Of the happenings in the winter of 1915 near Kensington Road
Chapter One: Just before dusk in November
Winter was eager to begin early this year. Therefore, the tomcat shivered
when his paws touched the terazzo on the dusk of this november-evening. He took
his time to get familiar with the temperature of the terrace, even seemed to
ponder going back into the house before finally he decided to sit down on the
mosaic of blue and white tiles and watch his surroundings.
Mist rested on the large garden, covering the more brown than green grass with
hoarfrost which dimly sparkled in the reddish light. Slowly the tom stepped
down, halting and sniffing at single fallen branches he encountered. Dried
chestnut, hazel and cherry twigs lay scattered across the lawn, though strangely
those trees were nowhere to be seen; Small bushes, willows and firs grew in the
garden. There must have been a storm earlier this autumn.
Curiously the cat moved faster, towards the fence marking the end of the
estate. Once he turned back to peer at his new home. A nice house, without a
doubt. Spacious, light and adored with many large windows it had given the
housemaids a scare when they had looked at it for the first time a week ago.
Smoky and dirty as this city was the glass promised to be a hard job to keep
clean. Not his concern, was it. The tom liked the new manor rather much. Not as
much as the castle back in the glends for sure, but it could have been worse. He
shrugged and went on.
He slid through the wrought iron bars and tried to find himself a way through
the thick boughs obscuring the view on his family's new house. He shuddered as
frost fell from the twigs and dried leaves and showered his tan fur.
Only moments later he reached the other side of the tall hedge. After just a few
meters the grass ended and the ground made an abrupt slope down. Jakkapas saw
frost sparkle on all varieties of scrap metal, old equipment and appliances when
he looked down. Something that looked like the back of a car and a wheel and not
to forget loads of rubbish.
A refuse pit? So this was the reason for the tall hedge. He looked at the dark
brick buildings towering over and enclosing the yard, so typical for London. The
cat frowned. He had expected to encounter a more noble neighbourhood.
Somewhere around a few corners a dog barked.
Gracefully he hopped down onto the back of the car and sniffed. This place
scented of cats - though no tom seemed to have claimed the area in particular,
at least he didn't smell any acid sign of that. The lid of the car stood a tad
ajar, the tom slipped his head through. The inside was empty and so he reached
onto the bottom with one paw before retreating again.
Variously colored fur stuck to the underside of his paw. White, black, red,
black with white tips, brown, cream-colored... A wide variety, which proposed
this was the local posse's meeting place. He shook the fur off.
The barks suddenly became louder and closed in from the alley leading to the
backyard; a piece of scrap metal clattered onto the ground. The hair on the
tom's tail rose and he backed away from the car.
Another clang right above?
An amorphous mass buried the explorer before he could even look up. Hissing and
kicking he wiggled off a load of empty cans and boxes along with a staggered
young tom who apparently had plunged down by accident. Then he hastily looked
down the lane, the dog however was already dragged away by his human on the far
end of the dark lane. The tom heaved a breath before gazing at the young cat who
still assembled himself. He was barely an adult, rather thin and wiry, and his
brown and white fur part patches part stripes.
"Who're you?" the explorer asked, ears still flattened.
The young raised his head and mustered the stranger for a second before he
warily answered.
"Pouncival." Still shaky from being chased by the dog Pouncival felt
not up to put much attention to the new arrival already. Nevertheless even the
quick once over had told him the mature tom was a bit past his best years. His
pelt indicated an aristocratic blood, being merely a little lighter than
Cassandras but otherwise of similar quality. Pouncival didn't like the way the
stranger bristled his whiskers, but he probably had been scared, too.
"Stupid dog wanted me for dinner," he tried to joke as he got up. The
shock was leaving Pouncival's limbs while he talked and stretched. "I've
never seen you here before. You new? What's your name?"
The elder cat seemed to unwind, too. "Jakkapas," he then answered
loftily with half a smile, apparently somewhat amused about the sudden flow of
questions. "I'll live here from now on."
Upon Pouncival's confused expression he nodded at the manor up the slope. Just
in this moment a small bell jingled from the indicated direction. Both looked
up.
"MacBeth!" a woman's voice called from somewhere up in the garden.
"MacBeth?"
Jakkapas turned to his new aquaintance. "Excuse me, my dinner awaits."
Without further ado he bound up the rise.
"Eh, chap?"
Frowning Jakkapas turned. "What?!" Chap!
"A bunch of us meets here now and then. Mmmaybe you'd like to have a peek
in some time.?"
Jakkapas turned his back on him and continued on his path. "Only if they
have more manners than you do," he stated casually as he disappeared under
the bough.
Pouncival stared at the hedge for a moment, then shook his head and tittered.
"Excuse me, my dinner awaits," he mocked as he hopped down from the
large tire.
