Ruahnna
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Chapter 158: It's Not What It Sounds Like, Either
Bobo watched the carpenters hammering away on the crystalline staircase under the watchful eye of the set designer. That was going to be some entrance, he thought, and had a moment’s satisfaction imagining Miss Piggy sashaying down that staircase. She could do it, too, and own that moment, but he was liking her as Betty Rizzo. This sure had turned out to be a plum assignment, he mused. The other fellas on security were pretty good guys—Harry had even offered him the spare room at his place for a share of rent—and once he had vetted the cast and crew, it was pretty much an easy job. Sure, sometimes the reporters got out of line, and sometimes the fans were a little overeager out front, but Piggy had been amazingly accommodating. She had not smacked him once, and had only yelled at him half a dozen times. He felt like he was getting the hang of things.
There was a sound from the hallway—a shout or something. He turned from the sound of hammering to go see what the ruckus was about.
It would have been hard to say who was more surprised—Piggy, who opened her door to a pack of rowdy young men or the young men who suddenly found themselves face-to-face with the personification of porcine pulchritude. Their mouths dropped open and they gaped at her, too stunned to even stammer out a hello. Her blue eyes went wide with surprise, then a moment of panic.
“Oh my—”
“Gosh. She’s even more—”
“—most beautiful woman I’ve ever—”
“—seen anything like it,” said the last of them, pushing his glasses back up on his nose. They stared, mesmerized, at her shocked expression.
Piggy started to slam the door, expecting security to be hot on their heels, but one of them had the presence of mind to put his size 14 Bapes in the door.
“No—wait!” he cried. “Don’t shut the door! We just wanna—”
“Moi is not receiving visitors,” Piggy said, striving for calm. Where was Bobo? Where was Harry? Although she tried not to think about it, she was assessing each of the four males for height, trying to decide if any of them might be the one who had grabbed her before. She was thinking about screaming, but she hadn’t decided to do it yet.
“Please! Please come out!” the tall one in the back cried. “You can come out, can’t you?”
“Just for a minute!” said the short stocky one, putting his hand on the doorknob. “It will only take a moment.” He grinned. “Gosh, you’re pretty.”
“Moi is busy. You should go,” she said, tucking as much of herself behind the door as she could without taking her eyes off them. “The show is over and Moi is tired.”
“Aw, c’mon,” a fellow in a blue oxford-cloth shirt wailed. “Please! We came all this way to see you. Come out for a minute—please?”
“Yeah, we just wanna—“
She saw one of them reach into his pocket and terror swept over her like a wave. She wrenched the door open, and the young man who had been holding the doorknob went staggering forward, tripping over her foot. He bumped his head against the makeup table in the middle of the room and crashed to the floor. Piggy ducked under the next young man’s oxford-cloth sleeve, elbowed the young man behind him—the one with the glasses—in the gut. When the young man turned around she shot her gloved fist up under his chin and cold-cocked him. The tall one in the back gaped at her but, seeing his fallen comrades, put his hands up defensively. Piggy swept her foot out in a graceful arc and cut his knees out from under him, then pinned him to the floor with an elbow against his neck. The whole thing had taken about eight seconds.
“Bobo!” she bellowed. “Harry!”
Bobo rounded the corner, saw Piggy on the floor amidst a pile of bodies—a pile of unfamiliar, un-vetted bodies—and saw red. He waded into their midst and began plucking them up as though picking daisies. When he had all four of them tucked under his arms, he slammed them casually against the hallway wall, where they quaked and tried to catch their breath. Harry arrived, panting, on the scene, but stood back, letting Bobo deal with it his own way.
“I don’t see any backstage passes,” Bobo rumbled, his snout mere inches from the cowering young men’s pasty faces. “And I’m pretty sure you don’t work here—” he began. The quiet menace in his voice seemed to loosen their chattering jaws.
“Sorry! We’re sorry.”
“Please—don’t kill us!”
“We didn’t mean to bother her—we just wanted—”
“I know what you wanted,” Bobo said grimly. “You were trying to get Miss Piggy out of her dressing room!”
“She was signing autographs out front,” one of them quavered. “I lost my program, so I had to go buy another one so—”
“—when we came back from the swag booth, she was going back in and—”
“I just wanted to have my picture taken with her!” The one with the glasses looked like he might cry.
Piggy surveyed them from behind Bobo’s broad back. Both the panic and the combat high were rapidly dissipating, and she looked at their earnest and terrified faces and thought she had—perhaps—over-reacted. Still, there was enough of a tingle of fear for her to look at them all searchingly, trying to match their arms with the arms that had grabbed her and tried to drag her away.
“If you expect me to believe that—,” Bobo growled. They whimpered pitiably, cringing from the enraged bear. Piggy put her hand on his back.
“Moi believes them,” she said quietly.
“Moi!” whispered the one in blue. “She’s so cute when she says that!”
Bobo glared at him and he shushed immediately.
Piggy started to walk around the bear but he put his hand out protectively, keeping her behind him. Piggy took his hand and stepped around him, and two of the young men looked longingly at the bear’s big paw held in her pink-gloved hand.
“It’s okay, Bobo,” she said. Harry started to step forward, but she shook her head, blond curls bobbing. “Harry—it’s fine.” She stopped in front of the interlopers, arms crossed over her chest, foot tapping angrily. They stared at her, transfixed, penitents before an angry goddess.
“Vous,” she said, pointing to the tallest, the one she had pinned on the ground. “How did vous get in here?”
“Vous,” moaned one of the others, sotto voce. “The way she says it is so sexy!”
Mutely, the tall, gangly one started to point, but when he moved his arm both Harry and Bobo tensed so he kept his hand at his side and gestured with his chin down the hallway. “The door down there was propped open,” he mumbled. “Miss Piggy—gosh, we’re sorry! We didn’t mean any—”
“Who left the dad-blamed door open?” Bobo ground out, glaring around as though looking for the culprits among the shadows.
Harry grunted. “They were cutting some pieces for the staircase,” he said unhappily. “They could’ve left the door open.”
Piggy did not tell them that sometimes the back door was open to let in a little air to cool things after the hot stage lights. There was no point in giving a focus to Bobo’s rage. She pulled on the big bear’s hand until he straightened up, then let it go.
“We—we weren’t trying to scare you,” blurted the one with the glasses. “Honest!” His face was flushed, making him look younger than he had earlier, and for an instant, he reminded Piggy of Scooter. It softened her features a little and the line of her body relaxed.
“Moi was not scared,” she said coolly, “but vous are lucky Moi did not hurt you.”
“Very lucky,” said the stocky fellow, who had a knot the size of a goose egg on his forehead where it had struck the table. “Thank you, Miss Piggy,” he breathed.
Piggy felt a smile tugging at her lips, but fought it.
“Vous were very foolish,” she insisted.
“We’re idiots,” said the young man in blue.
“Complete imbeciles!” agreed his taller buddy.
“Total chuckleheads,” said the stocky one. “But…but we’re—”
“But we’re…fans.”
“Yes—fans. We’ve seen all your—”
“—movies are the most—”
“—amazing coincidence that you—”
Piggy held up a gloved hand and they stopped talking instantly, eyes wide with fear. The smile was still tugging at the corners of her mouth and, seeing it, their fear turned gradually to hope.
“You all just wanted autographs?” Piggy asked, her lips pursed.
“And a picture with you!” the tall one blurted. Bobo growled and the young man looked at him nervously, but then back at Piggy. He licked his lips. “Um, if you don’t mind?”
Kermit looked over and caught Scooter's eye. Scooter was talking to a producer from the WB, or rather, being talked to by the producer. He looked for signs that Scooter wanted to be joined—or rescued—and found none. They were old hands at this, and it took no more than a couple of miniscule tilts of their heads and a raised eyebrow from Scooter to communicate perfectly. Kermit nodded and glanced toward the patio door. He was going to slip outside, away from the crowd, and talk to Piggy. She had been upset last night, and he didn't want her to have another night with things unhappy or unsettled. Telling her about his planned visit next week would surely cheer her up. The thought of it had certainly cheered him up.
Kermit stepped outside and pulled out his cell phone, counting himself lucky that he'd been able to escape the sea of eager conversationalists. He didn't usually find himself as sought-out as he had been today and, away from watching eyes, he grimaced. Although he had never been one to air his laundry in public, the public had always shown more interest in his personal life than he'd been comfortable with. Piggy had not minded public interest—at least, not usually—and it was both ironic and painful to find himself correct about the cold-heartedness of the fourth estate. Well, in less than a week, he’d be with Piggy, and he doubted they’d spend a lot of time reading the papers.
He slipped around the corner of the house and almost tripped over a couple leaning artfully against the garden wall, their tan, golden bodies intertwined in a way that suggested he was most certainly intruding. Kermit withdrew, all stammers, but they merely giggled and waved him languidly away. He marched determinedly toward the gazebo in the corner and mounted the steps, glad for the moonlight instead of the harsh glare of lightbulbs, but even the moonlight revealed a pudgy, balding, middle-aged producer in earnest conversation with a young starlet who seemed to be doing an admirable job of putting all of her most attractive features forward. Kermit apologized and hot-footed it down the steps. The far edge of the pool looked unpopulated, but when he got there, he was too close to the musicians and he started back toward the house, his face scrunched up in consternation. He was sorry he had ever come to the party, sorry he had agreed to come out and rub elbows with the masses when the truth of the matter was that every moment not working seemed like one more minute he couldn’t get to Piggy.
While he stood there, grumpily pondering, it occurred to him that he was exactly in the center of lots of activity, but not in the middle of any activity. No one was close enough to talk to him, no one was looking in his direction or trying to pass him a drink, an hors d’oeuvre or an unsolicited script. The sound of the band was far enough away, the sound of the pool comforting to him in the moonlight. He looked at his phone—four bars—and decided to call right there.
It took a while to get them out the door, clutching their autographed pictures and their injuries, but eventually everything was quiet backstage. Bobo and Harry tried to chastise Piggy for rewarding the young men for their impudence, but Piggy waved their protests aside.
“It’s fine, Bobo. Moi is fine now.”
“They may have looked harmless—“ Harry began.
“They were harmless,” Piggy insisted. “They just wanted autographs.”
“I don’t like it,” Bobo muttered. “They shoulda come out front like everybody else.”
“I’m fine,” Piggy insisted. She did not want to admit the thrill of icy panic that had coursed through her when she’d first opened the door. Being scared made her feel vulnerable, but being helpless or cossetted made her feel furious. Besides, she had dispatched them without any trouble, which had made her feel better. Her mind touched back to that day in the street, when the dark stranger had grabbed her. It was like a sore tooth that your tongue couldn’t stop worrying—an ever-present reminder of a painful event. If she had been paying attention, she told herself today, she would not have had any trouble, would not have needed Fleet to rescue her, would not have talked to him, would never have taken the pink phone— With a growl, Piggy stopped that train of thought. “Moi can take care of herself if the need arises,” she insisted with more harshness than necessary. Bobo and Harry looked down, ashamed to have failed her.
“I’m sorry, Miss Piggy,” Bobo muttered, chastened.
“You shouldn’t oughta have dealt with them yourself,” Harry said, embarrassed. He looked, for all the world, like a little boy told he’d been naughty and wasn’t getting dessert.
Piggy rolled her eyes. Males and their egos! “Good grief, Moi is fine. Everything is fine. Everything is just fine. Now please stop hovering over Moi and go away!”
They didn’t like it, but there wasn’t much they could do about it. She patted each of them once before disappearing into her dressing room, reappearing a few minutes later with her things. She started for the back door but thought better of it. Tonight she thought it might be better to go out the front door.
Skirting the edge of the stage, she dialed Moishe. The sounds of hammering and power drills dampened somewhat as some of the union workers stopped working to watch her walk by, and though they enjoyed the graceful sway of her hips, they did not say anything bawdy or provocative. Word had already spread through the theater that she had just trounced four intruders, and none of them dared incite her ire by being disrespectful. Piggy barely noticed them, except to give the staircase an approving glance.
Moishe answered on the second ring.
“If vous do not have another fare—” Piggy began.
“I’ve been waiting out front for your call,” Moishe said. “I was getting a little worried, you know?” Piggy sighed into the phone. When Rory had been naming off the people who adored her, he’d remembered to include Mr. Finkel, and Piggy couldn’t help but smile as she basked in that devotion.
“Moi is coming,” she said.
Before she could put her phone away, it began to buzz again.
“Hello?” she said. “It is Moi.”
“I wish you’d have come with us,” Rory said. “The crowd’s pretty calm tonight, but the music’s good.”
“Rory….” She did not bother to hide her exasperation. “Moi is going home.”
He was instantly on the alert. “What do you mean, going? What? Why are you still at the theater?”
Piggy backpedalled madly, cursing her slip of the tongue. “I mean, Moi was just…was just—“
“Did something happen? Are you okay?”
“For goodness sake—!” Piggy’s phone began to chirp and she looked down in frustration, but her frustration was quickly replaced by pleased surprise. Kermit! Kermit was calling her!
“Kermie is calling!” she cried. “Moi is fine, Rory. Get off the phone so I can talk to Kermie!”
Somewhat mollified, Rory hung up and Piggy breathed into the phone.
“Kermie!” she cried. “Sweetie! How are vous?!”
It was late. Not late-to-be-at-a-party, but late-to-be-at-the-office. He was old and ought to go home, but there was nothing at home for him anymore.
Marty sighed and rubbed his hands over his face, then scratched the back of his head. The portfolio of pictures from the calendar bulged on his desk. There was some real talent on display here, and not just on the part of the photographers, although they’d done their part. Piggy looked stellar in most of them. If she’d taken a bad shot, they had wisely not included it. The problem wasn’t getting enough material (unless you counted the bikinis!)—it was paring down what was there into a calendar that wasn’t too heavy to hang on the wall!
He’d looked at the numbers for the calendar from every angle and it seemed obvious that it was going to need to be an 18-month calendar. There was enough footage to give plenty of variety, and enough demand to sell all they could print. Still, nothing could happen until he could get Kermit into a studio for his shots, and he wasn’t about to make any demands on Kermit’s schedule until the poor guy could get himself to New York for a visit.
Scooter had said it would happen within the week, and Marty had tried to lay low—worried he might give the news away if she’d called him because she was unhappy. He didn’t think she was really unhappy. She was having a lot of crapola thrown her way—stuff she didn’t deserve—but once the frog was up there for a snuggle she’d shine those stupid reporters on. Even when she was mad at him, nobody could comfort her like Kermit.
In spite of himself, Marty smiled. He had worried when Piggy had first fallen for Kermit, certain they were tragically mismatched, but he’d been proven wrong time and time again. What Piggy needed most was Kermit, and what Kermit needed most was her.
It may sound like a cliché, but when Piggy talked to Kermit, the rest of the world faded away. Nothing existed for her except Kermit. It had always been that way for her. Kermit was arguably more distracted on a regular basis, but once Piggy got his attention, she usually had it until she was ready to let it go.
“Piggy? Piggy—are you there?”
“I’m here, Kermie, Mon Capitan. Can you hear me?” As soon as the glow had faded from watching her walk by, the union boys had gotten back to work, and the whacks of the hammers were only marginally off-set by the whirr of the screwdrivers. Piggy looked around in annoyance.
“Just barely,” Kermit shouted. The party around him was loud and he cursed himself for the necessity of attending. “Piggy—you’re—I can’t hear you. Hang on—let me get somewhere quieter.”
“What?” There was a rustle of fabric that told Kermit that Piggy had turned away from the phone. “Would you guys PIPE DOWN?” Piggy yelled, making Kermit jerk his head away from the phone momentarily.
“Piggy—I’m losing you. Maybe we should talk—”
A couple of giggling starlets ran past him, chased by a middle-aged action star, and their resulting plop into the pool made water geyser up around him. He turned and covered the phone protectively, and when he put it to his ear, Piggy’s anxious voice was speaking his name.
“Kermit? Kermie, sweetheart?”
“Yes. Yes, I’m here. Just listen a second,” Kermit said.
“Kermit? Is that you? It’s so loud Moi can barely hear you! I am going to go outside where—“
“Piggy, wait! Wait, please! Please don’t go anywhere—” He would leave this stupid party this minute—anything to talk to his girl!
“Are you there, Kermie?” Piggy apparently still couldn’t hear him.
“Piggy,” Kermit bellowed. In the split second that he took in air, he noted the sudden hush that had fallen over the crowd—noted it too late to stop himself, to call back his next words. “Piggy—you’re breaking up!” He looked up, crestfallen. “I lost her,” he murmured, unable to stop himself.
It would be unfair to subject the reader to the intense misery that Kermit endured over the next few minutes. His much-anticipated phone call abruptly ended, he closed the phone carefully with unsteady hands and turned slowly to face the silence at his back.
Not too bad, Kermit thought absently, doing his best to meet the eyes of the other party-goers that stared fixedly at him with pity, scorn or simple curiosity. There can’t have been more than, um, two-hundred people who heard that. He cleared his throat nervously and started for the gate, feeling the weight of all those eyes on his back. Once there, he found, to his horror, that the gate had been secured against—of all things—gate-crashers, and he was forced to turn around and walk back down the cobblestone path through the lines of onlookers. The stir followed him into the house as he made his way carefully in the back door, through the crowded dining room, the media room, the living room, the great room and—at last--to the front door. He had enough presence of mind to return his host’s manly grip and press the slender white hand of the hostess before escaping out into the darkness.
Of all the rotten luck, Kermit thought miserably. He knew how that conversation would be interpreted, knew with certainty that they would be back in the tabloids tomorrow. He knew what the next few days, weeks even, were going to be like. The only thing he didn’t know—which was a real blessing at the time—was how exactly he was going to get through them without Piggy.
Bobo watched the carpenters hammering away on the crystalline staircase under the watchful eye of the set designer. That was going to be some entrance, he thought, and had a moment’s satisfaction imagining Miss Piggy sashaying down that staircase. She could do it, too, and own that moment, but he was liking her as Betty Rizzo. This sure had turned out to be a plum assignment, he mused. The other fellas on security were pretty good guys—Harry had even offered him the spare room at his place for a share of rent—and once he had vetted the cast and crew, it was pretty much an easy job. Sure, sometimes the reporters got out of line, and sometimes the fans were a little overeager out front, but Piggy had been amazingly accommodating. She had not smacked him once, and had only yelled at him half a dozen times. He felt like he was getting the hang of things.
There was a sound from the hallway—a shout or something. He turned from the sound of hammering to go see what the ruckus was about.
It would have been hard to say who was more surprised—Piggy, who opened her door to a pack of rowdy young men or the young men who suddenly found themselves face-to-face with the personification of porcine pulchritude. Their mouths dropped open and they gaped at her, too stunned to even stammer out a hello. Her blue eyes went wide with surprise, then a moment of panic.
“Oh my—”
“Gosh. She’s even more—”
“—most beautiful woman I’ve ever—”
“—seen anything like it,” said the last of them, pushing his glasses back up on his nose. They stared, mesmerized, at her shocked expression.
Piggy started to slam the door, expecting security to be hot on their heels, but one of them had the presence of mind to put his size 14 Bapes in the door.
“No—wait!” he cried. “Don’t shut the door! We just wanna—”
“Moi is not receiving visitors,” Piggy said, striving for calm. Where was Bobo? Where was Harry? Although she tried not to think about it, she was assessing each of the four males for height, trying to decide if any of them might be the one who had grabbed her before. She was thinking about screaming, but she hadn’t decided to do it yet.
“Please! Please come out!” the tall one in the back cried. “You can come out, can’t you?”
“Just for a minute!” said the short stocky one, putting his hand on the doorknob. “It will only take a moment.” He grinned. “Gosh, you’re pretty.”
“Moi is busy. You should go,” she said, tucking as much of herself behind the door as she could without taking her eyes off them. “The show is over and Moi is tired.”
“Aw, c’mon,” a fellow in a blue oxford-cloth shirt wailed. “Please! We came all this way to see you. Come out for a minute—please?”
“Yeah, we just wanna—“
She saw one of them reach into his pocket and terror swept over her like a wave. She wrenched the door open, and the young man who had been holding the doorknob went staggering forward, tripping over her foot. He bumped his head against the makeup table in the middle of the room and crashed to the floor. Piggy ducked under the next young man’s oxford-cloth sleeve, elbowed the young man behind him—the one with the glasses—in the gut. When the young man turned around she shot her gloved fist up under his chin and cold-cocked him. The tall one in the back gaped at her but, seeing his fallen comrades, put his hands up defensively. Piggy swept her foot out in a graceful arc and cut his knees out from under him, then pinned him to the floor with an elbow against his neck. The whole thing had taken about eight seconds.
“Bobo!” she bellowed. “Harry!”
Bobo rounded the corner, saw Piggy on the floor amidst a pile of bodies—a pile of unfamiliar, un-vetted bodies—and saw red. He waded into their midst and began plucking them up as though picking daisies. When he had all four of them tucked under his arms, he slammed them casually against the hallway wall, where they quaked and tried to catch their breath. Harry arrived, panting, on the scene, but stood back, letting Bobo deal with it his own way.
“I don’t see any backstage passes,” Bobo rumbled, his snout mere inches from the cowering young men’s pasty faces. “And I’m pretty sure you don’t work here—” he began. The quiet menace in his voice seemed to loosen their chattering jaws.
“Sorry! We’re sorry.”
“Please—don’t kill us!”
“We didn’t mean to bother her—we just wanted—”
“I know what you wanted,” Bobo said grimly. “You were trying to get Miss Piggy out of her dressing room!”
“She was signing autographs out front,” one of them quavered. “I lost my program, so I had to go buy another one so—”
“—when we came back from the swag booth, she was going back in and—”
“I just wanted to have my picture taken with her!” The one with the glasses looked like he might cry.
Piggy surveyed them from behind Bobo’s broad back. Both the panic and the combat high were rapidly dissipating, and she looked at their earnest and terrified faces and thought she had—perhaps—over-reacted. Still, there was enough of a tingle of fear for her to look at them all searchingly, trying to match their arms with the arms that had grabbed her and tried to drag her away.
“If you expect me to believe that—,” Bobo growled. They whimpered pitiably, cringing from the enraged bear. Piggy put her hand on his back.
“Moi believes them,” she said quietly.
“Moi!” whispered the one in blue. “She’s so cute when she says that!”
Bobo glared at him and he shushed immediately.
Piggy started to walk around the bear but he put his hand out protectively, keeping her behind him. Piggy took his hand and stepped around him, and two of the young men looked longingly at the bear’s big paw held in her pink-gloved hand.
“It’s okay, Bobo,” she said. Harry started to step forward, but she shook her head, blond curls bobbing. “Harry—it’s fine.” She stopped in front of the interlopers, arms crossed over her chest, foot tapping angrily. They stared at her, transfixed, penitents before an angry goddess.
“Vous,” she said, pointing to the tallest, the one she had pinned on the ground. “How did vous get in here?”
“Vous,” moaned one of the others, sotto voce. “The way she says it is so sexy!”
Mutely, the tall, gangly one started to point, but when he moved his arm both Harry and Bobo tensed so he kept his hand at his side and gestured with his chin down the hallway. “The door down there was propped open,” he mumbled. “Miss Piggy—gosh, we’re sorry! We didn’t mean any—”
“Who left the dad-blamed door open?” Bobo ground out, glaring around as though looking for the culprits among the shadows.
Harry grunted. “They were cutting some pieces for the staircase,” he said unhappily. “They could’ve left the door open.”
Piggy did not tell them that sometimes the back door was open to let in a little air to cool things after the hot stage lights. There was no point in giving a focus to Bobo’s rage. She pulled on the big bear’s hand until he straightened up, then let it go.
“We—we weren’t trying to scare you,” blurted the one with the glasses. “Honest!” His face was flushed, making him look younger than he had earlier, and for an instant, he reminded Piggy of Scooter. It softened her features a little and the line of her body relaxed.
“Moi was not scared,” she said coolly, “but vous are lucky Moi did not hurt you.”
“Very lucky,” said the stocky fellow, who had a knot the size of a goose egg on his forehead where it had struck the table. “Thank you, Miss Piggy,” he breathed.
Piggy felt a smile tugging at her lips, but fought it.
“Vous were very foolish,” she insisted.
“We’re idiots,” said the young man in blue.
“Complete imbeciles!” agreed his taller buddy.
“Total chuckleheads,” said the stocky one. “But…but we’re—”
“But we’re…fans.”
“Yes—fans. We’ve seen all your—”
“—movies are the most—”
“—amazing coincidence that you—”
Piggy held up a gloved hand and they stopped talking instantly, eyes wide with fear. The smile was still tugging at the corners of her mouth and, seeing it, their fear turned gradually to hope.
“You all just wanted autographs?” Piggy asked, her lips pursed.
“And a picture with you!” the tall one blurted. Bobo growled and the young man looked at him nervously, but then back at Piggy. He licked his lips. “Um, if you don’t mind?”
Kermit looked over and caught Scooter's eye. Scooter was talking to a producer from the WB, or rather, being talked to by the producer. He looked for signs that Scooter wanted to be joined—or rescued—and found none. They were old hands at this, and it took no more than a couple of miniscule tilts of their heads and a raised eyebrow from Scooter to communicate perfectly. Kermit nodded and glanced toward the patio door. He was going to slip outside, away from the crowd, and talk to Piggy. She had been upset last night, and he didn't want her to have another night with things unhappy or unsettled. Telling her about his planned visit next week would surely cheer her up. The thought of it had certainly cheered him up.
Kermit stepped outside and pulled out his cell phone, counting himself lucky that he'd been able to escape the sea of eager conversationalists. He didn't usually find himself as sought-out as he had been today and, away from watching eyes, he grimaced. Although he had never been one to air his laundry in public, the public had always shown more interest in his personal life than he'd been comfortable with. Piggy had not minded public interest—at least, not usually—and it was both ironic and painful to find himself correct about the cold-heartedness of the fourth estate. Well, in less than a week, he’d be with Piggy, and he doubted they’d spend a lot of time reading the papers.
He slipped around the corner of the house and almost tripped over a couple leaning artfully against the garden wall, their tan, golden bodies intertwined in a way that suggested he was most certainly intruding. Kermit withdrew, all stammers, but they merely giggled and waved him languidly away. He marched determinedly toward the gazebo in the corner and mounted the steps, glad for the moonlight instead of the harsh glare of lightbulbs, but even the moonlight revealed a pudgy, balding, middle-aged producer in earnest conversation with a young starlet who seemed to be doing an admirable job of putting all of her most attractive features forward. Kermit apologized and hot-footed it down the steps. The far edge of the pool looked unpopulated, but when he got there, he was too close to the musicians and he started back toward the house, his face scrunched up in consternation. He was sorry he had ever come to the party, sorry he had agreed to come out and rub elbows with the masses when the truth of the matter was that every moment not working seemed like one more minute he couldn’t get to Piggy.
While he stood there, grumpily pondering, it occurred to him that he was exactly in the center of lots of activity, but not in the middle of any activity. No one was close enough to talk to him, no one was looking in his direction or trying to pass him a drink, an hors d’oeuvre or an unsolicited script. The sound of the band was far enough away, the sound of the pool comforting to him in the moonlight. He looked at his phone—four bars—and decided to call right there.
It took a while to get them out the door, clutching their autographed pictures and their injuries, but eventually everything was quiet backstage. Bobo and Harry tried to chastise Piggy for rewarding the young men for their impudence, but Piggy waved their protests aside.
“It’s fine, Bobo. Moi is fine now.”
“They may have looked harmless—“ Harry began.
“They were harmless,” Piggy insisted. “They just wanted autographs.”
“I don’t like it,” Bobo muttered. “They shoulda come out front like everybody else.”
“I’m fine,” Piggy insisted. She did not want to admit the thrill of icy panic that had coursed through her when she’d first opened the door. Being scared made her feel vulnerable, but being helpless or cossetted made her feel furious. Besides, she had dispatched them without any trouble, which had made her feel better. Her mind touched back to that day in the street, when the dark stranger had grabbed her. It was like a sore tooth that your tongue couldn’t stop worrying—an ever-present reminder of a painful event. If she had been paying attention, she told herself today, she would not have had any trouble, would not have needed Fleet to rescue her, would not have talked to him, would never have taken the pink phone— With a growl, Piggy stopped that train of thought. “Moi can take care of herself if the need arises,” she insisted with more harshness than necessary. Bobo and Harry looked down, ashamed to have failed her.
“I’m sorry, Miss Piggy,” Bobo muttered, chastened.
“You shouldn’t oughta have dealt with them yourself,” Harry said, embarrassed. He looked, for all the world, like a little boy told he’d been naughty and wasn’t getting dessert.
Piggy rolled her eyes. Males and their egos! “Good grief, Moi is fine. Everything is fine. Everything is just fine. Now please stop hovering over Moi and go away!”
They didn’t like it, but there wasn’t much they could do about it. She patted each of them once before disappearing into her dressing room, reappearing a few minutes later with her things. She started for the back door but thought better of it. Tonight she thought it might be better to go out the front door.
Skirting the edge of the stage, she dialed Moishe. The sounds of hammering and power drills dampened somewhat as some of the union workers stopped working to watch her walk by, and though they enjoyed the graceful sway of her hips, they did not say anything bawdy or provocative. Word had already spread through the theater that she had just trounced four intruders, and none of them dared incite her ire by being disrespectful. Piggy barely noticed them, except to give the staircase an approving glance.
Moishe answered on the second ring.
“If vous do not have another fare—” Piggy began.
“I’ve been waiting out front for your call,” Moishe said. “I was getting a little worried, you know?” Piggy sighed into the phone. When Rory had been naming off the people who adored her, he’d remembered to include Mr. Finkel, and Piggy couldn’t help but smile as she basked in that devotion.
“Moi is coming,” she said.
Before she could put her phone away, it began to buzz again.
“Hello?” she said. “It is Moi.”
“I wish you’d have come with us,” Rory said. “The crowd’s pretty calm tonight, but the music’s good.”
“Rory….” She did not bother to hide her exasperation. “Moi is going home.”
He was instantly on the alert. “What do you mean, going? What? Why are you still at the theater?”
Piggy backpedalled madly, cursing her slip of the tongue. “I mean, Moi was just…was just—“
“Did something happen? Are you okay?”
“For goodness sake—!” Piggy’s phone began to chirp and she looked down in frustration, but her frustration was quickly replaced by pleased surprise. Kermit! Kermit was calling her!
“Kermie is calling!” she cried. “Moi is fine, Rory. Get off the phone so I can talk to Kermie!”
Somewhat mollified, Rory hung up and Piggy breathed into the phone.
“Kermie!” she cried. “Sweetie! How are vous?!”
It was late. Not late-to-be-at-a-party, but late-to-be-at-the-office. He was old and ought to go home, but there was nothing at home for him anymore.
Marty sighed and rubbed his hands over his face, then scratched the back of his head. The portfolio of pictures from the calendar bulged on his desk. There was some real talent on display here, and not just on the part of the photographers, although they’d done their part. Piggy looked stellar in most of them. If she’d taken a bad shot, they had wisely not included it. The problem wasn’t getting enough material (unless you counted the bikinis!)—it was paring down what was there into a calendar that wasn’t too heavy to hang on the wall!
He’d looked at the numbers for the calendar from every angle and it seemed obvious that it was going to need to be an 18-month calendar. There was enough footage to give plenty of variety, and enough demand to sell all they could print. Still, nothing could happen until he could get Kermit into a studio for his shots, and he wasn’t about to make any demands on Kermit’s schedule until the poor guy could get himself to New York for a visit.
Scooter had said it would happen within the week, and Marty had tried to lay low—worried he might give the news away if she’d called him because she was unhappy. He didn’t think she was really unhappy. She was having a lot of crapola thrown her way—stuff she didn’t deserve—but once the frog was up there for a snuggle she’d shine those stupid reporters on. Even when she was mad at him, nobody could comfort her like Kermit.
In spite of himself, Marty smiled. He had worried when Piggy had first fallen for Kermit, certain they were tragically mismatched, but he’d been proven wrong time and time again. What Piggy needed most was Kermit, and what Kermit needed most was her.
It may sound like a cliché, but when Piggy talked to Kermit, the rest of the world faded away. Nothing existed for her except Kermit. It had always been that way for her. Kermit was arguably more distracted on a regular basis, but once Piggy got his attention, she usually had it until she was ready to let it go.
“Piggy? Piggy—are you there?”
“I’m here, Kermie, Mon Capitan. Can you hear me?” As soon as the glow had faded from watching her walk by, the union boys had gotten back to work, and the whacks of the hammers were only marginally off-set by the whirr of the screwdrivers. Piggy looked around in annoyance.
“Just barely,” Kermit shouted. The party around him was loud and he cursed himself for the necessity of attending. “Piggy—you’re—I can’t hear you. Hang on—let me get somewhere quieter.”
“What?” There was a rustle of fabric that told Kermit that Piggy had turned away from the phone. “Would you guys PIPE DOWN?” Piggy yelled, making Kermit jerk his head away from the phone momentarily.
“Piggy—I’m losing you. Maybe we should talk—”
A couple of giggling starlets ran past him, chased by a middle-aged action star, and their resulting plop into the pool made water geyser up around him. He turned and covered the phone protectively, and when he put it to his ear, Piggy’s anxious voice was speaking his name.
“Kermit? Kermie, sweetheart?”
“Yes. Yes, I’m here. Just listen a second,” Kermit said.
“Kermit? Is that you? It’s so loud Moi can barely hear you! I am going to go outside where—“
“Piggy, wait! Wait, please! Please don’t go anywhere—” He would leave this stupid party this minute—anything to talk to his girl!
“Are you there, Kermie?” Piggy apparently still couldn’t hear him.
“Piggy,” Kermit bellowed. In the split second that he took in air, he noted the sudden hush that had fallen over the crowd—noted it too late to stop himself, to call back his next words. “Piggy—you’re breaking up!” He looked up, crestfallen. “I lost her,” he murmured, unable to stop himself.
It would be unfair to subject the reader to the intense misery that Kermit endured over the next few minutes. His much-anticipated phone call abruptly ended, he closed the phone carefully with unsteady hands and turned slowly to face the silence at his back.
Not too bad, Kermit thought absently, doing his best to meet the eyes of the other party-goers that stared fixedly at him with pity, scorn or simple curiosity. There can’t have been more than, um, two-hundred people who heard that. He cleared his throat nervously and started for the gate, feeling the weight of all those eyes on his back. Once there, he found, to his horror, that the gate had been secured against—of all things—gate-crashers, and he was forced to turn around and walk back down the cobblestone path through the lines of onlookers. The stir followed him into the house as he made his way carefully in the back door, through the crowded dining room, the media room, the living room, the great room and—at last--to the front door. He had enough presence of mind to return his host’s manly grip and press the slender white hand of the hostess before escaping out into the darkness.
Of all the rotten luck, Kermit thought miserably. He knew how that conversation would be interpreted, knew with certainty that they would be back in the tabloids tomorrow. He knew what the next few days, weeks even, were going to be like. The only thing he didn’t know—which was a real blessing at the time—was how exactly he was going to get through them without Piggy.