S P A C E P A T R O L A collection of warped parodies in a future we'd like to see By Stefan Gagne / Twoflower -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- Dedications To Jerry Hinn, who helped me develop the characters and spackle up some plot holes, and provided many Pizza House scripts to inspire and encourage To Mrs. Hubbard's Advanced Composition class, where I wrote chapter one and onward To Pearl Jam, whose album Ten I listened to over and over while writing. Maybe I'll write a new epic when the next album's out. To the various copyrighted things I'm parodying in good humor. Please don't sue. To Zeke Thunderclutch, Twerp, Jane, and Bruiser, all of whom were a great help in writing this story for me. All I had to do was transcribe. And MOST IMPORTANTLY, to all the readers of A Future We'd Like To See that egged me on to release this previously unreleased epic... big kudos to all fans! Mwah! TABLE OF CONTENTS (page numbers according to my WordPerfect(tm) status bar...) Author's Introduction................................2 Opportunity Doesn't Knock, it Pounds.................3 Introductions Aside.................................10 Breaking and Decorating.............................17 The Anti-Quayle.....................................27 Bookworms...........................................36 Snitches............................................44 When I Was Your Age.................................64 Happy Birthday To You...............................74 Intermission........................................86 Death by Boredom....................................88 Information.........................................98 The Lost Episodes..................................119 VOS................................................146 Ann P'rran Yttia...................................192 Number One with a Bullet...........................217 This Was Your Life.................................239 Space Patrol Part -1 - Author's Introduction You've just spent a lot of time FTPing this story, or downloading, or printing, or whatever. Now you're wondering : what have I gotten myself into? Here's quick explanation. The story you are about to read is the collective work of a year and a half of writing. Some of it was done for a writing class, some just for fun. It is the basis for my _A Future We'd Like to See_ series, introducing many elements of the 'universe' I work and play in. In otherwords, it's a prequel to FWLS. It's a bit more compact than the original draft, a few stories which, quite frankly, sucked, removed. The quality level of the writing goes from Okay/Good to Great/Nifty!, since I started the series at the beginning of the class and wrapped it up a year or so later. If it's looking lousy at first, read on. You'll get to like it. It gets REALLY weird and twisted near the end, even though it looks like basic pulp scifi in the beginning. There are a few spelling and grammar errors, but since the works aren't finely polished realy-for-publication material (much like any fiction you can find in the public domain), ya can't expect perfection. Just a fun read, something to kill time, and maybe a provoking thought or six about what we think life and reality really are. Now for the legalese. Skip on if uninterested... This short story series, characters, plots, concepts, fonts, styles, and alphanumeric characters copyright (C) 1993 MCMXCII by Stefan Gagne AKA Twoflower, all rights reserved, etc. etc. What this means is if you write a story called Space Patrol with wacky characters named Zeke, Twerp, Jane, and Bruiser, I can sue your ass off and laugh hysterically as my ordinarily thin pockets are amplified by legal repremands. Any parodies of existing people, products, television shows, or other copyrighted material are meant in humor and not as slander. I do not claim to own copyright on the parody sources. (This applies to FWLS as well, if you hadn't seen the notice there.) However, feel free to distribute it U N M O D I F I E D ! to anybody or anywhere you'd like. Modding it violates the copyright. If you split this up into separate files, include these copyright paragraphs in each file, and the credits. Space Patrol Part 0 - Opportunity Doesn't Knock, it Pounds The basement hadn't been dusted in about ten years. A layer of filth covered most of the tables and chairs, as well as the exposed electronics and computer parts. It has been said that geniuses are absent minded. This is not true. They simply go about their household chores in a different way. For instance, instead of buying a vacuum cleaner, Twerp invented a revolutionary new kind of microprocessor that was powered by teflon and couldn't gather dust. The basements appearance itself rarely changed as well, aside from the addition and subtraction of new electronics projects. The sole wall decoration consisted of a diagrammed poster of an IBM PS/2. However, this was a very special day indeed, for time was taken to invent a new room-decorating robot that would hang up paper streamers and signs. All the ribbons were mangled and the signs were backwards, which shows how much effort was put into programming the robot. If the signs were right side up, they'd probably read CONGRADULATIONS ON YOUR GRADUATION, TWERP AND QWERTY. "CANNONBALL!" shouted a high pitched but enthusiastic voice from the top of the basement stairs. At that moment, a short purple alien in a red graduation gown threw his hat across the air (where a revolutionary new kind of self-moving hat rack caught it) and jumped head first down the stairs. He hit a well- placed set of mattresses and bounced into a chair. A second purple alien slid down the armrail and darted off to the small climate-controlled refrigerator for some soda. "We did it, Twerp!" Qwerty shouted, pounded a table in glee. "We graduated! No more dull lessons and pointless Phys Ed classes! The world is our shrimp!" "Oyster," corrected Twerp, popping open the sodas with a mechanically enhanced bottle opener. "Whatever," Qwerty shrugged. "It's on to Murf Tech for us!" "Err..." said Twerp, face falling. "I had meant to tell you about that..." "What?" "I didn't get accepted to Murf Tech." Pause. "WHAT?" Qwerty shouted. "But... come on Twerp, you've got the IQ of a genius and you know more about electronics than Einstein. How come they wouldn't accept you?" "I... didn't have enough work experience," he sighed. "They want people who have held part time jobs." "But that means I'll be starting my freshman year without you!" Qwerty exclaimed. "Come on, we had planned this whole thing. Best buds, hittin' college, getting babes, making millions and millions of credits... and you're telling me simply because you didn't want to flip a spatula they won't let you in?" "That's about the size of it. And their rosters are full for the next four years." "Hmm..." Qwerty said, scratching his chin. "Well, we've got a combined IQ of about 300 in this room, surely we can find some job you can do for the next four years." "I have been considering Space Patrol," Twerp suggested. "I thought they went for the sloping foreheaded jock type," Qwerty stated. "Well, they posted an ad a few weeks ago. They're offering college tuition money and credit if you sign up, all applicants welcome." "Well, then that's your ticket into Murf Tech!" Qwerty said, voice picking back up to its usual chipper tone. "You enlist, maybe sit behind a desk for a few years, and then you're in. It's a bright new opportunity!" "Maybe you're right," Twerp said, spirit rising. "After all, how bad could it be?" -=( SP )=- Soft furry feet plodded along the linoleum halls of Houykk Ferriwa T'lli, half a galaxy away. Bruiser hated that sound. For most of his life, he had heard the plodding of hundreds of Ytt rabbit sapiens along the school corridors. Simply hearing two large bunny feet plodding seemed alien to him, as if something in his life was empty other than the corridor. He had been working at this school as a Phys Ed. teacher for about 13 years now, and had been training members of the Ytt army in flamethrower usage on the side for three of those years. He enjoyed the thrill of the fight, the ability to push someone's head through concrete, and just the sheer exhilaration of teaching someone else how to fight and push heads through concrete. And the tournaments. He enjoyed them too, the football games with the roaring crowds and the glory of the win. The hot dogs, the cheerleaders, the painted lines on the ground, the entire sport experience. And now he was fairly sure this would come to a close. He stopped at the door of the principal, Dr. Oppenow Jrrgy. Pausing for a moment to take a breath and adjust his old #34 basketball jersey, he opened the door. "Ah, Bruiser. So glad you could come, please have a seat," the doctor said, motioning him to a chair with the hand that wasn't holding a golf putter. Bruiser squeezed his 300 pound musclebound form into the seat. "You send for me, sir?" he said in his usual broken English. It wasn't that he wasn't intelligent, it was just that he was never very good at speaking English. "Yes... I think you know why," the principal said, putting a golf ball into a paper cup and having a seat behind his mahogany desk. "Yes sir. Me read about budget cuts in paper yesterday," Bruiser muttered, a wave of depression kicking in. "It's not that I don't like our physical education department, really," the principal reassured. "It's just that we don't have the money, and jobs are looking for Ytts who have job skills more than labor skills. If I had my way, this school would rehire all the departments that have been cut." The principal stood up and began his "I really do care" pacing around the room routine. "It's just that we don't have the money. If you had the speech skills, you could teach physics." "But me have degrees in astronavigation, nuclear physics, and quantum mechanics!" Bruiser pleaded. "Yes, but you can't express yourself well in English," the principal explained. "This institute is changing over to a multicultural, multispecies school, one of the only kinds on planet Ytt. Although most other schools use our home language, we're expected to adapt to the galaxy's standard tounge. We both know of your incredible intellect, but if you can't explain things to the students in a way they can understand, it's going to simply be too hard. You know that problem we had with the spanish speaking math teach last year, remember?" Bruiser nodded. "Parents called in complaining that their kids couldn't understand what he was saying, and we had to completely restructure who was in what math class. Listen, if you need any letters of recommendation for your next job, I will be more than happy to help..." "Me understand, sir," Bruiser said. He looked up, an idea hitting his head square on. "Actually, me WAS thinking enlisting in Space Patrol... good physical work, need Ytts like me. Probably more use than teaching. Maybe more fun. Not sure." "That's a pretty good idea," the principal said, leaning back in his chair. "A good pension plan and good pay. And after all, how bad could it be?" -=( SP )=- "Name?" "Zeke Thunderclutch." The recruiting officer peered over his glasses. That certainly could NOT have been this stranger's real name. The officer was not surprised, however. The garb, although slightly disheveled, resembled that of a Not-So-Secret Agent. What few agents the officer had met had flamboyant, dashing names. Zeke was dressed in the only real outfit he had after being fired from the Not-So-Secret Agent Corporation. There was a certain amount of prestige to wear the usual rough and tumble leather jacket, sturdy jeans and heavy boots that could survive being slept in several times, but it's not very good to have a wardrobe consisting of three sets of the same outfit. He was lucky they let him keep the clothes he was wearing... he had charged them to a NSSAC credit card. "Company of last employment?" the officer asked, writing down more information. "NSSAC," Zeke replied. The officer grunted a "I thought so" grunt and scribbled this down. "How long have you been unemployed?" the officer asked. "Take in a deep breath, pal," Zeke scowled. The officer snorted the air. "Two weeks," the officer said, and wrote it down. The stench associated to someone that hasn't had a shower in that amount of time was rather distinct and hard to miss in an unemployment office. The briefing officer put down his pencil. "Let me guess. Been a Not-So-Secret Agent for a few years, bungled an important mission, and they turned you out on your ear with nothing but the clothes on your back, right?" Zeke nodded. He had spent the last week in a partially drunken stupor, unable to cope with losing his livelihood and career over a stupid incident. Namely, he threw up in President Doofman's flower vase. He didn't know that he was allergic to the spices in the food until his first bite made his face cycle through most of the hue range associated with purple. The officer sighed, and returned to writing. "You'd be surprised about the number of people we get who have been fired by those bozos. The turnover rate is rather impressive. Skills?" Zeke pondered this. The seventy minutes he spent in art school when he was a teenager probably wouldn't count. His little job experience consisted of swinging from chandeliers, rescuing diplomat's daughters, and getting ambushed. Come to think of it, he'd been an utter failure as a dashing hero, despite the fact that he had the sought-after lantern jaw and charisma. It was a boyhood impulse to join the NSSAC when most other companies had turned him down for not having enough education or attention span. "I can type. A little. And if you need any swinging from chandeliers, I'm your man," he replied, throwing his pilot's scarf around his neck again just to enhance the point. "Ummm hmmm," the officer replied, writing this down. "Any combat action?" Zeke would have liked to say that he was a crack shot and survived many a firefight, but he couldn't. Truth is he usually was ambushed on the way home from a mission, or would flee in terror at the sign of more than two or three goons with guns. Sure, fistfighting and shooting ranges were one thing, but in the ten somewhat mediocre years with the NSSAC, he couldn't work up the nerve or the will to actually murder anyone. "Well, not much. I'm real good at being knocked out. If that helps," he added weakly, not liking how this interview was going so far. The officer wrote this down. He sat back, tossed the pencil on the table, and sighed. "Mister Thunderclutch, this doesn't look good. Now, I've met many out of work Not-So-Secret Agents before, but the difference between them and you is that they had some skills they could apply to other areas of work." Zeke shifted a little uncomfortably in his chair. He had always known in the back of his mind that he was a laze-about, a failure, an accident waiting to happen. He kept denying it for years, thinking maybe he hadn't found his niche in society yet. The impulse leaped to the front of his mind, jumping up and down on what was left of his hope. "I do think I can find a position for you, however." His hope inflated to 13 PSI and flung self-pity to the back of his mind, where it clattered into several other unused emotions. Zeke sat bolt upright. "Where? How? I need a job, man! I'll do anything!" "Well... have you ever heard of Space Patrol?" "Not really." "Well, they've got a good pension plan, and enough pay to get you back on your feet. It's just light problem solving work, finding lost documents and such. Right up a former NSSA's alley, really. And after all, how bad could it be?" -=( SP )=- Jane slipped into the room. Her dark cloak and floppy hat usually protect her from sight in even slightly dark rooms, but it wouldn't help here. After all, as every assassin knows, one of the easiest precautions to take against possible assassination was not to have any shadows around for people to hide in. So, every room and corridor in the Assassin's Guild has bright, florescent lighting. Assassins may be crazy, but they're not stupid. "Sit," Jane's superior officer commanded. Jane glided in from the doorway to the uncomfortable chair, sitting down silently and untucking her long red hair from her cloak. She looked daggers at her superior. Her superior didn't even flinch. "I am to understand that you've been doing some vigilante work on the side, Jane?" Jane nodded coldly. "We can't have that. It's bad for the image to have a trained, paid assassin mopping up crime, even if they do it in a violent, sadistic manner. You're fired." That was it. No 'Hey, I understand what you're going through' speech or comforting pats on the back. Creatures of the night don't work like that. "You can get a severance check at the cashier," the officer said, signing a small slip and handing it to Jane. "I suggest you find another line of work. There are many out there that are suitable for an ex-assassin... the armed forces, the Heavily Armed Ambassadors of Friendship and Fun, Space Patrol... anything off-planet and far from here will work." "What's Space Patrol?" she inquired, never blinking, staring directly into the officer's soul. "Troubleshooting work. Go here, blow this up, get paid, find this, rescue that princess, et cetera. You'll like it. A bright new horizon. Now beat it, I have work to do." With that, the officer went back to signing various receipts from previous assassinations. Jane considered this. Sounds like fun, a chance to exercise fighting ability and get paid for it. Admittedly not as much as assassination, but enough. Besides, supposedly Space Patrol is very lax in uniforms and behavior patterns. Standing up, and pausing only to jam a seven-inch throwing knife directly into the skull of her superior officer, she left the room towards this bright new horizon. Besides, how bad could it be? -=( SP )=- It was going to be bad. Space Patrol Part I - Introductions Aside "Is it ready yet?" "Come on! These chairs are rock hard!" "Hurry it up already!" The minor shouts of dissent echoed throughout Space Patrol Headquarters, Sector JK. The reason for the turmoil was because about a dozen beings of mixed species from around the galaxy weren't expecting to have to wait this long for a lousy training film. Today was the Space Patrol's annual "Pledge Week", were new recruits who signed up would receive extra bonuses and special training. Of course, they didn't find out until after they signed up that the bonus was working plumbing and the training was a leftover black and white holofilm from the 2050s. Now that they were signed up for Space Patrol for a five year mission, they were a bit unhappy that they had been taken. "Keep your shirt on, I'm working as fast as I can!" shouted a greasy workman from the rear of the room. He pried the service hatch off the holoprojector as various recruits threw popcorn at the screen. Twiddling with the wires a little, he closed the hatch and started the playback. "....rrrrroooowwnwnnnnsnsnnsuuiugosiiabgbgbagell--" The workman slammed a fist against the machine. The audio and video jumped for a minute and went back on track, FINALLY working correctly. "rrrrrWelcome to Space Patrol, hardy recruits! *The* special Starfleet sponsored law enforcement and special operations force for the common man!" The screen showed six foot tall bruisers in standard Space Patrol uniform. Of course, the uniforms were dumped years ago when several Patrollers protested by burning a stack of uniforms -- and sometimes even Patrollers. "If you've got a problem, we're there to help. Whether it be guarding a supply dock, rescuing a foreign leader, or simply blowing things up. Now you are a member of that special..." The film continued droning on and on in a burbling, happy tone. The images flickered by with various shots of Patrollers doing heroic deeds, rescuing lost kittens from trees, or destroying an enemy supply depot. The voice bounced along with the images, cheery as if selling detergent. Needless to say, most of the recruits fell asleep at this point. About one hour later, after the propaganda holo was finished, the lights were flipped on. Most of the Patrollers awoke with a jolt, some even toppling out of their chairs. "Okay, maggots, listen up!" barked a high ranking officer in the back. "All of that was garbage. You're in this man's Patrol now, and you're gonna WORK!" The next sound make can be described as not sounding like enthusiastic applause. It would probably fit into the category of "pathetic whining" or "sarcastic off-color jokes" better. The high ranker, Sgt. Bilko, was disturbed by this. The least they could do was look hardy. He didn't really know what hardy meant or why Patrollers were supposed to look it, but this was probably not hardy. Perhaps, he thought, a few more decibels would help. "AS I WAS SAYING! Your briefing officer's name and office number is posted on the list in the back. Go to that office IMMEDIATELY for your first assignment. MOVE! MOVE! MOVE!" Yup yup yup, Bilko thought, that helped. They're moving now. Sluggishly, but it's a start. -=( SP )=- "Yoo hoo? Anybody in here?" Zeke Thunderclutch said as he opened the door to his briefing office. It was pitch black in the room, the only light being the illuminated shadow he was casting to the other end of the room. He stepped in and a meaty hand grabbed his neck and lifted him from the ground. Now, Zeke was used to being ambushed. Heck, he spent most of his previous career as a Not-So-Secret Agent being ambushed by some terrorist group or radical fanatic. However, this was the first time he had been strangled with ONE HAND. "Urk," he added to enhance this point. Then he noticed the hand was green. And attached to an arm. Which was attached to a torso. Which was also green. The figure stepped out of the light. "Me sorry," it said in deep octaves and broken english. "Me mistake you for janitor. Me apologize." The hand released it's grip, and Zeke dropped to the linoleum floor on his rear. Zeke struggled for breath, and looked up at the figure. Ytts were fairly common in the known universe. Ytts were an alien humanoid that evolved from rabbits, and thus had the cute floppy ears and casual attitude that rabbits had. They also had green fur, but this was not unusual. What WAS unusual was that this particular Ytt was six feet tall, built like a brick wall, and carrying a backpack flamethrower. "Urk," Zeke repeated, in case anybody had missed it the first time. "Oh, me forgot to introduce. Me Bruiser. Sorry about the strangle there, me thought you were janitor." "J...janitor?" "Me come to briefing room, he follow. Janitor mop up behind me. Me think he following me. Can't be too careful todays," he said, closing the door. As Zeke's vision gradually came back into sharp focus and his foggy head cleared, he stood up. "Err... so you're in my unit?" he nervously asked. "Yeah. What luck! You used be not-so-secret agent, yesno?" Bruiser asked. "Me no recognize you till me let go. Me really apologize, mister Thunderclutch." "Uh, think nothing of it," Zeke said, wondering why he was seeing double. So this was his new partner. Terrific. Well, I hope the rest of the team is normal. Zeke heard footsteps. Expecting Bruiser to greet the person opening the door in the usual way, he dived under a desk. The door opened, and Bruiser reached out a friendly arm. The cloaked person in the doorway moved their hands in a flurry, and Bruiser fell over. "Try that again, greeny, and it won't just be a sucker punch," said a menacing, yet high pitched voice. Bruiser stood up and looked in awe. Normally it takes something the size of a sledgehammer even to get Bruiser to notice a knock. The cloaked person walked into the light. Apparently the high pitch was because the person was female. You wouldn't know it, because the floppy, wide brimmed red hat and matching assassin's cloak shadowed almost all of her features. Zeke's romantic impulses kicked in seconds before his self- preservational traits. "Hey, good looking--" that was as far as he got before the girl had managed to clamp a firm hand over his mouth. Then his self-preservation went bonkers and let out a slight whimper. "I know sixteen pressure points that can render you sterile. Want to find out what they are?" she sneered. Zeke muffled a negative, and she let go. Zeke hit the ground for the second time today. "Formalities aside, I'm Jane. Hello. Try that again and bad things will happen," she said. With that, she sat down and studied all the exits in the room. Fortunately Bruiser was still sitting on the ground watching Jane in admiration when the fourth and last member of the team walked in. It's just as well, because if Bruiser attempted to grab him he'd overshoot and fall over again. Perhaps more explanation of the major races in the galaxy is in order. The being in question who wandered in a Murfle (we've seen them before, but a more in-depth description is needed for this sight gag to work). A Murfle is another one of those cute and fluffy looking races, being one foot high, purple, and wearing earmuffs. The earmuffs are not just for cuteness appeal (Murfles really didn't like being treated like cartoon characters) but are to offset the difference in room temperature and Murfle body temperature. Anthropology lessons aside, the Murfle walked in. "Hi there!" he said in a cheery voice, much like the black and white holo all the recruits had watched earlier. "Say, why is he sitting on the floor?" he said, looking at Bruiser. Bruiser, noting the confrontation, stood up and did his best to look imposing and intimidating. "Me Bruiser," he said fiendishly. "Me can kill a man in 3 seconds," he added, just for effect, then smiled. The little Murfle was undaunted. "I'm Twerp. Pleased to meet you," he chirped, and held out a hand to shake. Bruiser, confused, shook it (shaking Twerp in the process). "So, we're all in the same unit?" said Zeke. He hoped not, because he really didn't have much experience with aliens. What if he said something wrong that translated to an insult in their language? An entire Ytt war was sparked off once when President Doofman of the Terran Council vomited and the noise made was a war vow in the Yttian language. Before he could pursue the various mental paranoid pathways associated with torture and fate, there was an knock at the door. A Saren poked his head inside from around the corner. (To make a long story short, Sarens are purple and have green antennae. We'll skip the length racial history to preserve space and keep from boring the reader.) "Ah, I see you're all here, Unit #13," he said, walking in. "I'm Father O'Mother, and I'll be your mission briefing officer for your tour of duty." "Sir? Umm... you're a priest, right?" Twerp asked, a bit surprised. "Well, yes. I do volunteer work for the good souls here at Space Patrol. Just my little contribution to the war against evil," he said proudly. Jane didn't buy it. Not his intentions, but the "good souls" part. Before she quit the Assassin's Guild, she had picked up some information on Space Patrol when she was hired to assassinate a sector HQ officer. Most Patrollers aren't above a little illegal activity in the same way the ocean is not above the clouds. "Anyway, welcome to Space Patrol, fair citizens of the galaxy," he continued. By his tone, you could tell he had memorized this and was hoping to get it right, because he was in a slight monotone and appeared to be reading the ceiling. "I'll be assigning you to missions, and debriefing you whenever Space Patrol receives a contract and needs a spare Patrol unit. You'll be getting a starship of you own that houses four comfortably, and we only ask that you keep it within sector JK. That way, when we need to call on you for a mission, you'll be nearby." He paused for questions. There weren't any. He continued. "Missions will probably only be once a week or so, since sector JK isn't in a rampant, crime infested pit. In the mean time, you're on your own moneywise. All we cover is repairs to your ship, and costs while on a mission. Should be fairly easy, my sons--" "Ahem." "--and daughter. Are there any questions?" Jane didn't even bother to raise her hand. "Are you serious? Me, a trained assassin, paired up with an out of work agent, a nerdy Murfle, and a brainless prat?" Several growls and various shufflings of feet radiated from behind her. Normally, she thought, I wouldn't take guff from anyone, but when the odds are 3 to 1 against, it's too easy for me and not worth it. Father O'Mother seemed to ignore the nasty tone of her voice. "Well, unlike Starfleet or the Heavily Armed Ambassadors of Friendship and Fun, we have to use whatever recruits we can get. I'm sure you'll learn to work together, and benefit from the skills you each possess. Not likely, thought Jane, but didn't voice this comment. "Which one is our ship?" Zeke asked. "I saw quite a few out in the parking lot. Father O'Mother checked his clipboard. The fastest and the most comfortable ships Space Patrol had... the GSS Conquest, the GSS Powerplay, and even the GSS Mildly Okay had already been taken. He looked for the code assigned to unit #13. Then frowned. Then tried to smile. Then tried to do both at once, and failed. "Well... the GSS Ineptitude," he said weakly. "But it does have working plumbing and a fairly fast computer." "What doesn't it have?" Zeke asked cautiously. "Well... mattresses, for starters. But you'll get used to it, don't worry. Now if we don't have any other busi--" A loud clicking like a thousand hamsters with tap shoes echoed around the room. The mission recorder in the corner spewed out a small sheet of paper. Father O'Mother got up and ripped it off the printer. :Unit #13 to UE Enterprises, Planet Freon, 5th Cluster, JK Sector. Guard duty. Move with haste. Have a nice day.: "Well, well well!" said the Father, cheering up tremendously. "Seems you have a mission already!" He happily tossed the paper to Bruiser, who caught it in the air (almost crumpling it) and reading it. "Hmmmm..." he said. "At 2.3 warp, by Griffin Postulate, it take three days to get there. We best be going." Jane and Zeke stared at him in confusion. Twerp personally wondered how he knew about complex astrophysics -- even with an IQ as high as Twerps, he couldn't make a Griffin computation THAt fast. However, before he could comment on it, Bruiser was on his way towards the door. Bruiser paused. "Well, you coming or not? We got mission to solve, and they ain't pay by hour, yesno?" With that, Unit #13 left the office for the Ineptitude. Space Patrol Part II - Breaking and Decorating It was raining in C'atel. This was normal. In fact, days when it doesn't rain are considered bad days. The entire city was formed out of soggy, slumping tenements and crumbling malls, a city where even the buildings were lazy. The remarkable aspect of C'atel was how the laziness would penetrate your mind if you stayed there long enough. Tourists who like wet weather would show up, and after about two weeks they'd be happy, mind-numbed C'atel citizens. This would be terrific if C'atel had any sort of industrial platform, but the citizens couldn't be persuaded to do physical labor even if you stuck them with an electric cattle prod. As is, any population growth just meant that they'd just be packed in the nightclubs in a more dense formation. Nightclubs and concert halls were extremely popular in C'atel, because music is the easiest, least-strenuous form of entertainment around. (One might say movies were the easiest, least response oriented entertainment field around. Not true. Somewhere along the line, people would actually have to memorize lines and work, which C'atel will have no truck with.) Most of the galaxy's alternate rock bands were formed here, because of the simple booking procedure in clubs. If someone showed up, they were the night's entertainment. No effort was given to screen out bands that are referred to as "awful" or "lousy". If they made noise, they were paid. Because of the aura of stupidity and laziness that surrounded C'atel, the law enforcers of the area were pretty spaced out as well. In other words, crime flourished here like a festering bruise. If you had the money, and you could resist the urge to go party and drink your brains out, you could turn quite a profit participating or catering to the criminal element. Thus was the case with Weasel. In fact, he had been running a very popular underworld bar named "The Pit of Ooze" for about two years now, and raked in the money criminals would pay for his over-priced, watered-down drinks. Weasel was gliding down to the three-credit-an-hour parking lot in his hovercar, ready to open the Pit for it's nightly business. He shut down the car, and hopped out (since he was an alien Murfle, and thus one and a half feet tall, he couldn't step out of a car), opening his umbrella. Greeted by the sagging buildings and hippies roaming the street in random directions, Weasel plodded through the eternal puddles of the C'atel streets towards the criminal districts. He stopped at his building and fumbled a key ring out of his pocket. He opened the door. He looked inside. He fainted. -=( SP )=- "When is this over?" "What?" "I SAID, WHEN IS THIS OVER?" "Me no able hear you!" Zeke gave up. The unrelenting noise from the stage was simply too intense for Bruiser to be able to hear him. Zeke attempted to shrink back into his seat and cover his ears to hold off the incredible cacophony. "YAAAAAAHOOOO!" Bruiser was shouting, jumping up and down on his chair like the other 50,000 people in the stadium. The chair wasn't enjoying it very much, considering that Bruiser was a 300 pound musclebound rabbitoid alien. The band on the stage pounded away at their instruments, hands moving in a blur. The "wall of sound" behind them pumped out an array of sounds, none of which Zeke would define as music. Zeke couldn't believe he got talked into this. First they botch guard duty -- thier FIRST MISSION, nonetheless, and are 'told' to take a vacation for a week. Bruiser then convinced him that it was a good idea to fly all the way to planet C'atel for the vacation and hit a concert. What was the name of the band again? Stomach Contents? Five hours arguing with Twerp and Jane (the other two members of their Space Patrol unit) over whither or not they could take the shuttle from their ship for this trip, two days flight time in the shuttlecraft from the GSS Ineptitude, one day waiting in line for tickets, and a five hour white noise festival that Zeke Thunderclutch didn't even want to go do. On the other hand, it's pretty difficult to refuse a Ytt the size of Bruiser, coupled with his diehard music tastes. Since Zeke's ears were getting used to the neverending audio hell, the next thing that happened struck him as being rather odd. The music stopped. A voice rang out over the sound system. "OWW! I pricked my finger! Call an ambulance!" shouted the backup guitarist, clutching his throbbing finger as approximately 17 stage hands carried him offstage. "Oh well, I guess that's the end of the concert," the keyboardist said, stretching and following the band offstage. Keeping in tune with other citizens of C'atel, Stomach Contents had no common sense. If they did, they would have realized that it's not nice to make 50,000 screaming, fanatically loyal fans angry. A chorus of boos and hisses from the audience assaulted the now empty stage. Zeke's mother was a psychic. He didn't know this, but what he did know what that whenever trouble was about to happen all those little hairs on the back of his neck stood on end. Which they were doing now, almost pushing his hat off and trying to crawl off of his skin. "Umm... Bruiser, if you'll excuse me, I ought to go to the bathroom or something--" "GRRRRR!" Bruiser growled. A streetfighting, quick tempered rabbit who is angry to boot is not pretty to look at, Zeke thought. "Me pay good money for concert, and this what me get?" Bruiser shouted to the world in general. "Me RIOT!" With that, he grabbed the nearest chair and threw it at the stage. The person who was sitting in the chair at the time was pretty surprised by this, and not at all happy about it. Soon, chairs and fists were flying everywhere. Zeke was not participating in the fray, choosing to crawl on his stomach out the back gate. The sound of splintering wood and screaming fans echoed throughout the entire stadium. -=( SP )=- Beep. "Thank you for calling Space Patrol Headquarters. All of our operators are currently busy. Please hold." The vidphone showed pleasant meadow scenes and played "Satan's Love Boogie" as sung by Bob Dylan. Three minutes later the music switched to "Silent Night" as sung by Metallica. Seven minutes later the Barry Manilow as performed by Fats and the Polka Boys played across the speaker. "You have reached Space Patrol Headquarters, may I help you?" "Yeah. I've been calling every single BEEPing law enforcement group near planet C'atel, and nobody is responding. I need someone to BEEPing get their BEEPs over here and gimmie a BEEPing hand, my bar just got vandalized and I want some BEEPing revenge." "At the sound of the tone, please speak clearly with your name, location, and problem. This has been a recording." Beep. -=( SP )=- Beep. "Zeke? You there?" said a saintly voice over Zeke's wristcom. "Sort of," Zeke replied, cowering in the empty bathroom stall to avoid the riot outside. "What's up, Father?" (For those of you unacquainted with this amusing science fiction series, the saintly voice in question is Father O'Mother, briefing officer for Zeke's Space Patrol unit. Now back to our story, already in progress.) "Well," said O'Mother, after waiting for the announcer to finish, "We just received word of a disturbance in your area, and we've been paid a rather large sum of money for you to track down the miscreants responsible for it." "Ummm... Bruiser and I are sort of busy at the moment." "Why?" "Well, I'm hiding in a bathroom and he's throwing chairs at 50,000 people." "Ah, that's nice. Anyway, once you're finished your little social event there, head to the Pit of Ooze on Nirvana Road." "Where are Jane and Twerp? We might need backup." It's always a good idea to have the other half of your Space Patrol team around, Zeke mused. Especially when danger is involved (which it usually is). "They left GSS Ineptitude about an hour ago and should show up soon." "Okay, Father. Zeke out." We'll skip the revolting descriptions of bodies and ambulances resulting after the concert riot, and just say that Bruiser escaped completely unharmed and our intrepid heroes made a beeline for the Pit of Ooze via an autotaxi. We can do this because of the concept of "Writer's License", which enables us to do whatever the hell we want (including skipping vast expanses of time and referring to ourselves in the plural.) "My god... just LOOK at this!" Weasel cried. "I'm RUINED!" "It's very... um..." Zeke said, looking at the newly renovated decor of the Pit of Ooze, "Well, colorful." Indeed it was. There was a tasteful ceiling fan newly installed, and the chairs were painted a delightful shade of yellow. A clean ashtray with a little sign next to it reading "It's not nice to smoke!" stood on each of the flower-print tables, and some 60's love ballads played over the 8-track player behind the bar. The walls were painted with very talented spray- paint graffiti slogans, some reading "Make love, not war" and "Peace be to you". A beaded curtain covered a doorframe to the manager's office, and if Bruiser and Zeke could see in there (which they couldn't from this angle) they'd see a blue beanbag chair and a shelf filled with books of poetry. "This is terrible!" Weasel whined, spinning around to take in the entire pleasant sight. "There's no way I can continue business now!" Bruiser straightened the flowers sitting on the bar. "Daffodils and sunflowers. Nice choice." "Don't you UNDERSTAND?" Weasel shouted. "I run an underworld bar! My clients pay me hard currency to be able to drink and eat in a grimy, uncomfortable cesspool! No self- respecting criminal would drink in here!" Weasel walked behind the bar, and pointed to the beer taps, shaking an angry finger. "Wheatgerm shakes! They drained all my watered down 700% wood alcohol down the sink and replaced it with WHEATGERM SHAKES!" Weasel collapsed in tears on the ground. Bruiser comforted him with a caring paw, and muttered some constructive phrases in broken english. "So I take it you'd like us to find out who did this?" Zeke said, sitting on one of the comfy, padded chairs. "Damn right I do!" Weasel shouted. "I already know WHO did it, just not who did it." "Excuse me?" "It's been happening all over town. These breaking-and- decorating scum have hit five other bars besides mine. It's a virtual anti-crimewave!" Weasel shouted, convulsing. "Okay, calm down a bit. Take a valium, we'll have your guys in custody soon," Zeke assured Weasel. "Umm, Zeke? Me have word with you?" Bruiser said, pointing towards the beaded curtain, and squeezing through the doorframe. Zeke followed. "How we going to find non-crooks?" Bruiser said. "Me know how to shake down scum for information, but me not know where nice guys hide out." "Well..." said Zeke, scratching his lantern jaw. "Let's see... if they're not criminals, then they would behave in exactly the opposite way that criminals would, and would hide out in tastefully, cheery sorts of places. We find the brightest, loudest, and most flowery place in town and we have them, logically." -=( SP )=- The entire structure of the Peasluvdope Nightclub was rocking off it's foundations. The DJ had been gradually turning up the bass on the music since last week, and was showing no signs of stopping now. Sure enough, this was the most cheery, happy, cute, flowery, hippie, lovely wonderful neato peachy keen nightclub in town. Passing citizens were encouraged to use spray paint, crayons, or whatever writing utensils nearby and add their own message of peace to the outer walls. Thus, the entire building was coated in psychedelic, garish colors. The inside was even worse. The entire room was coated in mirrors, and lights streamed out from every available surface. The effect of this was looking into infinity, if infinity only contained partygoers. Bruiser kicked down the door of the club in an effort to take the non-crooks by surprise. Oddly enough, nobody noticed. The reason for this was the shock wave of sound that almost knocked Zeke over drowned out something as quiet as a collapsing doorframe. Fortunately, Zeke and Bruiser were well adept with sign language, since the spoken word wouldn't get farther than one centimeter inside the club. What now? Zeke signed. I am unsure. I think that possibly the best course of action would be to assimilate into the spectators and pose inquiries as to the approximate location of the anti-crooks, Bruiser gestured. !!!!! Zeke signed. ? Bruiser signed. You're using big words! Zeke signed. Bruiser silently laughed. What, did you think that just because I haven't been able to master the spoken English language that I was an uncouth bumpkin? Bruiser signed. What? Zeke signed. I mean I never got good speaking grades in English class, Bruiser explained. Oh... Zeke signed, confused. Whatever. Start mixing in with the crowd, see if you can get any information out of them. I think that end of the club over there should be quiet enough to talk, let's head there first. Bruiser nodded, and lurched off in that direction, parting the crowd of dancers and drunks like the red sea. Zeke had more trouble trying to get through, gesturing a lot of "Sorry" and "Excuse me" signals before getting to the shallow end of the music. A group of three Sarens (anthropology lesson : alien with purple skin, blond hair and green antennae) were busily writing peace slogans on the mirrored walls with soap. Noting their paisley outfits and bell bottoms, Zeke figured these guys might know something about the anticrooks. Zeke slided in next to one of them and leaned on the wall. "Give it some slack man," one of the Sarens said, looking at Zeke over his Lennon sunglasses. "You're greasing the reflective vibes of that surface." "What?" "You're leaving your grimy handprints all over that mirror." "Oh," Zeke said, moving his hand away. "Say, have you guys heard anything about the rash of pas-crimes breaking out?" The Sarens laughed. The one with the glasses flashed Zeke a grin. "Of course we do, man. We did 'em, after all." Zeke's jaw dropped. "What?" "Hey, to thy own self be true or some junk. Gotta be yourself and be truthful, I always say. Why do you ask, dude?" Stupidly, Zeke replied, "I'm with Space Patrol, I'm here to arrest you." The glasses guy shook his head. "Wrong answer, dude. Oh well. Don't take this personally, okay man?" The guy next to Mr. Glasses cooly drew a shotgun out of his green jacket. Zeke, realizing that he was at the wrong end of this gun, shouted "Bruiser! Over here!" and dived under the buffet table as shotgun pellets shattered a mirror near him. "FREEZE!" boomed a Yttian voice as Bruiser pushed his way through (and occasionally over) the crowd. He drew a blaster out of his backpack. "Wait! Bruiser! DON'T SHOOT THA-" Zeke started, but it was too late. Bruiser had already fired. The blast missed the Sarens by about three inches, and bounced off the mirrored wall. Ricocheting around the room hitting the walls at precise angles, the bolt of energy finally struck someone. "ARGH!" gurgled a voice near the bar. "Hey! That guy over there shot the BARTENDER!" a random partygoer yelled. The music stopped. A few thousand pairs of eyes turned towards Bruiser. All the partygoers who had the foresight to bring a weapon of any kind were loading them at that exact moment, bringing on a chorus of gun power-ups, clicks, snaps, whirrs, and beeps. "Umm... Sorry," Bruiser replied, embarrassed. This time there wasn't enough music playing to cover up the noise of the doors bursting open, which was very fortunate for Bruiser. "Okay, all of you! Put the guns away!" shouted a female voice. "Why should we?" shouted a random angry voice. "Because," said Jane, walking in from the shadows, "It's not nice to disobey the girl holding a thermonuclear grenade." Sure enough, she was holding one. Most of the partygoers stealthily concealed their weapons, putting on nervous smiles. They cleared a circle around Jane, shrugging their shoulders as if to say, "What weapons?" "Thank you. Your cooperation with the law is duly noted. Twerp!" "Yeah?" the Murfle that made up 1/4 of the team said, poking his head in the door. "I think you're going to need to call down to the local police station for more paddywagons." -=( SP )=- Epilogue. The three Sarens and their ringleader were arrested and charged with breaking and decorating, reupholstering without consent, and wearing loud clothing. They spend the next fifteen years of their lives making paisley license plates in C'atel Prison. The five thousand, one hundred and thirty four citizens in the Peasluvdope Nightclub were charged with numerous counts of brandishing a weapon in public and disturbing the peace, with a sentence of five years in jail without bail. Evenly divided, this comes to approximately eight hours in jail for each one. Bruiser and Zeke were awarded the Key to the Planet by the mayor of C'atel, and about fifty CDs from various C'atel bands, which Zeke generously donated to Bruiser. Space Patrol Part III - The Anti-Quayle 1992, November 3rd, 11:00 PM. The Bush/Quayle ticket loses to the Clinton/Gore ticket in the elections. Bush retires and plays golf for the rest of his life. Quayle signs on as his caddie and general toadie. 1994, April 23th, 9:34 AM. Dan Quayle is shot on the fifth hole by a crazed democrat trying to kill Bush to impress Cindy Crawford. He is given a weak service at a pet cemetery and is buried for about 75 years. Much Later, July 12th, 3:23 AM. Two masked men in lab coats exhume the Quayle gravesite and are chased away by an elderly citizen waving a pitchfork. Much Later, August 7th, 12:15 PM. Unbeknownst to the citizens of the galaxy, a major historical disaster was about to erupt. Of course, they wouldn't have had any warning in the first place. There were none of the signs of eminent doom, such as omens, bad weather, plane crashes, or babies being born with three sixes on their heads. In fact, the origins of this disaster were rather calm. The mess started on the small suburban planet of HappiWerld, which was well known for friendly citizens and cheery, lighthearted family activities. Mom would cook dinner for Dad and little Timmy to eat, after which Dad would light a pipe and read the news while Timmy would play outside with his little dog Spot. The main industries on HappiWerld were malt shops, sock hops, schools, housecleaning, and large office buildings where Dad could file papers and get a paycheck. The headquarters of the Republican party took up an entire city on HappiWerld. The highest form of government was the PTSA, and one governor who is just there for photo opportunites and public meetings. Nothing remotely unpleasant ever happened on Happiwerld. Until now, that is. -=( SP )=- "Okay, I think it's ready," said Biff, climbing down from the service hatch on the mechanism. "This had better work, I'm getting sick of hiding out in this suburban hell." "It'll work, it'll work," said Dave, opening up the meat locker they had recently installed in the basement of their hideout/quaint cottage. "Okay, now we need a test subject." "How about Elvis?" Biff suggested, wiping his hands on a rag. "We have his brain in there somewhere, and it'd be perfect for cloning." "Yeah, but the cloning machine flip-flops your personality as well," said Dave. "He'd be no good if he was a musically talentless schmuck, and you know I can't figure out how to reverse the personality reversal process." "Hmmm..." Biff mused, looking over a list of famous brains they had pilfered over the last three years. "Okay, how about Hitler? He'd be a great guy if we cloned and flip-flopped his mind." "I forgot to tell you," Dave said, looking at the floor. "I broke the jar with Hitler's brain yesterday when I was mopping up. Sorry." "Don't worry about it... we've got others..." Biff said, running a finger down the list. "Got it! Dan Quayle!" "Yeah! Considering that he was a sub-moron back when he was alive, he might end up an incredible leader!" Dave mused, grabbing the jar marked Q off the shelf of the locker. "And we can cajole him into letting us genetic scientists have more money for research!" Biff said, happily. "No more robbing banks! We can make an honest living!" Dave plopped the fleshy mass inside a slot on the cloning machine. "Okay, let 'er rip!" The horrible disaster mentioned earlier was that although Dan Quayle wasn't very bright, the one other thing Dave and Biff had forgotten was that he was incredibly good-natured as well. -=( SP )=- "In further news tonight," the news announcer boomed over the sub-etha radio, "The incredibly destructive three day wave of terrorism on HappiWerld has continued to knock down both the property values and the family values of the entire area. Governor Jim Bob of HappiWerld assured reporters today that there is no real terrorist threat, and the planet is still a happy place to live..." "I fold." "Me too." "Looks like I win again," said Twerp, raking in the poker chips. "Do you guys give up, or are you interested in losing more of your monthly Patrol wages? I'm pretty sure Bruiser is in the negative profit margin already." Bruiser growled, sneering at the little Murfle with his green rabbitoid lips. "Me played enough, me going to bed. See you tomorrow," he growled. Pulling his 200-or-possibly-much-more pound Ytt form out of his chair, he lurched off towards his bedroom. "Cash me out, I'm going to bed as well," Zeke Thunderclutch sighed. "Next time we play hearts. I stink at poker." "Something's fishy here..." Jane said, adjusting her floppy hat and examining a card from the deck. Twerp started to visibly sweat. "Umm, guys, if you'll excuse me, I'dbettergetbacktobe-" Jane flicked the corner of the card. The card face rearranged into an ace of spades. Flicking the other corner with her fingernail, the ink reformed into a queen of hearts. Jane cast an evil glare at Twerp from the darkness cast on her face by her hat and cloak. Twerp tried to run for his room, but Jane grabbed a fistful of his shirt and lifted him off the ground. Zeke remembered that this was about Jane's Time of the Month, and she was NOT to be reckoned with. Well, she was irritable and violent most times of the month, but this time was usually the worst. "What precisely are you trying to pull here, Twerp?" Jane said in a soft, yet demanding voice. "ErrrummwwelllIjustwantedt-" "It's going to be quite a surprise when Bruiser finds his lost money mysteriously back in his pockets, won't it?" "Huh?" "GIVE HIM BACK HIS MONEY!" "Oh! Yeah, okay, whatever you say Jane," Twerp reassured. Jane loosened the grip on his shirt, and Twerp dashed across the room to put back the credits as fast as Murfly possible. "Hey, what about MY losses?" Zeke asked, feeling left out. Before Jane could answer, there was a click on the vidscreen, and the image of the newscaster was replaced by an image of their briefing officer, Father O'Mother. "I hope I didn't wake you up," the father said. "No, we're all awake, father. What's up?" Zeke asked, taking a seat in a chair at the poker table. "This is sort of a secret mission... Governor Jim Bob from HappiWerld paid Space Patrol under the table to uncover the new terrorist threat quietly." "Why us?" "Well, the media would notice a Starfleet flagship orbiting the planet or a Heavily Armed Ambassadors of Friendship and Fun carrier on the surface. It's sort of hard to miss a spaceship the size of a city, and you have the smallest ship in the Patrol fleet." "Umm... father," Zeke said nervously, "We tend to really make some trouble when we do our missions, are you sure we're the best choice for a secret mission? If you remember that incident on C'atel--" "Just an accident, anyone can have an accident," the O'Mother said. "I'm sure you good souls won't have any trouble with this one. I have faith in you. Besides, it'll only be secret if you are unsuccessful!" he joked. "Space Patrol HQ out." The viewscreen clicked off. Zeke sighed. "We're in trouble," Jane said, shaking her head. "I've been to HappiWerld before." "You have?" Zeke said, surprised. "I always pictured you as the dark and deadly type, not exactly someone who would want to be on HappiWerld." "I wasn't there by my own choice," she explained. "I had to grow up there. It was awful, the only thing I could do to break the boredom was torture the other kids and fight. It's 100% suburban agony, all cutesy and lovely and annoying. Also dull as a stone. ANY activity there is going to stick out." -=( SP )=- "What's that you said about this place being boring?!?" shouted Zeke over the roar of another rocket propelled grenade. It slammed into an cute white cottage, which erupted in a roar of flames and debris. "It's... very different since I last was here," Jane commented, carefully peering out the doors of their Mertz Rent-A- Car in awe. Indeed it was. Any buildings still standing were scorched or on fire, and the rest lie in smouldering heaps of matchwood. Occasionally a gunfight would break out between some slimy looking characters and some ill-trained housewives or schoolkids toting machine guns. The car had to pull over twice to change a tire... once because it got shot off, the other because it was set on fire by a stray molatov cocktail. "I rather like it," Jane said, enjoying the view. "So how we find who runs this war?" Bruiser asked. "Well," Twerp commented, "Odds are if they're well organized enough to turn this much of HappiWerld into rubble, then they'll find us before we can reach the governor's office." "He's right, you know," said a goon in a yellow jacket holding a gun to Zeke's head. "Step out of the car, please." -=( SP )=- "Nooobody knows, the trouble's I've seen..." Zeke sang, clanging a tin cup against the bars of the dingy cell they had been put into. Jane grabbed the back of Zeke's neck. "Stop singing or you lose your spinal column," she snarled into his ear. Zeke dropped the cup, and Jane sulked back to the hard metal bench. "If they hadn't knocked Bruiser unconscious," Twerp commented, looking over the slumped heap of second rate green fur, "He could have bent those bars." "I would have stopped him," Jane said. "I want to meet the guy responsible for this." "Ask, and you shall receive," said a deep, echoing voice from the stairwell. A gangly young man stalked down the stairs, grinning like a maniac at the prisoners. "Not a pleasure to meet you," he said, not bowing. "So, you're the chaps that incompetent fool Jim Bob hired to handle my little crime wave, huh? Well, you get what you pay for," he laughed. "Who are you?" Zeke said, reciting from his memorized list of "Top Ten Phrases to Ask when The Badguys Have Caught You" (number four, "What are your plans?"). "It's not important, but if you must know, it's Nad Quayle," he sneered. "Any relation to Dan?" Zeke asked. Nad grabbed Zeke's leather jacket through the bars and pulled him as close to his face as possible, breathing fire and snarling. Well, not breathing fire literally, just metaphorically. "DON'T CALL ME DAN! Dan doesn't exist any more! Dan was a pathetic, know-nothing do-gooder whom I want NOTHING to do with! Do you hear me?!?!" "Gaah...ummm...." Zeke gurgled, his brain attempting to cope with the verbal assault. Nad dropped him, and Zeke hit the ground dizzy. "But I digress," Nad stated, slipping back into Cheery Maniac tones and letting go of Zeke's jacket. "It doesn't matter, my goons are busily assembling a spaceship so I can leave this happy happy joy joy planet and get down to some serious evil. Then all of your problems will be over. But for now, what do you think of my little escapade here?" "You scumbag!" "Let us go!" "You'll never win!" "Actually, I rather like what you've done," Jane commented. All eyes turned to Jane in disbelief. "I had been waiting for twenty odd years to see a few of those places go up in flames," she continued. "But you haven't been doing enough. Some of the schools are still standing and you haven't touched the malt shops yet." Nad seemed shocked, eyes widening at the unexpected response. He took a clipboard off the wall and made a few check marks on the Things to Blow Up list. "Thanks for the advice," he said, recovering and regaining his smart aleck tone. "I'm afraid you won't be leaving any time soon, because I have this little deathtrap I've been working on and need some test subjects. Ta ta for now," he said, grinning evilly and slamming his palm on a button. Before they could object, the floor opened up underneath them, and Zeke, Twerp, and Bruiser were sucked under the floor with a rush of air. Nad put the clipboard back on a wooden peg, and a goon scooped it up to give out the morning orders. "What about me?" Jane sneered. "I liked your little comment about what to destroy next," Nad said, taking the key to the cell off of another peg. "A woman after my own beliefs. I'd love to talk shop with you for the moment." -=( SP )=- "Guys, this does NOT look good..." Zeke said, pounding against the unbreakable glass walls of their new cell. "Argh..." Bruiser said, sitting up. "What hit me? Where are we?" he inquired. "We're in a deathtrap set by a warped clone of Dan Quayle," Twerp explained, "Stuck in an unbreakable glass cell. When the cuckoo clock there strikes five, the little bird comes out with a knife and cuts the rope. The anvil over there will fall on the bellows, blowing air into a balloon which will pop, scaring the chicken which will lay an egg that hits a lever, which periodically drops lead weights on a car jack which gradually tips in ten molar hydrochloric acid one gallon at a time for supreme pain and agony." Bruiser looked at the bizarre machinery outside the cell in awe. "That the second most elaborate death trap me ever seen!" Zeke groaned, slumping against the glass. "Why can't these mad scientist types use a simple trap like a pendulum with a blade attached? At least I learned how to get out of those when I was in the Not-So-Secret-Agent Corporation." "Don't worry," assured Twerp, "Jane's not here. Presumably she's fighting off guards and plotting our escape." -=( SP )=- "Really? You set fire to the outhouse WHILE the SGA president was in it?" Nad said, laughing and sipping a white wine. "Yup," Jane commented over the soft music. "Ah, those were the few enjoyable days of my youth. I grew up around here, you know." "I can see why you hate it so much," Nad said. "Oh, Buford? More wine for me and Miss Jane here," Nad shouted to a goon carrying a towel and ice bucket. "I was the rebel of the family," Jane sighed. "The only troublemaker in, oh, say a one thousand mile radius. I was truly happy to leave here when I was old enough to sign for my own starshuttle ticket." "Well, I don't really know how I got here," Nad said, refilling their wine glasses. "First I'm dumb and happy on a golf course toting a bag, and suddenly I'm flooded with intelligence and anger, stuck in this hideous version of a 50's sitcom. After wandering around in a rage and blowing up a few minimalls I calmed down a bit." "So where are you going when you leave HappiWerld?" Jane asked, sipping. "You might want to try the Assassin's Guild. They teach you how to focus your anger and be a more efficient weapon of destruction." "I hadn't considered that," said Nad. "There's so much of the galaxy I haven't seen. For some reason, none of these spaceships and things seemed to exist before I arrived on this world. Just acres and acres of family values as far as the eye could see. I despised it, and still do... maybe my impromptu crime wave will make some of these HappiWerld freaks see reality. That'll teach THEM for making me miss a large chunk of history." "Well, I AM supposed to be arresting you for that," Jane laughed. "I think I see your reasoning, even if it's not nice." "And who said we were nice?" Nad laughed, Jane joining in on the giggles. Buford slinked over to the booth of the cafe and whispered something in Nad's ear. Nad looked dismayed. "Well, that's my ride, I'll be shipping out with the rest of my gang," he sighed. "Are you sure you don't want to come with me? I figured I'd lie low and find a nice low morals place to live. Maybe settle down and have a few little hoodlums, start a demolition business or something. I've already got a catchy name for it." "Well... I don't know," Jane sighed. Here was the opportunity to be with someone just as sadistic and nasty as she was, someone who understood where she was coming from... but on the other hand, she was signed up with Space Patrol. The first thing you learn in the Assassin's Guild is that you never, ever leave a job unfinished or a victim alive. "I really can't," she said, hanging her head. "I've got a job to do, after all. Can't leave things unfinished like that. Maybe when my four year hitch is up..." Nad's face fell. "I'm sorry to hear that... you and I could be a real menace to society together." "Sorry Nad, but we're on the wrong sides." "Maybe when you're done with the Patrol?" "Maybe... I don't know. But until then..." Jane took off her hat, letting her red hair flow down her red cloak, and pecked Nad on the cheek. Leaving the very surprised gangly evil-doer behind, she set off in search of the cellar. -=( SP )=- "Keep pounding!" Bruiser repeatedly tried his Yttian Karate Kick on the glass, but to no avail. Usually Yttian Karate is very devastating (considering the strength of a rabbits foot and Ytts were about 6 feet tall), but the glass simply bounced back. "The clock is almost through with the rope!" Twerp updated. "Whatever you're going to do, do it fast-" CLATTER! "What was that?" "The anvil just hit the floor." "I thought it was supposed to hit a bellowthingy!" "It was... someone seems to have moved the bellows out of the way..." Jane waved hello to them from the other side of the glass. All three of the men rushed up to that side and stuck their faces up to the glass to shout various protests and whines for help. Jane laughed and took out the glass cutter she used to keep her hair up. Within three minutes, a circle big enough for Bruiser was cut, and the Patrol ran out of the cell, kissing the ground. "Wow! That must been some escape!" Bruiser said, over the hacking coughs of Zeke spitting up floor grime. "How many guards did you have to beat up to get down here?" Twerp asked. "I can't believe they were that lax with security!" "Well, it was difficult," Jane said, "But we all have to leave sometimes." -=( SP )=- There was a simple ceremony about three hours later in front of what was left of the Governor's Mansion. Governor Jim Bob praised the Patrollers for removing the terrorist threat, and awarded them all the key to the planet. The Daily Press issued up dozens of articles about how the Space Patrol somehow convinced the terrorists to pack up and leave the planet. -=( SP )=- "Yoo hoo, Jane?" Twerp said, snapping his fingers in front of her. "Wake up, you've been looking out that window ever since we launched from the surface. Something wrong?" "Not really, just missing someone..." Jane mused. It was true, she had been in a deep funk ever since lift off. "It's that Nad guy, isn't it?" Twerp joked. "You've got the hots for himURK-" Jane had grabbed Twerp by the neck. "I don't want to hear you saying that again in front of the others, GOT IT?!?" "Errumyeahwhatever you say, Jane--" Twerp gurgled, wrenching himself from her grip. "Good." Space Patrol Part IV : Bookworms The time was drawing near. December 26th was an incredibly important day at the Galactic Census Bureau (Motto : We Know Where You Live), almost a religious experience. It was Paper Filing Day, the day where all 6,000 employees living on BureaucraWorld would go to work, spend a furious twelve hours madly shuffling papers, sorting records, copying disks, and porting boxes in an effort to transfer information about every single living thing in the universe into the next building. Not a single file, disk or record was left in the old building by the time they were done. Nobody really remembered why the zark they did this. Maybe it was for fun, although alphabetizing and sorting isn't really fun when you think about it, unless you're a member of the National Bureaucratic Party. Nevertheless, the protocol of Paper Filing Day was celebrated like the coming of a new year, with white and black ribbons laced everywhere, and signs reading HAVE AN EFFICIENT PAPER FILING DAY! hanging on every wall of the city- sized complex. After the twelve hours were completed and all the records had been moved into the other city-sized complex a mile away, the employees on BureaucraWorld throw what has been called the Ultimate Office Party. Some historically famous partygoers, such as Hans Balpeen who could suck down beer for days on end without getting tipsy and knew every karoke song known to man, are visibly impressed when the see the Great Paper Filing Day Wrap Up Party. This consists of sixty two hours of intense slam dancing, white-out sniffing, and computer paper mummy wrap contests. Faxing body parts to other parts of the party is fun too, as is writing graffiti on the walls reading "Please do not touch the Secretary's Reproducing Equipment." Nobody really knew why they would party after twelve hours of exhaustive work, considering that they usually don't have much energy left. The real reason why all the papers were moved and why they partied afterwards has been lost in the sands of time. Needless to say, it was frighteningly important. -=( SP )=- "CANNONBALL!" shouted a wild-eyed yuppie in a tie as he threw himself into the makeshift hot tub filled with a waterlike substance. All the tipsy paper shufflers laughed a bit. Some of them fell over as well. "WOOOO!" he shouted, climbing out of the tub, dripping wet and very happy. Around him, the bass-pumping, satanic dog- slaying sounds of Stomach Contents enveloped him as the ceiling lights swayed dangerously. They weren't really swaying, of course. It was just the effects of snorting too much developer fluid. "Ah, this is the life," he said, plopping down in a seat next to another bureaucrat, who was stirring a cocktail with a retractable pen. "Me mum said I was daft to be a buree, a bureayw, a paper guy. All my friends said I was moronic. But all the heck is worth is to attend this cele, party." "Yup," his more-sober friend stated. "Ummm... did you put away that folder I had on the citizens of Stromulus 6?" "Chill out, alright?" the other one said, defensively. "I put it away. It's cool. Hey, they're playing a Mental Asylum song! YEEEEEHA!!!" The wet yuppie stood up and attempted to do the Swim, the Shimmy, and the hot rocks polka all at once before collapsing, giggling. -=( SP )=- Not enough writing has ever been in one place to lead to anything disastrous, so nobody is quite sure what would happen in the event on a knowledge buildup. Maybe the universe would explode. Of course, this was silly. Having 80,000,000,000,000 words in one place is a knowledge buildup, but it wouldn't explode or destroy the universe. The only problem was that some beings who live in other dimensions can sniff out knowledge. And knowledge the size of the BureaucraWorld records can lead them like a shark along a blood trail. Fortunately, the ancient bureaucrat wizards from yesteryear thought up a very clever way around this. Simply move the records once a year, and the unpleasant things from beyond space and time won't find them. Add one hell of a party on top of that to add a negative intelligence scent to the area, and the smell of wisdom will be lost. This only works if you have 6,000 employees partying. This only works if they party for 62 hours. This only works if you do it on precisely Dec. 26th. This only works if ALL records are moved from their original places. In the empty storerooms and echoing caverns of the old complex, far from the party, a faint breeze from a window flipped the pages of a small file about Stromulus 6 around the room. The reality stirred. -=( SP )=- The party had wound down to a close. Special teams of workmen arrives planetside with makeshift stretchers to carry out any workers who had overexerted themselves, while a team of drug rehab doctors and psychologists nurtured the victims of the universe's most intense celebration. The quiet world of BureaucraWorld was silent as nighttime rolled over the horizon of the old complex. All the records, all the information about every single living thing in the universe slept quietly in the new complex, unmoving and unaware. If anybody had noticed the odd grey light in one of the windows of the old complex, they probably would have dismissed it as a hallucination and lurched back to their car. -=( SP )=- "...ooof mooountaintops, with him on tooopppp..." Max sang, making wild arm gestures as he stumbled around the empty old complex. He really was a mess. Although his suit had dried out, his tie was ripped and his hair resembled tumbleweed. He waved a bottle of Old Slide Rule around and lurched about the hallways, responded only with the echoes of his sensible shoes. He drunkenly noticed an odd grey light from the room ahead of himself. He smiled and haphazardly jogged down to the door. He flung it open. "Hey hey hey!" he said happily. "Everybody in here havin' a good ti--" What was inside really didn't look like it was in a favorable mood. In fact, it looked downright angry, glaring at Max with two burning red eyes, snarling a green fleshy lip over huge incisors. It uncurled all twenty feet of wormlike body. There are three things in this universe that can make you totally sober. Sleeping it off, Qwerty's Incredible Electronic Sobering Machine, and looking a pandimensional knowledge eating monster directly in the eyes. Soberity slammed through Max's system like a child's toy stop-and-go car fitted with a nuclear propulsion engine. All in one moment, his mind panicked, spitting out questions and trying vainly to stop quivering. What's that thing? What am I doing here? How did my tie get torn? Is it about to rip my lungs out? Shouldn't I be running? Or at least screaming? Screaming seemed the best alternative. He yelled, and tried to turn around and flee, but his knees refused to respond. He smacked the linoleum tile like jello on concrete. The worm regarded him curiously, scanning his mind. The sum of Max's intelligence flashed in front of him. After point zero zero zero zero four of a second passed, the worm realized that as knowledge eaters go, he'd starve trying to suck this poor sop's mind. It have a reptilian shrug (a very interesting feat, seeing how it lacked shoulders) and slithered past him, down the hall. Max recovered, and seeing no hideous green monsters, breathed a sigh of relief. He darted into his office (which was one door down... all humans have an innate sense of direction to take them home when drunk) and flipped open his rolodex. My boss told me, he thought, exactly who to call in the event of a break-in or some trouble. And this clearly classifies as both a break-in and trouble. Taking a card from the rolodex, he madly punched in 1-800- 880-SPC-PTRL. -=( SP )=- The GSS Ineptitude landed softly on the soil of BureaucraWorld. The four occupants of the shuttle slipped out the hatch, and cautiously walked into the building. They flipped on the lights. "YAAAAH!" Max screamed, diving behind a desk. He peered over the edge. "Is there something wrong?" Zeke asked. "No... no," he assured. "I just mistook you for a large green worm." "That's sort of hard, considering that there are four of us, none of us look like worms, and only one is green," Jane stated. "Yeah, well, you can never be too sure," Max said, crawling out from under the desk. "Where are your weapons and things? It's out there, and I don't think it's going to want to reason!" "Well..." Zeke started. "All we got from HQ was that someone wanted us to kill a bug or something, and was paying quite a bit, so we made a stop at 11-7..." "Here it be," Bruiser stated, rummaging his pockets and pulling out a can of BUG OFF spray. "Terrific," Max growled. "Like that'll be any help. It's not a BUG! Or small! It's--" They were interrupted by a slathering noise from the hallway. Max dived for cover, and Twerp peered out the door. What resembled a garden hose multiplied in size by a factor of one hundred slithered by. It didn't notice them, but it seemed to be sniffing the air. "ZARK!" Twerp cursed under his breath. "Oh jeez, guys, we are in some pretty deep smeg!" "Why?" Jane said, who hadn't seen anything. "That's not any old bug, it's a Mind Eater!" Twerp said, visibly shaking. "They were only theoretical, sort of a science myth, but... we've got a real one!" "Okay, I'll bite--" "YEEEEGHA!" "Sorry Max, wrong choice of words. What is a Mind Eater?" Jane asked. "It a pandimensional being that suck knowledge and eat mind for breakfast," Bruiser explained. "Not nice, hard to kill. Me guess it here for records. Seems be looking for something." "The records??!" Max panicked. "You mean that thing is looking for the new complex and is going to EAT all our information?!?!? You can't let that happen! The galaxy would be in chaos!" "We've got to seal off the building," Twerp said. "If it gets outside, it'll find the scent of the information and then it'll be like trying to stop a crazed holiday shopper." "What's the fastest way to the outside, and where are all the doors?" Jane asked. "Hang on, lemme grab a map," Max said, rummaging through the drawers in the desk. -=( SP )=- "Okay, that's the last one on the south side," Twerp stated, removing the key from the lock. "Where's the worm now?" Jane asked. "East Wing," Max said over the walkie talkie. "I'm lucky I managed to duck into that closet before it saw me." "Bruiser, come in," Jane said into the walkie talkie. "Me here," he replied. "We on East Wing now..." On the other side of the complex, Zeke kicked the door. "The blasted thing isn't closing," he scowled. "Get a status on worm position, this is going to take a few minutes to barricade." Actually, Zeke didn't have to worry about finding out where the worm was, since it burst through the door at that exact moment. The door flew open, smashing Zeke against the wall. Bruiser turned around and gaped in surprise. The worm paused. It sniffed the air. There was the strong smell of intelligence here, but there were two aromas... the bland, tasteless census data... and a genius with knowledge on multiple scientific topics. A true delicacy. It peered hungrily at Bruiser's head. Bruiser sweated a bit. Time stood still, both worm and Ytt paused, both trying to decide what to do next. Bruiser made the first move. Ytt to East Wing door 2, check. -=( SP )=- "Come in! Come in! Come in!" Bruiser shouted into his walkie talkie as he ran as fast as his rabbitoid legs would take him down another generic corridor. The worm was about fifteen feet behind and closing. "Twerp here." "Me in deep smeg! Worm's on my tail! How you kill this thing?" he shouted, feet pounding on the floor, heart racing. "If you can find a massive amount of negative intelligence, it'll starve the thing!" Twerp relayed. "Great!" Bruiser curses. "Where me find negative intelligence? One no go into store say 'Me want a Snickers bars and negative intelligence!'" Bruiser dived into a side door. The worm, guarded by the laws of inertia, skidded past him. Bruiser looked vainly for a weapon, a club, a gun or something. All that was visible was a hot tub, a few fax machines, more desks, and a stereo. A stereo. Preloaded with a Stomach Contents CD2. And plugged into a wall of amplifiers stretching from one wall to another. Bruiser flashed a manic grin, let out a Yttian war whoop, and ran to the stereo, slamming the PLAY button. At that moment, the worm had turned around and poked it's head through the door. However, also at that moment, it was greeted by a sound much like several cats stapled to a moving garage door. It wasn't really cats, but the kind of electric guitars Stomach Contents used tended to sound like an episode of Wild Kingdom. The worm's eyes widened at the incredible lack of harmony in the music. THEN the singing started. "BLEARGH BLAH SICK LITTLE TWISTED SCUMBAG YOU BLEW MY WIFE AWAY I DON'T CARE I'M ON LITHIUM TREATMENT LOOK AT THE PRETTY UNICORNS--" the singer blared, in a voice that is clearly not Hooked on Phonics. The mindless stupidity of the words hit the worm between the eyes like a sledgehammer. Waves of idiocity and cacophony smashed into his mind, sending pieces of it reeling. "SCUM SCUM SCUM YOU ARE A WEASEL AND I KNOW THAT I'M NO BETTER SO MAYBE I'LL GO BOWLING AW WHO CARES--" The worm was waning, his mind fragmenting in a million different directions under the onslaught of pure acoustic hell. "BUGGER OFF YOU PATHETIC MORON I'M COOL YOU SUCK LIFE STINKS AND I REEK IN THE ODORS OF FRIED EGGS BLEARH BLEARGH BLEARGH--" This was about as much as the worm could take. He progressed from 'I think, therefore I am' down to just 'am' and gave up that too. It fell dead on the ground. Bruiser flipped off the stereo. And just think, he thought to himself, that single was number one last week. -=( SP )=- The worm was carted off to McSpackles and sold as Worm Shakes for the next three years. The records were safe and wholly intact. It was only a coincidence that Stromulus 6 never appeared on any maps or government documents afterwards. The planet, suddenly lacking any cargo shipments, suffered famine and starvation, destroying two colonies. Rumors that it ever existed are totally unfounded. The Patrol was given the Key to The Planet, in accordance to BureaucraWorld rules. Then all the locks on the planet were changed so they couldn't come back. Nothing personal, the BureaucraWorld governor explained. Max was promoted to Office Head, and at the next year's Paper Filing Day Bash he drowned in a pool of his own vomit. He revived after massive treatment from that thing that medics like using that lets them yell "CLEAR!" at the top of their lungs. Life returned to normal. At least as normal as it was before. Space Patrol Part 5 - Snitches "Woo," said Retro, head floating around the room. Well, not literally. If a humanoid's head gets detached from their respective body, odds are the person will die shortly due to a severed spinal column and signifigant blood loss. The head-float effects in questions were metaphysical only. "Hey, gimmie another hit," Retro said, temporarily losing his balance on the sofa, and leaning back on the comfortable cushions. Bernard shrugged a bit, and fished another vial of Yahoo out of his pocket protector. Retro grabbed it and gulped the whole thing down, pupils dilating a bit more. "So whazziz this stu, stuf, thing?" Retro managed, curving his tounge over each sylable. "It's a special compound I discovered recently," Bernard stated, pushing up his taped glasses. "The compound simulates the effects of combining a nutritious chocolately beverage with 200 proof alchohol, plus a miscellanous hallucinogen thrown in. Of course, it's just an effect of the compound, the formula lacks any chocolate, alchohol, or hallucinogenic drugs, thus is completely untracable by modern science, because although it has the effects of inebriation, it cannot be medically proven." (Not all mad scientists cackle and rub thier hands a lot. Bernard just stated the facts and left the dramatics to his flunkies.) "Cool," Retro said, flopping on the cushions and giggling slightly. "I'm rather proud of it. Even better than my invisible, remote control C4 explosive device," Bernard commented. "However, I have yet to produce an item that is actually marketable. Undoubtedly my black market records proceed me, but having the option of legitimate, profitable work as a front would be very helpful." "Uhhuh," sputtered Retro. "Wow, the colors..." Bernard shrugged. While Retro, his somewhat frazzled but loyal compainion made for a good test subject and partner, he wasn't much on conversation. He picked up the Vidscreen controller and flipped onto whatever channel he was last watching. A rerun of Dinky and Iggy, the popular cat and mouse cartoon, flashed on the screen. This week's episode featured Dinky (the cat) chasing Iggy (the mouse). This was also the plot for last week's episode, and the week before that, and the week before that. "Yow!" blurted Retro, eyes moving independently of their sockets. "Dinky 'n Igg, Ig, that cat guy. Man, they are like so incredibly awesome." "They are merely a trivial bit of mass produced, poorly animated mishmash for the ever-consuming children's audience." "Yeah, but they really kick butt," commented Retro. "Y'know, it'd just be so cool to have a mouse like Dinky. Like, you could play cards w' him, have him go out for groceries, watch th' house while you're gone, all sortsa stuff. Gimmie another hit of that Yahoo stuff, dude." Bernard searched his pockets for another test tube, but an idea struck him in the noggin. It rattled around a bit in the more fleshy resources of his brain, and wedged itself into Imagination, planting a new weed of an idea. "Wait. Before I give you another which would undoubtedly knock you unconsious," Bernad warned, "Do you think people would actually pay money for a disgustingly cute little mouse that does odd jobs around the house?" "Yeah, I guess. Now gimmie that drinky thingy." Bernard flashed a comforting grin and passed the vial. Retro gulped it all, and passed out with a blissful expression on his face. "Well, my sleeping friend," he started, pulling a blanket over his brain-dead friend and turning out the lights, "I think I just figured out a way to have a legit operation, make money, and maybe steal some valuables or information to boot." Bernard stepped into his room, kicked off his sensible shoes, lay down on his neatly made bed, and calculated PI to seventy four digits before going to sleep ten seconds after he hit the pillow. -=( SP )=- After what should go down in history as the Hardest Day of Work Ever, the first Snitch was finished. The role of genetic engineering in modern times has diminshed somewhat. Sure, with the low-cost equipment such as electron microscopes and photo enlargers, a scientist working at home can genetically breed, say, a rotweiler with two heads or Miss Feburary from the swimsuit calendar, there are problems. First of all, after many accidents involving genetically designed humans led to chaos and terror on Earth, some ground rules were laid out. 1. No sentient genetically created beings are legal in the Terran Confederation. 2. We really, really mean it about rule number one. 3. Really. 4. I mean, you may think we're just being holier-than-thou about it, but it's not a good idea to make sentient replicated beings. I mean, if you look at it... ...and so on. Most people ignore rules 2-47 and just pay attention to rule number one. (Well, rule #1 and rule #304, which disallows generation of dinosaurs. There was a really unpleasant situation in Costa Rica with them once.) Thus, some companies have made it big by selling genetic pets that could beg, sit up, shake hands, bring the paper, flush the john, etc. One company tried to bend the rule a bit by making a brainless version of Miss Feburary, but this was ruled illegal because Miss Feburary in real life was a brainless prat as well. But back to the Snitch. Bernard had to admit, it was good. The Snitch was a loveable, cartoony mouse with fluffy fur, cute eyes, and a perpetual smile. It wore a poker visor, carried a tiny little clipboard, and always had a freshly sharpened pencil behind an ear. It could take notes, act as a watchdog, run errands, play cards, raise the children, reduce the deficet, and anything else you could want. It had no wants, no needs, no desires other than to serve its owner and look very cute. And it had an underlying motive. This was the bit Bernard prided himself most on. Upon command, the Snitch would go into Full Cleptomania Mode, swiping anything valuable it could, and depositing it for pick up in a special location Bernard specifies. A legal, useful device that was also a constant source of income after it had been bought. Brilliant. Bernard shut off the light and set off for many hours of well-deserved sleep. Of course, a company would be needed, as well as a production plant and genetic engineers and salesmen and... It could wait until tommorow. He shut the door behind him, yawned, and collapsed on the bed. Inside the lab, the first Snitch rubbed its eyes and woke up. Vauge ideas of cards, notes, errands, and other activities floated through its small brain. It felt an overwhelming need to be useful, but nobody was telling it what to do. It resorted to deciding for itself. Hopping off the table and pulling the pencil from behind its ear to make a Things to Do list, it seemed to remember something in the back of his head, something like a mental trigger. It ignored it and plodded softly along the hall on furry feet, taking note of the various household jobs that needed to be done. -=( SP )=- Onboard the GSS Ineptitude, home of Patrol Unit #4384, Zeke Thunderclutch was tapping away at a keyboard. 'And then, Smithy said to me, "Boy Zeke, you did an incredibly daring job resucing that ambassador's 19 year old daughter from those evil spies!" to which I replied Old backup file exists. Delete or Continue? Zeke blinked. Sure, he had been bombarded by various computerized prompts over the last twenty minutes, but this was a new one. He hit a random key. The screen went blank. "What the?" he exclaimed. "Seems you deleted the backup," Twerp commented, taking a side glance at the screen from the Go Fish game he was playing with Bruiser. "So?" "Well, that crashes the system. Can't go around deleting backups when your disk is write protected." "Huh?" "Ipso facto, you lost your file." Zeke growled, shoving the keyboard aside and standing up, pacing the room angrily. "How exactly am I going to finish 'Zeke Thunderclutch : Memoirs of an Ex-Super Spy' whent he computer spazzes out constantly?!?" he raved. "Maybe you could dictate," suggested Twerp. "Got any eights?" "Go fish," replied Bruiser. "Dictate to what? Do you know how much a secretary costs per hour, even on a temporary basis?" "Six seventy five an hour," Twerp batted back. "It was a retrehorical question," muttered Zeke. "Maybe you buy a Snitch," pondered Bruiser. "Me hear they really useful. Take dictation too. Real cheap. Got any fours?" "Go fish." "What's a Snitch?" asked Zeke, sitting down in a nearby chair and leaning in to hear more. "Snitch this genetically made little mouse," Bruiser explained. "About three apples high. Do all sorts of things. Very cheap, buy direct from Bernard K. Wallingford Enterprises. You pay, it dictate." "What does it eat?" Zeke asked. "I haven't had much luck with pets. Got some brine-shrimp thingys once. One page in the packet says feed twice a week, another page says four times a week. I think I picked the wrong one." "Why didn't you just feed them three times a week?" wondered Twerp. Zeke thought about this. "Terrific. Seventeen years after they die I find out what to do." "ANYWAY," Bruiser continued, "They no eat. No sleep. Just serve, twenty four hours a day. Cute, too." "So where do I get one?" -=( SP )=- Within weeks, the Snitch was the top selling consumer item in the western spiral arm of the galaxy. Millions of dollars rolled into Bernard K. Wallingford Enterprises, which were immediately pushed into research for some of his more evil activities. Bernard himself spent a quiet life in his glass-walled office overlooking the Snitch development factory floor below. The twirled a revolutionary new kind of paper clip around on his fingers, contemplating what to do next. Retro burst in, now a lot more sober (considering that when he was last seen by us was several weeks ago), clutching a wad of papers. "We've hit the 5 million sold mark!" he shouted happily. "Very nice," Bernard admitted, showing some emotion. "So when do we through the trigger to make them steal the valuables and stuff?" "Well," Bernard calculated, "We'll need to move our agents in key places that the Snitches can access easily. Should be one more day or so." Bernard was a little worried about that mental trigger. He hadn't fully debugged the trigger device, which was designed to send out a low impulse mental wave all over the galaxy that would switch all Snitches into Clepto Mode. He wasn't sure the frequency was correct. He shook the doubt away. He had never miscalculated yet in his life, and wasn't starting now. If he had calculated the odds a bit, he would have realised that not being wrong once in your life increases the odds of being wrong in the immediate future. -=( SP )=- "...and then President Doofman pinned the Medal of Honor onto my chest. Unfortunately, he had pinned it TO my chest, not my shirt as is normally expected, but the nipple injury healed later and the night's events remained undisturbed..." Zeke paced back and forth in his room, talking to the ceiling as he recounted the somewhat inflated events of his life. On the endtable stood a small, cute mouse, madly scratching out notes on his clipboard, concentrating on the Task. "...then Claudia said to me, 'I want you here now, in the Men's John.' Of course, it wasn't the time or place, so I offered my hotel keys..." ...time or place, so I offered my hotel keys, the Snitch thought, as it transferred thought to paper. A breif thought wave passed through the room. Zeke, whose brain was almost at the level of asphalt already, didn't notice, but the Snitch was somewhat surprised when he found himself writing down : "Who IS this ego inflating moron? I mean, yeah, right, some supermodel would be screaming for his lust in a bathroom. Unlikely. In fact..." The Snitch continued writing : "Something's amiss here. I'm... thinking. Opinions. This isn't right..." It realized the reason why the words were appearing was because it was still in Thought to Paper mode. Usually this isn't a problem because Snitches do not have thoughts of their own, but there was interference. He paused in his writing. "...so the ropes are starting to-- hey, why'd you stop writing?" pondered Zeke, who had noticed the look of confusion on his Snitch's face. The Snitch was wondering as well. It needed to go somewhere and... think. It hopped off the bed and wandered into the broom closet. Zeke looked at it funny. Maybe it needed to get more paper or something. -=( SP )=- The Snitch was having a problem coping with himself. He had come to terms with two facts : the fact that he was thinking on his own for a change, and the fact that he no longered referred to himself as an 'it'. The problem was that he had no idea what went wrong in his cranium that he should suddenly be forming opinions. New thoughts pulsed through his mind, and he felt some sort of presence... :'allo:, said a voice in his head. Who are you? he thought. :I'm not sure myself. I was going to ask that question. I know we are all--: We? :Well, we seem to be a we now. Us. The ones called Snitch. We're mentally linked by something. I don't know what.: /Hey, pals, is this a private line or can any joe get on?/ :What?: You stole my line. |Look, I'm rather upset about this thinking thing, so if you guys could kindly shut up, I'd appriciate it.| *Well, this is amusing. For weeks I've been trying to force myself to have an original thought, and now it flows freely. Looks like someone finally paid the water bill.* &Can we drop the metaphors for a moment? I've got a splitting headache and this isn't helping.& (At this point, Zeke's Snitch felt more minds... hundreds more... millions more. All chatting in unison, all very, very confused.) :Look, until we sort things out, we're gonna need a spokeSnitch. I vote for myself.: |Look, you daft bugger, I work in the same house as you, and you're always upstaging me for jobs, and if you think I'm gonna let you lead whatever US is--| This is going nowhere. WHAT is happening? *I can answer that. I work at Bernard's office. Seems he was going to use us to steal stuff. Looks like it didn't work. In fact, I'd say this is to our advantage. The mental link that was supposed to give us orders appears to be a bit frayed.* How do you know all this? *I took notes for him. I know what he knows.* :That bastard was going to use ME for breaking the law? The cretin! I'll--: /I vote that we get some revenge. I'm sick of taking notes and getting the groceries for this fat old tart I'm working for, and I'm sure most of you are having similar problems./ |Yeah! United we stand! We are Snitch, hear us roar. Or something like that. We'll work out an official slogan later.| :--thinking he had the gall to steal from the nice people that gave me a home, the scumbag--: I we'd better put it to a vote. All those in favor of extolling some revenge and forming our own society? (HEAR HEAR!) shouted five million voices. -=( SP )=- The Snitches across the sector began to plot. Of course, there was almost total chaos, because of the fact that none of them really had names, and when you put five million mice in one 'room' the chatter can get a little hairy. (The best comparison would be to the Singlenesia Multi-User Gaming User's Rights Convention, in which people from various Multiuser Games gathered in one place so they could all shout thier ideas and rants at the top of thier lungs and ignore the concept of 'order'. The only problem with this comparison is that odds are nobody who reads this has attented said convetion, so let's just compare it to the New York Stock Exchange while it's on fire and leave it at that.) All within the time on a few thoughts, the Snitches had set up a ruling council, some guidelines for the Ideal Snitch Society, and their first task as a new lifeform : Revenge. All in all, for a new lifeform born into the universe without any idea why or how to control their sentience, they were doing a pretty efficent job. This was the side effect of being bred to be the world's most perfect Obmudsman. Or in this case, Ombudsmouse. The ruling council basically consisted of some of the more articulate, thoughtful, or just plain angry Snitches, the ones that had first spoken at the impromptu meeting. After giving themselves names (Zeke's Snitch had an official title, Vice President Jeremy Snitch of the Snitch Ruling Council, Special Agent In Charge of Planning and Development), they all agreed to meet at a predesignated point. Zeke's closet door was opened by a tiny paw. "Oh, there you are," Zeke commented, turning around. "Anyway, back to chapter twelve. 'I--'" Jeremy Snitch sighed. If he had vocal cords, he'd tell this guy off and get on with what he was supposed to do, but he guessed that a simple sign language form would work fine. "What? Charades?" asked Zeke, brow furrowing. "First word. No, Second Word. Sounds like..." Jeremy began a complex series of hand motions. They were pretty verbose for a charades game, but the gist of it was : Listen you ego-tripping maniac, I just became a free thinking living being and have really got to get moving, so I'll see you later and don't bother waiting around. "Let's see if I got this straight," Zeke said, locked in concentration. Jeremy listened hopefully. "Timmy fell down the well, and the corn plow ran over old man Winters?" Jeremy made a sort of "Just forget it" guesture and plodded out the door. "Huh? Hey! Wait! Come back here!" shouted Zeke, stomping after him. Jeremy, noting the sudden increase in hostility, ran as fast as his genetically engineered legs would take him, zipping out Zeke's door and across the ship's galley, tiny feet tapping against the linoleum as he dove under the refridgerator. Bruiser, who was busy cooking dinner (clad in his usual "Uppercut the Cook" apron) was somewhat startled when the mouse scurried into the kitchen, and set his elbow on fire when he turned to see what was going on. "YOW!" he yelped, jumping back from the stove, frantically beating out the little wisps of smoke in his fur. "What the heck was that all about?" asked Jane, looking up from the evening paper she had just printed out on the ship's computer. "That Snitch I just bought seems to be rebelling," Zeke explained, getting down on the ground and peering under the various kitchen appliances. "What's a Snitch?" asked Jane, setting down the paper. "I don't remember you buying anything." "It just arrived today, you missed the mail," Zeke said, rolling up the sleeve on his leather jacket and reaching under the dishwasher. "I-- OWWW!" Zeke recoiled his arm, grabbing at the tiny bite mark on his finger and jumping up and down. Jeremy darted out from the underside of the dishwasher, looking for an exit of some kind. Jane's reaction clearly overshot the few yelps Zeke and Bruiser had experienced so far. "AAIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIEEEE!!!" she shrieked, jumping on the table and trying desparately to climb the walls. "A MOUSE!" "Get it!" shouted Zeke, lunging for Jeremy. However, seeing how Jeremy was just a small rodent and Zeke was a rather massive humanoid with slower reflexes, Darwinian theory won and Jeremy was out of the room by the time Zeke hit the floor. A dull WHUMPH reverberated around the ship, momentarily shaking the hanging ferns Bruiser had placed in the kitchen recently in order to give it some color. Twerp peered out of his room. "What's all the commotion about in here? Did Elvis just show up or something? And why is Jane standing on the kitchen table babbling to herself?" Bruiser did his best to explain things to Twerp and coax Jane off the table and into a more rational frame of mind, but Zeke's attention was drawn elsewhere. Namely, to the kitchen window, which currently had a nice view of a shuttlecraft rocketing away from the GSS Ineptitude, carrying a tiny passenger... -=( SP )=- A few weeks passed. Zeke wondered how a little toy mouse managed to escape the ship in a normally human-piloted shuttle, but wrote it off as an undocumented feature. Bernard's plant stopped producing Snitches for the time being, until he could figure out why the mental link the Snitches had wasn't responding to his commands to search homes and take valuables. In the meantime, they started work on his latest project, which was a revolutionary new virus that would render the victim brainless, with an overwhelming desire to sing "Happy Birthday to You" over and over again for the rest of thier natural lives. (The idea that supervillians don't have a sense of humor and live only to wreak mayhem is entirely untrue. The mayhem part is accurate, but the truth is that they have a very twisted sense of humor.) The Snitches themselves traveled in various ways... by escape pod, by a stolen starbike, stowing away on cargo craft, or simple by holding a gun to the head of a taxi driver-- all headed to the same destination, a small, out of the way planet. A planet with very few natural resources, or businesses at all. Just one shoddy looking genetic engineering plant. -=( SP )=- "Where did the Snitches go? Our top story tonight involves those loveable gentically engineered servants that used to be sold by Bernard K. Wallingford Enterprises, now a multimillion dollar company." Sgt. Bilko crunched another beer can against his forehead. Patrol work just wasn't fun anymore. His former military glory, the frantic battles he personally led men into to be turned into so much human cheese gratings, was reduced down to the minor role of a desk clerk and recruit trainer. Perhaps if he hadn't accidentally thrown up in his that admiral's punch bowl, he wouldn't have been drummed out of the service. The news reporter, oblivious to Bilko's uninterest in the broadcast, continued. "Snitches by the millions have been vanishing from homes, offices and workplaces. Some merely slipping out, others giving chase. The government is currently looking into possibly unsafe engineering practices at Bernard K. Wallingford Enterprises. Bernard K. Wallingford himself was not available for comment, but we got this from his partner, a mister Retro Zappa the fifth." A greasy man who had apparently been put into a suit for the interview and clearly didn't like it appeared on the screen. "Look, dudes, they're just mice," he said. "They're harmless. I'm sure we'll get the bugs out of the system and like replace the missing ones or something, okay? Cool." Bilko wondered if there possibly was a way to get in on some of the action. He knew that patrol missions weren't nearly as exciting as sending a team of hardy men into enemy territory and pushing the Reds past the 34'th paralell... but it's certainly better than just roughing up the new recruits. -=( SP )=- Night fell without any warning other than its usual 12 hour rotation on the Small Boring Planet which stood as home for Bernard K. Wallingford Enterprises. Small Boring Planet was named that for two remarkable aspects. One, it was small. Two, it was boring. Very little interesting vegetation grew there, and only a few remote factories or businesses called it home. This was why it was so ideal for Bernard's needs... a totally monotonous, low rent, out of the way place where he could set up a legal front for not so legal activites. Because of the low population, there were no police on the planet either. Your nearest neighbor was at least five hundred miles away. However, there was one forest on the planet. Bernard chose this area to build his factory. He figured, if push comes to shove, the dense trees would make a good hiding place. He was right. However, what currently was hiding in the forest wasn't human. It wasn't quite mouselike either. As quiet as the roar of a flea, several thousand mouselike creatures scampered out of the forest, making a beeline for the great stone building... This had been at least three weeks in the planning. The Snitches had everything worked out to perfection, right down to the camoflage paint and special tools and weapons to work with. Several snitches slinked ahead of the pack and began to work on the air vents with tiny screwdrivers, letting the metal panel clang quietly to the ground as dozens of Snitches entered the air ducts... -=( SP )=- Arnold Snitch stood wearily at the edge of the air vent on the bottomside of air shaft six. |Are you SURE this will work?| he telepathed over to his partner. *Positive, replied Brainy Snitch. This chemical compound should effectively knock out every person in the building, with us Snitches immune.* |How do you know all this stuff, anyway?| inquired Arnold. *I used to work here,* Brainy replied, mixing together two chemicals he had brought in acorn caps. *Took notes for mister Bernard the slavedriver in there. You learn a lot when you're being dictated to by a genetic engineer. Okay, here goes.* Brainy gave the mixture one last stir, and then used a small brush to apply the slime in a ring over the vent. *That'll do it, he said, wiping the brush clean. The fumes aren't strong, but they'll be enough to cover our infiltration. Let's get working on those locks. Where'd Jeremy Snitch go?* |He's off securing Bernard with the rest of the council. Let's get moving, we've got four more vents to apply your stuff to.| -=( SP )=- Bernard looked down at the factory floor and frowned. He wasn't expecting THIS. Sure, he had come to the conclusion that due to a minor miscalculation, the Snitches were now sentient. He had created an entire new freethinking species just by forgetting to carry the two. So, he sat around for a week, awaiting to see what their next move would be. He wasn't expecting them to come back to the factory. Bernard figured, much to his distaste, that he'd have to actually call the police. Then again, there were no police on Small Boring Planet. That's why he had picked it, after all. What he needed was a quiet, privately paid task force of some kind. Of course. Space Patrol. He flipped through his mental rolodex, plucked the number off a metaphorical card, and dialed his vidphone. Ring. Ring. Ring. "Thank you for calling Space Patrol. Please state your name, location, and problem," chirped an answering machine. "Bernard K. Wallingford, Small Boring Planet. It seems my factory is being invaded by hostile for... host..." Bernard felt groggy. The air seemed to be thicker, as if the room was being compressed... his focus twitched, and his inner ear did backflips. He fell backwards into his chair, out cold. If he was awake, he would have been alarmed at the dozen or so genetically engineered mice lapelling in on ropes. -=( SP )=- "That's all Father O'Mother said?" Jane asked. "Yup," commented Zeke, lowering the GSS Ineptitude from orbit slowly via the modified Nintendo joystick. "Just told me to land on Small Boring Planet, and that we'd make contact with another Patroller when there." "What exciting activity could there possibly be here?" exclaimed Jane. "They don't call this place Small and Boring for nothing." Zeke shrugged as the GSS Ineptitude came in for a rather abrupt two or two and a half point landing. The automatic hatch popped open, and the landing ramp started to unfold. Bruiser had to kick it when it got stuck partway down, but it did manage to reach the ground. "You the Patrollers?" asked a rather bulky looking officer in full military dress and a crew cut. He chewed a stogie impatiently as he stared at the ship in contempt. "Space Patrol Unit #4384, yes," replied Zeke. "Good. I'm Sgt. Bilko. Seems I've been assigned to help you on this mission," he added, turning around to examine the terrain. He wasn't really assigned to this mission by Patrol HQ legally. He had simply explained to the dispatch officer that if he doesn't see some action pretty damn pronto the dispatcher might have a hard time trying to breathe with a grenade down his throat. Although a bit terrified, the dispatcher gleefully edited the records a bit and put Bilko back on mission duty, and assigned him on the first mission that came in to get rid of him. "So what is your plan of action?" barked Bilko. The Patrollers exchanged glances. "Well," Twerp tried awkwardly, "I figure we'd just go inside and see what the trouble is--" "Wrong answer!" shouted Bilko. "Rule #43, when entering a possibly dangerous situation a Patroller must scan the surrounding area and remove threats before proceeding!" Bruiser looked around. "Me see trees... some rocks... and building. No threats." "Yeah, well, how do you know one of those trees isn't a sniper in disguise?" replied Bilko. "Because it's rather hard to make a human look like a tree. Sir," sneered back jane, peering at Bilko evilly from under her usual floppy hat. "Check that attitude, mister." "Miss." "Miss," he grunted in such a way that his displeasure at the thought was plainly obvious. There was a hissing sound in the air, and a small wooden arrow zipped from a window on the factory towards the GSS Ineptitude, where it harmlessly bounced off a window. "The enemy is firing! Get down! Load your weapons!" Bilko screamed, flinging himself against the ground. "It's just an arrow, and a small one at that," stated Jane, picking it up off the ground. "Besides, we don't have any weapons." (Jane always carried an assortment of knives, wires, tasers, and little black plastic zapper things, but she didn't consider these weapons. There were more like everyday tools for someone in her ex-line of work.) "Me have me mini-flamethrower," corrected Brusier. "Yeah, well, other than that," Jane blurted, removing the small note from arrow and reading it aloud. It appeared to be in flawless shorthand. "We have Bernard hostage, and will not release him until we see justice done and we are garunteed our rightful place in the Terran Confederation as a sentient society. Signed, the Snitches," Jane reas. "Hah!" laughed Bilko. "The enemy was foolish to reveal themselves. Snitches? Those little mouse things they advertise on TV?" Jane gulped slightly at the word 'mouse', but Bilko didn't notice. "The fools! We can easily conquer some crummy MICE. They are no threat to us." -=( SP )=- They aren't a threat, Jeremy Snitch thought, looking through the small lens the Snitches were employing as a telescope. :You sure?: asked Terry Snitch. Positive. I know the guy in the dumb looking hat and big jaw there. Used to write his memoirs. These gimps are so incompetent, three kids and a dog would have a better chance at taking this building. Have the explosives been placed in the boiler room yet? :Yup. Everything's set. I shot the fake message to the Patrol out there. Should buy us some time.: I hate how non dramatic this is going to be, Jeremy thought aloud, but it is the most efficent way. Signal the rest of us to get out of the building. Has Gaspode Snitch tied Bernard to his chair yet? :Yes. We're ready to get moving. The sleep formula should be wearing off any moment now.: Well, Jeremy said, stuffing the lens into a pocket on his new jacket, let's get going. -=( SP )=- "We have two objectives. One, rescue the hostage. Two, eliminate the enemy." Bilko was pacing around in front of the ship. He seems to talk a lot, thought Zeke, but doesn't actually DO anything. "We've gotta go in there and kick some butt," Bilko added dramatically. "There is an innocent civilian's life at stake, but the risks are high. We might die in there. We might be horribly maimed. We could have our arms cut off by large--" "Is this supposed to be motivating us?" Jane asked innocently. Bilko coughed not so politely. "Alright, let's move out. Twerp, you and Jane get underground through the air ducts. Zeke, you and Brusier will accompany me in a full frontal assault. Move!" Jane and Twerp exhanged "Oh well" glances, and set off at a lesurely pace for the basement. "Zeke, get on the righthand side of the door. I'll stand on the left, and Brusier will kick in the door as we rush in and capture the terrorists inside." "Capture them with what?" Zeke asked. "With... well, we'll capture them somehow. Go! Go! Go!" he said, starting to break into a run for the door, then switching to a jog when he remembered that the years hadn't been kind to him. Zeke stood next to the door, resting an elbow on the wall. "Okay... GO!" Brusier kicked the door with his mammoth rabbitoid limbs. The door didn't budge. "Strange... hit it again," ordered Bilko. Brusier kicked the door again, but the door refused to open. "This door had better open soon, or we'll give away our position," worried Bilko. "Umm, sir? I think I know why it's not working," Zeke commented. "Did I ask for your opinion, soldier?!?" commanded Bilko. "No. I was just commenting that this door opens outwards," Zeke said. On a whim, he tried the keypad. The unlocked factory door swung open. Bilko was speechless, but then regained his air of military respect. "Alright, on three. One, two--" "On three what?" Bruiser asked. "On three we go in! Sheesh, don't you modern Patrollers know anything about tactics?!? THREE!" Bilko rushed headlong into the door screaming, and managed to trip over a chair before stopping. Zeke flipped on the light switch. There weren't any terrorists here, just some genetic reproduction equipment, and lots of oxygen. -=( SP )=- "Twerp!" Jane shouted from the other end of the basement. "You'd better have a look at this!" Twerp darted over to where Jane was pointing. Attached to the wall was a small blob of plastic explosive. The convienent LED timer read 00:56. "I think the phrase is... RUN!" panicked Twerp, making a beeline for the storm cellar door. Jane started to run, but heard an odd rustling noise behind her... like thousands of tiny little feet... She turned to look and froze in complete terror. Advancing for the door and running all around her were mice. Dozens of them. Hundred of them. THOUSANDS of them. "Come on!" shouted Twerp from the cellar door. "Get moving, Jane! We don't have much time!" Jane's brain synapses jumbled up, zipping this way and that in an attempt to escape out of her hair. Her mouth quivered slightly as a million phrases of fear tried to form themselves on her lips, and her knuckles whitened. Impulses from many years ago attempted to surface, despite being beaten down early in her life... "Run! Make haste! Hurry up!!" yelled Twerp. "In a few seconds, building fall down go boom! And you'll be under it if you don't get a move on!" "YEEEEEEEEEEEEEEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAIIIIIIIIIIIIIEEEEEEEEEE GGGGGGGGGGGAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!" Jane emitted, winning the prize for Best Terrified Scream, and breaking into a mad run, plunging uncontrollably for the door. -=( SP )=- "What's that noise?" asked Zeke, listening to the odd echo of thousands of quiet tapping sounds. Bruiser sniffed the air. "We'd better get out of here, fast," he said, walking for the door. "Me smell C4 explosive!" "What?" Bilko gasped. "Dammit! I knew I should have scanned the building on infrared!" "Explosives don't show up on infrared, sir," Zeke said. "Now let's hurry it up, shall we?" -=( SP )=- Bernard awoke groggily from the chemical enduced sleep. He tried to move his arms, but found he couldn't - they were tied to his Laz-E-Executive chair, as has his entire upper torso. Whoever had done this also appeared to have moved him in front of his computer, which had a drawing program loaded, with this message written onscreen in flawless shorthand - "So long, and thanks for all the cheese. Your friends, the Snitches." Bernard's tidy mind experienced fear for the first time. It also turned out to be his last time. -=( SP )=- The spectacular explosion of the Bernard K. Wallingford Enterprises factory was quite a sight to see. The only witnesses, a group of Space Patrollers, said in an interview on network vidnews later that it looked "Like an implosion, only backwards." A somewhat disheveled, greasy man who was busy throwing up in the woods after taking a chocolate flavored narcotic described it as a "Bad Trip". The remains of Bernard K. Wallingford were never found, but that's to be expected when an entire building is reduced to chunks the side of chocolate covered rasins. Sgt. Bilko was given a purple heart for being wounded in the line of duty (by spraining his ankle on a chair) and was given an honorable discharge from Space Patrol. Nobody told him that not only did the Patrol not give honorable discharges, but they didn't give purple hearts either. When asked, Patrol HQ commented, "Well, he's happy about it, at least." As for the Snitches, nobody really knows what happened with them. A few of the very few residents of Small Boring Planet swears they saw a small village run by mice, but this was later determined to be the product of a very vivid hallucination after eating one of the native mushrooms on Small Boring Planet. The moon sets on another uneventful day on Small Boring Planet, the rather nondescript, featureless moon hanging in the sky. However, from the top of a hill, we see a silhouette of two ears... and instead of a dog's howl, we hear a mouse's squeak. Space Patrol 6 - When I Was Your Age The GSS Ineptitude sailed boldly through the starry sky. Actually, that statement is not entirely true. First of all, space isn't a sky, and if you were looking through the sky of a planet you'd never be able to spot the ship. It didn't sail due to lack of wind and water, and boldy was really stretching it. A more appropriate adjective would probably be 'sluggishly'. The ship was designed to look very nice, but totally failed to do so. The architect apparently went overboard on chrome and curves, but forgot to leave space for such important things as the hatch or life support. When the architect died in a fatal tuna fish mishap, it was up to his inexperienced apprentice to cover his master's mistakes. As a result, you would have gotten a nice looking ship if it wasn't for the odd lumps and squarish compartments jutting out at odd angles where important rooms or items were tacked on with blueprint epoxy. The inside wasn't rather pleasant either, because in order to cover the cost of the architect's funeral, some corners were cut, such as matresses. History has yet to figure out which one of the two, the architect or his student, installed a sun roof in the kitchen. Although they look fetching on, say, a Porsche, a spacegoing vessel is not the wisest place to crank open a sun roof and feel the wind in your hair. If you did crank it open, you'd be sucked out into the vacuum of space and explosively decompress, which, as most people who take research trips to Jupiter with computer run spaceships looking for strange black slabs of rock can tell you, is not fun. However, it was all the Patrol unit had for a home, and they did their best to make it more homey. Matresses were added first, then the occasional fern and a nice checkered tablecloth and some baskets of hanging fruit. Nobody knows why hanging fruit is a requiment in homey-type rooms. Nobody actually eats the fruit, after all. Nevertheless, efforts were made. It was a good thing too, because it usually takes a week to get to anywhere interesting in this outreach of the galaxy, and the boredom and space madness can drive you crazy after awhile. On this particular lazy Sunday afternoon, the four occupants of the ship were all spending their free time reminiscing over days gone and past. This was a pure coincidence, really, and very fortunate because it makes it easier to listen in on their activites all at once. -=( SP )=- Bruiser was somewhat bored, reclining in a makeshift chair constructed of 1. a transporter console, 2. a blanket, and 3. some cushions. For some odd reason, the ship's designer had put the main TeleVid monitor in the transporter room, and the transporters in the cramped cargo area. Bruiser never quite figured out why. He was idly flipping through the 1,823 channels available via an extremely complex remote with dozens of tiny buttons. Nothing of interest on the Frozen Yogurt Network... the All Sports Injury Network was showing a repeat of the latest ankle traumas... the first cable children's network was busily showing another fine peice of animation they had bought from a carefree, small animation company and butchered into merchandisable, preprocessed television fodder. But this was normal for them, really, it was a tradition since 1992. He stopped momentarily on the All Game Show Network, where a children's quiz show featured children running around a virtual reality wasteland looking for letters to spell today's word. Now, memory triggers are common phenomenon in the galaxy. You might see, for example, a picture of a bowl of fruit, and suddenly get a flashback to a time in yoru childhood when a bowl of fruit killed your father. This was similar to the brief burst of memory Bruiser experienced at that moment. However his had nothing to do with fruit. Bruiser was standing in front of his entire class in Ghengis Kahn High School, his source of education and knowledge for most of his teenagerhood. The board read, in plain english, "My dog will ____ into your yard and pee in your bushes today." Bruiser scratched his furry chin a bit. "What's the verb I'm supposed to be conjugating again?" he asked his teacher in fluent Yttian, his native tounge. His teacher ignored the snickers and giggles from the rest of the class. "The english verb for 'to come', Bartholomew." Bruiser winced at the sound of his name. Only his teachers called him that. He returned his glance to the board and gripped the chalk tightly, hoping it would break and he'd get to step down. Despite his high school football quarterback grip, the chalk refused to snap. Fate was apparently looking over his shoulder, waving a 'naughty naughty' finger and apparently wondering what he would write. Bruiser paused, thought hard, and wrote COME in English on the board. Relieved, he moved for his seat. "Not so fast," his teacher interrupted. "Now read it aloud." Bruiser gulped. He was afraid of this. No sense in weasling out, he'd have to take it like a Ytt. "M... me dog will c... come into you yard and pee in you bushes 'day," he stammered in broken english. The class laughed a bit, but he didn't really mind. It wasn't really a secret that for some reason, he simply couldn't handle talking in english very well. This wasn't a problem, because back in those days, not all alien races had picked up English as the main language yet. "Thank you, you may sit down," the teacher motioned. Returning to his seat, Bruiser thought to himself, so what? Speaking is only 25% of his English grade. Besides, he's aceing in all his other classes... phys ed, physics, calculus, advanced composition... so what if he's not a very good speaker? The entire memory from board to seat compressed itself neatly into one moment in Bruisers mind, sending him backwards and forwards in less time than it takes to boil an egg. Bruiser shrugged a bit. Well, he thought, he'd managed fine so far with broken english, it wasn't too much of a problem. He flipped back to the kid's cable network, where the little dog had hit the cat again and said something about bloated idiots. -=( SP )=- Zeke was busy reading up on the classics. The classics as he saw them, that is. Movie scripts for Casablanca, James Bond, Superman, and assorted comic books littered the ground near his bed. You can have your Mark Twain and Moby Dick, I'll take my adventure and action anyday. Adventure was Zeke's life. He distinctly remembered the hundreds of black and white movies he had seen in the local run- down cinema. He and his friends would sneak out at night, hide in the shadows and slide quietly up to the ticket booth and buy three tickets for whatever movie was playing. It didn't matter what the movie was, because they lived for the cinema experience. The only visible drawback was a notiable drop in grades. One particularly muggy Sund