~ Akasha ~
by
Sandra Cox
Akasha raised her pretty calico head and sniffed the air.
Something about the brooding stillness didn’t feel right. There was too much
electricity in the heavy atmosphere. The cat peeped out the cubbyhole in the
boathouse, where she made her home, and looked at a sky turned black with storm
clouds. The waves of the lake lifted and hit against the shore with a sharp slap
that made her flinch. Thunder rumbled. In the distance a bolt of lightning cut
through the dark and hurled a sizzling blaze of light to the ground.
“Mamma, I’m scared.” A tiny replica of herself, down to the
gold spot on her chin and black splotch on her right shoulder, peeped at her
from the top of an old wooden fishing boat resting upright on a flat webbing
rack supported by eyehooks.
“Don’t worry, Cairo. Mamma’s here. Mamma will take care of
you.” Akasha purred. Her first litter and she was so proud. She’d never known
kittens that were as smart or as cute as her little five-week old darlings.
She’d had no idea how it would feel to be a mom. That nothing in the world would
ever matter as much as these three balls of fluff. She would lay down her life
to keep them safe.
Cairo’s head disappeared abruptly, followed by a hollow thump
as she fell to the bottom of the boat. “I’m okay, Mamma,” Cairo’s voice sounded
muffled as she sang out from the bowels of the boat. “Oh look, I found a leaf.”
“That’s nice, dear.” Akasha lay on an old towel deep in the
shadows of the boathouse, Cubbie and Cosmo, her two boys, drowsing beside her.
A crack of thunder sounded close by and a streak of blinding
lightning landed almost on top of the building. The sound of splintering wood
followed a great whoosh and the maple next to the boathouse crashed to the
ground.
The wind picked up at a frightening rate.
The two boys woke with a start and burrowed against her. “What
was that, Mamma?” Cubbie asked, raising his little black head to look around.
Blowing gusts howled. The heavens opened and rain battered the
building pinging off the steel roof like the rat-a-tat-tat of bullets.
“Mamma.” Cosmo tried to burrow under her.
“Mamma, I’m scared,” Cairo called out.
A whistle like an approaching train sounded in the distance,
getting closer and closer at an alarming rate of speed.
Akasha tensed and laid back her ears as the noise rose to a
piercing shriek, hurting her eardrums. She sensed danger, terrible danger.
“Flatten yourself in the bottom of the boat, my darling Cairo,
under one of the seats,” instinct made her call out above the driving winds.
“Boys, get under me.”
“I want to come to you, Mamma,” Cairo wailed.
“It’s too late, baby. Do as Mamma says.” Akasha flattened
herself over Cosmo and Cubbie, stretching her paws out in four different
directions and putting her head down.
The shrieking noise escalated and the building collapsed
around them like so much kindling, leaving the cats inside a gray funnel that
picked them up, held them suspended in air for several heartbeats, then, like a
giant fist opening, dropped them in the water. The boat landed with a splash
several yards away, teetering madly on the waves.
As Akasha and the two male kittens hit the water an icy swell
washed over them. Akasha pushed hard to the surface. She looked around
frantically. “Cosmo, Cubbie where are you?” she howled, fear beating at her like
the relentless waves.
“Mamma,” Cairo called out several yards away.
“Hang on, baby,” Akasha mewed, swallowing a mouthful of water
as a second wave crested over her. Again she fought her way to the surface. The
pounding rain mixed with her tears as she called frantically, “Cosmo. Cubbie.
Where are you, babies?”
She treaded water and turned in frenetic circles, trying to
look through the towering dark waves, but the rain streamed down in liquid
sheets, blinding her. Everywhere, nothing but water and the boat bobbing farther
and farther away, while Cairo’s voice grew weaker. “Mamma, save me. Save me,
Mamma.”
“I’m coming, baby, I’m coming.” Pushing herself, she stretched
one paw in front of another. She was so tired and the icy water froze her
muscles, making movement an impossible effort as the rain pelted her.
A huge gray wave crashed over her. She sank in the freezing water, her drenched coat of fur weighing her down. With the rest of her remaining strength she pushed to the surface only to be hit with another angry wave. She tried to fight her way back to the top but this time her legs refused to move and the water sucked her under. My babies. She closed her eyes and drifted down. I’m dying and I can’t save them, was her last conscious thought as she sank deeper and deeper into the watery darkness.