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Cats vs. Robots #2
Cats vs. Robots #2 Read online
Dedication
This book is dedicated to all the
young people
who
speak up
and
take action
to make the world
safer, cleaner, more tolerant, and fair.
Thanks for Being the Flea.
This book is also dedicated to Charlie
with thanks
for coming up with all the good ideas
as usual
and even the title.
—M, L & K
The Known Galaxy
LEGEND
PLANET BINAR, home world of the Binars (metal-heads), HQ of the Galactic Robot Federation
PLANET FELINUS, home world of the Cats (four-leggers), HQ of the Great Feline Empire
PLANET EARTH, home world of Humans (Furless/two-leggers), HQ of nothing in particular
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Dedication
The Known Galaxy
1. Huggs Held Back
2. Watching Wengrods (weeks later)
3. A Raging Robot
4. Woe Is Meow
5. A New Hope?
6. Plotting with Pounce
7. Huggs Hears
8. Flea Freak-Out
9. A New Ally
10. Pounce and Obi in Peril
11. Slayar Wants a New Engine
12. Dreams of Change
13. Meow Learns About Infinity
14. Huggs Wants War
15. VP P.P. Pants
16. Binars Bamboozled
17. Cats Claw Back
18. Armies Ahoy
19. Flea Factory
20. Huggs in High Gear
21. Pants Prepares
22. Testing, One . . .
23. Testing, Two
24. Elmer’s Extreme Makeover
25. SLAYAR Is Smooth-Talked
26. Meow Mixed Up
27. Pants Pulls Up
28. Pleas with Fleas
29. Max and Min Go to Space
30. The Dream
31. Double Trouble
32. Taking Down Tyrants
33. Area 70
34. Betrayal
35. The Trap Is Sprung
36. Freestyling Fleas
37. Can We All Get Along?
38. Phewph, We Did It. Again.
39. New Directions
Acknowledgments
About the Authors and Illustrator
Copyright
About the Publisher
1
Huggs Held Back
As it turns out, you can be very, very rich and still feel very, very small.
Very, very powerful, and still feel very, very powerless.
Case in point: bosses.
Really, most bosses of most companies everywhere, but in particular, this boss, of this one, right here.
Because here in the vast, cavernous darkness of the futuristic headquarters of GloboTech Incorporated, an angry-looking boss of a man sat and stared at a wall . . .
. . . feeling small.
The longer he stared at the wall, which was also a screen, the angrier he became and the smaller he felt.
It wasn’t the wall that was the problem. (Of course not; the custom fifty-foot enhanced-ultra-extreme-definition-flat-screen wall was his favorite thing in the world, at least most days.)
It was the contents of the screen wall that triggered the boss man.
Every inch of it, every millimeter, was crammed edge to edge with information—images and videos, charts and figures, gifs and memes and streams, all flashing and updating in dizzying, constant motion.
The boss man’s bloodshot eyes fixated on one part of the collage, a large blue rectangle filled with tiny white words that scrolled and flowed downward like a digital waterfall.
At least, that’s what he was expecting to see.
At the moment, the only thing in the blue rectangle was a glowing red window blinking ALL CAPS warning messages like “HOUSE SYSTEM FAILURE!” and “NETWORK ACCESS DENIED!”
The turtlenecked man’s unusually long fingers, carefully steepled beneath his too-large-for-his-face nose and his bald speckled quail egg of a head, began to quiver.
He was a tensed spring, ready to snap. A bottle rocket about to blast off. A rattrap about to—
BRRRAAP!
The immaculately manicured pug perched in the boss man’s lap lifted his head and busted out a breathtaking booty bomb. A poopy puff of pug perfume. A real fur-filtered nose nuke of a . . .
Well, a classic puppy fart.
The blast echoed off the high ceiling, and the man rubbed his tired eyes, muttering to himself with irritation.
“Failure. Denied. Failure. Denied.” His mutterings grew louder. “FAILURE?! DENIED?!” He was shouting at the screen now. “WHAT IS THIS GARBAGE?!”
Startled, the pungent pug slipped down from the man’s lap and retreated quietly behind the desk.
Failure was not a word this particular fellow was used to—
“FAIL? I DON’T FAIL!” the man shrieked at nobody.
Because the fellow in question was—
“DON’T YOU KNOW WHO I AM?!”
The fellow was—
“I AM THE ONE AND ONLY GIFFORD MICHAEL EDWARD HUGGS!!!”
Indeed.
The frustrated man was none other than Gifford “Giff” M.E. Huggs, the world-famous CEO of GloboTech and, not to mention—as he would always mention—
“I AM THE RICHEST PERSON IN THE WORLD!!!”
There it is.
Giff M.E. Huggs did not—
“I DO NOT—”
He never—
“EVER—”
Failed.
“GIFF M.E. HUGGS DOES NOT FAIL!”
Huggs growl-shouted again. He swept an important-looking stack of confidential papers and files off his desk. Post-it Notes exploded into the air like confetti.
Huggs began to speed-pace around the room.
His spindly arms swung wide, and his small, well-trained feet never left the ground—in keeping with the flawless form and discipline he had perfected through years of competitive speed-walking. Speed-pacing, his team of GloboTech in-house therapists said, was a healthy way to calm anger issues. At least, healthier than his previous methods of speed-window-breaking, speed-fire-setting, and speed-Ferrari-crashing.
But this raging Huggs was a side the mogul didn’t often show. To the world, he was known as the wise and friendly neighborhood billionaire; the composed, dignified, ultra-wealthy—if egg-headed and oddly proportioned—man who had it all.
And truthfully, by many standards—or, by money standards—he did. Huggs had more bank than the average bank, even the average country, and he prided himself on that.
His infatuation with accumulation began with a gift from his miserly grandfather and guardian, Gavin “Gave” Newman Olson Huggs. It was the only gift little Giff ever received from his grandfather, and was his most prized possession: a porcelain Puggy Bank.
Gave N.O. Huggs was a stingy coot, spare with money as well as love, but the young Giff M.E. Huggs idolized him. Desperate for his approval, little Giff was driven, obsessed even, by an unrelenting need to fill that Puggy Bank over and over.
Is it full enough now, Grandpa?
Poor little Giff asked this question more times than he could count, and every time, Gave N.O. Huggs would squint over his square spectacles, mouth turned downward in a permanent frown, and shake his head.
“Almost,” he would say, and turn back to his work.
Grandpa Huggs was long gone, but the younger Huggs never stopped trying to fill that bank.
He had more money than he could possibly spend, although he did his bes
t to try. He bought enormous mansions, small islands, large islands, yachts that could hover and survive any natural disaster, parking garages full of cars (self-driving, self-flying, self-floating), and his own copy of the Declaration of Independence.
He even bought the vice president of the United States, Parker P. Pants, although owning VP P.P. Pants was the one thing he could not openly brag about. Not that it made it any less true.
Indeed, most people couldn’t imagine having a fortune so enormous, but Giff M.E. Huggs knew he could always have more. His grandfather’s cold disapproval was on permanent autoplay in his mind, drilling an unfillable hole in his soul.
“Almost,” he heard when he counted his cash. To Huggs, the word almost was worse than any four-letter word you could imagine (and please don’t try).
For example, if he had children, and they rushed home excited about getting a near-perfect score on the hardest math test imaginable, best in the school, he would almost be proud of them.
Those poor children would almost be allowed to eat dinner rather than spend the rest of the night correcting their one mistake, over and over.
So yes, Giff M.E. Huggs got a little upset when he wanted something and couldn’t have it. Especially when he almost had his hands on it.
Like now.
Huggs speed-paced back to his desk, focused on only one thing.
Bratty children.
The thing that got in his way.
Annoying twins.
The ones who had almost-ed him.
Nobody gets the better of me.
Huggs tapped an invisible touch pad on the surface of his desk and zoomed in on a blurry picture of a family, a mother, father, and twin children.
He zoomed closer on the twins, fingers trembling.
Especially not them.
If it weren’t for those two, he would be busy planning his next acquisition, not hiding in a dark room, speed-pacing, licking his wounds.
Max and Min Wengrod.
Horrible children, with horrible parents that almost surely spoil them.
He growled and tapped again, bringing up a satellite image of a small, shabby home in Los Angeles. In the poorly maintained front yard (so overgrown it was obvious even from orbit, Huggs noted with disdain), he saw the outlines of two small spaceships parked on the lawn.
“There they are. . . . Look at that.” Huggs leaned forward. “Are you looking at this?”
“I’m looking at it,” a disembodied voice echoed out from a speaker imbedded in the wall. “I was also there,” the voice added, sounding a little bitter. “If you recall.”
The voice, belonging to an AI program named House was, indeed, a little bitter. GloboTech had been using House as a corporate spy in the Wengrod house, until its cover was blown and the Wengrods got the better of it.
“I do recall,” Huggs said through clenched teeth, “how you fumbled everything, right at the finish line. When we were SO CLOSE!”
The voice went silent.
Huggs tapped at the touch pad. Through hazy black-and-green night vision, he watched small, odd-sized shapes shuttle between the house and the ships, some on four legs, some on one.
Suddenly, an intense flash flooded the scene—reflecting off that shiny eggshell Huggs called a head—and only one ship remained, cat-shaped.
Huggs tapped again and pulled up a cluster of satellite images showing the curved surface of Earth, dark and cloud-covered. A second flash of light lit the clouds below.
The camera centered on the flash and refocused on the ship as it burst through the clouds, escaping Earth’s atmosphere at impossible speeds, leaving a quickly fading trace of billowing smoke.
The sight of the ship leaving orbit triggered a new level of Huggs rage. He shouted toward his wall speakers.
“HOW COULD YOU LET THEM GET AWAY?”
Huggs kicked away from the desk, knocking it over with a thundering crash.
PFFPPLPLLPT!
The pug yelped and farted—er, yarted—scrambling to a safer distance on stubby legs.
“How did this go so wrong, House?” Huggs resumed speed-pacing, trying to regain some composure. He went through his routine. Heel-toe. Heel-toe. Breathe out the heat. Breathe in the sweet. . . .
“Is that a rhetorical question, sir?”
“It’s a question question, House.” Heel-toe. Heel-toe. Breathe out the pain. Breathe in the gain. . . .
“Actually, I would argue that many things went quite right,” House sniffed. “Granted, we did not capture the Singularity Chip, or the plans to create one, and true, both ships were able to leave Earth. . . .”
“But, House—” Huggs sucked down his rage, hopping in place like a poorly proportioned frog. “Were those . . . were they not . . . in fact . . . THE ONLY THINGS THAT MATTERED?!”
The twins Max and Min Wengrod—not to mention Max’s kittens and Min’s robots—had managed to keep House, Huggs, and GloboTech from taking control of the Singularity Chip invented by the Wengrod parents. The Singularity Chip was one of a kind—worth more than all other technology in the solar system, combined.
Huggs wanted the chip.
“If I may,” House said, taking control of the screen. The view zoomed back to a close-up of the surveillance video of the house.
Huggs pinched the bridge of his nose, flopping back down into his chair. “Go on.”
House cycled through images of the Wengrod property. “I suggest we focus on what we learned and use that to move forward. By going back. Return to the scene of the crime. Ground zero, the Wengrod home. We need eyes on the creators if we want the chip.”
Huggs stared. “You’re right. We need to know what’s going on. We need you to get back into that house. With the . . . Snodgrods? Hogdogs? Wengrods?”
House crackled. “Unfortunately, it can’t be me this time. The Wengrods . . . er, deleted me. I’ve been erased from their systems entirely. Utterly firewalled.”
“So you’re useless?” Huggs raised an eyebrow.
“Temporarily.” House sounded defeated.
“Fine.” Huggs eyed the video feed. “We’ll use the Roachbot.”
“The top secret surveillance robot you’re developing for the CIA?” House pulled up a series of classified GloboTech schedules and blueprints. “It appears the prototype is still weeks from being completed.”
“Come up with a better idea, House. Until then, seeing as you’ve been . . . evicted, this is the best plan for infiltrating that shabby shack.”
The speakers crackled again. “Affirmative.”
As the AI logged out, the walls switched back to an image of the cat ship leaving the solar system.
Huggs reached down into the shadows and picked up his small, stinky companion. He scratched the pug’s chin folds as he stared at the stars on the screen in front of him, considering his options:
. . . get control of that chip . . .
. . . fill a galaxy-sized Puggy Bank, while you’re at it . . .
. . . and show those snotty kids they don’t want to mess with Huggs . . .
The pug gave Huggs’s cheek a lick and squeaked out the tiniest toot.
.
.
.
PFFFFFFFT!
2
Watching Wengrods
(weeks later)
Just as you can’t judge a book by its cover, or a boss by their Puggy Bank, you also can’t judge a family by how recently they’ve mowed their lawn or painted their house.
This was the case, at least, for the family who lived in the two-story red-tiled hacienda on Bayside Road, known to the locals as “the Wengrods.”
The Los Angeles summer sun cast a yellowish glow on the peeling paint and weathered exterior of the Wengrods, but inside, the home was anything but shabby.
It was clean, sleek, modern, and (for now) quiet, as a host of smart devices around the house hummed silently along, doing their smart things. Laundry was washed and folded. Dishes cleaned and sorted. Dust dutifully swept up and discard
ed.
In contrast, two kittens on the couch splayed and stretched lazily, asleep. Stu and Scout were also smart—as in smart-mouthed—but the only thing they were diligent about was eating and sleeping.
In the guest bathroom nearby, a toilet gurgled. Stu’s ear twitched at the sound. It was one of his favorite sounds of all, right up there with the shaking-snack-bin sound, the kibble-hitting-bowl sound, and the fridge-opening sound. But today he was too deep into his nap to go investigate, and the sound went otherwise unnoticed.
BLOOP!
The water in the toilet rippled and an oily, brackish bubble rose to the water’s surface . . . and popped.
Then another . . . and another . . .
PLUP! BLUP! PLUP!
Along with the bubbles, dark clouds rose from the bottom of the water, reaching slowly toward the surface. . . .
PLOOOOP!
A disgusting lump of foul-smelling goo rose to the water’s surface—no, not that goo—
—and out of it a small mechanical cockroach emerged, legs churning, antennae searching. A microscopic logo on its thorax was stamped with the logo for GloboTech.
In a flash, the robotic roach crawled out of the water. It scaled up the sides of the toilet bowl, dropped to the floor, and zigzagged into the shadows, hiding itself in the dark corner crack between the bathroom wall and the bathroom cabinet.
BRRRPBRRRPBRRRPBRRRP!
It emitted a series of ultrasonic pulses, vibrating until it was clean—and the corner was decidedly not.
The GloboTech Roachbot had arrived.
Two tiny red sensors glowed as the Roachbot consulted an internal map of its surrounding environment . . . found its bearings . . . and shot out and under the inch-high gap beneath the bathroom door, heading for the living room.
The Roachbot scurried from shadow to shadow, antennae twitching as it searched for the optimal location. This home was, as the CIA would say, a target-rich environment, but Roachbot knew what it needed.
There, on the bookshelf.
Roachbot detected the internet-connected pet cam that Max used to check on Stu and Scout during the day. Shelf by shelf, it scurried and crawled, and eventually settled on top of the camera.
Microprobes extended from its mouth, through joints in the internet-connected camera, and in moments, Roachbot had hacked into the camera, ready to broadcast the sights and sounds of the Wengrod home back to GloboTech.