“Play Room”
By RD Rivero
“Bengali, why don’t you take a look at the
kittens’ play room?”
“Why?
Is something wrong with it?” He
looked at her across the cluttered breakfast table.
“I don’t know, I just want you to look at
it -- or maybe get Cheetara to look at it.”
He put his cup of orange juice down. “Cheetara?
What would she know? It was
designed by Panthro and Tygra.”
“It’s just that maybe someone with her
sense might --” Pumyra stopped in the middle of the kitchen. A pot of water boiled over the stove. “The play room is just, different now,
different than it once was.”
Bengali sighed and stood. “Fine, let’s have a look.”
The two Thundercats walked down the main
hall of the
The play room was silent -- it was a
jungle glade on a hot afternoon.
Overhead the sky was blue, a yellow sun was streaked by long, thin
clouds. Bengali and Pumyra -- who stood
in the middle of the clearing -- began to sweat under the heat.
“Let’s get out of the sun,” he said to
her, “this is a little too real but I don’t see anything wrong.”
“Wait a moment and you’ll see,” she
whispered into his ear.
He sniffed the air and was struck by the
particularly strong smell of lion grass, the cool smell of a water hole. The sounds came next. Antelopes running through a grassy sod,
vultures soaring in the air.
A shadow ran across the land.
“Filthy creatures,” he heard her say.
“The vultures.”
“See, there are lions over that way, there
that way. They’re going to the water
hole.”
“They’ve just eaten,” Bengali said.
“Yes, but I don’t know what, though -- a
zebra, a giraffe. It’s a little late to
be sure, it’s cleaned, bleached bone.
The vultures are dropping in for what’s left.”
Pumyra thought she had heard a scream --
it was different from the last time she had been in the play room -- but he
could not tell.
The lions crept close to the water outside
the cover to the knee-high grass.
Bengali was filled with admiration for the mechanical geniuses who had
conceived of that room. He wished that
when he was a kid back on Thundera that he had had such a room. To be sure, the place could frighten with its
absolute accuracy -- something that Tygra had said need adjusting -- but most
of the time it was fun to have around.
The lions were less than fifteen feet from
them -- so real, so incredibly real that the two could feel the fur.
“Watch out!” she screamed at Bengali.
A lion with glowing, green eyes came rushing
at the Thundercats. Pumyra bolted
instinctively, he ran after her.
Outside, he slammed the play room’s door shut laughing but she was
crying. Both were appalled at the
other’s reaction.
“Pumyra, my dear, sweet Pumyra,” he said
playfully, “they almost got us.” She was
hysterical. “Those were only images,
those lions weren’t real.”
“It was too real! Didn’t you see that? Didn’t you feel that?”
“Pumyra.”
“We’ve got to tell WileyKat and WileyKit
not to explore more of
Bengali relented after a few minutes. She had stopped sobbing and was on her feet
again, on her way out of the room. “OK,
I’ll lock the play room for a while.” He
knew how hard that would be to do. He
remembered the last time those two had to be punished and the play room had to
be turned off -- the tantrum! Lately
those two only seemed to live only for that place.
She looked around, beyond him to the door
of the play room. “The lions can’t get
out of there, can they?”
He looked at the door -- it trembled
though something had jumped against it from the other side. “Of course not,” he answered.
At dinner Bengali and Pumyra ate alone
because WileyKat and WileyKit had yet to arrive from Cat’s Lair.
He had enough time to think about the
matter some more and concluded that it would not hurt if the twins were locked
out of it for a while. Too much of a
good thing was not good, he reasoned.
The twins had been spending too much time in there and their Thundercat
duties had begun to suffer. It used to
be that they loved to go out into the real countryside and explore it
themselves but that had changed.
“The sun,” he began to speak to himself in
his head while he ate the food that she had prepared, “I can still feel it on
my neck like a hot paw. The lions, the
smell of blood. It was remarkable how
the play room could recreate life.”
“Death, what ever the lions ate had to
have been killed and remember that the room creates what ever they think,
Bengali. If they thought a sun the sun
would appear. If they thought a lion a
the room would create a lion.”
“And if they thought death --”
Silence followed for a while and then
Pumyra admitted: “It’s not that they
don’t know what death is. It’s the wail
of death at the jaws of a lion, repeated again and again -- and the
blood.” She looked up, he was not at the
table any more, his plate only half-eaten.
“Where are you going?”
But he did not answer her.
Down the stairs and into the darkness he
made his way back to the play room and pressed his ear up against the
door. Far away in the muted distance a
lion roared. He unlocked the door and
opened it and just before he stepped inside he heard a scream, then another
roar, then a lion charging and then another scream.
He stepped into
It was all right to exercise one’s mind
with fantasies but when the lively children settled on one pattern -- then the
thought occurred to him, faint and murky, that he was sure that for the past
month he had heard lions roaring but had dismissed the notion as quickly as it
came to him.
Bengali stood in the grassland alone --
the lions looked up from their feeding, watching him. The only flaw to the grand illusion was the
sight of the open door behind him. He
could see Pumyra from the open door, half in the darkness of the hall.
“Go away,” he said to the lions but
nothing happened. He knew the principles
of the room. He knew that if he sent his
thoughts clearly then whatever he had pictured in his mind would appear. “I want to see Thundera,” he snapped but the
scene remained, the lions remained. “I
demand it!”
The lions rumbled in their hot pelts.
“Show me Jagga!”
He turned around and faced her in the
safety of the darkness outside the play room.
“The room’s out of order. It
won’t respond.”
“Or --”
“Or what?”
“Or it can’t respond because WileyKat and
WileyKit have thought about Africa and lions and killing so much for so many
long that the room is in a rut.”
“Bengali, Pumyra,” a soft voice spoke from
behind.
The lights turned on and the two adult
Thundercats turned to see WileyKat and WileyKit.
“You two are just in time for dinner.”
“Oh,” the girl spoke, “we’re so full of
candy fruit.”
“Candy fruit?”
“We were helping Snarf and Snarfer harvest
some of the bushes.”
“Anyways, come with us to table if just to
sit and watch,” Bengali said.
“Yes, so you can tell us all about the
play room.”
The Thunder kittens blinked at her and at
each other. The color had drained from
their faces. “The play room?” WileyKat
said with a slight, almost inaudible gulp.
“About Africa and lions and tigers and
bears, oh my!”
The children, of course, pretended that
there was nothing wrong, indeed, that what the adults had seen was news to
them. WileyKat said he did not
understand, he said simply that there was no Africa in the play room and his
sister backed him up: “Cheetara hasn’t
yet taught us that chapter.”
It was an exasperating conversation until
the twins offered to check for themselves.
WileyKit bolted to the door, the adults tried to hold her back but it
was too late. Bengali realized that he
had not locked the door. Her brother
assured them that she would only tell them what was in the play room and
nothing more but the others were not listening to him.
WileyKit came out of the room: “It’s not Africa,” she said.
“We’ll see about that,” Pumyra answered
with a slight growl.
Bengali pushed the door open all the
way. Before him was a green forest, an
arched river straddled by a stone bridge, a gray mountain loomed over the
horizon. The air was filled with the
songs of unseen birds. The African
scenery was gone along with the lions.
He looked on with disbelief: “Go to your rooms,” he said.
“To bed,” Pumyra scolded.
The children opened their mouths but
Bengali cut them off and fearing that he was about to yell at them they turned
their heads down and sulked into their silent sleeping room.
Bengali walked through the glade and
picked up something that lay in the corner by a stone where before a lion had
stood. He held it in his hand and walked
slowly to Pumyra. She asked what it was
and he looked at her: “An old wallet of
mine, from Thundera, I thought I had lost it.”
He showed it to her: the smell of
hot grass was on it, the smell of a lion, too, complete with drops of
saliva. It had been chewed thoroughly
and blood was smeared on both sides.
He closed the play room door and locked it
tightly.
In the middle of the night he was still
awake and he knew that she was still awake, too. He got up from bed and into the dark
hall. He did not have to knock on her
door, he was right about her -- at the same moment that he had left his room
she had opened her door. The two stood
face to face, half in, half out of the shadows.
“Do you think WileyKit changed it?” one of
them asked.
“Turned it from a veldt to a forest.”
“Switched the birds for lions.”
“Yes, I do but I don’t know why. Until we do that room stays barricaded,”
Bengali insisted.
“Those kittens have been given everything
they’ve ever wanted and more and this is our reward? Secrecy and disobedience?”
“They’ve been acting funny since we
forbade them from showering together.”
“They’re too old to that, soon they’re
going to need separate bedrooms.”
“Very soon,” he looked to the ceiling. “They’ve been cold to us lately, haven’t
they? I’ll get Cheetara to look at the
play room tomorrow. It’s a tranquil
forest now but I have a feeling it’ll be Africa again.”
Just as they turned around to go back to
bed, just as soon as they thought it was over, they heard screams. Two screams, two people screaming from
downstairs followed by the roars of lions.
Pumyra sprinted down to the room next to hers and announced that the
kittens were not in bed. “They’ve broken
into the play room,” she yelled into the murky, night air.
Bengali felt that the screams sounded
familiar, awfully familiar.
“Bengali,” said WileyKat.
“Yes.”
WileyKat looked at his feet -- he never
looked at him anymore or at Pumyra either.
“You’re not going to lock up the play room for good, are you?”
“Depends.”
“On what?”
“On you and your sister. If perhaps you had more variety than just
Africa. Thundera or the Treetop
Kingdom.”
“But we were free to play what we wanted.”
“You are, within reasonable limits.”
“But what’s wrong with Africa.”
“So, now you admit that you have been
conjuring up Africa, aren’t you?”
“I wouldn’t want the play room locked up,”
he said coldly, “ever.”
Bengali sensed something in the teenager’s
tone that was -- “I won’t have any threats from you!” he growled.
The youth nodded and turned away without a
word, headed off to the play room where his sister was waiting.
“I hope I’m not too early,” Cheetara said.
“Breakfast?” Bengali asked.
“Oh, I already had some. So what’s the trouble?”
“You know something of psychology --”
Cheetara admitted so. “Why don’t you
take a look at the play room. You saw it
once when Tygra put the last touches on it.
Did you notice anything, odd, about it back then?”
“Nothing unusual.”
Bengali had locked the play room. He told her how he had done it once before,
that the kittens broke in sometime in the middle of the night. He had let them stay there so that it could
form the images for Cheetara could see.
A terrible screaming came from the door.
“See what you make of it,” he said. He opened the door walking in on the twins
without knocking.
The screams faded, the lions fed.
“Run outside a moment you two,” Cheetara
said, “don’t change the metal images, leave them the way they are.”
With the children gone the two Thundercats
stood studying the pride of lions clustered at the distance. The animals ate with great fever whatever it
was that had been the prey.
“I wish I knew what it is that the lions
catch -- we never get to see it until it’s too late.”
“How long has this been going on?”
“Pumyra thinks a month or more.”
“This doesn’t feel -- good. This is bad, very bad. No, this room shouldn’t have been built. I warned Tygra but he would not listen, he doesn’t
understand much about the nature of addictions -- that’s given him problems in
the past. And to give a room like this
to children. The room has become a
channel bent toward the fulfillment of destructive thoughts instead of a
healthy release from them. Has something
happened in the meanwhile to have made the twins angry?
“I wouldn’t let them shower together. I’ve discussed them having separate rooms.”
She sighed.
“Does that mean anything?”
“Everything. Before they had a friend and now they have an
enemy. Teenagers prefer to have it their
way all the time, especially spoiled teenagers.
We’re all guilty, I suppose, we’ve all let this room replace their
parents. This room is their mother,
their father, it does what they want, it never tells them that they can’t do
this, can’t do that. It doesn’t set
their bedtime, warn them to brush their teeth, wash their face.”
“And now we’ve come along and want to shut
it off. No wonder there’s so much hatred
here.”
“Yes, Bengali, I can feel it coming out of
the sky. Feel that sun. This room must be turned off, quickly and I
guarantee that in a year those two will be back to their normal selves.”
“Won’t the shock be too much if we shut
the play room off too abruptly?”
The lions stood on the edge of the
clearing watching the Thundercats.
Cheetara wanted to leave -- she could not
stand what was coming out of the room any more.
She said that the lions looked real.
“I don’t suppose that there’s a way --”
“What?”
He looked down, somewhat embarrassed: “I’m not too good with technical stuff. I don’t suppose that there’s a way the lions could
become real?”
“Not any way that I know.”
“A flaw in the machinery, a tampering,
something?”
She laughed a little, tapped him on the
shoulder. The two went to the open door.
“I don’t image the play room’ll like being
turned off,” Bengali said.
“Nothing ever likes to die, not even a
room. Hey, what’s this?” She bent and
picked up a bloody collar from the grass.
He looked at it, then at her: “It’s Pumyra’s.”
At the fuse box in the control room
Bengali pulled the switches that killed the play room. The twins were hysterical, they screamed and
pranced and threw things. They yelled
and sobbed and swore and jumped at the furniture.
“You can’t do that, just can’t!”
The two flung themselves onto a couch and
began to tear the fabric with their claws.
“No, Bengali, turn it on for just a few
moments, you can’t be so abrupt.”
“You can’t be so cruel!” one of the
kittens screamed.
“It’s off and it stays off.”
“I hate you!” WileyKat said to Bengali,
right into his eyes.
“Insults will get you no where.”
“I wish you were dead!”
WileyKat began to cry and his words were
unintelligible. WileyKit looked up at
the two adults and wailed: “Just for a
moment, just for one moment.”
Pumyra looked at him: “It couldn’t hurt.”
He relented if only so that those two
would shut up. He let them stay for one
minute, one minute only and that then it would be off forever. He was determined that the dreadful play room
would no longer be part of the Tower of Omens.
He was going to call Panthro and Tygra and have the thing removed --
forever.
The children smiled with wet faces then
went off babbling to themselves.
In the kitchen Pumyra was once again busy
preparing dinner. That time, however,
Bengali was helping her. He was actually
very good around the stove and she liked having his company. In about a half hour, they guessed, the food
would be ready to serve.
“I think we’d better get downstairs before
they get too attached to those animals again.”
“Pumyra!
Bengali!” The twins called from
bellow. “Come quick -- quick!”
Without thinking they ran down the hall,
down the stairs into the darkened basement where the play room was built. The kittens were no where in sight. “WileyKat?
WileyKit?” The adults asked but
there was no answer.
The door to the play room was slightly ajar
and bright, yellow light poured from the crack.
The two entered -- the African grasslands were empty except for the
lions waiting, looking at them.
“WileyKat? WileyKit?” Once again
there was no answer.
The door slammed shut behind them.
“Open the door!” Bengali growled. The knob would not turn for him. “We’ve been locked in!”
“You two better open now! Right now!”
Pumyra scolded.
She heard WileyKat’s voice from outside,
against the door. “Don’t let them switch
off the play room,” he said.
The adults continued to pound at the
door. “Don’t be ridiculous, open this
door now,” Bengali shouted.
The two heard the sounds -- the lions were
coming toward them from three sides, the door to their backs, running toward
them in the yellow grass of the clearing, padding through the dry straw. Roaring.
Bengali looked at her and she looked at
him then to the beasts that edged forward at them. The two Thundercats screamed suddenly
realizing why the screaming they had heard so often before had sounded so
familiar.
Back to Fanfic Archive