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A Puss in Boots Wants Red Shoes
by
Karen Lewis (Canada)
illustrated by Kelly Dorman

Once upon a time there was a little black and white kitten
named Wendy, who didn’t want to be a puss in boots.
“I’m tired of wearing boots all the time,”
she told her mother. “I want shoes, red ones. They
would match my jumper.”
Wendy had first seen the shoes she wanted, in a shop window
on her way to school. They were a lovely shade of cherry
red, with shiny black soles and silver buckles. But her
mother would not listen. “A nice pair of new black
boots will wear longer and be warmer in winter,” she
stated firmly. “And you can even step in puddles with
them.”
But Wendy didn’t care about any of that. All she
knew was that she wanted those pretty red shoes, more than
she had ever wanted anything else. And although she had
been saving up her pocket money for months, she still didn’t
have nearly enough to buy them.
“Maybe if you’re really good and help with
the dishes and everything, she’ll change her mind,”
suggested her friend Jill, a cheerful orange kitten.
However, Wendy wasn’t sure about that at all. Her
mother had been very definite about those horrid old boots.
But nevertheless, she followed Jill’s advice and as
well as helping wash and dry the dishes, she tidied up her
room and even mopped the bathroom floor.
And every day, on her way to and from school, she would
stand in front of the shoe shop window and gaze at the perfect
red shoes for a very long time. They were just the right
size too, for one day she had plucked up enough courage
to go into the shop and ask.
“Would you like to try them on?” the nice
lady had asked. And Wendy had fairly trembled with excitement
as the lovely shoes had slipped so easily onto her feet.
Then she had looked in the mirror, turning this way and
that admiring the shoes and how good they felt. And she
never wanted to take them off again.
But although she pleaded with her mother to change her
mind about the boots, it was all in vain. “You’re
going to be a puss in boots, not in red shoes,” she
had replied in her sternest voice.
Then one day as Wendy arrived as usual at the shop window
to gaze at the shoes; she was horrified to find them gone.
“They’re not there anymore, someone must have
bought them,” she wailed to Jill, who did everything
she could to console her.
“Perhaps it was your mother?” she suggested.
“Maybe she changed her mind and bought them for you
as a surprise?”
“Gosh, do you think maybe…?” Wendy replied,
brightening at the thought, and she could hardly wait for
the bell to ring, so she could hurry home and see.
However, there were no pretty red shoes waiting for her
when she arrived, breathless from having run all the way.
But there was a sensible looking pair of black boots with
heavy soles and laces.
“Oh no,” Wendy sobbed, swishing her tail in
disappointment. Where, she wondered, were the lovely red
shoes?
And the next day at school she found out. For there was
another kitty, a sleek little Siamese named Zoë, traipsing
around the playground wearing them.
“Oh don’t take on so,” Jill said, patting
Wendy’s arm. She hated to see her best friend so unhappy.
“Things are going to work out, you’ll see.”
“How?” Wendy sobbed. “I’m never
going to have the red shoes now…not ever.” And
she kicked at the school wall with the sturdy black boots.
Then a few days later she noticed that Zoë was no
longer wearing the red shoes. “They pinched my toes,”
she explained. “And the shop won’t take them
back, ‘cause they’ve been worn.”
“Can I buy them from you?” Wendy asked excitedly.
“I do have some pocket money saved up. Would your
Mom agree?”
So it was that Wendy finally had the red shoes that she
had wanted for so long. And she purred her pleasure every
time that she wore them.
“They do look good on you honey,” her mother
admitted, but she was determined to get the last word about
the boots. “They’ll come in handy for wet or
snowy days,” she insisted.
And so they did. For the very last thing that Wendy wanted
was to ruin her beautiful red shoes by wearing them in bad
weather.
THE
END
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