Dickens Station Daily Telegraph, Dickens Station Story Series

DC Solves a Crime

Oh, that’s DC. She thinks it’s funny when she solves a crime at Dickens Station before I do.

Want to know more about Dickens Station's favorite feline? Check out this Dickens Station Daily Telegraph article about DC.

Telegraph Key

  Dickens Station Daily Telegraph

Monday, May 2, 2022  Dickens Station, Vermont

by Emily Dodson, Editor

Meet DC

DC the Cat

     Writer’s block had me in its death throes. With my deadline looming and my imagination fresh out of story ideas, I wandered in the dark from the modern newspaper offices in the rear of the building to the Print Shop Museum in the front for inspiration. I stared blankly through the 19th-century lead-glass pane at the gently falling snow. I thought I was alone.

     An almost imperceptible plodding of footsteps on the basement stairs sent tingles skittering down my neck. I glanced in that direction, took one last, nervous look out the window, then turned to return to my desk. A shadow darted along the back wall and lunged at me. I shrieked and backed into the typesetter’s table. Movable type jostled from the upper case, and loose line-o-type skittered across the floor. The mortal owner of that shadow landed eye to eye with me and a hair’s breadth away on a nearby filing cabinet. It mewed.

     “Darn you, DC! You scared the life out of me!”

     The tortoiseshell cat’s green eyes glared at me like I had lost my ever-loving mind. She mewed again, asking for a treat. When my heart resumed beating, my writer’s block lifted. I mused that both townspeople and visitors alike might enjoy reading about one of Dickens Station’s most beloved residents, DC.

     Even if you are not a “cat person,” read on! DC often makes believers out of those most resistant.

Even if you are not a “cat person,” read on! DC often makes believers out of those most resistant.

     DC is a community cat. This dark feline phantom has the uncanny knack of showing up in the different historic buildings around town, any time of the day or night, even in locked buildings, even in the dead of winter. Most importantly, DC has earned a reputation for bringing people together, finding lost things, and pointing those she adopts in the right direction.
 
     Some Dickens Stationers will tell you that DC stands for “Dickens’s Cat.” That is not, in fact, correct. DC stands for “Darn Cat,” a nod to the popular Disney Movie of the mid-nineteen sixties. DC’s propensity to appear without warning has often produced from her fellow town’s folk a different “D” expletive, which would be inappropriate to print in this article.
 
     To understand the effect DC has had on our town and its people, search no further than the origins of the “Dickens’s Cat” misnomer. One dreary winter’s day a few years ago, DC scared the bejeebers out of a guest rummaging through Ida’s Book Shoppe. A relatively young man wearing a toupee that wasn’t very secure failed to notice DC keeping watch from a top shelf perched on a copy of Dickensian Whodunnits. When the man wandered within paw’s reach, DC, who is still fully clawed, playfully sent the rug flying into the cookbook section. The embarrassed owner and the startled widow who returned the wig enjoyed a hearty laugh together. Then they enjoyed tea together and dinner that evening. The two were last seen boarding the train back to Rutland holding hands.
 
     Since the cat prefers to sleep on a volume of Dickens-related mysteries, Ida’s Book Shoppe’s manager decided DC should stand for “Dickens’s Cat.” Doubters point out that the tome rests flat on a high shelf directly below a heating vent. But “Dickens’s Cat” provides an air of authenticity for visitors requiring a quick answer to an often-asked question. Some have even mused that DC could be the great author’s reincarnation (gender notwithstanding).  
 
     The local vet occasionally makes a “house call” to whichever building DC is currently in residence and cares for our hero medically. The rest of us are more like her minions. Most shop owners have a litter box tucked somewhere, a few cans of cat food in the break room, and a cat toy in our desks, all for a cat that none of us own.
 
     So, as you enjoy the magic of a 19th-century Christmas here in Dickens Station, don’t be surprised if you occasionally hear, “Oh, I accidentally let the cat in,” from an uninformed visitor to one of our historic buildings. To which the shopkeep will inevitably reply, “It’s okay. That’s just DC. She comes, and she goes.”  

Published by Donald Jay

Author Donald Jay
Donald Jay writes cozy mystery, adventure, romance, and inspirational stories suitable for all audiences. Don brings to life eclectic and engaging characters who whisk readers off to enchanting places, challenge them with unusual puzzles and cleverly hidden clues, and inspire them to dream. Formerly a magician, Don is also a woodworker, painter, and toymaker. His wife, Linda, says, “It’s like being married to Santa himself.” He grew up in the snowy winters of the West Virginia mountains and loves the spiritual roots, rich traditions, and festive decorations that spark the magic of Christmas. So, he often sets his stories during the Christmas season. Don is a Virginia Tech graduate, a former first responder, and a retired hotel executive who now turns his lively imagination to entertaining readers of all ages.

5 thoughts on “DC Solves a Crime”

  1. Lori Lee Palmer says:

    Don –

    I love stories about DC! She has such a personality.

    Lori

    1. Author Donald Jay
      Donald Jay says:

      Thanks, Lori! Wishing you safe travels and continued fun adventures.

  2. Dianna says:

    Great story Don! I love how you really immerse the reader in the town. And who wouldn’t love DC? (Even if it’s not as much as Old Joe hahahaha)

    1. Author Donald Jay
      Donald Jay says:

      Thanks, Dianna. I’ll tell Old Joe you said that, but I won’t rat you out to DC. ?

      1. Dianna says:

        Phew! I’d hate to get on the bad side of DC but you know how I feel about Joe.

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