Architect, realizing that his efforts to give Jack and Anne some privacy were in vain, lets the three whose mouths he'd shut speak freely. Cognisant, Ginoskein, and Gopher all gasp for breath and give the old man a glare.
"So, mate, will ya tell 'em what the Cat is about?" asks Cognisant.
"Well, I've no choice, it seems," sighs Architect, "Long ago, the INFJ's of the Black Forest grew lonely: The cold, bare bark of their wood gave no comfort, the nights were long and pierced by the screeches of lonely, hungry lynxes, and the few mortals brave enough to venture into their misty forest had long since gone mad. So, they domesticated the wild cats and brought them into their warm fold, nurturing each generation of kittens into frisky, happy companions no higher than one's knee. And all was well: the INFJ's and their cats kept each other company, made the frigid, wet nights warmer, and kept watch for the feral beings that lurked in the marshy wood.
But the peace could not last. An INFJ named Cameron had cast off his mantle of warmth and kindness to bear a shining sword of logic across his back. Soon the others rejected him, looking upon his cold, calculating ways as foreign and evil.
"You stone-hearted fiend! How dare you bring such stricture upon the ineffable qualia of the human condition?" exclaimed one offended villager as Cameron huddled by a fire, psychology textbook in hand.
"Bah," Cameron fired back, "you'll never understand the intricacies of thought, the wonderful interplay of neurons, the beautiful complexity of the mind!"
And study Cameron did. Not only psychology, but philosophy, Latin, and biology, too. With Latin, he gleaned precious anatomical insights from the otherwise unread primers rotting beneath the library floorboards. With knowledge came theory, and from theory, practice: the creation of the ultimate feline companion.
And late one dark and stormy night-- rain always accompanies the feverish work of brilliant minds-- he brought a new life into the world. Soft and gentle, Mark, the world's first man-made cat awoke in Cameron's loving arms. Its tiny tongue licked at his face, searching for a nipple to bring it sustenance; Cameron lifted a bottle of kitten formula and tucked it between the newborn feline's lips. It drank greedily, soon draining the bottle to the dregs. With a father's smile, Cameron set the cuddly kitten down on his lab table and sighed in joy,
"What a wonderful life I have. An exciting lab, a delightful newborn kitten, and all the time in the world."
In time, the cat grew and grew and grew and grew! From ten inches to twelve, fourteen, sixteen, twenty-four, forty-eight, and on! By puberty's end, Mark was well over the size of a school-bus and left yard-deep footprints in the mud. The tribal elders brought Cameron before their council to discuss the gigantic cat's future.
"Listen, Cameron, please. Mark needs to leave. Doing so would be better for all of us." said the chief elder as he softly laid his hand on Cameron's shoulder.
"But not for me!" replied Cameron.
"We just want what's best for the village" answered another elder.
"You just want to take him away!" growled Cameron, "You just can't stand seeing me happy, can you? Ever since I took up logic you've all hated me, despised every move I made, begrudged me every thing I held dear, and now... now you want to take Mark away."
"Please, be reasonable." replied the chief. Cameron began to quiver in anger.
"How reasonable would you be if someone came to take your baby away?!" came Cameron's furious, shouting answer!
"Restrain him and take the cat by force" sighed the chief.
"You old fool. You just don't get it, do you? I'm the only one who Mark listens to, so if I say that he stays, he stays" said Cameron with a scowl.
The elders ignored his warning and opened Mark's stable. The cat roared and stormed through the forest, carving a path of broken trees and trampled branches in its wake. And it never heard from Cameron again, so now, it scours the plains for its missing owner.
Anne, you're an INFJ, right?"
"Yes, but how does my type pertain to this horrible tale?" she replied, holding the slowly awakening Jake in her arms.
"It wants you, I'm afraid. And it will not stop until it's either recognized you as Cameron, or strewn your guts across the field; we just happened to be next on its list" answered Architect.
Jake, who'd just returned to consciousness, fainted once again upon hearing Architect's fatal warning. Anne blushed and tried to find a place to set him down where he wouldn't be hurt. She set him down on a loveseat and sat down beside him; better to die among friends-- even new ones--than to leave this world alone, she figured.
-Duxwing