Published Works and Tales by Melissa Jensen

Archive for the ‘short story’ Category

Short Story Saturday: Shortest Armageddon Ever

I was there when the portal opened, when the things came pouring out like entrails from a split carcass. Those things, with their twisted, slick bodies that could not decide if they wished to be animal or man. Things with wolf skulls for heads but the torso of a centipede. A boar-faced grotesque with multiple bony arms like a spider. A slug, its visage so human, so tormented, its mouth forever open in a silent scream. And that was just what I could see of the creatures.

Because, and unfortunately for them, they hadn’t been all that big. I believe the largest had been about the size of a wolf spider, give or take. It was also the beginning of spring, with the birds migrating north and creatures formerly hibernating crawling from their dens groggy and incredibly hungry. And with the weather having been a comfortable sixty-six degrees that day and this being a hiking trail full of people in their large, sturdy hiking boots…

At least it gave us good pictures for our Facebook pages. I’m up to 400 likes.

Short Story: Fluff

No Way was I going to let this October pass without a creepy story.

Fluff

Most of Fluff’s memories were of death.

There were good memories, like mama’s white fur and the salty taste of the meat the Caretakers called tuna. And the Caretakers, like Lieutenant Kell, who kept Mama and Fluff safe from from the Alpha that Lieutenant Kell called Chief. Lieutenant Kell always had to hide Mama and Fluff in a box whenever the Chief came by. They would hold perfectly still and try not to make the meowing sounds that were the only sounds the caretakers seemed to understand.

“Sometimes I swear you didn’t get rid of those cats, Lieutenant,” were the noises the Chief would make.

“They’ve been dealt with, sir, I promise,” were the noises Lieutenant Kell would make.

Then the chief would leave, and Mama and Fluff could come out.

There was also Lieutenant Frost, a female Caretaker, who gave Mama and Fluff the tuna and sometimes a meat they called ham. But it was Lieutenant Kell who had found Mama in the big metal cave full of metal boxes before Fluff was born, who gave Mama a place to have Fluff and gave them food and pettings. Lieutenant Kell was Fluff’s favorite.

Fluff also liked the clear box full of water and shiny swimming things, but he wasn’t sure about the strange walls that showed only blackness and tiny little lights that seemed so far away and cold. It scared Fluff, he didn’t know why.

(more…)

Short Story Saturday: Tug of War (A Tale Told in Pictures)

Tug of War

Starring Bug and Pepper

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The string’s been dropped, and they’re off!

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Bug takes the lead but Pepper is already moving in for a counterstrike.

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And Pepper takes the string! But don’t count Bug out just yet.

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Bug has retaken the string! Oh, but hold on, folks, Bug seems like she may be losing interest.

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We’re at a stalemate and things are getting really heated. Who will get the string. Who will get the glory. Who will be the Tug of War champion!

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Pepper has the string and… Bug has lost interest! Bug has lost interest! Pepper is the Tug of War champion and the crowd goes wild.

The end.

Short Story Saturday: Myron’s Menagerie

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Myron’s Menagerie

It was with little regret, and not a drop of hemming and hawing, that Myron came to a decision: playing God was not for him. Contrary to popular belief, genetics wasn’t rocket science. Well, obviously it wasn’t rocket science, rocket science was a whole other field. But while genetics was not for the slow witted nor for those lacking a mountain of Ph.ds, throwing various bits of DNA into the proverbial pot and hoping for the best didn’t seem particularly productive. It had yet to produce a cure for anything, it had yet to tell them something they didn’t already know, nor did it seem fair to take what Mother Nature had worked so hard on for billions of years and muck it all up for the sake of a what-if. It was also unsettling. Very, very unsettling.

Plus there were the ethical ramifications to consider. Just because God could create a duck-billed platypus didn’t mean humanity could go around making parrot-beaked echidnas and butter-fly winged black widows (the black widows had been the final straw, really. Myron had a hard enough time as it was with spiders, then that idiot Doctor Flemming had to go and give the damn things wings). The world wouldn’t be able to deal with his department’s creations. Rabbits, for example, had enough of a struggle hiding from wolves. How fair was it, then, to combine the DNA of a wolf with the DNA of a rabbit and give them the ability to burrow (and yet still crave meat over carrots)?

Then there were the four legged, air-breathing sharks. That was a horror movie waiting to happen.

It was without a second thought that Myron transferred to the less-than-thrilling adventure that was studying amoebas. Amoebas may not have been as thrilling as four-legged sharks, but at least they were safer.

In fact, two weeks in and Myron found himself quite content to stare into a microscope at bristly little blobs floating about in their little liquid world, wholly unaware of the massive being watching them like some inactive deity.

It was as Myron was observing that liquid world that Dr. Elspeth came running into the lab, out of breath and chubby face flushed a color bordering on puce.

“Oh, Myron, you’re going to love this,” Dr. Elspeth gasped in elation, eyes practically sparkling like a kid on Christmas morning. “You remember your old department?” Of course Myron remembered it. Number one, it was hard to forget. Number two, it had been only two weeks since Myron had transferred.

Dr. Elspeth, however, was too caught up in his excitement to care about particulars. “Something escaped. Some kind of… monkey-bird-cat thing…”

Myron looked up from his microscope thoughtfully. Ah, yes, the flying monkey with the face of a cat and a penchant for knocking things off shelves for no reason at all. Myron had been rather fond of that one… when it wasn’t stealing his glasses in order to bat them around on the floor.

“It started knocking stuff down and letting other animals out of their cages. They barely managed to catch everything and I think a few of the specimens were eaten. They’re shutting the department down!”

Myron shrugged. “Bound to happen sooner or later.” And went back to his microscope and amoebas.

Watching those vulnerable amoebas in their tiny world, Myron couldn’t help but think about all those creations he’d had a hand in. What would become of them? Would they be locked away? Or… disposed of? Because they certainly weren’t going to be released.

The brain was such a funny little organ, with thoughts going this way and that like undirected traffic. Here Myron was, wanting nothing more to do with his old department and its creations – creations more at home in some disaster movie in which idiot scientists gleefully rearranged DNA for the sake of it and then unleashing their monstrosities, also for the sake of it – and Myron found himself feeling sorry for the abominations. It wasn’t their fault they existed, and it certainly wasn’t their fault they couldn’t live in the same world where their DNA originated from.

Myron looked up from his microscope and sighed at both the machinations of his brain and his blasted sense of responsibility.

~~~~~

Myron had to wonder about himself, sometimes. He had been quite happy as a scientist, even one who studied boring amoebas. He’d never had a desire to branch out in his career, pursue other interests, expand his horizons and so on and so forth. He most definitely had never entertained the thought of starting a zoo.

But while not all the creations of his department were his, some of them were. And as disturbing as flying spiders and four-legged sharks were, he still had a soft- spot for those cat-faced monkeys and parrot-beaked Echidnas. Since they couldn’t be released into the world, they could, at least, live out the remainder of their existence in comfort.

His former co-workers were more than happy to help, in part because they, too, still cared for their creations. Also in part because they were in need of a job. Besides, who best to handle these creatures than the ones who’d made them?

There was only one setback. Myron knew next to nothing about managing a zoo. He’d been to enough of them as a child, and so attempted to base his current zoo on the zoos of his childhood. But while riding a flying horse tethered to a pole seemed like a good idea in theory, riding a dragon-fly horse turned into a lesson in “how not to panic” when the creature refused to land anywhere but vertically on every available wall. The kids enjoyed it well enough. The parents… not so much. And while the octo-cats were affectionate and harmless, trying to untangle their tentacles from off one’s person was a nightmare.

Also, not only were their too many animals with the ability to talk, but for some reason they only ever picked up on swear words and other insults (also to the joy of the children and the annoyance of the parents). The talking coyotes would belt out the most terrible rendition of any song sang to them, thanks to Dr. Johansen, their creator, who had always enjoyed singing but could never carry a tune to save her life.

There were animals too smart for their own good, forever getting out only to find themselves in something else’s pen – usually an unfriendly something. The wolf-rabbits were digging holes their handlers were forever falling into. The rat-fish kept gnawing on the decorations in their tank. The (literal) spider-monkeys would get their handlers, and sometimes themselves, tangled in their own webs. The kangaroo-cockatoos squawked so loud that guests refused to go anywhere near them until they were behind sound-proof glass. There were also protests, people standing outside the gates waving signs and demanding that the owners stop playing God for the sake of entertainment.

It was a pain, a mess, and made Myron wonder for the fiftieth time what he’d been thinking. And yet…

And yet…

It was also a success. Despite the issues, complaints and protests people still came. They “ewed!” over the tarantula ducks and “awed!” over the tiny bat-bears, then left the zoo cuddling stuffed animal renditions of iguana-lemurs and owl-otters. Once the situation was explained to the protesters, they eventually drifted off (after giving Myron the stink-eye for having created these creatures in the first place).

And while a part of Myron sometimes missed the uneventful world of amoebas, it was a sentiment overshadowed by a feeling of contentment, of having done something important.

Something right.

It seemed to Myron that any idiot with a mountain of Ph.ds could throw DNA together and make something new. But what mattered was what one did with that thing after. It may have had tentacles and scales and was so ugly that nature itself would have fainted at the sight of it. But, damn it all, it was their creations – his and his former departments.

Any of Myron’s employees slash former coworkers who so much as uttered the words “so what would happen if we combined…” would get a swift slap to the head and threats of a pink slip. Myron was finished stirring pots of DNA stew.

But looking after his creations he could live with.

The End

Check it Out! Kismet: Suncutter by Layla Lawlor

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Centuries in the future, a new kind of faster-than-light drive promises to revolutionize interstellar travel. Now the galaxy’s #1 empire-building dystopian superpower is after not only the spaceship, but also the scientist who invented it, and the only pilot who can fly it!

If you’re a fan of sci-fi and graphic novels, then click on the image to check it out.

The Toymaker: Excerpts

Trotter was given a reprieve from having to carry everyone. Too treacherous to be riding anything in caves, Ren said, even with an electric torch. He led the way, marking their path with their single circle of light. The cave angled down comfortably so, but the way was an obstacle course of jutting rocks and deep potholes. Then it became another maze of stalagmites and great pillars of stone like yellow, congealed foam. Somewhere in the cold, moist darkness, water dripped.

“Reminds me a bit of the junk cave,” Ren said. “Only a little more damp, and crowded.”

Ashima frowned, her gaze darting to places that could be hiding anything, like bats, or rats, or Beasts that preferred to live underground. The cave continued to descend. They entered a tunnel so narrow it forced them to walk single file. It was a horrible tightness in some places, making it easy to believe that it would only get smaller until they could no longer move, or breathe, and Ashima’s heart resumed its mad fluttering. Trotter got stuck, twice, taking everyone to push and pull him through. Ashima wasn’t kind about it. She tried to be, but the longer Trotter was stuck, the more thin the air felt, as though the walls were moving in to crush them all.

“Is it much longer?” Ashima whimpered.

“I don’t know,” Ren grunted through clenched teeth. “Tight way ahead. Trotter, you need to get as low as you can.”

There was also ducking, sometimes a bit of crawling, and sometimes a bit of sliding. The deeper they went, the surer Ashima became that they would never see the surface again. They would go deeper and deeper straight into the fiery bowels of the world…

“Ah!” Ren shouted in triumph.

Ashima jumped. “What! What is it!?” She reached out to follow the wall that, moments ago, had been scraping her sides. Her fingers grabbed open air instead.

“A cavern,” Ren said. “A big cavern, by the looks.” The light danced over a wide floor of glittering black rock. They had entered some sort of void, no end to it in sight, making Ashima suddenly miss the tightness of the tunnels.

“What’s this?” Ren said, kneeling. Ashima moved next to him and bent forward. The light was cast down, reflecting off a floor speckled with small, faceted crystals as clear as polished glass.

“That looks like star stone,” Ashima breathed. She brushed a finger over one of the crystals. It felt as smooth and clean as it looked.

“If it is…” Ren said. He didn’t reach into the bag this time, he reached into his coat pocket. He removed his bit of star stone and held it close to a crystal on the floor.

The stone began to glow, and the cave’s crystal with it, along with the crystals next to it in a chain reaction of light. The void was no longer a void, it was a night sky full of a million stars, and Ashima and Ren and all the golems were floating in it. Ashima pulled her own crystal from her own pocket and added it to the night, and twice as many crystals glittered back at her, great rivers of them and clusters and lonely specks of the purest white. All that was missing was a moon.

“Wow,” she whispered.

“Wow is right,” Ren whispered back.
——————————————————————–

Now available at Amazon.com and Kindle.

The Toymaker: Excerpts

“Oh,” Ashima said. “Is Lance dangerous?” she asked. It was taking everything she had not to tell Jasmine what Lance had done, to fight the feeling that someone needed to know in case it meant Lance doing something worse.

“He’s angry like a lot of people,” Jasmine said. “He’s just in a position to do something about it. Which, between you and me, I think makes him pretty dangerous. He had family killed by a wild goblin, you know.”

“Really?”

“Oh, yeah. A brother, I think, and both parents. I heard it was bad.” Jasmine’s normally sardonic expression melted like ice left out in the sun. “They were torn limb from limb and Lance was the one who found them.” She set her cards to the side. “It’s easy to hate the goblins and still be able to talk about taking action against them nice and slow when you know your family is still alive. Like my family, all well and good and not in the city. When it’s because of the goblins your family’s dead, it makes you want to kill right back. There’s a lot of people who want to do more than take action. They want to end the goblins once and for all. Lance, he wants to do it now, and a lot of people are cool with that. They’re cool with whatever it’ll take to make that happen. They’re cool with saying to hell with everyone if it means seeing the goblins dead, and then someone else loses family because the goblins retaliate. Just one big cycle of anger, anger and more anger.”

“People can get pretty dumb when they’re desperate and angry. But we’re not all like that so, I don’t know, I guess it sort of balances things out,” said Jasmine, taking up the cards. “The thing is, something has to give, because someone is either going to do something brilliant or something stupid. That’s my theory, at least. Either this plan of Lance’s works or we all end up going to hell in a hand basket. Because we know, either way, that the goblins are going to be pissed about our new little weapon, and if we don’t take them down with one blow…” She shrugged, then shuffled the cards, set one out, and snorted. “The Fool. Wonderful. Describes us all to a T.” She held up the rest of the deck. “Sure there isn’t anything you’d like to know?”

Ashima stared at the cards as she picked at her biscuit. “Will I ever see my parents again?”

“Isn’t that why you’re here? To find them?”

Ashima nodded.

Jasmine looked at her deck of divinations. Sighing, she set the deck aside. “I hope so, kid.”

————————————–

Now available at Amazon.com and Kindle

You Never Know

Rating: PG

Summary: You never know what light might be found in the darkness.

You Never Know

(more…)

The Humane Society of the Milky Way

Summary: The day to day aboard the Humane Socety.

Rating: G

Note: Based on a prompt I actually gave someone else but who then prompted me to give it a go, and I couldn’t resist.

The Humane Society of the Milky Way

Saving animals across the galaxy since 2121

Starship class White Star

Jumpdrive capabilities, cloak shield, EMP missiles for defense purposes only.

~oOo~

Paid Positions Available:

Vet tech

Tech assistant

Giant Grok wrangler

Admin assistant

Transporter Assistant

Director of Psychic Communications

Jump Drive mechanic

Navigator

~oOo~

From: X’rotz M’don, Director of Volunteers

To: Everyone

Message: We are in need of volunteers in the following areas:

Spay and Neuter Clinic from seven to one.

Aquatic life-form tank cleaner from two to five (scuba diving certification required)

Aquatic life-form feeder (no scuba certificate needed)

Pevarian Mot kennel cleaners and walkers (training required except for Pevarians).

~oOo~

From: Jenny Myers

To: X’rotz M’don

Message: We are in serious need of volunteers for the gygoriat kennels. Those things defecate more than zakas and zakas crap every two minutes.

To: Jenny Myers

From: X’rotz M’don

Message: We may just need to break down and switch the gygoriat Blue-Spider Chow for the Red Spider-Chow. We’re having a similar problem with the gelks and they should only be deficating once a week. I’ll talk to Gaan about working it into the budget.

~oOo~

From: George Kell, Administrator

To: Everyone

Message: Just a reminder to deny adoptions to the Fre’et Hunting Guild unless the adoption is for Fre’et hunting hounds only. If you are unsure whether or not a Fre’et is a member of the guild, Da’ain and Ge’een know the Hunting Guild salute, which a Fre’et Hunter is duty-bound to respond to.

Please do not attempt to learn the salute on your own. It is incredibly complicated and requires four limbs and a tail. Injuries have been known to result from attempting the salute.

~oOo~

From: X’rotz M’don, Director of Volunteers

To: Everyone

Volunteer position open in feline isolation from one to four. We would prefer Joxies not volunteer for this position, as we are currently low on anti-contamination suits. While we know the hives Joxies receive from cat dander is harmless, they do tend to emit a rather unpleasant odor.

~oOo~

From: Jetsi, Director of Admissions

To: Clinic Staff

Attachment:

Image

Message: We’re going to need a DNA test on this one. We can’t decide if it’s an earth cat with a deformity or an oddly colored Katiica tree cat.

~oOo~

From: George Kell, Administrator

To: Everyone

Message: It’s that time again. The bi-annual All Creatures Great and Small fundraiser. This year it will be taking place on the Ice Mountains of Praxus Two. Our theme will be Winter Wonderland for all the thick-coated animals out there and Jev Snow Beasts. We’ll need cold-weather capable volunteers for this one. Thermal suits will be provided for any of our warm-climate races wanting to participate, but they are limited.

If you would like to volunteer, a sign-up sheet can be found in the lounge.

~oOo~

From: Hees Ja

To: Meagan McDonald

Message: Ack! I did not sign up for the fundraiser fast enough! They ran out of thermal suits!

From: Meagan McDonald

To: Hees Ja

Message: Yikes, sorry to hear that. I may know someone with a thermal suit you could borrow. Barring that I also know that the next fundraiser’s going to be on your home planet – on Fire-Sands beach, I think 😀

From: Hees Ja

To: Meagan McDonald

Message: That makes me feel better *paw-gesture of happiness*

~oOo~

From: Dr. Zorata, Clinic

To: Jetsi

Message: We’ve been getting a lot of pregnant Scy Spiders without fully distended abdomens. We may need to have Kessi or another Traxian sniff for pheromones to determine if a spider may be pregnant. Those little et ez as are a pain to catch once they come pouring out of the egg pouch.

~oOo~

From: X’rotz M’don, director of Volunteers

To: Everyone

Message: There’s been some concern about Mkeel Mammoths coming in with Yota Beetles attached to them. This is perfectly fine and natural. Yotas are not parasites but symbiotes that ride Mkeels to a new destination while ridding the Mkeel of dead skin cells and parasites. Should you find a Yota detached from a Mkeel, simply leave it and a staff member will find a place for it in the insect kennel.

~oOo~

Volunteer Handbook

Rule 23: When in doubt about which end is the creature’s mouth and which end isn’t, give the animal a treat and watch which orifice it puts the treat in.

Rule 24: Do not whistle around the following animals. Hlkxs, Boondas, Je Monkies and Oona cephalopods. The first three become highly agitated around high-pitched noises. The latter will interpret it as a mating call.

Rule 25: Do not take more than one dog for a walk.

Rule 26: Do not take less than two Furriets for a walk. It will not move unless accompanied by one or more of its kind. Those with multiple limbs are encouraged to walk as many Furriets as possible.

Rule 27: Only Gredians, Lossians, Humans and V’t’rem may handle Lyssomas, as they are immune to the Lyssomas’ paralyzing spray. If paralyzed the Lyssoma, though small, will attempt to cocoon you in self-defense. Should you be hit with the spray, the affects can last up to two hours without the anti-spray.

Rule 28: Refrain from foul language, curses and oaths of combat and blood-letting around the Ma’akaka. They will repeat everything you say word for word and in your voice.

Rule 29: Do not remove cats from the kennel unless in a carrier.

Rule 30: Do not remove Eems from the kennel unless they are securely attached to you.

Rule 31: Do not remove a lxlxl from the kennel without first allowing it to take your hand inside its mouth. It is not trying to eat you, it’s merely sucking some of the salt from your skin.

Rule 31: To remove lxlxl saliva you will need to soak you hand in a mixture of warm water and braxta soap for two minutes. Do not visit the Eyeeta kennels four two hours after handling a lxlxl.

The end?

(Probably not)

Note: the cat in the image is my cat Pip, who was born with deformed front legs that bend inwards so that she always looks like she wants to arm wrestle. She gets around just fine, though, and has no trouble jumping and getting up to mischief with her adopted older sister, Pepper.

Story: How to Save the World without Meaning To

Summary: In which there is a wet-behind-the-ears secret agent in the making, a mad scientist bent on taking over the world, and a very endearing cat.

Rating: G

How to Save the World without Meaning To

Or

Think of the Kittens

There was a tradition (disguised as protocol) in which the newest members of the team were charged with the most menial of tasks. There was no guarding important entrances nor rifling through dangerous-looking equipment for the ones barely a year into the job, and heaven forbid if they got so much as within twenty feet of the villain of the hour (apparently, there were devices of the ray-gun variety that could muddle a man’s mind into liberating said villain). Not even guarding the henchmen. Oh no. It was guarding doors to restrooms and keeping a weather eye on the kitchen and lounge, because you never knew what dastardly surprise might be waiting in the oven or surround-sound system.

Still, Dan couldn’t help but wonder if the other lads were having him on, because his job was to guard a cat.

Dan had never considered himself to be a cat person, but even he had to admit it was a pretty cat – one of those snow-white Persians only without the smooshed face, and eyes as blue as the ocean. It was also pampered in a manner that could be counted among the absolutely ridiculous. The villain of the hour – a balding, aging, megalomaniac hell-bent on taking over the world by destroying most of it with a hidden missile or two – had spared no expense in spoiling his little darling. The cat (Annabelle, according to her solid gold name tag on her sapphire collar) had a room twice the size of Dan’s pitiful little flat. There were plush, cat-sized love seats, a little bed fit for a king, a jumbo-sized television currently playing the Aristocats, a fish tank of the same size as the television brimming with bright tropical fish, and two silver dishes against the wall beneath a device that automatically filled them whenever they were empty. There was also a silver platter next to the dishes with the remains of what might have been salmon.

And it boggled Dan’s mind how a man so destruction-happy could take up the hobby of spoiling rotten another living being. The floor was littered with expensive cat toys and high-end catnip balls, and there were pictures on the walls of Annabelle as a fluffy kitten batting at string, another of her older being held by her brightly beaming master, Annabelle at Christmas playing in wrapping paper, Annabelle at the beach, and similar pictures besides.

While just two corridors down was a room full of weapons that could level a city.

“Why the hell would Dr. Zenvoid want to destroy the world? Where’s he going to get cat toys from, or cat food, if he burns everything?” Dan said.

Zenvoid’s plan wasn’t merely to subdue the world, but to “cleanse it” by wiping out humanity then repopulating with a more “superior” species specially chosen from humanity and genetically modified by him.

Bill, who’d been charged with the slightly less demeaning task of searching the room for dangerous weapons (well, perhaps not so demeaning. Dan doubted even a mad man like Zenvoid would hide anything where his precious cat might paw at it and set it off) spat impatiently as he sifted through a basket of toys, “Why the hell are you asking me? The man’s bloody mad, you don’t question the bloody mad. Just… do something with the cat. Captain Franks wants this whole place cleared out.”

Dan looked to Annabelle, sitting primly and unconcerned on one of her many love seats.

Bill’s search had unearthed the luxury limo among cat carriers, with a lambs-wool interior and a little heater and air conditioner on the back. It was also quite spacious, which meant it was going to be a pain to carry.

At the sight of the carrier, Annabelle leaped from her throne and trotted over to begin rubbing up against Dan’s leg, as if thanking him for bringing out her carriage.

Pampered yet polite – it made Dan smile.

“You have any favorite toys you want me to bring?” he asked, but Annabelle had already made herself comfortable in the carrier. Dan looked among the toys anyway, his assault rifle threatening to slide off every time he bent forward and bop him on the head. He picked the toys that looked the most chewed on and tossed them into the carrier.

When anyone on the team said to “deal” with something, what they really meant was “get it out of the bloody way and let someone else eventually deal with it so that we can focus on the more important tasks.” As long as the cat was in the cage and not where she would trip anyone by tangling around their legs, then Dan could have called it a job well done and move on. He knew this – he’d been at it a bloody year, although this was only his third clean-up – and yet he couldn’t help taking it a step further by preparing the cat a travel bag.

A bloody travel bag. Which he found in a closet along with containers for food and water, various cat brushes, and a fat, red pillow. He packed all this, even knowing that it would be discarded once the cat was taken to the nearest animal shelter, or whatever was done with her. She was a pretty cat, so he was sure she would get adopted quickly, although she would never again enjoy this level of pampering.

~oOo~

Dan had been a bit hasty thinking that Annabelle’s story ended with her removal from Zenvoid’s secret base. Zenvoid had a penchant for escape-artistry (this was the second time he’d been taken into custody), and until headquarters could ensure Zenvoid was in a position where he couldn’t make a break for it, they wanted all his possessions in a position where they could be amply guarded. The last thing they needed was Zenvoid targeting whoever wasn’t spoiling his precious Annabelle per her usual level of coddling.

Which didn’t sit well with Dan. Maybe a shelter wouldn’t have pampered her, but being the pretty cat she was, it wouldn’t have been long before someone came along who would pamper her. As it was, she’d been placed in one of the smaller storage spaces (a broom closet) so she would be out of the way, with a cake pan for a litter box and very little space to roam except in a tight circle.

Bill said that she needed to suck it up; it would teach her to be less spoiled. Dan thought, she’s a cat; it’s not her fault she’d been ridiculously mollycoddled by a psychopath. Dan visited her, in part because he felt bad for her, in part because she was a very friendly cat, and in part because he found brushing her to be rather relaxing. But she was listless, wearing the most pathetic look every time Dan had to leave. The only time she perked up was when he arrived, and then she was all over him, rubbing against his legs, bumping her head against his chin, batting at toys as though hoping to get him to play.

She’s the cat of a world-dominating mad man, the other lads would say.

She’s a bloody cat who just wants a bloody brushing, Dan would say.

Meanwhile, Zenvoid wasn’t talking, and there was still a missile or two out their eagerly waiting to destroy the world. Concern over one cat shouldn’t have been a priority, but dangling a bit of string in front of her did seem to take Dan’s mind off the matter of imminent demise, if just for a bit.

Thank goodness for the head secretary, Mrs. Abernash, who was terrifying on a good day, but had a soft spot for cats. She had some of the cat’s things brought up from storage and arranged in the lounge, under the pretense of being sick and tired of hearing the cat whine all day. The lounge was spacious, full of plump couches, a fish tank, and while the TV screen was not jumbo-sized it was still a massive step up from no TV screen at all. It wasn’t long before Annabelle became one of those much appreciated additions that everyone refused to admit to. Annabelle was not a pushy cat, and always seemed to know what it was that was needed, whether it was to curl in one’s lap or sit by their side and simply be there, as if saying “I’m here for you and understand what you’re going through – well, not really because I’m not a secret agent and I’ve never had to kill anyone or disarm a bomb using only a fork and my wits with only ten seconds to go – but I’m still here for you.”

And it continued to hound Dan how a man who probably spent hours brushing their cat and teasing her with bits of string would build a missile (or two) to wipe out the world. The more time Dan spent with Annabelle, and the more he witnessed top agents, hardened former soldiers, and stick-up-their-backside officials unwind as they stroked her fur and teased her with bits of string, the more the question began to drive him mad.

He didn’t really think on it when he made the request to speak to Zenvoid, or whether or not Dan’s request would be granted. Honestly, it shouldn’t have been granted at all, but he’d said he had questions about the cat – which was true; she was having a bit of a diarrhea issue – and while the higher-ups were hesitant about it, overall they didn’t see the harm.

None of it – the request, that the request it had been granted, that Dan, still at the stage of having to guard bathroom doors, was about to talk to the world’s most dangerous mastermind – registered until he walked into the interrogation room to Zenvoid himself.

It didn’t matter that Zenvoid was dressed in maximum-security prison orange, the look on the man’s face was a heartfelt promise of terrible things to come as soon as he managed to escape. It doubled when Dan walked in.

“Oh, lovely, now they’re sending in children. Or are you merely here to escort me on my morning constitutional to a more secure location?” Zenvoid spat. He leaned back in the metal chair and studied his nails. “I do hope they warned you about my rather bad habit of slitting people’s throats even when they’re looking.”

And suddenly Dan wished he had kept his mouth shut.

Until he thought of Annabelle and all those pictures of a happy, smiling, not-insane-at-all Zenvoid cuddling her. Dan seated himself awkwardly and launched into the diarrhea issue.

Zenvoid rolled his eyes. “My word, you people are incompetent. You switched cat food on her without easing her into it. Of course she has the runs! You’re probably giving her that wretched store brand filth. Look, I’ve got a man who supplies me cat food. It’s beyond your pay-grade, I’m sure, but just say my name and he’ll send some over as a personal favor to me.” He then gave the number of this supplier.

Dan frowned thoughtfully at Zenvoid. “Um, if you pardon my saying, Mr. Zenvoid,” he said, “But, um… the thing is.”

“Spit it out,” Zenvoid said flatly.

“Well, it’s just… well… you want to destroy the world and everyone in it and all but that would mean killing your supplier, too, wouldn’t it? Unless you were going to, you know, take him in or something. Except even then, what with the world in shambles, he wouldn’t have what he needed to make this special cat food and all.”

Zenvoid narrowed his eyes. “It’s animal parts cooked up in a lab. If you raided my sanctuary, which I know you have, you’ll have seen I have enough labs to spare.”

“Well, yeah, but, what about cat toys? And getting fresh salmon for her? And, and… what about all the other cats?”

“What about them?” Zenvoid said.

“Well, you destroy the world then you destroy cats, too, right? And you destroy the cat breeders, and the people who make cat toys. And, well, the cats, Mr. Zenvoid. What of the cats? And the kittens? And all the cat videos you had saved on your computers, and the cat screensavers, and the calendars. There wouldn’t be any more of those.”

Zenvoid’s fingers drummed anxiously on the table. “No, I suppose not,” he said slowly, carefully, as if caught in a game of wits and so having to choose his words with caution. “But there would have been, eventually, once the world fell into order.”

“But that’s going to take time. And in the meantime, if all the cats don’t get wiped out, it’ll still mean all these orphaned cats with no home, and kittens without their mothers, wandering around and crying and getting eaten by rats and wild dogs…”

Zenvoid’s fingers stopped drumming.

“And if your missile does wipe out the cats, and Annabelle dies, you wouldn’t be able to get another one. There’d be no more cats.”

Zenvoid said thickly. “You’re point?”

Dan shrugged sheepishly. “Sorry, I’m just trying to understand. I know the world isn’t always the greatest place and there’s a lot about it you despise, but there’s things in it you like, too. I just don’t understand why you’d be willing to destroy everything if it means destroying the things you like. Haven’t you thought about the kittens and the cats and what would happen to them? And who would take care of them while the world rights itself? I just… I don’t get it is all.”

Zenvoid sat there, staring at him with a face as blank as a new piece of paper. He said nothing, and after two minutes of this Dan figured he had annoyed the man enough that he wasn’t going to answer. Dan left, feeling like an idiot.

A day later, Zenvoid gave up the location of the missiles (turned out there were five, not two). The boys and girls upstairs were baffled, and everyone else (having heard about Dan’s interview with Zenvoid) didn’t know whether to laugh or clap him heartily on the back.

Dan was promoted from guarding cat rooms to guarding the villain of the hour, just in case there was anything about said villain that puzzled him and he felt the need to ask about it.

Annabelle maintained her position as spoiled princess of the lounge room, rewarded periodically with fresh salmon, and looking rather smug as though she was well aware of her part in saving all of man (and cat) kind.

The end

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