She’d had to go down to Hogsmeade in the afternoon (something Barbara avoided most of the time, as every time she went, she felt obligated to stop at home and say hello, and her parents had developed a tiresome habit of quizzing her on her studies when she did) but she returned with the good tidings that, firstly, her cat was not going to die, and secondly,
yes, her cat shouldn’t have eaten a Streeler, and was probably poisoned now, but the antidote cost only four Sickles, and the phial was wrapped in a handkerchief in her bag.
If only she could find her cat.
All morning she’d sat with Pinky in the lavatory, so she (the cat) could vomit in the sink and not on her (Barbara’s) bed, while she’d sat cross-legged on the floor trying to pay dual attention to her sick cat and to her Monster Book of Monsters, and – when that had proved unhelpful – she had tied the Monster Book of Monsters up again, and almost run all the way to the village to the menagerie, trying to hold her pointed hat onto her head with one hand.
In the time it had taken to do so, and to convince herself that she didn’t
need to stop by home if it was an emergency, and to sprint back up to the castle (which had turned into a bedraggled walk halfway through, as she was quite wiped out) Pinky, who had been set down on her bed in a fruitless attempt to make her comfortable, had absconded. Barbara looked at all the windowsills, pulled all the covers off her bed, and finally heard a rustling from under her bed.
She was trying to seize her cat by her tail when the door opened; at once she grabbed and pulled, and from under her bed came a hissing, scratching kneazle – Barbara, more from surprise than fear, let out a shriek as it flung itself away, and looked with shock at her roommate standing in the doorway, fairly positive that she didn’t remember Perpetua having any pets – “Ugh! Is that
yours?â€
@Perpetua Robbins