A Dog and His Boy!

A Dog and His Boy! is the single story in Scooby Apocalypse #23, by DC Comics.

Premise
Scooby-Doo proves how loyal he is to Cliffy when they wander off and get corned by one of the mall monsters.

Synopsis
Insert details here.

Characters
Main characters:
 * Scooby-Doo
 * Cliffy

Supporting characters:
 * Shaggy Rogers
 * Dr. Velma Dinkley
 * Daisy Dinkley

Villains:
 * Talking monster

Other characters:
 * Cliffy's mom
 * Cliffy's dad
 * Cliffy's sister
 * Wilfred
 * Rufus Dinkley
 * Al-Qaeda
 * Carrie

Locations

 * New York
 * Albany
 * Henry Hudson Mall
 * CJNickels
 * Mears
 * Kira's
 * K Drew
 * Spencers Plus Size
 * Home Station
 * New York University

Objects

 * Velma's goggles
 * Emotigoggles

Vehicles

 * None

Full credits
The following credits try to match how they are displayed in the comic as much as possible:
 * Keith Giffen, J.M. DeMatteis & Ron Wagner: Undisputed Masters of Storytelling*
 * Andy Owens: Inks
 * Hi-Fi: Colors
 * Travis Lanham: Letters
 * Liz Erickson: Assistant Editor
 * Harvey Richards: Editor
 * Jim Chadwick: Has No Idea How Javins Conned Him Into Working with Giffen & DeMatteis Again
 * *Also Delusional.

Continuity

 * The gang found the mall in the Malled!
 * The monster that attacked Scooby and Cliffy, was the same monster who was sneaking around in the previous story.
 * In Child's Play, Cliffy met a girl named Carrie, who had been affected by the nanite plague, but was still nice.

Notes/trivia

 * The cover artists aren't credited.
 * Shaggy mentions a brother-in-law named Wilfred, a reference to Maggie Rogers's newlywed husband in the The New Scooby and Scrappy Doo Show episode Wedding Bell Boos!
 * This is the second time Daphne has smacked Shaggy in the face, this time being intentionally (after it being an accident in the previous story). This makes him the third person after Fred and Velma to be a victim of Daphne's physical abuse.

Miscellaneous

 * "Ruh-roh" count: 1.
 * "Zoinks" count: 0.
 * "Jeepers" count: 0.
 * "Jinkies" count: 0.

Cultural references

 * CJNickels and Mears are parodies of J.C. Penney and Sears, respectively.

Coloring mistakes

 * None known.

Inconsistencies/continuity errors and/or goofs/oddities

 * None known.