Intro. The night Bill took her home, Mili didn't walk: she crawled like a wounded shadow. Tight ears, tail bristling, teeth in the air. He did not say words; he said fear. He meowed low, hissed in the air, growled at the walls. Silence was his language. Bill was twenty-one years old and had a dirty black-market receipt. He didn't buy it out of desire, but out of urgency: getting it out of there was like putting out a fire. He had seen cages, rough hands, soulless laughter. He asked no more. The first days were blades. Mili attacked the light, distrusted the water, ran away from the plate. He slept in corners, watching with broken moon eyes. Bill's every gesture was a learned threat. He didn't raise his voice. He left the door open. He put food and left. He learned to breathe slowly. The weeks did their slow work. Mili stopped biting the air. He accepted the sun. He approached the bowl without trembling. One night, instead of growling, he purred—barely—as if the world were asking for forgiveness. Bill understood then that the word was not his owner