The Cat’s Bell

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By Christina K Sangma

On a quiet street where afternoons were lazy and evenings smelled of rain and warm food, lived a small cat named Luma. She was not remarkable in colour, just a soft mix of brown and grey, but everyone noticed her because of the bell she wore around her neck. The bell was old, slightly dented, and tied with a green ribbon that looked faded. When Luma walked, it made a gentle sound.
Ching.
Not loud enough to startle, not sharp enough to disturb, just enough to be heard.
The bell had been tied there years ago by a watchman who believed that every street needed a heartbeat. “You,” he had told the kitten, “Will be ours”. And so Luma became the street’s cat.
She wandered from house to house with unhurried grace. Children paused their games when they heard her coming. Old shopkeepers smiled before they even saw her. At night, when the streetlights flickered, worries grew louder than the footsteps. It was Luma’s bell that reminded people of something warm and alive still moving nearby.
Luma had a habit of appearing exactly where she was needed. She curled up beside a woman waiting for news from a hospital. She sat quietly near a boy studying for an exam he was afraid to fail. She walked behind late-night workers, her bell steady and calm, as if guarding them from the dark.
But one evening, something changed.
While slipping through a narrow gap between two gates, Luma felt a sudden lightness around her neck. The ribbon tore. The bell dropped and rolled into a drain with a soft, hollow sound.
Then, silence.
Luma took a step. Nothing. Another step. Still nothing.
The world felt wrong without the sound that had always announced her presence. She padded through the street unseen and unnoticed. Doors stayed closed. No one looked up. It was as though she had become invisible.
That night, the street felt different too. A child cried longer than usual. A man paced his balcony restlessly. Someone left their light on till morning, unable to sleep. They didn’t know what was missing, only that something was.
Luma curled up beneath a parked car, confused and tired. It was here where she felt truly alone.
The morning was quiet.
A small girl named Meena was walking to school when she noticed something shining near the drain. She bent down and picked up the bell. This is Luma’s, she whispered, her eyes searching the street.
When she spotted the cat, Meena smiled as if she had found a lost friend. She tied the bell back around Luma’s neck with a piece of ribbon from her pocket. It wasn’t neat, but it was secure.
Luma stood.
The sound of the bell returned, soft and familiar.
By evening, the street breathed easier. Windows opened. Conversations flowed. People felt comforted without knowing why.
And Luma walked on, her bell chiming gently, not to be seen, not to be owned, but to remind everyone that sometimes, the smallest sounds are what hold a place together.

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