As we were coming home from work yesterday evening, this cute-as-a-button little tortise-shell kitty came up to my wife, when she was still on her bicycle. Jeanette picked her up and she was just so sweet. Without even thinking, I just grabbed both bikes and took them upstairs while she held the cat. When we first brought her inside the sight of our other cats stressed her out quite a bit, so we took a litter box and some food and water and let her spend the night in the bathroom.
For the first few hours she would alternately meow and growl from the bathroom, and then curl up in the little towel closet we have. If any other cats went near the bathroom door, she would emit this amazing bellow and start pawing at them through the crack underneath. At one point, she got into a swatting contest underneath the door with our Shakey, but no-one was hurt. Over the course of the early morning I heard her meowing a few times but when I went to the bathroom and visited her she was friendly as anything.
This morning, Jeanette clipped her claws and we were treated to about 650 feline expletives. Jeanette basically let our new kitty lock her jaws onto her hand while she slowly and gently pared her sharp claws down just a bit. Did I mention that cats start to smell to high heaven when they're stressed? At this point, our other cats were all safely in the bedroom. After the new addition spent a few minutes getting over the stress of the clipping and found a comfy spot in our living room window, the bedroom door was opened and everyone was allowed to integrate. So far everything seems okay as long as our other three cats don't get too close, but as we've seen twice before when we've introduced cats to each other the initial standoffishness usually only lasts a few days.
Assuming the transition goes smoothly enough, we're going to keep her. Her name is TurtleTaz, or Taz for short, because in all seriousness I have never heard a cat as loud as this one, and even her normal meows are growly and muttery. She is roughly the size of our other female, Marmalade, but with bushier fur, a long fluffy tail, and much thinner at this point. According to our scale, she's half the weight of Calis, our biggest, at about 9 lbs. Here is a picture of her in Jeanette's arms.