[center][h1][color=BB33FF]Mandy Mason[/color][/h1] [img]https://i.imgur.com/wRkePSP.png[/img] [color=BB33FF]Location[/color]: Supermarket [color=BB33FF]Skills[/color]: N/A [/center] Mandy put the bag of groceries in the car and made sounds that she had been informed were the right ones to get animals to trust you—simple tongue clicks. Mandy had no idea what they sounded like, but she knew the mouth feel well enough. The kitten seemed to want attention and was quickly pliant. She took a quick picture of the cat and sent it to the chat with her parents. [color=BB33FF]"Going to take this little one to the vet to see if it has humans. I'll be home after."[/color] The kitten even let her pick it up. There had to be a human. She checked that her car was locked and headed to the vet in the same parking lot as the shop where she had gotten masks and toilet paper. Entering she pulled up her notes app and held it up for the receptionist. She kept a note pinned that explained [color=BB33FF]'Hi my name is Mandy. I am deaf. I can communicate via notes or text.'[/color She waited for the receptionist to read the note before adding to it. [color=BB33FF]'I found this kitten in the lot. Can you do a quick check for a microchip?'[/color] Vet offices and rescues had microchip scanners on hand to check if a lost animal was chipped. That could give contact information for the owner and get the animal back to where it belongs.