
by Siobhan
Zettler
Captain
Scarlet and the Mysterons episode ‘Expo 2068’
The Colonel was in a bad mood. That was not
unusual. When Captain Scarlet was dead, Colonel White was always in a bad mood.
That mood wasn't about to improve. But that
had nothing to do with Captain Scarlet.
Captain Grey was counting the minutes as he
watched out the perspex viewport down into Cloudbase's cavernous main
hangar deck. He was standing in the
lower deck's mezzanine conference room, waiting side by side with Technician
Terracotta, the both of them nervous and sweating in trepidation.
He had ordered the warning klaxons silenced
immediately, though the emergency lights were still spinning out their cyclic
distress, the stroboscopic white and amber beams pulsing their way around and
around and around the empty and deserted helijet bay.
The Deck Officer was upset, no doubt pacing
around the small Security office located directly below his own feet – on a
level with the crisis. The Deck Officer was requesting instruction, having
found none in the procedures manual to cover the present circumstance.
"It's a full quarantine," Grey
explained into his cap mike, calmly, quietly. "Just keep that lockdown
active and all personnel clear until further notice. We don't want to make
things any worse. Grey out."
Beside him, Terracotta was agitated.
"The scrubbers can't handle it," she moaned, banging her head against
the spex with her eyes closed. "They just weren't designed with this contingency
in mind!"
Grey heaved a sigh, not liking it.
Terracotta was Cloudbase's Chief Environmental Engineer, a part of the civilian
staff, one of the very few non-military personnel on board the carrier who
rated a color-coded designation. She took care of the Systems – the vents and
the plumbing, kept Cloudbase's air clean and the water pure. Terracotta was not
easily flustered, and she wasn't squeamish either – for she was also in charge
of things like the waste recycling and the raw sewage.
If Terracotta was upset, then so was
Captain Grey. She took care of some of the
most Important Things – the things that the rest of them took very much for
granted until and unless it looked like things might go wrong.
And this – this was looking very
much like something that could and would go wrong. Very, very wrong
indeed.
Grey hadn't the slightest idea what they
were going to do about it either.
It was less than four minutes before the
door opened and Colonel White strode in, his brow creased and countenance
frowning, far less than happy, that much was for certain.
"What's the meaning of this,
Captain?! Report!"
Oh no, not a good mood out of the Colonel
at all.
Grey straightened to attention. "Sir –
we have a situation, sir."
"What sort of a situation, man? That
helijet hasn't been here for more than ten minutes – they scarcely got Scarlet
off and into Sickbay and the next thing I knew was that someone had called a
level one quarantine into effect!"
Terracotta stepped forward. "I'll
accept full responsibility, Colonel. I called the quarantine."
"And I authorized it, sir," Grey
hastened to add. As civvie technical staff, Terracotta didn't have the
authority to enact such a thing on her own.
He did. And he hadn't hesitated.
Grey was about to go on when the door
opened again and Ochre came skidding into the conference room with Melody Angel
on his heels, the two of them responding to the emergency in record time, if
they'd come down from upper decks.
Less than record time if they'd come
off-duty from quarters – his or hers – here on lower decks, which was not
impossible, just rather unlikely, as there had been a Mysteron threat
current and active until just a few short hours ago. Still, there were rumors
circulating. The fact that the two of them had just arrived together and
simultaneously lent a certain credence to those rumors.
"I'm waiting, Captain," Colonel
White growled.
"Sir," Grey stepped away from the
viewport, though Terracotta had turned her worried gaze back out into the
hangar, biting at her lip. Ochre and Melody took note, and approached the spex
slowly and carefully, unsure precisely what they were going to find there.
"Sir," Grey repeated. "The
helijet bringing Captain Blue and Captain Scarlet back from the Expo site in
Manicouagan made a routine touchdown and lock-through into the flight deck. The
helijet was met promptly by the med-staff, and Captain Scarlet taken to Sickbay
immediately. Captain Blue shut down all systems and logged off as usual,
turning the helijet over to the flight mechanics for routine post-flight
maintenance and make-ready."
"And?" Colonel White was short-tempered and impatient.
Grey opened his mouth to continue, but
Ochre let slip an explicit curse and Melody squeaked in horror, the two of them
now shoulder to shoulder with Terracotta at the viewport, looking the same
direction at the same scenario.
"Colonel White – the mechanics
discovered a problem with the helijet."
"I'll say…" Ochre quipped like an
idiot, as his initial shock gave way to something that Grey could only define
as a flippant appreciation of the potential –
Because Ochre was possessed of a wicked –
some said a downright evil – sense of humor and was probably that very
moment musing how he could have turned the situation into one of the most
supremely heinous of practical jokes. Ochre had that kind of imagination.
"What sort of a problem?! Spit it
out, Captain!" The Colonel's short patience was wearing dangerously
thin – and Ochre's all too typical smart-ass attitude wasn't helping.
Grey cleared his throat. "Potential
biohazard, sir. The entire base is at risk of contamination."
"Cloudbase is a closed environment,
sir," Terracotta pressed the point. "We're not equipped for this. The
filters and the air scrubbers won't stop it. This is an utterly unforeseen
circumstance and there's no contingency in place to handle it." She
wrung her hands, distraught as she stated the obvious.
Grey watched as Colonel White blinked, some
sense of dire urgency seeping past the impatience, penetrating through the bad
mood. Spectrum's Commander-in-Chief moved toward the viewport, and the
subordinate officer, pilot and civvie staff there stood aside.
Grey held his breath, waiting for the
reaction.
"What in God's name…" Colonel
White stared downwards. "Is this a joke, Captain?!" The
Colonel's expression had gone from quizzical to skeptical in something short of
a nanosecond, and he swung around to fix those vivid, pale-blue eyes not on
Grey, but on Ochre, whose reputation for practical jokes was well and widely
known. And who was also, at that very moment, only scantly concealing the mirth
bubbling under the serious expression that his colleague was trying without
much success to maintain.
To his credit, Ochre was at least startled
by the suggested accusation in the tone. Perhaps even a little flattered.
"If it is, Colonel, then it's not one
of mine," Ochre replied, somehow managing a respectful non-grin. "But
this would be a tough one to organize, let alone to manage. No, sir."
Ochre shook his head emphatically. "I really don't think this is a
practical joke."
"Based on your vast experience?"
"Ah... if you'd like to look at it
that way. Yes, sir. In my considered opinion."
"Just a highly entertaining
happenstance?" Colonel White was not wholly mollified, and well aware that
Ochre was, in fact, amused.
Ochre shrugged. "That will depend
entirely on how things play out, sir."
Colonel White scowled and turned back to
the spex. "I want this situation...resolved, Captains! A level one
quarantine cripples this base. The flight deck is presently inoperative, and
that is completely unacceptable!"
Shaking his head, Colonel White leaned heavily on the sill of the
viewport, again casting his gaze down into the flight hangar. "Is that
really what I think it is?" he inquired at last, resigning himself to the
prospect without enthusiasm.
"Yes, sir. I'm afraid it is," Grey
confirmed.
"Reputation deserved?"
"Once again, sir," Grey let out a
long sigh of his own. "I'm afraid the reputation is also justified."
Grey moved forward, coming alongside the colonel at the spex, verifying for
himself that things hadn't miraculously changed in the last few minutes.
The problem was still there.
Lost and confused and sitting right there
in the middle of the deck.
"It's a skunk, sir," Grey said.
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It was not something with which Colonel
White himself had any direct experience.
The skunk – a small creature,
characteristically black with two broad white stripes running down its back and
bushy tail - looked to his eye to be little more than an oversized, oddly
colored squirrel. The skunk was not native to the British Isles, and if any
resided there, they were quite properly confined to zoos or to be found
taxidermically stuffed in museums.
But his subordinates (most of them)
were reacting to the skunk's presence as if it actually constituted an
emergency.
He let his glance wander the group, pensive
and thinking hard.
Grey, Ochre, Melody Angel and Technician
Terracotta; North Americans, every last one of them, hailing from Chicago,
Detroit, Atlanta and Ottawa respectively. Three Yanks and a Canuck. All of them
of the same opinion.
Presumably familiar with the hazard.
But it was Terracotta's reaction that was
disturbing him the most.
No contingency. Biohazard. Contamination of the entire
base.
As he considered the potential
difficulties, Colonel White regained his bad mood. It had not been the
best of days. First the Mysterons - and a threat to devastate a significant
portion of the North American continent. A non-idle and very narrowly averted
threat, involving missing trucks with nuclear reactors, a murdered driver, a wounded
civilian, a hijacked freight helicopter and all manner of upset and panic
amongst various local authorities and governments - at least half a
dozen of whom had already placed calls that he was required to respond to, all
of them making useless, belated demands for information and utterly pointless
suggestions about how Spectrum might have better conducted itself while
operating within their respective boundaries and jurisdictions. The High
Commissioner for the World Expo was clamoring for attention. The power utility
that owned the reactor was in a similar uproar –
Never mind that Captain Scarlet was dead,
besides. Always a concern, that was. With never any guarantee that it was a
temporary state of affairs.
And now it was Mother Nature handing
him problems.
"This is an operational base!" he
barked. "Not a wildlife center!"
"Sir, we appreciate that, however
–"
"Get the thing off my deck! Captain
Grey – I'm putting you in charge of this removal operation. Requisition
whatever personnel or equipment necessary. Someone must have some
relevant experience! But get it done. I'll not have vermin running this
base!"
There was a brief silence. Captain Grey
finally cleared his throat, seeming to feel it incumbent on him to say
something, as he'd enacted the quarantine in the first place. "We'll
handle it, sir."
"We had a nest of 'em under the porch
once," Melody Angel volunteered.
"Urban crits," Ochre offered
after that. "My cousin had a pet raccoon."
Colonel White turned, narrowing his eyes at
the both of them. "I gather then that comprises relevant experience,"
he stated rather than asked. "Thank you. You've both just volunteered to
apprehend the creature. Now, I have other more urgent matters to attend.
Captain Grey – I will expect your report on the situation as soon as
possible."
"S.I.G., Colonel. I'll keep you
apprised of our progress."
"Do that, Captain. You have your
orders." Colonel White nodded once in general dismissal, even though he
was the one leaving. He crossed the floor, an uneasy silence from his
subordinates trailing in his wake. He turned as the door opened, having clearly
assigned them to the task, fully confident that they would see it done, and
quickly.
Nevertheless....
"Good luck," he wished and left
them to it.
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"Nice going, Fraser! Look what you
just got us into!" Melody Angel turned, irritated, unhappy and swatted
Ochre on the shoulder as soon as Colonel White had cleared the room. "What the hell do raccoons
have to do with this?"
Grey had been thinking precisely the same
thing. "Absolutely nothing, I'm sure," he said, folding his arms as
he continued to stare down at the small, furry black and white problem – his
problem, suddenly – and wished it was
as simple as a raccoon instead of a skunk.
Ochre spread his hands in a gesture of
offended innocence. "Hey… they both come out at night and turn into
roadkill before morning."
"With certain very obvious
differentiating characteristics." Grey shook his head. "This is a
touch more serious than Colonel White realizes. I somehow don't think
he's ever had the dubious delight of driving past a bit of ripe roadkill skunk
before."
"Unlike the rest of us."
Terracotta groaned again. "Think about that in the vents,
Captain. Closed system. You want that in your quarters?"
"Ugh," Melody said, wrinkling her
nose. "Double-ugh. No...triple-ugh!"
"Fine! And no, I don't want that in my
quarters," Ochre admitted, moving back toward the viewport. "Little
stink bomb terrorist. Do any of these panels open?" Ochre ran a finger
along the perspex panel's edge. "I could just shoot it from here."
"No!" In a surprising, unrehearsed unison, Grey,
Melody and Terracotta all objected vehemently otherwise.
Leave it to Ochre, Grey thought, to go
right to the most direct, pragmatic and least palatable solution.
"You can't shoot it just because
it's a skunk," Terracotta insisted. "That's not humane!"
"Neither is skunk reek in the
vents," Ochre argued, rolling his eyes. "I thought that was what we
were trying to avoid."
"The panels don't open," Grey
said aloud, knowing that Ochre knew that, and had likely just been testing the
rest of them out for their reactions. "They're all pressure sealed."
Grey frowned, wondering if Ochre's suggestion – serious or otherwise – wasn't the
simplest and most expedient answer. "It'd probably spray even if you did
shoot it," he said. "Death throes. Even a tranquilizer dart probably
wouldn't help. We could ask Fawn."
"Fawn's busy," Ochre dismissed
that idea. "What'd you do about the nest under the porch, Melody?"
Melody shrugged. "Mom called Pest
Control."
"Sounds like a plan," Ochre
muttered. "D'you suppose they make house calls at 40,000 feet?"
"We want it taken care of a bit
quicker than that." Grey thought about it. "But it's a place to start.
I mean, there must be techniques for dealing with this sort of thing.
Terri – get on the net, do a bit of research. You two…" Grey spared a
glance toward Melody and Ochre. "Had better suit up – decontamination
gear."
"Uh-uh." Ochre shook his head.
"And scare the thing at first sight? It'll have seen people, not
people in space suits. Com'on, Mel, we'd better get changed."
"Into?" Melody questioned, as
Ochre went for the door.
"The rattiest, tattiest duds you own.
Whatever you've got that you won't mind incinerating later."
"That sounds pessimistic." Melody followed, less than thrilled by the
idea.
"It is pessimistic. I
haven't thought of a way to corner the thing without upsetting it yet. You're
not supposed to startle or scare 'em.
And I'd say that one's already nervous."
"Maybe we could feed it."
"Do you know what they eat?"
"Uh....no," Melody admitted.
"I'll find out," Terracotta
assured them, already seated at the conference table's workstation. "And
I'll have someone bring it down from the galley. I'll see if we can scare up a mesh net of some sort for you.
Heavy gloves. And something to lock it up in."
Grey kept his eye on the critter.
"We'll get all the gear down to the Deck Officer. Don't waste time – it
could disappear anywhere, anytime. Ten minutes?"
Ochre paused briefly at the threshold.
"Eight," he estimated, and then vanished with Melody still on his
heels. Grey pulled his cap mike down, deciding that Terracotta was going to
need some help on the info search, putting several of the Deck Officer's idle
staff to work on the same task and the rest of them on skunk watch.
And, on the whole, feeling pretty much as
pessimistic as Ochre about the entire business, too.
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Eight minutes was plenty of time, though
Melody had complained about the tight schedule all the way back to her own
quarters. Which meant not much or for long. She was a professional, and she
knew how seconds could count in a crisis, never mind minutes. It was one of the
things Ochre liked about her.
He already had the cap and the tunic off by
the time he reached his own quarters and was peeling out of the shirt even as
he was kicking off the boots. Damned uniforms were expensive, there was no way
he was turning any part of his official wardrobe into skunk fodder.
He knew where his grubbies were, consisting
of an old World Police t-shirt, tattered jeans with paint stains and ripped out
knees. Nothing he'd ever miss. He even knew where the scruffy sneakers were,
buried at the bottom of the storage bin under the bunk – they were old and
disreputable, presently unused and not nearly as vile as he remembered
them. But that aromatic situation would
change, once he had them on again, and it would change with a radical,
heat-activated potency that might give even a skunk pause when that reached
its maximum efficiency.
He had the Deck Officer on the line while
he changed, requesting a couple of hands-free radio headsets be available and
fully charged – in about four minutes. Time was flying, but he was ready, and he
slapped a seldom-used baseball cap onto his head as he picked up the final bit
of personal gear he'd run across buried in the same drawer as the cap. He
headed back out into the corridor, as prepared mentally and physically as he
could be, expecting the worst.
And certainly trying to keep with the total
absurdity of the circumstances.
He rejoined Melody in the corridor as she
emerged from her own compartment, her dress-down garb every bit as disreputable
as his own. His favorite Angel was also sporting old jeans and a t-shirt, the
uniform of the hour. She had a couple of brightly patterned bandanas in one
hand and a pair of swim goggles in the other, gear that was every bit as
makeshift and as appropriate as his, though her sacrifice sneakers were in somewhat
better condition than the ones he was wearing.
They found, when they reached the Deck
Officer's cluttered little office, that all the staff there – some of
Spectrum's best – had been moving fast, and improvising well, because that
small space was now littered with an imaginative array of pursuit and intercept
gear.
There was, in addition to the two headsets
he'd requested, a big canvas and mesh bag (a laundry tote from Services), a
large net for throwing (volleyball equipment pilfered from the gym), several
pairs of heavy leather work gloves (belonging to various of the flight
mechanics) and an even more impressive pair of up-to-the-elbow neoprene gloves
(normally used for aviation fuelling purposes). But best of all, in Ochre's
immediate opinion, there was also an angler's capture net, donated from
somebody's personal collection of dusty, unused fishing gear. It had a short
aluminum handle, but it had been securely fastened to an extension pole with
duct tape. It was impromptu, but it now had considerable reach. That was liable
to be important.
Not bad, he thought, for seven minutes
worth of scrambling. The two radio sets were already tuned to both the console
transceiver in the mezzanine conference room and to Grey's cap, live and ready
to go. Ochre turned his pistol over to the Deck Officer for safekeeping.
Gunfire was a thing far less than recommended in the hangar and flight deck -
where the presence of both aviation fuels and live ordnance made the very risk
of such strictly prohibited and inadvisable under all but the most extreme of
circumstances.
The damn skunk – as insanely inconvenient
as it was – really didn't count as such.
"Any changes to report?" Ochre
asked, as he spun the ball cap around backwards, fitted the radio head-set and
tested it out as soon as he had it settled in place. "Grey? What's the
furball up to?"
"Status quo, Ochre. The thing's nosing
around a bit, but it hasn't gone far from where you last saw it. Terri says
they don't like bright lights - so we've shut down the strobes, hoping it won't
be strung out and nervous."
"Good thinking. So what else do we
know that we didn't know a few minutes ago? Does the little perp have an M.O.?
I'm not seeing any food for it down here."
It was Terracotta that came back on the
line. "We don't have much that it likes. They're omnivorous by
definition, but carnivorous by preference. They eat meat; worms, grubs,
beetles, carrion - all of which are in somewhat short supply in the galley.
They'll even eat mice and bird's eggs when they can get them. We can manage a
few chicken eggs and some fruit for it. Whether or not it's hungry or will even
be tempted to eat under the circumstances is another matter."
"We can still try," Melody said,
coming online with her own radio. "Is someone on the way from the
galley?"
"As we speak. Just give it a
minute."
"Is there anything else we want to
know?" Ochre rephrased his request for information. "Am I gonna need
a rabies shot before I'm done?"
"Don't let it bite you," Terracotta replied. "It's not
likely to have rabies, but skunks are notorious carriers. If it does bite you,
there'll be no choice but to have to put it down for testing and you'll need
treatment too, just in case. You wouldn't like that very much."
Ochre paused, considering that aspect of
things. "I think I'd like shooting it better," he reiterated the option, despite the fact
that he'd already disarmed.
"No!" That from all three of his mission
colleagues again, still in vigorous unison.
"Just asking," he muttered, and
looked up as a plastic plate containing two eggs and a sliced-up apple arrived
by foot-courier from the galley. Melody took custody of it, as Ochre donned a
pair of the heavy leather work gloves, and then slipped the big neoprene ones
on top of them.
With stiff, hardly mobile fingers, he then
placed his own personal safety goggles (eliciting a stunned silence from the
nearby crew) and picked up the fishing net. He signaled for the Deck Officer to
open the security door.
"We're going in!" he announced melodramatically, and
then strode out into the hangar with a burdened and bemused Melody Angel
trailing behind –
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It was Ochre just being... Ochre,
right to the core and at his random best.
Grey stared, and raised an annoyed eyebrow at the sights that presented
themselves only a second or two after Ochre's serio-comic proclamation of
intent.
"Ochre," Grey stated the
code-name drily when he saw Ochre emerge from the security office. "What
are you doing?"
"Skunk hunting," Ochre replied, matter-of-factly. "It
was an order."
"I mean, what, specifically, are you doing
with that damned silly head gear?"
"I'm wearing it. You know - safety
goggles."
"I don't think that nose-glasses fall
into that category," he said pointedly. Ochre had rigged out with an
enormous pair of gag nose-glasses on his face - a set with huge bushy black
brows riding atop the oversize spectacles and pale bulbous plastic nose with an
equally bushy moustache tacked onto the underside. "I thought you
didn't want to scare the thing."
As if that wasn't bad enough, Melody
(obviously learning very quickly during off-duty rec-time) was looking every
bit as ridiculous, with a big yellow bandana knotted up to cover her hair,
another orange one tied robber-style across her face and a pair of hot-pink, tight-fitting
swim goggles nestled securely between the two.
God, Grey groaned inwardly. I'm trying to get something
serious taken care of here and I get Groucho Marx with a neon bandit sidekick
in swimming specs to do the work.
He refused to pursue any additional verbal
admonitions or commentary about it. It very seldom paid to encourage Ochre's
bouts of public mischief aloud. And most certainly never within Ochre's earshot
if one did.
Terracotta abandoned the workstation to
join him there at the viewport, concern deepening the furrow across her brow.
She was thirty-something, solid in her commitment and confident in her job, as
competent and as steady as they came. Grey knew her qualifications were
impeccable. Terracotta knew Cloudbase from the inside out, and cared about it
more than most of Spectrum's elite officers knew. She had already been anxious
about the circumstances, worried over the possible consequences should things
go wrong out there, and she was becoming increasingly alarmed by the content of
the conversation she'd just overheard. She had short-cropped chestnut-red hair,
and a band of rust-colored freckles across her nose. Ochre's cavalier outlook,
and the state in which he'd managed to present himself were sufficient to widen
Terracotta's eyes, and left those freckles standing out in stark contrast to
the skin that had further paled beneath them.
It wasn't that she lacked any sense of
humor. For Terracotta's real name was Teresa (Terri) Cotter, and she'd selected
her color-code name because it had been both available and a perceived source
of perpetual personal amusement.
"They have poor hearing and poor
eyesight," Terracotta said into her com-link after a moment, consigning
herself to moving forward with the operation, hoping, no doubt, that
performance was going to count more than appearances. "They can only see
well for three or four feet."
"Should be easy to catch it
then," Ochre
whispered loudly as he brandished the fishnet and turned for his quarry.
"Its nose works. And they can spray up
to twelve feet when they do, further in a favorable wind. They're accurate for
about half of that."
"Wind shouldn't be a problem. I think
we have enough reach. Any signs we should be watching out for?"
"In general, skunks only spray as a
last resort. They prefer to run away from trouble, but will warn it off by
displaying their intent to spray. They'll stamp their front feet, arch their
backs, raise their tails or even perform handstands for an enemy. Those are
your first clues."
"And if the worst happens?"
"Don't get any in your eyes. Skunk
musk causes intense irritation and sometimes temporary blindness. Nausea and
vomiting are common reactions."
"Just keeps on getting better, Terri.
We're going to shut down the chatter on this end, you just keep feeding us
whatever information you come up with that sounds useful, and have everyone
keep an eye on the crit. If it bolts, we want to be able to track it down.
Sound fair?"
"You've got it, Captain." Terracotta nodded as Melody waggled a finger
at them, the Angel's hands otherwise being too fully occupied with gear and
tidbits for a proper wave. Terracotta moved back to the workstation to continue
her research. Grey kept his place at the perspex, watching with an increased
interest as Ochre and Melody began actively to stalk their quarry.
So far, the skunk seemed unaware that it
was under pursuit. It had wandered from the vicinity of the helijet across an
expanse of open deck and stopped, perhaps having lost its bearings, if its
eyesight was truly as poor as Terracotta had indicated. Ochre moved to within
30 feet of the critter, and paused, taking bearings of his own, looking for the
best angle of approach, scanning for likely holes the thing could dive for if
it did turn tail and run.
Then the door to the room opened, this time
to admit an incredulous Captain Blue, without a doubt having just arrived from
Sickbay, where he'd very obviously spoken with Colonel White. Blue was openly
skeptical, striding into the room with an unaccustomed, intensely dubious frown
pulling his brows together as his glance darted between the viewport and Grey's
face.
"I brought a what back with me
from Manicouagan?!" Blue blurted.
Grey could only gesture out the viewport.
"I'm sure you heard it right," he said as Blue closed the distance.
"But you can see for yourself if you really don't believe it."
As Blue came closer to take in the hangar
scenario, Grey traded a weary glimpse with Terracotta, so far the only other
person involved who seemed to want to take the situation seriously.
"All right then; Skunks 101, a crash
course," Terracotta continued, having sifted through some information and
distilled it down for delivery. "The common striped skunk - and that
certainly appears to be what we have here - is widespread throughout Canada, the
United States - other than Alaska - and into northern Mexico. They are
nocturnal, members of the weasel family. Genus: mephitis. Species: mephitis
mephitis."
"That seems a bit redundant. Did they
run out of decent words to use?" Grey wondered aloud.
"It's Latin," Terracotta
supplied. "According to this, it means 'poisonous vapor'."
"I was thinking it sounded more like
Faust," Blue remarked. "As in Mephistopheles."
"I hated English Lit. Especially
Shakespeare," Ochre complained. "Who?"
"We did that one in high school,"
Melody whispered.
"Not Shakespeare. Faust, I mean. I think it was German."
"Mephistopheles," Blue repeated.
"Mephisto for short. The Devil, if that helps."
"Well, that's appropriate
enough," Ochre
muttered. "In a negative sort of way."
"Males are larger than females,"
Terracotta forged ahead, interrupting. "Ranging up to 11 pounds in weight,
the females about 8. They live in a variety of habitats, but prefer forest
border, brushy areas and open fields – ”
"Sounds a lot like Manicouagan,"
Blue grumbled.
"And they're abundant in suburban
areas due to the large number of buildings that provide them with cover."
"Sounds a lot like our porch," Melody added.
'They generally don't live more than a mile
or two from a source of water. They don't hibernate, but they do den from
November through March – breeding in February or March, they produce litters
only in the springtime. Males and females have little else to do with one
another during other times of the year."
"Doesn't sound like any fun. Idiot
crits."
"Females with young can be at some
risk from encounters with solitary males, whose territories often overlap those
of several females."
"All of that's very interesting, Terri - but what about its
weaponry?" Ochre
asked, very quietly. "That's what we're most worried about at the
moment."
"Just about there, Captain. But this
sounds like something a bit more relevant for your situation: skunks are slow
moving and docile."
"Oh – good news!"
"Striped skunks do not normally
discharge the contents of their scent glands unless they are mortally
threatened."
"Even better. Seeing as I'm not
allowed to shoot it. Does it know these rules?"
"I thought you were going to
shut up, Ochre," Grey interrupted, growing more irritated by the minute by
Ochre's idiotic comebacks. Ochre, however, did not deign to reply, which was,
Grey knew, far more an Ochre-typical disregard for the commentary rather than
it was any sort of compliance with it.
"When mortally threatened, however,
they will assume a U-shaped posture, with both head and rump facing the
enemy."
"Contortionists, huh?"
"No, just flexible weasel-relatives. A
skunk has voluntary control over the two scent glands located at the base of
its tail, and can control the direction in which its musk is sprayed."
"Not such good news. So much for the
delivery system. What about the ammo?"
"This is the scary part, Captain. The
musk is comprised of a thick volatile yellowish and oily liquid - this
obnoxious scent can be detected up to twenty miles away from its point of
discharge, and it can persist for months."
Grey blinked in surprise. Blue's eyes went
wider. There was (finally) a genuine silence from Ochre and no comment from
Melody.
"No wonder we called a
quarantine," Grey murmured, as he digested that piece of information. At
least he would have something to justify and substantiate his reasons for doing
so when it came to his written reports. Contamination of the entire base had
not been any exaggeration by the sound of that little snippet of knowledge.
It wasn't often used, but Cloudbase
had a small galley topside, where anyone feeling the need could indulge his or
her culinary whims. In due season, Symphony and Melody had been known to bake
up a storm of apple or pumpkin pies - and whenever they did, the scent of that
baking carried delectably, wafting throughout the entire base in
Terracotta's well maintained, highly efficient ventilation systems, whetting
appetites and driving everyone mouth-wateringly mad.
Grey imagined that any bad smells would
carry every bit as well and as efficiently as the good ones.
"That's with a favorable wind,
right?" Ochre asked
after a moment. Hopefully.
“I
don’t know if that’s a typo or not. Most of these sites say one or two miles. Which
is still more range than enough to contaminate all of Cloudbase.”
Terracotta went on, now that she had Ochre's undivided attention. "It gets
even worse. If its warnings fail to deter an intruder, the skunk will hiss,
spread its haunches and spray. And it doesn’t take it long to reload. They can
spray repeatedly, 5 or 6 times."
"This base is done for!" Blue
groaned. "If it's that freaking potent, then why didn't I know that I had
the thing on board the helijet?"
Terracotta shrugged. "Skunks
themselves don't smell like skunk musk."
"This one lives near the Expo
construction site," Grey surmised. "It would be familiar with heavy
machinery. Lots of work choppers there. And you didn't mortally threaten it,
either."
"Damn glad I didn't trip over it on
the way out." Blue seemed suddenly relieved, and happy enough not to be
the one down there in Ochre's particular position at the moment.
"Must've still been in hiding at that
point." Grey was not happy himself. Not with the situation, not
with Ochre's general attitude, and certainly not by Blue's doomsday
pronouncement. He was less happy still, when the door – it may as well have been a revolving one, he
decided – opened one more time –
It was Symphony, still in her flight
jumpsuit, evidently just relieved from standby duty, and grinning with
amusement, ear to ear.
"Polecat in the hangar?"
she inquired cheerfully. "That's gotta be a first!" She crossed the
room and slipped one arm into Blue's, as if they were about to promenade
together out to a show of some sort. No surprise there. Those specific
rumors had been laid to rest ages ago.
"Good news sure travels
fast." Grey folded his arms.
"Hold the small talk, if you don't mind, please. Some of us are trying to
resolve the situation." He glared a brief annoyance at both Blue and
Symphony, neither of whom took note of it, because they were both too busy
looking out into the hangar. "Let's have a few details on the potent
stuff, Terri. I'm thinking about possible damages and cleanup."
"Tomato juice," Blue offered. "How
much do you suppose they have in the galley?"
![]()
"I've heard that tomato juice doesn't
really work." Melody replied to that when she heard it over the com.
"The pest-control guys said it's just a myth."
"That's what the web says too," Terracotta confirmed. "It
says here that chemists have determined that there are 7 distinct
compounds that make up skunk musk. The major ingredients are called thiols –"
"Thigh-alls?"
Symphony
chuckled again in the background, and Melody sighed patiently. Symphony seldom
missed an opportunity to revel in innuendo whenever the opportunity presented
itself. “Whoo-hoo!”
"T-H-I-O-L-S---"
Terracotta
spelled it out, just to be clear for the transcript of the incident, which
Lieutenant Green would no doubt be recording for posterity, if he wasn't
broadcasting the events live all over the base, just to keep all crew informed
for the duration of the crisis. The Quarantine status that Captain Grey
had invoked would be meticulously logged, encrypted and flagged in the Base
archives. Thoroughly. Those were the Rules.
Symphony had
evidently not thought of that as yet.
Terracotta
continued: " – which are created by decomposing proteins. Skunk musk
has evolved to resemble the stench other animals identify as decay and that
they naturally shy away from. Two of the most potent compounds responsible for
the musk's strong odour are: butane-1-thiol - commonly called butyl mercaptan -
and methyl-1-butanethiol." Terracotta paused for breath.
"There's another 5 or so compounds as well, but most of those have never
been identified. I'm not going to try to pronounce the ones that have been for
you."
"English Lit
to Chemisty," Ochre complained. "We won't remember them anyway Terri,
save your breath." Ochre glanced around, and then nudged at her elbow.
"Mel – do you suppose we could
corner it in one of the SPJ bays?"
"Maybe."
Melody scanned the area to portside ahead of them, looking into the three
jet-storage slots, probably the most enclosed areas they could hope to find to
contain the skunk. She tried to recall
what lay at the back wall, whether it presented a solid barrier or not -
because even a small vent hole would be bad news if the skunk might find it
before they had it netted. The jets were in the way too, something the skunk
could run under with complete impunity and they would themselves have to crawl
beneath if necessary. "Hang on – oh – I think maybe it's seen
us...." she dropped her voice to a low whisper, and everyone stopped
talking.
The skunk had
turned, its pointy snout snuffling busily. Melody took a tentative step closer,
crouching down with one of the eggs in hand. Nearing cautiously, she moved to
within about 10 feet of the crit, and then carefully rolled the egg toward it.
Ochre came level with her, his net and pole at the ready.
The egg wobbled and
veered, but rolled close enough that the skunk saw it. Unalarmed, it
investigated the egg with its nose, putting a clawed foot on top of the thing
and squeaking quietly. It was small, almost delicate in its beautiful and
luxurious coat. It was no larger than a house-cat and looking every bit as
innocuous.
"Careful with that net, Ochre, honey –
you'll hurt it if you hit it too hard," she whispered a concerned warning
as quietly as she could.
"Why is everyone so worried about the
damn skunk?" Ochre asked the question in a similar hushed tone, without
taking his eyes from the target. He had the net high, gauging the distance and
the arc it would have to drop through to make a successful capture of the
beast.
"We want to be nice to it so that it
won't spray," Melody stated pointedly under her breath. "Are you
going to try to catch it or not?"
"What makes you think it won't spray
no matter what we do or don't do?"
"Fraser!" The man was wasting time, and any second now that
skunk was going to Notice them and take a personal interest.
"All right, all right! Keep
your bandana on! Jeez – I'm only warming up." Ochre moved a step to
the left. "Put the plate down, get your net ready – I'll try to sneak up
on it from the other side and if it runs, toss the net and catch it. How
difficult can it be?"
"It's gonna run towards
me?!"
"Relax... I'm the one who'll be
looking at the business end of the thing!" Ochre moved stealthily away,
his extended net hovering over the near center of the circle he was tracing
around the skunk.
"They contort, remember?"
"It won't. Not if I catch it
first."
"If," Melody
repeated the key word. A very big little word, if was. Melody
left her plate of tidbits on the floor and hefted the volleyball net, spreading
it equally across both hands, waiting anxiously for Ochre to complete his
circuit around the skunk. Its nose was still working, following that slow
progress, though Ochre should still have been outside its clear visual range.
She supposed, however, it might be able to
see something in the direction its nostrils indicated something might
be located. She didn't suppose it was completely blind beyond a few feet, no
more than she supposed it wouldn't spray, even if it was caught in a net.
Nets being very porous objects in their own
right.
"There, you see," Ochre whispered
into his headset mike. "It's got me in its sights now."
"You've no idea how comforting I find
that," Melody whispered drily in reply. The image that Ochre cut, there in
his cap and nose-glasses, was hardly inspiring her with confidence.
"If you confront it, be
prepared," Terracotta
warned quietly. "They'll stand their ground when push comes to shove
and challenge whatever's in their path. That's how they end up as roadkill,
because they'll stand in front of an oncoming vehicle to spray it instead of
moving out of its way. That's the
instinct."
"That's just stupid," Ochre
assessed.
"The instinct evolved before the
advent of the motor vehicle. Skunks aren't afraid of anything, Captain, that's
why the warning stripes and total lack of camouflage – they don't care if
they're seen."
"Got it." Ochre set his stance,
narrowing his focus to the task at hand and preparing to lunge at the skunk
with his fishing net. "Ready, Mel?"
"As ever I will be," Melody
replied, tensing, her own net gripped tightly. "Go for it."
Ochre's eyes flicked from the skunk to the
end of his net and back again as his knees bent, ready to spring. "On
three..." he murmured. "One... two... and... three!"
Bounding forward, net swinging in a
downward arc, Ochre moved –
– and the skunk did too.
With a hissing squeal, its tail shot
straight upward, the clear warning that Terracotta had predicted. Melody
flinched, but the thing scurried forward, right towards Ochre, dodging under
the descending net as Ochre's knee hit the hard steel of the deck and the skunk
kept on going, scampering straight on past his feet as the aluminum frame of
the fishing net struck empty space and deck plates, the intended quarry fleeing
directly away from the SPJ bays –
Melody cursed silently, still holding onto
her so-far useless net while Ochre cursed aloud, spinning on the one knee in
time to see where the thing was aiming for as it ran…
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"No, dammit!" Ochre hissed
under a dismayed breath. "Not under there!"
The escaping skunk had disappeared – and it
had disappeared beneath the tangle of pipes and hoses that comprised the hangar's
mobile fuelling tantalus. Constructed primarily of spark resistant carbon fibre
mesh and rubber, the apparatus had a raised platform and catwalk, presently
locked into place and positioned over one of the 'pits' – a cramped work area
that spanned the distance between the hangar floor and the under-the-deck, a
crawl space used to access and maintenance the hydraulic systems that lifted
any airlocked craft to the outer launch deck.
That cramped service level was the last
place he'd wanted the thing to find. Pursuing the skunk, he went down on his
hands and knees, then flat to the deck with his net in hand, carefully pulling
himself along the deck plates in the narrow space under the catwalks, wishing
the light was better. Melody was coming along behind him, her gathered gear and
goodies in hand once again.
"I think I can see it," he
whispered, and Melody froze where she was, her head close to his ankles.
"Terri – can we turn up the hangar
lights at all?"
"Hang on, we'll see what we can do
about it..." Terracotta
acknowledged the request, and they waited as the auxiliary emergency lights
were manually overridden and activated, one after another, along the length of
the hangar.
Melody coughed. "Fraser..." she
said, all distaste. "It's brutal down here. Like something died. Are those
your sneakers that I'm smelling?"
He hesitated to reply – those old running
shoes were certainly not a way to impress a wanna-be girlfriend.
"Hey - sometimes you've gotta fight fire with fire..." he muttered
finally, putting on the best, maybe the only spin he could come up with
for that particular malodorous circumstance.
"Fire nothin'," she complained.
"What'd you call that stink-stuff, Terri, honey?"
"Butyl mercaptan," Terracotta supplied. "A by-product
of decaying proteins."
"Well, we're not gonna get anywhere
near that crit with Ochre's brutal-your-captain-something-died-in-them sneakers
on down here."
"Very funny...." Ochre was less
than amused. He remained totally unapologetic, hearing it in the background as Symphony
picked up that ball and ran with it.
"Brutal-her-captain's shoes," Symphony giggled with delight. "They'll
love that in the Amber Room."
"Where's our damn lights?" Ochre
asked, cranky enough in the tight quarters, irritated that he'd missed the crit
in his first attempt to catch it, but nonetheless optimistically reckoning that
it could only be a good thing to be a main topic of discussion in the Amber
Room. "Where's that plate of stuff, Mel?"
"Right here." Pushing the plastic
plate along the floor, Melody clumsily worked her way alongside his elbow.
"Can't you move over even a little bit, Fraser?"
He had tried. The narrow space became for a
moment an awkward nightmare of elbows and knees in motion as Melody managed to
squeeze level with him. He gave her his best and most lecherous grin.
"That's nice and cozy," he purred loudly, wickedly, just for
Symphony's benefit. "Is that good for you, Jones?" That ought to generate some
discussion that would easily override the footwear issue for gossip-value. He
leered behind the nose-glasses.
"Cozy enough for a good slap upside
the head," Melody drawled icily, also for the benefit of those on the
other end of the line, though she winked at him from behind the pink goggles.
"Where'd you say you thought you saw that critter?"
"It was..." Ochre's voice trailed
into silence, lecherous thoughts instantly banished and forgotten. "There,"
he breathed. "Mel... it's right there, to your right."
There, at the back end underneath the
fuelling tantalus, just a few feet away now, was the skunk, abruptly
illuminated in a band of light as the overheads came on topside of the fuel
platform.
Watching them with those shiny
little black eyes, pointy nose all a twitch.
It squeaked once. And it waited.
Ochre stared at it from that close range, knowing
right then that something was wrong. It wasn't nervous. It wasn't scared. And,
dammit all, right there, dark and very cleverly camouflaged under its sleek,
black coat it was wearing –
"Why the hell is it wearing a
collar?" he asked into the sudden quiet. "This thing's got tags!"
The silence that came back on the radio was
deafening.
"Say again, Ochre?" Grey asked.
"I said: it's got a collar and tags. This thing belongs to
somebody."
"What? Like it's a pet?"
"The Web says they can make good
pets," Terracotta
chimed in. "Try talking to it."
Immediately, Melody made some little
clucking noises, picking up and carefully extending a tidbit of sliced apple
toward it. "Com'on sweetie... we're okay, really. Never mind the sneakers.
Are you lost, honey? Hmmm? Com'on out."
And the thing came, squeaking one
more time as it took an uncertain step towards the extended treat.
Ochre swore quietly, low under his breath.
"Some emergency this is."
Pet skunks, he imagined, would be surgically de-scented
early on in their rare and no doubt pampered domestic careers.
"Just can it up, Ochre, honey,"
Melody warned, in the same coaxing, friendly tone. "Lose the glasses –
you're scaring it. Com'on, that's it,
punkin' – we're not so bad, really. You like apples? It's a really good apple.
Hmmm? There you go..."
Ochre watched as Melody cautiously placed
the bit of fruit onto the deck with an outstretched arm, then peeled off the
gloves and her mask and goggles in quick succession, revealing herself as human
after all, another ploy that seemed to work.
In less than a minute, Melody had the skunk
eating right out of her hand.
"I think the crisis is over,"
Ochre reported sourly, grunting as he wriggled to back himself out of the
cramped underside of the platform, giving Melody time and space to work her
magic with the crit. In another minute she emerged from under the catwalk as
well, cradling the skunk in her arms, something that suddenly seemed –
Too easy.
It was almost a disappointment. Ochre
pushed his silly-goggles up onto his forehead, listening as Grey reported the
culprit had been taken into custody. Colonel White acknowledged the deed, and
immediately ordered the quarantine cancelled.
"I'll be right down," Colonel White advised, and signed off. In a
somewhat better mood, anyway. The Colonel was likely still in Sickbay with Fawn
reassuring him that Scarlet would be fine. It had been long enough now that
Scarlet probably had a pulse and a respiration rate back. Now the skunk was taken
care of, the hangar lockdown was history and Cloudbase would once again
be fully operational, no damage done.
Colonel White would be much happier.
"Awwww... look at that little
face!" Melody gushed. "She’s so cute!”
"How do you know it's a girl?"
Ochre deliberately resisted an impulse to reach out and touch the thing. A
novelty item for sure, someone's pet skunk of all things, here on Cloudbase,
of all places. It would be the Topic of Discussion in the Amber Room for
days, eclipsing brutal-her-captain's sneakers and lecherous innuendo
alike.
"Because I'm not seeing any boy-parts
under here, that's how," Melody responded, still in the absurd
infant-babble tone of voice. "Now, aren't you glad that you didn't shoot
it?"
Ochre rolled his eyes. In feminine circles,
Cute was impossible to fight and he knew better than to try. "Yes, " he intoned dutifully.
"I'm glad I didn't shoot it now. Not that we knew about it being a pet at
the time. Things still could have been worse." Ochre picked up the
volleyball net and mesh bag from the spot Melody had left them and followed
along as she moved back towards the Deck Officer's Security office.
Melody was cooing softly at the small animal in
her arms, talking silly baby-talk at it as Colonel White came through that
security door into the hangar proper, approaching them as they closed that
distance, and Ochre relaxed in the aftermath of the not-such-a-crisis after
all.
"Her name's Sikako
– that's what the tag says." Melody read the information on one of the ID
tags suspended from the collar. "That's a pretty name, sweetie. What else
have you got here?"
"Look for the
owner's name and address," Ochre said. "And don't get attached. We're
not keeping it."
"Certainly
not, Captain." Colonel White stopped just short of Melody Angel and
friend, eyeing the creature curiously as it chirred softly, squeaking as Melody
stroked and tickled its belly. "Who would keep one of these as a
pet?"
"Her rabies
shots are all up to date. And this other tag says: I belong to Sherri-Ann
Sommers –"
"Sommers?!" Colonel White let
out a surprised exclamation. "Some relation to our Doctor Sommers?"
"It could be,
sir," Ochre mused aloud.
"Spectrum Security found him in the middle of running a few
personal errands when the crisis broke – he was rushed to Magenta's helijet,
picked up and flown directly to Manicouagan – it was an urgent hurry and
Sommers must've had the thing with him. Family pet, I'd guess. It went along
for the ride, obviously."
"And then Blue
brought that very same helijet back to Cloudbase, leaving Magenta at the
Expo site for post-ops," Colonel White completed the likely sequence of
events with a grumble. "Well it certainly explains how the creature
managed to get here. Someone might have mentioned it."
Ochre shrugged.
"I'd have to assume it had low priority. Sommers would have practically
forgotten the crit when the reactor went to overload."
"She was
scared and hiding under the seats, weren't you, honey?" Melody coddled the
critter, purring. "It was an emergency. Silly Mysterons, going to blow up
the eastern seaboard, they just don't care about little pet skunks, do
they?"
Colonel White was
just reaching out a tentative hand to touch the pet as all around the flight
deck, vents began to bang and hum, the quarantine standing down, the systems
coming back on-line. Sikako squealed and squirmed in Melody's arms at the loud
noise.
Melody just managed
to hang onto the thing. "Calm, calm, calm, honey – it's okay, just some
noises, you're fine, sweetie… we'd better get you somewhere quiet and make a
phone call – we don't want to have to go chasing after you again now, do
we?"
And then –
Ochre was the first
to see it, in the very same instant that Sikako started to chitter excitedly,
and clawed her way up onto Melody's shoulder to fix those bright, black little
eyes and busy nose the same direction that he happened to be looking.
Ochre was not
excited by what he saw.
No.
No, he thought with a
horrid, sinking feeling. It wasn't possible.
Except that it was
possible and the scenario flashed through his skull as vividly as if he'd been
there.
Dr. Sommers' pet critter loose and on the
prowl inside the helijet. An unattended helijet, at the Expo
site, there on the edge of the bush. Home to another skunk – a wild one,
scenting out and checking up on the visitor in its territory. The very same one
that was –
ohmigod.
The very same one
that was suddenly emerging from the shadows there behind Melody and Colonel
White, frightened by the loud clanging of vents out of its own hiding hole, a great,
waddling brute of a skunk coming at their group with its tail already
raised...
Ochre reacted without thinking, dropping
nets and gear, leaping forward on a reflex so sudden that the silly-goggles
fell back down over his face, obstructing his vision as he bodily shoved both
the Colonel and Melody out of his way. A guttural yell was welling up in his
own throat as he tried to make some sort of an effective wall out of himself
before the thing let loose…
Twenty miles, he thought. Months...
Terracotta had advised that the things
always gave warning – the crits stamped their feet, they stood on their
forepaws, did some sort of a song and dance for their intended victims. For a
brief second he'd been hoping on some level that the thing would simply back off
if he challenged it outright. But he was reading otherwise in the skunk's
stance and in its bold approach, seeing in its little animal-brain arrogance
that the thing was on strange turf and in bizarre circumstances, and had had quite
enough of all that nonsense.
Moreover, it knew that it possessed
an unrivalled sort of arsenal.
Skunks had no natural enemies. Skunks were
not afraid of anything.
On another plane of thought, Ochre was
realizing too, that the colonel had cancelled the quarantine. And at that
realization, some portion of his panicking conscious/unconscious mind had just
decided that it would make him a martyr and throw him atop the grenade.
Except that he didn't get that far.
Distantly he heard Melody opening up with a
surprised shriek, heard Colonel White begin to bellow an outraged exclamation
at what could only have seemed like an unwarranted physical assault and then,
in an eerie, terrifying kind of slow motion, he saw it as the crit stopped,
fixed its glittering, beady, evil black eyes on him and contorted,
swinging its backside around, taking aim.
The brute sprayed.
Ochre pulled up
short, as abruptly as if it had been a shotgun blast that had caught him
squarely in the chest.
It didn't hurt.
But he was stopped
as dead cold in his tracks as if he'd run into some sort of solid and invisible
barrier. He blinked behind the nose-glasses, horrified, paralyzed and
instinctively holding his breath as the warm and oily miasma enveloped him.
He fell to his
knees, overcome by the noxious fumes, worse, oh, god! – so much worse fresh out of the
beastie than he'd ever experienced it in the brief drive-by aftermath of summer
roadkill –
"Nuhhh. Urrghhh. Gaahhhh…"
He
choked and sputtered, losing valuable air, wasting his short-term ability to
speak on helpless babble instead of a proper warning. "Vents..." he
wheezed. His eyes began to water, as the full extent of what the skunk had done
to him made itself blatantly manifest. "Shutdown! Grey – the vents...
aaaccckkk... Terri! Seal the hangar..." It was all he could manage
before he ran out of air –
The situation had
just gone from Prevention to Containment.
Instantly, the com
went live with voices.
Terracotta
shrieked: "Full quarantine! Engineering! Cancel that cancellation! Stand
up the quarantine! Stand it up again! Now, Toby!"
"Seal the
hangar!" Grey shouted. "Priority One, code 926 – shut those vents
down!"
"Two!?" Blue squeaked in
total disbelief. "Two?! I
brought two of them back from Manicouagan?!"
"Polecat one,
Spectrum zero!" Symphony hooted, dissolving into a fit of helpless
giggling.
And the skunk –
That brute of a
skunk just stood there, with its nose all twitching, staring in Ochre's
direction, standing its ground, all complacent and self-satisfied, triumphant and
arrogant and smug....
Ochre suddenly
ceased to care that he didn't want to breathe the fouled air.
His nose, sinuses,
mouth and throat and lungs stung and recoiled under the olfactory assault as he
drew a reluctant but necessary lungful of the noxious atmosphere, immediately
contaminating his entire respiratory system. Gagging and spluttering, livid
with fury, Ochre sprang to his feet, startled the crit and then screeched his
musk-tainted outrage as he leapt into forward motion intent on inflicting some
mayhem of his own.
"SMUG,
STINKING LITTLE SON OF A BITCH!"
The skunk squealed alarm, turned and ran
for its life...
![]()
It had not been a conscious decision.
Melody Angel, with pet critter in arms, had
been physically spun around when Ochre had bodily forced his way past her and
the Colonel.
And she'd seen what had made him
move, and moved herself, diving behind Colonel White, making an abrupt 90
degree change in her course and sprinting for the nearest emergency
decompression shelter without a single modicum of deliberate consideration.
The shelters were scattered all around the
flight deck – little more than a stand-up booth-like compartment, any shelter
provided a safe haven in the event of a sudden loss of air pressure within the
hangar. They each had capacity for two, maybe three persons, and were equipped
with an independent, several hours-worth supply of oxygen.
She sealed herself and Sikako into one, and
tried to slow the hammering of her heart in the wake of that narrow escape.
The com was telling her all she needed to
know, and that her instinct to run had been correct.
The worst had happened.
"He's hit!" she heard Blue exclaim. "They're
both hit!"
Melody pressed her face to the shelter's
viewport, looking to see what state of affairs she'd left behind.
Colonel White was standing stock still, not
a single inch removed from where he'd been. Stunned to immobility, frozen to
the spot in horror, the Colonel was learning firsthand why the common
striped skunk had a world-wide, universally renowned reputation for self
defense and few, if any, natural enemies.
Ochre, at least, had known what to expect,
and had, from the outset, been prepared – body, mind and soul – for the very
worst-case scenario.
Now Ochre was in hot
pursuit of the perpetrator. Ochre had dodged around an unmoving Colonel White
to scoop up the fallen net and was completely narrow-focused, single-minded and
looking like a deadly dangerous psychotic killer in his nose-glasses and
backward baseball cap.
His quarry
disappeared, bee-lining a path under the nearest helijet. Melody watched from
inside the emergency shelter as Ochre dove after, heedless of the low overhead,
skinning his knees on the metal deck-plates and cursing volubly, a stream of
coherent invective over the headset that damned the skunk's ancestral lineage
and included numerous death-threats.
As if the thing
understood English.
"Don't you
dare, Fraser!" she yelled. "Kill it and I swear to God I'll never
sleep with you again!"
The words were out
and gone, and before they'd even reached her own ears she realized what she'd
just shouted on the open, Base-wide frequency.
"Eek!" she squeaked.
"Did you hear me, Fraser!? I'll never ever SPEAK to you again!"
There was silence, from every electronic
quarter out there. She'd just diverted everyone's attention.
"You haven't
slept with me yet, Jones!" Ochre yelled back. "But that's the most promising Freudian slip
I think I've ever heard!"
That was true enough, and a far better
improvised cover than she'd managed. Had to admire that quick wit
under the circumstances. It would at least look plausible in the transcripts. A
fact, besides. To date, snoozing had simply never been involved. She
immediately changed the subject.
"Don't you
dare hurt that poor little crit!"
she yelled again.
"Poor little
crit?! " Ochre was outraged. "What'd'ya mean 'the poor little
crit?!' That poor little crit's trying
to make sure that nobody sleeps with me ever again!"
In the background on Grey's channel, she
was sure she could hear Symphony howling.
"It washes out!" It was all she
could think to say, though it wasn't likely to change Ochre's current
state-of-mind. "It's not permanent!"
"Are you volunteering to scrub my
back, Jones?"
"You have a one-track mind,
Fraser!"
"Dammit!" Ochre cursed again. "Come back here
you miserable reeking vermin!"
"It doesn't speak English!"
"No? Of course not! Manicouagan's in
Quebec!" Ochre's
retort was all acid sarcasm. "I’ve been there! Bęte noire misérable!" Ochre yelled. "Tabernak d'estie!"
For a second time, the com went quiet.
"Was zat supposed to be French?!"
Destiny asked. "Where
did you learn zat?"
It confirmed for Melody that Lieutenant
Green, did indeed, have the situation on general Base-com. Another worst-case scenario, she thought
with dismay, considering the content of at least one of her own unedited
utterances.
"Supposed to be?! It IS French!" Ochre was offended. "And I learned
zat in Montreal, working undercover drugs and vice."
"You are sure?"
"Mais oui, Mam’zelle
Destiny!" Ochre
answered, irrationally irritated that anyone would question him on that.
"And it's bad words - learned from some of very the best bad word
speakers in the city!” A loud bang followed, a missed strike with the net,
Melody guessed. “What is this? High School? Friggin' English Lit, damn
Chemistry, and now remedial French lessons! Damn!" Ochre grunted and
cursed, having run into some obstacle outside of Melody's line of sight. "Very
bad words! If you don't like them, then how do you say: come back here you
stinking, freaking little pipsqueak skunk!?"
"They are called moufette," Destiny supplied. “Or sconse or putois.
And you would say: Putain de merde de bestiole puante.”
“I don’t have time to learn that right
now!” Ochre protested.
“You didn’t even use moufette or sconse!”
“Oh, for God’s sake, Ochre! It doesn’t
speak French either!” Melody
interjected, because it was a totally pointless discussion. “It’s there – Fraser!
It’s under the helijet again!”
“I see it!” Ochre yelled.
“Don’t let it near the tantalus!” Melody
warned. “I don’t think that one’s tame!”
“No kidding? Never would’ve guessed!”
Ochre came back into her limited field of
view, visible through the opened access hatches on either side of the helijet.
As the skunk scurried beneath the aircraft, Ochre leapt up into the open
passenger/cargo bay, charged through and launched himself down to the deck on
the near side, startling the skunk again as he cut off its escape route.
The thing came to a snarling halt, hissing
and stamping with its tail up one more time; another clear warning for the
adversary in its path.
Ochre didn’t even flinch. Melody held her
breath.
“Go ahead, Mephisto.” Ochre growled right back at the critter,
his voice dropping to a deadly monotone, undaunted now that the skunk had
already done its worst.
He brandished his net.
“Make my day...”
![]()
Captain Grey’s fingers were clenched,
white-knuckled on the edge of the viewport’s sill as he listened intently to
the background chatter over his com. Chaos was reigning supreme in Engineering
as the techs scrambled to reinstate the aborted quarantine. Terracotta was
dispensing rapid-fire instruction, a long and breathless list of which systems
to override manually and in what sequence, doing her utmost to see that the
contamination didn’t spread outside the hangar.
Down below in that hangar, Ochre was
engaged in a High Noon standoff. But that didn’t last.
As Ochre held his ground, the skunk
backed away, uneasy, perhaps having never encountered a victim that hadn’t
succumbed immediately to its defenses.
It turned and bolted beneath the helijet again avoiding the net that
Ochre sent crashing down after it.
“I thought you said these things were
slow?!”
“Relative term,” Grey responded, knowing Terracotta
was too busy to reply. “If it was a squirrel you’d never be able to catch it.
You’ve still got longer legs.”
“And a lot more altitude! Is everyone
watching this thing?”
Immediately, a chorus of helpful direction
flooded the channel – all of the Deck Officer’s staff were trying to be useful
at a distance – because absolutely no one was volunteering to get in there and
help to chase the skunk down.
Even Melody –
Melody-Nerves-of-Steel-Magnolia - had run, had gone all instinct-maternal and
had sought immediate shelter, abandoning both Captain and Colonel alike
to their respective fates, saving her crit instead.
As the skunk fled, Ochre charged for the
helijet again, up and through the cargo bay, that being the shortest route to
the other side. Following the chaotic instruction over com, he dodged left,
skirting around a rack of tools and emerging on the far side into a small
cul-de-sac of storage lockers and freight bins at the same moment that the
skunk arrived in the same spot.
It was an area too small for him to swing
the extended pole of his net. He dropped it and dove for the crit instead, his
big neoprene gloved hands outstretched and reaching to seize and immobilize the
beast before it could reach the narrow space underneath the bin –
Too late!
It vanished under one of the freight
containers, and Ochre slid crashing into the side of the thing, cracking his
forehead against the bottom edge and swearing aloud one more time.
"Somebody tell me it came out the
other side!" Ochre yelled,
nursing his brow and backing up to peer under the bin, nose-glasses
notwithstanding. He spun, turning to recover his net and launched himself on
another course around the bin.
The chorus of voices provided direction.
The skunk was running along the base of the starboard bulkhead and Ochre was
right behind it. It came up against another set of storage lockers and
performed a rapid about face to scurry back the other direction as Ochre
skidded into an abrupt maneuver to compensate; he managed to get the pole-end
of the net jammed against the bulkhead, minimally blocking the skunk’s line of
retreat.
Grey watched as it scampered over the pole,
with its back all arched and hissing audibly enough for Ochre’s mike to pick up
the noise – it ran another few feet as Ochre pivoted and brought the netted end
of the pole down again in its path.
In full rout now, it changed direction one
more time and bolted straight between Ochre’s legs, heading for open ground.
Ochre spun so fast he tripped over the
other end of the pole and fell, landing flat on his backside as the crit opened
a wide lead on its pursuer.
“Go Keystone!” Symphony – still tittering,
despite the situation – cheered Ochre
on as he picked himself up and resumed the chase.
Grey had a half a mind to tell Terracotta
to just send all of the tainted air to her quarters and seal it in there. Must
have been the rural background – perhaps Symphony had been through this sort of
thing before. Certainly she seemed to be having some difficulty in taking the
circumstances seriously.
Though it was hard not to laugh at
the lunatic sight that Ochre presented in the goggles and the neoprene.
Especially as both he and the skunk charged right past a still-unmoving Colonel
White and back again – to and fro several times, as if they were trapped in
some surreal mechanical shooting gallery in a circus sideshow…
The chase took itself back to the locker
cul-de-sac and under the storage bin, around to the bulkhead and then came back
again into the main hangar.
It was perhaps four minutes into the chase
when Ochre skidded around the corner and charged into open space again – where
he trod suddenly onto the raw egg that had been left to roll about the deck
plates, slipped in the resultant goo and came crashing down with his net extended.
And caught the thing!
Astonished, Ochre nevertheless scrambled
forward on all fours, slapped one heavily gloved hand down on the back of the
skunk's neck and held on while the crit had snarled and squirmed and tried to
get its tail up one more time.
"No way, Stinker. Not again, you
won't! You're under arrest, you reeking, slinking little vermin!" Keeping its head in vise-like grip, Ochre snugged the mesh of the
fishing net tight around the skunk, immobilizing it in a curled fetal posture.
Coming awkwardly to his feet to stumble with the long handle of the pole
dragging across the deck, Ochre was finally able to nab the thick canvas
laundry tote with his other hand.
Grey watched as the captive went into the
bag without any further pomp and ceremony. Ochre panted and cursed as he
secured the tote closed.
"How bad is it?" Grey asked
tersely. "Ochre – give me a
weather report! What’s it like down there?!"
"How the hell do you think it
is?!" Ochre coughed,
spitting the words, obviously wanting to spit more than just that. "Dammit!
You can't keep this air, Brad! You’re gonna have to vent it!"
"He's right," Terracotta said
from beside his elbow, looking down into the hangar. "Get it out of the
carrier, before it spreads any further. We can't clean it, and all of
the air inside the Base isn't anywhere near enough to dilute it."
"You've got the codes and the
authority. Quit wasting time! Override the airlocks and purge the flight
deck!"
"Set it up Terri – as fast as you
can." Grey conceded to the inevitable. There had been no choice, not since
the very instant the thing had sprayed. "Ochre – get to a shelter. Is the Colonel okay?"
"Hell if I know! I’ve been busy! Why
am I the only one doing anything around here?!" Ochre complained, but went that direction,
realizing only then perhaps, that Colonel White hadn't moved since the initial
contamination of the hangar. "Sir!" Ochre shouted at the
Colonel from a mere a foot away, and at last the Colonel blinked, as if roused
from some interminable nightmare. He looked at Ochre, eyes fluttering in a slow
recognition that the worst of the offending scent was standing right there
before him, and recoiled from it. "Sir, you've gotta move! They're
gonna purge the hanger!"
Terracotta nodded, and cleared her seat at
the workstation when the procedure was programmed. Grey leaned over the
keyboard, punching in his authorizations, finalizing it with a thumbprint scan.
He closed his eyes, exhaling a deep breath,
the deed done. He went back to the viewport. In her entire history, Cloudbase
had never had to purge her decks. His written reports were going to have to be
longwinded and hellish in detail, trying to explain this one.
Throughout the flight deck, the strobes
started to spin and the klaxons to wail. An automated and pre-recorded voice
warned of imminent decompression as the cycle kicked in, starting to
countdown...
...sixty seconds...
Finally, not without a disapproving curse,
Ochre seized the Colonel's sleeve, dragged Spectrum's stunned and unresisting
Commander-in-Chief physically to the first decompression shelter he came to,
shoved him within and sealed the unit. Then Ochre sprinted for one of his own,
his bagged crit in the other hand. With one more disgusted expletive for the
circumstances in general, Ochre shut himself into another shelter as the
pre-recorded voice continued its count –
...thirty seconds...
"Damn close quarters in here!" Ochre gagged and swore again after a brief
moment. "And they thought my sneakers were bad!"
...twenty seconds...
"You should've given it a unit of its
own," Grey said. "Tell me now if you want to abort – we can't stop the countdown after it hits
ten seconds."
"If I have to put up with it, so
can the damn crit!"
Ochre was still outraged. Perhaps more outraged
now that he'd stopped moving and had the time to think about being mad.
Stupid and stubborn mad.
"Your call, Captain." Though it
wasn't likely to matter, Grey realized. It was Ochre that had taken the
hit. The skunk itself was uncontaminated.
...ten seconds...
Point of no return. It was irrevocable now.
"Oh, just shut up, Brutus!" Grey heard it as Ochre swatted the
canvas bag. "I've had enough of
--- aacckkkk! Gahhh...." Ochre choked and sputtered yet again,
wheezing into a pained silence.
"Ooops..." Blue said, in a slow
realization and then all empathy for his stricken colleague.
“Polecat two…” Symphony dared to say,
confirming the suspected point-blank range event when the silence went on.
Though she had finally stopped giggling.
...zero seconds...
A bell went off, different than the warning
shrill of the klaxon. Vibration rumbled though the flight deck as the outer
airlock engaged, unsealing without benefit of the enclosed hydraulic aircraft
lift that normally prevented the hangar's atmosphere from escaping. Silver
moonlight beamed into the yawning aperture. The strident high-pitch of the
klaxons waned with the sudden drop of air pressure as Cloudbase
deliberately expelled the tainted air of its entire flight deck –
"Ochre?" Grey queried a few seconds later, concerned at
the prolonged quiet. "Ochre?!"
Evacuation wasn't any longer an option for
Captain Ochre, trapped within his cramped – and freshly contaminated – safety
shelter.
"The little beggar reloaded...."
![]()
His reports were almost finalized.
Colonel White keyed the last touches into
the console of the Control Desk, saved the file, forwarded copies to HQ and the
archives, and then cleared the system, all the while enjoying the unaccustomed
presence and warmth of the small creature currently perched on his shoulder.
The skunk was a lovely little animal, really, despite the reputation and recent
events.
Sikako had long and luxurious fur,
immaculately brushed and lightly fragranced with some sort of pleasant little
girl scent, courtesy of eight-year-old Sherri-Ann Sommers, who had both noted
and remarked – all in innocence, he was sure – that Sikako in her black fur and
white warning stripes, complemented his uniform very nicely. The young lady was
presently taking a tour of Cloudbase along with her father, Captain Grey
and Technician Terracotta – the carrier
now being blessedly clean and clear of far less delectable aromas.
He was still astounded that something so
small (for even Brutus had weighed in at no more than the average house-cat)
could possibly have been behind the sort of havoc that the two critters between
them had so unintentionally visited upon the carrier.
Of course, no one
had gotten into the helijet far enough to find what was already there.
Sikako had been
housed in a stock-standard pet carrier, tucked behind the rearmost seats in the
passenger compartment. In retrospect it seemed likely that vibration from the
helijet had unlatched the pet carrier's door, and Sikako had thereafter been
loose in the passenger bay, alone and looking for Dr. Sommers. Everyone doubted
she'd left the aircraft, preferring to remain in the vicinity of her travel
crate. Which meant in turn that Brutus had to have boarded of his own volition
at some point during which the helijet had been unattended at the Expo site,
sniffing out the unexpected newcomer in his territory.
Both must simply
have hidden when Scarlet – finally freed from the wreckage of the reactor crate
– had been rushed within and Blue had flown directly back to Cloudbase
with the helijet. Brutus had evidently abandoned the aircraft post-haste after
lock-through and repressurization - sometime between the departure of the
med-staff and the arrival of the flight mechanics – and the wild little creature had no doubt been horrified to find
the Expo construction site had somehow vanished, magically replaced by the vast
unknown of Cloudbase's hangar deck.
The true wonder was
that the thing hadn't sprayed right then and there.
The flight
mechanics had discovered Sikako loose in the helijet, and immediately sounded
the alarm, presuming the pet was a wild stowaway, a far more natural assumption
than was the possibility of a misplaced exotic pet.
The rest was now a
piece of colorful Cloudbase history.
Colonel White had written
off the hangar decompression as a drill; the first one and every single
one of the following three consecutive purgings, recompressions and
disinfections of the deck that had taken place in his absence. Symphony Angel
had in the end done something useful (he had read the transcripts) and had
provided the maintenance crews with a relatively simple home-remedy for the
removal of skunk musk, a concoction of dish soap, baking soda and hydrogen
peroxide, all of which had been scrounged in sufficient supply to make the
difference.
The deck crew had scrambled. Melody Angel had assigned herself the task of piloting the helijet off base, having located the pet carrier and subsequently re-installed Sikako in it. Colonel White had been provided with a decontamination suit and a respirator – for he had caught the overspray that had missed Ochre and had in that moment become a secondary source of contamination. Thus temporarily quarantined, he had strapped himself into a plastic-sheet covered seat in the cargo bay. He’d stayed out of the way, very quietly uncritical of the proceedings, as he’d not been of much help himself at all for the duration of the crisis, paralysed as he’d been, stunned beyond all reasonable belief at the sheer potency of the small amount of spray that had actually hit him. He had been aware only that he couldn’t breathe; he hadn’t been cognizant enough to have even offered to hold the canvas bag open for Ochre, once the Captain had apprehended the creature.
As for Captain Ochre –
Captain Ochre,
despite his misfortune and tainted condition, had been adamant that his
decompression shelter not under any circumstances be opened again
while on Cloudbase, damned if he was going to be the one responsible
for seeing all the effort go for naught. So the crew had simply followed the
Captain's orders, unbolted and released the shelter in its entirety from its
deck anchors, then loaded and secured it as a single unopened unit into the
helijet's cargo bay. They had thoughtfully and generously included an
additional oxygen tank for the Captain.
By the time the
helijet touched down at Manicouagan again, poor Ochre – very nearly silenced at
last by the noxious atmosphere within the shelter – might well have changed his
mind about his chosen course. Ochre had surfaced at destination, his complexion
fairly mimicking the color of Green's uniform, dragging his critter-in-a-bag
with him as he'd wobbled unsteadily away from his self-enforced entombment,
gulping after the clean air of Manicouagan's wilderness as if it were life
itself. Managing finally to find his
feet long enough, Ochre had up-ended that bag and shaken the skunk out of it.
The creature had emerged, likewise staggering almost as badly as its captor had
been, and waddled sidelong a few feet before it too had stopped to sniff the
air deeply.
"Perdu-toi, Muffy!" Ochre had shooed
the crit away, in the some of worst pidgin-French Colonel White had ever heard.
"Au
revoir, Pépé! Move it! Get lost! Fous le camp!" And when the thing hadn’t moved with the verbal encouragement, Ochre had
taken a threatening step its direction. “Allez-y! Take a hike, Vermin!
Scram!”
It was only well
afterwards that Colonel White had realized that Ochre had never called the thing
twice by the same name. It was Captain Grey that had dubbed the thing Brutus
in his reports.
And so Brutus had
gone, waddling away into the dawn, without a single parting glance backward or
an additional insolent flick of his tail.
Magenta had, of course,
been warned ahead that they were coming, provided with all the pertinent
details. Dr. Sommers had collected his daughter's beloved pet, uncomfortable
for the difficulties incurred, but still relieved and grateful that Sikako had
been returned safely, and hadn't been irretrievably lost in Manicouagan's
wilderness.
A bonfire had been
prepared in advance of their arrival, and Colonel White had gladly participated
right alongside as Ochre had stripped to the skivvies and incinerated every
last article of his contaminated clothing. He had happily tossed his own
uniform into the flames, and afterwards merely followed directions as the Expo
site foreman had provided them with shower facilities and then sympathetically
delivered professional de-scenting products for their unfortunate
circumstances.
Skunkings, as it happened,
were not unknown thereabouts.
His own cleansing
had gone far more quickly and effectively than had Captain Ochre's, who, after all,
had borne the brunt of things. He was still writing up a commendation for the
Captain, for services rendered above and beyond the usual call of duty.
He had also, more
pragmatically, given Ochre the week off, with very specific instructions not
to return to Cloudbase until such time as he was more publicly
presentable. Which was why, Colonel White thought with a resigned sigh, picking
up the expense report sitting on his console, there was an invoice for several
nights accommodation at the 5-star, very upscale Château Frontenac in
Quebec City, where - the explanatory remarks noted - that if such a fine
establishment could tolerate the good Captain's presence, then it was very
likely that return to Cloudbase was, perhaps, also possible.
Colonel White had
sent Melody Angel to ascertain and verify the Captain's present status, a task
that he imagined was apt to have involved close proximity, along with the fine
wine, the hot-tub and the fireplace that the room charges detailed.
Colonel White just
authorized the expense, no questions asked, and sent it back to the Purser's
Office for remittance of payment.
On schedule, the
doors at the port side of the Control room opened, the guided tour reaching its
end. Sikako took immediate notice; she scampered down from his shoulder, across
the console, dropped onto one of the raised stools on the other side, and from
there down to the floor. She scurried after that to young Sherri-Ann Sommers,
who scooped the creature up and gave her an affectionate hug.
"Thank you, Colonel
White," the little girl said. "For the tour and everything
else."
"And our
apologies for any – inconvenience, Colonel White," Doctor Sommers added
after that, having somewhat more comprehension what events had taken place than
his daughter did.
"Well, Doctor
– and Miss Sommers – there was nothing
that happened here that we can really blame on Sikako. She turned out not to be
the problem at all, as I'm sure Captain Grey and Technician Terracotta must
have explained. In the final analysis,
I think we can safely say that Sikako actually served to put our personnel on
alert – or the consequences for Cloudbase might have been somewhat more…
widespread than they were."
"Still,
Colonel White –"
"There's no
further discussion necessary on that point, Doctor Sommers. Spectrum would much
rather extend its gratitude to you for your assistance in averting a problem
of, shall we say, greater magnitude than the incident on the hangar deck. Which
reminds me – I have a question for Miss
Sherri-Ann."
"Yes
sir?" The young girl stood very straight with her pet in arms.
"Melody Angel
– the pilot who helped to recover Sikako –
has asked me if you could explain how you found the name for your little
friend. It's very unusual."
Sherri-Ann beamed,
pleased to have been asked and snuggled Sikako more closely. "Everyone
asks that," she said. "Sikako is named after my hometown, in
Illinois."
"Isn't that
odd," Colonel White mused. "Such a name didn't turn up on any net
search when Melody checked."
Dr. Sommers and his
daughter both smiled more widely. "It's an old version of the present-day
name," Dr. Sommers said. "Go ahead, you can tell them, Sherri."
"Sikako
is an Indian word," the youngster said. "Though no one really knows
how it might have been spelled, since the Indians didn't have a written
language. It means great or strong. It also means skunk. And my hometown was
built on a site that the Indians had named in honour of the skunk."
"I'm from
Illinois," Captain Grey remarked. "But I've never heard of a place
called Sikako. Small town?"
"Not really.
Rather a big town, actually. The name was somewhat changed from the
original," Doctor Sommers smiled. "The aboriginal peoples had great
respect for the common skunk. But I think you've probably heard of a town by
the name of Chicago, Captain."
"Really?"
Colonel White raised a brow, and glanced at Captain Grey, who was the one who
would be most astonished by that bit of information.
"Chicago means
skunk?!" Grey was startled, and he looked from Sherri-Ann to her
father and back in surprise. "That's my hometown, too. Why haven't
I heard that before?"
"The city
fathers prefer to let it be known as the Windy City," Sommers commented.
"But –"
"But it's
really the City of Skunks!" Sherri-Ann completed the sentence for her
father with a giggle, obviously delighted to know something that the Spectrum
elders hadn't.
Grey shook his
head. "Sikako... Chicago." He tested the phonetics of the two
words. "That almost makes sense." Grey reached over to scratch behind
Sikako's ear. "If it means great and strong, I guess that's okay too. And
I'd have to say that the respect for Sikako's kind is very well earned,
besides."
Sikako's nose worked vigorously, and she
squeaked just once. Whatever that meant.
"We'll take
that as a yes," Grey smiled.
Colonel White
merely nodded, having learned his own respect for the little critters the hard
way. “Indeed,” he said.
Very much indeed…

the end
Please visit:
http://www.fcps.k12.va.us/StratfordLandingES/Ecology/mpages/striped_skunk.htm
for a lovely picture of mephitis mephitis
Acknowledgements: (though
I'm sure I've missed a few, as I visited many fine websites in the course of
doing the research for this story and didn’t always remember to document where
I’d been....)
A very big thank you to Chris Bishop – for all of her assistance with
the good and the bad French used in this little just-for-fun tale.
And an equally big Thanks to Doc Brown, for beta-reading services and
helpful suggestions rendered….
And as for the Research:
OOPS - Website: Owners Of Pet Skunks - Where I first learned the word 'sikako' and hence had a
working title for this little tale and found the story behind the City of
Skunks. I highly recommend a view through their photo gallery!
University of
Michigan Website: animaldiversity - for lots of wonderful information on mephitis
mephitis
Website: ladywildlife.com - for more information on the common striped skunk
Chicago Public Library Website - where I learned that: "the name Chicago is derived
from the Indians.... and the name comes from the Indian word for either wild onion
or skunk, but some historians believe the word the word chicago denoted
'strong' or ‘great’. ...M.M. Quaife in his book Checagou, asserts that the significance
of the word was anything great or powerful.”
Any comments? Send an E-MAIL directly to THE AUTHOR
or to the SPECTRUM HEADQUARTERS site.