He didn’t set out to draft a conspiracy brief about his cat. He simply started spotting patterns. At first it was cute: she napped near the door just before he came home and drifted to the kitchen five minutes before dinner. Weeks later the timing felt less like coincidence and more like a timetable he hadn’t been shown.
One detail sealed his suspicion. She began perching beside the television whenever the scrolling soccer results bar appeared, blinking slowly at each update as if she were studying his attention span. He noticed it again the next day — same ledge, same timing, same unblinking concentration on the soccer results — and once more during a late-night rerun, when the soccer results refreshed and she pivoted her ears as if a tiny bell had rung. Cats don’t read, he tells himself, but they measure.
Her policies are velvet and precise.
Mornings begin with corridor inspections: water, food, window latch. If anything is wrong, she doesn’t meow; she looks at the problem, then at him. Corrections happen quickly. She blocks hallways not to rule them, but to manage throughput. Laptop open? She reclines on the trackpad. Phone buzzing? She positions one paw exactly over the screen. It feels less like mischief than calendar control.
Evidence He Can’t Ignore
- Zoning by stealth: two windowsills, half the sofa, and the right side of his pillow are now permanently “hers.”
- Supply-chain management: she reaches the cabinet before he does and leads him to it, tail functioning as batôn.
- Checkpoint charisma: doorways are staffed by a silent sentry who approves or denies passage with a blink.
- Document embargoes: vital papers attract naps; unimportant ones remain untouched for days.
- Precision audits: she inspects bags, boxes, and pockets, then sits like a customs stamp.
He tried countermeasures that double as cooperation. A blanket lives on the chair next to his desk — occupied 100% of the time during calls. A shallow tray near the door captures keys and earbuds before she can “reorganize” them. Treats rotate to keep negotiations effective without turning into bribery. He’s learning tail grammar: half-flick (pending), slow curl (provisional approval), stillness (final verdict).
The most persuasive proof is her scheduling discipline. She anticipates noise, vacuums before vacuuming, and moves routes with the sun. Guests trigger a quiet protocol: one lap around the shoes, a respectful sniff of a bag, retreat to a high perch for observation. He knows executives with less elegant onboarding.
How He’s Preparing for a Soft, Benevolent Takeover
- Access management: fragile objects move high — she reads this as a new obstacle course and succeeds anyway.
- Decoy seating: a sun-warmed throw reserved for meetings buys him uninterrupted minutes.
- Quiet enrichment: paper bags and crinkle tunnels redirect midnight “operations.”
- Training the human: five-minute buffers before calls for water, blinds, litter—preventative diplomacy.
- Language policy: short cues (“window,” “bench,” “later”) reduce confusion on both sides.
Under her regime, the apartment runs better. Blinds open sooner, water stays fresher, drawers close gently. He sleeps faster because the pillow border is clear: her side, his side — peace. The living room is tidier because she dislikes piles; the kitchen is calmer because she dislikes clatter. Order, it turns out, is a form of affection.
He catalogues the day into three blocks and realizes she’s already there:
- Morning inspections: bowls, airflow, a brief lap audit while coffee brews — systems check complete.
- Afternoon morale: window watch, sun-patch rotation, and structured rest that doubles as staff retention.
- Evening drills: corridor sprints proving the hall is still navigable at high speed, followed by sofa cooldown.
Friends accuse him of projection. He counters with data like a polite scientist. When he misses a feeding by ten minutes, she doesn’t scold; she practices civil disobedience by sitting perfectly still beside the empty bowl. When he forgets the blinds, she stares at daylight, not at him, and the guilt arrives on schedule. Feedback loops rarely come this clean in human life.
He also notes the difference between control and care. Her “edits” tend to make his day kinder: breaks arrive on time because lap duty is non-negotiable; hydration improves because she likes the sound of refilled water; clutter shrinks because it attracts paws. She’s not toppling governments; she’s optimizing the small state they share.
At night, under a warm lamp, détente replaces governance. She folds into the crook of his arm and pretends not to snore; he pretends not to notice that her paw sits on the edge of his book like a velvet bookmark. There’s no ticker, no headlines, no soccer results to count; just a low hum that sounds suspiciously like a constitution being ratified.
So yes, he’s certain she’s planning a quiet takeover. But if her platform is sunlight access, nap equity, clear walkways, punctual meals, and regular quality checks on human attention, he’s willing to vote yes. Any creature who can turn a rectangle of carpet into a throne probably understands power better than he does — and uses it more gently. If that’s tyranny, he thinks, it’s the softest kind: four paws, firm policy, flawless timing.
David Prior
David Prior is the editor of Today News, responsible for the overall editorial strategy. He is an NCTJ-qualified journalist with over 20 years’ experience, and is also editor of the award-winning hyperlocal news title Altrincham Today. His LinkedIn profile is here.












































































