Authors: Bruno Bouchet
âW
hat's that lovely scent?' Emm smelled something she found very pleasant. It vanished quickly.
âYuck!' Jay screwed his eyes up. All he got was a blast up his nose of something very pongy.
The ship was coming in to land on Libris. XL had signalled ahead and received permission to land. The Lab Rats thought their ship was clever. All they had to say was, âTake us to Libris' and it did just that.
As they approached the landing bay, expertly guided by XL, a face flashed up on the screen. It was a small woman in a black suit with pointy glasses. Her hair was neatly pulled back from her face and behind her head was the most enormous ball of perfectly combed hair, like a massive bun.
âWelcome to Libris, I am Miss Tennet, Assistant Head Librarian, Information Requests Section. In order to optimise your time on Libris, could you please state the nature of your enquiry?'
âGood morning Miss Tennet,' the children all said together without thinking.
âGood morning,' she smiled, âand your enquiry?'
Zed introduced himself. âWe want to know where we come from?'
âSurely you know that for yourselves?' Miss Tennet was perplexed.
âNo, profâ¦' Jay was about to mention Professor Xanax, when Dee interrupted him. She didn't think it was a good idea to let Miss Tennet know that one of the most ruthless and powerful men in the galaxy was chasing them.
âWe had our memories wiped during a weird electrical storm,' Dee said, âand we can't remember which planets we're from.'
âHow unfortunate. But we have all known life forms scanned into our databanks so we should be able to resolve your issue satisfactorily. I shall meet your ship.'
With that, the image of Miss Tennet disappeared.
âWhat did she mean?' asked Katy. âResolve our issue?'
âI think it means she can help us,' answered Emm, ââ¦ooh nice.'
Another smell wafted over her. Noone else could smell anything except for Jay.
âWho farted?' he asked, pressing both hands to either side of his nose to block his nostrils.
The ship set down on what looked like the page of a giant book. The writing on the page was different to anything the Lab Rats had seen before. It was Oopanâ the oldest known written language in the galaxy. It was there to remind everyone who landed on Libris that writing was the basis of everything, âthe launch pad for all libraries'.
A giant bookmark extended from the landing pad to the main building. As the children walked along the bookmark they could see buildings in the distance, which all looked like books on a bookcase, of different heights with different coloured edges.
At the end of the bookmark was a wide corridor. On either side of the corridor, shelves of books reached as high as they could see and far into the distance.
âWhat do we do now?' Katy asked, looking for Miss Tennet.
As the Rats waited, the first thing they noticed was how quiet Libris was. They had been so used to the hum of the ship and their own noise that the silence unnerved them.
Emm stood with XL under her arm, stroking him gently. On board the ship XL had been too busy running everything to enjoy any physical contact with the others. Now he realised he actually enjoyed being touched.
They could see something moving towards them in the distance. It shot along at high speed, growing bigger and bigger. Soon Zed could make out Miss Tennet's huge bun of hair. She was standing on a ladder which ran along a rail in front of one of the bookcases. The top of
the ladder touched a rail twelve shelves up. She hurtled towards them and the ladder stopped.
âWelcome to Libris!' she stretched her arm out and quietly replaced the one strand of hair which had strayed from her head.
âI apologise for being late, I had an emergency cross-reference enquiry.'
She looked at them all and smiled without a hint of shock, even when she saw Dee's arm. Dee liked her immediately. She was so neat and friendly. Dee wished she could be that neat.
âThank you for helping us, Miss Tennet,' she said.
âNow I better take you to Arrivals so we can log you in and go from there. Jump up.'
They crammed onto the ladder.
âHow marvellous you'd be at stacking shelves,' Miss Tennet looked at Zed's third arm. âHave you thought about a career in libraries young man?'
âNo,' replied Zed.
âI suppose he wants to shoot around the universe being exciting, doesn't he?' she asked Emm, who giggled and nodded.
âEverybody ready? Hold on tight,' she advised them and then said the words, â
Why can't a woman be more like a man.'
The ladder moved off at high speed, but it didn't feel like they were rushing. There was no wind and absolutely no noise.
âI don't know,' said Emm. âWhy can't a woman be more like a man?'
âI wasn't asking a question,' replied Miss Tennet. âIt's the activation code for the transport system. Some joke from so long ago that noone can remember where it's from. Bit silly if you ask me. Why on any planet would a woman want to be more like a man?'
âI agree,' said Dee and stuck her tongue out at Zed, who curled his lip back at her.
They soon reached Arrivals where they enrolled as members of the library, had their photographs taken, and were issued with library cards. Everyone in the universe was welcome to use the facilities at Libris but they had to join the library first.
âThere,' Miss Tennet held a date stamp and stamped each of their library cards with their date of arrival.
âI've been thinking about your problem and the best option is to take you down to Cataloguing and have you all scanned and cross-referenced with our species database⦠you can never go wrong with cross-referencing. We'll have your species and home planets identified in no time. How does that sound?'
âFantastic!' the children shouted. They had no idea it would be this easy. Zed regretted they had not come sooner.
To get to Cataloguing, they had to go through the Great Hallâthe oldest, most magnificent room on the entire planet. Just before they entered, Miss Tennet warned them.
âNo talking in here. Some of the finest minds from around the galaxy are studying and we don't want to disturb them.'
The Great Hall's huge domed ceiling was made of frosted glass. The light shone through in an even glowâ perfect for reading. From the floor to the bottom edge of the dome, there were rows of books. Thousands of books. At row upon row of desks, people sat surrounded by piles of books. Ladders swept silently around the bookcases, some travelled up and down too, reaching the very top shelves. There was absolutely no sound.
Halfway through the hall, Zed brushed his rear hand on one of the desks. Without realising, he knocked a pen off and into a small paper bin. As it hit the metal, the noise echoed louder and louder thundering through the hall. Everyone looked up and glowered.
Miss Tennet silently picked up the pen, replaced it on the desk and hurried the children along.
Once outside the Great Hall, she spoke.
âThat was unfortunate. Give me your card, Zed.'
She took his card and inserted it between two books in the wall on her left. A computer screen flashed in front of them.
âYes, I'm afraid you have incurred a fine for that Zed. There is a very strict no noise in the Great Hall rule. We'll have to sort that out before you leave.'
âMiss Tennet,' Dee had a sensible question, âif you have such great computers why are you still using books?'
âThe books themselves act as computer terminals linked into our central system. You can access every piece of information we have from any one book. We still have the books because some of us prefer to do it the old-
fashioned way.' She gave Dee a small smile, looking over the top of her glasses.
In the Cataloguing section, they were all scanned and Miss Tennet began the cross-reference.
âThis will take longer than normal as we have to check every known life form.'
âHow long will it take?' Katy asked.
Miss Tennet held up her finger and looked through the corner of her eye. âThat long!' she smiled.
The screen flashed up before them. There appeared to be a lot of information.
âWhat does it all mean?' Emm asked.
âMost peculiar,' she replied. âThis cannot be right.'
âWhat is it?' Zed asked. The children stared at the screen. Even XL, the only one that could understand the information, did not believe what he saw on the screen.
âIt seems you are entirely new life forms,' said Miss Tennet. âThe magnificent database of Libris has no record of anything like you!'
L
ibris was buzzing with the excitement. There had not been a new species in living memory.
Dr Doe was the Head Librarian in Cataloguing. He could hardly believe the news.
âForgive me, Miss Tennet,' he said, âbut they don't look like new species. Most of them look quite⦠human. Have you cross-referenced with everything?'
âYes, Doctor Doe, nothing matches.'
The children were sitting in Dr Doe's office. It was the only room they had seen on Libris with no book shelves. The walls were wooden panels. On the desk was a single book, Dr Doe's computer terminal.
âI don't feel like a new species,' said Zed. âI know I have a home, I just don't know where it is.'
The others agreed. They sat down on the chairs in front of the desk. Emm held XL on her knee.
âThere must be a factor missing,' said Miss Tennet. âIt's one of our golden rules, if all the information has been entered and the results are not logicalâ¦'
ââ¦then some of the information must be incorrect or missing,' Dr Doe looked hard at the children over his glasses. It seemed that everyone who lived on Libris wore glasses.
They gulped.
âIs there some information missing?' Miss Tennet asked. The children stared at the ground and swung their legs.
âWe can only help you if you tell us everything you know,' Dr Doe asked them.
Before the children could answer, there was a gentle tap on the door. A librarian walked in quietly and whispered something to Dr Doe.
Miss Tennet looked at the children and pursed her lips. She could tell they were hiding something.
The doctor cleared his throat.
âThere has been a breach of security in our information systems. Certain files have been wiped without our knowledge.'
Miss Tennet looked shocked.
âNoone has that sort of technology. Noone comes close to the security systems we have.'
âExcept for the person who helped devise our first system many years ago,' Dr Doe added. âWe've updated
and improved it regularly, but there is one person with the intelligence toâ¦'
âSurely not!' Miss Tennet was so taken aback, several hairs fell out of her bun and she didn't even bother to put them back.
Zed's heart sank. He knew exactly who they meant. Their only option now was to tell the truth.
âXanax, Professor Xanax,' he said. The librarians turned to look at him.
âI think, young man,' said Doctor Doe, âyou had better tell us
everything
you know.'
The children explained how they had all woken up with no memories in the Lab and decided to escape.
âThis is very serious indeed,' the doctor glanced at Miss Tennet who was holding her bun in disbelief.
âYou're clearly very resourceful and brave young people,' he said, âand I can only assume you are in considerable danger.'
âWhat if he's put a secret tracer on the deleted files!' Emm piped up. She suddenly thought that if Xanax had deleted their files, he might place a secret bug in the system. If anyone tried to find the missing files, he would know the Rats were on Libris. XL had planted the thought in her mind.
âVery astute,' Miss Tennet said, âhave you ever thought about a career inâ¦'
âNo time for careers Miss Tennet,' interrupted Dr Doe. âXanax is undoubtedly on his way here.'
âYuck, that smell!' Jay suddenly leapt up from his chair and ran to open the window. It was sealed shut to maintain the perfect temperature.
âOh yes!' Suddenly all the children were pulling faces. Even Miss Tennet and Dr Doe had their hands over their noses. The only person who didn't have a problem with the smell was Emm.
âIt's that lovely smell!' she said smiling. Her eyes glassed over and she breathed deeply. âIt's so⦠peaceful!'
âIt's rancid,' said Katy. She grabbed XL from Emm's lap and backed away.
âIt's you, you're making the smell!'
âI don't know what you're talking about,' Emm said, waving her head from side to side. âMmm bliss!'
Everyone else had moved away as far as possible.
âIs this Xanax's work?' Zed asked Dee.
âMust be.'
âI can't stand it, it's, it'sâ¦' Jay's eyes rolled to the back of his head. With his huge nose the smell was too much. He fell to the ground and passed out cold.
âWe need to get the children to safety,' Miss Tennet said. She began to activate her personal computer. It was a projection onto her glasses. That was why all the librarians wore glasses.
âNo!' said Dee and stopped her.
âGood girl,' said Dr Doe. âIf Xanax has penetrated our information systems, we cannot access them to help the childrenâhe would locate them immediately.'
âLa la da, di da da,' Emm stood up singing to herself and wandered around.
âEmm, what's going on?' Katy asked her. The smell was growing stronger. They could barely breathe. It was like every fart, every dirty sock, every rotten cabbage and every dead mouse smell all rolled into one.
Emm was barely conscious of them all.
She swung around in the room, singing to herself dreamily, as happy as could be.
The door opened, a library assistant walked in and immediately gagged.
âDr Doe,' he said trying to hold his nose, âProfessor Xanax has requested permission to land.'
âRefuse,' said Miss Tennet, âsay we're re-cataloguing and not dealing with enquiries. Don't let him land.'
Katy put XL on Dr Doe's desk and knelt down to revive Jay, but it was no good, he was dead to the world. Emm leaned against the wood-panelled wall of the office, smiling and humming to herself.
âWhat are we going to do?' Dee said.
âLook!' Zed was staring at Emm.
A thread burst out of her tummy and flew around. It landed on the wall behind her.
âEmm, move!' Dee rushed forward to help her friend but Miss Tennet stopped her.
âDo not interfere. There are some species that cocoon themselves like butterflies. She must be one of them. To interfere could kill her.'
âEmm!' shouted Dee with tears in her eyes. âTell me you're OK.'
Emm stopped singing. Her eyes were open but not moving. She leaned against the wood panelling as more
and more threads shot out and attached themselves to the wall around her. The threads flew out faster and faster until they could not see her at all.
âEmm!' they all shouted together.
The children watched in horror as their friend disappeared into a cocoon. When she had completely vanished, the threads stopped and goo oozed from the hole in her tummy. It trickled along the threads, coating them in a dark green slime, which grew solid to make a hard case all around her. The smell was at its worst as the goo poured out. They all started to feel faint and thought they might all join Jay on the floor.
As the smell faded they stared at what used to be Emm, which was now a hard shiny dark green shell. The surface was lumpy and they could still see the lines of the threads that had emerged from Emm's belly button. Dee put her ear to the shell. She heard some gurgling and squelching in there.
âEmm can you hear me?' she shouted at the shell and listened for an answer. There was no reply.
âYuck, how could put your ear to it?' Katy asked from the floor next to Jay. âIt's horrible.'
âI don't care what
it
is,' said Dee, âshe's still Emm.'
Katy felt bad that she had called Emm âit'.
âSorry,' she mumbled and shook Jay again in the hope that he would wake up.
âMiss Tennet,' said Zed, âwe have to get Emm off that wall and board our ship before Professor Xanax reaches us.'
âI'll get a team of IT specialists onto delaying him as long as possible. They're pretty good at slowing things down. In the meantime, wait here. Dr Doe, you will look after them, won't you?'
âNoone is forcibly removed from Libris,' he said, âit's the law. They will be safe in my office.'
Miss Tennet slipped out of the room to delay the arrival of Xanax's lab assistants.
âKaty, try and wake Jay up, throw water on him, anything,' Zed started to organise.
âDee, is there a way we can remove Emm's shell from the wall?'
Dee tugged at the edge of the shell but it was glued on hard.
âWe're going to have to remove the wall around her, sorry Dr Doe,' Zed said.
âHow?' asked Dee.
Zed looked at the wall around Emm's hard shell. It was a beautiful wood, polished and smooth. He knocked on it. It sounded hollow enough.
âWhat's behind this wood, Dr Doe?' Zed asked.
âThis wall doesn't hold up the roof, so it should be just the wood, then space for the information cables and then the wood panels of the room next door. But it's veryâ¦'
He hadn't been able to say âold and hardwearing' before Dee swung her hammer at the wall.
âOw!' She'd swung hard and hurt her arm. There was a small dent in the wood.
âI'll never smash through this.'
âGive it another go,' said Zed, âbut don't use your whole arm.'
Dee swung again, just from her elbow. It didn't hurt so much and the wood splintered a little more.
âJust keep at it,' said Zed.
Katy was having no luck with Jay. She'd tried slapping his cheeks, squeezing his nose, pouring the water from a vase of flowers over him. Nothing could wake him up.
While Dee hammered at the wood panelling, Zed pulled the wood away between each of Dee's blows. Slowly but surely they were beginning to break through the wood around the cocoon.
âDr Doe,' Zed called out, âdo you know of anything that could wake up Jay? We'll need his help to carry Emm out of here.'
Dr Doe did not reply.
âDr Doe?' Zed repeated. The head librarian was staring straight ahead, as if he was concentrating hard on something.
âVote him out!' said Dr Doe.
âWhat?' asked Katy.
âVote for Chanelle⦠get rid of Myetta⦠Paul's the best dancer⦠vote for Shantini,' the doctor was gibbering to himself.
âKaty, go and fetch help. See if another librarian can come in here,' Zed asked. Katy gave Jay one last shake and then ran to the door.
In the corridor, she discovered the situation was even worse. All the librarians were walking around talking
to themselves, bumping into walls, bouncing off and walking off until they hit something else.
âLewis lied about Cherise breaking the sewing machine on purpose.'
âGervais has the best voice, but Maria sings from the heart.'
âBecky and Carlo deserve to win the house.'
âRhianan lost much more weight than Sheronda, she should stay.'
âI want Blair to win.'
Katy realised that noone was in any condition to help them. All the quiet logical people of Libris were suddenly being very loud and making no sense at all. Back in Dr Doe's office she reported what she had seen.
âXanax must be up to something,' said Dee. It was the only possible explanation.