Midnight’s cats

By Stefene Russell
From 47 Incantatory Essays
On New Year’s Day, a day I spent stuffing straw into a
Styrofoam cooler to shelter a feral cat, a man died in a
Dumpster three blocks from my house. He died in the
Dumpster behind the old Falstaff Brewery Apartments.
People knew about it in England because it was reported
on the BBC. America has already seen its first cold-related
fatality of the year, as a homeless man in St. Louis has frozen
to death in a bin. He thought getting out of the wind would
help. Tat the insulating power of plastic trash bags would
help. He was 53. Right before Christmas, a man froze to
death downtown in a Port-o-Potty. He lived in it, after the
city shut down New Life Evangelistic Center and opened a
shelter in the old Biddle Market with 98 beds. When people
couldn’t get in they just walked around all night. The night
time temperature in St. Louis between December 2017 and
January 2018 hovered around minus 6 degrees. The police
removed his belongings: shoes, umbrella, bottle of orange
juice, empty beer can, jacket, $25 Panera gift card, plastic
spoon, and a debit card bearing the name Grover Perry.
He was 56 years old. At the foot of the Port-o-Potty, some-
one left a poinsettia, the kind you get at the drugstore with
petals edged in red glitter. On every block in my neighbor-
hood, three or four orange cats shelter under cars, or in
empty buildings. My neighbor M. calls the empty house on
Knapp the cat factory. Terry Midnight squatted in a little
building on the other side of Florissant and every day fed
orange cats, more than 20. They still don’t know who shot
him but the day he died his daughter came and spray-
painted RIP DAD/SHINE BRIGHT on the front of the
building and leaned on the building and wept. Every
day, people came and added something. Midnight’s
photo in a silver frame. Silver balloons tied to the railing,
sunflowers in juice jars, grocery store roses, candles.
People sat in chairs in front of the building for hours
in the cold. If I were mayor, I’d make sure every bullet
was made out of rare silver and cost $10,000. The grief
became a silver music and rose like notes. It rose like
notes made from smoke and silver roses and glittering
light, a hymn for Terry Midnight. J. feeds Midnight’s cats
and P. feeds Midnight’s cats and the guy who drives the
mobile dental clinic feeds Midnight’s cats. The cats have
so much food the raccoons come out at night and eat
the leftovers. An address is just an address, how does it
magically make you a human being? My neighbor who
sees ghosts said the dead don’t go anywhere. Right now
there’s a lady here named Fran who grew sweet potatoes
in her garden, she said. An older guy with a limp, he says
his name is George, she said. He’s friendly, he says he’s
a protector. So many ghosts, she said. They’re sad about
the falling-down buildings and they’re sad about us
falling down too. The dead grieve, she said, just like the
living. A whole choir of mourners, visible and invisible,
heartbroken together.

 

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