Some cats come into your life quietly. Bea arrived like a small, orange, slightly overweight force of nature — and she has never once toned it down since.
This is the story of a very large cat with a very big heart, a very specific set of daily duties, and absolutely no intention of being ignored.

Bea's story didn't begin with the fairy tale she deserved. Her original owner passed away, and a friend of that person made the decision to drop her off at a shelter in Los Angeles.
Just like that, a cat who had known a home her entire life found herself without one. No warning, no gentle transition — simply a new cage in an unfamiliar place, surrounded by strangers.

But fate, and a remarkable rescue organisation called Boomer's Buddies, had other plans. They took Bea in, and when her now-mom came to meet her, there was no deliberation, no hesitation, no weighing of pros and cons. Just immediate, uncomplicated love — between a woman and a very large, very orange cat.
And when we say very large, we do mean it.

Bea weighed close to thirty pounds. Thirty. When her mom went to collect her from the rescue, she realised she didn't own a carrier anywhere near big enough.
A last-minute dash to the pet store followed, and when she explained the situation to the owner, he was genuinely puzzled. He asked why she needed a dog carrier if she was adopting a cat. The answer, of course, was simply: because Bea.

The good news is that Bea has since slimmed down to a svelte twenty-two pounds, which her mom cheerfully refers to as her summer body. No diets were involved — her mom doesn't believe in those for anyone.
Just healthy choices, a loving home, and what turns out to be a surprisingly active lifestyle. Because Bea, against all expectation, has a job. A very important one. And she takes it extremely seriously.
Bea brings slippers.

Every single day, without fail, without training, without anyone ever suggesting this was a good idea — Bea picks up her mom's slippers and carries them down the hallway.
She didn't learn this from anyone. Nobody taught her. She simply decided one day that this was her purpose, and she has committed to it with the kind of focused dedication usually reserved for golden retrievers and very motivated postal workers.

Her mom, who works from home, will sometimes peer around the corner just in time to catch Bea mid-mission. There she is: ears back, completely focused, hauling a slipper down the hall with the gravity of someone delivering something deeply important.
Which, to Bea, it absolutely is. The delivery, she has made clear, is not free. Payment is expected in the form of cuddles — or, at minimum, someone turning on the kitchen faucet.

Because Bea has strong opinions about hydration. Water fountains are beneath her. The sink faucet is the only acceptable source, and access to it is a perfectly reasonable exchange for slipper services rendered.
Over time, the operation has expanded. Socks entered the rotation. Then sweatpants. Then leg warmers. On particularly ambitious days, her mom comes home to find an entire outfit carefully arranged by the front door, as though Bea has been planning her arrival down to the last detail.
And once, in what can only be described as a personal best, Bea appeared with a leg warmer and two slippers simultaneously. There really are no words.

When her mom is away, the slippers are still delivered — left neatly by the front door, like a tiny, emotionally complex butler preparing for the return of someone very important. Which, to Bea, her mom absolutely is.
Underneath all the slipper theatrics lives a cat who is, without question, the neediest creature on the planet — and who wears that title with tremendous pride. Closed doors are not tolerated. If her mom is on the other side of one, Bea will make her feelings known clearly and at length.
If another cat has already claimed the lap, Bea will simply climb onto her mom's chest instead, because proximity is non-negotiable.

Yes, there are other cats now. Bea went from only child to what her mom affectionately calls the Brady Bunch — big brother Lefty, and little sisters Lucy and Ted.
The house is full and lively, and Bea has adapted gracefully, while making it absolutely clear that she remains, always, the main character.

Guests are not exempt. It doesn't matter whether they like cats. Bea will find them, assess them, and install herself on their lap for the remainder of the visit. This is not a suggestion.
And then there's her voice — a meow so uncannily similar to a human baby that her mom has had to pause more than one work call to offer an explanation.

From a shelter she never should have ended up in, to a home filled with laughter and slippers and love — Bea is living proof that rescue cats don't just find homes.
Sometimes, if you're very lucky, they fill those homes so completely that you genuinely cannot remember what the quiet felt like.
Check out Bea in the video below:
A big thank you to Bea's Mum for sharing their story with us
You can see more of this delightful family on Instagram
Related story: Meet Miss Biscuit, the Overweight Cat Who Refused to Give Up After Being Abandoned
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