Rick is sitting in his lab in the basement of his family home, his wife is at work and his adopted son, with whom he rarely spends quality time, is upstairs in his room playing some video games. The scientist is so caught up in his experiments, that he does not notice the family slowly drifting more and more apart.
At this moment, Rick is working on his latest experiment: a spray, which is suppose to be able to transform humans and animals with interesting results.
Over the course of a few weeks, Rick has “collected” all sorts of animals of both genders as test subjects, not wanting to use the spray on a human before he is sure that it works the way he wants it to. The animals in his collection range from rats, mice, cats, dogs, squirrels, raccoons, venomous and non-venomous snakes, foxes, wolves all the way to stags, does, pigs, bees, wasps, hornets, flies, lizards and many more. Rick's lab is always filled with loud animal noises, some angry, some scared, but Rick simply ignores the cries, squeals, barks, growls and all the other noises.
Rick sets down his equipment and looks down at the liquid he created, it has a turquoise color, “okay, I hope this time I got it right,” he says, “I also hope that the mist has not messed it up, only one way to find out if it works.” He pours the liquid into a spray bottle and slowly walks over to the animals, who fall silent as he approaches. Rick stops in front of the cages and looks around, “now, what animal should I test on today,” he asks himself.