Lacey And Manx !full! [WORKING]
If you are considering adding a second cat, don’t look for a clone of the one you have. Look for the one who annoys them just enough to wake them up. Look for the Manx to your Lacey. It will be loud. It will be messy. And it will be the best decision you ever made.
But something was missing. Lacey was a painting on the wall—beautiful to look at, but you couldn’t touch her for too long, or she’d get wrinkled. I swore I was a one-cat household. But then my neighbor found a stray kitten under their porch. "He has no tail," they said. "He’s grey. And he keeps trying to fight the garden hose." lacey and manx
But then came Lacey. And then came Manx. If you are considering adding a second cat,
Putting together a household with these two has been less like pet ownership and more like producing a reality TV show titled Real Housewives of the Living Room . Here is the long, winding, fur-covered story of how a lacey lady and a tailless tornado taught me about love, boundaries, and the art of the 3 AM zoomie. Lacey came first. I found her at a local rescue, tucked away in the corner of a cage, looking like a Victorian ghost who had seen better centuries. She is a dilute calico with the softest fur you have ever felt—like dandelion fluff. The rescue had named her "Lacey" because of her dainty white paws and the lace-like pattern of her orange spots. It will be loud
If you had told me two years ago that I would be living in a home ruled by two felines—one who thinks she’s a porcelain doll and another who thinks he’s a rabbit—I would have laughed you out of the room. I was a "dog person." I liked my pets straightforward: walks, fetch, slobber. Cats were cryptic.
Tags: #CatLife #Manx #Calico #PetAdoption #OddCouple #CatBehavior #RescueCats