CAT-ASTROPHE!
The deep rumbling tones of the Mysterons came over the loudspeaker of the officers' lounge, "... a
moving fossil will be destroyed ..."
"Fossil ... FOSSIL?" queried Captain Scarlet.
"A moving fossil," amended
Captain Blue.
"Could they be referring to a
living fossil or do they mean someone moving a fossil from one location to
another?"
"Living fossil ... mmm ... old
fossil ..." murmured Captain Magenta.
"I wonder if they might be having a second go at Colonel
White?"
"I dare you to tell HIM
that!" exclaimed Captain Ochre. "And I want to be there when you do."
"I want to have a camera
handy," snickered Symphony Angel.
"He's not that old and I bet he could run fairly fast chasing
Captain Magenta with a lump of wood in his hand."
Some more laughter and jibes were poked
at the unfortunate Magenta.
"Children, children ... Please!" called out Captain
Blue. "We are getting off the
track a bit."
"Yes, what could they mean?"
Captain Scarlet furrowed his brow once more.
"Does anyone here know anything
about fossils?"
"There's a enormous book on them
around here someplace, I suppose," Magenta answered helpfully.
"What do you mean, 'I
suppose'? It either is or it
isn't."
"Well, it's been quite a long time
since I saw it."
"How long?"
"Let me put it this way; Captain
Black was reading it the last time I saw it."
"WHAT? Are you sure?"
"Yes."
"Was this before or after the
Mysterons took him over?" asked Symphony Angel.
"Before, of course." Magenta sounded nettled. "Just how dumb do you think I am?"
There was a hushed silence, a bit of
face pulling and some lip twitching before Captain Ochre hissed between his
teeth and said: "Temptation!"
"Calm down," said Blue soothingly
to Magenta, seeing him about to sputter a retort. "Now, are you sure it was a book on fossils, not something
else?"
"Yes. I can remember distinctly asking him if they were once friends of
his."
Groans were heard all over.
"Brilliant comment," murmured
Symphony.
"He is older than us and ..."
"Not that much." said
Blue. "I bet he gave you short
shrift for that, he didn't suffer ... comments like that lightly."
"Strange, as soon as I said it -
without really thinking ..."
"Surprise, surprise," Captain
Ochre murmured sarcastically.
Magenta gave him a sideways glance and
decided to ignore him. "As soon as
I said it; I expected to be barked at - but he didn't. He stared at me for a while and then slowly
shook his head; then he commented that they weren't friends of his, because
they all had died out a few years before he was born and that he never got to
meet any of my ancestors."
"Ha! He got back at you," expressed Symphony with great
delight. "I bet he was looking at
ape fossils."
"Well you're wrong, he
wasn't."
"How do you know, did you
look?" Ochre jumped in.
"No, he told me. He made quite a point of it too ... you
know, that man had a definite cruel streak in him." He sounded aggrieved.
"Go on, you're not stopping there,
what did he say?"
"He told me he was looking at a
picture of stegosaurus bones and emphasised, and I mean emphasised, that it had
the smallest brain/body ratio of all the dinosaurs. He really drove home the point, even started doing little
calculations on a piece of paper ... couldn't get out of there quick
enough."
"He certainly knew how to handle
you," Ochre sighed. "What a
pity he's not on our side anymore."
"Is this it?" gasped Rhapsody
Angel, interrupting them, as she limped over towards them lugging a great heavy
tome.
"You found it, great." Magenta beamed.
"It found me," she answered in
disgust, throwing the book on a table with a great thud. "It fell on my foot!"
"These things usually aren't
coincidental," he told her, "there's a clue here, they are probably
trying to tell us something." He
opened the book at random and found himself looking at a stegosaurus drawing;
he quickly flicked the pages to another section, briefly glanced at it and then
he snapped it closed hurriedly.
"It's coincidental after all," he concluded, to the amusement
of the others - they had seen the words 'Missing Link'.
"Give it here," Captain
Scarlet ordered, as he reached for the book.
"Good Grief, it is
heavy," he frowned at Rhapsody, "you shouldn't have carried it all
that way in your condition."
"Condition!" she snorted. "It's only a sore foot, I'm not that
weak!"
"You could have compounded the
injury, oh sweet delicate little flower of womanhood," Magenta taunted.
"Shut up, or I will make it worse by kicking you." She then winced and sat down.
"Trilobites," said Captain
Scarlet, whilst looking at the pages it opened to.
"They are quite cute," added
Captain Ochre.
"They look like giant slaters to
me," grumbled Rhapsody.
"Trust a man to take a fancy to them."
"Look here, it shows a sign of
great intelligence to like trilobites - studies have shown this, so watch what
you say," cautioned Ochre.
"What studies?" Captain Blue frowned.
"You are not supposed to ask such
questions."
"Well I am asking."
"You don't need studies for what
common sense tells you; but if there were studies done, it would show just what
I said."
"So you just made it up?"
"Just a logical deduction."
"Yeah, well I think studies would
show that such people had contorted minds," Magenta added. "Having said that, I like them
too."
"A big thing like that would eat
you," Rhapsody had her say.
"Most of them are small,"
Scarlet told her, "you can place one in the palm of your hand."
"And get bitten, the name ends with
'bite' and they might be poisonous."
"No, no no, it says here that
trilobite means three lobed - nothing to do with savagery."
"Besides, they are extinct ... no
more, gone forever so to speak," Blue told her.
"So why would the Mysterons want to
kill something that is already dead?"
"We don't know what they mean yet,
that is what we are trying to figure out."
"Spectrum Pursuit Vehicles look
like trilobites," Ochre informed them all, "and that could be what
they mean by 'moving' fossils."
"Nothing in that, the man who
designed them had armadillos in mind," Captain Blue corrected.
"I disagree. They are more like trilobites, SPVs don't
have tails or little pointy ears."
"They don't curl up in balls
either."
"So? Not all of them did and armadillos can curl up too."
"Were there any giant armadillos in
the past?" asked Symphony.
"Could they rate as 'living' fossils?"
"Good point," Captain Scarlet went to the index. "Yes, it is mentioned." He turned to the page. "Wow!
Look at that thing, a Glyptodon ... it doesn't look like a SPV though,
unless you are very imaginative."
"None of them do," Captain
Ochre still hadn't finished. "They
look like trilobites."
"Armadillos," muttered Blue.
"I always thought the Maximum
Security Vehicles were the vehicles designed after armadillos," Captain
Magenta couldn't help stating.
"Don't you start," Captain
Blue flashed an annoyed glance at him.
"Never get angry at someone for
being right," Ochre came to Magenta's defence. "That's another proof of my trilobite theory."
"You are being very persistent
about this." Scarlet looked up
from the pages he was studying.
"Because it is the only thing that
has made sense so far, what other reason could there be for mentioning fossils,
living or otherwise? Unless they are
talking about something important that looks like one ... simple."
"We'll keep it in mind, let's move
on and tick off the 'living' fossils to make sure we haven't missed
anything."
"How are we supposed to know what they are?" whined Rhapsody,
starting to get very bored indeed.
"This book devotes a whole chapter
to them. Now let's see ... mmm ... I
think we can rule out the Chambered Nautilus, Coelacanths, Horseshoe Crabs,
Turtles and Crocodilians, unless the Mysterons want to make a 'fashion
statement' - which is highly unlikely."
"Horseshoe Crabs are supposed to be
distantly related to trilobites," Captain Ochre felt duty bound to point
out.
"I'm getting sick of hearing about
those wretched trilobites," groaned Blue, "if they weren't already
extinct I'd make them!"
"You never know, a deep sea dredge
might just turn one up one day ... stranger things have happened. There are all sorts of mysteries waiting at
the bottom of the ocean, even in these times."
"God, I hope not, we'd never hear
the end of it if you were proven correct."
"I wonder if they are going to do
something to affect deep sea fishing on a commercial scale," Magenta
interrupted excitedly, as the thought struck him.
"They don't have to, it has been
banned for a while now," explained Captain Blue in a patient manner. "Fish from those depths take so long to
grow and are so slow to reproduce that the time it took to replace them was a
concern."
"Most of them are the most vile
looking things too," Symphony added, with sounds of disgust. "Who in his right mind would want to
eat them anyway?"
"Tuataras have a third eye,"
Scarlet suddenly announced.
"HUH?" was the combined
startled response.
"Just wanted to get your attention
..."
"What ... what is a
tuatara?" Rhapsody asked. "I bet it's another revolting prehistoric
animal."
"Nice dragony looking lizards
actually that aren't really lizards, but are a more ancient form of reptile
..."
"I rest my case."
"And the third eye is a
light-sensitive structure under the skin at the top of its head."
"What is the significance of
that?" Captain Blue was interested
to know.
"I'm not sure. I was hoping it
would jog something in your brains ... are there any tests or experiments going
on to do with night vision for instance that could have anything to do with
this?"
"Sounds like a pretty weird long
shot, but it can be checked out, I suppose ... er ... you don't suppose the
Mysterons are just simply making fools of us for the hell of it?"
"That thought often crosses my
mind. Let's go on to trees ...
Magnolias, Cycads and Ginkgoes to name a few."
"Ah!" exclaimed Magenta,
"some people take Ginkgo compounds for bad memories, I had an old distant
relative who used to swear by it."
"Did it do him any good?"
"Well, um ... er ... he could never
remember my name and he carried a green fly swat with him at all times, because
he had a persecution complex about Leprechauns harassing him."
"Good
God!" groaned Symphony, "insanity runs in his family, or should I
say skips and sings!"
"Jealousy is a curse," Magenta
responded. "Having an Irish
heritage is something to be proud of."
"Worried about, more like,"
she shot back, "look at how many Irish jokes there are."
"About as many as there are Blonde
ones," he quickly retorted.
Symphony was taken aback, but quickly
rallied. "Touché. But then, realise, it is a good thing you
aren't a Blonde Irishman, isn't
it? The world would be in real danger then," she added to the
accompanying sounds of coughs and snickers.
"I think we can rule out the
trees," Captain Scarlet broke in before a sparring match really started,
"besides, they don't move anyway ... by themselves I mean ..."
"So where does that leave
us?" Captain Ochre queried. "It seems to me that my idea is the
best one and ..."
"Cloning," Captain Blue said
in a rush, so that he didn't have to hear that terrible 'T' word again. "I think we should look at what is
being done in the way of cloning extinct animals, we might be exploring
technology that the Mysterons don't want us to know about."
"That is the most sensible and logical
idea I've heard so far, at least we have some possibilities to report to
Colonel White - it hasn't been a complete waste of time."
"I wonder what Captain Black is up
to at this moment?" mused Captain Magenta, "I bet he is picking on
some poor ignorant slob."
* * * * *
The man Captain Black was eyeing off was
neither poor nor ignorant. He was a
paleontologist who worked for a prestigious museum and who was not adverse to
selling rare fossil finds on the side, or doing anything else he considered to
his advantage.
John Jeremy was making demands on his -
or what he thought was his - latest prospective buyer. "Look, I want full payment in advance
for what you want ... no ifs or buts," he said more forcefully than he felt. He also wondered why they had to meet on the
edge of a stinking fetid swamp. The
dark-haired gaunt man dressed all in black gave him the creeps and he noted
that even the voracious mosquitos didn't dare molest him.
Captain Black took a step in the man's
direction and said in his ominous voice; "You will get the full payment
you deserve, Earthman!"
"What? ... er ...
Arrrgh!" John Jeremy felt himself
pushed backwards with a considerable force and landed right in the middle of a
patch of quicksand.
"What the hell did you do that for?"
he demanded of the Mysteron Agent, as he regained his senses and realised he
was sinking fast.
Captain Black didn't answer, he just
cocked his head to one side and watched with an air of detached curiosity.
"Get me out of here, have you gone
mad? People don't go about attacking
each other in a civilised society!"
"No, they don't. They don't lie, cheat and steal
either."
"How
dare you try to take the moral highground!" the sinking man declared
in a fit of such indignant red-hot anger, it was a wonder the boggy ground
around him didn't boil.
"We don't have to 'take' what is
already ours."
"You
have a damned nerve! You are not going
to get what you want any other way!" the paleontologist sputtered,
thinking to himself that there was no way he was going to do anything for this
man once he was free.
"Yes, we will," was the
answer.
"I'm the only one who has access,
you can't make a better deal with the others; they are all a bunch of dewy-eyed
idealists in any case ..."
"That information is most reassuring,
Earthman."
"Earthman? Look, if this is some sort of joke ... this
has gone too far ... I don't find this funny ... get me out! ... there's hardly any time ... HELP,
HEL..." He was cut off when his
head sank beneath the surface in a bubbling frenzy.
After a few minutes, twin green circles
passed over the area where the hapless man had submerged, then his replica was
standing next to Black.
"You know what to do," spoke
Black to the latest Mysteron slave, who answered in the affirmative.
* * * * *
"What
the hell do you have there?"
sputtered an outraged Colonel White to Captain Blue, in complete
disbelief, while seated at his revolving desk in the Control Room.
"It is a lion cub, Sir, but not
your everyday lion cub."
"I can see that it is an unusually
large lion cub, but what is it doing here on Cloudbase?"
"We thought it would be safer here,
that's all," Blue said, while making an adjustment to get a better hold on
the squirming animal.
"We?"
"Doctor Jeffries and I thought that
the Mysterons wouldn't be able to get to it up here and there was hardly any
security where it was bred. This way I
can concentrate on any other possibilities that may arise concerning the latest
threat."
Colonel White looked at the cub's
breeder and whispered to Blue; "Has she been cleared by the Mysteron
detector?"
"Oh yes, of course."
"And that animal?"
"The cub?"
"Yes, the cub."
"I don't think that they would
Mysteronise a baby animal."
"How
would you know? That creature could be
a ticking time bomb, get it cleared right now," the Colonel barked.
"Yes Sir," Blue responded and
sat the cub on the startled Colonel's lap, then he sprinted out the door.
"Just what do you think you were
playing at?" fumed Colonel White, when Blue returned with a detector.
"She was getting heavy and I didn't
want to drop her, that is a very valuable animal."
"Yes, he's right," added Dr.
Jeffries. "You are very privileged
to see her, let alone hold her like that."
"All clear," announced Captain
Blue, pulling an x-rayed picture of a lion's head from the camera and trying to
avoid seeing the Colonel's reddened angry face.
"What an amazing device,"
declared the doctor, and pointing to the x-ray added, "see the dentition
is slightly different to the average African Lion and notice that ..."
"Forget
the picture, get it off me now!" roared an uncomfortable Colonel
White. The cub had started to lick his
neck and she had a very rough tongue.
"She likes you, you must have a way
with cats," smiled Dr. Jeffries in a disarming way, as Captain Blue
removed the overgrown furry feline.
"Er ... yes, they do seem to like
me ... er ... what is so special about it ... her." The Colonel then blushed.
"Teshadina Antoinette, that's her
name. She is a hybrid between an
African Lioness and a Cave Lion from the last ice age. Remember when there was all that excitement
over the discovery of a frozen Cave Lion a few years back?"
"Vaguely."
"Well it was a male lion and it
still had viable sperm cells in its ..."
"Yes, yes, I get the picture. What
do you hope to accomplish with this female hybrid?"
"Usually hybrids are sterile, but
with cloning techniques we hope to be able to use some more of that sperm with
her eggs and produce a three-quarters cave lioness and so on with each
successive offspring until we have a purebred cave lion."
"That seems quite plausible - how
long will it take?"
"We estimate that about five
generations should do it."
"This must be the most exciting
event in the world concerning prehistoric animals then?"
"Oh no, there are strong rumours of
something even bigger. Apparently there
is a very strange unknown creature that has been discovered in
Antarctica."
"Antarctica!" Captain Blue
moaned.
"Yes, very unusual for that to
happen."
"But, it is so cold there
..." He suppressed a shudder.
She laughed. "That is why the creature was frozen to death and is still
frozen. The group that found it were
actually only looking for fossils from the Cretaceous Period, but ended up
finding something from the Pleistocene Epoch."
"Is it still there?"
"As far as I know it is. Only one man has studied it and he guards it
jealously, when he left the site for a couple of weeks, he had it locked in a
freezer that only he has the key to. It
will have to be moved soon and ..."
"Moved?" Colonel White pricked up his ears.
"Of course, you can't study it
properly in Antarctica and with winter coming on, well ..." she shrugged.
"Captain Blue ..." the Colonel
started.
"I'm on my way," he sighed in
response. "What about the
cub?"
"It will be all right - I think Dr.
Jeffries will be able to handle her own baby animal until you get back. And pick up Captain Scarlet on the way there
too."
"SIG."
The Colonel turned back to the
doctor. "Now tell me some more
about this remarkable animal."
Teshadina had wandered back over to him, when Captain Blue had sat her
on the floor; the Colonel reached out and scratched the itchy bit between her
eyes, causing the animal to half-close her eyes and seemingly smile.
* * * * *
"Why did it have to be
Antarctica?" moaned Captain Blue for the hundredth time, as they touched
down on the continent.
"Cheer up," Captain Scarlet
told him, as their helicopter was immediately surrounded by beaming faces,
"the people seem friendly."
"Desperate, you mean, for anything
that is different - as anyone who had to spend months in this bleak hole would
be. Little wonder they look like
inmates from an insane asylum."
"Go on with you, most good
scientists are a little ... eccentric.
Would you prefer it if they were serious all the time?"
"Yes."
Captain Scarlet's answer was prevented
by the door of the helicopter being pulled open.
"Hello, my name's Carl, it is so
good to meet someone different and of some importance," grinned a fresh
faced youth, as he grabbed Scarlet's arm and nearly shook it off. Captain Blue received similar treatment.
It took them an hour to get a word in,
so eager were all the workers to tell them about, and show them all over, the
complex.
"Ahhh, so you've heard about our
latest find," said Carl to them appreciatively, when they were finally
able to mention it. "Secrets are
hard to keep, even on Antarctica."
"Can we see it?" asked Captain
Blue, eager to get it all finished with.
"Lordy no," he laughed,
"Mr. Jeremy guards it with his life, so to speak."
"Can we speak to Mr. Jeremy
then?"
"Should be able to, he's just got
back from South America a few hours ago.
I'd leave it for a while, if I were you, he seems a little grouchy and
the first thing he did was to check on the frozen creature to make sure we
hadn't tampered with it. That was silly
of him, we wouldn't do that."
"You have seen it
though," Captain Scarlet asked.
"Yes, I found it."
"So, what does it look like?"
"It's hard to say ... it's ...
different, that's the most I can say ... although, if really pushed, I would
say it was a medium sized cat-like creature ..."
"CAT!"
exclaimed both captains in unison.
"I said cat-like; I said that to
Mr. Jeremy, but he told me not to talk such idiotic irresponsible nonsense and
that it was impossible for any feline species to be in Antarctica at that time
and what we were looking at was just an ancient seal of unknown species."
"It was right in front of you,
couldn't you tell?"
"It was and is still covered with
compacted ice, so visibility was limited, and since it wasn't too large, it
could be placed it in a freezer until we could thaw it out properly. I took some photos ..."
"Great, where are they?"
"They are not developed yet. Mr. Jeremy wasn't happy when he found that out,
I'm to give the film to him and he is going to get them done. I wonder if the
green glow will show up?"
"Green
glow! It had a green glow around
it?"
"Yes, it seemed most unusual. Mr. Jeremy told me I was imagining it and
not to talk such piffling hogwash ... he gets a little crabby at me sometimes,
but I'm sure he doesn't mean anything by it," Carl happily ended.
The two captains rather diplomatically
kept their thoughts on that subject to themselves. Captain Scarlet has more important things to think about
anyway.
"Take me to him right now and have one of your
assistants take Captain Blue to the place it was found."
* * * * *
"Mr. Jeremy, Mr. Jeremy, this
gentleman would like to talk to you," Carl panted, as he ran into the
man's office.
"And take your picture," added
Scarlet, pointing a detector in the man's direction.
"What's this? I don't have time for interviews and signing
photographs, I'm a busy man - come back later," Jeremy growled in
discomfort.
"It won't take long, I can assure
you. Then I'd like to see the
fossil."
John Jeremy's copy moved out of the way
of the detector. "That will be all
Carl," he told the youth, then he turned to Captain Scarlet. "I will show you the remains of the
creature first, this way." He
strode off.
"Wow! he must like you, he wouldn't make an offer like that to just
anyone," gasped Carl, as he was
leaving.
* * * * *
Captain Scarlet very warily entered the
freezer room, but nothing seemed amiss - in fact John Jeremy was standing next
to the largest freezer with the lid up and he was smiling.
"This is what you wanted to
see?"
Scarlet approached. "I don't see any green glow."
"That Carl," Jeremy shook his
head. "Of course you don't see a
green glow ... Earthman," with a sudden movement he toppled Captain
Scarlet into the freezer and added, "that is not the fossil, it is just
frozen meat!" Then he closed the
lid.
The surprised captain found that lifting
the lid of a freezer from the outside was a completely different proposition
from the inside. The vacuum seal made
it impossible to open, however much he kicked and hammered at the lid. After a while he started feeling numb and
sleepy ...
* * * * *
"Paul, Paul, wake up," Captain
Blue urged his friend, slapping his face, "quick, wake up, c'mon Paul, you
can do it."
"What, what ... where is
he?" Scarlet stammered, regaining
his senses.
"Mr. Jeremy left in your
helicopter. He said he had your
permission to do so." Carl informed him, then added with awe. " Gee, you are lucky, I would have
thought you were too far gone to recover like that."
"He's pretty hot blooded,"
Captain Blue stammered out a clumsy answer, then turned his attention back to
his friend. "I have told Cloudbase
and they are sending the Angels out to intercept him."
"Good, I will contact
them." Scarlet adjusted his
cap/mike and found himself talking to Rhapsody.
She in turn told him that she was there
alone and had lost contact with Cloudbase soon after being given directions,
and that the other Angels hadn't caught up with her, because in her words,
'something strange was going on'.
Neither Captains could contact Cloudbase
either and then Rhapsody sighted the helicopter near Mount Erebus; they told
her to shoot it down over land, but not to blow it up - because the Mysteron
had the fossil with him.
"I have ejected," were the
next words they heard from her.
"Why, did he shoot you with a
missile?" the red captain inquired.
"No, toe cramp."
"What?"
"That foot of mine that the book
fell on, well, I had a severe spasm in it and that caused me to jerk
involuntarily and I accidentally hit the eject button."
"You're
joking!"
"I wish I were. You will have to send a ground crew to pick
me up when you can, but don't worry there seems to be people camped nearby -
they are heading in my direction. At
least the Angel jet didn't hit their camp, so that's good."
"Absolutely
marvellous!" spat the disgruntled
captain.
* * * * *
It was many hours later before they were
all assembled back on Cloudbase and were able to fill Colonel White in on what
had happened.
"The Mysteronised Mr. Jeremy
crashed the helicopter into Mt. Erebus," Rhapsody told him. "The people that rescued me saw it all
happen."
"So what did you find at the crash
site?" Colonel White asked in exasperation. He'd had a tough day.
"There wasn't one. The volcano was erupting and he flew right
into it, that's what those people were doing there - studying the effect of the
volcanic emissions on the ozone layer, you know, it has quite an impact and
..."
"Never mind that ... it seems we
will never find out what the frozen remains were actually of and why the
Mysterons were so desperate for us not to know."
"So it seems Colonel," Captain
Scarlet spoke up. "Why couldn't we
contact Cloudbase and why weren't the other Angels sent?"
"I was wondering when you would get
to that," Colonel White responded in a dangerous tone. "Let me tell you about what has been
happening up here, whilst you have all been enjoying yourselves on the ground."
They all knew better than to try to
dispute that.
"Firstly, who's brilliant idea was
it to send Captain Magenta to New Zealand to look into studies of
Tuataras?"
"Mine," confessed Captain
Scarlet, wondering what that was leading to.
He soon found out.
"Well, I received an call from a
very irate New Zealand Government official; it seems that he thought we were
accusing their government of vivisection and experimentation on a protected
species, it took me a good part of an hour to reassure him that we weren't
doing any such thing."
The room was filled with silence as they
digested that information.
"Secondly, we come to Captain Ochre
..." the Colonel continued.
"He wanted to go there
himself," Captain Blue quickly pointed out.
"I know. I had just finished a harrowing time with the New Zealand
representative, when I had a call from the factory where the SPVs are
assembled. It seems they were all ready
to go on strike, because Captain Ochre had them in an uproar. They had got it into their heads that he was
poking fun at them, in a very sarcastic manner, and accusing them - on
Spectrum's behalf - of prehistoric designs and work practices ... That was
another hour of my time wasted and I was told, quote: 'To remove that ranting madman from there immediately,' close
quote." He paused to let the
effect sink in. "And now finally
to Captain Blue." He directed a
narrow-eyed stare in the man's direction.
"I haven't done anything,"
Blue shot back in surprise.
"This brings us back to your ... your lion cub and the main cause of all
the pandemonium that has been going on for the last six hours."
"What could that baby girl have
done even if she did act up a bit? I
thought people would more likely want to play with her, if anything."
"You are right there, everyone did
want to play with her. Do you know what
happens when a cat gets overexcited and has a full stomach?" Colonel White asked Captain Blue with firm
precision.
"Oh
no!" Blue covered his face.
"Oh yes. Right on the moving walkway, causing Dr. Jeffries no end of
embarrassment I can tell you ... not to mention the smell."
"Smell?" Blue squeaked, as an
eye peeked out from between his fingers.
"Yes, the smell, I was not very
popular with Lieutenant Green when I suggested, at first, that he might have
been the cause of it. It seems that
once a week the cub is given a special treat of a concoction that is a mixture
of cream, blood, the strongest fish emulsion you could ever imagine, minced
liver and various other components ..."
Sounds of disgust and groans greeted the
description and realisation that it was better to be on the ground after all,
when that happened.
"But Colonel, Sir, that doesn't
explain why you were blacked out for so long," Captain Scarlet had to
know.
The Colonel's face took on an icy
smile. "Captain Blue's lion cub
was not content with that, she had to make friends with Lieutenant Green and in
doing so, she jumped up onto the computer and walked across it with her very
large feet; then she became playful and decided to have a 'mad cat' moment when
the Lieutenant attempted to remove her - causing a complete lock out of
communications and other systems that took hours to rectify. Ever tried to catch a boisterous, clumsy,
and seemingly deranged, lion cub that is tearing around the place at, what
seems to be, the speed of light and have it leaping, sliding and falling
everywhere? It was utter chaos."
Captain Blue didn't look up to see the
chilly glare directed at him, but he felt it.
"Ah yes, its long been known that
cats and computers don't often mix," Captain Scarlet suddenly said in a
feeble attempt to cheer up his superior officer and to remove some of the anger
from his friend. "I take it that
we won't be keeping the cub as a mascot then?"
A killer scowl was the immediate
reaction he received.
"We had the photographs
developed," he hastily added, thinking that a quick change of topic was in
order. "But they didn't come out
too well. The Mysterons beat us there too."
"Hand them over."
Colonel White looked at them in
astonishment, instead of a frozen corpse - there was printed on the pictures,
in green lettering, the words: 'You
Lose!'
Cwissy
30th May, 2001
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