The Kindness of Strangers by Annie R. McEwen

When people say “love defies boundaries,” I’m pretty sure they mean national, geographic, or even topographical. The Chinese-Welsh couple. The girl from Seattle and the boy from Miami. The groom who climbs the mountain to claim his bride on the other side.

My experience of love is that species is as permeable a boundary as any other. I’ve been lucky enough to find interspecies sweethearts many times, from my first turtle Soozie to my boa constrictor Stripe. But my heart was never filled—or broken—so thoroughly in cross-species love as by Blanche.

Blanche got her name from A Streetcar Named Desire. You know, the character Blanche DuBois, who says, “I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.” Blanche came to my hand as a ten-day-old feral kitten. When I say “came to my hand,” I mean that literally. She was so tiny her whole body fit on my palm. Her eyes hadn’t opened yet.

I had lost my longtime feline friend Kitty O’Shea just a month earlier, and wasn’t ready for another cat. Definitely not ready for an infant cat, one whose chances of survival without a mother and littermates was slim.

“Oh, no,” I told my friend John, who’d found the kitten on his farm. “I can’t do this.”

“I couldn’t just leave her. That mother cat never comes back to her kittens. She’s stressed and dumps them so she can survive.”

The harsh truth of feral life. I didn’t try to argue about it. Instead, I gave a heavy sigh, put the kitten in a nest of rags with a hot water bottle, and went out to buy feline pediatric formula and the tiniest feeding bottle I had ever seen.

At an age when my own fertility was a rapidly receding image in the rear view mirror, I became a new mom. Four-hour feedings—including in the middle of the night. My furry newborn had such strong feral genes that she fought even sustenance, and a nursing session left me with bloody scratches on the hand holding the bottle. After the feeding, came the burping, with Blanche draped over my shoulder on a flannel cloth to catch the bubbles of milk when she belched. Then, the bum washing, which I learned to do under a stream of warm water from the sink faucet. After that, the patting dry, the stowing of the by-then sleeping baby in a padded orange crate, with a corncob pillow heated gently in the microwave.

Feed. Burp. Wash. Dry. Tuck in. Sleep. Repeat.

When Blanche got old enough to walk without falling over, she explored. Tiny circles on the living room rug at first, then slightly bigger ones, always returning to my lap. She was a cute infant, but with each passing day she became more beautiful. More beautiful, in fact, than any cat I’d ever owned. (And believe me, I passed that “every life has nine cats” yardstick a couple decades ago.)

She was totally white, not a black hair on her body. Pink toe pads, nose, and inside ears. Eyes … Blanche’s eyes were sapphires, seen through ice. Large, brilliant blue, clear, knowing.

Apart from beauty, she had courage—another donation from her feral genes, or so the vet said. She was so fearless she scared the wits out of me at least once a day. One of her favorite perches was the top edge of an interior door—an inch and a half in width and six feet off the floor. For safety’s sake, since suburbia is at least as dangerous as the country, she lived indoors. But there wasn’t a square inch of my 1920s bungalow that Blanche hadn’t found a way to turn into a jungle gym.

And not just the house. Blanche loved the car. John and I had an Irish band, which periodically meant piling instruments, P.A., and ourselves in a van and heading off to festivals, workshops, ceilis, concerts, pub gigs, St. Patrick’s Day … After the gear went in, Blanche went in, too. She had a traveling crate, of course, but her favorite perch was on top of a speaker, where she could glare out the window at people in passing cars.

People. That’s where the love story becomes complicated. Blanche—who apparently thought I was her birth mother—adored me. Every day, in a dozen different ways, she said I was the center of her universe, her reason for getting off the bed in the morning and curling up peacefully at night. John, she tolerated. Most of the time.

And that was it. She let one pair of two-legs into her life and the needle of her tolerance went to Full. It wasn’t just dislike of outsiders; it was full-on, battle-ready rage. The plumber, the a/c repair tech, the census taker, the UPS person, the hapless kid selling candy bars for the high school band—in Blanche’s book, they were marked for death the instant they attempted to ring the doorbell.

It was—challenging. Over the years, I adapted more and more to Blanche’s unreasonable and unyielding hatred of strangers. She couldn’t change. I could, and I did. Over time, I got fewer visitors and had almost no friends left. Unscarred ones, anyway.

Some people—people who’ve never loved an animal that deeply and been loved that deeply in return—thought I was loopydoodle. They’re entitled to an opinion. Blanche would have given her life for me; that was her opinion. If that plumber or a/c repairman or kid with the candy bars had made the slightest hostile move in my direction, my furry warrior would’ve taken them on. A fight to the death to protect her loved one. Morituri te salutant, as the gladiators said.

Blanche had to be euthanized, due to terminal lymphoma, at age ten. At the end, she could only get around by dragging her hindquarters. She hadn’t eaten in weeks, and weighed four pounds. She was on morphine for the pain. But the blue fire of her eyes—that still glowed. And the beat of her heart, the tiny heart I’d felt against my shoulder when she fell asleep after a bottle feeding …

That heart was still there. It beat for me, as mine—after years and years—still beats for her.

A career historian, Annie R. McEwen has lived in Spain, France, the U.K., and Morocco. Her background helps her create award-winning romance set in faraway times and places. Winner of the 2022 Page Turners Award, Genre (Romance) Category, Annie also garnered both First and Second Place honors in the 2022 RTTA (Romance Through Ages Award from Romance Writers of America) and multiple Honorable Mentions and/or publication on platforms like Globe Soup, Reedsy, and others. When not in her 1920s bungalow in Florida, Annie lives, researches, and writes in Wales. Annie is represented by Blue Ridge Literary Agency. To follow her journey check out her website: https://www.anniermcewen.com/

Happy Love Your Editor Day, Sam!

October 31 is Love Your Editor Day at The Wild Rose Press. My editor, Samantha Keating, is the reason why I even had a chance. I owe her so much. She has officially been my editor since August 2022, but I have been in contact with her since November 2021. 

When I was ready to query Bondwitch, The Wild Rose Press was my first choice publisher. When you query TWRP, you send your query to a general query email, so I didn’t know who exactly would be reading my query. Thirteen days after I sent my query I received an email from Samantha requesting the first three chapters! 

A little over two weeks after that, Samantha responded with a very detailed and helpful critique on what skills and style TWRP expects, which I did not quite meet. She explained that to improve my story to WRP standards would require a rewrite, so she couldn’t accept my full manuscript. She encouraged me to keep writing and not give up.

As more rejections came in from other publishers, and I had conversations with my fellow writers, I learned that Samantha’s helpful critique was a rare gem. I also learned that the suggestions she made to improve my writing weren’t unique to TWRP. Almost all publishers today want the same thing: show, don’t tell. I still really wanted to get a second chance with TWRP, so I got to work rewriting Bondwitch with the suggested improvements.

It took me four months to fix my manuscript. When it was ready, I emailed Samantha directly, and asked if TWRP allowed resubmissions. She responded that they normally don’t, but she was interested in finding the answer to a cliffhanger scene in chapter 2. She invited me to resubmit the first three chapters, and she would take a look at my improvements. Two weeks after that, Samantha requested the full manuscript!

I didn’t hear anything for three months – which, I understand, is pretty standard for a full manuscript request. Then, on my wedding anniversary, I was sitting at a table in Cafe Orleans, Disneyland when my phone alerted me to an email from Samantha. My heart rate accelerated tenfold. I looked across the table at my husband. “I’m scared to read it.”

“Just open it!” he said.

I clicked on the notification, read the first few lines of the email, and screamed in the middle of a Disney restaurant. Samantha had finished my story, and was pushing it forward to the managing editor, who has the final say. 

A week after that, Samantha emailed me that Bondwitch was being accepted by TWRP, and the official contract would be sent to me within twenty-four hours. She also told me that she would be my editor. Once again, I was in a public place when this email came through. This time, I was in a hotel lobby for a work retreat, so I couldn’t scream out loud, but I definitely teared up.

Samantha and I are currently knee deep in editing, and I love working with her. Her style of editing is to approach it from a teaching angle. For the content editing, she made comments for the first one hundred pages with the goal that at that point I would have learned from her comments enough that I can find and fix the rest on my own. At first I was nervous about that. I didn’t think I could do it. I thought I would need her to hold my hand the whole time. But she knew exactly what she was doing – and that’s why she’s the editor! I’m three chapters beyond where Samantha stopped making comments, and I can “hear” her in my head pointing stuff out as I read over my words.

I owe this wonderful journey to Samantha. She went above and beyond by giving me detailed feedback long before she was my official editor. She believed in me and gave me a second chance. And she is an amazing teacher. 

Happy Love Your Editor Day, Sam. I’m so grateful you are my editor. I look forward to our continued partnership.