Scooter slipped out her home on the south coast of England one night in the summer, BBC News reported, and turned up the next morning on a nearby lawn - sliced down the length of her belly, entrails pulled out and piled up beside her, laid there to find like some sort of sick message.
As went Scooter, so went Rusty 240km to the north: dumped in a bag on a teenage girl's doorstep, according to the Guardian, headless, limbless and earless. And Topsy, mutilated in Northampton on September 7; and Squiggles, found partially skinned with her tail cut off in an Addlestone car park last Wednesday.
These are just a few of the victims of who pet owners across Britain and police believe is a serial killer of cats, who has eluded capture for two years and may be expanding his ambitions. Since the first killing in late 2015, the carcass found near the alleys of a Croydon neighbourhood south of London, more than 370 animals are believed to have been mutilated by the same suspect, the BBC reported. Most of the victims are pet cats, though foxes and the occasional rabbit or puppy are sometimes reported - even a baby owl, once. Police have only confirmed a fraction of the hundreds of mutilated animals to be the work of one human mind.
"It's quite possible other people have got on the bandwagon - copycats, if you like," Andy Collin, a Metropolitan police detective in Croydon, told the BBC. But he has no doubt the killer exists. "Cats are targeted because they are associated with the feminine. The killer can't deal with a woman or women who are troubling him."
And already, the killings have spread from a single London suburb in a widening ring, which by now extends from the coast to kilometres north, east and west of the capital city.