Title: Double Blind
Author: Tiffany Pitts
Publisher: Booktrope Editions
Pages: 280
Genre: Action/Adventure/Humor/Sci-fi
Format: Paperback/Kindle
Purchase at AMAZONAuthor: Tiffany Pitts
Publisher: Booktrope Editions
Pages: 280
Genre: Action/Adventure/Humor/Sci-fi
Format: Paperback/Kindle
Delilah
Pelham’s brother, Paul, is missing. She should probably be worried about that
but honestly, he’s been in trouble since the day he learned the words “trust
me." In fact, if it weren’t for his roommate, Carl, she would gladly leave
him to his fate.
Carl is a good guy, even if he’s a bit of a dork. Okay, a large slice of a dork. Possibly the entire cake.
But he wants to help, as do his gamer friends, which is how Deli finds herself in the middle of Hong Kong with the King of the Dorks, running from creepy guys with slicked-back hair and shiny black guns.
Back
at home, Carl’s friends aren’t faring nearly as well. All they had to do was
monitor the situation and feed Deli’s cat while she was gone. How could that
possibly end in bloodshed?
There
is an answer, of course, but no one ever thinks to ask the cat.
Deli’s
Living Room
Later
That Evening
Because of his size, most people assumed that
Toesy was more dog-like. To some extent, that was true. He liked to go for
walks. He liked chasing cats. He even played a very specialized game of fetch,
which could be very rewarding—provided, of course, you were in need of a dead
bird or half a rat.
But in some important ways, Toesy was very
feline indeed. For instance, the second Jake’s breathing slowed from the syncopated
wheeze of someone doing too many things at once to the drawn-out rhythm of
sleep, he pounced.
No, pounced is too harsh a word. He crept,
as well as any thirty-two pound cat can creep, from the far side of
the couch to the man’s lap. It wasn’t easy. The man had minimal lap to start
with and it currently held many electronic whatsits. However, Toesy’s ability
to squish all thirty-two pounds of himself into tight spaces was quite
remarkable, and soon he was cozied up between the man, his gadgetry, and the
back of the couch.
After a while, the man woke up enough to move
the whatsits from his lap to the coffee table. He discovered Toesy tucked in by
his side and took the opportunity to reclaim the other half of the couch by
propping his feet up on it. Toesy allowed the man to get comfortable before
stretching out again. Delighted at this turn of events, he began to purr.
“You’re not such a huge monster, are you?”
The man mumbled more contented laziness at him and scratched behind his left
ear. A small drop of saliva gathered on Toesy’s lips.
The man must have been very tired because he
soon returned to snoring. Toesy took advantage of the situation by climbing up
to sleep on his chest.
Toesy considered his mistress a near-perfect
human. She was easy to live with, generous with the catnip, and willing to stay
in bed until noon on Sunday mornings if it was raining outside. Yet for all her
fine qualities, Delilah Pelham had one major flaw. She was too small for him to
sleep on.
Usually, as soon as he achieved the prime
comfort position, she complained that he was too fat or that she could not
breathe. Sometimes her arms fell asleep. Toesy loved Deli endlessly, but
occasionally he suspected that she might be a bit of a wimp.
This man, who knew to feed him the Seafood
Flavor without any prompting, would not complain about Toesy’s extra girth, for
he had extra girth himself. Toesy suspected he might be a holy man. Certainly,
no regular human he ever met had been so awe-inspiring.
He kneaded the lumps of stuff in the man’s
shirt pocket into an arrangement conducive to long-term napping. Perfection
attained, he tucked his nose into his furry belly and purred himself into a
trance.
Or at least that’s what he intended to do.
A few moments into his joyous nap, Toesy heard
a faint tick-tick sound and opened his left eye halfway. Normally, he
didn't allow tick-tick noises, on the principle that they always
precluded some sort of funny business, like a bird or a squirrel. Then he would
have to go kill something, eat it, and spend the rest of the day fighting off
vermin-induced heartburn. But thanks to this great man, he wasn’t hungry just
now. He refused to allow one tick-tick to ruin his repose. He closed his
tawny eye.
Another tick-tick ticked. Both of
Toesy’s eyes shot open.
One tick-tick was understandable, but two
tick-ticks? He would not stand for it. Toesy was a sweet creature as far as
sharp-fanged, mildly feral cats go, but there was a streak of murder in him
that would not stand for a good nap to be ruined by ticking jackassery.
He lifted his head to look at the nearest
window. If that crow was back again, he intended to kill it completely
this time. But the kitchen window was empty.
More ticking ticked, this time followed by
faint scritchy-scratchy noises, which confused his senses. Toesy closed
his eyes and focused his ears on the unusual sound. It came not from the
window, but somewhere close.
He flicked his ears twice, once in
recognition and once in disbelief. The ticks were coming from the man's trouser
pocket!
Toesy searched until he found the fold of the
man’s pocket and cautiously stuck his nose inside. The smell of cheese
overpowered him for a moment, so he lay still and waited for his brain to
adjust. After a moment, he was able to pick out more subtle scents. The tangy
brine of coins, oily keys, and the cold, blank smell of glass—all surrounded by
a diffuse aroma that Toesy could not place. It smelled awake.
TICK-TICK.
The glass jumped toward him, hitting him in
the nose. Toesy backed away, affronted.
Surely this man does not
want all this tick-ticking in his pocket, he thought. I must put a stop to this
nonsense.
He reached in through the folds of cloth with
a giant furry paw. The glass surface was round like a tube, with a little fluff
stuck in one end. As Toesy rummaged, the tube slid free from the man’s pocket
and started to roll away toward the floor. He flashed a claw and caught it by
the fluff.
Inside the tube, small bugs hopped and
popped. Normally, Toesy wouldn't bother with bugs of this size, as he preferred
something juicier. However, these particular bugs had just punched him in the
nose and obviously needed a short, sharp lesson in consequences.
The wad of fluff at the end of the tube
squeaked along his claws as Toesy dug deeper. He got a good grip and shook
hard, loosening the cotton until suddenly it jerked free. This caused the glass
tube to shoot across the room, where it hit the television with a tink
and dropped to the floor.
Toesy did not want the bugs to escape before
he could inspect (and possibly eat) them, so he power-jumped across the room.
When using all the muscles in its hind legs,
the average house cat can jump six to seven feet from a resting position.
Toesy, however, was not an average house cat. He was more like two or three
average house cats shoved into the body of one. The force exerted by all
thirty-two pounds of Toesy, power-jumping off the man’s sleeping abdomen, was
approximately equal to being sucker punched by a gorilla.
That’s why the man woke up gasping for air
and clutching his gut. He tried to roar, but without any breath, it came out a
thin squeak.
“What the…” Wheeze. “…hell…” Gasp.
“…are you doing?” Cough, cough.
Toesy had no attention to spare. He landed
within inches of the glass tube, all thoughts laser-focused on the floor.
Now that he was better able to see them, the
bugs didn’t look like bugs at all. They looked like shiny, hopping beans. He
sniffed them. They smelled like shiny, hopping, metal beans. He reached
out with a tentative paw and batted at them. One of the beans popped up, half
an inch into the air. Toesy quickly clamped his paw down on it.
“What have you got there, Toesy?” the man
asked after he went back to breathing right.
Toesy flicked his tail in deference to the
man but did not turn around. He was trying to figure out how to let go of the
shiny bean and eat it at the same time.
“Let me see, boy.”
The man was on his knees now, shuffling
around on the floor next to Toesy.
“What’s this?” he said, holding up the
cracked glass tube. “That’s not… No, it can’t be. What have you got?” His voice
grew alarming and insistent.
“No! No, no, no, no, no! What have you
done?”
Toesy admired his volume as the man yelled
and scooped two of the beans back into the cracked tube.
“What are you doing with the Elevators? You
can’t have those! They don’t even work! Carl is gonna kill me!”
Another bean popped into the air. Toesy
clamped a free paw down on it while his eyes dilated all the way up to crazy.
He loved everything about this day.
“What the—?”
The man sat back on his haunches and examined
the two beans he captured earlier. They sat at the bottom of the tube,
vibrating back and forth gently.
“That…has not happened before,” he
said. Then he looked at Toesy and added, “Do you see this?”
Toesy, still splay-legged with trapped beans,
rejoiced at this turn of events. The man was getting in on the game, too! They
would eat the beans together! He broke into spontaneous purring. The beans
under his feet began to wiggle around, and he dug his claws into the carpet
wildly.
The beans in the man’s hand vibrated faster.
He peered at them, then he peered at Toesy. He brought the beans closer to
Toesy. They began to pop inside their tube. He drew the beans away from Toesy.
They quieted down.
“Holy s**t,” the man said. “Cat, do you
realize what this means? I could kiss you!”
But he did not kiss him. Instead, the man
leaned over, lifted Toesy’s right paw and extracted the bean from underneath.
Then he tousled Toesy’s shredded ears. Toesy dug the claws of his other paw
deeper into the carpet. He did not want the man to take away his last bean.
“You,” he said, pointing to Toesy and smiling
huge. “Are the most awesome cat in the universe! I gotta tell Carl.”
He stood up, grabbed something from the
table, and walked to the kitchen. He was making little boop-boop noises
on the electronic whatsit when he stopped suddenly.
“S**t, he’s still on a da*n plane.” He turned
to Toesy and continued talking. “I’ll have to email him about how awesome you
are, Toesy.”
At the mention of his name, Toesy purred
louder. The bean struggled beneath his paw.
“Now, where does Deli keep your cat treats?”
The Great Man continued to talk at him as he
combed through the kitchen, but Toesy had stopped listening after cat treats.
There was no doubt in his mind now that this
was indeed a holy man. Toesy loved him, whisker and claw. Deli was gone for
now, but she would return. When she did, could he convince her to let this man
stay? The thought of him sleeping on the couch forever made Toesy purr even
louder.
The bean beneath his paw struggled again.
Cautiously, in case it escaped, Toesy lifted his foot. The bean popped up but
fell back down in the same spot, seemingly resigned to its fate. Toesy sniffed
it twice, then ate it.
It tasted of metal and victory.
About the Author
Tiffany
Pitts grew up in the Seattle area in a time when the Super Sonics were huge and
Starbucks was just a store at the end of the Market. Tragedy struck early in
her life as her family moved to New Jersey mere months before Bon Jovi’s
“Slippery When Wet” album hit record stores. It took nearly a decade to wean
herself off the hairspray. But Seattle called her back, so she went; eventually
earning a degree in Botany (pronounced “Bar tending”) at the University of
Washington.
She
made one more valiant attempt to leave the PNW after college by travelling
around the country doing not much of value and making very stupid decisions.
She is thankful every day that the internet was not a huge deal in those years.
Then Seattle called again so she picked up and moved home where she spent many
years being a scientist of middling talent in several labs that she absolutely
did not blow up—except for that one time and everyone agreed not to talk about
that any more.
Now
she divides her time between writing fiction and raising two kids who are
wonderful but, for some reason, will not stop licking things.
Her
latest book is the action/adventure/humorous/scifi, Double
Blind.
For More Information
My Review:
I loved that Toesy was a "character" and that he "transformed" in the book. The mystery was interesting and I thought I knew why and how, but I did not until the last few chapters. This is the first book in a new series and I can not wait to laugh with the author in her future books. There were times when I could not stop laughing, and I was still engrossed in what was going to happen. The characters brought out my dork side, and the science fiction plot really added to the story line. I am giving this book a 4/5. I was given a copy to review, however all opinions are my own.
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