Ruahnna
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Chapter 116: Foreboding
“Are you thinkin’ what I’m thinkin’?” Rizzo asked Gonzo before he thought better of it.
“Probably,” said Gonzo. “But I don’t think they’re gonna let us use the fire truck.”
Rizzo stared, opened his mouth to speak, then closed it with an effort. “Um, sure, buddy. Sure. So since, um, that’s not gonna work, how ‘bout we drop by the studio and see how Kerm is doing?”
“We probably should,” said Gonzo. “Things have been, you know, weird since Piggy left for New York.”
“Yeah. Everybody else is disappearing, too.”
“Not me,” Gonzo sighed. “I’m invisible in my own life.” He sighed again, practically begging for sympathy.
“In those spandex tights? Never, buddy. You’ll always be a star in my mind.”
“Shows what a twisted little mind you’ve got,” Gonzo muttered, and Rizzo just chuckled and snorted.
“You got that right,” Rizzo said. They tramped along the sidewalk eating the remains of their chili dogs and fries. Gonzo wiped his furry blue fingers on a handkerchief of questionable cleanliness before he opened the studio door, and Rizzo preened his whiskers carefully before stepping inside.
“You know,” said Rizzo thoughtfully. “They really shouldn’t leave the door unlocked like that,” he said.
Gonzo shrugged. “You worry too much. What would somebody be after here? Flat soda from the drink machine?”
“I don’t know,” Rizzo said, a little irritably. “It’s, just, you know, been weird lately. And Scooter said they still don’t know what happened to that edited film.”
“Yeah—that was weird. I mean, Scooter said the film never left the studio, except with him. Poor guy’s been beating himself up about it pretty hard, I hear.”
“Hear where?” said Rizzo.
“I know we’re here. I held the door for you.”
“No—not here where—I mean, not ‘We’re here.’ I meant, where’d you hear that.”
“Sara told me,” said Gonzo smugly, and Rizzo did a double take.
“Since when does Scooter’s missus-to-be confide in you?”
“Since I helped her throw a party on, like, an hour’s notice.”
“Oh.” Rizzo thought about it for a moment. “So Scooter blames himself. But he didn’t do it. That’s ridiculous!”
“It is ridiculous,” said Gonzo. “But you know how serious Scooter takes his responsibilities here. Sara says he’s just eaten up over it.”
“Poor guy. Kermit ought to cut him some slack,” said Rizzo, feeling sorry for their all-grown-up gopher.
“Kermit doesn’t even know it. He’s pretty distracted nowadays. Sara said Scooter’s just been moping around the house—thinks he should have caught the problem with the film. Afraid he’s mucking up the job of looking after Kermit now that Piggy’s gone.”
Rizzo put his hands on his hips. “It’s not Scooter’s job to look after Kermit,” the little rat said. “Kermit’s a big frog—he can look after himself.”
Gonzo greeted this show of loyalty with a carefully neutral look, and Rizzo caved first. “Yeah, okay. So the amphibian needs a keeper sometimes. And that’s usually Piggy’s job, but she’s not here. Got it. But Scooter doesn’t have to look after him alone, anyway. What are we—chicken feed?” snapped Rizzo.
Gonzo sighed hugely. “I was—once. Now she won’t even grab a corn nugget with me.”
Rizzo was beginning to think that—as Harve had observed a continental span away—dames were just plain trouble. “Aw, Camilla’s not going anywhere. You can wear her down. Can we just deal with one unbalanced emotional state at a time?”
Gonzo gave another huge sigh. “Sure—if you can’t keep up. So what can we do to help Kermit? Nothing that I can think of. He misses his pig, and—sorry buddy—you and I are a poor substitute for Miss Piggy when he goes home at night.”
If Gonzo had hoped to bait Rizzo with that barb, he was disappointed, for instead of making his own snarky comment back, Rizzo furrowed his furry brow and thought hard. Gonzo looked at him.
“Rizzo?”
“Don’t bother me for a second—I’m thinkin’,” Rizzo said distractedly.
“Well, don’t hurt yourself,” Gonzo muttered, but once again Rizzo seemed not to hear.
“You might be on to somethin’,” Rizzo said at last. “Let me ruminate on it for a bit. I might be on to somethin’ too.”
“With your digestion, I have no doubt,” said Gonzo, and they turned and walked back toward the editing room.
“Mabel, Honey, these biscuits are about to float right off the table,” said Clifford.
“Must be the gusts of hot air,” Mabel teased, and Tricia giggled. She licked the tip of her finger and reached over to pick up the biscuit crumbs off Clifford’s plate, then looked up to see him watching her with an incredulous expression.
“Woman,” he said, “are you eating off my plate?”
Tricia blushed scarlet. “Just crumbs!” she mumbled, mortified. Clifford just laughed, and when she realized he was just yanking her chain, she shot to her feet and went to bury her hot face in the cool refrigerator air. Mabel and Clifford exchanged amused glances.
“You’re playing with fire,” Mabel said. “She’s liable to get back at you, somehow.”
“I can hold my own,” said Clifford, enjoying the view from where he sat. He was thinking about dancing with Tricia last night, thinking about holding her lithe, muscular figure close to his, and his expression softened. “Hey, Tricia—come on back and sit down. I’ll let you drink out of my cup.”
Clifford expected her to tell him what for and possibly throw something, but he did not expect what she did do. Tricia turned and glared at him, then all but stomped off to her room. The silence in her wake was deafening.
Finally, Mabel spoke. “You’ve done it now,” she said mildly.
Clifford looked at her uncertainly. “Did I—was that because I teased her about eating off my plate?” he asked. “I was just playing.”
“Eh, that’s not it,” said Mable, smiling and moving to the sink.
“But I didn’t mean anything by it—really,” said Clifford. “I thought it was kind of cute.”
“I know,” said Mabel. “That’s not it either.”
Clifford sighed. “What is it gonna cost me to get enlightened, then?” he grouched. “Want me to clean out your gutters? Take out the trash?”
Mabel stopped washing the dish and turned around and leaned on the sink. She smiled at him, and Clifford felt himself blush under her scrutiny.
“I think she likes you,” said Mabel.
“Yeah, I kind of thought that last night. And I kind of thought that this morning, too, but I seem to have stepped in it now.”
“Naw. Nothing that won’t wipe off. It’s just…well..Tricia’s a little gun-shy. She’s not had real good luck counting on folks.” She very carefully did not say, “counting on men, too,” but Clifford wasn’t born yesterday. He acknowledged the information Mabel had given him without commenting on it directly.
“Except you,” Clifford said, and Mabel looked at him in surprise. “She said you were there for her when nobody else was.”
“Tricia said that?”
Clifford nodded solemnly. “We talked a little.”
Mabel sat down at the table and looked at Clifford. “Sounds like you talked a lot.”
The dreadlocked bass player shrugged. “We have some things in common.” There wasn’t any point in telling Mabel what it had been like growing up. He was grown now and it was all cool. Nothin’ to do about it now.
Mabel reached out and patted his hand. “I’m sorry, Sugar,” she said. “But I’m glad things turned out okay.” She got up and went back to put the dry dishes away. Nothing stayed damp long in the arid Nevada air.
Clifford turned and looked morosely off the way that Tricia had gone. “I hope things turn out okay,” he mumbled. “She was gonna take me to hear her band.”
“Well, aren’t you special,” said Mabel, grinning. “Better mind your manners.”
Clifford opened his mouth to speak, but at that moment Tricia appeared in the doorway, scowling fiercely.
“You coming to hear the band?” she demanded. Wordlessly, Clifford nodded, then found his voice when she shot him an aggrieved look.
“I’d love to,” he said, minding his manners. Behind him, he could have sworn he heard Mabel snort, but he ignored her, his eyes on Tricia’s face.
“Well, I’m pulling out of the driveway in two minutes, so you’d better get your butt out there.” She stalked past him, then whirled fast enough to make him startle. “And if you ever call me woman again, I’m going to whup you up side of your dreadlocks with your bass!”
“Yes ma’am,” Clifford said, careful to not look too amused.
“And then, I’m gonna beat the stuffing out of you with my bass, got it?”
“I got it,” Clifford said. He shot Mabel a look, and she gave him one of her own that said, plainly, “She might, at that.”
Clifford vowed to mind his p’s and q’s. He stood up and laid his napkin on the table, then followed Tricia out the front door.
Kermit was definitely minding his p’s and q’s. Scooter, on the other hand, was downright terrified.
“This is not my idea of a break!” he hissed near Kermit’s aural organ. “When you asked me if I wanted to get out for a bit, I thought we were going to Starbucks!”
“Well, you’re awake now, aren’t you?” Kermit murmured out of the corner of his mouth, and Scooter gave him a sour look.
“Oh, I’m awake,” his personal assistant muttered. “I’m just wondering where he keeps the sharp scissors.”
“Don’t be silly, Scooter,” Kermit admonished. “He’s harmless—until you get the bill.”
“Yeah, well, I don’t like the way he looks at my jacket,” Scooter mumbled. Despite the fact that he had a modest wardrobe of reasonably tailored clothes, sometimes he still liked to kick back with his old jacket and faded jeans. Today had been one of those days.
Suddenly, Thoreau turned on them and Scooter fought the urge to yelp. But the designer was smiling—imperious and smiling. “Close your eyes!” he demanded, and Scooter and Kermit both closed their eyes.
Maybe this is like the Batcave, Scooter thought. Maybe no one is allowed to see the secret entrance. But his determined merriment was cut short as he felt himself pulled urgently through a doorway. He banged his elbow on the edge of the door and heard Kermit say “ouch” beside him.
“Okay—now you can look!” Thoreau cried. Scooter wondered how he did that—gave the impression that he’d just been trumpeted in by a brass band.
Kermit opened his eyes, blinking a little in the natural light flooding from the skylight in Thoreau’s studio. The designer gestured towards something hanging sedately from a polished wooden clothes-hanger, and Kermit and Scooter both looked obediently.
“Oh. Um, it’s very nice,” said Kermit, eying the tuxedo with interest.
“Very nice? Very nice?” Thoreau hissed. “Crème brulee after supper is very nice. A raise in your credit limit is very nice. This—This—“ He gestured with a flourish and Scooter heard the brass band again in his head. “—is a work of art.”
Kermit tried to muster a little more enthusiasm. “It’s—it’s beautiful, Thoreau. It’s really very ni--, um, beautiful. I really like the color,” he said.
Thoreau smirked smugly. “Piggy thought you would.”
“You know, we all had plum-colored tuxedos one time. The show was just starting out and funds were a little tight, but Hilda got this great deal on—“
“This is not plum,” Thoreau snapped. “This is indigo purple.”
Kermit flinched in the face of the designer’s ire, trading looks with Scooter. Scooter was—frankly—petrified of the fashion police, and was no help at all. Kermit did what he did when Piggy was in high dudgeon—he asked for marching orders.
“Um, what would you like me to do?” he asked meekly. “Do you want me to try it on?”
Recognizing submission, Thoreau un-bared his teeth. “Yes. Do that. I want to check the lay of the collar.”
Kermit took the hanger and reached for the shirt. It felt like silk—probably was silk--and although it had looked icy white while beneath the tux, now it looked faintly, er, indigo purple. Thoreau was giving him a look.
“Wear an undershirt, won’t you?” he sighed. “We don’t want you to sweat in it.”
“Um, amphibians don’t sweat,” said Kermit. “At least, not literally. Figuratively, I guess we do sweat the small stuff, but not literally.:
Thoreau’s eye’s brightened. “Really?” he asked. “That’s good to know.”
Kermit dressed, Thoreau fussed and Scooter tried to be unobtrusive. At last, Kermit was allowed to examine himself in the big mirror.
“Very nice,” Kermit murmured. “Much better than crème brulee,” he added hastily. Thoreau seemed mollified by the admiration in his eyes. Kermit shot his cuffs which were still loose, and Thoreau startled and put a palm to his cheek. “Oh!” he said. “Oh! I almost forgot!”
He left the room for an instant and came back with a small box on one long-fingered hand. He handed it to Kermit, who took the little box and opened it. Scooter crowded in to see, his curiosity overcoming his fear.
“Wow, Boss,” he said. “Those look like the earrings you got Miss Piggy for Christmas.”
“They’re a little smaller,” said Thoreau, “but it’s the same designer. Piggy had the cufflinks made for you.”
Kermit took one out of the box and Scooter helped him fasten it through the silky cuffs. It glimmered on his cuff, looking for all the world like it could take bejeweled flight any moment. Like Robin had observed, it looked delicious.
“Wow,” said Kermit, completely surprised by Piggy’s gift. She must have planned for them to wear their jewels together to the awards show, unsuspecting of how her life would change between then and now. Guiltily, Kermit remembered how he and Marty had deceived her—how they had planned and plotted to bend her to their will—and his cheeks flushed a little. It was for her own good! he thought, feeling defensive and underhanded nonetheless. And it had paid off. Piggy was in New York, and he was here, and even now—across the miles that separated them—she was looking out for him, wanting him to look his dapper best.
“You look swell, Boss,” said Scooter admiringly, then realized he was not supposed to speak unless spoken to, but success had made Thoreau munificent.
“Not bad,” the designer said dryly. “Prince Charming will have to watch his back.”
“So the little twerp is impersonating me?” Marty growled.
“No, it’s not Scribbler,” Piggy said. “Moishe was very clear and the descriptions don’t match.”
“Who the heck is Moishe?”
“Mr. Finkel,” Piggy replied patiently—or at least as patiently as she was able.
“Oh—oh, the cabbie. Right. Good guy, you said.”
“Yes, a good guy, but he didn’t know Moi very well then. Some guy apparently tracked him down, claimed to be you, and tried to pump him for information.”
There was a steady silence on the phone for several seconds. “And why am I just hearing about this now?” Marty asked. There was an edge to his voice that Piggy seldom heard.
Piggy sighed. “Because Moi is just hearing about it now. Moishe—Mr. Finkel—told me last night on the way home from the theater.”
“I don’t like it.” Piggy could hear the raspy sound of Marty scratching his jaw with a business card. She had also told him about the person in the coat and disguising hat who had seemed to be following her earlier in the week. “Somebody’s following you around up there but it’s not Scribbler,” Marty mused. “You’re sure.”
“Moi is positive,” she said primly, and Marty desisted. Piggy had excellent instincts if she bothered to employ them.
“So if it’s not him, what’s Scribbler up to?” Marty asked. “His articles sound like he’s up there.”
“He’s up here,” Piggy said, but did not elaborate.
“You’ve seen him?” Marty demanded, reading something in her silence that he hadn’t in her words.
“He’s seen Moi,” Piggy growled, which was as much of an answer as Marty was going to get.
“The frog’s not going to like it,” said Marty wearily.
“The frog’s not going to hear about it,” Piggy snapped. “Don’t you dare tell him, you double-crossing talent hound you! You’re supposed to be Moi’s agent, and you have no right to—“
“Fine. Hush. Hush already, Honey. I won’t tell him if you don’t want me to.”
Piggy snorted.
Marty took a deep breath and tried again. “I won’t tell—talent scouts’ honor,” he said, but Piggy was only mildly appeased.
“Talent scouts have no honor,” she snarked, but was immediately contrite. “Except vous, Marty,” Piggy said softly. “I’m sorry. Moi is worried and on edge.”
“If you’re going to worry, don’t worry about Kermit. Worry about that creep—or creeps—who are following you. Are you sure you won’t let me put some security on you until—“
“No.” Piggy did not raise her voice, but there was finality in her tone. If Marty hired a bodyguard, Kermit was sure to hear about it, and he could put two and two together with the best of them. If Piggy needed a bodyguard, there was no way Kermit was going to sit by without trying to come charging up here to champion her, and that was impossible now. Plenty of time for Sir Kermit to come to the rescue when the film was in the can.
“Alright. But I’m trusting you to keep those baby blues open and those karate hands ready—capiche?”
“Yes, Marty,” Piggy said meekly, and Marty had to bite his lip. Oy vey, you could get whiplash around this little lady plenty quick.
“I want you to call me if anything else happens, you got it?”
“Yes, Marty,” said Piggy, but this time there was a defiant undertone in her voice.
“And Piggy?”
“Yes?”
“Stay away from Scribbler.”
“Moi wouldn’t—“
“Don’t bother,” Marty said, and heaved another sigh. “I don’t know what you’re up to, but I know I’m not going to like it.”
Piggy said nothing, which Marty took as the only answer he was going to get.
“Just be careful, Sweetie. Keep your snout to the wind, okay? There’s some funny stuff going on.”
“Moi will be careful, Marty,” Piggy said earnestly, and they said their goodbyes.
Piggy put the phone away and worried BK, twirling it around and around on her finger. Before Kermit, there had been lean times and uncertainty. Before Kermit, there had been loneliness—after Kermit, too, for a time, but then it was a Kermit-specific type of loneliness. Before Kermit, she had wondered if her dreams of stardom and love would ever come true. Before Kermit, there had been…Fleet. Fleet would know who was following her. He would know which of the yellow-bellied yellow fleet was trying to catch her doing something that would make tongues wag and eyes roll and hurt her beloved Kermit.
Piggy bit her lip. She thought—just for a moment—about calling Kermit to tell him what she was about to do, so she wouldn’t really be doing it behind his back, but the first lie begat the second. She couldn’t tell him about planning to talk to Fleet without telling him why, and telling him why meant telling him that someone here was stalking her, and she would not—could not—live with herself if she distracted Kermit while so much was at stake. Wasn’t it enough that she was here being famous on Broadway while he was slogging away at home? Noone to greet him at the door after a long day, or snuggle with him to banish the day’s worries. How could she add to his burden when she had already been so selfish? A teardrop overflowed her brimming eyes and made its way down her flushed cheek. Hastily, she wiped at it, then pulled herself together. If she was going to catch Fleet today, she needed to powder her nose.