John Persons did not know what to do with love. He knew about quarterly reports, about mortgage rates, about the proper way to fold a fitted sheet. But this scruffy, purring thing that rubbed against his shins while he made his morning coffee? It unnerved him.
John Persons was not a man given to whimsy. His suits were charcoal gray, his ties were navy blue, and his lawn was mowed in mathematically precise stripes. He lived at 42 Maple Drive, a house that looked like every other house on the block, except for the fact that it was marginally cleaner. john persons kitty
He looked at her, now curled in a perfect orange circle on his lap, and said, "You are a disaster." John Persons did not know what to do with love
That was the sound that undid John Persons. It unnerved him
And so, John Persons, the man of gray suits and navy ties, became John Persons, the man with the cat. He still didn't know what to do with love. But he was learning. One tiny, rusty mew at a time.
He just held on.