The Puss in Boots and the Magic Smartphone
Bedtime story

The Puss in Boots and the Magic Smartphone

~3 min readFree

Once upon a time, in a kingdom where cobblestone streets met wireless signals and castle towers broadcast Wi-Fi, there lived a clever cat named Percival. Unlike ordinary felines, Percival wore polished leather boots that clicked elegantly against the pavement, and around his neck hung a enchanted smartphone that glowed with ancient magic.

This was no ordinary device. The Magic Smartphone had been crafted by the kingdom's greatest wizard, who had trapped starlight in its screen and woven spells into its circuits. Its battery never died, its signal never dropped, and its apps could alter reality itself.

Percival's master was a young miller's son named Theo, who had inherited nothing but the cat, the boots, and the mysterious phone after his father's passing. "What am I to do with these?" Theo lamented. "A cat in boots and an old telephone?"

"Trust me," purred Percival, his whiskers twitching with schemes. "I shall make our fortune."

The next morning, Percival strutted to the royal palace, his boots gleaming. The guards tried to stop him, but he simply tapped his smartphone and whispered, "Let me pass." The gates swung open as if welcoming royalty.

Inside, Percival approached the King. "Your Majesty, I bring greetings from the Marquis of Carabas," he announced proudly, inventing a title on the spot. "My master wishes to court the Princess and offers this gift."

He opened the Camera app and captured a photo of the King's garden, then used the Magic Filter to transform it into a vision of breathtaking beauty—flowers blooming in impossible colors, fountains spraying liquid diamonds. The King gasped in wonder.

"Remarkable!" exclaimed the King. "Your master must be truly wealthy to command such magic."

Percival smiled. "Indeed, sire. But there is more."

Over the following weeks, Percival used the smartphone's many enchanted apps. The Maps app showed routes through forests that didn't exist on any ordinary chart, leading hunters to game that fed entire villages. The Weather app could summon gentle rains for crops or clear skies for harvest. The Translation app allowed the cat to negotiate trade deals with distant kingdoms.

Word spread of the mysterious Marquis of Carabas, whose wealth and power seemed limitless. The King grew impressed, and the Princess became curious about this noble stranger.

But a wicked ogre who lived nearby heard the tales and grew jealous. "I shall challenge this Marquis," he rumbled. "I can shapeshift into any creature! What can he possibly do?"

Percival accepted the challenge on Theo's behalf. The ogre transformed into a lion, then a dragon, then a terrifying serpent. Each time, Percival simply opened his smartphone and selected a new app. The Game app turned the ogre into pixels. The Music app made him dance uncontrollably. Finally, the Catnip Filter confused him so thoroughly that he surrendered.

"You win," grumbled the ogre. "Your master's magic is greater than mine."

The King, witnessing this display, declared that Theo must truly be the greatest noble in the land. He welcomed him as a suitor for the Princess, who had fallen in love with the young man's supposed wisdom and power.

At the wedding feast, Percival sat at the table of honor, his boots propped on a velvet cushion, his smartphone charging wirelessly beside his plate of cream.

"And so," the cat told the gathered guests, "remember that true magic lies not in the device itself, but in the cleverness of those who wield it wisely."

The kingdom prospered, Theo and the Princess ruled with kindness, and Percival continued his adventures, always ready with the perfect app for any situation.