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The Open and Shut Case
The Open and Shut Case
The Open and Shut Case
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The Open and Shut Case

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Imagine if Sherlock Holmes was a bear? Alternative Universe Mysteries for Adult Animal Lovers that relate the exploits of super-sleuth Octavius Bear and his cohorts. Just for fun, this series swaps anthropomorphic animals for humans in a world very similar to our own 21st century. Earth minus homosapiens.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherMX Publishing
Release dateMar 28, 2018
ISBN9781780926902
The Open and Shut Case

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    The Open and Shut Case - Harry DeMaio

    phony.

    The Development of Civilization - Part 1

    Our Origins

    (From An Introduction to Faunapology by Octavius Bear, Ph.D.)

    "About 100,000 years ago, according to scientific experts, a colossal solar flare blasted out from our Sun, creating gigantic magnetic storms here on Earth. These highly charged electrical tempests caused startling physical and psychological imbalances in the then population of our world. The complete nervous systems of some species were totally destroyed.

    For example, Homo Sapiens lost all mental and motor capabilities and rapidly became extinct. Less developed species exposed to the radiation were affected differently. Four-footed and finned mammals, birds, and reptiles suddenly found themselves capable of complex thought, enhanced emotions, self-awareness, social awareness, and the ability to communicate, sometimes orally, sometimes telepathically, often both. Both speech production and speech perception slowly progressed with the evolution of tongues, lips, vocal cords, and enhanced ear- to- brain connections. Many species developed opposable digits, fingers or claws, further accelerating civilized progress. Some others (most fish and underground dwellers) were shielded from the radiation and remained only as sentient as they were before the blast.

    This event is referred to as The Big Shock. It remains under intensive study."

    Prologue

    The Peacock, with art-deco tail

    Spreads it out like a billowing sail.

    The poor Peahen does not.

    She can’t share his proud lot.

    Eyes unveil in the tail of the male.

    If that damn peacock shows his beak in here one more time, I’m going to nail his feathers to the wall and turn him into performance art.

    Opening day of a new museum exhibit hardly qualifies for a World Peace and Tranquility Award. Opening day at the Loupe Museum in downtown Chicago showed early signs of re-starting the Great Inter-Species War.

    The Director was sitting on top of his desk next to the phone, whiskers quivering, tail aloft and eyes glowing with righteous anger. It was 8:00 AM, two hours before opening time. He’d already gone through two pots of prairie coffee and had just called out to his secretary for a third.

    This museum has been managed by my family of pack rats for over a century and no damn art deco feather duster is going to tell me how to open a new show. That bird’s squawk is enough to set off the burglar alarms. ‘Docteur Loupe, the lights in Hall Three are too soft. Docteur Loupe, the gift shop doesn’t have enough copies of my monograph. Docteur Loupe, the walls in the Deep Blue Sapphire Room create echoes. The room should be still and silent.’ If he wants still and silent, he should swallow a sponge.

    The speaker - Montebello Loupe Ph.D., Director of the Loupe Museum for the Decorative Arts in Chicago.

    The target of his ire - Phillipe de Peacoq, Parisian Curator Emeritus and Senior Fellow for Manifestations Artistiques from the Global Association of Exquisite Jewelers and Gemologists.

    The event - Day One of the blockbuster show - Jewels to Die For - Bijoux, Baubles and Blood - a traveling treasure trove of beauty and evil. Each gem in the collection bore its own unique curse. Each, it is said, had inflicted hideous mayhem on those who had crossed its glittering path. The public and the press ate it up. Between phone interviews, requests for private showings and the constant bitching of the peacock, Loupe was at the end of his ordinarily short temper.

    The star of the show was the Deep Blue Sapphire, a magnificent 372 carat, faceted gem whose name didn’t begin to describe the intensity of its unfathomable indigo depths. Males had killed for this stone and a few females had been caught up in the collateral damage. Legend has it that since its discovery two hundred and thirty five years ago, at least seven individuals lost their lives, all in unusual circumstances and all due to ownership or attempted ownership of the sapphire.

    In all, there were thirty five cursed pieces in the show. Radiant emeralds; deep lustrous rubies; shimmering diamonds; pearls - large blacks, miniscule but perfect whites and every shade and size in between; a rainbow of sapphires - displayed either unset or in necklaces, bracelets, chokers, and enough earrings to adorn the lobes of a pack of poodles. No matter their gemological pedigrees, they all shared bizarre histories. Strangled tomb robbers, suicidal nobles, impaled jewel thieves, assassinated royalty, disappearing actresses, choking rock stars. Everything that makes death worth dying!

    And in one hour and fifty minutes, the museum doors would open and the games would begin. There was a large and impatient crowd assembling outside the building. When they finally did stampede into the exhibits, with any luck, some oversized beast would trample that feathered test pattern underfoot. Oh, how he hated that pretentious, pompous Parisian.

    Just as Dr. Loupe was settling down again, a horrendous screech came echoing down the halls. Who else? That damn peacock! This time the burglar alarms did go off ,and as the Director scrambled from his office he was knocked over by a black and orange freight train (later identified as a cheetah). Guards and staff were running in all directions. The gift shop was a shambles and on top of all the other noises there was a god-awfully loud duck sounding off non-stop…" QUAAAACK, QUAAAACK, QUAAAACK, QUA…(you get the idea)

    Au secours, zut alors, sacre bleu! It is gone! C’est disparu!!! And more of the same from the Parisian Curator Emeritus, as he spread his gorgeous fantail dramatically and fell over in a dead faint.

    The dazed and bruised pack rat picked himself up from his collision and skittered down the hall past the recumbent bird and into the Deep Blue Room, where ungodly quacks were rattling every door, fixture, and display case.

    Shut that duck up!! he shouted, I can’t hear myself curse! Who is that anyway? Shut him up, I said.

    Over the din, a guard, trying to hold his ears, pointed to the floor in front of the Deep Blue Sapphire’s display case and shouted, It’s not a duck. It’s an egg!!!

    A what?

    An egg. See it? He pointed at a shiny black ovoid the size of a puppy’s football. The sound seemed to radiate from it.

    Get it out of here! Now! No! Wait! Better yet, get some of the shipping blankets off the show trolleys and cover it up. Don’t move it yet!!

    He looked up for the first time at the side of the case. Stuck to the buffed aluminum of the Deep Blue’s plinth was a sign. Written on vintage vellum in Olde English Script was the greeting, Salutations, Bear! Attention, Wallaroo! Now You See It, Now You Don’t.

    Dr. Loupe jumped up on the Small Animals’ Viewing Platform and stared into the empty case. The white velvet pedestal that had modestly borne the proud jewel was intact. The display top seemed firmly in place, but there was a distinct absence of jewelry. The sign said it all. The Deep Blue had been deep-sixed.

    Running back to his office to call his chief of security and the police, he tripped over the supine peacock. He told his secretary, Aramantha, to revive the bird while he made his calls.

    Get me Inspector Wallaroo, he screamed into the phone. Where is that hopped up Aussie?

    After a few seconds, Aramantha darted back into his office. An albino rat, it seemed impossible that she could be any paler than she usually was. She was! Doctor Loupe, she stuttered, I think the peacock is dead!

    Loupe dropped the phone and ran out into the hall to view the elegant fowl, tail in full array, artfully ensconced beneath a piece of Greco-Roman statuary - three piglets being nursed by a she-wolf. Rustling through the forest of feathers, he leaned over and listened for a heartbeat or a breath. Nothing! Aramantha was right. Phillipe de Peacoq, Parisian Curator Emeritus and Senior Fellow for Manifestations Artistiques from the Global Association of Exquisite Jewelers and Gemologists was no more. The Deep Blue Sapphire had claimed another victim.

    Chapter One

    Do Bears give you a scare? Well, me too!

    So I’ll pass on this tactic to you.

    You just fix that old Bear

    With a cold, piercing stare.

    But make sure that he’s Winnie-the-Pooh!

    However!

    However what?

    "Maury, every picture of meerkats I’ve ever seen shows you guys as watchful, vigilant and alert little creatures. Why don’t you ever pay attention to me? For your exclusive and personal edification, I have just completed a brilliant exposition of my upcoming testimony on the accelerating incidence of white-collar crime throughout the known universe. I’m a witness at CCRIME.[1] I refuse to begin again."

    I should tell you that Octavius Bear, my employer, mutual confidant and classic pain in the tail had just returned from another of his brief attacks of involuntary sleep (narcolepsy, to the medically inclined). We were sitting (he had been slumped) in his oversized office. This in turn, was inside his opulent mansion located just far enough from Cincinnati and the Ohio River to maintain some level of secrecy. Not a lot, but some. More about geography, topography, architecture, and other such stuff shortly.

    Over half an hour had elapsed since I was last exclusively and personally edified. As you may know, Octavius is a nine foot tall Kodiak bear, the largest of the ursine species, larger even than the male polar bear. Standing upright, with his jaws open, formidable teeth on total display, brown and black fur bristling, eyes locked in a fierce, unblinking stare and his Dolby 5.1 roar at full amplification, he presents a magnificent example of nature at its most powerful and horrible.

    On the other paw, among his many talents and accomplishments, he is a brilliant, self-taught practitioner in biology, physics, ursinology (bears), voodoo, chemistry, apiculture (bees), and oenology (wine, especially honey wine or mead). A self-made megabillionaire, he is also a first rate electrical, electronic, structural, weapons, aeronautical, marine, space, mechanical, and chemical engineer. A truly remarkable combination!

    Early in his career, while he was dabbling in biology, he developed an antidote for the annoying (for him) need for bears to hibernate. This allowed him to dedicate himself year-round to his businesses, his studies and research, his personal avocations and especially his primary vocation - the protection and betterment of all animal-kind.

    Much of this latter activity over the past few years has involved battling the ultra-criminal Imperius Drake and his two henchbeasts, Chita (you guessed it)and Bigg Baboon. Much more of them later!

    Unfortunately, unknown (or more likely, unaccepted or unadmitted) by him to this day, the antidote for hibernation has a serious side effect. The Great Bear falls off into periodic and often poorly timed narcoleptic sleep that can last from a few seconds to upwards of an hour.

    Once he wakes up again, he blithely carries on as if nothing had happened. Every now and again, when it has resulted in a particularly dangerous or embarrassing situation (cf. Octavius Bear and the Overflowing Bathtub) I’ve tried to make him face up to his problem. Score so far: Bear 564 - Meerkat 0. But I digress.

    I don’t suppose you’d believe me if I…

    No, he roared, I would not. Now pay attention. If the bleeding hearts insist on their ridiculous assertions that megabillionaires caught with their paws in the honey pot are simply victims of an oppressive society, I shall have to…

    We were interrupted by the soundless approach of Frau Schuylkill, Bear’s housekeeper, cook, chief pilot, and security officer. Octavius had hired her from an old inn in Switzerland where she had nursed him back to health after his accident at Breakurbach Falls while pursuing the arch-fiend Imperius Drake. Not to put too sharp a claw on it, she is a wolf. A dangerous, good-looking wolf. In fact, a real fox.

    And she is blindly devoted to the Bear. She glanced over at me with that hundred tooth grin that gave new meaning to the phrase, wolf your food.

    Your pardon, Herr Bear, she rasped, but Inspector Wallaroo has just arrived and must speak to you urgently.

    All right, Frau Schuylkill, sighed the Bear, but make sure you and Maury get everything breakable out of his path.

    "Ja, mein Herr" she growled, pausing to pick up several priceless and fragile antiques presented to Octavius by various and sundry crowned (and uncrowned) heads of state.

    Inspector Bruce Wallaroo requires no introduction to crime aficionados. He has bounded his way through forests of felonies since he first emerged from joey-hood and is now one of the world’s leading criminologists - on a par - although Octavius would never admit it - with the Great Bear himself.

    His career began as an obscure foot patrolman in Melbourne - bouncing along on his beat in the seamier parts of town - The Bounding Bobby, they called him. There weren’t many marsupials on the force and even among them, he stood out, if for no other reason than his inability to stand or sit still. Morning formation was sheer torture for him. He ducked out of police parades because he couldn’t stay in line. He wanted to leap to the front and wave a baton. Bruce was nothing if not patriotic. On ANZAC Day he covered himself with the flag and caromed off street corners, public buildings and rubbish bins singing Advance Australia Fair on the top of his lungs. He came dangerously close on several occasions to being mustered out by his superiors for being too energetic. This, of course, was anathema to any self-respecting policeman.

    Then, one evening, Bruce’s fortunes took a turn for the better, although it didn’t seem so at the time. He was hopping along the street covering his beat when he suddenly heard screams for help. He turned into an alley and saw a pack of tough looking dingoes trying to assault a female emu. (The national bird, for goodness sake!) His senses of duty, patriotism and chivalry all rose up to supercharge his energy and he went to work battering and flattening the wild dogs. He got several severe bites for his trouble, but finally the snarling pack, licking their own wounds, retreated from the scene, howling menacingly as they slinked away.

    He staggered over to the emu and said, G’day mum, are you quite all right?

    Before she could answer, he passed out. Next morning, he woke up in a hospital bed with bandages scattered around his leathery hide. He had lost a little of his right ear in the bargain. A wombat nurse clumped into the room, carrying a stack of newspapers and said, You’re a bonzer hero, officer, look at these tabloids. There on page one of the Melbourne Monitor, the Sydney Shout, the Canberra Clarion and the Antipodean Advance sat a picture of Bruce, covered with blood and lying unconscious on his side. The headlines varied a little, but they all said essentially the same thing: Hero Bobby Rescues Mayor’s Daughter. The stories went on to tell how he had single pawedly held off a pack of thirty ravenous dingoes (there were really six), beat several of them to death by jumping on them (he wounded one,) and carried the hysterical emu to safety. (He collapsed at her feet.)

    Obviously, the mayor’s daughter had been somewhere she shouldn’t have been, doing something she shouldn’t have been doing with someone she shouldn’t have been with. So she created a story making Bruce the biggest hero since Ned Kelly, the famous Australian bandicoot. He got the publicity. She got away with whatever she was trying to cover up.

    Bruce read all the newspapers carefully and was ready for his superiors when they came for his report. He claimed he couldn’t talk much - too weak from loss of blood and in some pain but essentially, the mayor’s daughter’s story was true. The press descended on him in his hospital bed and took more pictures of him, this time swathed in bandages. He was interviewed by two TV stations until his doctor, a Tasmanian Devil, bared his teeth and ordered everyone out of the room.

    Next morning, the Mayor and Police Commissioner dropped by to thank him and to tell him he was being promoted to Sergeant in the plain clothes detective division. And thus it began. It turned out Bruce Wallaroo was a very fine, nay excellent, detective and he became a legend in his own mind. Promotion followed promotion as he cracked thefts, robberies, murders, drive-by embezzlements, art and jewel heists. He was called on by Interpol and began to spend more of his time on international assignments, now as a representative of the Australian National Police. He began undercover work, but discovered he hopped around too much to keep the covers on.

    It was on one such assignment - an international peat moss smuggling ring - that he met Octavius Bear. Together, they caught the chief smuggler, a nasty Irish terrier, broke up the ring, got peat moss prices down once more to reasonable levels, and saved the industry from being shoveled under.

    So, Wallaroo sprang up from obscurity Down Under and bounced to the very pinnacle of his profession. Together, he and Octavius have created legends that are studied worldwide in police colleges, intelligence training programs and even detective correspondence courses.

    Yes, Inspector Wallaroo is a marsupial of the highest intelligence but he is also virtually unintelligible when he lapses into his heavy Strine accent. He can also reduce a room to rubble by the simple act of pacing back and forth - which in his case consists of springing from one vertical or horizontal surface to another with incredible speed and impact while his Aussie mind moves at warp nine.

    Needless to say, we never allow Frau Schuylkill and Wallaroo to be alone in the same room. She would no doubt tear him apart in a moment, all the time snarling about his big dirty feet all over my nice clean sofa. or "Ach, another broken end-table." Right then, I could hear her howling loudly in the kitchen - her standard reaction whenever Inspector Bruce Wallaroo arrived.

    Between his bounding, his Strine and her baying, a casual conversation among friends/colleagues doesn’t come easily. So in the interest of keeping you with me, I’ll filter out the background noise and translate the foreground. Before I do, I’ll give you a raw sample of Bruce’s conversation, just so you know what an effort I’m making on your behalf.

    "G’day Maury, G’day Ocko. Had another dust up with yer wolf. Oughta flick that sheila back of beyond and git a proper jillaroo (femalehand). She’s a no-hoper. D’give her a gobful m’self, but she’s a bitie, she is. Don’t want nuther barney (fight) wither, I don’t."

    You probably got the drift. Frau Schuylkill did not greet Bruce with anything near cordiality, and once again he’s urging Octavius (to no avail) to get rid of the wolf and take on a more traditional housekeeper. He further states that like myself, he doesn’t want to mix it up with Frau Schuylkill whose hundred or so teeth, silent approach, tenacious jaws, dumbfounding speed, and muscular weight would…well anyway.

    With the exception of an occasional Crikey, G’day, Shrimp on the Barbie, and other Qantas Airlines Strine to remind you of Wallaroo’s origins, I’ll present his dialog in Midwest U.S. English for the rest of this story. This is difficult for me, given my French-Dutch-African foreboers. At a later point, I’ll tell you how a Meerkat ended up on the African offshore island of Mauritius, but obviously Inspector Wallaroo has a pressing need to confer with the Great Bear.

    Ocko, he blurted, that damned Duck has done it again. Inspector Bruce Wallaroo was the only one permitted to call Octavius Bear Ocko, and this only after long years of association.

    Calm yourself, Inspector, rumbled Octavius, and come down off the piano. Would you like a drink?

    Thanks, Beer, I’ll have a bear, if you don’t mind.

    Maury, beer for the Inspector! I’ll have mead and get something for yourself. Now, Inspector, are you telling me that Imperius Drake has come out of his self-imposed retirement and is back to doing his dire and desperate deeds?

    I am indeed, although I doubt he ever retired. I think he just went south for the winter.

    You’re probably right, said Octavius. It was too much to hope that his last defeat at our paws would have discouraged his criminal urges but…once a Duck, always a Duck.

    Here, of course, the Bear was referring to the generally irascible nature of ducks as illustrated by the famous Daffy, Donald, and Scrooge. But Imperius Drake took irascibility to a much higher level. He was out and out nasty with major top notes of dastardliness. While other criminal minds had risen to challenge Wallaroo and Bear, none had created the same obsessive priority in their busy lives as had Imperius Drake.

    Rightcherare, Ocko, he’s a bad bloke, but this crime beats all. I wouldn’t have believed it was him if he hadn’t left his signature at the scene.

    The Black Quack???

    The same! It must be him. As far as I know, no one else can make the damned thing. And he’s the only one who can handle it without going starkers.

    The Black Quack was an apparently solid, ebony ovoid about the size of a duck’s egg, made of some unidentifiable material that withstood all our efforts to analyze, dismantle or destroy it. Seemingly inert, it emitted an unbearably loud and constant quacking sound whenever it was approached or touched. No doubt it was Imperius’ version of giving us the bird. The only way it could be handled or transported was with high-tech earplugs and soundproof containers.

    Well, Inspector, growled Octavius, you’ve identified the culprit but so far Maury and I are totally in the dark as to what exactly our old nemesis has done.

    The Impossible! That’s what he’s done. The Impossible!

    My dear Inspector Wallaroo, remember my first principle of detection. After eliminating the possibly improbable, whatever is left is probably impossible.

    Yeah, yeah, I know, Ocko. But this time he’s done it. Made an irreplaceable jewel disappear into thin air.

    Oh, come, come, Inspector, not another trite jewelry theft. Maury, how many disappearing jewel tales do we have in my memoirs?

    I had returned with the drinks. Wallaroo chugged his beer, and Octavius sloshed his keg of mead as I pondered a moment over my mug of fermented coconut milk VSOP.

    At least a hundred, I replied.

    And how many of them were the Deep Blue Sapphire? shouted the Inspector.

    This stopped the conversation dead in its tracks. I had never before seen the Great Bear blanch, but he was certainly doing a good imitation.

    The Deep Blue? But we designed the security for that ourselves. he said. It was impregnable!!

    I thought so too but when I arrived on the scene and saw an empty case, a smart-ass sign addressed to you and me and the Black Quack! Well, Crikey! And on top of that, there’s the dead peacock.

    Dead peacock? Imperius killed the show curator? He’s never killed anyone before, although he did try to do me in once.

    Not sure. There’s going to be an autopsy, but the medical examiner said she thought it was a heart attack, induced by the shock of the theft and the sound of the Black Quack.

    Sure sounds like Imperius! But how did he know we were involved? How did he do it? Why did he do it? There isn’t a fence in the world that would touch that stone and unless he wants it for himself…but no, this kind of job is not his style. He’s had plenty of opportunities in the past to steal major league valuables, but he preferred fraud or extortion or something else less physical and more fungible. Were Chita and Bigg Baboon mixed up in it?

    Not sure about Bigg, but the museum Director said he was knocked over by a high speed, spotted cat running through the halls. Who else could that be?

    "Messieurs, I said slipping in and out of one of my three native languages. Perhaps the jewel is meant to be symbolic. Maybe the way he pulled off the heist is a message of something bigger to come. The Duck’s ego is titanic. He obviously found out you two designed the security. He can’t resist pulling your tails and telling you he knows you are on the spot for the museum’s security. Ruin the show! Embarrass the Bear and Wallaroo! Score one for the Duck. Previews of coming attractions! Who knows what’s next?"

    ‘Maury, burped the Bear from behind his mead keg, there are times, albeit few, when I realize that behind that adorable twitchy-nosed face there is a formidable brain at work. You could be correct. All right, Inspector, the game is apaw. Let’s hear your story from start to finish. And please stop jumping on the mantelpiece."

    Just as Bruce was about to launch into a detailed exposition of the Chicago heist and associated death of the not-too-lamented peacock, there was a thump and a slosh. Octavius had drifted off again, sending a spray of mead squirting onto the floor. Two "time-outs’ in the last hour! Strange!! Maybe he’s actually tired.

    1 (Congressional Committee for the Restoration of Industrial and Marketplace Ethics)

    Chapter Two

    Spotted Cheetah’s breathtakingly swift.

    It’s a really remarkable gift.

    From zero to fifty

    In no time. How nifty!

    And just think! Not one gear must she shift!

    In Chicago, a few hours earlier, Chita had found herself deeply involved in a very high priority mission - running like hell, trying to escape capture and keeping her gorgeous hide intact. She had dashed through the museum creating chaos. She had run right over that poncy-looking pack rat and that squawking peacock. How could such a beautiful bird have such an ugly voice? Reminded her of some of the runway models she knew. She bounded down the stairs. Stay out of the elevators. They’re traps!

    She had a fake emerald necklace dangling around her ear and neck. After crashing into one of the gift shop showcases she had emerged bejeweled. She brushed it off. God, what crap they sell! Nothing but the real thing for Chita. Nothing but real diamonds for this cat, although this phony sapphire didn’t look bad. She had it in a bag around her neck. She still couldn’t figure out what went wrong with the heist. She was supposed to switch the stones, but there was no stone in the case to switch. She had slapped that stupid sign on the side of the case and had run like a demented…cheetah. Past a guard scratching his mane in bewilderment.

    That quacking black egg should have had them all rolling in agony up on the third floor, and for that matter, maybe the whole museum. She could still hear it and feel it reverberating in spite of her electronic earplugs and the fact that she was finally at the front door. She tripped up another security guard and made it out into the street through the mob of animals waiting to see the exhibition. She ran up the block and hid in a doorway to catch her breath. Wind sprints, always wind sprints!

    Now, where do we go, Chita? She was going to have trouble darting through the Chicago traffic.

    After several years with Imperius and Bigg, she was acclimated to big cities (New York, Mumbai, Paris, London, Milan). Lately she’d spent a lot of time in Manhattan but navigating there was easy. The streets were all numbered and the avenues either had famous names or numbers. Those she could keep straight. But here she was in Chi-Town with that silly river and lake and all those stupid street names. Plus, she wasn’t sure where she was going. Dumb, dumb, dumb! Which way was the lake? Imperius had told her to home in on the lake. Too many damn buildings in the way! Dashing into the street in front of a set of screeching wheels, she looked over her shoulder. A landmark! The elevated train is that way, so the lake must be the other way. Go, Chita, go!

    As she ran off, she heard a loud whistle and sirens behind her. Oh, rats, the police. The museum guards were faster on the panic button than she thought they’d be. All those security guards looked like they had been rented from a home for retired wagon horses. They were big, but they were slow. But now the canine cops were on her. This called for a bit of brain work. She could move a lot faster than a police car in and out of traffic, and she could dash through buildings, but they were also on foot. Retrievers weren’t exactly slouches when it came to speed. On a straightaway she could leave them in her dust, but they knew these streets. She didn’t. She would shortly be in deep catnip.

    She ran into the lobby of a building and whirled through a coffee shop, knocking over a few urns in the process. Ouch, that stuff was hot. Out through a revolving door. Damn it, her tail was stuck. Back up and then out. Two amazed sheep panicked and dropped their packages. Which way, which way? She looked up at a street light. Signs, signs - No Parking - No Right Turn on Red - Vote for Mayor Daley - Navy Pier, Next Left. The Navy Pier, that’s what she wanted. She made a mental note to vote for Mayor Daley if she happened to ever get back to Chicago, and took off to the left.

    Just then, she heard a louder police whistle, and she turned in time to see a Polish Retriever running right at her. He barked, Stop or I’ll shoot! Pedestrians scattered, looking for cover. He

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