Nat1's Winter Court is a prompt-driven writing challenge! The goal is to write a short story with specific parameters once a week throughout January. This is my third submission for the fourth week. Get your copy of Winter Court: Year One, 2026 here.
Prompt
The cat in the library is essential for everybody’s safety.
Required components
In far off place and distant time
Did warming rays of gold light shine
On earth and leaf of grassy moor
Where old rain called up petrichor
’Tween river and deep sea’s embrace
Great arching tower of wood face
And torches bright with orange flame
A library’s figure proclaimed
Where weary minds and feet found rest
And hungry readers’ eyes were blessed
With stacks of shelves and quiet nooks
That teemed with mountains of old books
For these they quested far from home
Some to consult a magic tome
Or maybe ancient tales of dead
Perhaps the secret to good bread
Among the rafter’s bird’s eye view
One could perched see the tall corkscrew
And watch the bustling visitors
Close, open and pass through oak doors
To access volumes leather bound
Did that great staircase spiral round
It twisted up and down again
To airy spire and deep dark den
One not secured by lock or key
For every title there was free
All written truths were on display
To be enjoyed through night and day
Old myth and fact on heaven’s grace
Deep secrets hid in that grand place
‘Mong reams of childrens’ painted scribbles
All these belonged to old wise Nibbles
This Nibbles, guests would speculate
Kept to himself to concentrate
They did not know or failed to see
The true form of this addressee
Since teacher, bookworm, study too
Could truly not be sure just who
He was he came and went as pleased
To rub his chin upon their knees
Mentees ignored his trotting round
The tower’s dorms and maintained grounds
His spritely hunting of white rabbits
And lengthy, lazy sleeping habits
In fact they paid no mind at all
To that cat’s slumber in the hall
Yes, whiskers white and coat of gray
Adorned the master of their stay
Curled up in lap he sometimes read
Whilst getting pet upon his head
Rare times at their fingers he nipped
One man’s notes were freshly ripped
But for their respite so secure
In his great tower on the moor
Did Nibbles have but one lone rule
Books mustn’t cross the vestibule
These writings he would share with all
Should never leave his reading hall
To take a book twas leant not sold
Was certainly a crime of old
In the dark nightfall wreathed in black
Dared bands of bandits to attack
With quiet, skulking thieves to take
His tomes but not for learning’s sake
Whilst raiders leered and lurked about
The cat’s sharp claws did protrude out
Those not asleep up high in dorm
Saw Nibbles in his lion form
Great razors grew from small cat claws
To befit shaggy mane and paws
So massive, gray, and outraged he
Defended his vast library
He crept and stalked the thieves of night
Who wished that they had died of fright
Instead he rent them flesh from bone
And purged their bodies from his home
When twilight waned and dawn arose
Would Nibbles yawn and twitch his nose
Exhausted from his dim campaign
And he became tomcat again
So beast of claw and sharpened tooth
Curled up again on window booth
No reader ever was the wiser
They just presumed him a late riser
And thus the tomcat of the halls
Did keep his books to share with all
For questers coming to and fro
To seek the orange torchlight glow
Not once would they raise the alarm
While on his watch they saw no harm
Don’t try to ask to them; they won’t say
They minded not the cat of gray
Birds and rats and rabbits too
Know Nibbles more than humans do
And keep his secret without doubt
They do not dare to rat him out
Should journey you in place and time
Heed this bird’s warning of short rhyme
Ye burglars had just best beware
The fat old cat with the gray hair
Who slinks among his books and purrs
But after dark he grows and stirs
There’s no place for wayward crooks
Among the stacks of Nibbles’ books