“A pigeon?” Tabby Girl
asked, incredulously.
“I wanna summon a demon, but this
is what I usually get,” the Summoner explained sheepishly. He picked
up the gray pigeon. It cooed and wrapped its fat pink feet around
his finger. “I got a dog once though.”
“Look out!” Helmet-head shouted,
as his Frisbee flew free of his grasp.
The flying saucer zipped across the
room, careened off the leg of a metal chair, and crashed into one
of the cat carriers.
“Snuggles!” Tabbygirl shouted, opening
the front of the cat carrier. “Are you okay?”
A tabby with white nose and paws
dashed across the room as soon as the cage door opened. With a
yowl that sounded almost human, the cat leapt for the pigeon.
“No!” The Summoner lifted his pigeon
out of the cat’s reach. Snuggles dug her claws into the Summoner’s
purple robe and started climbing him like a curtain. “Hey! Get
your cat off of me.”
“Snuggles! Snuggles! Get down from
there!”
The flying saucer still hummed, and
its blades vibrated. It looked like it was about to wiggle itself
free. Brad thought about grabbing it, but he got distracted by
the sound of retching.
“Hey, that’s my backpack!” he shouted,
protesting the hairball which Mr. Boots had deposited.
“Yeah? What are you gonna do about
it, punk?” Mr. Boots drawled.
Brad drew his shoe back and was about
to launch Mr. Boots across the room, when he remembered his father’s
advice. A superhero ought always obey the wisdom of his elders.
He was pretty sure that went for superhero sidekicks, too.
“Son,” his father had said, not long
before he died, “Never kick a cat when a lady can see you do it.
Make sure she’s left the room first.”
Helmet-Head was busy trying to get
the bladed Frisbee out of the side of the pet carrier. Brad didn’t
want to be standing next to it when it got free, so he put a row
of chairs between himself and the flying saucer.
By now Snuggles had climbed up to
the Summoner’s shoulder. Judging by the Summoner’s screaming, Snuggles
wasn’t skimping on the claws. The pigeon had escaped, and perched
on top of the wall clock. Tabby Girl had a hold of Snuggles’ neck,
and she yanked as hard as a cat lover with a recalcitrant feline
dares.
Now that Tabby Girl was distracted,
Brad stood and looked around for Mr. Boots. Mr. Boots had climbed
to the top of one of the empty chairs, and was wiggling his tail
from side to side.
“Gotcha now,” Brad muttered, as he
leapt for the cat.
The cat yowled, and leapt off the
chair. Brad hit the arm of the chair with his elbow, and fell.
Just in the nick of time too, because the Frisbee flew over his
head, gouging a trough in the wallboard next to the door. The pigeon
swooped off the clock, and the Frisbee took off after it, as though
that were its programmed target.
Snuggles leapt after the pigeon.
Her claws just missed the bird’s tail. She twisted in midair, cursing
and meowing, too preoccupied with her escaped prey to notice the
flying saucer until it was too late.
“Snuggles! No!” Tabby Girl shouted.
The bladed Frisbee swooped low. Blood
spurted, fur flew, and Snuggles dropped to the ground.
Mr. Boots was busy depositing a steaming
load onto the carpet, but Brad decided to do the decent thing and
see to the needs of a lady instead of giving that cat the kick
it needed.
“Tabby Girl, are you okay?”
“What about me, you moron?” yowled
Snuggles. “Can’t you see I’m bleeding? Alack, alas, the world grows
dim!”
“Look out!” Shouted Helmet-Head,
as the bladed Frisbee came back after the pigeon. The bird flapped
in a circle, taking temporary refuge in the hanging lamp. A rain
of dirty gray feathers fell, followed by a wet guano plop.
“Don’t worry,” Helmet-Head assured
them, turning on a second Frisbee. “I got another one to stop it.”
“I really don’t think that’s—” Brad
began, but it was too late. Helmet-Head had already turned on the
second Frisbee and launched it across the room. The saucer smashed
the glass on the door’s window, then ricocheted off the ceiling,
tearing out chunks of ceiling tile.
Helmet-Head was leaping for the first
Frisbee, which had embedded itself in one of the studs and appeared
to be vibrating itself free. Purple smoke boiled from the Summoner’s
circle, and he waved his arms dramatically as he intoned. Tabby
Girl cried and cradled Snuggles, while the cat wailed one of the
most overblown and obviously fake death scenes Brad had ever heard.
Meanwhile, the guy in the overalls just sat there, reading his
magazine as though nothing were happening.
It was time for a hero. It was time
for Brad.
Clock Stopper, that was.
“Stop!” He shouted, pointing at the
Frisbee embedded in the wall. Nothing happened, so he tried it
again, taking what he hoped was better aim this time.
The man in the overalls frowned at
his watch, and shook his wrist.
“Stop!” Brad shouted a third time,
trying to shut the wall-Frisbee down before it got free.
“Duck!” Tabbygirl shouted.
He might have disabled the Frisbee
that time, except that something hit him in the back of the head.
It was a duck. Snuggles made a miraculous recovery and leapt after
the duck, clawing up Brad’s jeans with a brazen disregard for testicular
integrity.
“Duck!” Tabbygirl shouted.
“Another one?” Brad asked, then crouched
down because one of the Frisbees was coming right for him. He dropped
and rolled, trying to knock the Frisbee out of the air with his
power. The second hand on the clock stopped.
The Frisbee gouged a hole in the
carpet, then bounced back up and struck the wall. The second Frisbee
came right after it, and the two saucers sliced parallel stripes
along the far wall. Plaster dust and shreds of insulation billowed
from the holes. One of the saucers turned vertical and rolled near
to the ground, then got stuck between the legs of two chairs.
Mr. Boots caught the duck, but the
duck wasn’t giving in without a fight. It quacked and kicked, biting
the cat’s tail. The Summoner was bringing forth a white chicken.
Brad looked for the first Frisbee. It must have damaged its flying
capabilities, because it limped spinning on the floor, chasing
Snuggles. As much as he hated cats, Brad wanted to be a hero, so
he pointed both hands at the Frisbee and concentrated all his power
at it.
The flying saucer’s lights flickered
and died.
“Hooray!” Brad shouted. “I’m a hero!”
“You broke my blade wheel,” Helmet-Head
protested. “I’m going to sue you! Those things are expensive!”
Just then, the door opened, and a
secretary came out. Everyone turned to look at her: cats, birds,
Summoner, Tabby Girl, even the guy in overalls.
“The Hero League has made its decision.”
Brad held his breath. The cats stopped
fighting. The ducks quacked quietly. Even the Frisbee hummed in
anticipation.
“Congratulations, Mr. Anselm.” The
secretary turned to the guy in overalls and shook his hand. “The
rest of you, thank you for your time, but the position has been
filled.” She shut the door behind her as she went back inside.
“What the…” Helmet-Head protested
to Mr. Anselm. “But you don’t even have a prop, you don’t even
have a character name.”
“Yeah,” Tabby Girl said, sounding
as resentful as Brad felt. “What’s so special about you, anyway?”
“I’m the fixer.” Mr. Anselm pointed
at the ripped drywall, the torn carpet, the sagging ceiling tiles.
Golden light beamed from his fingertips, and when it stuck the
debris, the wallboard became smooth, the ceiling tiles re-hung
themselves, even the clock hand moved again. Within seconds, the
room looked as good as new. He tipped an imaginary hat at them,
and walked into the Hero League office.