It was a rainy November evening when a Good Samaritan called about a “skin-and-bones cat” hiding in the engine compartment of an abandoned car at a Hesperia junkyard. Our animal control officer, Miguel Santos, spent two hours carefully extracting the terrified calico, who we later named Luna. “She was so frail, her ribs showed through her patchy fur,” Miguel recalls. “But what haunted me most were her eyes—wide with terror, like she’d given up on kindness.”
Back at CPAC’s clinic, Luna’s exam revealed severe malnutrition, a respiratory infection, and old scars suggesting past abuse. “Her front teeth were broken, likely from trying to eat garbage,” said Dr. Hernandez. “This wasn’t just neglect—this was survival.”
Luna’s rehabilitation became a masterclass in patience. For the first three weeks in foster care with volunteer Sarah Mitchell, Luna lived inside a specially prepared “safe room” with hiding boxes and vertical spaces. “She’d freeze like a statue if I made direct eye contact,” Sarah explains. Progress came in tiny increments—the first time Luna took food without hissing, the first night she slept on the provided bed instead of wedged behind the toilet.
The turning point? A feather wand toy left casually near her hideout. “I came home to find it dragged into the middle of the room,” Sarah laughs. “That’s when I knew we had a playful cat buried under all that fear.”
As Luna’s confidence grew, so did her quirky personality. Clinic staff adored her new habit of “making biscuits” while purring during check-ups, and she became our unofficial tester for new feline enrichment toys.
Maria S., a freelance graphic designer from Victorville, had been following Luna’s journey on CPAC’s social media. “There was something about her expressive eyes that reminded me of myself after my divorce—wary but wanting to hope again,” Maria shares. Their introduction was arranged as a slow, scent-first process through baby gates.
“On our third visit, Luna climbed into my lap and head-butted my hand,” Maria says. “That was it—I was hers.” Today, Luna reigns over Maria’s home office, “helping” with design projects by walking across keyboards and napping in sun patches. Her favorite pastime? Watching bird videos on a tablet (with the volume low—old fears still linger).
Operating with great compassion. The CARE AND PROTECTION OF ANIMALS CENTER provides rescue, shelter, and second chances for animals in the Holy Heavenly Lake region, working to end the cycle of overpopulation.
EIN : 83-1827996
Phone: +415-828-4763
Mon – Fri 8:00 to 7:00
Contact@cpanimalcenter.org
18955 LEMON STREET HESPERIA CALIFORNIA 92345
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