Catzilla Chapter Twenty-Three

Good afternoon. It is I Gigi the parti poodle here to introduce chapter twenty-three of my story Catzilla. The rain here has been coming down in torrents. As a poodle I get anxious when we get rain like this. It is most horrifying. Scarier to me than Halloween. Last night was unearthly. Buckets lashed down from the skies. I was mortified. I stayed very close to my novelist sitting on the blanket in her lap as she did her writing. I would get antsy and move to my pillow on the floor and then hop back into the chair. Thunder rumbled. Lightning struck. Rain poured. I was devastated. I was hoping things would get better today and my novelist was uncharacteristically optimistic. We went for a walk and got caught in a rainstorm. Not as bad as last night mind you, but I came home drenched. I was toweled off. My gorgeous curls were mashed and damp. That dratted Maltese laughed. Horrible. Hopefully the weather will clear soon, and I can become stable again. Until then here is chapter twenty-three of Catzilla. May you stay dry and comfortable.    

Catzilla

by

Gigi the parti poodle

Chapter Twenty-Three

My mom turned around and narrowed her eyes. She stood up very straight and scrutinized the owner of the voice. “Fortunately, it’s been a long time, professor,” she said.

“Indeed,” Dr. Grosser said. “From what I understand you’ve gotten your meat hooks into my latest experiment.”

“I’d hardly call it an experiment. More like a death wish gone rogue.”

“I’m merely doing what the Edevanes require. That is my job. As far as going rogue, I am in complete control of the experiment. The Edevanes needed a test done determining how far customers are willing to extend generosity. And the results show quite far. Have you ever noticed how pets have been bred to look more and more like human babies? It’s rather terrifying. Human beings simply love pets. And even when a seemingly normal kitten continues to grow bigger and bigger right before their eyes, they keep feeding it no matter how absurdly large it becomes. One of your neighbors was always willing to feed the kitty. If that’s the case, how could a company harness that frail human instinct to lure a customer into buying one’s product?”

“You’ve lost your mind.”

“Hardly. I am lucidly sane. Imagine a world where a customer’s generosity would drive them into purchasing more and more. Even better, how they could be manipulated into wanting to outshine their neighbor, give twice as much by buying more. We noticed how each neighbor would give the kitty more than the neighbor before. It became an endless cycle. And to the degree to which they would compete was utterly fascinating. Creating a logarithm to put into motion is how the Edevane factory is going to triple its sales.”

“They won’t be selling anything with a giant cat on the loose bent on destruction.”

“There are always setbacks. But how many people can a giant cat demolish? Not enough to matter compared to the behemoth this company could become.”

“That kitten might have killed my friend!” I shouted. “He’s on route to the hospital and he still hasn’t woken up!”

“You are young. You will make other friends. People place far too much value on friendship. A good friend today is only destined to become a memory tomorrow. Friends come into your life, and they leave your life through a perpetual revolving door. They don’t matter and you cannot count on them. What does matter are sales and what you can count on are profits. Profits are what pays for the heat, the groceries, the new SUV, and the trip to Dubai. All far more worthy aspirations than friends. Right now, I believe Ellery Edevane and his friend Quincy are pulling up to the mechanics business you just left. Quincy’s father is with them and will soon be opening the doors to the pole building where you so naively put the cat. Soon our kitty will be let loose to run rampant once again.”

“You’re insane!”

“One must always finish what one has set out to do.”

My mom grabbed my hand and we headed for the exit.

“And just where do you think you’re going?”

My mother pressed down the latch on the door but as she opened it two large guards stepped in front of us.

“I cannot have you going out there attempting to be heroes. That simply won’t do. These two lovely gentlemen are going to make sure you stay put.”

“Mom,” I whispered. “The kids leaving the dance.”

“Fine,” my mom said to Dr. Grosser. “We’ll stay.”

“Do hand these kind gentlemen your cellphones, will you?”

My mom and I reluctantly handed the two goons our cell phones.

“Take them to the office upstairs,” Dr. Grosser told the men. “They might as well get comfortable. It’s going to be a long night.”

The goons stepped aside allowing my mom and I to step out of the laboratory into the hall. I wished my mom still had her mace on her. We might have had a chance to spray them and run for the exit. I had no idea how we were going to get out of this now.

“Start walking, ladies,” one of the goons told us in a gruff voice. “Right up the stairs.”

We began climbing the stairs towards the offices where Lyle’s mother worked. All I could think about were Lyle and my classmates and the giant red kitten roaming free. I looked at my mother who seemed serene as if none of this phased her.

“Turn left,” the second goon said.

“Bend sinister,” my mom said.”

“What?”

“To go left is to bend sinister. Did you know a disproportionate number of criminals are left-handed?”

“Is that so?”

“It is so.”

“Yeah. Well, thanks for the trivia. “Bend sinister here, lady.”

We turned and the second goon held his keycard up to the pad turning it from red to green. Then he opened the door, and the first goon escorted us inside.

“If you think about leaving or doing anything stupid, we’ll be right outside. Enjoy your stay, ladies.”

They shut the door and locked it. My mother walked over to the whiteboard on the wall opposite the desk and wrote, “look up”. I looked up at the ceiling. Then she wrote, “we are leaving now” and underlined “now”. She pointed to the desk. I walked over and warily looked up. I stepped onto the desk, reached up with my hands and pushed the ceiling tile up and scooted it over one inch. I scooted it over another inch, and then again, and then again. Finally, I was able to scoot it over enough for me to get through. I grabbed the ceiling. My mother stepped up on the desk and pushed and guided me through the opening. I crawled forwards with trepidation and found it to be sturdier than I expected. I looked down and saw my mom step down, erase the whiteboard and step back onto the desk. She pushed the tile above her over another inch and then pushed it again. She hoisted herself up and met me in the ceiling. We both carefully closed the tile and my mom pointed forwards.

“Do you want me to take the lead?” my mom whispered. “I know how far we have to go.”

I nodded my head and my mom awkwardly scooted around in front of me and I scooted behind. My mom started crawling forward with me at her heals. We headed down the hall over the offices towards the front entrance. This was not easy as I was afraid of us getting stuck over the factory as opposed to over the offices and then having the tiles give way. But my mom knew where she was going and after a couple of minutes she stopped.

“Here,” she whispered. She carefully moved the tile away in front of her and stuck her head down and surveyed the room. “This is it,” she said. “We’ll have to move fast.”

I looked down and saw the desk below was further away than I was comfortable with. My mom, however, worked herself down and landed on the industrial carpet like a superstar. She motioned for me to follow her, but I hesitated.

“We have to hurry,” she said, “or that cat’s getting sprung loose.”

“I’m going down over the desk,” I said and scooted over and pushed back another tile.

“We should probably scoot those two tiles back before we go.”

“You’re right,” I said and carefully slipped down onto the desk landing more like a backup singer than a superstar. I turned, reached up and slowly scooted the tile back into place. Then I stepped down onto terra firma.

“Help me take this plant off this small table here and then we can move the table under the open tile.” I moved over and picked up the potted aspidistra and set it on the floor. My mom lifted the table and placed it under the askew tile. My mom stood up on the table, reached up and began scooting the tile back into place. Suddenly the tile tilted, and I ran over to try and help catch it, but it hit the floor with a bang. My mom and I looked at each other and knew the thugs must have heard the sound. “Let’s go!”

We hurried to the door, opened it, and headed out en route for the stairs at the front side of the building.

MY BOOKS

You can check out my books Chicane and all five installments of the Musicology book series Musicology: Volume One, Baby!Musicology: Volume Two, Kid!Musicology: Volume Three, Twist!Musicology: Volume Four, Sweetie! and Musicology: The Epiquad on Amazon in Kindle and Paperback editions. You can also check out Musicology’s web site at www.musicologyrocks.com and vote for who you think will win Musicology!

STREAM OF THE WEEK: CACHÈ (HIDDEN) (2005)-TUBI

If ever there was a movie to prove the screenwriters were right about AI, this one is it. This French gem by director Michael Haneke is a complex unusual puzzle of a story that has been debated ever since its release in 2005. The movie was robbed of an Oscar nomination for Best Foreign Language Film because the film is in French and Haneke is Austrian which the Academy didn’t allow. Stupid. As far as I’m concerned Best Foreign Language Film is a film in a language other than English made in a country other than America. And frankly, this category should allow seven instead of five films. Too many great foreign films have gotten passed over for a nomination and certainly in present day, everyone makes better films than the Americans. It’s embarrassing. The best film in theatres this summer was the re-release of the 2003 movie Old Boy, a masterpiece of modern South Korean cinema, which, by the way, AI couldn’t write either.  

The movie starts out with a mundane shot of a city street in Paris. We see the occasional car or bike drive by, and the shoot just stays still. But it doesn’t take us long to find out what we’re really watching is a video tape. A tape that has been sent to the home of bourgeois TV literary reviewer Georges Laurent (Daniel Auteuil) and his wife Anne Laurent (Juliette Binoche) who works in publishing anonymously. The couple have a twelve-year-old son named Pierrot Laurent (Lester Makedonsky) and wonder if the boy’s friends sent it as a prank. But another anonymous tape is sent wrapped in a white piece of paper with the drawing of a face spewing blood and the couple starts to wonder if they are not being pranked but stalked. To say more about the story would ruin it. But I will mention this: pay very close attention to the last shot of the film and look at it from different angles.

After and only after you’ve watched the film entirely, I would encourage you to look at this review by Roger Ebert.

Catzilla Chapter Twenty-Two

Good afternoon. Gigi the parti poodle here to present chapter twenty-two of my story Catzilla. Fall is just around the corner, and it has been preceded by the cold season. Everyone around my novelist is sick. Except my novelist and me. I fear she will fall ill soon and where does that leave me? Abandoned on a desert island to fend for myself. Try as I might, I cannot seem to figure out how to open those blasted cans of dog food. And the treats in the zip locking bags and the goodie jar, forget it. I can’t climb up there. I can’t open those infernal bags. I need my sustenance. I need my novelist to remain well. She tells me not to worry. A cold would not make her so ill she could not feed me. I simply do not believe her. I’ve seen her get sick and it’s disturbing. More terrifying than a Kubrick film. I can see the elevator doors opening now and all the horror breaking loose. I have been making sure she is taking her vitamin C. That she is wearing a mask when she is out of the house. That she is taking me for walks and getting fresh air. She must not get a cold. She must not get a cold. And with that thought, here is chapter twenty-two of Catzilla.

Catzilla

by

Gigi the parti poodle

Chapter Twenty-Two

Aero ran back inside the building and headed towards mom and me. Lyle wasn’t a big kid by any far stretch of the imagination, but it was awkward trying to get him out of the truck just the same.

“Okay, Mrs. Gagnon.”

“Garnet.”

“Okay, Garnet. I’m going to reach inside and try and get him out.”

Aero opened the truck door and tipped Lyle up to a sitting position, slid his hands under him and carried him out of the truck. “He’s heavier than he looks. Could you get his legs, Garnet?” He turned and looked at the drooped-over cat. “Let’s ditch the truck and get out of here.”

Areo and my mom carried Lyle towards the exit with me following behind. Aero reached over and put in the code to let the doors roll down. Then he laid Lyle down on the grass. “Lyle,” Aero said to him patting his face. “Lyle buddy, you with us?” Lyle didn’t respond. Aero checked his pulse. “He’s still with us but we’d better get him to a hospital.”

“You need to drive him,” my mom said.

“I’ve got a lot of work here I need to finish.”

“Drive this boy to a hospital now. And before you do, we need a car since the truck is in there with the cat.”

“Most of the cars here don’t work. That’s why they’re here.”

“You must have something.”

Aero thought about it for a moment and said, “There’s this one sports car I’ve been rebuilding. Took it for a spin the other day. Thing is a beauty: new engine, new tires, new paint job…I’ll drive that one. You can take my truck. It’s that one over there.” He pointed to a little white truck that must have been twenty years old. “She’s old but good.”

I looked at my mom and my mom looked at me. “Hand me the keys,” she told Aero.

“They’re going to be looking for the cat,” my mom said. “Hopefully we can get to them before they get to us.”

“Lyle’s heartrate seemed low,” I said.

“He was breathing and Aero’s taking him to the hospital. Right now, I’m going to call the principal and tell him to send the kids home from the dance.” She unlocked her phone and handed it to me. I found the principal’s number in her call history and dialed.

“Hello,” I said when he answered. “This is Briar…Mrs. Gagnon’s daughter. She wanted me to call to tell you now is the time to get all the kids out of the dance and send them straight home.”

“What’s the deal with the cat?” Principal Doofus asked.

“Put him on speaker phone,” mom said.

I did.

“Hello, this is Mrs. Gagnon. I just wanted you to know we have the cat secured and this would be an excellent time to send the kids home.”

“So, it’s safe?” he asked.

“For now. But you need to get them home quickly. I don’t know if the cat’s owners are coming to find it or not. With something like this I imagine a fair amount of money is riding on this experiment and the cat likely has a camera on it besides the one my daughter and her friend attached.”

“I’d not thought of that.”

“As someone who has done a lot of consulting with a lot of different companies, I’d say the likelihood is high.”

“What are you going to do now?”

“I’m going to go see some old friends.”

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“I haven’t been over here in a while,” my mom said as we parked Aero’s truck on the back side of the Edevane factory.

“I thought you’d never even been here.”

“It was one of the first companies I worked for. They hired me before you were born.”

“How did it go?”

“Not well.”

“How are we going to get inside?”

“How did you get inside before?”

“Lyle’s mom’s keycard.”

“But you don’t have that on you this time.”

“No.”

“But I do.”

“What?”

“Lyle had it on him tonight. I took it from him.”

“How?”

“Let’s go inside.”

We disembarked the car and headed up to the gate. My mom put the keycard up to the pad. The gate unlocked and we headed inside towards the building. My mom stepped up to the door and held the keycard up to the keypad.

“I think they’re watching us on surveillance right now,” I said.

“I think you’re right,” my mom replied as the light turned from red to green and we headed inside. We were on the opposite side of the building from where Lyle and I had been last time, which put us closer to the laboratory.

“We’re close to the lab,” I whispered to her.

“Lead on.”

I looked around wondering if that guard who’d chased Lyle and I last time was lurking around. Then I turned left, and my mom followed. We crept up to the laboratory door. My mom put the key card up to the pad and the light turned from red to green.

“We’re in,” my mom said, and we slipped inside.

The factory looked the same as it had when Lyle and I were there before. My mom looked around taking everything in. We heard strange animal sounds coming from the door inside. My mom held the key card up to the pad. The light remained red. She tried again. The light still didn’t change.

“It didn’t work for us either,” I said.

“Sounds like our cat isn’t the only one being experimented on. Even if we can’t get in, we can record the sounds and take pictures of the lab. Get out your phone. I’ll record the sound you take the pictures.”

I took out my phone and began quietly taking pictures of the place while my mom recorded the cries of the cats or whatever was behind the door we couldn’t enter.

“Well, well,” a voice said. “Garnet Gagnon, we meet again.”

MY BOOKS

You can check out my books Chicane and all five installments of the Musicology book series Musicology: Volume One, Baby!Musicology: Volume Two, Kid!Musicology: Volume Three, Twist!Musicology: Volume Four, Sweetie! and Musicology: The Epiquad on Amazon in Kindle and Paperback editions. You can also check out Musicology’s web site at www.musicologyrocks.com and vote for who you think will win Musicology!

STREAM OF THE WEEK: WORKING: WHAT WE DO ALL DAY (2023)-NETFLIX

When I went through a PATP program and studied acting in New York City, one of our first-year projects was to choose a person and their occupation from the book Working by Studs Terkel and perform a monologue. The assignment was for a speech class and the focus was to learn how to recognize and communicate operative words. Operative words are the most important words in any given sentence and convey the new and most important information. The book is considered a classic work of journalism where the author interviewed numerous people who all had different types of jobs and made different types of income.

This documentary hosted by former President Barack Obama is inspired by Studs Terkel’s book. There are four episodes. The first episode focuses on those working in the lower class. The second focuses on those working in the middle class. The third focuses on the jobs of the nine percenters. The final episode focuses on the top one percent. It’s interesting to watch what each group values, and in some cases how money is precious and sparse where in other cases how money is earned and wasted. Interestingly, the most balanced group seems to be the one shrinking the fastest and that’s the middle class. There is a young man from this group who continues to follow his goals all while dealing with his delusional parents’ blasé ideas of success, which I assume is similar to many Americans’ constant need to cling to the past.

The documentary shows how workplaces used to treat their employees and the abysmal way they treat them now. Most of this is thanks to a man named Milton Friedman. If you think most of the products you purchase these days are overpriced junk and that golden parachutes for CEO’s are ludicrous and damage companies, thank that guy. And it’s not getting any better. Obviously most (not all) of the one percenter group are disconnected from reality. But even sadder are the nine-percenters who waste money aspiring to be in the group above them. Nothing is good about being on or below the poverty line and nothing is good about a shrinking middle class which the documentary points out was at the time it was conceived a radical idea.

Something else the documentary shows is the looming world of artificial intelligence, which in some ways could be a marvelous tool providing more middle-class and nine percenter jobs. But when you meet some of the cavalier upper management, you get the sinking feeling the place runs a good chance of getting renamed Cyberdyne Systems.

Catzilla Chapter Twenty-One

Good afternoon. It is I Gigi the Parti Poodle here to introduce chapter twenty-one of my story Catzilla. As of late my novelist has decided to create what she calls a “panic room” whereupon when she leaves our humble abode, she puts Tucker the Maltese in the bedroom and shuts the door. She grants me free reign except for that blasted panic room. I am limited in my ability to open doors what with having paws instead of hands and no opposable thumbs. I am trying to come up with a way to enter the panic room in another manner so I can break in and torment the horrid mongrel as he deserves. But alas, thus far my novelist has thwarted my efforts. It’s not fair. I deserve the right to boss the little lap dog around when she’s gone but she believes in this horrid thing called civility. You need to play fair, Gigi. You need to be kind to Tucker, Gigi. You need to stop swinging that spiked mace, Gigi. Dreadful. It is horrifically boring wandering around the place with nothing to do. Yes, of course I write but then I get anxious. One can only play so many games of video solitaire before one goes mad. One can only sleep on one’s leather chair so long before one goes mad. One can only drink so much Aquadent laced water before one goes mad. In my mind I hear the call to rough up the Maltese and be satiated. Until then I will keep writing and planning until that glorious day when I breach the panic room and I am allowed to bathe in my glory. But for now, here is chapter twenty-one of Catzilla.  

Catzilla

by

Gigi the parti poodle

Chapter Twenty-One

The kitten leaned in. Its hot breath singed my cheek. From the corner of my eye, I saw Lyle slip his hand into his pocket.

“Briar!” my mom cried from the distance.

Suddenly, the sound of the forklift rumbled, and Aero drove up to the opposite side of the flatbed. He slid the fork under the kitten’s haunches. The surprised feline’s emerald-green eyes widened, and it turned and swiped one of its alligator-sized paws at him. The paw struck the overhead guard missing Aero but rattling the machine. Aero tried again to slide the forklift under the kitten’s haunches, but the creature swung a mean left causing the forklift to wobble and fall over on its right side. The kitten leaped on top of the fallen machine to examine its prey.

I heard the racing of dog paws scratching across the cement floor rushing towards their owner, their barks echoing against the pole building’s walls. Gavin sprung up and flew like Superman through the air landing on the flatbed with a thump. The kitten whipped around and slashed at its new enemy. The rottweiler sunk its jaws into the kitten’s front leg, shaking its head wildly as if he had just acquired a new chew toy. The kitten caterwauled baring its double set of teeth. Fritz viciously barked at the kitten and leapt up onto the flatbed to join its fellow soldier. It tried to bite the kitten on its large pink nose, but the kitten swatted at it making contact and sending the dog sailing through the air where it landed in the bed of Buckly’s pickup causing the truck to jolt.

I felt Lyle grab my arm and pull me away from the side of the flatbed. As he did, Gavin leaped up and sunk his teeth into the kitten’s throat. The kitten wailed and with its right paw flung Gavin off hurling him into the air. The dog flipped over and over landing on the flatbed on its side. The rottweiler struggled to its feet but fell back down whimpering. The kitten then snatched the fallen dog into its jaws, and bit down. The horrific sound of bones snapping filled the hollow pole building and in an instant the dog’s crushed frame fell, hitting the flatbed and bouncing off onto the cement floor like a bag of wet sand.

Fritz, suddenly aware of his companion’s demise, leapt out of the pickup and charged across the cement floor towards the kitten. He scrambled back onto the flatbed as my mother grabbed my hand and drew me further away from the action.

The kitten caught Fritz in his mouth and was about to crush him as well when the forklift roared to life and Aero somehow situated the lift under the flat making it jolt. The four football players rushed over to assist and began trying to tilt the forklift back into an upright position. The kitten, however, was not on board with this and hurled Fritz at them. Fritz, who was more agile than the kitten expected, managed to flip in the air sailing above the boys and landing on his paws behind the forklift.

“Lyle!” my mom called. “We need to get the dose into its mouth!”

“How?” Lyle replied thinking my mom was nuts.

“If we don’t that cat’s going to kill us all!”

“I don’t want to die, Mrs. Gagnon.”

“I don’t want you to die either, Lyle but we need to make this happen!”

Just then the forklift jolted the flatbed from underneath and the kitten scrambled to regain its balance. This gave Aero, whom the football players managed to tip back into an upright position a one up on the kitten. The football players backed out of the way and Aero was able to slide the forklift under the flatbed at the right level and tilt it enough to cause the kitten to slide off onto the concrete floor. Fritz came plowing up to the kitten barking and snarling. The kitten hissed and swatted its paw, but the dog dodged her and continued to bark and snap at her.

Lyle and my mother snuck behind the kitten. Lyle retrieved a Kraft caramel from his jacket pocket, unwrapped it and smashed my dad’s last pills into it. I ran towards them, but my mother waved me back. Lyle took the lead moving closer and closer to the kitten’s head.

“Mom!” I mouthed silently. My mom shook her head as if to say you can’t stop this and I was overwhelmed with helplessness. I couldn’t just stand there and let Lyle take the risk. He crept around the side of the kitten as Fritz kept barking and charging at it. Lyle inched around closer to the front of the kitten. I could see he was getting ready to toss the caramel into the kitten’s mouth. He pulled his arm back like he was going to send a bowling ball down an alley when Fritz charged at the kitten. Just as Lyle threw the caramel underhand and the confection became airborne, the kitten struck Fritz with her paw causing the dog to go sailing knocking the caramel out of its intended path leaving nothing between Lyle and the kitten. The kitten lurched at Lyle and slapped him with her paw.

I saw where the caramel landed and ran towards it. The kitten scooped Lyle up in its paw. Lyle screamed. I dove for the candy, but Frits ran in front of me knocking me over. I turned and saw the kitten bat Lyle around as if he were a toy. My hands grabbed at the floor trying to pluck up the caramel all the while listening to Lyle’s screams. Fritz dodged at the kitten again but this time he missed me, and I snatched the caramel in my fist and jumped around and yelled, “Here, kitty, kitty, kitty!”

The kitten dropped Lyle on the floor and turned its dark green eyes at me. It leaned in, opened its mouth, and hissed. I tossed the caramel underhand and it sailed into the back of the kitten’s throat. The kitten swallowed the candy as I ran over to Lyle who lay motionless. My mom rushed over and helped pull him away just as the kitten turned in our direction. My mom retrieved her mace from her jacket pocket and sprayed it into the kitten’s eyes. The kitten howled as we struggled to limp back to the truck dragging Lyle with us. The kitten wiped its eyes with the back of its paws, turned and headed after us. But Aero whipped around from the other side of the truck and zoomed up to the kitten putting feline and forklift face to face.

“Get in the trucks!” Aero yelled and the football players scrambled for their pickup.

“All you need are a few minutes before those drugs start kicking in!” my mom yelled.

“Rodger,” Aero yelled back.

With Lyle lying between us in the cabin, I checked his pulse as my mother turned over the engine. I looked out the window and saw Aero and the cat fencing.

The football players revved up the engine of Buckly’s pickup, whipped the truck around and drove towards the kitten. The kitten knocked over the small forklift again and charged at the truck. It jumped onto the hood and swiped at the window.

My mom opened the door and jumped down. She rushed over to the pickup, faced the kitten, and sprayed what was left of her mace into its face. The kitten shrieked, its paws swiping erratically in front of its eyes, losing its balance, and falling off the hood of Buckly’s truck. Aero climbed out of the forklift pointed at it and said, “This is the worst forklift in the world!”

“Let’s get out of here!” Buckly yelled.

Aero ran towards the entrance as Buckly hit the gas. Aero pushed the button, the doors started to rise, and the pickup truck zoomed through. My mom released the brake and drove forwards. As she did the kitten took a flying leap and landed on the flatbed with a thud.

“Mom!”

“How’s Lyle?”

“The kitten!”

“How’s Lyle?”

“He’s not moving.”

“We need to get out fast.” The kitten stood up and plopped its paws on the top of the roof. But my mom was not deterred. She barreled the truck towards the doors. Suddenly, the kitten slumped over on top of the roof. “The drugs are working.” My mom stopped the truck and hit the brake. “Let’s get out.”

“But the kitten.”

“It’ll be sleeping shortly. We need to get Lyle out of here.” Mom and I disembarked. “Aero!” she called. “Help!”

“But…”

“Now!”

MY BOOKS

You can check out my books Chicane and all five installments of the Musicology book series Musicology: Volume One, Baby!Musicology: Volume Two, Kid!Musicology: Volume Three, Twist!Musicology: Volume Four, Sweetie! and Musicology: The Epiquad on Amazon in Kindle and Paperback editions. You can also check out Musicology’s web site at www.musicologyrocks.com and vote for who you think will win Musicology!

STREAM OF THE WEEK: COLLATERAL (2004)-NETFLIX & PARAMOUNT+

This week’s pick is one of those rare action movies that combines pensive meditations on philosophy with edge of your seat thrills. Smartly penned by Stuart Beattie and well directed by Michael Mann, this summer sleeper originally came out in August of 2004 and packed a wallop.

Max Durocher (Jamie Fox in a wonderful Oscar nominated supporting performance) has a dream: to own his own fleet of Lincoln Town Cars and run a limousine service. But he lives in fear of success and has been stuck in the same nightly taxi driver job for twelve years. One night a beautiful lawyer named Annie Farrell (Jada Pinkett-Smith) gets in his cab. She is on her way to a hotel to prepare for the first day of her recent court case. She and Max argue civilly over what the best and fastest routes to her destination are until she relents, and Max’s route turns out to be the most efficient. The two form a connection and make a trade: Max gives her the postcard of a serene island he keeps on his visor, and she gives him her business card.

Max’s next fare turns out to be a sharp-dressed man in a grey suit named Vincent (Tom Cruise in a tour de force performance) who at first seems polite and professional but quickly reveals himself to be something more sinister. Vincent offers Max $700 to be his only passenger for the night, which involves making rounds to five different locations to carry out his assignments all while providing Max with unconventional advice about life.

The movie was also nominated for Best Achievement in Editing for Jim Miller and Paul Rubell. Mark Ruffalo, Peter Berg, and Javier Bardem round out the film’s fantastic cast.

Red Flag Personality Traits in People

Daily writing prompt
What personality trait in people raises a red flag with you?

There are several and we are not being comical this time. Combinations of any of the following are highly suspect.

  1. They drink black coffee.
  2. They drink gin and tonic.
  3. They like bitter foods such as radishes.
  4. They eat strange combinations of foods and often like fast food (like Donald Trump or Warren Buffet)
  5. They exhibit a poor sense of smell.
  6. They are obsessed with food, money and sex.
  7. They have heavy prominent eyebrows.
  8. They have a wide face.
  9. They have a flat affect.
  10. They bully people.
  11. They are extroverted and a thinker.
  12. They have a tendency to get in your personal space.
  13. They are twitchy and/or use their hands a lot when they talk.
  14. They are arrogant and narcissistic.
  15. They don’t like animals, don’t like pets and if they live where they could have pets, they don’t have any.
  16. They often engage in high-risk activities such as base jumping, hang gliding, snowboarding, gambling, fast driving.
  17. They have a violent temper.
  18. They are a member of a college fraternity.
  19. They are extroverted (not introverted) and play sports for a high school or college or professionally.
  20. They are an ESTP, ENTP or ENTJ. Sometimes possibly an ESTJ.
  21. They are majoring or planning to major in business administration, law, communications, criminology, religion, culinary arts, or planning on becoming a surgeon.
  22. They are a CEO, a salesperson, a lawyer, a policeman or policewoman, a surgeon, a chef, a journalist, a postal worker, a politician, a civil servant, a member of the clergy, or they work in the media.
  23. They have abnormal speech patterns consisting of unusually high amounts of doubled words, disfluencies, and excessive use of subordinate conjunctions such as because, so that, that, therefore, etc.
  24. They primarily listen to rap music and like songs like “No Diggity” by Blackstreet and “Lose Yourself” my Eminem and hate songs like “My Sharonna” by The Knack and “Titanium” by Sia.
  25. They have an above average IQ. One example is Simon Cowell and Ted Bundy who both have/ had an IQ of 124.
  26. They are pathological liars.
  27. They are charming.

Catzilla Chapter Twenty

Good afternoon. It is I Gigi the parti poodle here to introduce chapter twenty of my story Catzilla. The Maltese has been driving me mad. Long ago my novelist taught him to speak. This may have been one of her worst decisions to date. Lately he’s been barking more than usual. He likes to hear his own woof. It is most annoying. I wish he would quiet down but he’s having such fun driving the rest of us insane. When my novelist talks too much, I simply put my paw on her mouth to stop the infernal noise. She has the sense to cease talking. The Maltese, on the other hand, does not. But I have come up with a plan. As much as he likes to bark, he likes to sleep and so, I have located an old pocket recorder which I turn on when he barks so I can tape him. Tonight, after he has fallen asleep, I am going to give him a taste of his own torment. I’m going to place the recorder right by his bed near his ear. Take that, wretched mongrel! See how you like being awoken from your precious slumber by the sound of infernal barking! And with that thought, here is chapter twenty of Catzilla.  

Catzilla

by

Gigi the parti poodle

Chapter Twenty

Lyle and I hopped in the cabin of the flatbed and my mom slowly backed out. As she did the kitten’s paws dragged along the asphalt.

“Mom, this isn’t going to work,” I said.

My mom looked in the rearview mirror and nodded. “You’re right,” she said. “We need to reposition the cat.”

“We could rope its paws to the top of the truck,” Lyle said.

“We’re going to need those football players to help us,” my mom said and shut off the engine, opened the door, and climbed out of the cabin. She ran out and waved down the pickup truck Buckly was driving.

Buckley rolled down the window and asked, “What’s the matter, Mrs. Gagnon?”

“We can’t drive away with the cat’s front paws dragging along the road.”

“That thing’s a killer. Who cares what happens to its paws?”

“You have a point, Buckly. But it’s inhumane. We need to tie the cat’s paws up and take a chance on restoring it to its normal size. I need you four boys to help us do this before it wakes up.”

“What are we going to use?”

“There’s rope in the cabin. It should be enough for you guys to pull it off.”

Buckley rolled his eyes. “Let’s just get it done.”

He shut off the engine and the other three football players reluctantly climbed out of the pickup. Mom opened the door of the flatbed and handed them the rope.

“If this thing wakes up,” Silas said, “all bets are off.”

“Agreed,” my mom said. Then she sided up to the driver’s side window. “Lyle, come out here. I need you to watch the cat while the boys tie her paws.”

“Yes, Mrs. Gagnon,” Lyle said.

Lyle disembarked the truck, and I watched in the rear-view mirror as he walked over and stood in front of the cat, studying it intensely. My mom climbed back inside and shut the door. The four football players climbed onto the flatbed, and secured the ropes to hooks on the roof of the cabin. Then Silas and Toby got on either side of the kitten’s right paw and attempted to lift it as if it were a big furry alligator. They made a loop with the rope, slipped the paw through, anchored it, and cinched it allowing the paw to hang out like a diving board.

Buckly and the fourth football player whose name was Devin, passed by the kitten’s upside-down head, secured their rope to the roof of the cabin, made a loop and were just about to stick the left paw through it when Lyle said, “Hold it.” The four football players looked to find the kitten had opened its eyes and was staring at Lyle.

“Mom,” I whispered as I was looking through the window at the back of the cabin. “I think the kitten’s regaining consciousness.”

My mom looked at the cat and whispered back, “It’s probably still under.”

Then I heard a distorted version of that unmistakable hiss. “Lyle needs help.”

My mom heard it too. She disembarked the truck and hurried over beside Lyle. She whispered something to him. Lyle took a step towards the kitten, and I craned my neck to see what it was, but I was unable to get a good look. The hissing became erratic, then softer, and then tapered off. I watched as Buckley and Devon threaded the kitten’s left paw through the looped rope, anchored it, and cinched it. Lyle hurried in front of the truck and climbed back inside the cabin next to me.

“Buckle up,” my mom said. “We’re heading to Steeling Cars Auto Maintenance.”

My mom pulled up beside the Steeling Cars Auto Maintenance sign while Buckly and the other football players pulled up behind her. “Stay here,” she told Lyle and I before disembarking the truck. She headed up to the entrance of the garage and banged on the door. “Mr. McQuoid! Mr. McQuoid!”

A guy in grey greasy overalls rounded the corner wiping his hands on a dirty towel. He looked at my mother and said, “I take it you’re the lady from the school dance with the toolshed sized cat.”

“That’s correct.”

“Wow,” Aero McQuoid said walking up to the side of the flatbed where the sleeping kitten lay sprawled with its paws tied to the top of the truck and its head turned upside down. “It looks dead.”

“No, it’s breathing.”

Aero took a closer look, “You’re right it is. So, you want to cage up this thing in the pole building over there, huh?”

My mom looked in the direction his oil-stained finger was pointing. “Yes. I think that will work splendidly.”

“So how do you want to do this?”

“I was hoping to drive the truck in and have the boys in the pickup behind me untie the cat and help slide it onto the floor and get out.”

“Uh, huh. How long do you think that thing will stay passed out?”

“Difficult to say. I gave her a solid dose and a backup but with a cat that large its hard telling when it will wear off.”

“Well, I don’t want to be around when that thing wakes up. I’ll go open the doors for you and you can drive in.”

Aero strolled towards the pole building and mom motioned for Buckly and the other football players to follow her. She hopped back into the cabin and drove up to the pole building entrance. Aero pushed in a code on the side of the building and the large door began to rise. As it did two oversized rottweilers trotted out and sat down in front of the building on either side of the entrance as if they were stone lions. I looked in the rearview mirror and saw Buckly get out of the pickup. As soon as he did, the rottweilers began growling and baring their teeth. They rose to their paws ready to pounce.

“Fritz, Gavin!” Aero snapped. “Sit!”

The two dogs begrudgingly sat back down on their haunches. But their eyes never left Buckly. I watched Buckly slowly get back into the pickup and follow my mother as she drove the flatbed into the pole building. She shut off the engine, rolled down her window and asked, “How are we supposed to unload this cat with your two guard dogs sitting there ready to pounce?”

“Fritz and Gavin?”

“Yes, Fritz and Gavin.”

“I’ll have them stand outside the door and guard the place. They’re well trained.”

“You’re sure they won’t attack?”

“Totally.”

Mom looked skeptically at the two rottweilers.

“I don’t trust your dogs, man,” Buckly called from the pickup.

“Kid, I just told the lady here they won’t attack.”

“They growled at me.”

“They’re excellent judges of character.”

“I’ll get out first, Buckly,” my mom said. She opened the truck door. The two rottweilers studied her but remained seated. My mom motioned for Buckly and the other three football players to come over. She stuck her head back in the window and said, “We’re going to need your help too.”

Lyle and I got out of the truck and walked around to the side where the football players were standing.

“We’re going to slide it off the flatbed,” my mom said.

“How?” Devin asked.

“Mr. McQuoid has a forklift over there which will make things easier. You boys will untie the ropes. Mr. McQuoid will slide the forklift under the cat. Briar will watch to make sure the cat does not wake up. Lyle will deal with the cat if it wakes up.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?”

“Lyle knows what it means and that’s what matters. Now, let’s get started.”

Buckly, Devon, Silas, and Toby all climbed up on the flatbed. The kitten let out a huge snore and all four boys jumped back.

“Easy,” my mom said.

Silas and Toby got on either side of the kitten’s right paw. Buckly and Devon carefully unhitched the rope as Silas and Toby carefully loosened the loop and slipped it off the kitten’s paw. Silas and Toby moved over to the kitten’s left paw as Buckly and Devon loosened the remaining ropes from the top of the truck’s cabin. Silas and Toby slowly lowered the paw down.

Mr. McQuoid started driving the forklift over to the cat. “Alright, boys,” he told the football players. “I’m going to take it from here.”

Aero drove the forklift around to the back of the truck. He lifted the fork to meet the height of the kitten. Lyle and I, our eyes still on the kitten’s face, took a step back as Aero began to side the fork under the feline’s underbelly. The kitten began to rise. My mother put the truck into neutral and began to slowly roll it forwards. The kitten suspended in the air slumped over the front of the fork so Lyle and I could no longer see its face. Aero shifted gears and began to lower the kitten to the ground.

Suddenly, Lyle grabbed my arm. Then I saw the cat lift its head and bore its emerald-green eyes into ours. It hissed like a giant cobra and swatted its paw causing it to slip forwards on the forklift. Whump! It landed on its feet hissing loudly staring Lyle and I down.

MY BOOKS

You can check out my books Chicane and all five installments of the Musicology book series Musicology: Volume One, Baby!Musicology: Volume Two, Kid!Musicology: Volume Three, Twist!Musicology: Volume Four, Sweetie! and Musicology: The Epiquad on Amazon in Kindle and Paperback editions. You can also check out Musicology’s web site at www.musicologyrocks.com and vote for who you think will win Musicology!

STREAM OF THE WEEK: RESERVOIR DOGS (1992)-NETFLIX

It occurs to me sometimes that I assume everyone has seen a lot of great films. And that may not be so. Especially with the saturation of superhero movies and the peculiar idea that said films have depth, are art, and are not just overhyped entertainment. But for the most part they don’t have depth, are anything but art, and are primarily designed for franchising and merchandising. And so, this week I thought I would recommend a film that everyone should see, has truly great writing and direction, and says something more profound about the human condition.

Quintin Tarantino films tend to have two basic elements. One is they are about honor. Two is they are about logic. This is a film that pits one against the other in a brilliant exploration of honor amongst thieves. The story on the surface is basic: a jewelry store robbery has gone wrong. The post robbery meeting place is a warehouse. After the botched job those who didn’t get killed show up to figure out if they’ve been set up and if so by whom. But at its core it’s about each character’s vantage point, their personal values, and how those two elements determine if they will survive.

Six criminals are hired by a father and son. The father is Joe Cabot (Lawrence Tierney) the son goes by the name Nice Guy Eddie (Chris Penn). The thugs they hire know nothing about each other and are given fake names by Joe. The aged veteran is Mr. White (Harvey Keitel), the resident psychopath is Mr. Blonde (Michael Madsen) the rookie is Mr. Orange (Tim Roth), the man on the brink of retirement is Mr. Blue (Edward Bunker), the conspiracy theorist is Mr. Brown (Quintin Tarantino himself), and the cynic is Mr. Pink (Steve Buscemi).

After an unplanned shootout occurs at the jewelry store, police show up and civilians and two of the criminals are killed. Two of the survivors arrive at the warehouse first. One of them has been shot in the stomach and is in dire need of medical care. A third criminal shows up with the bag of diamonds and a fourth shows up with a surprise in his trunk. The men debate as to if they have been set up, if there is a mole amongst them, if the rendezvous location is safe, and if Joe and Nice Guy Eddy are coming or if they are waiting for Godot. The story is told in the present and well-designed flashbacks which give us insight into who each of these men are and all the performances are first rate. This is a must-see piece of masterful modern filmmaking.

Catzilla Chapter Nineteen

Good afternoon. It is I Gigi the parti poodle here to bring you chapter nineteen of my story Catzilla. The time is drawing near when I must wind down to the last few chapters of my story and choose a whole new tale to pen. This is more difficult than it seems. Do I go with drama or comedy? Do I attempt a mystery, a love story, fantasy, or science fiction? Do I write a tale about humans or animals or both? I must say, the pressure is keeping me awake at night. I often hop off the bed, step on the Maltese just to interrupt his slumber, and pace about the room. The moonlight illuminates my gorgeous two-toned hair. I make a cup of tea and sit in the rocking chair and peruse my list of log lines to see which one I like the best. I gaze outside at the stars and ponder my next chess move. How shall I best entertain my readers? You’ll have to tune in to find out. But for now, here is chapter nineteen of Catzilla.

Catzilla

by

Gigi the parti poodle

Chapter Nineteen

Four football players who were attending the dance offered to carry the refreshments table out to the flatbed truck my mother had driven out of the old bus garage. She parked by the back door on the opposite side of the gym.

Before they carried out the table I suggested, “You should take the liquids off it. It would be lighter that way.” The football players looked at me like I was stupid and tried to carry it with the drinks on it anyway. Then they set it down.

“I think she’s right,” the smallest of them said. I think he was the kicker.

“Don’t be a pussy, Toby,” one of the other guys said. He looked like a linebacker.

“But it’s heavy, bro.”

They picked it up again and tried to carry I again and again they ended up setting it down. “I hate it with Toby’s right,” the linebacker said. “Let’s just try it again.”

“I’m not trying it again, Buckly,” one of the other football players said. “This is stupid.”

They set down the table and Buckley said, “Gagnon,” in reference to me. “You’re the one who wants the drinks off the table. So, take the drinks off the table.”

I shrugged my shoulders, walked over, and began taking cans of soda and bottles of water off the table. Lyle headed over and started helping me.

“What do you think you’re doing, Concord,” Buckley said with a sneer.

Lyle calmly looked at him and said, “I’m helping Briar.”

“I don’t think so, flyboy. She’s the one who wants the drinks taken off the table so she’s the one who’s taking the drinks off the table.”

“Just let me do it, Lyle,” I said concerned the football players might rough him up.

Lyle looked at me and then looked at the football players. “Are you okay doing this?”

“Yeah, I think I can take drinks off a table by myself.”

Lyle nodded. Then he looked at the football players again and stepped away.

“Your boyfriend’s a weirdo,” Buckly said.

“It’s possible for a girl and a guy to just be friends, you know.”

Buckly and his teammates chuckled. “No, it isn’t.”

Idiots. I took the last few drinks off the table and stacked them against the gym wall with the others and the football players lifted the table and headed out the door where my mom was waiting in the truck.

“I think we’d better go after them,” Lyle said.

“Okay,” I said warily.

We stepped out into the cool night air and watched the boys turn the table around and start to load it onto the truck bed. As they did Lyle, and I heard the faintest sound of an angry hiss. From out behind one of the parked buses sauntered the kitten.

“Lyle,” I whispered, every hair on my arms standing on end. Lyle looked up and saw the wide angry red feline mammoth prowl towards the truck.

“Buckly,” Lyle said. “The cat is here.”

All four guys stopped and turned to see the giant haystack of a creature creeping towards them.

“Holy cow!” one of them said.

“What the…?” another croaked.

The kitten’s elliptical emerald-green eyes twinkled with menace as it hunched down, its fluffy garden hose sized tail swishing, preparing for battle. My heart pounded thunderously, and I struggled to breathe. Then suddenly the kitten was airborne.

It looked like a giant Garfield balloon at the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade with its arms outstretched like Superman sailing through the air in slow motion. It gave the four football players enough time to jump off the truck and Lyle and I enough time to hurry behind one of the school buses and hide. The football players saw us and headed over to take cover.

The kitten landed squarely on the back of the flatbed with a hard thud causing the truck to shake. It sent reverberations up to my mother in the driver’s seat. The kitten dug in and ate ravenously devouring everything on the table: cookies, chips, nuts, and of course the drug laced cupcakes decorated in the school’s colors.

“What is that thing?” Buckly demanded.

“We believe it to be an experiment from the Edevane factory designed to see how compliant people are.”

“Are they out to kill all their customers?”

“I don’t know. It is, however, overdramatic.”

“What do we do if your mom’s pills aren’t strong enough, Gagnon?”

“I don’t know,” I replied.

“You don’t know?” he said as we witnessed the cat scarf up the last of the food.

“No, but we need to wait this out and see if it falls asleep.”

The kitten suddenly turned its head and stomped around to face us.

“What now?” Toby asked.

The kitten turned its large triangle ears around like antennas, shifting and flickering as if trying to hear us better. I glance at my mom who is sitting in the truck glancing at the cat in the rearview mirror. The kitten sniffs the air. We hold our breath waiting for my dad’s sedatives to kick in. The cat’s head makes a full 360° turn baring its two rows of sharp teeth.

“It’s like Jaws!” Buckly exclaims.

“I want to go home,” one of the football players lamented.

“Shut up, Silas. You’re going to draw its attention.”

The kitten narrowed its emerald-green eyes and put its left front paw down on the asphalt. Then it put its right front paw down. It started lifting one of its hind legs…it mewed strangely, sagged to one side, and blinked a couple of times. Its green eyes started to glaze over, and it turned its head around, so it was upside down with its chin pointing north. Its long pink tongue flopped out of the corner of its mouth like a large pink deflated innertube. Its eyelids raised and lowered slowly until they finally shut, covering the menacing emerald-green eyes. And then it began to snore.

My mother rolled down the driver’s side window. “Did you boys drive here in a car?” she asked the football players.

Buckly scarfed. “A truck.”

“Get in the truck and follow us. Briar and Lyle, you ride with me.”

MY BOOKS

You can check out my books Chicane and all five installments of the Musicology book series Musicology: Volume One, Baby!Musicology: Volume Two, Kid!Musicology: Volume Three, Twist!Musicology: Volume Four, Sweetie! and Musicology: The Epiquad on Amazon in Kindle and Paperback editions. You can also check out Musicology’s web site at www.musicologyrocks.com and vote for who you think will win Musicology!

STREAM OF THE WEEK: THE BEAR (2022)-HULU & FX

One of the finest shows on television presently is this smart, funny, raw, and poignant tale from FX and Hulu. Accurately depicting what it’s like to work in restaurants which is essentially like going into battle and not in a good way, the story centers around intense introverted Carmen “Carmy” Berzatto (Jeremy Allen White who is fantastic in the role) an extraordinary young chef who while working at one of the finest restaurants in the world is ripped out of his lofty ecosphere after his older brother Michael (Jon Bernthal) blows his brains out and wills the family restaurant to him. Michael’s restaurant is not haute cuisine. It is sandwiches and spaghetti sold in a Chicago neighborhood where mobsters hang out and occasionally shoot at each other. Michael’s best friend, arrogant rough and tumble Richard “Richie” Jerimovich (Ebon Moss-Bachrach also fantastic here) co-runs the restaurant with Carmy. Despite their different demeanors, the two are relatively sympatico and struggle to keep the restaurant alive, especially since money is tight and deceased Michael owes a large sum to their Uncle Jimmy (Oliver Platt).

Into their business comes a young, trained chef named Sydney Adamu (Ayo Edebiri) who has a vision of her own as to how the restaurant should be run, which is in many ways compatible to Carmy’s style. The two struggle to bring the rest of the staff on board, including Richie, to change their low-bar style of cooking, train the chefs to work as a team, and elevate the menu to a higher plane all while Carmy fights to come to terms with his ever-present crushing grief.

This wonderfully claustrophobic show is nominated for thirteen well deserved Emmy nominations and is an absolute must see. Especially impressive is its surprising first season finale that knocks it right out of the park.

The Last Thing I Searched for Online

Daily writing prompt
What was the last thing you searched for online? Why were you looking for it?

Why it was a dog bed of course. Apparently, the spoiled rotten Maltese needs a new dog bed. I don’t know why he should be bestowed a new sleeping apparatus. He’s perfectly fine on the floor on his well-worn pillow. Why does he need a mattress? I don’t get a new bed. Just because I sleep on my novelist’s Sealy Posturepedic mattress doesn’t mean I don’t deserve the best, the finest dog bed around. But do I get one? No. I just get scolded for growling at that wretched cur every time he wants to hop up on my bed. I mean the nerve. Doesn’t he realize it’s uncivilized for a Maltese to sleep on the same mattress as a parti poodle? Does he not realize he is unworthy? And then my novelist, my Maltese enabler insisting he needs better support. Better support. Are you kidding me? That thing is spoiled beyond belief. Eating the same special dog food I do, eating the same premium treats I do, sleeping on a new bed instead of the cold hard floor where he belongs. It’s utter madness. So, there you are. That’s the last thing my novelist and I searched for online. Pathetic.

Catzilla Chapter Eighteen

Good afternoon. Gigi the parti poodle here to introduce chapter eighteen of my story Catzilla. My novelist and I have been wanting to recommend a film for our stream of the week that was released in 2003. My novelist had watched it some years ago and was most impressed. She also watched the remake, but the original is the one to see. She was perplexed she could not locate it on any of the streaming channels this past year. But it turns out the film has been fully remastered and restored and has gotten a theatrical re-release as of August 16th. The film is called Oldboy and if you have never seen it before you really, really should. This is a well-told action mystery tale and the less you know about it before you go in the better. I will say it contains violence and explicit adult themes so it’s not for kids. But if you want a great time at the movie theatres and this is playing near you, we strongly recommend it. Even Tucker the Maltese wants to go. In fact, he claims to have a junior blackbelt in Taekwondo, but I have my doubts. He does keep trying to spar with me, however, and the whole situation has become quite disturbing. Anyway, here is chapter eighteen of Catzilla. Enjoy!  

Catzilla

by

Gigi the parti poodle

Chapter Eighteen

“Mr. Homola,” my mom said. “May I address the crowd?”

Principal Doofus sighed. “Sure.”

My mom walked up the stage stairs and stepped up to the microphone. “From what I can ascertain,” she said, “my daughter and her friend were able to lure the cat and sedate it. It was smaller at the time, and they managed to place a bug on it so they could follow it. I am not condoning these actions, but they worked just the same. To get the cat into a container we are going to have to sedate it yet again. Originally my daughter and her friend did this by luring it with food. Therefore, we will need to feed the kitty. Let’s take the refreshments we have on the table there and put together a meal for the creature.”

“Psst, Mrs. Gagnon,” Lyle said just off stage. “What if we just moved the entire table outside?”

My mom glanced at the refreshments table. “What items should I put the drugs into do you think?”

Lyle studied the goodies. “Great question. I think the cat would be fond of the cupcakes.”

“Really?”

“Yes.”

“I suppose that’s as good an option as any.” Then she turned back to the microphone and said, “I’m going to put the sedatives into the cupcakes. Nobody eats anything off that table from now on.” Everyone watched as my mother climbed down from the stage and headed over to the table.

“Wait!” Mr. Relish, the science teacher said. “We need to know where we’re going to store the cat after we drug it.”

“If I’m not mistaken,” my mom said, “there’s a pole building that belongs to the car mechanic’s shop that’s just on the outskirts of town.”

“How are we going to transport it there? Because otherwise your dragging tonnage for the length of a mile.”

“The school owns a large truck with a long flatbed they use every year to build a float on for homecoming. We’ll drive the truck out, park it, put the table of food on top of the bed and lure the cat. The cat will climb on the bed, eat the food, and pass out.”

“There’s all sorts of things that could go wrong with that plan.”

“Maybe. But do you have a better idea?”

Mr. Relish stared her down for a moment and said, “Not presently. But even if you could lure the cat up there and sedate it, who’s going to drive the truck?”

“I am. I paid most of my way through college driving trucks for a company in the summers.”

“Fine.”

“Good.”

“Well,” Principal Doofus said. “After you drug the cupcakes what’s your next move, Mrs. Gagnon?”

“We need to contact the owner of the mechanic’s shop so we can have the doors open to drive the cat in there.”

“Who owns the mechanic’s shop?”

“Quincy’s dad!” one of the kids shouted.

Of course, I thought.

“But Quincy’s missing,” Principal Doofus said.

“Yes.”

“Well, there goes your plan, Mrs. Gagnon.”

My mom sighed. “Can someone try and text Quincy?”

Just then there was a big thud against the main doors followed by an ear-splitting caterwauling. Students screamed.

“Calm down,” my mother said into the microphone. “Everyone, calm down.”

The guitarist struck another earsplitting chord. This seemed to get things under control.

“Alright,” my mom said. “We need to figure out who’s going to be the team to drug the cat and who’s going to stay in the gym. But first, I’m going to try and contact Quincy’s father’s shop and explain what’s going on and what we plan to do.” Then she stepped away from the microphone and walked down the stairs to us.

“I have the number to the mechanic,” Lyle said. “My dad had to take his car there last week to get a dent fixed and they called my number by mistake.”  

I furrowed my brow and asked, “Why did you say something a couple of minutes ago?”

“I didn’t think about it.”

“They’re probably closed by now.”

“Someone could be working late,” he said locating the number in his phone and dialing it. “I’ll put them on speakerphone, Mrs. Gagnon so you can do the talking.”

“That would be fantastic, Lyle,” my mom replied.

We listened to the phone ring a couple of times before a recorded voice said, “You’ve reached Steeling Cars Auto Maintenance. If you are calling about an emergency, please hang up and dial 911. Please listen to the following options. To make an appointment, press one. If you are calling to find out the status of your repair press two. If you are calling about a replacement part press three. If you are a supplier press four. If you need to speak to our legal department press five. For all other inquiries press six.”

“What should I press?” Lyle asked.

“Six,” my mom said.

Lyle pushed six and we waited. The phone rang several times before someone finally picked up. A rough, gravelly voice that sounded like it was run over with sandpaper said, “Yeah, what is it?”

“Hello,” my mom said. “This is an emergency.”

“Hang up and dial 911 like the message told you.”

“No, you don’t understand. We are in urgent need of your services. We want to use your pole building.”

“Pole building? What for?”

“We need a place to store a toolshed sized cat.”

“Is this Frank? Are you messing with me again? Because if you are…”

“This isn’t Frank. This is Mrs. Gagnon. I’m Briar’s mother. She goes to school with the owner’s son Quincy.”

“Yeah, so?”

“I don’t know if you’re aware of this but there genuinely is a toolshed sized cat running amuck on our streets and we need a sturdy place to imprison it after we sedate it.”

“You’re hilarious. I’ll see you tomorrow, Frank.”

“Don’t hang up! Please! This cat is dangerous, and your pole house is the best place to put it.”

“Yeah, well I can think of a few places to put it off the top of my head, Frank.”

“Please help us.”

“Uh…no.”

“We’ll give you two thousand dollars in cash. That’s what the school made off the tickets they sold for the dance tonight.”

There was a long silent pause on the other end of the line. “I’m here till nine. Once it’s nine, it’s Miller time.”

I looked at the wall clock in the gym. It was five past eight.

“Thank you, Mr.…”

“McQuoid. Aero McQuoid.”

“Thank you, Mr. McQuoid.”

“Just watch out for Gavin and Fritz.”

“Who are Gavin and Fritz?”

“Oh, you’ll see.”

MY BOOKS

You can check out my books Chicane and all five installments of the Musicology book series Musicology: Volume One, Baby!Musicology: Volume Two, Kid!Musicology: Volume Three, Twist!Musicology: Volume Four, Sweetie! and Musicology: The Epiquad on Amazon in Kindle and Paperback editions. You can also check out Musicology’s web site at www.musicologyrocks.com and vote for who you think will win Musicology!

STREAM OF THE WEEK: GAME NIGHT (2018)-HULU

One of the great joys of movies is finding a sleeper. And this wacky silly exciting film is well worth watching for its clever script and terrific actors. Max (Justin Bateman) is obsessed with winning games. He met the girl of his dreams Annie (Rachel McAdams) at a trivia night in a bar where they both got the right answer at the same time. After getting married they host a game night every week for their friends and recently have marginalized their next-door neighbor, a peculiar cop named Gary (Jesse Plemons) who used to attend their soirees until his wife divorced him. Because of their intense competitiveness, Max and Annie are having difficulty conceiving. They suspect this might be magnified by Max’s older brother Brooks (Kyle Chandler) who has always beaten Max at every game or challenge the two have had together. On their usual game night, Brooks shows up in town and at the end of the evening invites them to his house for the following week for what he promises to be a game night to remember.

Max and Annie show up at Brooks’s opulent rented house along with the usual game night guests: Kevin (Lamorne Morris), Michelle (Kylie Bunbury) and Ryan (Billy Magnussen). Ryan, who is always bringing a different date with him, has invited Sarah (Sharon Horgan) to join him. The six competitors settle in to play the murder mystery Brooks is hosting where the prize is a red Corvette Stingray, the car of Max’s dreams. Everything starts out as planned until the plan goes completely awry. Look for a couple of surprise celebrity guests along the way.