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Two Weeks a Cat Kept Coming to the Window. Staff Were Stunned When They Discovered the Reason

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**Diary Entry A Guardian in Fur**

For two weeks, a cat had been appearing at the window. The staff couldnt believe it when they finally learned the reason.

Emily burst into the break roomfresh out of nursing school, cheeks flushed, eyes sparkling.

“Margaret! You wont believe ithes back again!”

“Whos *he*?” Margaret, the ward manager, rubbed her temples wearily. The night shift had been exhausting, and now this.

“The cat! A grey one, with a white ear Hes been sitting there for an hour! And he comes every single day, can you imagine?”

“What do you mean, *every day*?”

Margaret sighed, shuffling through patient files before her rounds. Their newest admission in Ward Four remained unconsciousfourteen days in a coma after being hit on a zebra crossing. Some reckless driver had sped through a red light. As if they didnt have enough to handle with scheduled patients!

Emily perched on the edge of a chair. “Two weeks now. He sits by the window where Mrs. Thompson is. Stares inside like hes waiting The janitors shoo him away, but he always comes back. Weve started calling him the Night Watchman.”

Margaret frowned. Stray animals were the last thing they needed! She opened her mouth to scold the young nurse, but something in Emilys voice made her pause. Against her better judgment, she followed her to the window.

There he wasa grey cat with one white ear, just as Emily had described. Thin but clearly once well cared for, his fur ruffled but not neglected. He sat oddly upright, like a sentry on duty, gaze fixed unwaveringly on the window of Mrs. Thompsons room.

“Good grief,” Margaret muttered. “A womans fighting for her life, and were discussing cats.”

Yet something nagged at her. The cats persistence, his refusal to leave despite being chased offwhat kind of devotion was that? Few humans showed such loyalty.

“What do we know about our patient?” she asked abruptly.

Emily shrugged. “Not much. Anna Thompson, fifty-two. Lives alone, visited occasionally by her daughter. She was hit just outside her flat.”

“Which flat?”

“That grey five-story one,” Emily gestured toward the window, “behind the hospital fence.”

Margaret studied the cat. It turned its head as if sensing her stare, and a shiver ran down her spine at the intensity of its gaze.

The answer came unexpectedly later that day when the patients daughter brought in medical records. A photograph slipped outMrs. Thompson in an armchair, cradling a grey cat with one white ear.

“Is this?” Margarets voice faltered.

The daughter sniffled. “Thats Whiskers. Mums cat. Went missing two years agodarted out when the plumbers left the door open. She put up posters, searched every alley” She wiped her eyes. “She even refused to move. Said, What if Whiskers comes back? How will he find me?”

A chill ran through Margaret. So the cat *had* found herbut too late. He must have been nearby when the ambulance took her away, trailing it to the hospital. How hed pinpointed her window, no one knew.

“Where where does she live?” Margaret asked.

“Just there, behind the hospital. The grey block of flats”

A shrill alarm from Mrs. Thompsons room cut her off. They rushed inMargaret, Emily, the daughterthe cardiac monitor flickering with signs of consciousness. The cat was forgotten.

When Mrs. Thompson finally opened her eyes, the world was a blur of light and voices.

“Mum?” Her daughter, Lucy, clutched her hand. “Mum, can you hear me?”

A weak nod was all she could manage.

“Easy now,” Margaret soothed. “Youre doing brilliantly.”

Later, Lucy smiled through tears. “Mum, Ive got a surprise. Youll never believe it Whiskers is back!”

Mrs. Thompson jolted, eyes widening with recognition and joy.

“Dont try to speak,” Margaret said gently. “But yeshe found you. Sat by your window every day. When I saw your photo, I knew.”

Tears spilled down Mrs. Thompsons cheeks.

“Ive taken him home,” Lucy said. “He didnt want to leave at first, kept trying to dash back here. But weve struck a dealIll bring him to visit once youre moved to a regular ward.”

When the transfer happened, Lucy arrived with a carrier, an indignant yowling inside.

“No pets allowed!” a nurse snapped.

Margaret waved her off. “Let him stay. That cats earned his place more than most.”

Whiskers bolted to the bed the moment he was freed, nuzzling Mrs. Thompsons face, purring loud enough to echo down the hall. She laughed and cried all at once, trembling fingers stroking his fur.

“Bloody hell,” Emily whispered, wiping her eyes. “Like something out of a film.”

From then on, Lucy visited daily. Strangely, Whiskers seemed to *know* visiting hourspromptly at four, hed pace by the door, meowing impatiently.

“How do you even tell time?” Lucy marveled.

Hed only flick his tail as if to say

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