Ruahnna
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Chapter 107: Mad Men
Rory looked doubtfully out the window of the cab at the somewhat disreputable corner lot. In a section of town that was not at all good, this was one of the less desirable spots. The young Broadway actor hoped that they were not here to do something illegal or dangerous, and was a little alarmed when Piggy got out of the cab. She walked up to the cabbie’s window and smiled a 1000-watt smile that might have felled him where he sat if he hadn’t been driving a New York cab for the past 23 years. “I’ll pay if you’ll wait,” she said, and fluttered her eyelashes at him.
It took him a moment to recover, but he finally managed to answer. “This ain’t exactly a great neighborhood,” he said uneasily, glancing around at the vacant and hopefully vacant buildings nearby. A huge hulking building next door completely dwarfed the building on the corner lot. “I don’t know….”
Piggy made her blue eyes wide. “But vous are so big and strong, and Moi knows you have a phone, right? And you were so clever, losing anyone who might have been tailing us.” She beamed at him and fluttered her eyelashes again.
“Oy vey,” the man groaned. “Fine, fine. I’m an idiot, but I’ll wait. But I’m running the heater.” He cut his eyes at Rory uncertainly. “He gonna be able to take care of you where you’re going?” he asked gruffly. Piggy laughed her gay little laugh.
“Not to worry,” she said. “Moi will be able to take care of both of us.”
Showered and shaved, Rory had followed Piggy into a cab with no clue as to where he was going or what he was doing. But Piggy had asked for his help and he was here. He got out of the car and trotted after her as she made her way toward a scarred metal door with a big dent in it, as though something inside had been trying to get out.
“Mad Man Mooney’s Car Heaven?” Rory said, looking up at the grimy sign above the doorway. “Piggy, um, Piggy, what are we…is this place even open?” The lot was deserted, and there was no sign of any cars outside. The outside of the building was covered in graffiti. Piggy pushed a button beside the door, and an intercom-filtered voice said, “Yeah—what is it?”
“It is Moi,” Piggy said simply, and Rory’s imagination went into overdrive. Who in the name of Sam the Eagle was Piggy meeting and what sort of trouble was she—
There was a buzz, a click, and the heavy, dented door swung inward. “Mad Man Mooney says so,” said Piggy airily and pushed through the door. Rory might not have followed but she had a death grip on his wrist and was dragging him. As they entered the lobby, a dim bell clanked somewhere deep inside. Helplessly, Rory followed closely and looking nervously over his shoulder. If that cabby was still there when they re-emerged, he’d eat his, um, shorts.
“Is he, um, trustworthy?” Rory asked, omitting the obvious question, which was “What’s a ‘Mad Man Mooney’?” Even if Piggy hadn’t had a firm clasp on his arm, Rory had abandoned all plans of letting her out of his sight. He might have grown up in The Big Apple but he was in way over his head.
“Usually,” Piggy murmured, and then a tall, rangy, craggy-faced individual was coming toward them. He enfolded Piggy’s relatively petite form in a crushing bear hug that lifted her off her feet. It almost knocked the ten-gallon hat off his head, but he seemed not to mind in the least.
“As I live and breathe,” he said, putting her back down on her heels and gazing at her. “I thought I might make it to Midtown to see you grace the stage but I never dreamed you’d come all the way out here to see me.”
“Moi has a favor to ask,” Piggy said, and fluttered her long dark eyelashes. Rory tried to get his jaw off the floor. In the space of about three minutes, she’d unleashed more devastating charm on these two guys than she’d ever dared show backstage. It was a little overwhelming to watch.
“Honey, you had me at ‘It is Moi.’ How’s Kermit, the old wheeler-dealer? What’s up with the gang?”
But Piggy darted a quick look at Rory—he saw it but pretended not to—and evaded the question neatly. “Everyone is doing lovely. Can we sit down after like old friends?” She ran her satin-covered fingers up under the sleeve of his jacket—a surprisingly intimate liberty—and she glanced at his watch. “I’m afraid we are on a bit of a tight schedule today.”
“That’s right—you said so. So you don’t want the full treatment?” He sounded disappointed, and Rory gulped, wondering what “the full treatment” was.
Piggy seemed to remember he was there for the first time. She reached back without looking and grabbed his muscular forearm, pulling him around beside her.
“Mondell—this is Moi’s friend Rory. He is starring opposite Moi in Grease!”
Rory felt himself blush. She was introducing him as a friend. He hoped it was true.
“And Rory, this is Moi’s very dear friend Mondell Mooney.”
Rory felt instantly disappointed. Friend. He wondered what it would be like to be Piggy’s very dear friend. Mondell reached out and gripped his hand in a fist the approximate size of a breadbox, and shook his arm enthusiastically.
“Any friend of the The Frogs is a friend of mine. Gosh—we’ve known Kermit and Miss Piggy for a long time. They’ve done a lot a business with my Uncle.” He smiled at Rory, showing lots of square, white teeth. “So, son—you ever driven a race car before?”
Dumbfounded, Rory just stood there with no idea whatsoever what to say.
Clifford carried his luggage into the little house, the screen door banging behind him. He could just see the top of Mabel’s furry head over the top of the bag of groceries balanced on top, and tried to tread carefully lest he tromp on her heels. She was talking and he leaned forward a little to catch everything she said.
“—don’t mind sleeping on the couch. It’s plenty comfy, even for a big guy like you, but you let me know if you need anything. Here, doll—put the groceries down on the table—oh! Hi, Sweetie—you’re up awful early.”
Clifford put the brown bag down carefully on the kitchen table and started to straighten, but something seemed to be preventing it. It might have been the sudden rush of color to his cheeks. It might have been the sudden attack of speechlessness. But it was probably the fact that he was transfixed by a pair of the prettiest, greenest eyes he had ever seen.
They were housed in a sweet, pixie-ish face with a cute, turned-up nose and a little pink bow of a mouth. She might, he thought, be one of the prettiest muppets he had ever seen.
He straightened with a lurch, and tried to catch the potatoes that spilled out of the grocery bag and rolled, catawampus across the little table. “Sorry,” he stammered. “Sorry about that.” The young lady giggled and helped him while he stammered out an apology
“Don’t worry about it,” she insisted. “Mom’s probably just going to mash them anyway.”
Clifford looked from her pert face to Mabel, who was gazing at him with an expression of smug satisfaction.
“Your…mom? Mabel is your mom?”
“Yeah,” she said, and wrinkled up her nose in a way that reminded Clifford forcefully of Mabel. She held out a slim white hand. “I’m Tricia,” she said. “Mabel’s daughter.”
Transportation was proving to be a bit an issue since Piggy left. Kermit felt silly using a studio car by himself, and he didn’t want to impose on Scooter by asking for a ride. California had no genuinely practical public transportation from the suburbs, so Kermit had been driving himself. As a polite and unaggressive driver, Kermit often felt a little overwhelmed on the highways, but lately he’d been doing it almost automatically while his mind wandered over the day’s activities. They’d gotten an enormous amount of stuff done today, and Scooter had finally given him permission to leave.
In the quiet of the little roadster, Kermit grinned. Scooter had not been kidding about owning his schedule. He’d been pushing them like a muppet driven, and Kermit had more than once found himself remembering Scooter as he had come to them so many seasons ago, tentative and more than a little uncertain about his place in the mix. Uncertain was not a word that Kermit would have used to describe Scooter now. Pushy, he thought in the privacy of his own car. Exacting. Dictatorial. If he and Piggy had had a child of their own, they could hardly have imprinted more firmly on their offspring. Kermit found that he was grinning broadly, enjoying a moment of secret snarkiness. What was it about him that seemed to make people either protective or bossy?
Protective and bossy made Kermit think of Piggy and he was suddenly, achingly lonely for her. Not sad, not miserable but terribly aware of a Piggy deficit in his life. He drove in silence for a moment, thinking of her, the day they had met, the first time they had worked together, the day she had tackled him and kissed him during the Glee Club act, saving him the trouble of watching and wondering what it would be like to have those two soft lips pressed to his.
The thought of those lips pressed to his made him feel better and worse at the same time and Kermit wondered what Piggy was doing right that minute. Rehearsal would be over, and she was probably heading back to her new apartment, getting ready for a quiet evening at home. He would go home, rustle up a grub or two and then call her and let her tell him about her day.
A driver behind him laid down on the horn and Kermit started back to life, surprised to see that he’d been doing a sedate 55 mph while things whizzed around him like he was standing still.
“Sheesh,” he gulped, and put his flipper to the floor.
“Sweetie—is everything okay? You’re looking a little…um….”
“Crazed?” Scooter supplied. He looked up from his computer screen and realized he’d been sitting all hunched over. He tried to stretch, feeling brittle.
“I was going to say wired,” Sara said diplomatically. She stepped behind his stool and put her hands on his shoulders, then made a little “oh” of concern. “Scooter, honey, you’re neck feels like concrete.”
“Hmmm,” Scooter said, not disagreeing with her, but he sighed with pleasure when her strong slender hands began to knead the stiff muscles gently. “Stop this minute,” Scooter deadpanned. “No, really—I can only take about three hours of this.”
Sara laughed and turned the stool around so she could lean down and kiss him, still kneading the sore muscles of his neck and shoulders. Scooter groaned, and his hands reached out and clasped her around the waist. Sara did not protest when he pulled her closer but when he tried to pull her into his lap, she disengaged her lips and gave him a look.
“I don’t think this stool is built for two,” she said pragmatically, and Scooter pouted so comically that she laughed and ruffed his hair. “Don’t pout,” she said. “I’m pretty sure the recliner will hold both of us.” She put on a look of concern and put one finger in her mouth. “But we’ll probably have to sit really close. You don’t mind, do you, dear?”
Scooter surged to his feet, lifted her in his arms and staggered, chuckling toward the recliner. Sara laughed but did not protest, even when he dropped her rather unceremoniously into the depths of the chair and followed her in. With a great deal of giggling and gasping, they managed to wedge themselves into the chair, but only by intertwining their limbs and mashing their forms together in a rather friendly manner.
“Comfy?” asked Sara, wriggling a little tighter.
“Oh, yeah,” said Scooter, and smiled. They were so close it was no trouble to kiss. It went well, so they did it again. And one more time, this time with more energy.
“Mmmm,” said Scooter. “This is nice.”
Sara ran her left hand through his hair, admiring the way the engagement ring looked on her finger in the lamplight. “So tell me what you were making yourself into a pretzel for?”
Scooter was quiet for a moment, biting his lip. “I—Piggy’s Broadway debut is this Friday,” he said, and Sara waited, not sure what he would say.
“Right. She’s still in rehearsals this week, but Friday’s the day.”
“Yes. And Kermit’s here, and she’s there.” He paused.
“I know, honey. If things weren’t so backed up—“
“We’re ahead now,” Scooter blurted, then looked around as though afraid he’d been overheard.
“Ahead? Ahead of what?” Sara’s eyes widened in joy and surprise. “Ahead of schedule? Oh—Sweetie! You did it—didn’t you? You cleared enough time for Kermit to go to see her?”
Scooter just nodded, eyes shining.
Sara kissed him. She was good at it, and she practiced often but this one ranked right up there in the top five for sure. It took Scooter a few to come back to earth and hear what she was saying.
“—wonderful man, you! No wonder you’ve been so cranky lately—all that extra work! Oh, Sweetheart—you are the best, most dedicated personal assistant on the planet.”
Scooter blushed but his face belied his pleasure. “Really?” he asked, wanting her to say it all again.
Sara said it with kisses, drowning her fiancé with affection until he laughed and held her still so he could prolong the pressure of their mouths. They pulled away smiling and Sara touched his face.
“You are so terrific,” she murmured. “What did he say?”
But Scooter shook his head. “I didn’t tell him today,” he said. “I dropped the film off on the way home today and I didn’t want to jinx anything. I’m going to tell him tomorrow morning, when I hand him the plane ticket.”
Sara shook her head, loving this mischievous side of him. A thought occurred to her and she opened her eyes wide. “Does Kermit being gone all weekend mean that I’m going to have you all to myself all weekend?”
If smugness were an Olympic sport, Scooter would have taken the gold. “Yep,” he said, and laughed as Sara got an early start on the weekend.
“Oh! AhhhH! Eeeeeyow! Watch out for that corner!” Rory yelled. He’d long since moved past screaming like a girl and was now babbling in something like mortal terror! “Eeeesh! Watch OUT, will you, Piggy! I’ve got a mother who loves me---ahhhHH!”
Piggy shot the little car around the last hairpin curve and barreled down the chute to the entrance, decelerating skillfully so that Rory’s stomach joined them before the car came to a stop.
“There,” she said, taking off her fashionable goggles and smiling at Rory. “How was that?”
Rory was in the process of melting into a puddle in the passenger side of the car.
“Oh, sweet mercy, Piggy—are you absolutely insane?” This had been the most hair-raising ten minutes of his life.
But Piggy was getting out of the car and coming around. She opened the door and looked down at him as he gazed weakly up at her.
“Come on—haul butt, buster. We’ve only got another half hour and then I’ve got to get you back to the studio or Larry will have my hide.”
Rory tried to stand and found his shaking legs would not support him. Piggy reached down and hauled him out of the car, then put a supportive arm around his waist and walked him around to the driver’s side. She opened the door and shoved him in.
It took a moment for everything to register, and then Rory looked down at the steering wheel sitting almost in his lap.
“What? What am I supposed to—oh! Oh no! Piggy—I have never driven a car before in my life!”
Piggy looked at him, hands on hips.
“Okay—once!” he admitted. “But I was drunk.”
“You told me you had a learner’s permit.”
“I do,” he insisted. “It was just a lark—we were just going to see if we could—“
Piggy shut the door and walked around, effectively cutting off what he was saying. She climbed back in the car—on the passenger side this time—and fastened her seat belt.
“Buckle up, bucko,” she said. “It’s your turn to take me for a spin.”
“But, but, but—“
“That’s a lovely impression of a motorboat, but we don’t have time for it now. Pop the clutch, put the car in gear and drive.”
Rory opened his mouth to say something but one look at her lovely and imperious face told him would be fruitless—and possible painful.
“Yes ma’am,” he whined, and did as he was told.
“—just a quiet evening at home,” Piggy said. She crossed her fingers, fairly certain that lightning couldn’t strike her inside the apartment.
“I wish we were having a quiet evening at home,” Kermit said, ruefully remembering all the times that Piggy had said the same thing to him. “Scooter finally let me come home.”
“Then you must have been good. Are you eating some microwave atrocity?” Piggy asked. Her voice was soft, half-chiding, half-affectionate.
“Um, I stopped at Flyburgers,” Kermit admitted. “What about you? You subsisting on chocolates and muffins?” Piggy had sworn the muffin basket was as big as a house.
“Moi ordered veggie lasagna from a place around the corner.” She did not tell Kermit that she had almost been mugged on the way from. It had been no big deal, and she had not even needed to put down her purse to dispatch the two thuggish hopefuls. Now that she was here, back in the city, her city smarts were coming back. She thought with embarrassment of how easily she’d been caught off guard during their Christmas show’s run. Just let somebody try to mess with her now!
“Sounds good,” he said. “Anything exciting happen at rehearsal today?”
“At rehearsal?” Piggy paused thoughtfully. “No—nothing very exciting at rehearsal today.”
She and Rory had had quite enough excitement afterward.
“That was—that was amazing!” Rory said. His eyes were bright and dilated, and his face was flushed from excitement. “I’ve never done anything like that in my life!”
Piggy smiled at him. “You had city boy written all over you. I figured you’d never been behind the wheel of a car.”
“I’ve never been behind anything like that,” Rory enthused. “I didn’t even know they made indoor speed tracks. That was the most incredible—the most…the most…absolutely thrilling thing I’ve ever done.” He had barely topped 80 mph—way slower than Piggy—but it had been a total rush.
Piggy reached out and grabbed the front of his shirt, pulling him down so he was looking into her eyes.
“Now,” she said. “Do you get why Kenickie’s so excited about the car?”
Rory stopped gushing, and his mouth dropped open. He shook his head. “I thought it was just about getting some—“
Piggy shot him a look.
“Um, girls. I thought it was just because it was a chick magnet.”
Thinking of Camilla, Piggy almost smiled. It took way more than a fast car to impress her friend.
“Nothing wrong with attracting girls,” she said. “But—girl or no girl—a car is still a car.”
Rory’s face was full of dawning wonder. “So that’s what the big whup is That’s why they’re all hot to get the car souped up?”
“That’s what the big whup is,” Piggy agreed. “So tomorrow when I climb on your lap in our after-party scene and proceed to kiss your face off, I don’t want you to think about the kissing.
It was entirely probably that Rory blushed, although it was hard to tell since his face was already flushed. “Okay,” he mumbled. “No thinking about the kissing.”
Piggy giggled. “Okay—a little thinking about the kissing,” she said. “But I want you to think about today, and about driving that car like a maniac, with your hand on the clutch and the steering wheel in your lap and--”
“And the roar of the wheels in my head,” Rory murmured.
“Exactly. Think you can do that?”
“Yes ma’am,” Rory said, grinning. Piggy swatted him.
“Moi may be older than you and smarter than you but if you keep calling me ma’am I’m going to hurt you—do you understand?”
The desire to say “Yes, ma’am” and tempt fate was strong, but Rory resisted. Instead, he smiled, lifted her gloved hand to his lips, and kissed it.
“As you wish, Piggy.”
To Kermit, Piggy said, “Another day of the same ol’ same ol’ tomorrow, but then opening night the next day.”
They were both quiet for a moment, then spoke at the same time.
“I’m sorry you can’t come,” Piggy said. She had decided to tell him, so he would know how much she missed him.
“I’m sorry I can’t come,” Kermit said. He wanted her to know how much he wanted to be there.
“It’s okay,” Piggy said. “I understand.”
“Just—just break a leg, okay? Not literally. I mean, I know it’s just an expression and not really…um, okay? Do good. I’m proud of you.”
“I’m proud of you for doing the right thing, Kermie. For being responsible.”
Considering all of the bad things Kermit had thought recently about being responsible, it was nice to hear something positive.
“Love you, Piggy.”
“Love you, too, Mon Capitan.”
“I’ll call you tomorrow.”
“Call me tomorrow.”
“Bye.”
“Bye.”
“Bye.” Kermit closed the little phone.
If this were a movie, Kermit thought resignedly, a fairy bog-mother would arrive about now, tap her magic wand and send this lonely frog on a trip to see his best girl. But no bog-mother arrived, and Kermit refused to go out on the back patio to see if she had gotten lost and come to the back door instead. He was a sensible frog, with mostly sensible dreams, so he put himself to bed and hoped for a good tomorrow.
Posts: 849, Looks: 42,391 December 10, 2011 7:20
Rory looked doubtfully out the window of the cab at the somewhat disreputable corner lot. In a section of town that was not at all good, this was one of the less desirable spots. The young Broadway actor hoped that they were not here to do something illegal or dangerous, and was a little alarmed when Piggy got out of the cab. She walked up to the cabbie’s window and smiled a 1000-watt smile that might have felled him where he sat if he hadn’t been driving a New York cab for the past 23 years. “I’ll pay if you’ll wait,” she said, and fluttered her eyelashes at him.
It took him a moment to recover, but he finally managed to answer. “This ain’t exactly a great neighborhood,” he said uneasily, glancing around at the vacant and hopefully vacant buildings nearby. A huge hulking building next door completely dwarfed the building on the corner lot. “I don’t know….”
Piggy made her blue eyes wide. “But vous are so big and strong, and Moi knows you have a phone, right? And you were so clever, losing anyone who might have been tailing us.” She beamed at him and fluttered her eyelashes again.
“Oy vey,” the man groaned. “Fine, fine. I’m an idiot, but I’ll wait. But I’m running the heater.” He cut his eyes at Rory uncertainly. “He gonna be able to take care of you where you’re going?” he asked gruffly. Piggy laughed her gay little laugh.
“Not to worry,” she said. “Moi will be able to take care of both of us.”
Showered and shaved, Rory had followed Piggy into a cab with no clue as to where he was going or what he was doing. But Piggy had asked for his help and he was here. He got out of the car and trotted after her as she made her way toward a scarred metal door with a big dent in it, as though something inside had been trying to get out.
“Mad Man Mooney’s Car Heaven?” Rory said, looking up at the grimy sign above the doorway. “Piggy, um, Piggy, what are we…is this place even open?” The lot was deserted, and there was no sign of any cars outside. The outside of the building was covered in graffiti. Piggy pushed a button beside the door, and an intercom-filtered voice said, “Yeah—what is it?”
“It is Moi,” Piggy said simply, and Rory’s imagination went into overdrive. Who in the name of Sam the Eagle was Piggy meeting and what sort of trouble was she—
There was a buzz, a click, and the heavy, dented door swung inward. “Mad Man Mooney says so,” said Piggy airily and pushed through the door. Rory might not have followed but she had a death grip on his wrist and was dragging him. As they entered the lobby, a dim bell clanked somewhere deep inside. Helplessly, Rory followed closely and looking nervously over his shoulder. If that cabby was still there when they re-emerged, he’d eat his, um, shorts.
“Is he, um, trustworthy?” Rory asked, omitting the obvious question, which was “What’s a ‘Mad Man Mooney’?” Even if Piggy hadn’t had a firm clasp on his arm, Rory had abandoned all plans of letting her out of his sight. He might have grown up in The Big Apple but he was in way over his head.
“Usually,” Piggy murmured, and then a tall, rangy, craggy-faced individual was coming toward them. He enfolded Piggy’s relatively petite form in a crushing bear hug that lifted her off her feet. It almost knocked the ten-gallon hat off his head, but he seemed not to mind in the least.
“As I live and breathe,” he said, putting her back down on her heels and gazing at her. “I thought I might make it to Midtown to see you grace the stage but I never dreamed you’d come all the way out here to see me.”
“Moi has a favor to ask,” Piggy said, and fluttered her long dark eyelashes. Rory tried to get his jaw off the floor. In the space of about three minutes, she’d unleashed more devastating charm on these two guys than she’d ever dared show backstage. It was a little overwhelming to watch.
“Honey, you had me at ‘It is Moi.’ How’s Kermit, the old wheeler-dealer? What’s up with the gang?”
But Piggy darted a quick look at Rory—he saw it but pretended not to—and evaded the question neatly. “Everyone is doing lovely. Can we sit down after like old friends?” She ran her satin-covered fingers up under the sleeve of his jacket—a surprisingly intimate liberty—and she glanced at his watch. “I’m afraid we are on a bit of a tight schedule today.”
“That’s right—you said so. So you don’t want the full treatment?” He sounded disappointed, and Rory gulped, wondering what “the full treatment” was.
Piggy seemed to remember he was there for the first time. She reached back without looking and grabbed his muscular forearm, pulling him around beside her.
“Mondell—this is Moi’s friend Rory. He is starring opposite Moi in Grease!”
Rory felt himself blush. She was introducing him as a friend. He hoped it was true.
“And Rory, this is Moi’s very dear friend Mondell Mooney.”
Rory felt instantly disappointed. Friend. He wondered what it would be like to be Piggy’s very dear friend. Mondell reached out and gripped his hand in a fist the approximate size of a breadbox, and shook his arm enthusiastically.
“Any friend of the The Frogs is a friend of mine. Gosh—we’ve known Kermit and Miss Piggy for a long time. They’ve done a lot a business with my Uncle.” He smiled at Rory, showing lots of square, white teeth. “So, son—you ever driven a race car before?”
Dumbfounded, Rory just stood there with no idea whatsoever what to say.
Clifford carried his luggage into the little house, the screen door banging behind him. He could just see the top of Mabel’s furry head over the top of the bag of groceries balanced on top, and tried to tread carefully lest he tromp on her heels. She was talking and he leaned forward a little to catch everything she said.
“—don’t mind sleeping on the couch. It’s plenty comfy, even for a big guy like you, but you let me know if you need anything. Here, doll—put the groceries down on the table—oh! Hi, Sweetie—you’re up awful early.”
Clifford put the brown bag down carefully on the kitchen table and started to straighten, but something seemed to be preventing it. It might have been the sudden rush of color to his cheeks. It might have been the sudden attack of speechlessness. But it was probably the fact that he was transfixed by a pair of the prettiest, greenest eyes he had ever seen.
They were housed in a sweet, pixie-ish face with a cute, turned-up nose and a little pink bow of a mouth. She might, he thought, be one of the prettiest muppets he had ever seen.
He straightened with a lurch, and tried to catch the potatoes that spilled out of the grocery bag and rolled, catawampus across the little table. “Sorry,” he stammered. “Sorry about that.” The young lady giggled and helped him while he stammered out an apology
“Don’t worry about it,” she insisted. “Mom’s probably just going to mash them anyway.”
Clifford looked from her pert face to Mabel, who was gazing at him with an expression of smug satisfaction.
“Your…mom? Mabel is your mom?”
“Yeah,” she said, and wrinkled up her nose in a way that reminded Clifford forcefully of Mabel. She held out a slim white hand. “I’m Tricia,” she said. “Mabel’s daughter.”
Transportation was proving to be a bit an issue since Piggy left. Kermit felt silly using a studio car by himself, and he didn’t want to impose on Scooter by asking for a ride. California had no genuinely practical public transportation from the suburbs, so Kermit had been driving himself. As a polite and unaggressive driver, Kermit often felt a little overwhelmed on the highways, but lately he’d been doing it almost automatically while his mind wandered over the day’s activities. They’d gotten an enormous amount of stuff done today, and Scooter had finally given him permission to leave.
In the quiet of the little roadster, Kermit grinned. Scooter had not been kidding about owning his schedule. He’d been pushing them like a muppet driven, and Kermit had more than once found himself remembering Scooter as he had come to them so many seasons ago, tentative and more than a little uncertain about his place in the mix. Uncertain was not a word that Kermit would have used to describe Scooter now. Pushy, he thought in the privacy of his own car. Exacting. Dictatorial. If he and Piggy had had a child of their own, they could hardly have imprinted more firmly on their offspring. Kermit found that he was grinning broadly, enjoying a moment of secret snarkiness. What was it about him that seemed to make people either protective or bossy?
Protective and bossy made Kermit think of Piggy and he was suddenly, achingly lonely for her. Not sad, not miserable but terribly aware of a Piggy deficit in his life. He drove in silence for a moment, thinking of her, the day they had met, the first time they had worked together, the day she had tackled him and kissed him during the Glee Club act, saving him the trouble of watching and wondering what it would be like to have those two soft lips pressed to his.
The thought of those lips pressed to his made him feel better and worse at the same time and Kermit wondered what Piggy was doing right that minute. Rehearsal would be over, and she was probably heading back to her new apartment, getting ready for a quiet evening at home. He would go home, rustle up a grub or two and then call her and let her tell him about her day.
A driver behind him laid down on the horn and Kermit started back to life, surprised to see that he’d been doing a sedate 55 mph while things whizzed around him like he was standing still.
“Sheesh,” he gulped, and put his flipper to the floor.
“Sweetie—is everything okay? You’re looking a little…um….”
“Crazed?” Scooter supplied. He looked up from his computer screen and realized he’d been sitting all hunched over. He tried to stretch, feeling brittle.
“I was going to say wired,” Sara said diplomatically. She stepped behind his stool and put her hands on his shoulders, then made a little “oh” of concern. “Scooter, honey, you’re neck feels like concrete.”
“Hmmm,” Scooter said, not disagreeing with her, but he sighed with pleasure when her strong slender hands began to knead the stiff muscles gently. “Stop this minute,” Scooter deadpanned. “No, really—I can only take about three hours of this.”
Sara laughed and turned the stool around so she could lean down and kiss him, still kneading the sore muscles of his neck and shoulders. Scooter groaned, and his hands reached out and clasped her around the waist. Sara did not protest when he pulled her closer but when he tried to pull her into his lap, she disengaged her lips and gave him a look.
“I don’t think this stool is built for two,” she said pragmatically, and Scooter pouted so comically that she laughed and ruffed his hair. “Don’t pout,” she said. “I’m pretty sure the recliner will hold both of us.” She put on a look of concern and put one finger in her mouth. “But we’ll probably have to sit really close. You don’t mind, do you, dear?”
Scooter surged to his feet, lifted her in his arms and staggered, chuckling toward the recliner. Sara laughed but did not protest, even when he dropped her rather unceremoniously into the depths of the chair and followed her in. With a great deal of giggling and gasping, they managed to wedge themselves into the chair, but only by intertwining their limbs and mashing their forms together in a rather friendly manner.
“Comfy?” asked Sara, wriggling a little tighter.
“Oh, yeah,” said Scooter, and smiled. They were so close it was no trouble to kiss. It went well, so they did it again. And one more time, this time with more energy.
“Mmmm,” said Scooter. “This is nice.”
Sara ran her left hand through his hair, admiring the way the engagement ring looked on her finger in the lamplight. “So tell me what you were making yourself into a pretzel for?”
Scooter was quiet for a moment, biting his lip. “I—Piggy’s Broadway debut is this Friday,” he said, and Sara waited, not sure what he would say.
“Right. She’s still in rehearsals this week, but Friday’s the day.”
“Yes. And Kermit’s here, and she’s there.” He paused.
“I know, honey. If things weren’t so backed up—“
“We’re ahead now,” Scooter blurted, then looked around as though afraid he’d been overheard.
“Ahead? Ahead of what?” Sara’s eyes widened in joy and surprise. “Ahead of schedule? Oh—Sweetie! You did it—didn’t you? You cleared enough time for Kermit to go to see her?”
Scooter just nodded, eyes shining.
Sara kissed him. She was good at it, and she practiced often but this one ranked right up there in the top five for sure. It took Scooter a few to come back to earth and hear what she was saying.
“—wonderful man, you! No wonder you’ve been so cranky lately—all that extra work! Oh, Sweetheart—you are the best, most dedicated personal assistant on the planet.”
Scooter blushed but his face belied his pleasure. “Really?” he asked, wanting her to say it all again.
Sara said it with kisses, drowning her fiancé with affection until he laughed and held her still so he could prolong the pressure of their mouths. They pulled away smiling and Sara touched his face.
“You are so terrific,” she murmured. “What did he say?”
But Scooter shook his head. “I didn’t tell him today,” he said. “I dropped the film off on the way home today and I didn’t want to jinx anything. I’m going to tell him tomorrow morning, when I hand him the plane ticket.”
Sara shook her head, loving this mischievous side of him. A thought occurred to her and she opened her eyes wide. “Does Kermit being gone all weekend mean that I’m going to have you all to myself all weekend?”
If smugness were an Olympic sport, Scooter would have taken the gold. “Yep,” he said, and laughed as Sara got an early start on the weekend.
“Oh! AhhhH! Eeeeeyow! Watch out for that corner!” Rory yelled. He’d long since moved past screaming like a girl and was now babbling in something like mortal terror! “Eeeesh! Watch OUT, will you, Piggy! I’ve got a mother who loves me---ahhhHH!”
Piggy shot the little car around the last hairpin curve and barreled down the chute to the entrance, decelerating skillfully so that Rory’s stomach joined them before the car came to a stop.
“There,” she said, taking off her fashionable goggles and smiling at Rory. “How was that?”
Rory was in the process of melting into a puddle in the passenger side of the car.
“Oh, sweet mercy, Piggy—are you absolutely insane?” This had been the most hair-raising ten minutes of his life.
But Piggy was getting out of the car and coming around. She opened the door and looked down at him as he gazed weakly up at her.
“Come on—haul butt, buster. We’ve only got another half hour and then I’ve got to get you back to the studio or Larry will have my hide.”
Rory tried to stand and found his shaking legs would not support him. Piggy reached down and hauled him out of the car, then put a supportive arm around his waist and walked him around to the driver’s side. She opened the door and shoved him in.
It took a moment for everything to register, and then Rory looked down at the steering wheel sitting almost in his lap.
“What? What am I supposed to—oh! Oh no! Piggy—I have never driven a car before in my life!”
Piggy looked at him, hands on hips.
“Okay—once!” he admitted. “But I was drunk.”
“You told me you had a learner’s permit.”
“I do,” he insisted. “It was just a lark—we were just going to see if we could—“
Piggy shut the door and walked around, effectively cutting off what he was saying. She climbed back in the car—on the passenger side this time—and fastened her seat belt.
“Buckle up, bucko,” she said. “It’s your turn to take me for a spin.”
“But, but, but—“
“That’s a lovely impression of a motorboat, but we don’t have time for it now. Pop the clutch, put the car in gear and drive.”
Rory opened his mouth to say something but one look at her lovely and imperious face told him would be fruitless—and possible painful.
“Yes ma’am,” he whined, and did as he was told.
“—just a quiet evening at home,” Piggy said. She crossed her fingers, fairly certain that lightning couldn’t strike her inside the apartment.
“I wish we were having a quiet evening at home,” Kermit said, ruefully remembering all the times that Piggy had said the same thing to him. “Scooter finally let me come home.”
“Then you must have been good. Are you eating some microwave atrocity?” Piggy asked. Her voice was soft, half-chiding, half-affectionate.
“Um, I stopped at Flyburgers,” Kermit admitted. “What about you? You subsisting on chocolates and muffins?” Piggy had sworn the muffin basket was as big as a house.
“Moi ordered veggie lasagna from a place around the corner.” She did not tell Kermit that she had almost been mugged on the way from. It had been no big deal, and she had not even needed to put down her purse to dispatch the two thuggish hopefuls. Now that she was here, back in the city, her city smarts were coming back. She thought with embarrassment of how easily she’d been caught off guard during their Christmas show’s run. Just let somebody try to mess with her now!
“Sounds good,” he said. “Anything exciting happen at rehearsal today?”
“At rehearsal?” Piggy paused thoughtfully. “No—nothing very exciting at rehearsal today.”
She and Rory had had quite enough excitement afterward.
“That was—that was amazing!” Rory said. His eyes were bright and dilated, and his face was flushed from excitement. “I’ve never done anything like that in my life!”
Piggy smiled at him. “You had city boy written all over you. I figured you’d never been behind the wheel of a car.”
“I’ve never been behind anything like that,” Rory enthused. “I didn’t even know they made indoor speed tracks. That was the most incredible—the most…the most…absolutely thrilling thing I’ve ever done.” He had barely topped 80 mph—way slower than Piggy—but it had been a total rush.
Piggy reached out and grabbed the front of his shirt, pulling him down so he was looking into her eyes.
“Now,” she said. “Do you get why Kenickie’s so excited about the car?”
Rory stopped gushing, and his mouth dropped open. He shook his head. “I thought it was just about getting some—“
Piggy shot him a look.
“Um, girls. I thought it was just because it was a chick magnet.”
Thinking of Camilla, Piggy almost smiled. It took way more than a fast car to impress her friend.
“Nothing wrong with attracting girls,” she said. “But—girl or no girl—a car is still a car.”
Rory’s face was full of dawning wonder. “So that’s what the big whup is That’s why they’re all hot to get the car souped up?”
“That’s what the big whup is,” Piggy agreed. “So tomorrow when I climb on your lap in our after-party scene and proceed to kiss your face off, I don’t want you to think about the kissing.
It was entirely probably that Rory blushed, although it was hard to tell since his face was already flushed. “Okay,” he mumbled. “No thinking about the kissing.”
Piggy giggled. “Okay—a little thinking about the kissing,” she said. “But I want you to think about today, and about driving that car like a maniac, with your hand on the clutch and the steering wheel in your lap and--”
“And the roar of the wheels in my head,” Rory murmured.
“Exactly. Think you can do that?”
“Yes ma’am,” Rory said, grinning. Piggy swatted him.
“Moi may be older than you and smarter than you but if you keep calling me ma’am I’m going to hurt you—do you understand?”
The desire to say “Yes, ma’am” and tempt fate was strong, but Rory resisted. Instead, he smiled, lifted her gloved hand to his lips, and kissed it.
“As you wish, Piggy.”
To Kermit, Piggy said, “Another day of the same ol’ same ol’ tomorrow, but then opening night the next day.”
They were both quiet for a moment, then spoke at the same time.
“I’m sorry you can’t come,” Piggy said. She had decided to tell him, so he would know how much she missed him.
“I’m sorry I can’t come,” Kermit said. He wanted her to know how much he wanted to be there.
“It’s okay,” Piggy said. “I understand.”
“Just—just break a leg, okay? Not literally. I mean, I know it’s just an expression and not really…um, okay? Do good. I’m proud of you.”
“I’m proud of you for doing the right thing, Kermie. For being responsible.”
Considering all of the bad things Kermit had thought recently about being responsible, it was nice to hear something positive.
“Love you, Piggy.”
“Love you, too, Mon Capitan.”
“I’ll call you tomorrow.”
“Call me tomorrow.”
“Bye.”
“Bye.”
“Bye.” Kermit closed the little phone.
If this were a movie, Kermit thought resignedly, a fairy bog-mother would arrive about now, tap her magic wand and send this lonely frog on a trip to see his best girl. But no bog-mother arrived, and Kermit refused to go out on the back patio to see if she had gotten lost and come to the back door instead. He was a sensible frog, with mostly sensible dreams, so he put himself to bed and hoped for a good tomorrow.
Posts: 849, Looks: 42,391 December 10, 2011 7:20