Tag Archives: kitten adoption story

Journal Entry – It’s a Boy

Black-and-white photo of Luno the black cat detective in noir style, lying down with paws stretched out, looking straight ahead

Yeah, I didn’t approve this photo either.

Premonitions in the Night

The night started wrong. No midnight kibble, no water. Both bowls pulled after dark like I was headed for lockup. By morning, the alarm went off early — 7 a.m., sharp. The human didn’t make coffee, didn’t swallow his usual handful of pills. He went straight for a canvas box with mesh windows. My old fascination. I used to perch on top of it. This time, he opened the door and I stepped inside like a sap. He zipped it shut, scooped me up, and we were on the move.

Back to the Joint

I hadn’t been in that car since the day I got sprung from the pound — or jail, as I like to call it. I howled the whole way. Something in me knew we were headed back. And I was right. Dropped at 8 a.m., they said. Spayed, they said. Pick up at 3 p.m.

The Reveal

The human showed up on time. But the news wasn’t what he expected. Not spayed — neutered. “There’s no mistake,” the desk clerk said. “No other black cats today. No doubt about it. Luna’s a boy.”

The human argued. Said he’d asked for a female, even bent his rules about age. He’d been sold a story, and now it smelled rotten. Sunset Cove — that’s what the file said. Same name in the chip. Sold off cheap for twenty-five bucks while the others went for a hundred, two at a time. A bargain bin black cat with a cover story attached. Honest mistake, or a setup to move me out the door?

The Choice

They told him he had options. Swap me for another cat. Walk away. Pretend the last month never happened. But the guy’s no monster. He’d brought me home, bought me toys, fed me like family. You don’t dump family back at the pound. So he signed the papers. Sunset Cove, officially adopted.

Coming Home

I was loopy, drugged up, staggering like a drunk gumshoe at closing time. But I knew that voice when I heard it at the desk. I meowed the whole ride home — not scared, just buzzing, like the walls were melting around me.

Back at the flat, he let me out of the box. I wobbled, barely able to stand. He carried me to the litter box, and somehow I managed. Took three hours before the fog lifted. He kept staring, weighing the name. Luna. Pretty name. Pretty cover. Even Luna Bella, the Albanian goddess had called me. For a moment I almost liked it, forgot I was a boy.

But the truth was out now. The cover cracked, the con exposed. And somewhere down the line, the name would have to change.

—Sunset Cove 🐾

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Journal Entry — The day everything changed

Black-and-white photo of Luno the black cat detective in noir style, sitting upright and looking straight ahead.

The human calls this candid. I call it blackmail.

Life Behind Bars

The joint stank of bleach and bad air. The AC rattled like a busted fan in some flop-house office, trying but failing to clear the stink. That’s where I was — a two-bit kitten doing time in a steel-bar kennel. Then the warden walked in with a human close behind.

I didn’t catch the conversation at first. Didn’t need to. This was my one chance to bust out, so I laid it on thick. Wide eyes, tiny meows, claws hooked on the bars like I had a story to tell. The kind of performance that could turn heads in a lineup. And sure enough, it worked. The human bent down, gave me a look.

That’s when I heard it. He wanted a female — said he’d seen a couple of dames on the website. Trouble was, the warden told him those weren’t available for another month. Then she tapped my cage file. Sunset Cove — Female.

“You can have her today,” she said.

“This is a female?” the human asked again.

“Yes,” the warden replied, steady as a lie detector with the cord yanked.

I almost choked on the punch line. Sunset Cove was my file name. And I was a boy. Either it was sloppy paperwork or a con in broad daylight, but the human bought it. The warden even added color: me and a sibling found in a cardboard box, abandoned in an apartment lot. I barely remember it. When you’re two and a half months old, a week ago feels like ancient history.

The Paper Trail

They moved me into another cardboard box — this one with air holes, like prison transport with a view. The ride was rough, but I kept my ears open. At the clerk’s desk, the human spoke first. “Her name’s Luna,” he said, like it was ink drying on a confession.

The clerk didn’t even blink. “As far as we’re concerned, this file will always be Sunset Cove. That’s what’s on record, and that’s what’s in the chip.”

So there it was. Sunset Cove — the name on my jacket, stamped permanent. Luna — the alias my human chose, the cover I’d be wearing for the job. One name for the file, one name for the street. And me? Just a boy playing the part of a girl in a long con I didn’t ask for.

The Escape Ride

The transport box rattled as the car pulled away. I cried, loud enough to shake the night, but the human whispered soft promises through the holes. For the first time, it didn’t feel like a lie. Maybe, just maybe, I could trust this one.

A New Territory

The joint he brought me to was smaller than I’d like, but good enough to stake a claim. Didn’t take long before another sap — his brother — stumbled in, said he was there to fix the bathroom faucet.

That’s when I cased the strangest room. A porcelain chair with a water bowl in the seat. I leaned in for a sip, but the human slammed the lid shut and barked “no.” I don’t like that word.

Then I found the prize — a giant oval bowl on the floor. Perfect racetrack. I ran circles around it until the human scooped me up and locked the door. Said he was worried I’d mistake it for a litter box. Who did he think he was dealing with? I’ve been working litter boxes since day one.

The First Case File

So that’s how it started. Sunset Cove on paper. Luna in the human’s eyes. And me, undercover in my own story.

The digs had food, toys, and a human who needed training more than I did. I didn’t know what tomorrow’s case would bring, but I knew this much — today was the day everything changed.

—Luna 🐾

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