My Roommate’s Cat Went Missing And When I Checked The Microchip Website, His Name Wasn’t Fergus

My roommate, Kian, is outside sobbing and taping ‘MISSING’ posters to every pole on our street. He’s had his cat, Fergus, since he was a kitten. I’m standing in the kitchen, pretending to look for a better photo for the flyers. My hands are shaking.

Kian’s entire life revolves around that cat. He tells everyone this heroic story about rescuing Fergus from a shelter right before he was going to be put down. So when Fergus slipped out an open door last night, Kian fell apart. We’ve been searching for 12 hours straight.

A little while ago, I suggested we report him missing to the microchip company. Kian got super weird and defensive about it, saying it was a waste of time and we just needed to hang more posters. His reaction was so off that I waited until he went outside again. I found Fergus’s vet file, got the microchip number, and looked it up online.

The profile loaded. It was him, same ginger cat. But his name wasn’t Fergus. It was Marmalade. And his registered owner wasn’t Kian. It was a woman in the next town over. And next to the cat’s name, in all-caps red letters, was his status: “REPORTED STOLEN.”

Just then, the front door creaked open. Kian came back in, his eyes red and puffy from crying, a roll of tape still in his hand. I quickly closed my laptop and tried to look casual, but my chest was pounding so loud I swore he could hear it.

“Find a better photo?” he asked, his voice hoarse.

I nodded, holding up my phone with an old picture of Fergus on the couch. “Yeah, this one’s clearer. You should probably use it for the next batch.”

He squinted at me like he was trying to read my thoughts. Then he gave a weak smile and muttered, “Good idea.” He walked past me to the fridge, grabbed a bottle of water, and went upstairs.

The moment I heard his door shut, I opened my laptop again. My stomach turned as I reread the words: “REPORTED STOLEN.” Kian had always been so protective of Fergus, so dramatic about their bond. But what if it wasn’t love? What if the cat wasn’t even his to begin with?

I didn’t know the woman who was listed as the owner, but her number was right there on the profile. I hesitated. If I called, I might blow up my whole life here. Kian and I shared this apartment, the rent, the bills. We were close—or at least I thought we were. But if he really stole a cat, then everything I believed about him was fake.

Finally, I dialed.

The line rang twice before a woman’s voice answered, shaky and tired. “Hello?”

“Hi, um, my name is Sam,” I began, my throat dry. “I think I might have some information about your cat, Marmalade.”

There was silence for a second. Then I heard her gasp. “Marmalade? Oh my God—where is he? Do you have him?”

My chest tightened. “I don’t, not right now. But my roommate does. He’s been calling him Fergus. He went missing last night, and I checked the microchip database. That’s how I found your info.”

Her breathing got heavier, almost like she was crying. “I knew it. I knew someone had taken him. He disappeared from my backyard almost two years ago. I’ve been searching everywhere, putting up posters, even reporting it to the police. No one ever found anything.”

Her voice cracked, and guilt washed over me. For two years she thought her cat was gone forever, while I sat in a living room watching Kian cuddle him on the couch.

“I’m so sorry,” I whispered. “I didn’t know. He told everyone he rescued him from a shelter.”

She let out a bitter laugh. “Figures. People like that always make up stories.” Then her voice steadied. “Listen, if you can get him back to me, I’ll meet you anywhere. Please. He’s all I’ve got.”

I promised her I’d try, and we exchanged numbers. When I hung up, I sat at the table, staring at the screen. My hands wouldn’t stop shaking.

The rest of the day dragged. Kian kept pacing the house, muttering to himself, calling Fergus’s name out the door. I couldn’t look at him the same way anymore. Every time he talked about how much he loved his cat, I saw the word “STOLEN” flashing in my mind.

That night, I barely slept. I kept hearing the woman’s voice, the desperation in it.

By the next morning, I had made up my mind. If we found Fergus—Marmalade—I was going to return him.

Around noon, a neighbor knocked on our door holding a ginger cat in her arms. “I think this is yours. He was hiding under my shed.”

Kian rushed over, scooping Fergus into his arms like a child. He buried his face in the cat’s fur, sobbing, “Oh thank God, thank God.”

But when Fergus looked up at me, those green eyes felt different now. Like they weren’t ours.

Later, while Kian was in the shower, I texted the woman. “We found him. He’s safe. Can you meet tonight?”

She sent me an address at a quiet park in the next town. My heart raced.

I knew Kian would never willingly give him up, so I had to do it behind his back. Around 8 pm, when Kian sat down to watch TV, I casually said I was going to grab snacks from the store. Fergus was curled on the couch beside him.

I grabbed the carrier from the closet and tried to coax Fergus in. My hands were trembling, but to my surprise, he went in without a fight. Maybe, deep down, he recognized he was going home.

I drove with the windows cracked, my stomach in knots. When I pulled up to the park, I saw a woman pacing by a bench. The moment she saw me carry the crate, she covered her mouth and ran forward.

“Marmalade!” she cried, kneeling down to peer inside. Her eyes filled with tears. “It’s really him.”

When I opened the crate, the cat stepped out cautiously. Then, as if nothing had ever changed, he rubbed against her legs and purred. She broke down, hugging him gently.

I swallowed the lump in my throat. “I think he’s yours. I’m sorry it took this long.”

She looked up at me, shaking her head. “Don’t be sorry. You brought him back. That’s all that matters.”

We talked for a while, and she told me stories about Marmalade’s kitten days, how he used to sleep on her pillow, how he followed her around like a shadow. It was clear—they belonged together.

When I drove home, the weight of what I’d done hit me. Kian was going to lose it.

And he did.

The moment I walked in and he saw the empty carrier in my hand, his face drained of color. “Where’s Fergus?”

I took a deep breath. “His name isn’t Fergus. It’s Marmalade. And he’s not yours. He was stolen, Kian. I gave him back to his real owner.”

For a moment, he just stared at me, like I had spoken another language. Then his expression twisted with rage. “You had no right!” he shouted. “He was mine! I raised him, I fed him, I loved him!”

“You stole him,” I said firmly, my voice shaking. “You built your whole life on a lie. That woman has been grieving for two years because of you.”

He clenched his fists, his chest heaving. “I saved him! She didn’t take care of him, I did!”

I stepped back. “No, Kian. You kidnapped him. There’s a difference.”

For a long time, we just stood there, the air between us thick with anger and betrayal. Finally, he stormed upstairs and slammed his door.

The next few weeks were hell. Kian barely spoke to me. When he did, it was venom. He called me a traitor, a thief, even though I knew I had done the right thing. The apartment became unbearable. Eventually, I packed my things and moved out.

It wasn’t easy. I lost a roommate, a friend, and the comfort of a home I thought I understood. But I gained something else—peace.

A few months later, the woman sent me a photo. Marmalade was curled up on her bed, looking perfectly content. She wrote, “He’s back where he belongs. Thank you for giving me my family again.”

I smiled at the photo, tears stinging my eyes. In the end, the truth mattered more than comfort. Doing the right thing wasn’t easy, but it was worth it.

Sometimes, love isn’t about holding on. It’s about letting go, even when it hurts.

And if there’s one lesson I took from all of this, it’s that lies eventually collapse. You can build your whole life around them, but the truth has a way of clawing its way back.

Share this story if you believe in doing the right thing, even when it’s the hardest choice. And if you’ve ever had to let go of something you loved for the sake of what’s right, know that you’re not alone.