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The Cat Watched On
Once these walls had been part of a castle. Now weathered
by time and overgrown with brush and flowers grown wild from
their once appointed places in their gardens, they housed only
memories and small woodlands animals. Instead of the proud
king who once sat in the roofless throne room, a large feral
cat lay sunning in the last rays of the late afternoon sun.
Forest shadows crept across the courtyard, and as dusk
began to gather, other shadows now appeared in the ruins below.
From his perch above, the cat now watched what only he could
see, ears twitching to sounds only he could discern. He watched
as the weeds growing up from the cracked floor seemed to bend
of their own volition. Or were they crushed by feet dancing to
a phantom pavane?
The brackish pool in the small garden by the
hall seemed to echo with the splashing of water from a long
dried up fountain, and polite murmurs of courtiers long absent
from this court drifted up as the cat shifted his position, if
voices they were and not merely breezes blowing down empty
hallways.
People gave this place wide clearance. Some said it was
cursed. Some said it was haunted by the shades of the last
ruler and his rebellious sons, doomed to fight each other for
all eternity. Whichever it might be, no one came to look.
No one dared. Except the cat.
And the cat watched on.
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