Article: 178910 of talk.bizarre
From: andsol@cml.rice.edu (Andrew Solberg)
Newsgroups: talk.bizarre
Subject: SCIENCE FICTION: Sanford's Calico [repost]
Date: 1 Dec 1994 23:15:28 -0600
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Sanford and I both work at the local lab; he's a computer jock, and I do
research in microelectronics.  We rarely cross paths in the office, but we've
remained close since college.  For instance, every Friday we make a point of
going to Garvey's Pub to drink and talk.

It was on one such expedition that we spoke of Sanford's Calico.

He had gotten the cat fairly recently, apparently from an animal shelter in
Phoenix.  He had paid for all the papers and shots out of his own pocket, and
though the cost was only a fraction of that one might pay in a pet store, it
put a serious dent in his paycheck.  Sanford claimed not to mind, however, as
the calico was delightful company and easy to care for.

It was an outdoors cat, according to my friend, and it preferred stalking
about under the hedges of his backyard to loafing on a sofa all day.  Sanford
would just let it outside in the morning when he went to work, and when he
returned it would be standing by the door, meowing amiably and ready for a
good scratching.  The eternal bachelor Sanford found this very pleasant.

It seems the calico (Sanford, eccentric as always, refused to give the beast
a name) was something of a hunter.  More often than not, Sanford pull into the
driveway only to find a mouse or small bird lying dead and bloodied on the
front stair -- presumably as a gift for him.  Sanford decided that, for all
its barbarism, this little ritual was incredibly cute, and would reward the
purring kitty with a tin of sardines for its trouble.

Did I mention how strange Sanford can be?  I should have.

At any rate, the calico, being as subject to Pavlovian dynamics as any other
creature, accelerated its campaign against the local fauna (and occasionally
flora) in hopes of receiving its just piscine desserts every day.  This
strategem seemed to work well -- the cat got its fish, and Sanford got a
regular supply of deceased delicacies on his walk.  Sanford found this to be
a scream, and was considering keeping a kind of scrapbook of the calico's
"trophies".  He thought nothing of the rapid denuding of the local background
wildlife population.

As a kind of afterthought, Sanford mentioned that on the previous morning the
calico had dragged in a mutant mouse.  It looked perfectly normal in every
respect, except that its tail was scaled like a lizard's, and blue.

                     - * -

The following Monday Sanford did not come to work.  He was also not there on
Tuesday, and the word came down the pipeline that he was AWOL.  When he didn't
show on Wednesday either, I decided to check up on him that evening.  

I pulled my rebuilt Catalina into Sanford's drive and parked it.  The house
looked like a sepulchre: shades drawn, no lights, papers piling on the lawn.
It looked like Sanford had just pulled up roots and left.  However, if you
knew Sanford like I know Sanford, you would know that Sanford never leaves
home without putting a tailor's mannequin in the window, presumably to ward
off really stupid and myopic burglars.  I climbed to the front door and rang
the bell.

I had barely released the button when the door opened a crack.  A moment 
later it was flung full open, and Sanford was dragging me inside.  "In!
Quick!" he hissed, and slammed the door.  

Sanford looked terrible.  He had huge, dark circles under his eyes, and the
stain on his lips told me he had taken up chain-smoking again.  His t-shirt
had mustard stains on it, and he wasn't wearing anything else.  In short, he
looked like a body found in a ditch, and I told him so.  He seemed not to 
hear me.

"Anybody see you?  Anybody follow you here?"  His eyes glittered at me in the
near-darkness.  I shook my head.  He looked relieved.

"Jesus.......you don't know what I've been through, man......."  He looked
like he was going to collapse.  I ushered him into his own living room and
made room on a recliner by clearing away a stack of newspapers.  I knew where
everything was in his kitchen, so I fixed him some coffee and a sandwich and
tried to make him comfortable.

He looked a lot better after eating something.  I pushed some comic books off
the sofa and sat down to watch him.  He took a long pull at the coffee and
sat back heavily into the comfortable chair.  "Sheez......" he breathed,
closing his eyes.

At that moment there came a noise at the back door.  It was a grating sound,
of something rough being dragged across something metal.  Claws on the screen
door -- oh! the calico.  "Shall I let it in?" I asked, rising from my seat.
I stopped when I saw the look of horror on Sanford's face.

"No!  Don't!  The cat.....who knows what it's gotten into.......it's not safe,
man!  Don't let it in!"  It poured out in a rush of panic.  I got him some
more coffee and tried to calm him down.  When he seemed a bit less jumpy, I
asked him to tell me what this was all about.  He looked at me with the 
unwilling stare of a man forced to relive his worst nightmare.

"They're in the freezer......"

                  - * -

There were three things in the freezer.  One was a pound of ground chuck roast
that had been in there long enough to be harder than a brick.  The other two
objects were not hamburgers.  They were sealed in zip-loc baggies.

The first contained a bird.  It was the size and shape of a sparrow, but its
feathers were all colors of the rainbow.  Its beak was curved slightly like
a finches', and it had eight talons on each claw.  It had several wounds on
its sides and neck.  Its tongue, protruding slightly, would have been six
inches long if extended fully.  It was clearly not a local bird.

The remaining specimen was beyond "not local".  It was not terrestrial.

It was the size of a large rat.  It looked something like a wolf spider,
but stretched to the length of a shoe.  It had thick tannish bristles with
spots, like a leopard's.  At the end of its body was a vicious-looking
stinger.  Its grasping palps were tipped with what can only be described
as three fingers and an opposing thumb.

Both creatures were severely mauled.  There was no question that the calico,
fearless feline hunter, had been on one hell of a safari.

"Where'd they come from?  What are they?" Sanford wanted to know.  I couldn't
help him.  But the calico could......

"Oh, no," said Sanford, backing up.  "I'm not letting that cat back in here."

              - * -

The cat chewed noisily on its Tender Vittles.  Sanford looked strung out as
an addict, and he sucked on his cigarettes like they were full of gold dust.
We watched the cat eat, and waited.

Eventually the calico finished, burped, and curled up on the carpet to sleep
as if nothing had happened.

Sanford and I exchanged glances.

We watched the cat all through the night.

              - * -

The next morning Sanford gingerly fed the cat some sardines.  It mewed 
happily as the can opener ran, and gobbled the fishes down as soon as they
were under its nose.  Then we let it out into the yard.

It seemed to have a standard routine of yard-traversal: it would sniff every
plant and pebble in turn, as if conducting an inventory.  Then it would 
hunker down in the shade under the bushes and lie in wait for prey.  There
in the shadows, it looked like a little tiger.  We watched it from the 
bathroom window with a pair of binoculars.

Over the next few hours, the calico made several attempts to bag a cardinal
which was trying to hunt up grubs on the ground.  The cat would dash out from
cover, a blur of color, but the cardinal would swoop out of danger just in
time.  The hunter would then pretend indifference, and would saunter casually
back to its hiding place, as if preparing for a lazy afternoon nap.  Fifteen
minutes later, it would try again, with similarly poor results.

Around 12:30 the calico slipped through surveilance.

"Where'd it go?"  Sanford asked.  I took the glasses, but the cat was not
in the yard.  I berated him for letting it get away without seeing which 
fence it had jumped, but he insisted that it has simply disappeared.  
Naturally, I didn't believe him.

"Alright then, Mr. Know-It-Fucking-All," he blustered, "YOU track the little
bastard tomorrow."  That gave me an idea.

That evening the calico left a gift on the stairs.

Owls don't have fangs.  Do they?

                - * -

The next day saw a repeat of the previous ritual, with one exception.  The
technology level of calico-tracking had advanced a century or so.

We had fitted a small signal emitter, courtesy of the lab and its generous
after-hours policy, to the cat's collar.  We had also borrowed an oscilloscope,
a receiver, an amplifier, a multi-band gain unit, several i/o boards, and the
most advanced terminal from my division.  Sanford's bathroom looked like
Arecibo, and we could have heard a spider piss if it didn't put the seat up.
Ah, modern science.

The cat went through its standard motions of local hunting, the results
matching well with the previous day's foray.  It bumbled around the yard
until almost three in the afternoon before vanishing.

We peered at the screen.  One second ago, the cat had been licking its paws
in the middle of the lawn.  The next moment it was simply not there.  The
computer confirmed what we thought we had hallucinated: the cat had made an
instantaneous translation out of the range of our equipment.

Well, not quite instantaneous.  A rigorous analysis of the shifting of the
signal wavelengths showed that, at the moment of transmission loss, the 
calico had been receeding at a rate just under the speed of light. 

               - * -

The calico did not return that day.  However, Sanford and I were awakened
around midnight by the familiar scraping at the door screen, and we admitted
the wayward cat.  It bore with it a small creature, something like a cross
between a parakeet and an oppossum.  It was thoroughly mauled, and quite dead.
Further investigation showed that its left ear was pierced with a ring holding
metallic tags with bizarre spidery markings.

It took two pots of coffee to calm Sanford down.

                - * -

Sanford got rid of the cat.  I don't know how, or where it wound up, and I'm
sure I don't want to know.  Science is good for lots of things, but there are
some mysteries that don't bear looking into.

I live in Melbourne now, designing printed circuit boards.  It's kind of
dreary work, but it's a long way away from Arizona.

I figure when the aliens come to find the predator that has been hauling off
their pets, this is the last place they'll look.
-- 
HWRNMNBSOL
-- 
HWRNMNBSOL = Andrew J. Solberg, Visiting Prof. at Rice U. from U. of Oslo