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thelostcatpodcast · 6 months
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attempting to make a fan intro of the The Lost Cat podcast using only Blender. wish me luck!
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thelostcatpodcast · 1 year
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The Next Episode of ‘The Lost Cat Podcast’?
I have been having some trouble finding a story for the next Ep of The Lost Cat. ‘This AI malarkey is all the rage’, I thought. ‘Let’s give it a go’.
I prompted an AI to: ‘Write a short funny story in the style of Neil Gaiman about me looking for my lost cat but I find a monster’
It responded with:
‘Once upon a time, I set out on a quest to find my mischievous feline, who had wandered off into the wild unknown. I stumbled upon a dark and eerie forest, where the trees towered above me like sentinels. I called out my cat's name, but all I heard in response was a mysterious growl.
Being the brave soul that I am, I approached the source of the growl, ready for anything. And what did I find? A monster, of course! But this was no ordinary monster, oh no. This one was round and fluffy, with bright green eyes and a wagging tail. It was, in fact, a monster of cuteness.
I was so taken aback by the monster's adorableness that I nearly forgot why I was there in the first place. "Have you seen my cat?" I asked the monster. To my surprise, it nodded and began to lead me through the forest.
As we walked, I noticed that the monster was leaving a trail of cat toys in its wake. And there, at the end of the trail, was my beloved feline, batting at a feathery wand.
Turns out, the monster was just a friendly pet in disguise, and it had taken a liking to my cat. From that day on, the three of us went on many adventures together, encountering all sorts of creatures and finding all sorts of treasures. And whenever I think back to the day I found that monster in the forest, I can't help but smile and laugh at the absurdity of it all.’
Well,
'A monster of cuteness'.
I mean, tbh, it's not completely off. 😀
And, hey, it’s not like i’ve got an actual episode lined up for you anytime soon.
Give it a year, and if i haven't managed to write another ep, maybe just ask our AI overlords to write one for you.
And maybe tell me about the adventures you have, with this monster of cuteness.
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thelostcatpodcast · 1 year
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The Lost Cat Podcast: Season 5, Episode 9: Earthquake
Season 5, Episode 9: Earthquake
An earthquake rocks the neighbourhood, giving me another lead in the search for my cat.
https://thelostcat.libsyn.com/season-5-episode-9-earthquake
Suggested song: How about 'Ghosts'.
It too is about our changing relationships with our surroundings.
https://apclarke.bandcamp.com/track/ghosts
Suggested time for large glass of wine: right at the start, or right at the end.
Happy New Year, and I hope 2023 is good for you.
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thelostcatpodcast · 1 year
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The owners of the old museum were very mean people indeed. They were just horrible. Not so much that they deserved to be eaten by dinosaurs, of course, but they weren't nice.
One of the owners was a tall man who looked like he was made of matchsticks. And he was, if matchsticks were things you counted with, say in a poker game without money. He totted up everything in terms of worth, including people and fun, in order to cut them into little pieces and fit them into columns and rows. And he would never use money to play poker with. He had the look of being perpetually angry with the world, as its being a sphere prevented him from looking in its lower right corner. His name was Mr. Gawps, and very much like a poker game without money, he was entirely a waste of time.
The other owner was a tornado of tumult which no order could survive contact with. She would loom into a room, create crisis and disaster all about her, and then move blithely onto the next, blaming everyone else for the wreckage that now lay all about within. In fact, the only thing separating her from highly destructive forces of nature is that tornadoes have a calm in their center. Her name was Mrs. Cataver, and she made the world in her image.
And they were mean to their staff. They were mean to their customers. Their practices closed down other businesses around them. You'll have worked with people like this. We've all worked for people like this. You know. Them.
- The Lost Cat Podcast, Season 3, Episode 6: Dinosaurs
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thelostcatpodcast · 1 year
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“Once upon a time there was a leaf that blew about in the wind. It blew around with a thousand other leaves and made patterns in the air. The leaf did not know it was in the pattern. The pattern did not know how the wind would shape it. The wind had no idea it was making a pattern with the leaves. And no one was there to see it. And the world span on and on. And in that world the air was full of patterns and in those patterns were thousands of leaves and in those leaves a single leaf blew about in the wind. When I finished the line was quiet.
The explosion did not make the news.”
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thelostcatpodcast · 1 year
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The Lost Cat Podcast: Season 5, Episode 8: The Ultimate Truth of The Universe
S05, Ep08: The Ultimate Truth Of The Universe
In which is revealed the ultimate truth of the universe.
https://thelostcat.libsyn.com/season-5-episode-8-the-ultimate-truth-of-the-universe?fbclid=IwAR3jGOpVzd3XoAi70ib_uW_Ip0uS1KUnps6BdsdM_HHo_fF8cYe3DX4TlBg
Accompanying song: 'Constellations'
A good song for contemplating the infinity of the cosmos to.https://apclarke.bandcamp.com/track/constellations
A good time to have a glass of wine: I think 'when we arrive at the run-down house' is a good spot.
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thelostcatpodcast · 1 year
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Ummm
The Lost Cat Podcast has just been informed that the title of its latest episode is actually spelled 'Foie Gras'.
The Lost Cat Podcast is currently deciding whether to pretend the spelling on the episode was an artistic choice.
https://thelostcat.libsyn.com/season-5-episode-7-fois-gras
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thelostcatpodcast · 1 year
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Season 5: Episode 7: Fois Gras
Season 5: Episode 7: Fois Gras In which I and my housemates track down a terrible monster attacking people in the local area, mostly by going to the pub. 
https://thelostcat.libsyn.com/season-5-episode-7-fois-gras
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thelostcatpodcast · 1 year
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Lost Cat Podcast Songs
I haven’t included songs with this latest batch of episodes, so I will try and match them with some of my recent releases.
How about 'Crack In The Wall' matched with 'So Long, Dear Friend'?
https://thelostcat.libsyn.com/season-5-episode-6-the-crack-in-the-wall
https://apclarke.bandcamp.com/track/so-long-dear-friend
As for 'when is the right time to drink a large glass of wine?', the answer is 'always, my love'. :)
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thelostcatpodcast · 1 year
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Season 5: Episode 6: The Crack In The Wall
Season 5: Episode 6: The Crack In The Wall
In which a good friend buys a fancy new apartment, and then falls through a crack in the wall.
https://thelostcat.libsyn.com/season-5-episode-6-the-crack-in-the-wall
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thelostcatpodcast · 1 year
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Why, yes, I am trying to figure out what all the buttons do on tumblr again, but i thought i would do it using the amazing artwork Lost Cat has inspired.
Like this, of the very coolest monster (though, you know, an argument could be made for Lisica doing just as many bad things :) ) - Sister Cyra, the Hollow Vampire.
‘A ‘hollow’ vampire? Ah, it must be a metaphor for...’ no, she’s actually hollow. That’s just how The Lost Cat Podcast rolls :)
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Sister Cyraliene, the hollow vampire from A.P. Clark’s podcast, the lost cat podcast 
@thelostcatpodcast (i hope you get to see this)
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thelostcatpodcast · 1 year
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New Episodes Of The Lost Cat Podcast Soon!
I will start releasing new episodes next week (maybe) and release one a week (ish) until Christmas (not confirming which one).
Trying to decide if I should I start with a new monster, or a haunted house?
I’m mostly active on https://twitter.com/LostCatPod but, well, let’s see what happens there.
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thelostcatpodcast · 3 years
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Victoria Died (and then some other things happened and we all got a bit distracted sorry about that Victoria)
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A Death by Dying / Lost Cat Podcast crossover fic, because I think the Lost Cat narrator and Obituary Writer deserve to meet each other
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Keep reading
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thelostcatpodcast · 3 years
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The creator of The Lost Cat Podcast, A P Clarke (who is me, but lets not get technical) has released a new album: Bones And Ghosts
You can listen to it here: https://apclarke.bandcamp.com/album/bones-and-ghosts
You can watch the lyric video for the lead song here: https://youtu.be/N89dqbObnjA
And i have a new website, which collects together all my work here: https://apclarke.studio/
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thelostcatpodcast · 4 years
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THE LOST CAT PODCAST TRANSCRIPTS: SEASON 5: EPISODE 5: THE DUNNERING DEMON
THE LOST CAT PODCAST TRANSCRIPTS: SEASON 5: EPISODE 5: THE DUNNERING DEMON
Released on : 5th June 2020
https://thelostcat.libsyn.com/season-5-episode-5-the-dunnering-demon
My cat was walking along a quiet hedgerow-lined road in the country, of the kind where the tarmac gives way to gravel at the edges, and passed a sign reading ‘you are now entering the village of Dunnering’.
Some bunting had been draped it.
It was a beautiful village on a green hill surrounded by rolling fields dotted with comfortingly ancient trees where birds sang just out of reach, with delightful rows of mismatched cottages leading up the hill to the stately old manor house.
From every lamp-post hung bunting and flags, on every window flowers.
It could not have been a more pretty, peaceful place.
But Dunnering was a village beset by ill-fortune, sickness, violence and, as of this morning, murder. For the village of Dunnering was cursed.
THE LOST CAT PODCAST, BY A P CLARKE, SEASON 5, EPISODE 5: THE DUNNERING DEMON
As my cat wandered up the delightful high street, he noticed a general movement of humans up the hill towards the manor house. A crowd of them. He made a habit of following crowds for the inevitable heaps of dropped food that always accompanied them.
But there was a strange feel to the crowd, less of the excitable and chaotic energy that one usually gets when something out of the ordinary has happen, and replaced with some kind of grim magnetism that pulled them all up the hill.
The crowd was full of mutterings about ‘the curse’, and ‘the demon’.
And they all walked, leaden foot, up the hill towards the manor. And so my cat held back, not wanting to get caught under any of those feet.
Then my cat also noticed one human, an old lady, walking slowly but very determinedly in a different direction. She walked over to the side of the road, bonked her stick off the helmet of the police constable, who was watching the whole parade with a bemused expression, and made him open his car door so that he could drive her up the hill. My cat leapt in to her lap, just before the officer closed the door, and immediately began purring.
The old lady said, “oh? What’s this with the purring? I don’t have any food.”
But she scritched at his head, and he settled down gently.
“Ah dear, do we have to, Mrs Lipeston?” Grumbled the officer. “It’ll get fur everywhere!”
“I’ll worry about this cat dirtying your car, when you’ve bothered cleaning it up after last night’s joy ride. Don’t think I didn’t notice!”
And the officer coughed and changed the subject.
“And if there’s anything else I can do for you, Mrs Lipeston.”
“This will be sufficient, Jason.”
They drove carefully up the road to the gates of the manor house, avoiding the crowd.
The gates were closed, and being guarded by large groundskeepers with even larger dogs. The crowd drew up to the gate, but all stopped a very specific distance away from the hardened scowls that greeted them, and absolutely none tried to push past.
The groundskeepers owned absolutely everything beyond that point.
So the crowd peeked around the edges of the gates, and over the fence, to try and sneak a look at what might be happening within.
As the police car pulled up to the side of the road, the constable asked, “Do you know what this is about, Miss Lipeston?”
“No, but I fear any business concerning Lord Dunnering will come to no good.”
“Some say he’s quite mad.”
“Oh, I doubt that.”
“Some say...”
“Don’t mention the curse, Jason.”
“Sorry, Mrs. Lipeston.”
“He was a good child,” the old lady began, and the constable knew better than to interrupt again. “Brighter than all the others. It would get him in to trouble, but I never had problem with him. I think what gets ascribed to madness is often an unwillingness to accept a life of rules and traditions such as run right through an ancestral manor such as this. However, at some point, as he grew into a man, it turned him inward, and dismissive of others, and I simply could not talk to him at all after that. But he grew in to a man of immense will. He had unbounded energy, a world striding ambition, and he did not suffer fools, or his family, gladly. He abandoned his inherited wealth and then went and built an entirely new fortune by himself that dwarfed that of his family. Mad? I am not so sure.”
“Yes, ma’am,” said the constable, opening the passenger door for her.
Miss Lipeston held my cat in her arms, and the constable helped her out of the car.
As the two began slowly making their way through the crowd to the gates, passing plenty of whispers about ‘the looney lord’, they saw a handsome lady rush up to the gates, with a clear attitude of authority, and began speaking to the crowd with a high manner. She kept looking at the Groundskeepers with a mildly-hidden mix of fear and disgust, while the groundskeepers were in turn barely keeping their disdain in check.
It seemed a common goal - of keeping the crowd out - was allowing a temporary impasse.
The dogs just snarled.
She said: “Now please, please, Lord Dunnering is a VERY private man and this is a very sensitive matter. We must ask for the GREATEST of respect in this unfortunate time.”
“That’s the Lord’s niece,” said the constable. “Turned up recently.”
“Yes, I know of her.”
“Lord Dunnering knows,” the lady continued. “Lord Dunnering knows that he can reply on your FULL support at this time.”
And while the lady was speaking, Mrs. Lipeston leaned in to the constable’s arm and continued: “Then the story takes a turn. For he took off. Vanished. Overseas, and no-one knows where, or what he did. Rumours, of course, and of a most unkind nature, flourished. He came back some five years later, with no word of explanation, kicked everyone out of the ancestral pile and filled the halls with the uncounted, not to mention mysteriously gained, treasures that he had acquired in his travels. And that, I am afraid, is where the trouble began.”
They approached the gate. The neice blocked them. The dogs snarled at my cat, and my cat hid further down in the woman’s arms.
“Uhh, excuse me but where are you going?”
“To speak to Lord Dunnering.”
“As his niece I will be handling all questions regarding the estate at this time.”
And Mrs Lipeston gripped the constable’s arm, just ever so slightly.
“Mrs Lipeston will be assisting the police today, Lady Carstarse.”
“Well, I…” Lady Carstarse began, but Mrs Lipeston walked straight past her before she could finish.
“Grace,” she said, as she did.
The handsome woman clearly wanted to follow them in, to assert authority again, but that instinct was caught in a conflict of not being willing to give up the gates to the groundskeepers. As such she just sort of stood still, and stuttered.
“Well, aren’t you going to do something?” she said.
The groundskeepers said nothing, but kept their eyes very carefully on the old lady as she passed. The dogs growled at them, and pulled at their leashes.
My cat stayed very deep in Mrs Lipeston’s arms.
And they walked along the gravel path towards the house, past withered flower beds, thick bramble, and endless cages for animals, of all sizes, now empty and overgrown.
And Lipeston was in full flow now: “Once the family was gone, he filled The Manor House with every kind of treasure, the grounds were filled with every kind of exotic animal. He hired a full staff of groundskeepers to look after this extraordinary collection. The house had never seen such success. But bad luck began befalling the Dunnering Estate. Plants would not grow, the animals began dying, there were strange sicknesses among the staff: breakages, accidents, sightings, and more”
My cat did notice a strange atmosphere in the grounds. He heard no birdsong, he smelt no trace of wildlife. He looked back, and saw the guard dogs had stayed right where they were, on the other side of the gate.
“These events became so severe Lord Dunnering became convinced that he had been placed under a curse and that he was being hunted by a demon. And a darkness came over the manor then. It radiated out from him and smothered all within its influence. He became more and more paranoid, more fearful of every tiny threat until he locked himself away inside his great hall and was never outside again. And of course, such behaviours simply fuel gossip like gasoline.”
“They say he desecrated an ancient Syrian tomb.”
“Precisely,” said Mrss Lipeston.
And with that, they entered through the vast doors of the Dunnering Manor.
And they saw just what the gossiping had all been about.
The entrance hall had been completely gutted, and replaced with an immense glass case, stretching all the way up to the now removed roof, forty feet above, and enclosing some 80% of the vast atrium.
It was a complete second, sealed, inner room. The old roof had been removed, so that the glass was exposed to the sky, with nothing breaking its smooth surface but a small ventilation port barely two feet across right at the top and right at the centre.
Inside the room the floor was filled with furniture and statuary, of Marathan, Byzantine and Zhou heritage, and more. Some of the sculpture was immense. Beds, divans, tapestries and dining tables of many styles, filled in the spaces between. Marble and bronze, wood and glass: The treasures of many worlds.
And there, lying at the centre, quite dead, was a young woman with her head bashed in.
“Oh my dear girl,” Mrs Lipeston said, so quietly, and my cat could feel her body straighten as her aspect changed, and she slew off some of her little old lady body language.
My cat gave the room a good sniff.
The constable said with a gasp: “Is that Maud Montgomery?”
“I’m afraid so,” said the detective in charge, calling over. “Lord Dunnering’s fiance. Daughter of the head groundskeeper. We’re just getting the doors open now.”
A group of medical staff and police officers stood by a complicated set of doors on one side of the glass enclosure. Groundskeepers stood around them, checking over their every action with grim expressions.
And the medical staff, even the police officers, worked with great and visible, care.
An older man was with them, handsomely dressed, entering a code into the door.
Mrs Lipeston leaned over to the constable and whispered “Uncle.”
“They do keep popping up, don’t they.”
“Don’t they just.”
The Uncle was speaking: “Double-redundancy, Time release airlocks. A fully featured quarantine with de-comtamination chamber. The, uhh, renovations were made without any expense spared.”
He looked up at what was left of the Manor’s roof as he said this. “Which of course were entirely Lord Dunnering’s privilege to make, and we have supported him in every way. There.”
The heavy doors unlocked with a hiss of escaping air, and the medical staff went in to check on the body, lying still in the centre of the room.
My cat, sitting in Mrs Lipeston’s arms, got a good smell of the escaping air.
When the uncle saw the body through the doorway he turned away, holding his hands to his face.
“Oh it’s too awful,” he said. “They were to be wed this Saturday.”
Just then the niece bounded in from outside, out of breath, clearly having made the decision that it was more important being there than at the gates.
She saw the body, and held her uncle’s shoulder.
“It is a tragedy, Uncle Freddie.”
“We put bunting up all over the village,” said the sobbing Uncle.
Mrs Lipeston asked, “And why all this?”, gesturing at the great class enclosure.
It was the niece that responded.
“I’m afraid Lord Dunnering is... sensitive to outside contagion, and demands everything go through two weeks of quarantine before being let in to own sanctuary. He built this entire chamber for his fiancée so she could pass her time in quarantine in comfort.  When the quarantine period was finished, she would have been transferred to his own quarters so that they could have been, finally, together.”
“How did they meet?”
“The two struck up a relationship while she worked around the house, doing groundskeeper duties. She would sit by his chambers for hours, apparently. She was an incredible solace to him. Such a lovely girl, surprisingly so. We thought she might finally bring him out of himself. It is so tragic.”
Mrs Lipeston said, “I might need to speak to the groundskeepers too at some point.”
“Uhh, be careful,” said the niece, speaking more quietly now. “They don’t mix well with... locals. The Lord brought them in after working with them on his travels. They are insular, proud, and fierce.”
“The story I tell,” said the uncle. “From my great-grandfather, about how their people fought in some war or other. They faced an invading force ten times their number, and over days of battles broke that number down to less than half. Extraordinary fighting. But when the invading force finally overwhelmed them, and stormed their settlement, they found every last one of them dead. Facing capture, they had killed their own rather than face dishonour. I would be careful.”
“Nevertheless,” said Mrs Lipeston, and moved over to the quarantine doors.
The groundskeepers all watched as she approached, and she made a point of catching one of their eyes and holding his gaze.
Some of the police officers were speaking:
“It’s the curse. It’s got to be.”
“It is a crime,” said the detective in charge.
“But how could it have been done? There’s no way in, and no way out?”
“That’s what we’re here to find out, isn’t it.”
“No human could have done this.”
Mrs Lipeston interjected: “Has Lord Dunnering been informed of the death? We should speak with him.”
“Lord Dunnering don’t want to see anyone,” came a booming voice from behind them.
Heavy steps sounded from the darkened hall that led to the East Wing and the hunched form of the Head Groundskeeper emerged into the space, and stood, blocking the corridor.
“Mr Montgomery.”
“No-one.”
And the other groundskeepers joined him, standing shoulder to shoulder.
Mrs Lipeston approached, leaving the others behind.
“I can not offer you solace, Mr Montgomery,” she said. “But we will catch who did this.”
“Was the demon.”
“If it was a demon, then we will catch a demon. May I pass?”
Mr Montgomery did not move, and a couple of the groundskeepers leaned in and they spoke quietly for a moment.
Eventually he said, “Ma’am.” and he reluctantly stepped asideAnd Mr Montgomery reluctantly stepped aside, and then led them in to the darkness of the East Wing.
“I am utterly sorry for your loss, Mr Montgomery.” Said the uncle as they walked.
And Mr Montgomery cleared his throat so aggressively at that no-one spoke at all the rest of the way.
There was no lighting in the corridor, and it was lined with towering statuary and other treasures, piled high on either side. The deepening shadows loomed over the party as they walked in to the East Wing.
The corridor emerged to show another huge glass enclosure had been built, and filled the space. It was all in darkness, covered in drapes and curtains, save a single beam of bright sunlight from the ventilation port at the very top.
A man stood there just inside wall of the glass room, almost in silhouette, and watching them approach.
“Mrs Lipeston, it has been a long time.”
He was gaunt, he did not fit his clothes, he was pale, and his body was almost completely still. He had none of the vitality of the world-striding young man she had known, he did not have the squirling pestilent energy of the sick, nor even the floating unreality of a ghost, only the cold grey blankness of death, and it bled out from him to fill the entire room, the entire wing, and it poisoned everything it touched.
“Miss Lipeston, it has been a long time.”
“Yes it has, Philip.”
And he held in his arms a small, hairless cat, of the type popular in Northern Africa and the Middle East, and it hung limply from him, it’s shallow breaths showing through its ribs, with barely enough energy in it to raise its head, which lolled forlornly over his wrist. Its pale, bare skin stretched and stuck to its master’s until you could barely tell where one started and the other finished.
Lord Dunnering then looked at my cat, which was sitting in Mrs Lipeston’s arms, looking all about with some interest, and the merest trace of a wince could be seen on his brow.
Instinctively, almost unconsciously, he reached for a handkerchief, and began waving away imaginary cat hairs from around him. He caught himself doing it, and then began self-consciously rubbing at smudges on the glass wall with the handkerchief, as if to cover his mistake up.
The hairless cat in the Lord’s arms languidly raised its head enough to see what was going on. But Its heavy lidded eyes were barely even open.
Some smudges the Lord could not budge, no matter how hard he rubbed. He snapped when he realised they were on the outside of the glass.
“Mr Montgomery I have asked you repeatedly to ensure the cleanliness of the quarantine. Increase the rota. This place must be clean!”
“Yes, sir.”
Lord Dunnering caught himself again, and straightened, taking a half step back. It was clear he was finding himself doing this sort of thing more and more.
He took a deep breath, put the handkerchief into a waste receptacle, and gathered himself.
Calmly, the Lord turned back to the gathered crowd.
“I asked to be alone.”
“I’m afraid this is a police matter, Lord Dunnering.”
“And then why is she here?”
“We must ask you some questions.”
“There is nothing to say.”
“Your fiancée has been murdered,” said Mrs Lipeston.
“It was the demon.”
“Take this seriously.”
“It is the curse.”
“Philip!”
“The curse takes everything!” he spat, suddenly wrathful, with that old energy passing fleetingly across his parchment face. “Oh, at first I did not believe it, in my arrogance, as staff fell sick, animals began disappearing, began dying. You never could solve those deaths could you, Mrs Lipeston.”
“No, Philip, I could not.”
“But still I careened blindly on. Then my own pets were lost. I came back to this manor with three sibling cats, Mrs Lipeston.” and he stroked the pallid, lone creature in his arms. “By the time the second one was taken from me I could not deny the truth any longer: I was cursed, and it was killing everything around me, so I retreated here, to this sanctuary, out of the world, so I could keep what I loved safe.”
And his face passed in to shadow, and any trace of the old Lord that remained was entirely gone.
“But it did not work, for now the curse has taken my beloved. Even here, even with all I have done, the curse follows with me. The demon will come for me, will come for every thing I love. There is no escape. Leave, for there is nothing here. Not any more.”
He turned away from the glass then.
“Mr Montgomery, you are relieved of duty, you may do as you wish.”
And Lord Dunnering retreated from the wall, back in to the darkness, absently stroking his withered pet.
“Be careful with your cat, Mrs Lipeston. They don’t last too long round these parts.”
And then he was gone.
They walked back towards the Entrance Hall, towards the light.
As they walked, the uncle shook his head with worry. “I am concerned this could send him over the edge entirely, and we’ll never get him back, right-minded and competent again.”
“It is a terrible tragedy,” agreed the niece.
Back in the entrance hall, the body of Maud Montgomery had been brought out of the quarantine, on a stretcher and covered, and was currently waiting for the coroner to remove her to the hospital.
Mr Montgomery knelt by the stretcher’s side, and held the body’s hand.
He placed it back, gently, beneath the cloth and then rose.
“Well,” he said. “What’ve yer got?”
“We are following up a number of leads at this moment…”
Mr Montgomery scowled at him, shook his head, and stormed off.
“Have you checked the roof?” said Mrs Lipeston, and pointed up at the ventilation port.
“It’s too high, it’s too small. We’ve discounted it as a means of ingress.”
“Discount nothing, Detective.”
And the detective sucked in sharply. “Fine,” he said. “Officer: send three men up.”
And, as he ran off, Mr Montgomery and a couple of the groundskeepers stood at the East Wing corridor, arms folded, and glaring.
While they were climbing towards the roof, my cat wriggled in Mrs Lipeston’s arms and the old lady let him go to the floor, where he began sniffing around the doors of the opened airlock.
Forty feet above them, long wooden ladders were stretched out over the gloss roof, as they tried to attach to the support of the ventilation apparatus without touching the glass itself. This entire edifice was designed by someone who wanted it perfect in form, with no care as to how hard it was to access.
Police officers banged and wobbled their way along the ladders to reach the ventilation port. They checked it thoroughly, then reported down that there was no evidence of tampering at all.
Then one of the officers almost fell off the ladder. In the Entrance Hall they all looked up at the figure half dangling off the struts, then clasping himself very tightly to the ladder.
The detective called up, “are you alright? What happened? Report!”
“I’m sorry sir. I’m sorry. But I think you are going to need to see this, sir.”
“What is it?” asked the detective “what is it?”
“Footprints, sir.”
The officer was brought a tablet so he could beam an image down to the detective.
And the image told its story. Close to the ventilation port were two large, non-human footprints next to each other. They neared half a metre long, with complicated claws around their outside and, one on each foot towards the front, was the round outline of a large sucker.
“My god.”
“Like a squid or something.”
“It is the demon! It used the suckers to climb straight down the glass walls and do for poor Maud. We have to tell the Lord!”
They ran back to the East Wing.
Mrs Lipeston followed, silenced by the evidence of the footprints.
Back in the East Hall, The Lord looked at the footprints, then put his hand upon the glass and bowed his head.
He said, “My love, my love.” Then he collapsed, putting the cat down upon a table where it melted to the surface like custard. He said, as he sobbed into the floor “I have cursed you too.”
And then two large thumps were heard above them, coming from the darkened roof. Then two more, towards the back of the house.
“Footsteps!”
“The demon is still on the roof!”
The Lord grovelled on the floor “It is come for me. At long last, it is come for me.”
Mr Montgomery stood tall and said: ‘If it leaves footprints, it is real. And if it is real, you can put your hands on it. And I will lay my hands upon this demon.’ he pointed at the detective. “Bring everyone!”
And they rushed, all of them, the family, the police, the hangers-on and the groundskeepers, out into the grounds, carrying clubs and whatever was to hand, leaving only Mrs Lipeston and Jason the constable.
They looked into the glass case and the Lord lying there.
“It is not unheard of for someone to be so convinced of their own guilt that they create their own punishment. But could that self-destructive will become so strong as to manifest physically? To actually become real?”
“I don’t rightly know, ma’am.”
“You should probably go with them, if only to ensure they do not harm each other.”
“I think you might be right.”
“And Jason,” she added as he started to leave. “Do be careful of yourself out there. Just in case.”
“I will Mrs Lipeston,” he said, and ran off.
Mrs Lipeston left the East Wing slowly, and met my cat as he walked back from the Entrance Hall. She lent down and scritched behind his ears, speaking distantly, mostly to herself.
“I don’t know. I just… don’t know. I am not so foolish as to dismiss the existence of demons. But I’m not so sure it is monsters that do things like this. Let us say: Trapping the lord in a cage would most definitely benefit some of those outside of it. Something doesn’t smell right, and I am sure you sense it too, little one. Go on. And be careful.”
My cat ran off in to the halls.
My cat walked down the shadowed corridors of the vast manor house, lined with the relics of ancient worlds, and things more unimaginable, all towering over him.
Faint noises echoed in the halls: movements in the shadows in the corners of eyes. My cat was used to reading the endless activity of the city at night, but he was not used to the almost complete stillness here, and so found it hard to interpret it.
So he mostly ignored it, for he had a scent to follow. He was following the strange mix of smells he had found all around the tragic sanctuary of Maud Montgomery.
Outside the quarantine, he had smelt all of the usual country smells of village people but also stranger smells, chemical smells - smells he only knew from certain parts of parts of the city.
When the airlocks had opened he had smelled Maud, sweet and sad, coming from her clothes, from everywhere she had touched, but could not make out the scent of any other person. What he did smell coming out of that airlock door, that had so peaked his interest, was the very faint smell of an animal.
And it was this smell he was following right then.
He followed them down stairs, past kitchens, well passed where the statues began to thin out, with the smell of this animal getting stronger and stronger, and onto a corridor right on the edge of the manor house.
There was a bang! And a scrape!
And my cat hid beneath a statue, as one of the groundskeepers walked by, come back alone from the hunt, and constantly looking behind him.
My cat followed him.
And, at the very end of the corridor, the groundskeeper unlocked a door with three locks and went in. My cat snuck by before he closed the door and went in too.
And there the strange mix of chemical and animal was strongest mixed in with the sweet, sad smell of Maud Montgomery.
It was a small, plain bedroom, and the groundskeeper was lighting dark candles and incense of the kind to ward off dark spirits, filling the air with the smell of chemicals.
Then, in front of a small book case, he put down two small bowls, pushed the case aside, and revealed a small cubby hole, filled with blankets, soft lights, and a tabby cat curled up tight right in the corner.
And a cloud of cat hair spilled out of the cubby hole. The cat had been there a long time. And the tabby cat shuddered – it was absolutely terrified.
The groundskeeper filled one bowl with water, one with food, patted the poor creature on the head, and then left, locking the doors again.
Alone again my cat rose and, very carefully, before he revealed himself, made a thin high yowling noise.
The noise said ‘I am just passing through, and I pose you no threat’
And then he stepped out in front of the terrified creature, and waited for the animal to accept his presence.
But it would not leave its hiding hole. It kept checking on the windows, at the grates in the walls - all of the places a demon could get in. The terrified cat checked all around the skirting boards of the room. It all made perfect sense from my cat’s point of view - it was checking for any gaps.
As far as this poor cat was concerned, if he left this hiding place, the demon would get him.
My cat stayed small and gentle so as not to scare the cat any further. My cat purred and moved slowly to calm the animal and, eventually, my cat approached, sat down next to it, and began licking its fur.
This was Maud Montgomery’s cat, hidden away so that the curse that killed all the other animals would not get to it. It said a great deal that the cat was hidden, rather than given away or left with relatives. Maud was clearly a lady who was not going to give up her cat. This animal was loved, and had been cared for. It is possible that the cat had already sensed that something had changed, and that Maud was never, ever coming back again.
My cat gently groomed the poor creature. And when it was calm, they settled down and napped with each other, just for a little while.
My cat left the animal sleeping and happy a little while later, stopping to eat a bit of the food first. My cat knew the killer of Maud Montgomery now, and he had work to do.
It was the dead of night now. The halls of the Dunnering House were silent and still. And my cat paced through the East Wing to the great glass wall of Lord Dunnering’s quarantine.
The glass shone in the moonlight, smooth and clean.
The Lord was long asleep, the hunting party long since returned empty-handed, and the house closed up for the night.
My cat approached the glass, and he yowled.
And, slowly, out of the shadows withered the hairless cat, its head barely lifted from the floor, its limbs swaying like noodles.
It came and sat on the other side of the glass, its shoulders like knitting needles through the skin of its back.
They stared at each other.
And then the hairless cat straightened its limbs, its eyes narrowed to points, it rose up and sat regally. It opened its mouth and called out in a coarse, breathy hiss. But it was not addressing my cat. It was looking behind him.
Where, out of the darkness, two more hairless cats approached, stalking, like panthers.
The cat behind the glass cocked his head just slightly, as he watched. He showed his teeth, and hissed.
My cat backed away from the hunting pair, towards the glass.
One of the hairless cats circled round to cut him off, rubbing up against the glass to close that escape route, and leaving an oily smudge.
My cat had nowhere to go.
The two hunting cats closed in.
And then two nets came down upon them.
Mr Montgomery and the constable came out of the dark, holding on to the nets.
The cat within the glass howled a shrieking howl with its feet up on the glass wall, unable to do a thing.
Mrs Lipeston called for the lights to be turned on.
Mr Montgomery leaned in close to the cat in his net, and he said “I got my hands on you.”
The captured cats spat and yowled.
Lord Dunnering himself walked bleary eyed towards the glass.
“What is the meaning of this!” he said.
“We have captured the murderers of Maud Montgomery, Lord Dunnering,” said Mrs Lipeston.
The lord rubbed his eyes awake and saw.
“My cats.... Those are my cats! They did not die!”
“No. I imagine it would be relatively easy to live in the roofs and basements of this manor without being detected.”
“They are the killers? But this is ridiculous, Mrs Lipeston! You are making a fool of me! Of Mr Montgomery! Of Maud!”
But Mr Montgomery said, “i’d hear her out.”
“Fine!” said Lord Dunnering, looking at his long-lost pets struggling in the nets. “So tell me: HOW did they commit this murder?”
And Mrs Lipeston took a deep breath, and began:
“It was a simple plan, really. Jason, could you fetch me a chair. Thank you. Last night, the cats waited for the poor lady to fall asleep, then one blocked the filtering system bringing air IN to her quarantine - most probably that one, and you may find some slight scorching on one side of its body, as the machinery can get hot when blocked.”
Jason checked, and confirmed a slight reddening on one side of the cat.
“The other then simply sat on the ventilation port above and their smooth, hairless skin created an airtight seal on the glass. Then they had simply to wait for the oxygen, in what was now a completely sealed room, to run out.
“Poor Maud woke up eventually, choking and already dazed from carbon dioxide poisoning, and fell hard upon a marble statue and quite bashed her head in. Dramatic, but unnecessary, for she was doomed as soon as they sealed off the air.”
“And what about the footprints?”
“Ah,” said Mrs Lipeston, who was finding her rhythm. “The footprints were caused by these cats sitting on the glass while they waited for the lady to sleep. When a normal cat sits down they leave a bundle of hair, but these ones, they leave only an oily smudge of their sweat. The footprints were simply the oily residue of their hairless skin imprinting on the glass the outline of their seated forms, which can easily be mistaken for the footprint of a much larger beast’s footprints.” Then miss Lipeston leaned in. “Those suckers some were so sure helped them walk down the walls were, my dear lord, the oily outline of their hairless ani.”
She said this with some relish.
“But why would they do this?”
“Greed. Selfishness. Covetousness. Do not think that such desires are purely human inventions. They had the Lord and wanted him alone, so they began a campaign of destroying anything that would take the Lord away from them. This was the beginning of the curse. Then they hid in the roofs and grounds of this estate and attacked anything they saw as a threat. Other animals, new pets, staff and now, rising to human murder, the future wife of Lord Dunnering, Maud Montgomery: the biggest threat they had faced so far.”
Lord Dunnering was silent for a long while.
“My god,” he said. “My god.” he had his hand to his head.
“Well,” said the detective. “We shall take away these murderous animals immediately.”
And the Lord said “Stop! They are mine, and I will do with them as I please. Put them in quarantine so that they may join me in two weeks. These cats were my everything, and I thought I had lost them. Now I find them returned, and will not have them taken again, for they are all I have now. So this is done. The curse is complete, and the demon has found me. Leave my estate, you are all of you no longer welcome.”
And so they left. They closed the gates and went down the hill to the village, leaving the manor house behind.
And my cat had a very nice evening on the old lady’s lap, in front of her fire, as she told stories to her very patient friends of the many other mysteries she had solved. And they drank very large glasses of red wine.
After a day or so, the cat moved on, walking through the strangely quiet village on his way out.
It still was as bright and cheerful as ever, but it was not the same.
Some of the bunting lay coiled, higgeldy-piggeldy in the street where the wind had blown it down and no-one had picked it up.
And, on top of the hill, the manor house darkened and was shuttered up, its ground left to wild, its unused wings closed up and left to rot, and deep at its heart, three cats wrapped themselves around a man, alone, and lost, deep in an unfathomable darkness of his own.
THIS HAS BEEN EPISODE FIVE, OF SEASON FIVE OF THE LOST CAT PODCAST, CALLED ‘THE DUNNERING DEMON’, WRITTEN AND PERFORMED BY A P CLARKE
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thelostcatpodcast · 4 years
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THE LOST CAT PODCAST TRANSCRIPTS: SEASON 5: EPISODE 4: BIRDS
Released on : 8th May 2020
https://thelostcat.libsyn.com/season-5-episode-4-birds
Birds. Birds are amazing! They are small and they are cute and they come in all kinds of colours.  But did you know their pretty little bird songs are actually aggressively territorial threats? It’s true! Technically, they’re dinosaurs. They taste really nice, if you are that way inclined, which my cat certainly is. They can fly, which I think is an ability we tend to under-rate in birds. Birds are amazing.
And that’s it. That’s the intro.
THE LOST CAT PODCAST BY A P CLARKE: SEASON 5, EPISODE 4: BIRDS
I was in the pub with my housemates, Dom and Bojana, and I was telling them how great birds are. I was wearing a big hat that covered my entire head. And they were mocking me for my hat. They are my friends.
They were used to me telling them stories about the completely true adventures I have had while looking for my cat. They would often mock me for the more unlikely aspects of the stories, but I guess it passed the time for them, and they let me carry on.
“And another that birds do,” I said  “Is murmur. At the end of the day they form in to massive clouds of ten thousand birds, and they fly about above the trees. They fly in such numbers and so close together that these murmurations can blacken the sky. Then then whole cloud can turn on a penny and blind you with light as ten thousand white bellies are suddenly turned towards you.  Like a stun grenade. It is like a sudden flash.
“People mistake them for UFOs.
“Most likely it is so predators will mistake them for even bigger predators, but what do we know? We hardly know anything! Birds are amazing.”
Back in the pub, Dom said. “Birds. I mean, if you say so.”
Bojana, “let’s see where he’s going with it, OK?”
“Alright. Alright.”
“And a few days ago,” I continued. “I was sat on our roof, watching the evening drift in to night and I saw a huge murmuration, hovering above the top of the hill of the Far Park. It was gorgeous. Untold birds flew around, wafting and weaving about to their own rhythms, their own restless, ever-changing patterns. I looked out over the rows and rows of houses, and the birds looked so alive in comparison. The city felt like frozen time, and the murmuration was like the heartbeat of the world. Like the fire itself.”
“Yeah, alright, mate,” said Dom, back in the pub.
“Oh let him be,” said Bojana. “You carry on.”
“OK, so: in my reveries, I like to think that these murmurations hint at something deeper going on that we can’t see. Like just the surface shadow of something else. Like cats running away, hours before an earthquake, like dragonflies hovering over only perfectly clean water. Like, I would think in my more mischievous moments, the light on an angler fish.
“but then this murmuration swung round dramatically, turning almost exactly ninety degrees, then leapt almost straight upwards. It hung almost completely still, then gently collapsed into its normal coil and curves.
What could make the birds act like that? What predator could it be trying to fool?
I immediately thought of my cat,
“Of course you did,” said Bojana, back in the pub.
“Now, now,” said Dom. “You can’t blame the boy for being consistent. OK, mate, then what did you do?”
“I grabbed my gear, and headed out to the Far Park.”
“Nice. Movement. Action. Makes a change.”
“Are you going to be constantly interrupting me?”
“Probably, but don’t let that stop you.”
So I found my place in the story, and carried on:
“I arrived without incident in the waning hours of the day, with a few scattered people enjoying the last of the sun while sitting on the grass with a pleasantly tended form of nature buzzed all around us.
The murmuration still hung in the air above the hill, huge now I was beneath it, towering above me, swinging around lazily this way and that.
I reached the top of the hill in a hurry and found a man, tall with wild hair and big honest eyes, holding a complicated machine in his hands. He stood directly beneath the cloud of birds, looking straight up. He turned to me and smiled hugely.
“Hey, don’t I know you from the pub?” he said.
“Yeah, i think so,” I said, still panting at the effort of climbing the hill. I’m not sure I knew much about him, but I had seen him around.
“Oh yeah,” said Dom. “Bright shirts, right. Mostly sits at the bar. I’ve had a few with him. I’ve not seen him around recently.”
Well, back on the top of the hill, the man made a connection as to what he knew about me.
“Oh, did you think all this was your cat?”
I sighed, “yeah.”
“I’[m sorry: It’s just me. But still: hey! Look at this! It’s amazing! Birds!”
And he showed me his machine, which looked an awful lot like a remote control device.
“Do you know how murmurations work?” he asked.
“Like, instinct?”
“Kind of,” he said. “Not really. You see:”
And you could tell he really wanted to explain this. He’d been waiting. You should never ignore such enthusiasm. “Each individual bird is in visual contact with the half dozen birds directly around them, so if one of them moves, they move along with it. This way a huge swarm can move in a coordinated fashion almost simultaneously after the first mover has moved. Really simple rules define their action, but it leads to such incredibly complex behaviour! And all controlled by a single, first-mover, bird.”
“Who sees a predator, right?” I said.
“Well,” said the man. This was obviously a topic of debate. “We don’t know,” he said, with the equanimity of someone who had worked very hard on achieving it.
He looked up at the spiral of birds. “The patterns of nature are so beautiful, aren’t they? I think we have lost the ability to read its simple signals. The meaning in those patterns. Civilisation has separated us from nature Rather than adapt to an ever changing world, now we change the world to fit our needs, and our desires. Now, I fear we are completely blind to the patterns of the world. Completely deaf to its communications. Well I am trying to forge that connection again!”
 And he held up a small, mechanical bird. “This is a drone - of my own design - it looks, moves and even smells exactly like the breed of bird above us. I control it with this box.”
He pressed a button on the bird and then threw it up in to the air.
“And if I fly it in to the murmuration, I can become the first mover!”
He synced the bird-drone to the controller and then gently manoeuvred the control stick and, above us, the great cloud of birds all moved to the right, and then to the left.
  “Amazing, isn’t it?” he said with wild, honest eyes.
He swung the birds around in great arcs, all from his little remote control. We stood on top of the hill and looked up as the immense plume of birds whirled around us, towering hundreds of feet in to the evening sky. He flew them right up towards the cloud, then right down to just over our heads, and then away.
I noticed a bunch of cats turned up and watched the moving cloud.
And back in the pub Dom said: “cats, finally.”
“None of them were mine, sadly,” I said.
“Well obviously,” he said, and I ignored him.
Back in the park I did ask the cats “Have you seen my cat?”. Let’s say I did it half-jokingly, alright? Either way, they did not respond. They were watching the birds with great interest.
I asked the man: “But are you stopping the birds doing what they want?”
He smiled, patiently.  “They’re just animals. They are not doing this for any particular reason. It is mathematics, really: complex behaviours out of simple rules. This is what all complexity is: the weather, the leaves on a tree, animal behaviour. It is, looked at it this way, as nonsensical to ask what the birds want as much as to ask a drop of water in a storm.”
He handed me the controller: “go on! It is fun”
I took the controller and nervously pushed a stick. The tiny bird drone inside the Murmur shifted and the entire swarm moved with it. My eyes went wide. This was amazing.
I spun the birds gently around us, above our heads. The last of the sun shone through their wings, dappling the hill with light and shadow. It really was all just incredibly beautiful.
And then, in my hands, the controls began to feel heavy - the murmuration responded slowly, sluggishly to my prompts.
“Ooo, hello,” said Dom.
“Oh come on,” I said.
“Oh: no. It’s getting good! Carry on!” said Bojana.
“OK, well: I handed the controller back to the man.
“They seem to be resisting.”
“What?” He took the controls back with a disappointed look. “Don’t be silly.” He looked up and wrestled with the controls. The patterns above us were becoming more ragged, less stable.
Then I noticed that the cats were gone.
“We should stop,” I said, perhaps finally learning the lessons from all the missing parts of me.
“Ha!” said Bojana, who then stopped herself. “Sorry – I couldn’t help myself. Please: carry on.”
“Well, OK. To the man, I said “Maybe you should stop. I mean, how would you like it?”
He said, “they’re just birds!”And he twiddled some knobs and he upped the ampage, and the sounds of the birds above us changed as wings began to collide with each other.
And I started to feel unbalanced, almost queasy, as if the ground had shifted.
And I said, “you know, i’ve always thought these murmurations were like surface shadows of some deeper behaviours. Like cats, running away from earthquakes.”
“Yes, yes,” he agreed. “Or like dragonflies hovering over only clean water.”
“Yeah, or like the lights on pilot fish.”
“Nonsense!” he said dismissively.
And the sound from the birds grew to a roar, and the sky darkened.
And then the bird drone fell from the swarm and lay unmoving and broken at his feet
“Oh you bastards!” He yelled.
And he took out three more drones and sent them up in to the Murmuration.
And a great screeching came from the swarm now. The patterns became chaotic as conflicting signals pulsed through it.
It began to rain feathers.
“Please?” I said.
“What?”
And the three drones smashed down in to the control device which sparked and smoked, and the man had to throw it onto the floor.
And then the birds all shifted around together in perfect formation. They made patterns in the sky, high above the city.
And, pointed directly towards the top of the hill of the far park, the birds formed in to the letters: S.T.O. and P.
“No!” Yelled the man, response. He stood tall, and held up both his middle fingers at the great swarm of birds.
He turned to me and yelled, “look at me! I’m flipping the birds!”
A small cloud of birds separated from the Murmur, swept down and bit both his fingers off. They disappeared, with his fingers, back in to the Murmur.
The man looked at me and, as the blood started squirting and, with a sense of realisation on his face, he took a deep breath in to scream.
And then every bird in the Murmur changed direction at once and flew at the man and completely surrounded him.
If he did scream, I never heard it.
But the Murmur turned red, and bathed the park in strobing, neon, crimson light.
A bit like a disco.
The Murmur lifted and revealed the man’s skeleton, picked clean, standing tall and defiant for a final moment.
Then his bones collapsed.
Then they took the bones.
And then there was nothing left at all.
Then great swarm of birds towered above me on the top of the hill, spinning to a point, like a tornado, like a giant arrow pointing directly at me.
They dropped. They surrounded me. It was like I was in a zoetrope, with light and dark spinning around me so fast I could not see the outside world at all.
And I did nothing. For I had held the controls too.
And then ten thousands birds reached in... and one by one plucked one hair each from my head.
And with that done they lifted, and dissipated, and went back to their trees, and the Murmur was gone, and I was left alone on the top of the hill.
And, back in the pub, I finished my story.
“I was plucked clean,” I said. “It hurt like hell. They had pulled every hair out by the follicle.”
I took my hat off with a flourish, to reveal a completely bare head.
What they did with my hair I could not say, and would not dare venture to guess. Birds are amazing, but do not look too closely in to their nests!”
“Yeah, look, I dunno about this one,” said Dom.
“What?”
“The moral does seem a bit obvious, you know?” Bojana agreed.
“Well look at my head!”
“I can’t stop. It’s a really weird shape.”
“You know you could just say you were balding. There’s no shame in that - a man your age.”
“Honestly, mate, I’m more likely to believe the dinosaurs.”
“They were… oh, never mind. OK. Look, these days I have come to the conclusion that there is no moral so obvious that humans won’t ignore it. I have come to the conclusion that the unique quality that marks a story out as made-up is subtlety.”
And, just at that moment as if to make my point completely clearly:
A thousand birds all came and sat on the fence of the pub garden, lining the walls all around us. Bojana looked at me suspiciously, while I hurriedly put my hat back on.
She looked around. “Oh gild it, why don’t you.”
And then the birds all sang a song. One song, all the same, over and over, all around us.
“Birds are amazing,” said Dom.
And Bojana said, “well played.”
“Thank you,” I said.
And that mostly settled that. Everyone in the pub listened to the bird song in the beautiful late evening air. We got another bottle, and enjoyed the sounds too.
“Ain’t they lovely?” said Dom.
I leant in and whispered, “don’t tell them what we had for dinner.”
And so, in quiet, and surrounded by birds, we all had a large glass of wine.
THIS HAS BEEN EPISODE 4 OF SEASON 5 OF THE LOST CAT PODCAST, CALLED ‘BIRDS’, WRITTEN AND PERFORMED BY A P CLARKE
THANK YOU FOR LISTENING
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thelostcatpodcast · 4 years
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THE LOST CAT PODCAST TRANSCRIPTS: SEASON 5: EPISODE 3: HUMANS SCREAMING
THE LOST CAT PODCAST TRANSCRIPTS: SEASON 5: EPISODE 3: HUMANS SCREAMING
Released on : 10th April 2020
https://thelostcat.libsyn.com/season-5-episode-3-humans-screaming
My cat was walking across open night-time fields beneath an infinite sky of stars, but his eyes never rose above the level of the trees - looking for birds - and constantly scanned the ground for any small mammals. He did not care at all for the mysteries of the space above him.
Which was ironic, considering where he was about to go.
THE LOST CAT PODCAST BY A P CLARKE, SEASON 5, EPISODE 3: HUMANS SCREAMING
A net came down upon him, then he was put in a cage, which was put in a van, which drove off in to the night.
The van stopped in time, the cage was taken out, and my cat stayed very low and still as he looked out at his new surroundings.
They had just passed a very high, thick wire fence surrounding a huge flat open area with several incredibly tall, cylindrical rockets at the centre. They were headed toward a collection of low buildings right on the edge of the compound.
Above the door was a sign that read ‘Space Inc’ with a logo of with the globe and stars, with both within the flame of a rocket. A inscription read ‘Sub Caelo, Mundus’.
“I want this one up in an hour,” said an older man, walking stridently at the front.
A woman, looking in to the cage with a concerned look said “we have to run tests! We have to make sure he is healthy first at least.”
“What, he’s a cat, he’s fine, put him with all the other subjects!”
“We could at least give him a good meal.”
“What?” said the man, peering in to the cage. My cat looked at him, and stayed very, very still. “He looks like he’s eaten very well, and recently. Guys, stop this. Put him with the others.”
And the cage was roughly taken away from the lady by a couple of large, white-coated men. And as they travelled the corridors of the compound at counted dozens of humans walking around.
Finally my cat was shoved in to a storage space filled with similar cages, filled with animals all similarly staying very quiet and still.
The men banged the cage down on top of another, rattling my cat about.
The men left, laughing, and my cat followed them very carefully with his eyes.
My cat looked down, and a small dog in the cage below him looked up. They did not need to say anything to each other. The situation was obvious.
And then the woman snuck back in to the storage space. She put some fish into my cat’s cage, and some water.
“I am sorry,” she said. “I hope you like this. I am doing everything I can, I promise, but they’ll push me out entirely if I make any more of a problem. Do you understand? No, of course you don’t.”
She put some food in the other cages too, patting the dog on his head gently.
“At least you get a nice meal.”
She turned out the light as she left.
“I am so sorry.”
An hour later, the men turned up, loaded the cages on to a trailer, and drove it towards one of the huge rockets.
As they did, the older man’s voice sounded out loud over a PA.
“Friends! Our humble private business was formed to do the necessary work our governments have completely failed to do: to set our eyes beyond our world and conquer the frontier of space! For habitation! For commerce! For life! And this flight, friends, will represent the last step to prove our readiness to head in to full-scale mobilisation. If you control the sky, you control the world! Friends! The future is here, and the future is ours! Sub Caelo, Mundus!”
All around were roars of approval, the animals were pushed from their cages in to special slots in the rocket, then the rocket was sealed up tight with a tomb-like slam, and all of the sound from outside was gone. There was only the gentle beeping of machinery then, the hum of artificial air, and the whimpering of a dozen small animals.
Then a great rumbling began through the metal, then a great force, pushing them all down.
The whimpering stopped then, and they all stayed as flat as they could.
The roaring continued for an eternity, then a snap and a wobble and all the weight left them.
My cat, in his box, began to float. He looked out of his tiny porthole and found that the stars had come to him.
He saw the great globe of Earth shining blue beneath him.
And then a great shadow passed over the porthole and everything was dark. They were approaching something huge.
Small thrusts from the ship, pushed my cat back and forth, then there was a low clank, a release of gas and everything was finally still.
Then the doors of their boxes opened, and the animals were free.
They floated out and found that the rocket had docked with a larger station, orbiting the earth.
The animals spun around in various states of confusion, bouncing off the walls, with no ability to control their movement.
An electronic click filled the space and a voice sounded out.
“Complete! Fully-automated launch and docking with live payload. Congratulations my furry friends, you are helping secure the future for all mankind! Now, do please make yourselves at home. You maybe be here some time!”
There was laughing and a clinking of glasses could be heard. And then the radio snicked off.
The animals floated about in the space.
My cat put out its claws, and attached himself to the soft material of a wall and stayed there, secure. He oriented himself to this new configuration, and then began to walk, claws out, towards the cockpit. He was quite well suited to this new situation, he found.
But the other animals floated around him. They seemed quite calm, all things considered. Possibly dazed.
And then they all heard a different kind of noise. Not mechanical, or electronic, but kind of squelchy.
The sound moved, rhythmically along a pipe in what, to my cat, was the ceiling of the cabin, a sucking, fleshy sort of noise.
At the far end of the cabin, a panel in the pipingflew open in a blast of steam, and then a bright, yellow mass fell from it. The mass plopped on to the floor, barely more than a puddle. My cat watched it with some interest, for the mass started to produce some kind of mist.
The mist grew and undulated around the mass and became so thick the mass almost began to disappear behind it.
The mass just sat there at the far end of the cabin, and the animals all watched the small cloud waft about in the air currents.
Then a small animal squeaked and the mist all moved round to face the direction of the squeak.
My cat looked closer, and realised it was not a mist, but thousands and thousands of filament thin fronds, splaying out from its body in every direction for half a metre. The fronds all moved independently, wafting to their own wind, tasting the air, sensing currents and movements, and they were all now were pointing towards the poor animal that had just squeaked.
Then hundreds of the fronds weaved together beneath the mass to form thick woven rope, and lifted it up, as if on to legs. Then the mass ran at the animals.
The animals, floating in the air, panicked. They writhed and squealed and ran their legs, to precious little effect.
My cat stayed absolutely still, with its claws dug right in to the wall.
The dog – by far the biggest of the animals - banged off a bulkhead, and bounced around a corner into a side corridor. The fog of filament fronds all coalesced in that direction, and the mass stopped running forwards, and scuttled out of the main cabin in to the corridor the dog had just gone down.
There was banging
as equipment went flying, there was a heavy, wet snarl as the dog bared its teeth. There was the squelching as the alien got closer.
There was the noise of a desperate scuffle, the wet snaps of jaws closing, then a high pitched yelp, then everything was still. But only for a moment - for then the barking started. A great, terrified barking, with great sucking, panicked whining in between.
The dog reappeared from the corrdior, gently and purposefully floating back towards the other animals.
Though it barked in terror, its limbs were completely still. Its body completely calm. For the dog was not controlling them any more. For, covering the back of his head, with thousands of filament fronds of pushing into his scalp, the alien creature pulsed, controlling the poor animal’s body.
But the dog’s eyes were still wide with panic. The dog was still conscious. It barked and yelped and growled and its eyes swivelled in its head. It knew what was happening to it.
The alien had complete control over the rest of the animal, but seemed to leave the dog’s surface, conscious, mind, as well as its face, completely free. Presumably, the alien had no use for either.
So the dog barked and yelped as best it could, for that was all it could do, And it floated calmly past my cat, not even moving a muscle.
My cat looked at the dog as it passed, and the dog’s eyes pleaded for help.
My cat could do nothing.
Then the dog’s body rearranged itself in the space, and neatly, efficiently pushed off a control panel with its hind legs directly towards my cat. The alien was coming for him.
My cat pricked its claws and ran off to the far end of the cabin, in to the next corridor, and hid.
At least the dog was easy to avoid, barking in such distress as it was.
My cat hid as best he could, and listened.
He heard the barking, safely far away. Then he heard a whole series of squelching noises, and then a chorus of terrified squeaks and squeals, as the alien split in to parts and took over all the other animals.
A symphony of horror came from the main cabin.
And then, just as suddenly, every bark and squeal stopped, and the station was almost entirely silent.
My cat peaked out from his hiding place, and saw the dog’s body floating belly up gently passed him, not moving at all now. The body rotated, revealing a completely clear head, and absolutely no life.
Then the alien reared up behind my cat and launched itself at him.
My cat hissed, and bared its teeth, and a thousand filament fronds leapt down his throat.
It was not a long fight.
My cat throbbed and bucked, then it went still, and began floating up from its hiding place.
The alien had gained control.
My cat could feel the unnatural horror of a thousand knife-like worms burrowing through his brain, through his spine, through his very veins,
It felt like acid when he resisted and so it forced him to retreat further and further back in to himself.
And there was only a blankness where once had been his body, with only the dimmest sense of movement remaining, felt only as different intensities of absence, as if his body was a ghost that he now haunted.
And then, something else too, an acid-y, electric seeping in the darkness, that my cat realised was the alien itself, getting on with its business with his body. And my cat, rather than try to hold on to the physical sensations in his body, turned his attention wholly to the consciousness of the alien and began to see the landscape of its mind open out before him, and the weather of its moods roil above.
And it was not what my cat was expecting at all.
This creature was simple, deep down, like rolling hills against the cat’s intricate caves.
The alien lived by joining with, and merging into, other creatures, and conquered not by destroying the creature, but by destroying the barriers between them and becoming one.
But stuck on this space station, however it got here, the alien had no ability to merge and grow and spread.
It was, the best way my cat could interpret: lonely.
This was utterly fascinating to my cat – who mostly just ate other creatures.
So simple, almost sweet, and so easy to play with.
The alien’s consciousness lit up as it noticed the cat’s attention, and the frilling fronds of its consciousness fell full upon my cat’s mind. The brightening of the alien made it seem almost happy.
As the fronds rushed out towards my cat he knew he only had a little time.
In the last few moments he had, my cat realised that they both wanted off this space station. And that would be enough.
And as the alien rushed towards my cat, my cat rushed towards the alien.
And they met.
And my cat was overwhelmed. And in the flaying rush of psychic fronds, my cat roamed the creature’s landscape of desire, and over-layed his own until there was a perfect match and a connection, of needing to escape, was made.
And my cat, as accurately as any such communication can be described, said “hello.”
And the landscape pulsed and the whole colour and temperature changed around them.
And my cat continued: “I have an idea…”
And once the wills had been aligned, the alien was pretty easy to convince. It was, by its nature, a fairly simple organism, whose inherent simplicity allowed for devastating force.
My cat wanted to get back home. The alien wanted open space and lots of creatures to join with. My cat simply ushered up the image of the open spaces the rocket centre, bustling with so many white-coated people.
And with that my cat had that devastating force on his side. The alien, controlling my cat’s body, took off towards the control room. My cat had to hold in some panicky yowling as its body moved around him.
My cat leapt up to the control panel, fronds from the alien leapt up and in to the panels and circuitry.
Then my cat, my cat observed, lifted its paw and pressed some buttons, tapped numbers in to a key pad, and then pushed a gauge to maximum. My cat watched himself do this with quite some interest.
A great rumbling was felt through the station then, the great earth beneath them began to shift, and my cat was run into the small compartment of the rocket he had arrived in.
And, in the great dark sky above the rocket compound back on Earth, a star began to burn brightly, then fall, getting brighter and closer all the time.
Alarms sounded in the compound, people ran out of the buildings, looked about and then pointed at the falling star, that was now a raging fireball.
“Do not worry,” said the elder man. “We programmed for this. There are safety measures.”
The space station roared and flamed overhead and then smashed in to the empty fields over a mile from the compound. They felt the rumbles through their feet, but they were safe.
And then, floating down gently on perfectly programmed retro-boosters, the rocket came to a rest, vertical with barely a wobble, dead centre of the landing pad.
And the people gathered all congratulated themselves on how clever they were.
The hatch popped open, and my cat was jumped out.
“Aww look, it’s the cat!”
And the people all ran towards him.
“Hey, what’s that on its head?”
And then the alien loosed its fronds upon the humans, split into dozens of globs of sickly yellow flesh that travelled up the fronds into the screaming mouths of the people. Such were the riches around the alien, almost the entire mass of the alien split into parts as it spread leaving my cat with only a small, controlling part left.
My cat, inside itself, approached the alien, and ate it whole.
Then, free, he trotted off to find some more food.
My cat walked through the compound, which had started to fill with the sound of humans screaming. White coated figures walked by, perfectly calmly and slowly, but their eyes were wide and they were screaming. They knew exactly what was happening to them.
My cat saw the elder, speech-giving, man walk past calmly, screaming in utter terror. My cat walked on.
Then he heard a familiar voice, whispering in fear. He saw one of the aliens approaching the nice lady who had fed him food. The cat yowled, and the alien moved away.
Out of respect. Out of fear. Possibly out of friendship.
The woman stared at my cat in amazement. My cat meiowed at her, then walked off. The woman rose, gave one last look around, and then hurriedly followed him.
They both walked, quite quickly, past the humans screaming, out of the compound, which was now on fire and rapidly collapsing.
At the gates, The woman petted my cat, then looked around for her car, but when she turned back my cat was already walking off in to the night, to continue his journey beneath the infinite sky of stars, accompanied by the sounds of humans screaming.
THIS HAS BEEN EPISODE 3 OF SEASON 5 OF THE LOST CAT PODCAST, TITLED ‘HUMANS SCREAMING’, WRITTEN AND PERFORMED BY A P CLARKE
THANK YOU FOR LISTENING
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