Basically the entire inspiration for the entire story. That episode was my favorite :p
Post Merged: May 05, 2011, 07:02:09 PM
Watching Your Back…
His name was Elfangor. He was a high ranking soldier in the Andalite military, and he despised the Yeerks. There had been a battle in space between the Yeerks and the Andalites—just one of the dozens of bloody battles that had been fought and lost between these two races over the last few decades. The Andalites were sure they would win. There weren’t that many Yeerk ships—Bug Fighters, he called them—after all. But the Andalites were wrong. A powerful Yeerk ship—the Blade Ship—was hidden behind the moon (that’s right, the moon!) where the Andalites couldn’t see it. There was only a single Andalite Dome Ship in orbit. The Andalites thought they would win the battle.
But the Dome Ship cracked under pressure of Yeerk fire—like, it literally cracked! But Elfangor managed to land his fighter on a small, abandoned construction site on Earth, where he met a scrawny teenaged boy named Tobias.
That scrawny teenaged boy was me. I met Elfangor that night, and he gave me a gift. He gave me a small piece of Andalite technology—pretty standard issue where he comes from—that permitted me a power that no other individual outside the Andalite race has possessed; the very unique ability to morph into any other animal by way of touch. It was a power far greater than I could even comprehend. But Elfangor was confident that I’d be successful in defeating the Yeerks. That’s right; the fate of the world depended on a scrawny, friendless teenager without a family.
Why did I except the Andalites gift? Why did I agree to participate in a war that I had no hopes of winning? I don’t really know. I guess maybe I wanted to prove myself. Maybe I wanted people to start seeing me as a hero. Or maybe I just figured that I had nothing to lose; unlike Jake or Marco, or any of the other kids I went to school with. I was different from any of the others, who listened to their parents and avoided the dangerous abandoned construction site, where an alien just so happened to land his fighter. I actually believed I could do it, too! I was kidding myself by actually thinking that I could take on the Yeerks, single handed!
Let me step back and explain a few things first.
The Yeerks are pretty much the size of your average slug; if not a few inches bigger. Elfangor explained the Yeerks by way of thoughts—see, Andalites don’t have mouths, so they speak telepathically. And through these thoughts, he explained the Yeerk-Andalite War. He showed me how the Yeerks would crawl through the ear canal—of any given species across the galaxy—and made their way to the brain; where they wrapped their tiny little bodies around the most precious organ of the human—or alien—body and seized absolute control. And once it does that, you lose your freewill. You become a controller. Your family and friends won’t know the difference, because the Yeerk has access to all your memories.
Piece of cake, right? I could handle a slug.
That’s when the Yeerks showed up. The Blade Ship, joined in by a handful of Bug Fighters, landed a few feet from where Elfangor and I had been standing. And out from the ships poured a whole bunch of the Yeerks foot soldiers—the Hork-Bajir—followed by their pilots—the ravenous Taxxons. And, walking out from the Blade Ship was the leader of the Yeerk invasion on Earth. I realized, the second that his stolen Andalite body walked out from the jet black Blade Ship that I wasn’t a hero or a soldier. I was the same, scrawny kid I had been earlier that day, when Mitch and Rick threatened to give me a swirly. The only difference between then and now was that I was aware of the existence of extraterrestrials, and I had a shiny blue cube. And even armed with morphing powers, what could a single teenager do to an army of aliens numbering in the thousands? And that was in the United States alone! I barely had time to register the fact that the Yeerks might have already had Yeerk Pools and fronts set up all over the world! I was just another weak, defenceless teenager.
And I was a scared, weak, defenceless teenager. A scared, little boy hiding behind a wall, without a mother to cry to! And not only was I scared, I was useless too! I just sat there clutching the blue box—the device Elfangor used to give me the power to morph—while a dying warrior was picked up from off the ground and devoured by the monstrous Visser Three—taking the form of an alien that made all those Hork-Bajir and Taxxon Controllers look like Barbie and Ken by comparison! A brave soldier died that night, and all I had to remember him by was a blue cube, a single strand of DNA, and that triumphant laugh that rang in my head as I ran back home!
So, given what I had just told you, you could see why I leapt about twenty feet into the air when Jake snuck up behind me Monday morning.
“Hey, Tobias!” he said, patting me on the back to get my attention. “Whoa, easy there man! Someone’s a bit jumpy.”
“Sorry about that.” I said, blushing. I tend to blush whenever I’m nervous—which means I blush a lot! “I didn’t get a lot of sleep last night.”
“Do you drink coffee?” he asked. “If you do, I recommend you switch to de-cafe.”
Jake smiled to tell me that he was only kidding. I forced a small smile in response, but that still didn’t change the fact that I was scared stupid! I mean, I can still hear Visser Three laughing in my head! He was still, somehow ringing in my head, despite the fact that he was laughing through thoughts. Thought speech doesn’t really make sound, obviously.
Brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrI iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiing!
I leapt about forty feet in the air. The bell rang for the next period. I managed to keep calm for most of home room—which is weird, since I pretty much suck at math class—but I started to get very jumpy after first bell rang. I kept expecting a classmate to turn around in their seat or jump out at me in the halls wielding a Dracon Beam, or even a gun! I also managed to convince myself that my assistant Principal, Mr. Chapman was really Visser Three in morph, which is ridiculous. Why would a Yeerk want to spend all day in the head of a principal?
Then again, I really had no idea who was a Controller and who wasn’t. Elfangor told me that the Yeerks could have around a thousand human hosts by now. So I just had to assume that even Big Jake Berenson could be a Controller with an agenda.
“I think I saw you at the arcade.” Jake said, as we walked to the cafeteria. “Were you at the mall, Friday night?”
I started getting really tense when he mentioned the mall. I’m almost sure he noticed it. I didn’t think he even noticed I was at the mall. I mean, hundreds of other people from school pretty much ignored me—unless, of course they were bullies with nothing better to do. What was he hiding?
“I was there for a bit.” I told him. I decided it was alright to give him small facts. After all, hundreds of high school students spend their Friday nights at the mall.
“Yea, Marco and I were there.” He said, laughing. “He thought he could ‘whip my butt’ at Space Destroyers. But I proved him wrong. I had at least fifty points on him.”
“Don’t you mean Space Invaders?” I asked, suspiciously.
Jake looked dumfounded. “What did I say?”
“You said Space Destroyers.”
“Yea, well I’m surprised that even half of my brain functions on a Monday morning.” He said, laughing.
I guess I knew what he was talking about. I mean, I was barely capable of reading the lunch menu on most Monday mornings. So, Jake confused the name of a stupid video game for something else; big deal! There’s no need to start pointing fingers and shouting YEERK! Every five seconds.
So Jake and I walked into the lunch line, standing behind six or seven other kids. That only made me more paranoid. I rarely eat the cafeteria. And, even when I did, Jake would just say “hey” and ask me politely if I wanted to sit with him and his friends. I would kindly refuse, since I didn’t want to get branded as the tag along friend—unless I was hiding from bullies that day. And now, all of a sudden, Jake and I were talking in the lunch line like we were buddies?
We didn’t talk for a bit while we were in line. I guess Jake—or the Yeerk pretending to be Jake—was thinking of something else to say. So I started looking around the cafeteria. There were four girls and two boys in the line ahead of us, and about five other kids—a mix of boys and girls—standing behind us. Four kids bought a slice of pizza. One girl bought a salad. One guy bought a small fry and one kid didn’t buy a thing!
I let Jake go ahead of me. I guess I was still paranoid; like I expected the lunch lady to start shooting at teenagers like a tramp or a psycho.
“The pizza looks good.” Jake said, smiling at the plump elderly lunch lady behind the counter. He stepped to the left to pay the lady at the cashier. I took his place and counted the little money I had.
“Would…a buck fifty be enough for a small fry?” I asked.
The lunch lady nodded, wearing an especially obvious look of pity on her plump face. I noticed that Jake looked as though he was about to say something—like maybe he would offer to pay for a more expensive lunch item—but knew that it would embarrass me. So Jake just stood outside the lunch line.
There you go, I thought to myself. Jake can’t be a Controller. Did you see that look of sympathy on his face? Did you see the freaking pity? Yeerks don’t feel pity; not from what Elfangor told you. Jake’s just a regular guy.
I let out a deep breath of relief, knowing that I could trust Jake. I handed the lady at the cashier my chump change and followed Jake to a table at the end of the cafeteria.
We sat down at a table with some kids sitting at the end. There was enough room for the two of us.
And that’s when Jake’s best friend Marco decided to sit with us.
“Can you believe that the lunch lady wouldn’t give me an extra slice, just because I was short fifty cents?” Marco said. “I turned on the charm and everything! I complimented her on her apron. And I even told her how especially pretty she looked in her hairnet today—and nothing!”
Marco looked at me, frowning and asked Jake, “What’s he doing here?”
Jake must have kicked him from underneath the table, because Marco started groaning in pain.
“I saw Tobias in the hall.” Jake said. “I thought he could sit with us. That’s not going to be a problem for you, right, Marco?”
Marco mumbled something that sounded like, “I guess not” and stuffed his mouth with pizza. There was some more uncomfortable silence—which seems to be frequent when I’m around—that was eventually broken with the arrival of Rachel and Cassie.
I tensed up, but not for the reason you think. At the time, I didn’t even consider the possibility that Rachel could have been a Controller. I was just really happy to see her right then. Apparently Marco was too.
“Rachel, you’re looking especially nice in that outfit this fine morning.”
Rachel gave him a suspicious look as she sat down. “I do, do I?”
“Oh yes,” Marco said, nodding. “And that top you are wearing is—OW! What the hell was that for?”
“That was for thinking you’re funny when you are not!” Rachel replied. “Keep it up, and I’ll kick higher.”
“Doesn’t anyone remember what a compliment sounds like?”
“How come you didn’t compliment Cassie?” Rachel asked.
“What am I supposed to say, ‘Hey, Cassie, those stained overalls are especially lovely on this fine morning. I especially like how the bird poop matches the whites of your eyes?’”
“I think she looks nice.” Jake said, awkwardly.
“Thank you, Jake.” Cassie blushed.
“See Marco? This explains why you don’t get dates.” Rachel told him.
“Are you offering, Rachel?” Marco asked, smoothly. “Because I’m free on Friday.”
“If the apocalypse takes place on Friday then I’ll go out with you.” She promised.
“Ha! There, it’s a date!” he grinned.
Rachel rolled her eyes and turned away from Marco. Her eyes met mine for the first time and she smiled warmly.
“It’s Tobias, right?” she asked.
She remembered my name!
“Yea…it is.” I said, blushing.
She remembered my name!
“It’s nice to have lunch with someone with more than half a functioning brain.” Rachel told me, nodding towards Jake and Marco. “It’s too late for them. With all the video games they play, I’m surprised they have enough brain cells to walk.”
“Come on Rachel, be nice.” Cassie said, smiling. “Jake uses more than half of his brain.”
“And what am I, chop liver?” Marco asked. “Besides, if memory serves, I beat Jake on the last math test!”
“And you’re pretty much flunking everything else!” Rachel retorted. “If memory serves, you spelt cinnamon bun without the extra n.”
Marco frowned. “I still say there should only be one n. I mean seriously, what’s the point?”
“He’s just as hopeless in science.” Jake added. “You should have heard what he said when the teacher asked him about the different states of matter.”
“What did he say?” she grinned. “I bet it was some lame joke about gas.”
Marco snorted. “Give me some credit. I would never make a joke about gas. Gas humour is the least funny of the entire humorous joke in the universe. On the humour spectrum it scores a 2.5, right behind fart humour.”
“That explains why you do so poorly in school.” Jake said.
“It also explains why nobody ever laughs at his jokes.” Rachel added. “I mean, really, barf humour?”
“You laugh now,” Marco shrugged. “But in ten years I’ll be rich, and you’ll be begging me for a date.”
Rachel and Marco continued their back and forth of insults—most of them were actually quite amusing—while Jake and Cassie started asking me about my weekend.”
“I didn’t do much, really.” I lied. “You know, same old same old.”
“Come on, you couldn’t have done nothing.” Jake pressed. “Not after all the excitement from Friday night.”
Then I started getting tense again.
“Why what happened on Friday night?” Cassie asked.
“Apparently, after we left the mall, some people claimed to have seen a flying saucer.”
“Really, a flying saucer?” Cassie asked, amused.
“Hey, maybe they’ve come to take Marco back to the planet with all the apes.”
“Have you even seen that movie?” Marco asked. “Or are you just going for cheap shots?”
“If I wanted to take a cheap shot, I would have made a comment about your height.” Rachel said, batting her eyes.
And Rachel and Marco started insulting each other some more.
“Anyways,” Jake continued. “It was in the newspaper. Everyone’s making a big deal about it.”
“Everyone?” Marco and I repeated. We looked at each other awkwardly.
“If it’s such big news then why haven’t I heard about it until now?” Rachel asked.
“Like I said, it was in the newspaper.” Jake replied. “Tom was asking me about it on Saturday. He wanted to know if I was at the construction site, or if I saw anyone there.”
“What did you say?” I asked.
Jake shrugged. “I told him I saw some kid hanging around, but I couldn’t see his face.” He shrugged again. “The police think it’s just some kids playing with fireworks, but they want to question teenagers.”
“I knew it couldn’t have been real aliens.” Marco mumbled. “A real alien would have landed in a more interesting town. I mean, why come here? What’s there to invade? Sure, they could replace us with pod people, but that would just mean an alien copy of myself would have to go to my school, sit in my desk, eat my crappy lunch, and fail my science test. You’d have to be pretty lame aliens to want to invade us.”
I couldn’t help but laugh at Marco’s joke. It was so ironic. He didn’t have a clue.
“But even if it was only a couple of kids playing with fire works,” Jake continued. “It’s still pretty cool to think about, right? A few kids set off some fireworks and scare the entire town into thinking they’re being invaded by aliens. I want to meet the kid who did it.” Jake grinned.
Then Jake asked me something that started to make me wonder if maybe he was a Controller.
“Hey Tobias, you were at the mall, right? Did you pass through the construction site?”
I looked Jake in the eye, as if I would be able to somehow see the Yeerk wrapped in his brain. But I only saw his eyes.
“No,” I told him. “It’s supposed to be dangerous.”
“My mom tells me that all the time.” Rachel said, rolling her eyes. “I don’t see was so scary.”
“That’s because you’re Xena.” Marco joked.
“It would be pretty cool though.” Jake said, seriously. “Aliens, I mean. Could you imagine actual aliens landing on earth?”
“Someone’s been watching too much Star Trek.” Marco said. “Jake, my man; there’s a whole world outside all that sci-fi crap.”
“Like you don’t watch Star Trek.” Rachel snorted.
“Hey, I’m not the one ranting about E.T’s and green men from mars.” Marco retorted.
“If aliens did land on earth, I sure hope they’d be peaceful.” Cassie said. “I really can’t imagine why anyone would want to bring harm to us. I mean, we already bring enough harm to each other.”
I decided right then that Cassie couldn’t be a Controller.
Brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr Iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiing !
The bell rang. Lunch was over. Time to get to class.
“Just great.” Marco mumbled. “I really should have studied last night.”
Everyone got up and threw their leftovers in the trash. Cassie was making a big deal about the pros of recycling while Rachel watched Marco fumble with his trash. Jake pulled me aside where the others wouldn’t hear us.
“Listen, I know you’re worried.” Jake told me.
I was surprised at that. “You do?”
“It’s a bit obvious, Tobias.” “I mean, you’ve been really shaky and jumpy all morning. I mean, anyone can see that you’re worried.”
“They can?” I said, nervously.
“But you don’t have to be worried.” He assured me. “What you have to remember is that you have people watching your back.”
“I do?”
“Yea, you do.” Jake said. “You aren’t alone, Tobias.”
“I’m not?”
“No, you aren’t.” he smiled.
Did Jake know about the Yeerks? Did a Controller slip up and expose the Yeerks’ secret invasion? Did someone escape from the Yeerk Pool and tell him about the invasion? He said that I had friends watching my back, but maybe he meant allies! Maybe we could fight the Yeerks together? We could expose the invasion together! We could form an underground resistance!
“If you want, I could help you out.” Jake said, lowering his voice.
“Do you think we’d be able to stop all of them?” I asked, looking around. “I mean, they could be anywhere.”
“Of course I do.” He said. “If I tell them to back off, they will. I mean, they know who my brother is.”
“Wait…what are we talking about, exactly?” I asked, confused.
“I’m talking about Mitch and Rick.” Jake frowned. “I’m talking about punks like Andy and Tap Tap…what did you think I was talking about?”
“I…nothing.” I mumbled. “I guess I’m still a bit tired from the weekend and all.”
Jake nodded. “Just know that I’m always around, alright.” He assured me. “Like I said, I’m always watching your back.”
Jake and I caught up with the others. Rachel and Marco were still exchanging insults. Jake and Cassie were engaged in a personal conversation. I was left out, as usual. But that’s alright; it didn’t bother me. None of those old problems bothered me anymore. Things like homework, school, bullies, and my uncle—those all seemed so miniscule in the grand scheme of things.
Marco walked away, mumbling something about how science class would be the fall of the human race.
Like I said, Marco didn’t have a clue.
Post Merged: May 05, 2011, 07:03:08 PM
Feline Eyes
I was in the air, riding warm pockets of air called thermals. The thermals created from the concrete are the very thing that allows a bird of prey to fly. And that’s what I was, a bird of prey. Red-tailed hawks, falcons and eagles need these little updrafts, or else they’d tire themselves out from the constant flapping. But you’re probably confused by now. You’re probably thinking, “Hang on, wasn’t he human just a few minutes ago?” Either that, or you’re thinking, “this guy’s nuts!” But I assure you, I’m totally sane.
I’m pretty sure that you remember that little thing I mentioned about meeting an alien—the Andalite Elfangor. And, if you remember Elfangor, then you will definitely remember what I said about the blue box—how it would give anyone who touched it the power to morph. Then again, I doubt if anyone could ever forget a detail like that. I mean, it’s not every day you hear stories about teenagers meeting aliens with morphing technology.
But I never thought that it would actually work! I knew that I hadn’t been dreaming when I met Elfangor—watching Visser Three devour the Andalite was far too real to write off as a very interesting and well detailed dream. But I wasn’t so sure about that blue box. I mean, I had it in my bedroom with me the next morning when I woke up, but I didn’t expect it to work. I mean, I didn’t feel very different. I was pretty much the same old Tobias. If you were given powers by a strange alien, wouldn’t you feel different?
Well, eventually, I plucked up enough courage to actually try it. Elfangor showed me what to do through transference of his thoughts to my brain. I saw him acquire some strange looking bird that was native to his planet. All he had to do was touch it, and concentrate. He told me to focus on what the animal was—what it represented, what it meant to me…And, assuming that I followed his instructions correctly, I would be able to become that animal; an exact duplicate of the creature I touched.
My cat Dude was sitting at the edge of my bed, just minding his own business. I loved Dude; he was my best friend. My aunt bought him for me a few years ago when I started living with her. I’ve always just assumed she bought the cat to shut me up, but I wasn’t complaining. Dude was my first friend. Dude never insulted me, or ditched me, or manipulated me—not that he was even capable of insults, or ditching or manipulation.
Dude would be the first animal I would acquire. All I did was pet him. In just started stroking the back of his head like he always enjoyed. He started purring, and I felt the vibrations through my fingers. Dude was a small tabby cat. He was a nice black-brown colour. My cat wasn’t really big, but he was very flexible. And he could jump like nothing I’ve ever seen before! I mean, I’ve seen cats on TV, but Dude could easily jump higher than any of those TV cats. My aunt had him declawed, which meant that Dude would be stuck in doors. But the best thing about Dude—aside from his loyalty, and how easily pleased he was—would have to be his tail; the way it just swept from side to side like some sort of individual organism.
Dude suddenly stopped purring. That’s when I noticed it. He was in some sort of…I guess you’d call it a trance, like one of those people under hypnosis. He was still breathing, which was a good thing, but he seemed like he was asleep; like he had gone limp or something…
Then he stepped out of the trance.
Just as if he had never felt a thing. He just shifted to the side and started purring some more. If I hadn’t seen him in the trance I would have thought that it hadn’t worked. So, I just closed my eyes like Elfangor instructed me, and I focused on everything that made Dude what he was.
A minute later my arms started to itch. When I opened my eyes, I noticed that both arms had been covered completely in black-brown fur; slick and smooth fur!
I think the morph stopped there. I lost focus, and I was now a scrawny teenaged boy with two very hairy arms. I actually thought it was cool! I wasn’t scared or grossed out or anything like that. And, the more I focused on continuing the morph, the cooler it was! I could feel more fur growing on my face and whiskers popping out from the sides of my human nose—which had just started to transform into the snout of a cat.
My ears slid to the top of my head and became triangular in shape. My arms started to shrink and my hands became paws—only my paws still had claws, unlike Dude. And I could feel more fur growing all over my body, covering the pink flesh of the human. It was cool! What had once been chubby, pink flesh was now brown with black striped scattered here and there.
I’ll admit, I was caught off guard by the shrinking. It wasn’t scary, but it was off putting. It was like falling, but different at the same time. It felt like the ground was rushing towards me. I must have lost four and a half feet in about five seconds. And even after the shrinking came to an end the changes still continued; but they were happening inside me! Organs and bones shifted around or disappeared altogether to accommodate the anatomy of a tabby cat. That was off putting, too. It was eerie how nothing about the morphing process was painful. Morphing sort of felt like a visit to the Dentist. You know that the drill should hurt you, but the novocaine blocks out the pain. It was almost like the pain was happening to someone else, but I was still aware of it. I guess it’s hard to explain.
But the senses that came with the cat morph were the strongest of all the changes. It wasn’t like I was losing my fingers or growing a tail—which was definitely weird. It was like I had been blind and deaf for most of my life, and I had only just discovered the wonders of sight and sound! I could see everything from the fibres of my rug to the cracks in my bedroom wall. I could hear my hung-over uncle snoring all the way downstairs; passed out on his stupid lazy boy. And I was very relaxed. I mean, I’ve been calm before—when I wasn’t worried about getting bullied, or forgetting about a test in math class, or something like that. But in that cat body, taking on the appearance of Dude, I felt…relaxed! I started strutting around the bedroom like I owned the place. If the bedroom door hadn’t been closed I would have strutted about the whole house.
Someone was in the room with me!
I started to get very tense.
I turned around on the spot and looked up at the other creature in the room.
It was another cat, like me. It looked a bit like me: black-brown fur, four paws, a pink button nose…
But this was my room; he had no right to be in here! Who did he think he was, barging into my room? Did it not know that Tobias and Dude lived here? Who was this strange cat, and why did he look and smell so familiar.
My claws raked forward. I arched my back and felt my fur standing on its end. I started hissing in defense, hoping that this new cat would just back off and get the message. Well, it did. The other cat ran to the door and started clawing at the wood. But it didn’t have any claws! What a pitiful excuse for a cat—it had no claws!
It had no claws because a woman took its claws away. She was a horrid woman, with bleached blonde hair that always revealed her true roots. The woman was always yelling about how it clawed at her drapes and she drove the cat to have its claws removed.
But wasn’t I that cat? Wasn’t my name Dude? Wasn’t I Tobias’ cat?
No, you’re Tobias. You’re Tobias the human; Tobias the bully-magnet; Tobias the scrawny, the friendless, the meek…
I was suddenly very ashamed of myself. I was now very aware of the other brain living in my head. I mean, there was my brain—the human, Tobias’ brain—and there was the cat brain—Dude’s brain. It was like I was two people all at once. But I knew who I was now. I had won control over the cat’s instincts, despite myself.
I decided to demorph back into my human body, just so Dude would calm down. He couldn’t claw his way through the wood, but he could still make a lot of noise. The last thing I needed was my drunken uncle walking into my room to see two cats instead of one. So I demorphed. I was human within five minutes.
I morphed for the first time on Saturday morning; the day after I met Elfangor. I didn’t morph another animal after that, but that wasn’t from lack of trying. I just realized that I would have to morph to fight the Yeerks—to save the world from a secret invasion. It’s a little difficult to morph when you know that you should really be saving innocent people from certain doom. And I didn’t think I could stop a thousand Yeerks by myself.
Then I overheard Cassie telling Jake about an injured animal that her parents had taken into their Animal Rehabilitation Clinic over the weekend. It was a hawk with a broken wing or something like that. That’s when I remembered that Cassie’s parents were both vets. Her father ran a clinic from their barn and her mother worked at the Gardens, which functioned as both a zoo and an amusement park. And having been brought up by two vets, Cassie knew a thing or two about animals, too. So, who better to talk to about animals?
Of course, I wasn’t going to tell Cassie about why I was interested in animals. For one thing, she could have been a Controller—though I highly doubt it. And I couldn’t exactly say, “Hey, can I see a few of your animals? No, it’s not for school. I’m saving the world, you see, and I need to touch some animals so I can fight the Yeerks. Who are the Yeerks? They’re brain slugs bent on world domination. So, where do you keep the lions?”
That would have been awkward…
Anyways, I had to wait a good two periods before I could talk to Cassie in class. We weren’t friends, so I felt really nervous about asking if I could stop by her place to see her animals. So, instead of paying attention in my next two classes after lunch, I rehearsed my conversation with Cassie. I figured, if it sounded half-way decent in my head, then it couldn’t be too bad, right?
“Hey, Cassie.” I mumbled, taking a seat next to her. The bell had only just rang, but Cassie was one of the first people to walk in.
“Hello, Tobias.” She said, smiling, warmly.
“Hey…” I repeated, lamely; awkwardly.
She kept smiling. She looked like she knew I wanted to ask her something.
“Yea, so I overheard you talking to Jake after lunch—about the injured bird your family took in Saturday night?”
Cassie nodded. “Yes, the red-tail.” She said, with a hint of sadness. “We found the poor thing outback. It should be okay in about two weeks, but it’s in a lot of pain.”
“Yea…well, I’ve always loved birds.” I said, lamely.
Cassie smiled again. I guess she knew what I was about to ask; she just wanted me to ask her.
“Well…I’ve always like a lot of animals, especially dinosaurs—but you wouldn’t have any of those, I guess…”
I made a lame attempt at a laugh. Cassie just smiled politely.
“I was wondering—if you don’t mind, of course—if I could maybe, probably, stop by to see them…I mean the animals…”
“Sure.” She said. “But we’d have to take the bus. My family’s barn is a ways away.”
“Cool,” I said, grinning like a moron. “Cool…so…I guess I’ll meet you after class then.”
“I’ll be by the bus stop.” She said, still smiling.
Post Merged: May 08, 2011, 07:56:58 PM
Jungle Cat
Nobody paid much attention to the red-tailed hawk, slowly circling in the air over the zoo/amusement park. They were too busy with the rides, and the cotton candy, and the animals to bother with something that they saw almost every day. And, I guess they had a right to ignore the hawk. Red-tails are a diamond dozen, when you think about it. Golden eagles are stunning. The bald eagle is the country’s national bird and symbol for peace. Even a falcon is something that leaves you with that feeling of being awestruck. But a red-tail is just a fancier pigeon or seagull to most people. Sure, they’re nice to see, but it’s nothing to rave about.
But there was something about that red-tail at Cassie’s barn that just left a significant impression on me. I took one look at it and knew that, somehow, our meeting was no accident. And it looked back at me with this curiosity. I mean, you’d think that a bird would be terrified of a human, especially one that was so close to it. But he was calm. And he didn’t seem to mind that his wing was broken. He had Cassie’s parents to feed him, take care of him; he had nothing to worry about. And he just kept staring at me with those golden eyes; those piercing golden eyes that seemed to be looking into your soul. Say what you want about a red-tail, I think they’re pretty amazing. Eagles may be cool, but in a more arrogant way. Falcons have speed, but that can’t make up for its size. The hawk was like a perfect balance of both birds of prey; small, yet a symbol of strength. There’s a reason the Native Americans used the hawk as a symbol.
I already told you how cool flying was. But it’s something that I just can’t get over, you know? It’s like riding a rollercoaster. It’s like, every time you get on the rollercoaster you feel this anticipation before the ride starts; and once you’re on the tracks you get this tickle that you just can’t shake off. That’s what flying’s like, if I had to compare it to anything. But I don’t think I could really do it justice. It’s something that you have to experience for yourself, first hand.
After I acquired nearly every animal at Cassie’s place, I morphed the hawk in the forest out back. I still had a job to do, and I couldn’t think of a better time to start. I guess I could have snuck in at midnight, when the security cameras would be on and the guards would be alert. But I figured that few people would expect someone to be walking around a bunch of animal exhibits, touching the animals. After all, the best time to do something covert is in broad daylight, when everyone’s looking.
So I was circling about fifty feet above the tallest coaster at the Gardens. I didn’t know the name, since I had never been to the zoo before. My uncle never gave me money for anything else but food for the week, so a trip to the zoo was just out of the question. I could hear the kids shouting at the top of their lungs as the coaster zoomed down one of the hills. I could see them, too—that’s how amazing the hawk’s eyesight is. I could see the backs of everyone on the coaster, the people walking on the fake streets below, and even most of the animals in the exhibits. I just needed to figure out how and where to land and demorph. I had about five minutes left in morph.
There were about a hundred exhibits in the park; which meant that there were a hundred possibilities for morphs. I wasn’t sure if there was a limit to the morphing technology. Was I possible to acquire too many morphs? I couldn’t be sure. Besides, I didn’t think that a lot of the animals at the Gardens would be much in a fight against the Yeerk’s shock troops. The red-tail was a decent flight morph—maybe capable in battle if you considered the talons. But what good would a horse be in a battle? I had to be smart about the morphs I chose. I was pretty much alone in this war—at least until the Andalites came.
I flew down to the ground, landing casually on one of the branches of a foam tree in one of the big cat exhibits. I had a wide variety of jungle cats to choose from—the lion, the tiger, a jaguar, a panther and a bobcat. I decided against the lion, despite its power. I figured all that fur would slow me down in the heat of the battle. I needed something with strength and agility. I could have chosen either the jaguar, but something else caught my eye. It was a jungle cat that with large dark spots streaked across its body—rough, irregular spots that had no pattern or clear design. It wasn’t the largest cat in the zoo—maybe the smallest in the animal kingdom—but like the red-tail, it caught my eye.
The clouded leopard looked lonely in the mock den the Gardens made for it. There were a few others further away from him, most of them sleeping. But this one leopard was just lying under the shade of a tree across from me. He looked incredibly bored; like he would give anything to just leap over the railing and just run until he felt like stopping for a rest. I took a quick look around, to make sure nobody saw me, and landed behind a mock boulder nearest to the leopard to demorph.
The leopard raised its head, intrigued by this new development. He’s probably seen other humans like me coming and going, but never so close. The closest he’s come to human contact was feeding time. He didn’t strike right away, but he looked wary. He couldn’t be sure if I was a friend, foe or prey.
Predators are all alike, you see. Hawks, leopards, lions, wolves—they’re always hunting for the next meal. You can never get the best of a predator—not in a physical sense; not when you’re prey. The most a mouse or a gazelle could do when chased by a predator is to try to outrun their enemy and hope they can find a place to hide. I had to be very careful with the leopard. If I made one wrong move, I could be a fresh pre-lunch snack for the leopard.
“Easy, buddy.” I said, nervously. “I’m just going to acquire your DNA and get on my way…”
The leopard looked back at me with its golden eyes, head ****ed slightly. He looked almost amused by this point.
I made a slow attempt to touch his fur; moving at the same pace as dew falling from a leaf at dawn.
The leopard was on the alert now. There was a look of excitement in its eyes.
I backed away from the leopard.
The clouded leopard was on all fours now. He wasn’t moving…yet. I guess he was still deciding whether I was worth the effort.
They say that you should try to make yourself look big when facing a bear. Well, let me tell you something: you’re not focusing on trying to scare the bear, or the leopard, or whatever big and ferocious animal is about to eat you—you’re too busy shouting in your head, wondering whether you should just run or curl up into a ball and hope your predator just leaves you alone and finds something else to play with.
“Nice kitty cat…” I said, walking backwards into the foam boulder behind me.
I had to speed this process up. If I stood there any longer I’d draw attention to myself…Or I would get eaten. Either way, I wouldn’t be doing anything productive.
So, I tried to make myself look big.
I started walking towards the clouded leopard, waving my hands over my head, slowly. The leopard didn’t move an inch. I started to move closer, bringing my arms a lot closer to my sides; just level with the top of its head. The leopard just stared at me, clearly confused.
I had to act fast.
I slowly made contact with the leopard’s fur; only just brushing against the leopard itself. And I did what I had been doing all day—I just thought about the leopard and acquired the clouded leopard.
And, just like the hawk, and the horse I acquired at Cassie’s barn, and my cat Dude, the clouded leopard fell into the acquiring trance. I now had about ten seconds to get in and out of the exhibit, before the leopard came to its senses. Morphing alone took me about three minutes, so that was out of the question. I could try knocking out the leopard, but I didn’t want to hurt him. So, I did what any person would do in my position—I ran to the nearest exit before the big bad jungle cat would wake up.
Luckily for me, the door to the exhibit—the one the zoo keepers used to feed the animals—was unlocked.
Post Merged: May 08, 2011, 07:58:35 PM
The Legacy Survives
I don’t remember my dreams. Lately, all I’ve been getting are quick flashes of the construction site, and the dying alien whose last wish was for me to carry on his legacy and save humanity. But I couldn’t make sense of what the dreams were telling me…Sure, I understood the obvious parts: like Elfangor telling me how to use the powers, Visser Three—the tyrannical leader of the Yeerk forces on Earth—and Elfangor’s ultimate destruction. Those were obvious because they had been too amazing and horrifying to just blink away.
But then the dream starts to become fragmented…I start hearing voices that belonged to tall, shadowy figures that I could only just see in the dark. The only clear image had been Visser Three; morphed into some alien monster that even I couldn’t have imagined. Mostly, the voices were male. One voice in particular was so familiar that I found myself struggling to think of where I had heard the voice whenever I woke up.
I always try to analyze my strange dreams when I finally did wake up…The parts I remembered, anyways.
They always picked up where Elfangor had told me that evil aliens were enslaving the human race.
((Not like me,)) he said, angrily. ((They have come to destroy you.))
My reaction: startled, surprised, stunned. But I didn’t question him. His voice—if you could even call the thought speech in which he spoke a voice—was too sincere. Besides, when a blue centaur just appears out of nowhere, there’s no room for doubt.
((They are called Yeerks. They are different from us. Different from you, as well.))
Yeerks…He described Yeerks to me; two inches long, gray, uninteresting to look at. He put the image in my head, like telepathy! A fat, harmless slug.
((They live in the bodies of other species…))
Hork-Bajir…The gentle, pacifist race that now belonged to the Yeerks. All Hork-Bajir…enslaved and used by the Yeerks as shock troops; taken because of their shocking forms. A race of seven foot tall, dinosaur-like beings covered in blades.
((…They enter the brain and are absorbed into it, taking over the hosts thoughts and feelings))
Taxxons…Evil, vile creatures that willingly submitted to the Yeerks. Just as tall as any Hork-Bajir, but not as threatening. The Taxxons were basically fat worms, when it came down to it. Only, they were much bigger than your average worm. They carry the upper third of their bodies, sucking the air through their round, ravenous mouth. Eyes like jelly and hundreds of sharp, shark-like teeth!
((We had hoped to stop them,)) Elfangor told me, sadly. ((Swarms of their bug fighters were waiting when our Dome Ship came out of Z-space. We knew of their mother ship and were ready for the Bug Fighters, but the Yeerks surprised us—They had hidden a powerful Blade Ship in a crater of your moon.))
Visser Three and his Blade Ship—two of the most frightening things I had ever seen. Both large and intimidating. Both capable of eliminating every inch of you from the face of the Earth. The Blade Ship…Shaped like a medieval battle axe, blacker than the darkest black. The Visser…The only Yeerk to have taken an Andalite host—the only Yeerk capable of morphing, like most other Andalites. The Visser’s eyes—two placed in the middle of his face, and two sitting on blue stalks, like Elfangor’s. And yet, Visser Three’s eyes were nothing like Elfangor’s. Where Elfangor’s eyes were kind and, somehow, capable of smiling, all you saw in the eyes of the Visser was hatred. When you looked at those eyes, you knew that the end was very near. His eyes were the second most threatening aspect of the Visser—the first being the scorpion-like tail.
“This is too much,” I would tell him. “I’m just one kid…There’s so many of them. What makes you think I could stop them all?”
His eyes—all four of them—would meet mine, always smiling. ((Yes, you are young.)) He agreed. ((But there is strength in youth. You need not be old and wise to make a difference. All great warriors were once children. There may be something I can do…Quick, enter my ship. There, you will see a small, blue cube. Bring the box to me.))
The ship was always fragmented in my dreams. All I remember was the faint colour of beige of the ship’s interior. The only clear image was the blue box. That, and the holographic picture of the alien’s family.
((With this box, I will be able to give you some small powers by which you will resist the Yeerks.))
“Powers?” I repeated. “What kind of powers?”
((It is a piece of Andalite technology that the Yeerks do not have. A technology that allows us to pass unnoticed in many parts of the universe—the power to morph. We have never shared this power. But your need is great.))
“Morph…Like…You mean I could transform?”
((Yes, in a manner of speaking.)) He said. ((You will be able to become any animal you touch. But you must first acquire the animal’s DNA. It is simple, yet requires determination and concentration. Simply touch the animal, think about the creature, and its DNA will become a part of your own. But there are dangers…Problems…I do not have time…))
“I’ll do it.” I said. “I’ll do whatever it takes. I’ll fight the Yeerks.”
((You are brave,)) he said, smiling in that odd way that only involved the eyes. ((Here: touch the cube. Touch the cube and you will be able to morph.))
That tingling sensation…The shock I felt surging through my body almost the instant I touched the cube. That was all it took; that simple, quick form of contact. It almost made me want to laugh. It felt almost pleasurable.
Then, I noticed the sky…Those blinking red lights in the sky.
“What’s that?” I asked, pointing to the two beams of lights. They seemed to be getting closer.
((The Yeerks…They come. There’s not much time. There’s only one piece of information I need to give: the flaws to the morphing technology. You must never stay in one morph for more than two earth hours; otherwise, you will be trapped in that body, forever. Do you understand?))
I nodded.
((Good. Now run. The Yeerks will be here soon.))
“No. I can help you. Just tell me what I need to do.”
He smiled, again. ((No, you must run. I have little time left.))
And, suddenly, I was crying again.
“Please…You can’t die. I…I don’t want you to.”
((Do not worry for my demise, my friend.)) He said. ((The Yeerks may bring harm to my body, but I would rather face a thousand deaths than have the Yeerks enslave my people, my planet, and those I love.))
He stared into my eyes really hard. I got the sense he was trying to tell me something. But I didn’t know what message he was trying to convey through his little speech.
((What is your name?)) He asked, finally.
“Tobias.” I told him.
((Tell me about your mother, Tobias.))
That part caught me off guard. Why did he want to know about my mother?
“I don’t know much about her. She left me when I was just a kid. I’m told she couldn’t take care of me.”
Now it was his turn to look hurt. He looked sad. His strange way of smiling was gone now.
((I am sorry, Tobias…)) He said, genuinely.
I made a feeble attempt to shrug it off.
((I am sorry I cannot help you.)) He sighed. ((If only there was more…))
“You’ve done all you could.” I told him. “I understand.
Again, all for eyes met my single pair. And I soon received broken images—pieces of crucial information that the Andalite couldn’t tell me on his own. An image of a dark, horrifying place with never-ending pools of sludge. Inside these pools were Yeerks. The Yeerks were swimming…They were doing something…
Another flash…Some sort of device…hidden. Something about the device…It was important to the Yeerks. The word Kandrona stuck out in my head. Three days, the Andalites voice told me. The Yeerks must feed…
((There is one last thing I ask of you, Tobias.)) Elfangor said.
“Yes. Anything.”
The Andalite tried to get to his feet…But then pain overtook him and he fell back on to the dirt. So, he offered his arm.
I knew what he wanted to do.
“Are you sure?” I asked. “I mean…I’m honoured…But..”
((No. It is my honour, Tobias.)) He said.
It was almost profound, my acquiring the Andalite. It didn’t feel like I was just acquiring his DNA, but his entire essence. It was like I was saving that last piece of Elfangor that the universe knew; keeping the alien alive for two hours at a time. He seemed to fall into a trance during the process. At first, I thought I had killed him. But he snapped out of it quickly.
((Now run, Tobias.)) He urged me. ((You do not want to see what’s to come.))
I ran. But I couldn’t just leave him to die. I hid behind a low, concrete wall, about ten feet away from where Elfangor was.
The swarm of Bug Fighters landed near Elfangor’s own ship. Out came the Hork-Bajir and Taxxons—what Elfangor called Controllers. Then the Blade Ship touched ground. Suddenly, all the Controllers looked as though they were waiting for some big event.
That’s when Visser Three strutted out of his ship.
I remember hoping that the Visser couldn’t hear the screaming in my head.