Ruahnna
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Chapter 97: The Stand-Out Stand-Ins
“So this is your brother, Jimmy,” Annie Sue said. She looked from one to the other thoughtfully. “You look a lot alike,” she said at last. Except for the mottling patterns on his back, Kermit and Jimmy in matching suits looked quite similar.
“I’m the better-looking one,” Jimmy said smugly, shooting Kermit a look to see if his barb had struck home.
“As long as you make a better target,” Kermit muttered, and Jimmy laughed.
“As long as they’re only shooting film,” he agreed. “So…what’s the plan. We take them on a false trail and have some big goodbye scene.” He looked at Annie Sue. “You want to fight or smooch?”
Annie Sue laughed but Kermit looked irritated. “Now look, Jimmy—!” he began, but Annie Sue was not offended.
“We could do both,” she said, giving Jimmy a look that shut him up. “Unless you’re only good at one…?” She let the question hang in the air and Jimmy gave a great belly laugh.
“Okay,” he said. “You win that round.” He turned to look at Kermit and saw his brother regarding him unhappily. “Oh. Sorry.” He looked a little abashed, but not too much. “So, what do you want us to do?”
They mapped it out. Watching them, Piggy thought that Jimmy could have easily been on the stage and screen alongside his brother. He was sharp, good-looking and funny. She was in the middle of these musing when Jimmy looked up and caught her eye.
“I’ll try to be as good a kisser as Kermit,” he said saucily, but Piggy shook her head.
“Not possible,” she said smugly, and Kermit flushed. Guiltily, Jimmy and Piggy exchanged looks. This was obviously hard for Kermit on many levels, and they weren’t helping.
“Sorry, Mon Capitan.”
“Sorry, Kerm,” Jimmy muttered. “I’ll behave.”
“I notice you don’t say how,” Annie Sue murmured, and Jimmy turned and flashed a big smile at her. The sight of it took Piggy’s breath for a moment, and Kermit stopped and looked at them assessingly. At that moment, with Jimmy looking up at Annie with open admiration and affection, the differences between the two couples were far more negligible than before. This might actually work.
“But you’ll have to keep the suit on,” Kermit cautioned, and Jimmy made a face.
“Yeah, yeah,” he muttered, pulling at his collar. “I don’t know how you do it. Clothes, ties—ick.”
“Hormel says the same thing about ties,” said Annie Sue. She touched her blonde ringlets. “And I have to wear a wig,” she added. “Nobody would ever think I was Miss Piggy with this do.”
After a few more minutes of brainstorming and scenario checking, with Piggy occasionally adding succinct touches to their “script,” there didn’t seem to be much more to say. Either it would work or it wouldn’t, and the proof would be in the pudding, or rather, in the leaving.
“So—aren’t you even going to feed us?” Jimmy complained, and Kermit sighed.
“I’ll take you out tomorrow, after,” he explained. “If we all go out tonight, we might lose the element of surprise. Tonight we’ll eat in.”
Jimmy turned and grinned at Piggy. “So, you cooking tonight, Cookie?”
Piggy was nonplussed. “I’m dialing,” she said. “Real pigs don’t cook.”
The two-color cab pulled neatly up to the curb and a trench-coated figure got out.
“Look,” said Scribbler impatiently, throwing money randomly at the cabbie while he wrestled his carryon, his ticket and his phone. “I don’t care what you want right now.” He paused to pull the phone away from his ear. “Look—shut up already,” he said firmly. There was a squawk of protest from the phone but Scribbler seemed nonplussed. “I will hang up,” he said, and there was a sudden silence. “Okay,” he said, a little more cautiously. “We’ve been doing things your way, but now we’re on my familiar turf. Yeah, yeah—I know you’ve got the money, but I’ve got the know-how and I know how this game is played. I played it for years and I still have the swing.”
The voice on the other end of the phone was listening, and thinking hard. This was not the Fleet Scribbler that had been bullied and threatened into service—there was a new confidence about him now that made him intriguing…and far less easy to manipulate. But he might have something, so…. “Look—once she’s alone and he’s not there to interfere, I know I can pick up the thread again. We were…we were tight once. Let me work on it.”
There was a grunt, which Scribbler took for acquiescence.
“Good,” the once-star reporter said. “I’ll be in touch once I’m settled. Just stay out of my way and let me work.”
There are those that would argue that Piggy never made a bad entrance in her life. Whether they are correct or not, there’s little doubt that she never made a quiet one. In the grand tradition of a thousand show-stopping, heart-stopping, argument-stopping entrances, the faux Mr. and Mrs. The Frog made an entrance grand enough to count.
They came in fighting. Annie-Sue/Piggy came flouncing into the airport in high dudgeon, throwing snarky comments over her shoulder at the obviously irritated Jimmy/Kermit, who struggled with a veritable mountain of luggage. A hatbox toppled off Mount Fashion and spilled its feathered concoction onto the polished floor. Annie-Sue/Piggy stopped, stared and glared at the mortified Jimmy/Kermit, who struggled to get the contents back into the box and the box back onto the mound of luggage.
LAX is usually so bustling that it would be hard for any single incident or passenger to draw the attention of the entire crowd, but somehow Jimmy and Annie-Sue managed to attract and hold every eye within that entire wing of the airport.
No one noticed two trench-coated figures slip into the terminal in the wake of this spectacle, walking quickly but inconspicuously toward check-in. Almost two-thirds of the check-in line had turned to watch the glamorously-clad pig and her dark-suited companion as they battled their way across the terminal to stand in another check-in line with every sign of exasperation. Once there, however, the chic blond pig became suddenly emotionally, bursting into tears and letting her frog try to comfort her with pats and kisses. At least 2047 cell phones were surreptitiously recording it all, and all of the reporter-type loafers who had been lounging about the airport for the past two days—in case they had fallen for a false trail and she decided to leave early—surged to sudden action, talking anxiously into their cell phones and waving frantically to the cameramen (and possible camerasloths) who were popping through the door with alarming speed and in alarming numbers. Airport security began to edge nervously toward the scene, sensing a potential riot.
“It’s okay,” Jimmy/Kermit said anxiously, wrapping his arms around Annie-Sue/Piggy while she sobbed noisily. “Piggy, honey, don’t cry. It’ll be okay. You’ll be wonderful! You’ll be marvelous!” He did not know what experiences Annie-Sue was drawing on for her performance, but his own was coming straight from the heart. He tried to imagine what Kermit was going to say, and say those things as lovingly and believably as possible to the distraught sow in his arms. “I’ll miss you while you’re gone and I know you’ll miss me, but this is for the best. Broadway needs you, Piggy.”
Annie-Sue/Piggy sobbed louder, and all around them people began to murmur in sympathy and encouragement. It is hard to have a private conversation in a public place, and this conversation, which was both and neither, was drawing all the attention that a scene of this magnitude could command. Jimmy/Kermit looked up quickly, seeming surprised by all of the attention, and managed to look uncomfortable and stiff when he realized they were creating a stir.
“Um, Piggy,” he murmured. “Sweetie, we’re, um, people are staring.”
“Let them!” Annie-Sue/Piggy cried. “Oh, Moi is so sad to be leaving you, Kermie!” She boo-hooed becomingly into a little lace handkerchief.
Jimmy/Kermit looked more mortified, but increased his attempts to placate her. “Um, I’m, um, sad that you’re going, too, Piggy, but we…we sort of have to get your boarding ticket now so they can load up all your luggage.” He kept his arms around her but now he was trying to steer her toward the ticket gate. All around them, people stared in astonishment and murmured excitedly. Seeing a real live movie star was no big shakes at LAX, but seeing firsthand what was bound to be on the evening news, well…that was something else.
“Oh, Kermie! I don’t want to go without you!” Annie-Sue/Piggy wailed. The crying certainly added dramatic tension to what was already a show-stopper, but it also gave Annie-Sue some coverage. Although she was wearing one of Piggy’s show wigs and the long blond waves cascading down her back looked genuine (and fabulous!), they had decided not to chance too many up-close views of Annie-Sue/Piggy’s face. Piggy’s famous profile was hard to emulate, and while a beautiful pig is still a beautiful pig, they were all anxious that the gig not be up too soon.
‘I know, Honey,” Jimmy/Kermit said, and suddenly abandoned his own discomfort at being a public spectacle in favor of easing some of his faux wife’s misery. “Here, come here.” He pulled her into his arms and kissed her. It helped that they were both wearing hats (Annie Sue’s being a cute little number that matched her jacket). It helped that they were both accomplished kissers. As a matter of fact, Jimmy was beginning to think his kissing skills just had to have improved, seeing as how he was getting so much practice…. It is possible that he lost track of things for, well, at least a second or two, but then Annie-Sue/Piggy was pulling herself together, and pulling away from him and fussing about her stacks of luggage again.
“I’ll never get all of my things to New York with me!” she cried, off on a fresh tangent. More than a few folks commented—rather loudly and rudely, Jimmy thought—that Miss Piggy seemed as concerned about leaving her luggage behind as she was about leaving her husband behind. This started a general murmur of conversation that swelled around them like a cloud of static, and made a perfect backdrop of the next phase.
“My ticket!” Annie-Sue/Piggy exclaimed. “Moi forgot her ticket!” Her satin-glove hands covered her face—more camouflage—and at least three men and one older lady nearby said, “It figures! See what he has to put up with?” Others countered hotly that she had a right to be distraught and if he really loved her he’d have reminded her about the tickets. Annie-Sue/Piggy chose just that moment to make a face at Jimmy from behind her hands that no one else could see. Jimmy almost burst out laughing.
“Oh, um, I got them, Piggy,” he began, patting his pockets in a comical fashion. “Let me just, um, find them. I put them, er, in my jacket pocket so I wouldn’t forget them….” The people on Piggy’s side of the argument—and there seemed to be no one whose opinion about the situation was entirely neutral—made “humphy” faces at the group expressing sympathy for Kermit. So there!
Several minutes were lost while Jimmy/Kermit searched desperately for the ticket, which finally made an appearance. Jimmy was glad that the ticket, at least, was real, so he could brandish it about with abandon. Thank goodness for Scooter! Jimmy’s discovery of the ticket was an excuse for Annie-Sue/Piggy to launch herself into his arms again and cover his froggy face with kisses. Jimmy/Kermit tried to remember exactly how big Kermit had said Hormel was, but it was difficult to think of anything at the moment.
Eventually, Jimmy/Kermit had been satisfactorily thanked for saving the day and they went back to worrying loudly about the luggage. Under cover of his hat, Jimmy grinned at Annie Sue. They still hadn’t used, “Omigosh! Where’s my purse!” “I forgot my cell phone charger!” and “Did you tell the airline about my special requests/Why didn’t you tell the airline about my special requests.” Jimmy hoped Kermit and Piggy were making good use of the distraction, and wondered worriedly how Kermit was doing. He knew Piggy had listened the other day—he hoped she had really heard him and wouldn’t make this any more miserable on Kermit than it had to be. He realized Annie-Sue/Piggy, becoming “suddenly aware” of the attention she was attracting, had pulled out a stack of autographed photographs and was handing them around with a mixture of boldness and coquettishness. Annie-Sue had been unwilling to actually sign photos as Piggy. “Why—they won’t want one when they know it’s just me,” she had protested, but Jimmy thought secretly that a picture of his sister-in-law was still a picture of his sister-in-law. Still, he reached over to help her, handing them out to any comers with what he hoped was the right touch of proprietary pride.
“C’mon, Piggy,” he thought fervently. “Make your getaway already!”
While Jimmy and Annie Sue led what looked like every tabloid photographer in the state of California on a merry chase, two figures stood at the gate where a plane was warming up. Once Piggy was ensconced in a first class seat, the plane—which had been held just for her—would take off. The airline had promised that Piggy would be buffered and protected at each of her two plane changes, partly for the thrill of being in on the secret escape and partly for the cargo-load of amazing swag that Marty had sent to bribe fellow flyers and employees alike into happy acquiescence.
The only thing to do now was to let go, but that wasn’t going as well as all their other plans. The The Frogs stood outside the loading gate, looking into the portal as though it held the key to the future. Though both of them held on to their determination to be brave, it was an even bet as to which one would succumb first.
Piggy looked down the tunnel, shook her head and turned to face Kermit.
“I’ve change my mind,” she said. “Moi is not going.”
“Oh yes you are,” Kermit insisted. “C’mon, Piggy--you promised—remember?” His tone was affectionate and warm, and indication that he remembered.
“Moi did no such thing,” Piggy said, but her blushing cheeks belied her words. “That didn’t count,” she mumbled. “Moi was under…duress.”
Kermit smiled and put his arm around her waist, subtly steering her back toward the archway. “Duress, huh?” he teased, but his attempt at humor back-fired.
“You—you told me it was up to me!” she accused. “Vous said the ultimate decision was up to me.”
“It was,” Kermit fired back. “You said yes.”
“But—but that was just because you and Marty ganged up on me,” she flared. “If you hadn’t….” Here, she faltered, finding it hard to accuse him of ulterior motives when she knew this decision would take such a toll on him. She rolled her eyes, fighting tears and showing sarcasm at the same time. “Why do you have to be so…selfless?”
Kermit chuckled grimly. “You’ve been watching too many vampire movies,” he accused. “I’m not being selfless—I’m being….” He caught himself before he could say stupid. “Sensible,” he finished lamely. Although at the time, Piggy had pretended to be happy and he had pretended to believe her, the days between her acceptance and her going had worn away any deception between them—through friction, if nothing else. “You know I’m right. You have to go. If you don’t, they’ll say I kept you from it—held you back.”
“But you didn’t! You wouldn’t!”
“Piggy…” Kermit’s voice was gentle, and tinged with sadness. “You know that, but other people….” He did not want to finish the thought.
Piggy made a rude noise. “What do I care about other people?!” she cried. In spite of himself, Kermit started to smile, and even Piggy’s angry and threatening look could not stem his amusement.
“These people you don’t care about—would those be the people who are going to buy your new calendar?”
“That’s not the same thing!” Piggy protested.
“Are they the ones storming the studio and drowning poor Marty in fan mail—those people you don’t care about?”
“That’s different!”
“And what about all those people who are going to line up around the block just to see your name in Broadway lights?”
Piggy started to speak, but caught her breath. “I—that’s not—I…I don’t know,” she cried, anguished. They had planned everything so carefully so they could have a decent goodbye, and now Kermit was spoiling it—or she was. She didn’t know anymore. “I…just…I don’t want to leave you.” It did not sound like enough to say, but she hoped Kermit understood.
He did.
“Honey.” Kermit closed the distance between them that her pacing had crated. “I’m not going anywhere. Broadway is calling—you answer them, and answer them nice. Don’t you think that’s part of my dream, too—to see your name up there in lights?”
“Oh, Kermit…”
If she could have, Piggy would have lied. Would have told him that she didn’t give a flying baby frig about Broadway and seeing her name in twinkling lights, but it was as impossible to fool Kermit as it had been to resist him.
“I—what if Moi…but what…oh, Kermit. I don’t know.”
“Guess!” said Kermit. “Take a chance.”
“But the movie…”
“The movie’s wrapped and you’ll just be sitting at home waiting for a tired and grumpy frog to come home from a long day in the studio. That’s no fun.”
Piggy slipped her hands beneath his frill. “Sometimes that’s fun,” she whispered, and Kermit smiled in spite of himself.
“Sometimes,” he acknowledged, blushing, “but not very often.” He gave her his sternest look—the one that he had used to battle pay raises and exorbitant costume costs. “Look, you can’t help me by staying home. And it’s the chance of a lifetime—the chance of a lifetime, Piggy! How often are you going to see one of those?”
Piggy wouldn’t look at him. She pressed her face into his shoulder and tried to remember what Jimmy had said about not pushing Kermit about this. “Once was enough,” she said, and Kermit knew at once that he had won the final round. He smiled and pressed a kiss into her hair, hoping he would not rue this victory.
They were silent for a moment, just standing with their arms tight around each other. It was nice, a moment they would both remember, would both touch back to time and again in the months ahead. Finally, Piggy spoke, and her voice was light, conversational.
“You can’t make me get on the plane,” she said. There was no challenge in her voice, just conviction. She knew she could win this one if she tried, but she was trying hard not to try.
Kermit sighed, and squeezed her close. His voice was equally confident. He could hold out. He could do this—for Piggy.
“Oh no,” he said. “When that plane takes off, you’re going to be on it.”
Piggy shook her head stubbornly, not looking at him, and unwilling to use tears to sway him.
“Now you listen to me,” Kermit said firmly, lifting her face so he could look into her startlingly blue eyes. “I know you think you’re doing the right thing, but if you don’t get on that plane, you’re going to regret it. Maybe not today, and maybe not tomorrow, but someday, and forever.”
Piggy looked at him, laughing at his imitation Bogart, but her eyes were full of unshed tears. “But—you need me.”
His put his hands on her shoulders and rubbed her plump arms to warm them. “Of course I do, but right now—Broadway needs you more.”
Piggy looked toward the window where planes were arriving and taking off. Her voice was very small.
“And if they don’t like me?”
“Don’t like you? Are you kidding me? They are not going to like you—they are going to love you. But first—first you have to go and show them what you can do.” He walked her to the gate, his arm firm behind her waist and then gave her a little pat to send her on her way. She stopped and looked back at him. A few tears were beginning to spill.
“The problems of two people don’t matter a hill of beans in this big ol’ world,” Kermit said, this time doing a pretty decent Bogart. Piggy began to smile.
“Stop,” she said, touching his mouth with her hand. Without warning, her mouth replaced her hand and she kissed him with every ounce of devotion she possessed. That kiss would last him for a long time, which was a good thing because it would have to.
Before Kermit could recover, Piggy was gone out the gate and onto the tarmac leading to the plane. Kermit watched until the plane taxied slowly down the runway, took to the air and disappeared from view. He put his hand on the cold glass and heaved a sigh.
“Good-bye, Piggy,” he said softly. “Here’s looking at you, kid.”
“So this is your brother, Jimmy,” Annie Sue said. She looked from one to the other thoughtfully. “You look a lot alike,” she said at last. Except for the mottling patterns on his back, Kermit and Jimmy in matching suits looked quite similar.
“I’m the better-looking one,” Jimmy said smugly, shooting Kermit a look to see if his barb had struck home.
“As long as you make a better target,” Kermit muttered, and Jimmy laughed.
“As long as they’re only shooting film,” he agreed. “So…what’s the plan. We take them on a false trail and have some big goodbye scene.” He looked at Annie Sue. “You want to fight or smooch?”
Annie Sue laughed but Kermit looked irritated. “Now look, Jimmy—!” he began, but Annie Sue was not offended.
“We could do both,” she said, giving Jimmy a look that shut him up. “Unless you’re only good at one…?” She let the question hang in the air and Jimmy gave a great belly laugh.
“Okay,” he said. “You win that round.” He turned to look at Kermit and saw his brother regarding him unhappily. “Oh. Sorry.” He looked a little abashed, but not too much. “So, what do you want us to do?”
They mapped it out. Watching them, Piggy thought that Jimmy could have easily been on the stage and screen alongside his brother. He was sharp, good-looking and funny. She was in the middle of these musing when Jimmy looked up and caught her eye.
“I’ll try to be as good a kisser as Kermit,” he said saucily, but Piggy shook her head.
“Not possible,” she said smugly, and Kermit flushed. Guiltily, Jimmy and Piggy exchanged looks. This was obviously hard for Kermit on many levels, and they weren’t helping.
“Sorry, Mon Capitan.”
“Sorry, Kerm,” Jimmy muttered. “I’ll behave.”
“I notice you don’t say how,” Annie Sue murmured, and Jimmy turned and flashed a big smile at her. The sight of it took Piggy’s breath for a moment, and Kermit stopped and looked at them assessingly. At that moment, with Jimmy looking up at Annie with open admiration and affection, the differences between the two couples were far more negligible than before. This might actually work.
“But you’ll have to keep the suit on,” Kermit cautioned, and Jimmy made a face.
“Yeah, yeah,” he muttered, pulling at his collar. “I don’t know how you do it. Clothes, ties—ick.”
“Hormel says the same thing about ties,” said Annie Sue. She touched her blonde ringlets. “And I have to wear a wig,” she added. “Nobody would ever think I was Miss Piggy with this do.”
After a few more minutes of brainstorming and scenario checking, with Piggy occasionally adding succinct touches to their “script,” there didn’t seem to be much more to say. Either it would work or it wouldn’t, and the proof would be in the pudding, or rather, in the leaving.
“So—aren’t you even going to feed us?” Jimmy complained, and Kermit sighed.
“I’ll take you out tomorrow, after,” he explained. “If we all go out tonight, we might lose the element of surprise. Tonight we’ll eat in.”
Jimmy turned and grinned at Piggy. “So, you cooking tonight, Cookie?”
Piggy was nonplussed. “I’m dialing,” she said. “Real pigs don’t cook.”
The two-color cab pulled neatly up to the curb and a trench-coated figure got out.
“Look,” said Scribbler impatiently, throwing money randomly at the cabbie while he wrestled his carryon, his ticket and his phone. “I don’t care what you want right now.” He paused to pull the phone away from his ear. “Look—shut up already,” he said firmly. There was a squawk of protest from the phone but Scribbler seemed nonplussed. “I will hang up,” he said, and there was a sudden silence. “Okay,” he said, a little more cautiously. “We’ve been doing things your way, but now we’re on my familiar turf. Yeah, yeah—I know you’ve got the money, but I’ve got the know-how and I know how this game is played. I played it for years and I still have the swing.”
The voice on the other end of the phone was listening, and thinking hard. This was not the Fleet Scribbler that had been bullied and threatened into service—there was a new confidence about him now that made him intriguing…and far less easy to manipulate. But he might have something, so…. “Look—once she’s alone and he’s not there to interfere, I know I can pick up the thread again. We were…we were tight once. Let me work on it.”
There was a grunt, which Scribbler took for acquiescence.
“Good,” the once-star reporter said. “I’ll be in touch once I’m settled. Just stay out of my way and let me work.”
There are those that would argue that Piggy never made a bad entrance in her life. Whether they are correct or not, there’s little doubt that she never made a quiet one. In the grand tradition of a thousand show-stopping, heart-stopping, argument-stopping entrances, the faux Mr. and Mrs. The Frog made an entrance grand enough to count.
They came in fighting. Annie-Sue/Piggy came flouncing into the airport in high dudgeon, throwing snarky comments over her shoulder at the obviously irritated Jimmy/Kermit, who struggled with a veritable mountain of luggage. A hatbox toppled off Mount Fashion and spilled its feathered concoction onto the polished floor. Annie-Sue/Piggy stopped, stared and glared at the mortified Jimmy/Kermit, who struggled to get the contents back into the box and the box back onto the mound of luggage.
LAX is usually so bustling that it would be hard for any single incident or passenger to draw the attention of the entire crowd, but somehow Jimmy and Annie-Sue managed to attract and hold every eye within that entire wing of the airport.
No one noticed two trench-coated figures slip into the terminal in the wake of this spectacle, walking quickly but inconspicuously toward check-in. Almost two-thirds of the check-in line had turned to watch the glamorously-clad pig and her dark-suited companion as they battled their way across the terminal to stand in another check-in line with every sign of exasperation. Once there, however, the chic blond pig became suddenly emotionally, bursting into tears and letting her frog try to comfort her with pats and kisses. At least 2047 cell phones were surreptitiously recording it all, and all of the reporter-type loafers who had been lounging about the airport for the past two days—in case they had fallen for a false trail and she decided to leave early—surged to sudden action, talking anxiously into their cell phones and waving frantically to the cameramen (and possible camerasloths) who were popping through the door with alarming speed and in alarming numbers. Airport security began to edge nervously toward the scene, sensing a potential riot.
“It’s okay,” Jimmy/Kermit said anxiously, wrapping his arms around Annie-Sue/Piggy while she sobbed noisily. “Piggy, honey, don’t cry. It’ll be okay. You’ll be wonderful! You’ll be marvelous!” He did not know what experiences Annie-Sue was drawing on for her performance, but his own was coming straight from the heart. He tried to imagine what Kermit was going to say, and say those things as lovingly and believably as possible to the distraught sow in his arms. “I’ll miss you while you’re gone and I know you’ll miss me, but this is for the best. Broadway needs you, Piggy.”
Annie-Sue/Piggy sobbed louder, and all around them people began to murmur in sympathy and encouragement. It is hard to have a private conversation in a public place, and this conversation, which was both and neither, was drawing all the attention that a scene of this magnitude could command. Jimmy/Kermit looked up quickly, seeming surprised by all of the attention, and managed to look uncomfortable and stiff when he realized they were creating a stir.
“Um, Piggy,” he murmured. “Sweetie, we’re, um, people are staring.”
“Let them!” Annie-Sue/Piggy cried. “Oh, Moi is so sad to be leaving you, Kermie!” She boo-hooed becomingly into a little lace handkerchief.
Jimmy/Kermit looked more mortified, but increased his attempts to placate her. “Um, I’m, um, sad that you’re going, too, Piggy, but we…we sort of have to get your boarding ticket now so they can load up all your luggage.” He kept his arms around her but now he was trying to steer her toward the ticket gate. All around them, people stared in astonishment and murmured excitedly. Seeing a real live movie star was no big shakes at LAX, but seeing firsthand what was bound to be on the evening news, well…that was something else.
“Oh, Kermie! I don’t want to go without you!” Annie-Sue/Piggy wailed. The crying certainly added dramatic tension to what was already a show-stopper, but it also gave Annie-Sue some coverage. Although she was wearing one of Piggy’s show wigs and the long blond waves cascading down her back looked genuine (and fabulous!), they had decided not to chance too many up-close views of Annie-Sue/Piggy’s face. Piggy’s famous profile was hard to emulate, and while a beautiful pig is still a beautiful pig, they were all anxious that the gig not be up too soon.
‘I know, Honey,” Jimmy/Kermit said, and suddenly abandoned his own discomfort at being a public spectacle in favor of easing some of his faux wife’s misery. “Here, come here.” He pulled her into his arms and kissed her. It helped that they were both wearing hats (Annie Sue’s being a cute little number that matched her jacket). It helped that they were both accomplished kissers. As a matter of fact, Jimmy was beginning to think his kissing skills just had to have improved, seeing as how he was getting so much practice…. It is possible that he lost track of things for, well, at least a second or two, but then Annie-Sue/Piggy was pulling herself together, and pulling away from him and fussing about her stacks of luggage again.
“I’ll never get all of my things to New York with me!” she cried, off on a fresh tangent. More than a few folks commented—rather loudly and rudely, Jimmy thought—that Miss Piggy seemed as concerned about leaving her luggage behind as she was about leaving her husband behind. This started a general murmur of conversation that swelled around them like a cloud of static, and made a perfect backdrop of the next phase.
“My ticket!” Annie-Sue/Piggy exclaimed. “Moi forgot her ticket!” Her satin-glove hands covered her face—more camouflage—and at least three men and one older lady nearby said, “It figures! See what he has to put up with?” Others countered hotly that she had a right to be distraught and if he really loved her he’d have reminded her about the tickets. Annie-Sue/Piggy chose just that moment to make a face at Jimmy from behind her hands that no one else could see. Jimmy almost burst out laughing.
“Oh, um, I got them, Piggy,” he began, patting his pockets in a comical fashion. “Let me just, um, find them. I put them, er, in my jacket pocket so I wouldn’t forget them….” The people on Piggy’s side of the argument—and there seemed to be no one whose opinion about the situation was entirely neutral—made “humphy” faces at the group expressing sympathy for Kermit. So there!
Several minutes were lost while Jimmy/Kermit searched desperately for the ticket, which finally made an appearance. Jimmy was glad that the ticket, at least, was real, so he could brandish it about with abandon. Thank goodness for Scooter! Jimmy’s discovery of the ticket was an excuse for Annie-Sue/Piggy to launch herself into his arms again and cover his froggy face with kisses. Jimmy/Kermit tried to remember exactly how big Kermit had said Hormel was, but it was difficult to think of anything at the moment.
Eventually, Jimmy/Kermit had been satisfactorily thanked for saving the day and they went back to worrying loudly about the luggage. Under cover of his hat, Jimmy grinned at Annie Sue. They still hadn’t used, “Omigosh! Where’s my purse!” “I forgot my cell phone charger!” and “Did you tell the airline about my special requests/Why didn’t you tell the airline about my special requests.” Jimmy hoped Kermit and Piggy were making good use of the distraction, and wondered worriedly how Kermit was doing. He knew Piggy had listened the other day—he hoped she had really heard him and wouldn’t make this any more miserable on Kermit than it had to be. He realized Annie-Sue/Piggy, becoming “suddenly aware” of the attention she was attracting, had pulled out a stack of autographed photographs and was handing them around with a mixture of boldness and coquettishness. Annie-Sue had been unwilling to actually sign photos as Piggy. “Why—they won’t want one when they know it’s just me,” she had protested, but Jimmy thought secretly that a picture of his sister-in-law was still a picture of his sister-in-law. Still, he reached over to help her, handing them out to any comers with what he hoped was the right touch of proprietary pride.
“C’mon, Piggy,” he thought fervently. “Make your getaway already!”
While Jimmy and Annie Sue led what looked like every tabloid photographer in the state of California on a merry chase, two figures stood at the gate where a plane was warming up. Once Piggy was ensconced in a first class seat, the plane—which had been held just for her—would take off. The airline had promised that Piggy would be buffered and protected at each of her two plane changes, partly for the thrill of being in on the secret escape and partly for the cargo-load of amazing swag that Marty had sent to bribe fellow flyers and employees alike into happy acquiescence.
The only thing to do now was to let go, but that wasn’t going as well as all their other plans. The The Frogs stood outside the loading gate, looking into the portal as though it held the key to the future. Though both of them held on to their determination to be brave, it was an even bet as to which one would succumb first.
Piggy looked down the tunnel, shook her head and turned to face Kermit.
“I’ve change my mind,” she said. “Moi is not going.”
“Oh yes you are,” Kermit insisted. “C’mon, Piggy--you promised—remember?” His tone was affectionate and warm, and indication that he remembered.
“Moi did no such thing,” Piggy said, but her blushing cheeks belied her words. “That didn’t count,” she mumbled. “Moi was under…duress.”
Kermit smiled and put his arm around her waist, subtly steering her back toward the archway. “Duress, huh?” he teased, but his attempt at humor back-fired.
“You—you told me it was up to me!” she accused. “Vous said the ultimate decision was up to me.”
“It was,” Kermit fired back. “You said yes.”
“But—but that was just because you and Marty ganged up on me,” she flared. “If you hadn’t….” Here, she faltered, finding it hard to accuse him of ulterior motives when she knew this decision would take such a toll on him. She rolled her eyes, fighting tears and showing sarcasm at the same time. “Why do you have to be so…selfless?”
Kermit chuckled grimly. “You’ve been watching too many vampire movies,” he accused. “I’m not being selfless—I’m being….” He caught himself before he could say stupid. “Sensible,” he finished lamely. Although at the time, Piggy had pretended to be happy and he had pretended to believe her, the days between her acceptance and her going had worn away any deception between them—through friction, if nothing else. “You know I’m right. You have to go. If you don’t, they’ll say I kept you from it—held you back.”
“But you didn’t! You wouldn’t!”
“Piggy…” Kermit’s voice was gentle, and tinged with sadness. “You know that, but other people….” He did not want to finish the thought.
Piggy made a rude noise. “What do I care about other people?!” she cried. In spite of himself, Kermit started to smile, and even Piggy’s angry and threatening look could not stem his amusement.
“These people you don’t care about—would those be the people who are going to buy your new calendar?”
“That’s not the same thing!” Piggy protested.
“Are they the ones storming the studio and drowning poor Marty in fan mail—those people you don’t care about?”
“That’s different!”
“And what about all those people who are going to line up around the block just to see your name in Broadway lights?”
Piggy started to speak, but caught her breath. “I—that’s not—I…I don’t know,” she cried, anguished. They had planned everything so carefully so they could have a decent goodbye, and now Kermit was spoiling it—or she was. She didn’t know anymore. “I…just…I don’t want to leave you.” It did not sound like enough to say, but she hoped Kermit understood.
He did.
“Honey.” Kermit closed the distance between them that her pacing had crated. “I’m not going anywhere. Broadway is calling—you answer them, and answer them nice. Don’t you think that’s part of my dream, too—to see your name up there in lights?”
“Oh, Kermit…”
If she could have, Piggy would have lied. Would have told him that she didn’t give a flying baby frig about Broadway and seeing her name in twinkling lights, but it was as impossible to fool Kermit as it had been to resist him.
“I—what if Moi…but what…oh, Kermit. I don’t know.”
“Guess!” said Kermit. “Take a chance.”
“But the movie…”
“The movie’s wrapped and you’ll just be sitting at home waiting for a tired and grumpy frog to come home from a long day in the studio. That’s no fun.”
Piggy slipped her hands beneath his frill. “Sometimes that’s fun,” she whispered, and Kermit smiled in spite of himself.
“Sometimes,” he acknowledged, blushing, “but not very often.” He gave her his sternest look—the one that he had used to battle pay raises and exorbitant costume costs. “Look, you can’t help me by staying home. And it’s the chance of a lifetime—the chance of a lifetime, Piggy! How often are you going to see one of those?”
Piggy wouldn’t look at him. She pressed her face into his shoulder and tried to remember what Jimmy had said about not pushing Kermit about this. “Once was enough,” she said, and Kermit knew at once that he had won the final round. He smiled and pressed a kiss into her hair, hoping he would not rue this victory.
They were silent for a moment, just standing with their arms tight around each other. It was nice, a moment they would both remember, would both touch back to time and again in the months ahead. Finally, Piggy spoke, and her voice was light, conversational.
“You can’t make me get on the plane,” she said. There was no challenge in her voice, just conviction. She knew she could win this one if she tried, but she was trying hard not to try.
Kermit sighed, and squeezed her close. His voice was equally confident. He could hold out. He could do this—for Piggy.
“Oh no,” he said. “When that plane takes off, you’re going to be on it.”
Piggy shook her head stubbornly, not looking at him, and unwilling to use tears to sway him.
“Now you listen to me,” Kermit said firmly, lifting her face so he could look into her startlingly blue eyes. “I know you think you’re doing the right thing, but if you don’t get on that plane, you’re going to regret it. Maybe not today, and maybe not tomorrow, but someday, and forever.”
Piggy looked at him, laughing at his imitation Bogart, but her eyes were full of unshed tears. “But—you need me.”
His put his hands on her shoulders and rubbed her plump arms to warm them. “Of course I do, but right now—Broadway needs you more.”
Piggy looked toward the window where planes were arriving and taking off. Her voice was very small.
“And if they don’t like me?”
“Don’t like you? Are you kidding me? They are not going to like you—they are going to love you. But first—first you have to go and show them what you can do.” He walked her to the gate, his arm firm behind her waist and then gave her a little pat to send her on her way. She stopped and looked back at him. A few tears were beginning to spill.
“The problems of two people don’t matter a hill of beans in this big ol’ world,” Kermit said, this time doing a pretty decent Bogart. Piggy began to smile.
“Stop,” she said, touching his mouth with her hand. Without warning, her mouth replaced her hand and she kissed him with every ounce of devotion she possessed. That kiss would last him for a long time, which was a good thing because it would have to.
Before Kermit could recover, Piggy was gone out the gate and onto the tarmac leading to the plane. Kermit watched until the plane taxied slowly down the runway, took to the air and disappeared from view. He put his hand on the cold glass and heaved a sigh.
“Good-bye, Piggy,” he said softly. “Here’s looking at you, kid.”