WildC.A.T.S. (Comic Book)

Wildcats, sometimes rendered WildCats or WildC.A.T.s, is a superhero team created by the American comic book artist Jim Lee and writer Brandon Choi.
The team first appeared in August 1992 in the first issue of their eponymous comic book WildC.A.T.s: Covert Action Teams, published by Image Comics. It was Image founding partner Jim Lee's first work published by the newly launched company, and his first creator-owned project. The Wildcats were the starting point for Lee's menagerie of interconnected superhero creations which became the foundation of the Wildstorm Universe. The Wildcats launched at the apex of a speculator-fueled comics sales boom and was wildly popular at its inception, with wholesale sales to comic book stores above one million copies for early issues. This first series ran for 50 issues, and in addition to Lee, featured work by comics creators such as Travis Charest, Chris Claremont, James Robinson and Alan Moore. This popularity saw the property expand into other media, with an animated adaptation of the comic] debuting on CBS in 1994 and a toyline from Playmates Toys.

Gateway, Part 1 (Series 1, Issue #10)
Pris is new to the team. After being ridiculed by a more experienced member, she gets possessed by an alien. She feeds on human souls and keeps her identity quiet... at least, at first.

Gateway, Part 2 (Series 1, Issue #11)
Pris grows steadily consumed by the dark force and her need to feed.

A Gathering of Eagles (Series 1, Issue #12)
The climax of Pris as a flesh-hungry hunter. Too bad she doesn't stay that way forever. Meanwhile, Domina sinks her mental claws into Tapestry.

Flavors (Series 2, Issue #3)
"Bambi" and Connie pay a visit to Mr. Smear's exclusive academy, where the elderly headmaster has some nefarious plans in store for them. Meanwhile, a beleaguered Grifter fends off annoying children from his surveillance van, which he has unfortunately disguised as an ice cream truck.

Cold Medicine (Series 3, Issue # 7)
Edwin Dolby and Sam Garfield are at the shooting range of the Beverly Hills Gun Club. Dolby is given a turn and is shown to display a natural aptitude for marksmanship, in which he states to a surprised Garfield that he had never ever fired a gun before. Agent Wax is seen spying on them.

Wax is then at LAX to get his flight back to Washington and makes a call to Cole Cash, who informs him that Dolby and Garfield are not seen as a threat to Halo and about the former's marksmanship; in which Cole catches some interest in the latter information.

Meanwhile, Jack Marlowe is doing an interview by Miss Greene of Fiscal Magazine. He reveals his intentions for his company is not for profit but to improve society. Also, Marlowe strikes a deal in buying the Belljar Company, a powerful media empire, therefore making Halo one of the eight media giants that controls the world.

In Washington, Agent Wax returns to the National Forestry Service where Agent Downs grills him for his unprecedented absence in which he is severely demoted to a chauffeur in which he provides transportation for Downs's wife Miriam. While driving Miriam Downs, Agent Wax is frustrated by her constant yammering on her phone in which he finally snapped and used his hypnotic powers on Downs's wife in having sex with her.

Back in Los Angeles, Dolby arrives to his home in the late of night to find it intruded by two hulking S&M men, who attacks him. Dolby puts up a fight but is eventually beaten before blacking out.

At Halo, Cole shares his doubts to Marlowe about reprogramming Agent Orange. As Marlowe reasons with Cole that Orange's reprogramming would bring him in line with Halo's objectives, he is needed elsewhere to his office. Marlowe teleports there to find C.C. Rendozzo, who wants a conversation with him as she reveals that she knows of his alien origins.