At SAFE Haven for Cats, there are moments when a decision has to be made quickly. A cat is sick. A kitten is failing. A family calls with nowhere else to turn.
In those moments, our answer is simple. We say yes.
Yes to treatment.
Yes to the long nights and difficult cases.
Yes to the cats who need more care than most shelters can provide.
Cogsworth is one of those cats
He arrived at SAFE Haven in mid-June of 2025 with his mom, Princess Belle, and four siblings – Beauty, Beast, Gaston, and Lumiere. A partner shelter had reached out and asked if we could take them in. The kittens were still neonatal. Even with their mother caring for them, they needed careful monitoring and extra support to grow strong.
The family was placed into foster care with Brandi, our former Clinic Services Manager. For six weeks, Brandi watched over them as they grew bigger, stronger, and more playful. Most of the kittens thrived. But Cogsworth struggled.
He had always been the smallest of the litter, the runt, and as his siblings returned to SAFE Haven ready to be adopted, Cogsworth began to decline. Our medical team examined him and delivered difficult news. He had Feline Infectious Peritonitis, commonly called FIP.
FIP is a serious disease caused by a mutation of feline coronavirus. In Cogsworth’s case, fluid began building in his abdomen, causing his tiny belly to swell until he looked like a little gourd. Treating FIP requires patience, expertise, and resources. The treatment involves daily medication for 12 weeks and constant monitoring from veterinary professionals.
SAFE Haven started Cogsworth on treatment immediately. Slowly, he began to improve. Week by week, the fluid subsided, his strength returned, and the playful kitten underneath began to emerge. After months of care, Cogsworth was finally healthy enough to be adopted in mid-January 2026. For a brief moment, it seemed his difficult start in life was finally behind him.

But just a few weeks later, his adopter noticed something was wrong. Cogsworth had become unsteady on his feet. They rushed him to their veterinarian, but in the short time it took to arrive, his condition worsened dramatically, and he lost the use of his back legs.
The diagnosis was devastating. FIP had returned, this time in a neurological form affecting his nervous system.
Relapses like this are extremely rare. Research shows that fewer than 10% of treated cats experience a recurrence. In fact, out of the 38 cats SAFE Haven has treated for FIP, Cogsworth is the first relapse case we have seen.
His family was heartbroken. They did everything they could to get him help, but the complexity and cost of treatment were overwhelming. They reached out and asked if SAFE Haven could help him again.
Our answer did not change. Yes, we took Cogsworth into our care.
It was the weekend, but waiting was not an option. Caitlin, one of our dedicated Shelter Veterinary Assistants, rushed Cogsworth to an emergency veterinary hospital. The emergency team worked closely with SAFE Haven’s Medical Director to develop a treatment plan immediately. The emergency visit alone cost $2,300. Cogsworth would also need another full 12 weeks of medication costing $26 per day.
Within days of restarting treatment, something remarkable happened. Cogsworth began to regain the use of his back legs. He stood. He walked. He started exploring again.
By this point, Cogsworth had already spent more of his young life receiving medical care than living in a home. With another 12 weeks of treatment ahead of him, SAFE Haven knew he needed something more than an enclosure at SAFE Haven.
Our Executive Director, Annie, stepped in and opened her home to him. She learned how to administer his medication and brought Cogsworth home to foster during the remainder of his treatment.
Today, Cogsworth spends his days exploring every corner of Annie’s house like a curious archaeologist on his first big discovery. He proudly shows off how strong his back legs have become by standing tall and jumping as high as he can. While he desperately wants to be friends with Annie’s two resident cats, they remain the aloof older siblings who are not quite sure what to make of the energetic newcomer. Annie makes sure he gets plenty of extra love.
Cogsworth’s recovery has been a true team effort. Our staff coordinated emergency care. Our medical team designed and monitored his treatment plan. Tagteam Annie & Brandi opened their homes so he could recover in comfort.
But stories like Cogsworth’s also reveal something many people never see – the hidden cost of lifesaving care.
Cogsworth’s emergency visit alone was $2,300. His medication for this second round of treatment will cost more than $2,000 over the next 12 weeks. These numbers do not include the first round of treatment he received, the months of veterinary monitoring, or the staff and foster care that continue to support him.
SAFE Haven takes on these costs because cats like Cogsworth deserve every opportunity to heal.
And because tomorrow, another cat will arrive who needs the same chance.
Cogsworth still has weeks of treatment ahead of him, but his progress has already been extraordinary. Every jump, every curious exploration, and every playful moment is proof of what is possible when a community comes together to care for cats who need it most.
Cogsworth’s story is one of resilience, dedication, and a community that refuses to give up on a cat who needs help. But stories like his come with real costs. Emergency veterinary care, specialized medication, and months of treatment quickly add up, and Cogsworth is only one of many cats SAFE Haven cares for each year.
