![]() ![]() ![]() The multi-colored cats are known for their odd behavior, and, after all, this kitten has been responsible for leading my cozy’s human heroine to a dead body. ![]() Here’s the wonderful Clea Simon with proof.ĬLEA SIMON: I’m asking because that’s one of the (non-murderous) questions raised by the sudden inexplicable appearance of a tortoiseshell kitten in TO CONJURE A KILLER. I had gone to get a fluffy gray kitten, but when Lola saw me, she put her paw through the bars and tapped me. I got Lola from the humane society when she was so small she could not go upstairs, because she couldn't put her front paws on the stair above her back paws. See photo! She was so brilliant and diabolical. When he sat down, she was instantly on his lap. Apparently Lola, seething with jealousy, decided to drive him away, and honestly, followed him relentlessly wherever he went. When Jonathan arrived in our lives, he turned out to be allergic to cats. So many more examples, but here’s one more. And one night when I got home a tiny tiny bit later than usual, she’d –I am not kidding–opened the cabinet, pulled out the cardboard container box, ripped it open and taken out ALL of the vittles pouches, ALL of them, and opened ALL of them and scattered the food all over the kitchen floor. Back in the day, when we did not know things about cat food, she would ONLY eat Tender Vittles. My dearest cat Lola, who lived to be 20, was the bossiest most persnickety cat that ever existed. She says “Thank you, Hank, for having me over on Jungle Reds today! I’m going to dive right in and get all cat-centric and ask your readers: Are tortoiseshell cats crazy?” HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: I know the answer–definitively!-to the question the wonderful Clea Simon is asking. ![]()
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