A cat is stationary in the laboratory frame, it's tail at $x = 0$ and its head at $x = 2$, so it's length is $l = 2$. A rocket (pink worldline) is moving to the left of the lab at one-third the speed of light.
Now, let's do a Lorentz transformation to see things from the rocket's reference frame.
If the rocket observer measures the spatial distance between the two ends of the cat that he can observe at the same time, which I've represented with a red line, he'll find that the cat's length is $l' < 2$. This is length contraction and comes from the fact that, from the perspective of the laboratory observer, the rocket observer is measuring the distance between the "present tail" and the "past head".
Now, if the rocket observer marks the point in space where the lab's "present tail" is, waits a while, then marks the point in space where the laboratory's "present head" is, then measures the spatial distance between those two points, he'll find a length $l' > 2$. I've represented this with a yellow line.
Between these two possibilities, of course, there's a way the rocket observer can compare the laboratory's "present tail" to some "not quite present head", a possibility I've marked with a grey line, that would result in $l' = 2$. My intuition tells me this midway point probably has some interesting physical or geometrical properties, but I can't really figure out what they would be. What is this point and what's its significance?