(Open to a creaking windmill. Spinkick and Flytrap are rustling through rows of corn following the tracker. As they get close to the signal they split off from each other. The launch into an attack.)Spinkick: Game over, Sandie... go.
(The figure they thought was Carmen turns out to be a scarecrow wearing her signature hat and coat. Flytrap pulls the coat back to see the tracker they had placed on Carmen.)
Flytrap: We have to call this in you know.
(Shadowsan, not far away in a car, smirks in satisfaction at Spinkicks shout of frustration and drives off. Meanwhile Spinkick and Flytrap call the faculty and caught by surprise.)
Maelstrom: What's wrong? Lose your funny bone?
(Pan around to Maelstrom dressed as a clown, as if the man wasn't creepy enough as it is.)
Flytrap: Professor Maelstrom?
(We see all the faculty in costume.)
Maelstrom: Tonight, call me by my parallel universe name... Charlie Pants.
Cleo: Clowning around is no way to set an example for our new operatives, Gunnar.
Maelstrom: I shall venture a guess. You were tricked by Carmen Sandiego yet again.
Cleo: We were hoping for a treat.
Bellum: Such as this pumpkin spice latte.
Brunt: I reckon you all best mosey on back south of the Mexican boarder and see about rustling up Carmen's trail.
Maelstrom: Fail again, and Mr. Pants will not be a happy clown. Now, who's ready for the pumpkin carving contest?
(They all hold up a pumpkin. Transition to Team Red on a plane.)
Zack: Mexico City. And just in time for Halloween!
Player: Actually, Halloween's not the only holiday that takes place this time of year. Day of the Dead is even more widely celebrated in Mexico.
Zack: Wicked awesome, I love zombies!
Carmen: Sorry, Zack. Unlike Halloween, Día de los Muertos isn't about scares. It's all about celebrating the memory of loved ones.
Lincoln: Yeah, my friend in Lake City has shown me her type of holiday. There's mask's but not all about the scares and candy.
Player: Red and Lincoln are right. The roots of Day of the Dead go back thousands of years, to traditions of worship practised by the Aztecs and other Nahua people. Today, deceased relatives are honored with offrenda's, altar's adorned with flowers, candles, photo's, food, and even special belongings of the person being worshipped.
Carmen: The most familiar motifs of Día de los Muertos may be the calavera's and Calaca's, skulls and skeletons. You'll see them everywhere as candy, dolls, face paint, even masks, representing death as a natural part of life, rather then something to be feared.
Lincoln: A day to remember that no matter what happened while you were alive, those you've loved and lost are waiting for you. And those you love and still live will keep your memory alive in their hearts.
YOU ARE READING
Loud House: Where in the world is Lincoln Sandiego
AdventureCarmen Sandiego has tract a VILE operation in Michigan. In a town of Michigan lives a 11 year old boy named Lincoln Loud. After the Bad luck fiasco, he is still kicked out of the house. He is forced to where a squirl suit on at all times. One day he...