s stopped on the side and I wondered if it was broken, but Julia explained to me that they were waiting for people who were driving too fast. That was ca
'. When I'd learned what music was, it was supposed to be... melodic. This was just someone talking really fast about something incoherent while a prerecorded soundt
or I've exerted myself to the point of physical and mental exhaustion. When I awoke, we were no longer surroun
nting to the ground. Julia l
, while her eyes seemed to be warm and welcoming, like the sun. Of course, they didn't burn your retinas, but they were bright and cheery. Throughout the
e words they'd been using, I'd picked up many more words. I learned that Allan's glasses weren't just f
tiny in comparison to the laboratory - th
as Allan opened what I'd l
. I awed at it as he lifted me out of the
He looked down at me and smiled softly. Homes
om
-
ten yea
ften think back to that day, wondering how I got so lucky. There were dozens of oth
became a necessity. I hadn't noticed it before, but not only are my eyes alarmingly blue, they're also the eyes of a cat. Allan explained to me that wh
pletely. I was the first to succeed. My ability to see in the dark is impeccable, but no one else
able to defend myself to some extent. Julia and Allan already knew that the scientists had played wit
the walls. Literally. The DNA alterations gave me sticky
e was the
n and Julia an anniversary present when it all went wrong. I was cu
words I could use to describe the feeling are: Kill me or I'll d
of the shed, but I only felt the blistering pain. Then, a voice whispered in my ear. I closed my eyes as I began to focus on the pain and turn it
g axolo
ives off the coast of Mexico and
wing in the predators and they're eating the axolotl eggs. To think, the cure for can
nless they're in the real bay of Mexico. Therefore, unless Mexico finds away to chase away the prrl who can climb walls