Chapter 5
Chapter 5 everyone! (Although I feel like Count is the only one reading this). Every time I type a new chapter, I sorta feel like Rowlf in
this clip. Maybe Count should tell me "Post, hound! Post!" at the end of each chapter lol!
Anyway, a hidden movie reference, a commercial reference and another trip back to the dog food factory are located within this chapter. Enjoy!
Chapter 5
It had been a busy couple of days. Between rehearsals for the next show, Kermit had taken the taxi back and forth between the theater and KMUP studios. He wanted to ride his bicycle so badly. It was perfect weather for riding. But Kermit decided against it. That's how Max found out about him in the first place.
Other precautions were made around the Boarding House. First up, something was immediately done about the Electric Mayhem's bus. Parked outside, it was just too obvious. Max would've recognized it. Sweetums had helped build a makeshift garage for it in the driveway. It was only canvas and some metal poles, but it did the job.
Clifford and Rizzo got to work at the KMUP studio controls as Bunsen and Beaker fiddled with the transmitters. As Bo swept up, he flinched and squinted at each spark caused by Beaker being used as a conductor. Most of the others did what Kermit did; they took taxis or carpooled from the Boarding House to the theater or the studio. When possible, they used side streets to avoid being seen. Kermit had even put a tarp over the word "Muppet" on the marquee and the theater sign.
Robin went to school like he always did. The only difference being that Kermit wanted Robin to take a different route for safety. This meant taking the bus was out. Robin didn't mind that. Sweetums volunteered to carry Robin to and from school. It was more fun this way for Robin, since Sweetums knew all the shortcuts. Most of the shortcuts, however, were through various backyards. More than once, Sweetums came home with Robin in his hand, a plastic flamingo dangling from the tattered rags on his leg and half of someone's clean laundry draping his shoulders.
That day, Kermit decided to come early to the KMUP studio before the others came to shoot the announcement. He wanted to check out everything, just to make sure it all worked properly.
The stage backdrop was lit up with soft blues and purples. This would double as the video screen. Bunsen had done a good job editing the footage they needed. Clifford's expertise with the lighting equaled that of selecting the background music. Kermit tried it out. The music's stereo system was just right. No feedback, no pops...good. He played the video. Perfect focus, no 'blips' or lines...excellent.
The only thing on the stage was a simple, tall stool...the same one Kermit had sat on during the 'Magic Store' number. It was scratched and worn around the corners, but that was OK. It was all he needed...and he was sure Mister Rogers wouldn't mind.
Despite how great everything was going, Kermit felt butterflies in his stomach. They weren't the butterflies he had for lunch. This was a different feeling.
They were taking a risk putting themselves on television with Max so close by. Frass wasn't looking for them...but after what happened with Doc Hopper...
Kermit rubbed the goosebumps underneath his collar and tried to forget. He concentrated instead on that lone child out there. Somewhere, there was a lone child that would help protect the legacy of a legendary gentle genius. He had to find this child. Max or no Max.
Kermit shut everything off and locked up. As he hailed a taxi on the curb, he tried not to worry about the deadline. Things would work out.
At least he hoped they would.
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"Was I all right? Was I funny?" worried Fozzie.
"You were fine, Fozzie." assured Kermit.
"How was
Moi?"
"You were fine, too Piggy--"
"Hopefully lots of womens will see dis hokay."
"Were the floors squeaky clean enough?"
"When do we eat? I'm starvin'!"
"In a bit," answered Kermit. He hadn't thought about food (or anything else for that matter) but the announcement.
Kermit called the schedule managers of KMUP, (the local Hensonville Local Access Channel). They scheduled the announcement to be run about a dozen times per day throughout the week. The first airing would take place at 6AM the next morning. Scooter downloaded the rehearsal video and posted it on YouTube. There were no viewings so far, but they knew that would change soon enough. The only difference between the rehearsal video and the final cut was a blooper in the rehearsal tape. At the beginning, Beaker noticed he was on camera and quickly ran out of shot.
Big deal thought Scooter.
It doesn't matter.
Throughout the night, Kermit kept waking up. He had the same recurring dream of himself and Rowlf doing a musical number, Max noticing it and telling Frass. Then suddenly the image transformed to himself and Rowlf being forced to work at the dog food factory. The last thing Kermit saw in each dream was looking at a warehouse collapsing under a controlled demolition. As it imploded, Kermit saw a blue sneaker, part of a small crown and half of Daniel Striped Tiger's clock sailing into the air.
After the third time, Kermit decided just to stay up. He looked at the clock.
"4:30? Sheesh." Kermit sighed and climbed out of bed without bothering to put on his robe. He shuffled along in his pajamas, tired but also worried and nervous.
What if we can't find that child in time? What if Max finds finds out we're here? If Frass sees that announcement, he's bound to try to stop us. I hope he doesn't try to find our house and...
No.
He had to keep those thoughts out of his mind. Jim had a positive attitude. So could he. They would find that child. They would save Mister Rogers' Neighborhood. They would!
But what to do now? Kermit thought. He knew he'd have that dream again. He walked softly down the stairs.
Maybe...maybe I'll have something to eat, he thought.
Kermit squinted as the interior refrigerator light hit his eyes. "Let's see...leftovers, leftovers..." he glanced around the upper shelf. "okay, we got some soda, OJ, purple stuff, ooh! Sunny D, all right!" Kermit poured himself a glass, then walked into the living room to settle in his favorite chair. Amazingly, the TV remote wasn't lost (like it usually was) but right there on the chair armrest.
Kermit glanced up at the clock. It was fuzzy in the dark, but only five minutes had crawled by. Not much to do now but wait. He clicked on the TV and flipped through the channels. They only had basic, so there wasn't much.
(Click)
"
HI!" A voice bellowed even with the TV volume down. "I'm Todd Kapoodle, the Used Car King! We got all kinds of cars going
REAL cheap! We got a special sale on fixer-uppers! Buy a car without an engine, then if you can find all the parts for that engine, we'll install it at
HALF the fee! Yes!
HALF the fee! We have all kinds of tires, too! We got round tires, square tires, and even flat tires we've professionally repaired with the help of our good friends at Hubba Bubba! So, come on
DOWN this weekend for excellent deals! For instance, here's a one-of-a-kind, rustic item! Thanks to a stalling on the train tracks, the 5:15 from Chattanooga turned this once boring, functional truck into a real fixer-upper for the handyman who
really wants a challenge! So--"
(Click)
"And lift those legs! One! And two! And one! And two! C'mon! Burn that fat!"
(Click)
"This is an AMAZING vacuum cleaner! Just LOOK how it picks up those marbles!" RRRNNN!-clackety-clackety-clackety!--RRRNNNN!-clinkety-clunkety-clack!--RNNNN!-clunka-clanka-dink!--
(Click)
Fffffff......(Click) "Camembert cheese is also produced on a large scale and molded by the thousands in giant factories..." (Click)
ffffffff (click) "cheeses..." (click)
ffffff (click) "cheeses..." (click)
ffffff (click) "cheeses..." (click)
fffff
Kermit frowned. "Should I watch cheese or snow?"
The TV static had a calming, almost hypnotizing effect. The flickering light from the television cast reflecting ripples in Kermit's glass of untouched juice. Finally relaxed at last, Kermit faded off into a fuzzy, dreamless sleep.
A little while later, dawn inched its way into the corners of the Muppet Boarding House. Early morning sunlight greeted the plants on the front porch, warmed the windowpanes and made a small, young frog rub his eyes as he walked down the stairs.
"Uncle Kermit?" Nothing replied except the long, monotonic hum of a test pattern.
Robin crept closer. There was his uncle sound asleep in the chair. He looked at the clock. It was 5:50AM.
"Uncle Kermit?" Robin gently shook his uncle's arm. Kermit mumbled a little in his sleep.
"It's almost time..."
"Mrpph? Hrmm...I don't wanna go to school today..."
"Not school! The announcement! The announcement we made to be put on TV! It's almost time!"
"What?" Kermit groggily woke up and squinted in that fuzzy focus one experiences after a deep sleep. Straight ahead of him was the smiling face of Jim Henson...for some reason singing a long song with only one continuing note. A half-second later Kermit snapped fully awake and realized he was staring at the local Hensonville TV channel, KMUP test pattern. The traditional "Indian Head" in the test pattern was replaced by Jim Henson's face.
Kermit shifted his weight in the chair and stretched. How long had he slept? It felt like hours.
A moment later, the test pattern disappeared and was replaced my a graphic with the KMUP call letters. A baritone voice announced "Good Morning" and proceeded to rattle off the station identification information. As the voice explained how many gigahertz the station took and where its transmitters were located, a third resident of the Boarding House joined Kermit and Robin.
"Couldn't sleep, eh?" asked Kermit.
"Not really," Rowlf admitted. "I thought I'd sneak a peek at how the announcement looks."
"Well, grab a chair, it's going to start any minute." said Kermit.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Dawn slowly swept across Hensonville, bathing the landscape beyond it in a warm, welcoming glow. It shined on the tractors that had been puttering across the fields for an hour. It sparkled against the windshields of early morning commuters' cars. It greeted drowsy, yawning people as they bent down to pick up their newspapers.
There was one place, however, that the dawn seemed reluctant to cover. Two towns over from Hensonville was an imposing structure. It was a factory. It differed from the other factories in town, mainly because it stank of bugs and stale dog food. Not even the nuclear power plant across town reeked this badly.
Another attribute set the factory apart from the rest of the town altogether. Due to budget cuts, lazy planning and "important" design decisions, the factory was unfinished, yet functional. Several walls were missing, replaced by haphazardly taped plastic canvases. Steel beams balanced precariously in the rafters, abandoned by construction workers who were let go due to budget cuts. It was all right with the CEO. His office and personal lounge were finished. In his mind, that's all that really mattered anyway.
The morning whistle was about to blow as one lone worker checked the various gauges and instruments in the factory. He walked among the machinery, glancing briefly at the filthy gears, belts, spouts and hoses. As he worked, he tried to focus more on the clipboard in his hand rather than his surroundings. No matter how well the janitors cleaned the place, there were always a few dead (or dying) roaches here and there.
This was his morning routine and he hated it. Still, a job was a job. He had to pay the bills somehow...and that last couple grand he still owed on his student loan payments. It wasn't much of a comfort to know a paycheck was coming when it came from a job like this.
The worker performed his last duty before opening the factory: unlocking the doors for the factory workers.
The keys jingled almost pitifully as Max glumly put them in his pocket. Workers standing outside shared his expression as they put on their hardhats and checked in. There weren't many of them now that the factory had so many budget cuts. Frass had pulled some strings, dodged some policies and bribed many a health inspector to make his factory functional on a skeleton crew.
After the last worker shuffled by, Max checked the names on his clipboard and went to his boss's lounge to enter in the data.
Max didn't dare go into the staff lounge. Nor did anyone else. The janitors did their best, but roaches still found their way inside. Max never forgot the morning he flipped on the light and saw a family of them swarming from the coffee pot to a crack in the wall.
No, this was Frass's personal lounge and the place was kept scrupulously clean. Max didn't care if the place was sanitized enough to suit Howard Hughes. He still didn't dare sit anywhere and often carried hand sanitizer when he had to touch the computer keys. It was a habit of his.
Frass (or a janitor) had left the television on from the night before. Someone in a baritone voice mumbled something about the transmitters and gigahertz some television station used. Max ignored it as he propped the clipboard against the monitor and opened the daily Excel spreadsheet. There was a blob of what (he hoped) was dried nougat on the Tab key. To be safe, he poked the sticky key with a pen as he checked off the workers' attendance records. He flipped a page, opened a second file and entered some inventory records from the night before. The television mumbled through a brief Sermonette and was now nearing the end of a brief livestock report.
Max saved and closed the file. As he logged off, his stomach twisted at the thought of another day pouring drum after drum of roaches into mixers. As always, Max had the only breakfast that calmed his stomach, the same breakfast (and lunch) he had had for ages: Rolaids. Max crunched and grimaced at the chalky taste.
Doing his best to keep his looming, daily tasks out of his head, Max lowered his head and left the room just as the livestock report came to an end.
Ding ding!
"It's a beautiful day in the neighborhood..." a cheery voice sang.
"What?" Max blinked and peeked into the room.
The smiling, singing face of Mister Rogers was there. It brightened even this squalid, wretched place. Mister Rogers had a way of doing that. Max's stomach loosened a little, not relieved by Rolaids this time.
It was obviously a video clip--
some kind of commercial for PBS, Max thought. The whistle hadn't blown yet. Max had a little time. Maybe...maybe he'd watch Mister Rogers for a minute or two...just to see what the commercial was about.
The camera pulled back. Mister Rogers was now on a TV screen within a nearly blank studio. For a moment, Max thought it was a "picture in picture" feature of the TV.
It turned out it wasn't. The TV within the TV was filmed on purpose, right next to a worn out stool. On top of it sat...
Max's jaw dropped.
It was
him.
"Please won't you be...my neighbor?" Mister Rogers sang as he tied his left sneaker.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Rowlf, Kermit and Robin had seen the playback of their announcement last night. They knew what to expect. Still, it gave them goosebumps all the same.
"Hi ho, Kermit the Frog here," said the Kermit on the screen. "We're here to tell you all about something Mister Rogers did a few years ago."
A tight shot of tumbling envelopes appeared with Kermit now providing a voiceover. "A few years ago, Mister Rogers tried to find someone who he called 'The Best Neighbor'. This person would be in charge of keeping Mister Rogers' Neighborhood safe. Mister Rogers finally chose one person...a kid, actually, from two places. One of them was Hensonville. As a matter of fact, we have a video of Mister Rogers talking about it right now."
The announcement showed a clip from the "Best Neighbor" video Mr. McFeely had played for them. Mister Rogers explained what 'The Best Neighbor' entailed and that he made his decision.
The camera shot now showed a close up of Kermit. "That's right, kids. Mister Rogers has made his decision and we have the child's entry. The only problem is the return address is too smeared to read. We don't know who 'The Best Neighbor' is. This is where we need your help. If you are a kid and live in the Hensonville area, and if you sent in a drawing to Mister Rogers with the help of a grown up, please visit the Muppet Boarding House here in Hensonville. This is where the drawing will be kept for safekeeping for now. If the drawing is yours, then
you will be 'The Best Neighbor'!"
A new shot of a covered easel filled up most of the screen. Miss Piggy gestured to it like a game show model in front of a new car. The cloth over the easel, bathed in swirling spotlights (thanks to Clifford) was coated with question marks. As Miss Piggy hammed it up for the camera, Kermit's voiceover continued.
"Yes, right behind this cloth is the drawing Mister Rogers personally picked."
"He picked it personally?" asked Fozzie as he walked into frame and pointed to the cloth.
"That's right, Fozzie!" Kermit replied from offscreen.
"That's right!" Fozzie repeated, stepping in front of the cloth as Piggy frowned. "Mister Rogers personally picked the picture from preposterous piles of proposals presented by post from possible participants! So please pedal, plod or plunder to our place if you plan to be persistent in providing a possibility to our perplexing predicament! Wocka wocka wocka!"
"Fozzie!" called Kermit from off-camera.
"What? Oh, sorry!" Fozzie reached up with his tie and wiped off the slightly moist camera lens.
The camera was now on Kermit again. Max watched intently, hanging onto every word.
"Remember, this is a very important job and Mister Rogers is depending on you, whoever you are, to help him. If your description of your drawing matches the one we have and you live in the Hensonville area, then YOU will be the Best Neighbor! Yaaaaaaay! The Muppet Boarding House is located at--"
"MAX!"
Max jumped, his heart racing. He turned around to see the frowning face of his boss.
"I--I just got the data entered in..." he stammered.
"GET...ON...THE FACTORY LINE...
NOW!" he boomed. Max immediately ran out of the room and down the hall. Frass pointed after him and continued to yell like a drill sergeant. "If you wanna watch cartoons instead of working, I can always find another assistant!" he roared. "Any more loafing and you're going STRAIGHT to the unemployment line without
ANY severance pay!"
Frass watched as Max scrambled down the hall like a frightened squirrel. He then grabbed the errant remote with his pudgy hand and saw just a fraction of a familiar, elderly face before snapping it off.
One grey, wiry eyebrow arched in the direction of the set. As soon as he knew he was alone, Frass turned on the TV again. He had a feeling there was something out of place. The channel number didn't match PBS in that area. Why would any other channel show Mister Rogers besides PBS? Something didn't make sense.
By the time the picture blurred from black to a focused image, Mister Rogers was gone. Instead there was footage of a bearded man in a hospital bed. A doctor examined him while the man tapped his fingers on his book. For some strange reason, everything happened to a beat: the man's heartbeat, a cough, a bird tweeting and finally a small clock, which exploded on the windowsill. A moment later, the same man (perhaps) was painting an elephant pink.
Frass snapped off the TV.
"Weird." he huffed and waddled back into his office.
Max stopped at the end of the hall as the morning whistle screamed. A new day of pouring roaches into dog food mix awaited him. Eight long hours. His stomach churned along with the machinery as it groaned to life.
But there was something different about today. There was hope. Somehow, somewhere, there was hope. If nothing else, Max was going to hang onto that hope...
...and somehow he was going to try to find Kermit.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Not bad for the time we had to do it in," smiled Rowlf. "it was nice and simple...and that's OK."
"Yeah," agreed Kermit. Forgetting how long he had left his juice out he tried a sip. "Warm...yecch."
The announcement came on a couple hours later as the Muppets woke up and began their day. It wasn't long before there was a knock at the door.
Kermit's heart raced, immediately thinking of Frass. He imagined him there in the doorway, fists clenched, ready to threaten him.
"Who-who is it?" he called among the chatter of the Boarding House.
No answer.
Carter, the elderly, shaky butler went to answer the door, pausing to peek through the little peephole.
"It'sh a man with glasshesh and a hat-tsh." he lisped. (He had forgotten his dentures upstairs).
Max! thought Kermit.
Oh no!
"Come in." Carter quavered.
"Wait!" called Kermit. But it was too late. Worst of all, Robin was near the door. Kermit was too far away to get him in time.
Slowly the knob turned.
The door opened as if in slow motion. Kermit's arms went cold as he reached out, much too far away to get his nephew out of harm's way. it was too late for anyone to do anything.
The Boarding House went deathly still.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~