As day broke today, authorities were only beginning to assess the damage Hurricane Irma's brute force wrought on the delicate archipelago that makes up the Florida Keys.
But it became clear that one beloved tourist attraction had survived the storm unscathed: The colony of six-toed cats that resides at the Ernest Hemingway Home and Museum on Key West.
All 54 cats - and the 10 humans who hunkered down with them in the Spanish Colonial house that the late author called home in the 1930s - rode out the gusts with aplomb, curator David Gonzalez told MSNBC, after the worst of the storm had passed.
"The cats are accustomed to our voices and our care. We love them, they love us. We all hung out together," said Gonzalez, who added that the building's limestone-block walls had not only provided a sort of fortress from the elements but also kept the place nice and cool. "It's a very comfortable place for the cats, very comfortable place for our employees."
Outside the grounds of the 19th-century building, which sits 5m above sea-level - making it a high point on the island - Irma's effects remain to be tallied. But the Miami Herald reported that the damage to Key West, a tourist destination and end-of-the-road hideaway, appeared to be less severe than feared. "It's just trees and foliage and cars," one resident told the paper.