend! After today I shall walk up and down your keys no more, making you plink and plunk and driving everyone mad. Our happy hours are over. I’m off into the world, and we shall sadly never finish our masterwork: The Tuffy Piano Concerto for Four Paws.’

  I thought it would be nice to leave with that sweet tune still ringing in my ears. So I walked up and down the keys a bit. (I like to stick to the black ones. They sound more plinky-plunky. And every time one of my paws slides off onto a white key, I tend to get a little cross, and stamp.)

  ‘What is that dreadful noise?’

  Whoops! Mr Not-At-All-Musical poked his head round the door. ‘You! Well, you can get off that piano at once!’

  He pushed me off. I hate that, so I spun round in the air on my way down and scratched him hard.

  ‘Yeee-ouch!’

  He glared at me, and I glared back at him.

  That is one person in this house to whom I won’t be saying any fond farewell.

  6

  So Spank My Bum

  So spank my furry little bum, I didn’t say goodbye to Ellie. I meant to. That’s why I went back up the stairs and into her bedroom. That’s why I jumped up at her side and started to purr in her ear.

  Then I saw what she was looking at on her computer screen.

  Kittens!

  Cute baby fluff-balls. Sweet little winsome things with huge eyes staring out. You wouldn’t believe their names. Sugar-Pie. Binty-Minty. Pansy-Wansy. Prissy-Missy. (Excuse me while I stick a paw down my throat.)

  Ellie stopped at the photo of a kitten called Titania. (I ask you! Titania! For a cat!)

  ‘Look, Tuffy. Isn’t she cute?’

  Sometimes I think it’s a good thing that I can’t speak. Because if I could, I would have told young Ellie just what I think of idiotic, brainless balls of fluff that can’t clean their own fur or creep up on anything taking a quick nap in a nest. Why, some of them can’t even find the way to the litter tray on their tenth day.

  So it’s a good job I don’t talk. I wouldn’t have liked the last few words that I exchanged with Ellie to be unpleasant.

  So I never said goodbye.

  7

  Dead Mice and Birds? Eee-yuk!

  Out on the wall, the gang were waiting.

  ‘So,’ Bella said. ‘You’re really off?’

  ‘Yes,’ I said proudly. ‘I’m not going to stay where I’m not wanted.’

  They were still anxious. ‘But, Tuffy, if no one in Ellie’s family is there to put your food in front of you, what are you going to eat?’

  I had a think. In the end I said, ‘I am a cat, so if I don’t find anything else, there’s always the old traditional stand-by.’

  They all looked blank.

  ‘Dead mice and birds,’ I said.

  I don’t think I have ever seen three faces look more disgusted.

  ‘Dead mice and birds? Eee-yuk!’

  ‘You’re joking!’

  ‘What, pick off all that hair and fur and feathers and stuff, and actually eat the things?’

  ‘Revolt
ing!’

  ‘Horror-show idea!’

  ‘Full gross-out!’

  ‘What a sick plan! You must be off your head.’

  ‘Listen,’ I said. ‘Dead mice and birds is what cats used to eat.’

  They weren’t convinced. ‘Yes. Back in the Stone Age!’

  ‘Before cat food was invented.’

  ‘About a million years ago.’

  ‘Don’t be such wimps,’ I told them. ‘Why, I can remember my mother telling me proudly that my own great-grandfather was known as a splendid mouser.’

  ‘I bet he didn’t eat the things he caught.’

  ‘I bet he did,’ I argued.

  Tiger was determined. ‘No way. He’d have been sick.’

  ‘I’d have been sick just watching him,’ added Snowball.

  I wasn’t going to hang around and argue. It was getting dark. So I got Bella and Snowball to hold my collar tight while I slipped out of it.

  Then, ‘Farewell, gang!’ I said. ‘I’m off to seek my fortune. Wish me luck!’

  They all came further along the wall to watch me go. Tiger waved a forlorn paw. ‘Don’t you forget us, Tuffy!’

  ‘No, don’t forget us. We won’t ever forget you.’

  ‘No, never.’

  8

  Tuffy the Busker

  I thought it best to go where no one knew me. After all, I didn’t want nosy people peering down at me. ‘Aren’t you that cat from Acacia Avenue that dug up all my petunias? I’m going to take you home.’

  So I went further into town than I do usually. It was quite busy. There were a lot of people standing at bus stops and hurrying across the streets. I wandered up and down till, from round the corner, I heard someone playing a tune I like on a mouth organ.

  I stopped to listen. Whoever was playing began to sing the words:

  ‘Scooby-scooby, swish-swish

  Fishy in a dish-dish

  Make a little wish-wish