Interference by L.A. Witt EPUB & PDF – eBook Details Online
- Status: Available for Free Download
- Authors: L.A. Witt
- Language: English
- Genre: contemporary romance
- Format: PDF / EPUB
- Size: 2.8 MB
- Price: Free
ANTHONY
“I thought Maine Coons were supposed to be smart.”
“Oh, they are.” Dr. Green, laughed as she watched my cat
searching for his treat on the exam table. “But black cats are
kind of like orange cats—not exceptionally bright.”
Oblivious to us remarking on his intelligence (or lack
thereof), Bear looked around with wide yellow eyes, question
marks floating above his head because he could’ve sworn his
treat was right there a second ago. From the other end of the
table, my other Maine Coon, Moose, licked crumbs off his
paw. He’d already finished his treat, having had zero trouble
locating it after I’d put it in front of him. Maybe the black cat
thing was accurate. Moose was solid gray, and he was sharp
as a skate blade. Sometimes too smart for his own good.
Bear, on the other hand…
I finally sighed, took pity on him, and gave his giant paw
a nudge. He lifted it up and shot me a puzzled look, then
snapped his gaze down and discovered the treat that had
magically appeared. He immediately snatched it up and
started crunching happily.
Moose, for his part, turned big yellow eyes on me as if to
say, Dad, I didn’t get one. He hadn’t forgotten or misplaced
his, though. He was just gaslighting me. Like I said—too
smart for his own good.
And because I was a massive sucker, I dug out another
treat for each of them. This time, I made sure Bear ate his
out of my hand so he didn’t lose it under his own paw again.
Dr. Green just laughed and shook her head. “Makes you
wonder how anyone thinks cats are boring.”
“I know, right? Never a dull moment with these two.”
“Could be worse.” She grimaced. “They could be
Bengals.”
She knew of what she spoke—the sole reason I subscribed
to the clinic’s newsletter was because there was always a
hilarious photo or story about the four Bengals wreaking
havoc on her house. My boys were handfuls enough; I did not
need an army of speckled Tasmanian devils.
Now that Moose and Bear had finished their treats, I
clipped their leashes to their harnesses. Moose jumped down
with a heavy thud. Bear… Well, we’d be here all night if I
waited for him to jump, so I just hoisted him up under my
arm and gently set him on the floor beside his brother.
With Dr. Green on our heels, we headed out of the exam
room and up the hall to take care of the bill.
Usually, this was when the techs and receptionists would
start fawning all over the cats, which they both ate up like
the little—well,
“little”—hams they were. Whenever I took
the boys out on walks, people gawked and took pictures,
both because they were cats on leashes, and because they
were huge. Bear was twenty-two pounds, Moose was
For More Read Download This Book
EPUB