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ing passion," she smiled. "It's--what's that!" Clear and high above the sound of the storm came an imperious "Me-ow!" "It's a cat," said Harlan. "You don't suppose the poor thing is shut up anywhere, do you?" "If it had been, we'd have found it. We've opened every door in the house, I'm sure. It must be outside." "Me-ow! Me-ow! Me-ow!" The voice was not pleading; it was rather a command, a challenge. "Kitty, kitty, kitty," she called. "Where are you, kitty?" Harlan opened the outside door, and in rushed a huge black cat, with the air of one returning home after a long absence. "Poor kitty," said Dorothy, kindly, stooping to stroke the sable visitor, who instinctively dodged the caress, and then scratched her hand. "The ugly brute!" she exclaimed. "Don't touch him, Harlan." Throughout the meal the cat sat at a respectful distance, with his greenish yellow eyes fixed unwaveringly upon them. He was entirely black, save for a white patch under his chin, which, in the half-light, carried with it an uncanny suggestion of a shirt front. Dorothy at length became restless under the calm scrutiny. "I don't like him," she said. "Put him out." "Thought you liked cats," remarked Harlan, reaching for another sandwich. "I do, but I don't like this one. Please put him out." "What, in all this storm? He'll get wet." "He wasn't wet when he came in," objected Dorothy. "He must have some warm, dry place of his own outside." "Come, kitty," said Harlan, pleasantly. "Kitty" merely blinked, and Harlan rose. "Come, kitty." With the characteristic independence of cats, the visitor yawned. The conversation evidently bored him. "Come, kitty," said Harlan, more firmly, with a low swoop of his arm. The cat arched his back, erected an enlarged tail, and hissed threateningly. In a dignified but effective manner, he eluded all attempts to capture him, even avoiding Dorothy and her broom. "There's something more or less imperial about him," she remarked, wiping her flushed cheeks, when they had finally decided not to put the cat out. "As long as he's adopted us, we'll have to keep him. What shall we name him?" "Claudius Tiberius," answered Harlan. "It suits him down to the ground." "His first name is certainly appropriate," laughed Dorothy, with a rueful glance at her scratched hand. Making the best of a bad bargain, she spread an old grey shawl, nicely folded, on the floor by the stove, and requested Cla
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