Over the past few months, there were three kittens behind a restaurant where I often go. One of the restaurant employees adopted the first one when he came up to her months ago. I found out a few days ago that a gold-colored kitten was caught by some young women who adopted him weeks ago, too.
And then there was the elusive little gray tabby who I pursued for at least six or eight weeks. Nobody could touch him.
He was fast. He was smart. One of the kitchen employees wanted to take him home, but he couldn’t get close to him. For weeks, I couldn’t, either.
On Nov. 25, I finally got close enough to him — as he was hiding in a drainage culvert in the parking lot — to snap a photo of him. When I posted that picture on Facebook and explained that I had been trying to catch him, a friend in North Carolina suggested that I get a trap.
A week later, I was still trying to catch him with my haphazard schemes when my friend texted me to say she was sending me a trap. I couldn’t turn that down. She ended up buying one at a chain store with a location about two miles from the restaurant.
The next day, I picked up the trap and headed out to catch a cunning kitten.

What did you want in childhood? Did you abandon those dreams?
A culture which defines itself by consumption has lost its values
No ebooks for me: Reading is about more than simply absorbing data
Reaction to Googler’s memo says, ‘Diversity is good if you conform’
My political lens makes me think you’re crazy — and vice versa
Was he angry to lose his family? Or because he lost his control?
Reality check: A stupid racial prank isn’t ‘the worst thing anybody can do’
Financial crisis seems serious when it hits your own neighbors