Nick: Uh... Carrots? Why are you on top of me like that? Why are you looking at me like that? And, why-



Judy: Rrrrrrrrr.....



N: Wait a minute, are you growling at me?



Badger Doctor: Purring is more like it. She's showing affection, not aggression.



N: Doc! I don't know what's happened to her. One minute she's eating the cherry I gave her, the next she has me on my back, pinned to the ground.



J: (sniffle-sniffle-sniffle-sniffle)



N: Now you're smelling my neck? What wrong with you?



BD: I guess she likes your scent. Wait, cherry!? Did you get that from the table in the lab?



N: Yeah, Why?



BD: Mr. Wilde, that was the antidote for the Night Howler serum.



N: Huh? How does that explain Judy's behavior? (picks up Judy and sits her down)



J: Rrrrrr?



BD: Well, the Night Howler poison works by increasing the body's testosterone production. Thus, causing a psychoactive chemical imbalance. That would explain why all of the predators targeted were male.



J: How so?



BD: The poison would be more effective that way since males already have more of this hormone in their systems than it's feminine counterpart.



N: What, you mean like estrogen? Hold on a second here, guys have that!?



BD: Only in small amounts. And, females have a little bit of the masculine one, too. It keeps the dominant hormone from getting out of hand. And, that is how the cure for savage poisoning works. By raising the estrogen levels in an afflicted ones body to neutralize the excess testosterone.



N: But, if that's how it works, then when a female without savage poisoning takes the cure for it...