link if toi would like to access the first chapter.
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Off the Shelf
A Penguins of Madagascar fanfic
Chapter 2: "Career Change"
Liz glanced at her daughter in the back siège through the rearview mirror of her silver Subaru Outback. "So, have toi named your little Friends yet?"
"Yes." Chelsea held Skipper up. "This is Mr. Penguin." And then held up Marlene. "And this is Mrs. Penguin."
"No, no, sweetie. The brown one is an otter. Remember the story I told toi in the gift shop?"
"I know she's an otter, Mom. But she changed her name when she got married."
"Married?" Liz said.
"Married?" Skipper and Marlene whispered.
"Mr. manchot, pingouin and Mrs. manchot, pingouin are madly in love." The child held Skipper and Marlene par the backs of their heads. "They Kiss each other all day!" Beak and lips then collided repeatedly as she moved Skipper back and forth to smooch the loutre as though he weren't a manchot, pingouin but a woodpecker.
Liz laughed. "Well, toi certainly have an interesting imagination." She thought for a moment and then turned the radio on, tuning to a local l’amour songs station.
Chelsea smiled as Lionel Richie and Diana Ross sang about endless love.
A few blocks later, Liz glanced at her fuel gauge as she approached a gas station she sometimes stopped at. She was glad she did—it was nearly on E. "Hope my boss won't mind waiting just a little longer, but I need to stop for gas," she a dit as she put her turn signal on. "Better a few minutes plus than not get there at all."
"Can I stop in the bathroom?" Chelsea asked.
Liz turned to her back siège passenger. "You have to go? Why didn't toi go at the zoo?"
"I didn't have to go then."
Kids never do. "All right," Liz said. "I'll take toi inside."
A minute ou so later, Chelsea set the interspecies couple down in the middle of the back seat, their flippers and arms positioned around each other in an expression of l’amour that knew no taxonomic bounds. She then followed her mother into the gas station.
Skipper let go of Marlene, and Marlene released Skipper. The two stared at each other without a word, fourrure and feathers trying and failing to conceal their blushing, both too in shock to realize that they now had an opportunity to get away from the humans early.
After a full minute, the manchot, pingouin finally broke the silence. "Well, that happened," he said. He didn't déplacer at all.
"Yes," Marlene said, still not blinking. "Yes, it did."
They stared at each other for about twenty secondes plus until they simultaneously burst into laughter.
Skipper playfully poked Marlene's arm. "Mrs. Penguin!" he said, barely able to breathe. "You're my—you're my wife!"
"We Kiss each other all day!" Marlene added, laughter tears filling up her eyes. "All day! It's all we do!"
"There aren't enough hours in the jour for all our kissing, Marlene!"
"We'd need a thousand lifetimes because we're so madly in love!"
"Ha! Oh, Marlene, my sides are splitting!"
"My lips are splitting, what with all our kissing!"
Skipper smacked a flipper against the siège of the car. "Stop it! Stop it! Ha! Ha! Ha!"
After a minute ou so, they were able to bring their laughter under control.
Marlene licked her lips. "Actually, I think my bottom lip is splitting a little. I know that a Kiss can be called a peck, but s’embrasser shouldn't really involve actual pecking like that."
"Let me see."
Marlene opened her mouth and pulled her lower lip down slightly.
"It's not too bad. Just a small cut. I'll be plus careful suivant time, Mrs. Penguin."
Marlene laughed lightly. "Well, as awkward as that was, if I have to be paired with another stuffed animal par a little girl, at least it's with you. I'm so glad it wasn't Julien who went into the Zoovenir boutique after me."
Skipper nodded. "I hear you. But that kid's gotta go easy on us before we end up with a son named Harry."
"Harry?"
"Do toi have a better name for a potter?"
"A what?" She thought for a few secondes and then it came to her. She shook her head. "No, no, no! That's not even possible! We're adopting!"
The car doors opened, and Skipper and Marlene quickly embraced each other just like Chelsea had left them. They closed their mouths and kept their eyes open.
Chelsea sat down in her booster seat. She patted Skipper and Marlene on their heads but otherwise let them be for the moment.
Liz turned around to check that Chelsea's siège ceinture was buckled and then started the car. The radio came back on, about two minutes into Savage Garden's "I Knew I Loved You." Two plus songs followed, Johnny Rivers's "Swayin' to the musique (Slow Dancin')" and Faith Hill's "This Kiss," before the station went to a commercial break.
"Borough's Best Automatic Car Wash isn't just a name," a man a dit to begin the first commercial. His voice was deep and tough, but he was trying to sound friendly.
"Hey, it's my boss!" Liz said. She turned up the volume a little.
"Our KomondorKlean brushes remove plus dirt with a gentler touch."
Suddenly, Skipper felt a feeling in his gut he hadn't felt since Alice had mixed up the fish and the spoiled fish buckets. He glanced at Chelsea for a moment to be sure she wasn't looking at them and then looked back at Marlene. "Something's wrong, Marlene," he whispered.
"What?" Marlene asked.
"That voice. I know that—"
"Tell them Mr. X sent toi and receive a free upgrade when toi purchase a bronze ou silver wash."
Skipper nearly jumped as his suspicions were confirmed. "Officer X! He changed careers again! This changes everything. We can't wait until tonight to get away. We'll have to knock them out at a red light and escape now."
Marlene's eyes widened. "What! toi can't do that. toi can't knock out a little girl. Especially not a sweet one who loves us."
"She'll be fine. Kids are very resilient."
"Skipper!"
"I'll be gentle."
Marlene let out a little growl and grabbed Skipper par the neck. "And let me be gentle. Don't do it ou Mrs. manchot, pingouin will file for divorce."
Suddenly, the car stopped. In their disagreement over tactics, Skipper and Marlene hadn't noticed that the car had already pulled into the car wash parking lot.
Marlene gripped Skipper tighter and shook him. "Skipper! We're here! What do we do?"
"We have no choice. Looks like I'll be paying toi half my poisson in alimony."
Marlene sighed. "I'll do it."
"What?"
"You can't hit girls, Skipper. But I can."
"Marlene, toi have no experience with—"
Whack.
Whack.
Plop.
Plop.
"Well, uh," Skipper said, "I guess now toi do have experience."
"Don't worry," Marlene a dit as she pulled on the door handle, "I was gentle, and kids are very resilient. They'll be conscious again in half an hour." She pushed the door open. "Let's go!"
Marlene and Skipper jumped out the left rear door.
The first thing they saw were his boots.
The former animal control officer, former exterminator, former temporary zookeeper, former fishmonger, former convenience store clerk, former dentist, former florist, and current car wash manager couldn't believe his eyes. "I hate the zoo."
"Run!" Skipper yelled. The two took off toward the street.
X started after them, pulling a squeegee out from behind his back. "Every job! Every time! But not anymore!" He wound up his arm and released the squeegee; it struck the fleeing manchot, pingouin and otter, knocking them down, before returning to X like a boomerang. He laughed as he went over to the animals, who were conscious but dazed. "We have the best automatic car wash in the borough—it's in our name—but sometimes a good démodé, old-fashioned squeegee is all toi really need."
Skipper and Marlene could offer no resistance as X picked them up.
"This suivant part really sucks," X said.
Through blurry vision, Skipper could see that X was carrying them toward a row of vacuums. The manchot, pingouin groaned, half from the cheap pun and half from the squeegee strike.
"Free vacuum with every wash," the man of many careers a dit as he grabbed the hose on one of the vacuums. With a quick button press, the unit roared to life with industrial-strength suction power. The motor strained only slightly when instead of air being sucked through the nozzle, a penguin's back was sucked against it, preventing escape. X set Skipper down—he couldn't déplacer beyond the length of the hose—and did the same with Marlene with a vacuum three units down from the one Skipper was attached to, preventing any possibility of the two working together to free each other. "That ought to hold toi until animal control arrives to see I'm not crazy—I mean, to give me my old job back. And to take toi away!" He pulled out his smartphone and started to dial Supervisor Eubanks's direct line but then stopped and opened the camera app instead. If anything happened before animal control arrived, this time he would at least have proof.
He was about to take a picture when something metal crashed behind him. He turned around.
Six blue eyes stared from the haut, retour au début of the storm drain at what was in front of them. A pair of sunglasses stared back.
"Kowalski," Private said, "isn't that former animal control officer, former exterminator, former dentist—"
Private suddenly found Kowalski's flipper in his beak. "Don't say the D-word, Private," the dentophobic manchot, pingouin said. "But yes, it's him."
"The reinforcements!" X shouted as he charged toward the three penguins in the drain. He pulled out his squeegee again and launched it.
Kowalski and Private ducked for cover. Rico just opened his beak and swallowed the squeegee.
And then regurgitated a chainsaw.
X stopped dead in his tracks.
"Private," Kowalski said, "go help Skipper and Marlene. Rico and I will take care of the former oral butcher."
Private nodded. "Got it."
Kowalski and Rico jumped out of the drain, and Rico tossed Kowalski a crowbar. They took two steps toward X, and X took off toward the entrance of the main building.
He was almost there when an elderly man standing par the door gripped the door handle. X knew him—he was a regular on Tuesdays. He was frail and moved like a sloth and probably should have donné up driving a decade ago, but he loved to brag at the senior center about having the shiniest car in the parking lot.
It would be another three minutes before old Edgar, age ninety-eight, would make it all the way into the building. There would be no escaping inside for X from the two weapon-wielding penguins right behind him.
"Kowalski! Rico!" Skipper shouted to them, now free of the vacuum. "Forget him! Let's blow this popsicle stand—er, car wash!"
Rico revved his chainsaw menacingly at X one last time and then he and Kowalski followed the others down the storm drain.
"I hate the zoo," X repeated as Rico pulled the grate back over the drain. He would normally pursue, but he knew Liz and Chelsea were waiting for him. He looked toward Edgar for a moment, who had managed to open the door about a foot and was staring at him. "Afternoon, Edgar," he a dit with a small wave.
"Afternoon," Edgar said.
"You're probably wondering what just happened here."
The old man laughed as well as he could with his chronic shortness of breath. "Nah. I fought the penguins in the war."
♦ ♦ ♦
Skipper climbed into the penguins' rose car, joining Marlene and Private in the back seat. "Excellent timing, boys! toi really saved Marlene's and my tail feathers back there."
"It was a true team effort," Kowalski said. "Private's observations through binoculars, my expert analysis, and Rico's mad driving through the sewer system all got us here. X was a surprise, but he's always a surprise."
"You'd think in all this time toi would've come up with an X detector ou something. Get on that, will you?"
Marlene sighed.
"Hey," Skipper said, "I don't like that sound. What's wrong, Marlene?"
"We need to go back."
Skipper's eyes widened. "What! toi want to go back up there? With X? I'm sure par now he's found another squeegee. ou worse. Much, much worse. Besides, he's probably already found that Chelsea and her mother are unconscious in the car, and he knows we're responsible."
"Chelsea is exactly why we have to go back up there, Skipper."
"Huh?"
"That little girl didn't do anything wrong, but she's going to feel so sad in a short time when she wakes up and finds her new stuffed Friends are gone. She loves us. I don't want her to be sad."
"I don't want her to be sad either, but we can't go live with her. We're not stuffed toys."
"We don't have to go live with her, Skipper. But I do know something we can do. And how to get X out of the way."
Skipper was still hesitant. "I don't know."
"What if I gave it a cool mission name?"
♦ ♦ ♦
minutes later, behind the poubelle, benne à ordures of the pizza restaurant that was suivant to the car wash, The One and Only Ray's Pizza, Private sat down in the driver's siège of the penguins' car.
"Any questions?" Marlene asked.
Private pulled a pair of goggles over his eyes. "Nope."
"Hey, Private," Skipper said.
Private turned to him. "Yes, Skipper?"
Skipper laughed. "Don't forget to wash behind your earholes!"
Private started the car and began to drive away. Operation: Gentle Touch had officially begun.
In the car wash parking lot suivant to Liz's car, X had his finger on the 9 button of his phone, beginning to dial 911 after finding his employee and her daughter unconscious inside, when he heard a small motor followed par two short blasts of a car horn. He turned toward the noise, seeing a manchot, pingouin wearing goggles waving at him from behind the wheel of a rose toy car with fleurs painted on it. "Penguin! I knew toi no-good birds were responsible!"
Private tooted the horn twice plus and then started driving again, heading in the direction of the automatic car wash machine.
"All right, let's move!" Marlene a dit to the others behind the dumpster, seeing that X was now in pursuit of Private in the adjacent parking lot. The others nodded, and they all hurried through the small flowerbed that separated the two properties.
Private stopped the car a few feet into the car wash machine. He jumped out and entered deeper into the machine on foot. X was right on his heels.
"C'mere!" X yelled as he reached for Private, barely missing him as the manchot, pingouin disappeared behind an eight-foot-tall vertical brush. "You won't wax me this time. That's a three-dollar upgrade."
As X started walking around the brush, Private jumped into it for cover. The long blue and red fibers, shaped and sized like locks of fourrure on the corded manteau of a "mop dog," hid him well. X passed right par and started walking to the brush across from it.
Like a nuage passing par the sun, the amount of natural light entering the machine suddenly became less. X turned his head toward the car wash entrance as the garage door that closed off the machine at night slammed shut. He did the same in the other direction a moment later when the door that closed off the exit came down. "Hey!" the manager yelled as he started running toward the closed exit door.
Private began counting in his head. Forty-five secondes to get into position. One Winky, two Winky, three Winky, four Winky. Still hidden among the fibers, the manchot, pingouin began making his way up inside the brush. Eleven Winky, twelve Winky, thirteen Winky. When he reached the top, he emerged from the fibers and sat on haut, retour au début of the brush. He whistled to draw X's attention.
"There toi are!" Getting out was no longer a priority. X charged back to the brush and thrust his hands into it, grabbing the brush's core. He shook and shook and shook. When Private didn't fall down, the manager started climbing up.
Forty-three Winky, forty-four Winky, forty-five Winky.
Private jumped down just as the brushes began to rotate and the water jets turned on. Kowalski had been successful hacking the keypad outside that customers used to enter their wash codes.
X would normally say that KomondorKlean brushes have a gentle touch. When he was attached to one, though, all he could say was, "Aaaaaaaahhhh!"
Round and round and round he went, blasted par streams of water with each revolution. Fifteen terrifying secondes passed before the brush released him, flinging him off as if he were mud on a Jeep. He landed farther down the car wash, in a l’espace where no brushes ou water jets touched him.
Not that he would know, however, since he was no longer conscious.
Private looked at X for a moment and then waddled back to where he had parked the car par the entrance, being careful to avoid becoming entangled in any machinery himself. He blew the horn twice, and Skipper and Marlene opened the entrance door. Private put the car in reverse and drove out.
"Great work being the bait, Private," Marlene a dit as she walked up to the car.
"As always, soldier," Skipper added.
"Thanks," Private replied.
"I have to ask," Skipper said. "How were his puns?"
"He made only one. He said, 'You won't wax me this time. That's a three-dollar upgrade.'"
Skipper put a flipper to his lower beak. "Hmm. It's a little better than the vacuum one he made to Marlene and me earlier, but still pretty weak."
Kowalski turned to Skipper. "Actually, Skipper, the joke's on him. My hacking set the car wash to run every available option. Undercarriage wash. Tire shine. The wax is being applied right about . . . now."
Skipper laughed. "Good thing he wears sunglasses to protect his vision from his shiny new look!"
"Rico," Private said, "did toi finish your part of the mission?"
Rico mumbled and gestured that he had regurgitated a plush manchot, pingouin and a plush loutre for Chelsea and put them in the unconscious child's arms.
"Well," Skipper said, "we don't have long here. The little girl and her mother are going to wake up any minute. Let's go."
The penguins and Marlene climbed into the car. Private remained in the driver's seat, with Skipper suivant to him and Kowalski, Rico, and Marlene in the back. The loutre waved goodbye to the sweet girl who would soon wake up as they drove past Liz's car on the way out of the parking lot.
As Private stopped at the end of the driveway, a city bus was driving par on the same side of the street. "Hey look, Marlene!" he said, pointing at the bus after noticing the ad that was on the side of it. "Isn't that—"
Skipper's left flipper cut off Private and his right stretched to the back siège to cover Marlene's eyes. "Nope."
"Hey, c'mon," Marlene a dit as she pushed Skipper's flipper away. "Let me see."
The bus had already passed, but the back had an ad for the same advertiser as the one on the side. It was still close enough for Marlene to make out the most important words. And the man's face.
"Enrico Guitaro!" Marlene exclaimed. "He's coming back to Central Park in June!"
♦ ♦ ♦
Thirty-seven minutes later, X opened his eyes. His vision was a bit blurry, but he could feel that he was sitting down somewhere comfortable.
"Mr. X!" Liz said. "Are toi all right?"
X rubbed his head. It felt sore. And . . . waxy? "Liz? Where am I?"
"You're in my car. A customer found toi passed out in the car wash, and he and I carried toi here. What happened?"
As his vision began to unblur, he saw Chelsea standing suivant to her mother, holding her toys. He jumped a little in his seat. "The penguins! The penguins! And the otter!"
Liz pointed at the stuffed bird. "There's just one penguin. Chelsea's souvenir from the zoo. toi hit your head pretty hard; you're probably seeing double."
"Four penguins!"
"Or quadruple. Just relax. The paramedics should be here any minute now."
Chelsea was too young to understand everything that was going on around her, but seeing her mother's boss that way filled her with confusion and worry. She hugged her manchot, pingouin and loutre extra tight for comfort.
Boiiiing!
Maybe a little too tightly.
"Aaahh!" X shouted as the head of a plush loutre struck his chest and bounced into his lap.
Chelsea gasped. "Sorry, Mr. X! I didn't mean to!"
Liz looked at the plush loutre head in her boss's lap and then at the now-decapitated plush loutre in her daughter's hands, a vibrating spring where a neck used to be. "Oh, honey. I'm so sorry. I really thought they were making better-quality otters now." She thought for a moment. "It won't be easy, but I might be able to fix her. Commence Operation: Sewing Kit!"
Chelsea looked up at her, confused. "Huh?"
"Call me crazy, but Mr. manchot, pingouin strikes me as a military man," Liz a dit with a smile as she pointed at Chelsea's other plush. "He'd say that difficult things are always less challenging with a good mission name."
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Off the Shelf
A Penguins of Madagascar fanfic
Chapter 2: "Career Change"
Liz glanced at her daughter in the back siège through the rearview mirror of her silver Subaru Outback. "So, have toi named your little Friends yet?"
"Yes." Chelsea held Skipper up. "This is Mr. Penguin." And then held up Marlene. "And this is Mrs. Penguin."
"No, no, sweetie. The brown one is an otter. Remember the story I told toi in the gift shop?"
"I know she's an otter, Mom. But she changed her name when she got married."
"Married?" Liz said.
"Married?" Skipper and Marlene whispered.
"Mr. manchot, pingouin and Mrs. manchot, pingouin are madly in love." The child held Skipper and Marlene par the backs of their heads. "They Kiss each other all day!" Beak and lips then collided repeatedly as she moved Skipper back and forth to smooch the loutre as though he weren't a manchot, pingouin but a woodpecker.
Liz laughed. "Well, toi certainly have an interesting imagination." She thought for a moment and then turned the radio on, tuning to a local l’amour songs station.
Chelsea smiled as Lionel Richie and Diana Ross sang about endless love.
A few blocks later, Liz glanced at her fuel gauge as she approached a gas station she sometimes stopped at. She was glad she did—it was nearly on E. "Hope my boss won't mind waiting just a little longer, but I need to stop for gas," she a dit as she put her turn signal on. "Better a few minutes plus than not get there at all."
"Can I stop in the bathroom?" Chelsea asked.
Liz turned to her back siège passenger. "You have to go? Why didn't toi go at the zoo?"
"I didn't have to go then."
Kids never do. "All right," Liz said. "I'll take toi inside."
A minute ou so later, Chelsea set the interspecies couple down in the middle of the back seat, their flippers and arms positioned around each other in an expression of l’amour that knew no taxonomic bounds. She then followed her mother into the gas station.
Skipper let go of Marlene, and Marlene released Skipper. The two stared at each other without a word, fourrure and feathers trying and failing to conceal their blushing, both too in shock to realize that they now had an opportunity to get away from the humans early.
After a full minute, the manchot, pingouin finally broke the silence. "Well, that happened," he said. He didn't déplacer at all.
"Yes," Marlene said, still not blinking. "Yes, it did."
They stared at each other for about twenty secondes plus until they simultaneously burst into laughter.
Skipper playfully poked Marlene's arm. "Mrs. Penguin!" he said, barely able to breathe. "You're my—you're my wife!"
"We Kiss each other all day!" Marlene added, laughter tears filling up her eyes. "All day! It's all we do!"
"There aren't enough hours in the jour for all our kissing, Marlene!"
"We'd need a thousand lifetimes because we're so madly in love!"
"Ha! Oh, Marlene, my sides are splitting!"
"My lips are splitting, what with all our kissing!"
Skipper smacked a flipper against the siège of the car. "Stop it! Stop it! Ha! Ha! Ha!"
After a minute ou so, they were able to bring their laughter under control.
Marlene licked her lips. "Actually, I think my bottom lip is splitting a little. I know that a Kiss can be called a peck, but s’embrasser shouldn't really involve actual pecking like that."
"Let me see."
Marlene opened her mouth and pulled her lower lip down slightly.
"It's not too bad. Just a small cut. I'll be plus careful suivant time, Mrs. Penguin."
Marlene laughed lightly. "Well, as awkward as that was, if I have to be paired with another stuffed animal par a little girl, at least it's with you. I'm so glad it wasn't Julien who went into the Zoovenir boutique after me."
Skipper nodded. "I hear you. But that kid's gotta go easy on us before we end up with a son named Harry."
"Harry?"
"Do toi have a better name for a potter?"
"A what?" She thought for a few secondes and then it came to her. She shook her head. "No, no, no! That's not even possible! We're adopting!"
The car doors opened, and Skipper and Marlene quickly embraced each other just like Chelsea had left them. They closed their mouths and kept their eyes open.
Chelsea sat down in her booster seat. She patted Skipper and Marlene on their heads but otherwise let them be for the moment.
Liz turned around to check that Chelsea's siège ceinture was buckled and then started the car. The radio came back on, about two minutes into Savage Garden's "I Knew I Loved You." Two plus songs followed, Johnny Rivers's "Swayin' to the musique (Slow Dancin')" and Faith Hill's "This Kiss," before the station went to a commercial break.
"Borough's Best Automatic Car Wash isn't just a name," a man a dit to begin the first commercial. His voice was deep and tough, but he was trying to sound friendly.
"Hey, it's my boss!" Liz said. She turned up the volume a little.
"Our KomondorKlean brushes remove plus dirt with a gentler touch."
Suddenly, Skipper felt a feeling in his gut he hadn't felt since Alice had mixed up the fish and the spoiled fish buckets. He glanced at Chelsea for a moment to be sure she wasn't looking at them and then looked back at Marlene. "Something's wrong, Marlene," he whispered.
"What?" Marlene asked.
"That voice. I know that—"
"Tell them Mr. X sent toi and receive a free upgrade when toi purchase a bronze ou silver wash."
Skipper nearly jumped as his suspicions were confirmed. "Officer X! He changed careers again! This changes everything. We can't wait until tonight to get away. We'll have to knock them out at a red light and escape now."
Marlene's eyes widened. "What! toi can't do that. toi can't knock out a little girl. Especially not a sweet one who loves us."
"She'll be fine. Kids are very resilient."
"Skipper!"
"I'll be gentle."
Marlene let out a little growl and grabbed Skipper par the neck. "And let me be gentle. Don't do it ou Mrs. manchot, pingouin will file for divorce."
Suddenly, the car stopped. In their disagreement over tactics, Skipper and Marlene hadn't noticed that the car had already pulled into the car wash parking lot.
Marlene gripped Skipper tighter and shook him. "Skipper! We're here! What do we do?"
"We have no choice. Looks like I'll be paying toi half my poisson in alimony."
Marlene sighed. "I'll do it."
"What?"
"You can't hit girls, Skipper. But I can."
"Marlene, toi have no experience with—"
Whack.
Whack.
Plop.
Plop.
"Well, uh," Skipper said, "I guess now toi do have experience."
"Don't worry," Marlene a dit as she pulled on the door handle, "I was gentle, and kids are very resilient. They'll be conscious again in half an hour." She pushed the door open. "Let's go!"
Marlene and Skipper jumped out the left rear door.
The first thing they saw were his boots.
The former animal control officer, former exterminator, former temporary zookeeper, former fishmonger, former convenience store clerk, former dentist, former florist, and current car wash manager couldn't believe his eyes. "I hate the zoo."
"Run!" Skipper yelled. The two took off toward the street.
X started after them, pulling a squeegee out from behind his back. "Every job! Every time! But not anymore!" He wound up his arm and released the squeegee; it struck the fleeing manchot, pingouin and otter, knocking them down, before returning to X like a boomerang. He laughed as he went over to the animals, who were conscious but dazed. "We have the best automatic car wash in the borough—it's in our name—but sometimes a good démodé, old-fashioned squeegee is all toi really need."
Skipper and Marlene could offer no resistance as X picked them up.
"This suivant part really sucks," X said.
Through blurry vision, Skipper could see that X was carrying them toward a row of vacuums. The manchot, pingouin groaned, half from the cheap pun and half from the squeegee strike.
"Free vacuum with every wash," the man of many careers a dit as he grabbed the hose on one of the vacuums. With a quick button press, the unit roared to life with industrial-strength suction power. The motor strained only slightly when instead of air being sucked through the nozzle, a penguin's back was sucked against it, preventing escape. X set Skipper down—he couldn't déplacer beyond the length of the hose—and did the same with Marlene with a vacuum three units down from the one Skipper was attached to, preventing any possibility of the two working together to free each other. "That ought to hold toi until animal control arrives to see I'm not crazy—I mean, to give me my old job back. And to take toi away!" He pulled out his smartphone and started to dial Supervisor Eubanks's direct line but then stopped and opened the camera app instead. If anything happened before animal control arrived, this time he would at least have proof.
He was about to take a picture when something metal crashed behind him. He turned around.
Six blue eyes stared from the haut, retour au début of the storm drain at what was in front of them. A pair of sunglasses stared back.
"Kowalski," Private said, "isn't that former animal control officer, former exterminator, former dentist—"
Private suddenly found Kowalski's flipper in his beak. "Don't say the D-word, Private," the dentophobic manchot, pingouin said. "But yes, it's him."
"The reinforcements!" X shouted as he charged toward the three penguins in the drain. He pulled out his squeegee again and launched it.
Kowalski and Private ducked for cover. Rico just opened his beak and swallowed the squeegee.
And then regurgitated a chainsaw.
X stopped dead in his tracks.
"Private," Kowalski said, "go help Skipper and Marlene. Rico and I will take care of the former oral butcher."
Private nodded. "Got it."
Kowalski and Rico jumped out of the drain, and Rico tossed Kowalski a crowbar. They took two steps toward X, and X took off toward the entrance of the main building.
He was almost there when an elderly man standing par the door gripped the door handle. X knew him—he was a regular on Tuesdays. He was frail and moved like a sloth and probably should have donné up driving a decade ago, but he loved to brag at the senior center about having the shiniest car in the parking lot.
It would be another three minutes before old Edgar, age ninety-eight, would make it all the way into the building. There would be no escaping inside for X from the two weapon-wielding penguins right behind him.
"Kowalski! Rico!" Skipper shouted to them, now free of the vacuum. "Forget him! Let's blow this popsicle stand—er, car wash!"
Rico revved his chainsaw menacingly at X one last time and then he and Kowalski followed the others down the storm drain.
"I hate the zoo," X repeated as Rico pulled the grate back over the drain. He would normally pursue, but he knew Liz and Chelsea were waiting for him. He looked toward Edgar for a moment, who had managed to open the door about a foot and was staring at him. "Afternoon, Edgar," he a dit with a small wave.
"Afternoon," Edgar said.
"You're probably wondering what just happened here."
The old man laughed as well as he could with his chronic shortness of breath. "Nah. I fought the penguins in the war."
♦ ♦ ♦
Skipper climbed into the penguins' rose car, joining Marlene and Private in the back seat. "Excellent timing, boys! toi really saved Marlene's and my tail feathers back there."
"It was a true team effort," Kowalski said. "Private's observations through binoculars, my expert analysis, and Rico's mad driving through the sewer system all got us here. X was a surprise, but he's always a surprise."
"You'd think in all this time toi would've come up with an X detector ou something. Get on that, will you?"
Marlene sighed.
"Hey," Skipper said, "I don't like that sound. What's wrong, Marlene?"
"We need to go back."
Skipper's eyes widened. "What! toi want to go back up there? With X? I'm sure par now he's found another squeegee. ou worse. Much, much worse. Besides, he's probably already found that Chelsea and her mother are unconscious in the car, and he knows we're responsible."
"Chelsea is exactly why we have to go back up there, Skipper."
"Huh?"
"That little girl didn't do anything wrong, but she's going to feel so sad in a short time when she wakes up and finds her new stuffed Friends are gone. She loves us. I don't want her to be sad."
"I don't want her to be sad either, but we can't go live with her. We're not stuffed toys."
"We don't have to go live with her, Skipper. But I do know something we can do. And how to get X out of the way."
Skipper was still hesitant. "I don't know."
"What if I gave it a cool mission name?"
♦ ♦ ♦
minutes later, behind the poubelle, benne à ordures of the pizza restaurant that was suivant to the car wash, The One and Only Ray's Pizza, Private sat down in the driver's siège of the penguins' car.
"Any questions?" Marlene asked.
Private pulled a pair of goggles over his eyes. "Nope."
"Hey, Private," Skipper said.
Private turned to him. "Yes, Skipper?"
Skipper laughed. "Don't forget to wash behind your earholes!"
Private started the car and began to drive away. Operation: Gentle Touch had officially begun.
In the car wash parking lot suivant to Liz's car, X had his finger on the 9 button of his phone, beginning to dial 911 after finding his employee and her daughter unconscious inside, when he heard a small motor followed par two short blasts of a car horn. He turned toward the noise, seeing a manchot, pingouin wearing goggles waving at him from behind the wheel of a rose toy car with fleurs painted on it. "Penguin! I knew toi no-good birds were responsible!"
Private tooted the horn twice plus and then started driving again, heading in the direction of the automatic car wash machine.
"All right, let's move!" Marlene a dit to the others behind the dumpster, seeing that X was now in pursuit of Private in the adjacent parking lot. The others nodded, and they all hurried through the small flowerbed that separated the two properties.
Private stopped the car a few feet into the car wash machine. He jumped out and entered deeper into the machine on foot. X was right on his heels.
"C'mere!" X yelled as he reached for Private, barely missing him as the manchot, pingouin disappeared behind an eight-foot-tall vertical brush. "You won't wax me this time. That's a three-dollar upgrade."
As X started walking around the brush, Private jumped into it for cover. The long blue and red fibers, shaped and sized like locks of fourrure on the corded manteau of a "mop dog," hid him well. X passed right par and started walking to the brush across from it.
Like a nuage passing par the sun, the amount of natural light entering the machine suddenly became less. X turned his head toward the car wash entrance as the garage door that closed off the machine at night slammed shut. He did the same in the other direction a moment later when the door that closed off the exit came down. "Hey!" the manager yelled as he started running toward the closed exit door.
Private began counting in his head. Forty-five secondes to get into position. One Winky, two Winky, three Winky, four Winky. Still hidden among the fibers, the manchot, pingouin began making his way up inside the brush. Eleven Winky, twelve Winky, thirteen Winky. When he reached the top, he emerged from the fibers and sat on haut, retour au début of the brush. He whistled to draw X's attention.
"There toi are!" Getting out was no longer a priority. X charged back to the brush and thrust his hands into it, grabbing the brush's core. He shook and shook and shook. When Private didn't fall down, the manager started climbing up.
Forty-three Winky, forty-four Winky, forty-five Winky.
Private jumped down just as the brushes began to rotate and the water jets turned on. Kowalski had been successful hacking the keypad outside that customers used to enter their wash codes.
X would normally say that KomondorKlean brushes have a gentle touch. When he was attached to one, though, all he could say was, "Aaaaaaaahhhh!"
Round and round and round he went, blasted par streams of water with each revolution. Fifteen terrifying secondes passed before the brush released him, flinging him off as if he were mud on a Jeep. He landed farther down the car wash, in a l’espace where no brushes ou water jets touched him.
Not that he would know, however, since he was no longer conscious.
Private looked at X for a moment and then waddled back to where he had parked the car par the entrance, being careful to avoid becoming entangled in any machinery himself. He blew the horn twice, and Skipper and Marlene opened the entrance door. Private put the car in reverse and drove out.
"Great work being the bait, Private," Marlene a dit as she walked up to the car.
"As always, soldier," Skipper added.
"Thanks," Private replied.
"I have to ask," Skipper said. "How were his puns?"
"He made only one. He said, 'You won't wax me this time. That's a three-dollar upgrade.'"
Skipper put a flipper to his lower beak. "Hmm. It's a little better than the vacuum one he made to Marlene and me earlier, but still pretty weak."
Kowalski turned to Skipper. "Actually, Skipper, the joke's on him. My hacking set the car wash to run every available option. Undercarriage wash. Tire shine. The wax is being applied right about . . . now."
Skipper laughed. "Good thing he wears sunglasses to protect his vision from his shiny new look!"
"Rico," Private said, "did toi finish your part of the mission?"
Rico mumbled and gestured that he had regurgitated a plush manchot, pingouin and a plush loutre for Chelsea and put them in the unconscious child's arms.
"Well," Skipper said, "we don't have long here. The little girl and her mother are going to wake up any minute. Let's go."
The penguins and Marlene climbed into the car. Private remained in the driver's seat, with Skipper suivant to him and Kowalski, Rico, and Marlene in the back. The loutre waved goodbye to the sweet girl who would soon wake up as they drove past Liz's car on the way out of the parking lot.
As Private stopped at the end of the driveway, a city bus was driving par on the same side of the street. "Hey look, Marlene!" he said, pointing at the bus after noticing the ad that was on the side of it. "Isn't that—"
Skipper's left flipper cut off Private and his right stretched to the back siège to cover Marlene's eyes. "Nope."
"Hey, c'mon," Marlene a dit as she pushed Skipper's flipper away. "Let me see."
The bus had already passed, but the back had an ad for the same advertiser as the one on the side. It was still close enough for Marlene to make out the most important words. And the man's face.
"Enrico Guitaro!" Marlene exclaimed. "He's coming back to Central Park in June!"
♦ ♦ ♦
Thirty-seven minutes later, X opened his eyes. His vision was a bit blurry, but he could feel that he was sitting down somewhere comfortable.
"Mr. X!" Liz said. "Are toi all right?"
X rubbed his head. It felt sore. And . . . waxy? "Liz? Where am I?"
"You're in my car. A customer found toi passed out in the car wash, and he and I carried toi here. What happened?"
As his vision began to unblur, he saw Chelsea standing suivant to her mother, holding her toys. He jumped a little in his seat. "The penguins! The penguins! And the otter!"
Liz pointed at the stuffed bird. "There's just one penguin. Chelsea's souvenir from the zoo. toi hit your head pretty hard; you're probably seeing double."
"Four penguins!"
"Or quadruple. Just relax. The paramedics should be here any minute now."
Chelsea was too young to understand everything that was going on around her, but seeing her mother's boss that way filled her with confusion and worry. She hugged her manchot, pingouin and loutre extra tight for comfort.
Boiiiing!
Maybe a little too tightly.
"Aaahh!" X shouted as the head of a plush loutre struck his chest and bounced into his lap.
Chelsea gasped. "Sorry, Mr. X! I didn't mean to!"
Liz looked at the plush loutre head in her boss's lap and then at the now-decapitated plush loutre in her daughter's hands, a vibrating spring where a neck used to be. "Oh, honey. I'm so sorry. I really thought they were making better-quality otters now." She thought for a moment. "It won't be easy, but I might be able to fix her. Commence Operation: Sewing Kit!"
Chelsea looked up at her, confused. "Huh?"
"Call me crazy, but Mr. manchot, pingouin strikes me as a military man," Liz a dit with a smile as she pointed at Chelsea's other plush. "He'd say that difficult things are always less challenging with a good mission name."
WATCH the précédant specials on the Operation Blowhole DVD. ou download them from iTunes and watch them on your computer, tablet, ou smartphone.
LIVE the action in the Penguins of Madagascar video game Dr Blowhole Returns AGAIN! Available for KINECT for Xbox360, PS3, Nintendo DS, and uDraw for Wii.
PLAY The Deep theme of the Pinball HD Collection app. Complete awesome missions, slay the shark, and discover hidden treasure. Available on the App Store.
DANCE to Dr Blowhole's theme song, toi Make Me Feel par cobra Starship, the hit single from their latest album, Night Shades. Dance to it your own way ou dance to it on Just Dance 4 (Wii, Kinect) and Dance Central 3 (Only for Kinect).
And on the jour the special airs, grab your popcorn, turn down the lights, and get ready for The manchot, pingouin who Loved Me starring Dr Blowhole!