BPR 48 | 2021
Sorry about the accidents. I know you didn’t kill me
 for that, though. When I heard you say you’d “put me down,”
 I knew it was because I couldn’t jump up on the counter
 anymore and bat that foil bag of treats with my paw—
 hell, I could barely drag myself to the door. Did you notice?
 Of course you did. You were wonderful to me. And I loved 
 you back, though it seemed undignified to say so. Hence 
 the disdain, the inability to look you in the eye, the quick leap 
 off the bed when you put me there because you wanted 
 to lie down with me and cuddle. I wanted to cuddle, too, 
 so much that it would have killed you if you’d known. 
 All day I dreamt of sleeping on your belly while your bladder 
 filled to the point of bursting and you thought, I can hold it,
 can’t get up, can’t wake the kitty. I didn’t hunt those birds 
 because I disliked them. I chased them down because 
 I had to do something while you were at work to keep 
 my love from driving me crazy. And if the birds died, that
 was at least partly their fault: why did they have to flutter 
 and flap so much? Why couldn’t the birds be like lizards? 
 The lizards played dead when I took them in my jaws, 
 and when I dropped them at your feet, they sprang to life 
 and ran behind the refrigerator, where they died anyway.
 I got fat as I got older, but so did you. Why didn’t 
 my brother Percy get fat? He ate his food and mine, too, 
 and never gained an ounce. Percy was too stupid to get fat. 
 And his manners were terrible: he’d take a big shit right
 in the middle of the garden. I’d be under the plumerias 
 hissing, “Percy! Percy! People are watching!” and he’d just 
 keep going plop-plop-plop, like he was getting paid for it. 
 Then there’s my coat. God, it’s beautiful. I kept it clean, 
 didn’t I? That man you live with would say, “Ha, ha, 
 she’s cleaning her coat again” or “For God’s sake, stop 
 cleaning your coat!” but there was always one more bit 
 of leaf or dirt that he couldn’t see, though I could. And often
 I couldn’t see anything at all, though I knew something 
 was there: some flaw, some imperfection, a blemish 
 of one kind or another. We all have blemishes. 
 Not you, though. Sometimes Percy and I would sit 
 shoulder to shoulder and wait for you to get out 
 of the shower, and when you did, Percy would tilt 
 his head as though to say, “You look better in clothes,” 
 or “You need to start going to the gym again,” whereas 
 I just stared at you. I just looked. And I loved what I saw.



