THE CAT WHO WOULDN’T LET HER SLEEP
I get calls at all hours.
For some reason, people think that if you’re a veterinarian, you’re also responsible for insomnia, heartbreak, and existential crises—especially at two in the morning, when a cat is lying on your chest and you’re barely conscious.
But Carmen’s call came in the middle of the day.
Still, there was something nocturnal in her voice. A fatigue that didn’t belong to the hour.
“Good morning, is this Pedro’s clinic?” she asked cautiously.
“Yes. Pedro speaking.”
“My name is Carmen. I have an appointment today. I have a problem with my cat. He won’t let me sleep.”
That phrase—won’t let me sleep—can mean anything.
Fleas. Anxiety. Jealousy.
Or something much stranger.
THE “NURSE” NAMED MARCOS
Carmen arrived like someone entering a church—quiet, almost apologetic.
Early fifties. Carefully styled hair. A coat meant for being seen, not errands. A handbag that looked like it carried her entire life.
She placed the carrier gently on the exam table.
“This is Marcos,” she said. “Although at night, he’s less of a gentleman and more of a nurse on duty.”
Two enormous yellow eyes stared at me from inside. A large gray cat, dignified and unimpressed.
I opened the carrier. Marcos stepped out slowly, assessed me, decided I wasn’t a threat, and turned away with quiet authority.
“All right,” I said. “Tell me about this nurse.”
EVERY NIGHT AT THREE
“He wakes me up,” Carmen sighed. “Every night. Around three or four.”
“How?”
“At first he taps my face. If I don’t react, he hits harder. He bites, pulls the blanket, runs over me. He doesn’t stop until I get up and go sleep on the sofa.”
“And then?”
“As soon as I leave, he lies on my pillow and sleeps peacefully until morning.”
I raised an eyebrow. “Do you like the sofa?”
“I hate it,” she snapped. “He used to sleep there when my husband snored. Now my husband is gone, and the cat has taken his place.”
Marcos pretended none of this concerned him.
“How long has this been happening?”
“Three months. I thought it was spring. Then heat. Now it’s autumn and it hasn’t stopped.”
She hesitated.
“I have high blood pressure, Pedro. I’m on medication. I need sleep. I’ve started getting angry at him. I even locked him in the kitchen once. He screamed so loudly the neighbors hit the wall.”
That sentence—I’ve started getting angry at him—is where many cats end up abandoned.
But Marcos didn’t look aggressive.
He looked… attentive.
Not at me.
At her.
SOMETHING IS WRONG — BUT NOT WITH THE CAT
I examined him thoroughly.
Healthy coat. Stable heart rhythm. Calm breathing. No signs of neurological issues.
But when Carmen shifted in her chair, Marcos’ ears flicked instantly. His gaze locked onto her face.
Concern.
“Does he wake you at the same time every night?” I asked.
“Yes. Almost always between three and four.”
“And before that, do you sleep deeply?”
“I take my pill at eleven and I sink into something heavy. Then he pulls me out of it.”
“How do you feel when you wake?”
“Terrible. Head heavy. Heart racing. Dry mouth. Sometimes I can’t breathe well. I put a pill under my tongue and go to the sofa. After twenty minutes it passes.”
I didn’t like that description.
Racing heart. Breathlessness. Same hour every night.
I leaned back.
“I’m afraid the main patient here isn’t the cat.”
She blinked. “What?”
“Marcos is fine. What’s not fine is what’s happening to you.”
She stared at me.
“You think he’s waking me because something is wrong?”
“I think he may be reacting to changes in your breathing or heart rhythm. He doesn’t know medical terms. He only knows you’re not okay.”
“So… he’s saving me?”
“I can’t prove it,” I said carefully. “But the pattern is too consistent. You need tests. Cardiac. Respiratory. Don’t mention nerves. Say clearly: ‘My cat wakes me every night and I feel unwell.’”
She sat very still.
Then she nodded.
“All right. I’ll go.”
THE CALL THREE WEEKS LATER
I had almost forgotten about them when the phone rang.
“Pedro? It’s Carmen.”
Her voice was different.
Stronger.
“You went to the doctor,” I said.
“Yes. I insisted. I told him exactly what you said.”
She paused.
“I have severe sleep apnea. And cardiac episodes during the night. The doctor was blunt—if I had waited longer, it could have ended very badly.”
I closed my eyes for a second.
“And now?”
“I have a CPAP machine. The first nights were strange. Marcos kept staring at the mask and the tubes. But he didn’t wake me up. He just stayed beside me.”
She laughed softly.
“And now he sleeps next to my face again. Like before. It’s as if he was waiting until it was safe.”
That was the word that stayed with me.
Safe.
A DIFFERENT KIND OF GUARDIAN
A week later, they came back for Marcos’ routine check-up.
He jumped onto the exam table confidently, surveyed the room, and settled.
“He hasn’t hit me once,” Carmen said. “Not once.”
“He doesn’t need to anymore,” I replied.
She looked at him with a softness that hadn’t been there before.
“The doctor said many people live with sleep apnea for years without knowing it,” she whispered. “Sometimes they just… don’t wake up.”
She didn’t finish the sentence.
She didn’t have to.
Marcos hopped down and walked toward the door, impatient as if his shift had ended.
When they left, I thought about how animals have no medical degrees, no vocabulary for diagnoses, no explanations.
But they notice patterns.
They feel irregular rhythms.
They react to danger before we name it.
They don’t wonder whether it’s polite to wake you at three in the morning.
Since then, whenever someone comes into my clinic and says, “My cat is acting strange,” I don’t smile.
I ask something else first.
“And you… how are you sleeping?”
