newsmanfan
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Part 32
They’d managed to avoid being ticketed somehow, even after Animal ate the highway patrolman’s ticket book; Kermit took cell phone photos of all of them with the cop and Piggy flirted a bit with him while she posted the pics to Facebook. Thank goodness he’s a fan, Kermit thought, waving goodbye with everyone else as the cop sped off on his motorcycle. Animal was scolded for trying to catch cars, and the Electric Mayhem broke into a spirited rendition of “Hold On (I’m Comin’)” as the bus pulled back onto the New Jersey Turnpike. Piggy gave her frog’s flipper a squeeze, and he sighed and leaned back in the stuffing-deprived seat.
“Feels kinda good to be on the road again, huh?” Scooter asked Kermit, checking all his mirrors. As cranky as this old bus was, he found he’d missed driving it.
“Yeah,” Kermit agreed, nodding. “I wish the circumstances were different. How far to Pittsburgh?”
“Oh, another…five or six hours, maybe…”
“Great,” Kermit sighed. There was no way he could even nap with the band playing so loud. Sitting there holding Piggy’s hand, he thought about what Rhonda had explained to him as they disembarked an hour ago: how the simple fact of the Newsman’s being involved with Gina apparently wreaked havoc on his own odd tendency to attract accidents, and the damage he’d unwittingly caused was only due to some energy he had being influenced by someone else with similar energy…or something like that. Rhonda had promised him Honeydew could explain it more clearly, which Kermit doubted, but he understood the gist of it. Feeling sad and a little guilty still, he gazed out the dark window at the lights of towns skating by. Piggy gave his hand another squeeze.
“What is it, Kermie? You look a little down,” she murmured to him.
Kermit sighed. “Well, I was just thinking…”
“Mm-hmm; what about?”
“About the Newsman and Gina,” Kermit said. He pulled his fingers away to gesture out the window. “He’s somewhere up ahead of us right now on a train, probably lonely and depressed, and convinced he has to run away to protect Gina! I mean, just imagine…I’m pretty sure this is the first time he’s ever been in love – she’s definitely the first girl who’s ever been fascinated with him – and he believes he has to stay away from her! I can’t even imagine how awful he must feel right now.” Kermit swallowed, shaking his head. “I mean…I know how I’d feel, if something awful had happened to you, Piggy, and I thought I’d caused it! I’d hate to be…” He looked at Piggy. Her eyes were closed. She was humming faintly. “Piggy?”
“Hmmm?” Innocent blue eyes opened for him. She removed one of the earbuds of her iPig mup3 player. “I’m sorry, Kermie, did you say something?”
Kermit scowled, shaking his head. “Never mind!”
In the rear of the bus, Rhonda tried to use a couple of instrument cases to dampen the noise. “Marty? Marty, can ya hear me?” she squeaked into her cell phone. “Okay, listen: I have an exclusive on the Muppet Theatre catastrophe and the Sosilly Theatre accident! I know the guy who caused ‘em both! Yeah, turns out it wasn’t even his fault; it’s a long story and a really juicy one, lots of sex and discrimination… Yeah, I’m going to pick him up right now, but it may be a while. We’re trying to catch him in Pittsburgh.” She paused, listening as her editor gabbled at her with his usual about-to-go-to-press-on-the-morning-edition panic. “Well I don’t know why Pittsburgh! I’ll ask him when we get there. Yeah. Yeah, I’ll phone in the story. The guy’s girlfriend is in the not-too-badly-hurt people’s ward at St Pancreas, and we’ll be bringing him back to her for the big tearful reunion soon as we can. Oh, and, uh…I’ll be needing per diem on this one. What? Well I don’t care what Rupert says! This is too good to miss, so you tell him the rat gets travel expenses, at least! Okay. Later.” Hanging up, she settled into an empty guitar case in satisfaction. This was shaping up great! Newsie reunited with Gina; the dangerous energy stuff cancelled out through the wonder of modern science; and a lovely human-interest story to boost her out of the freelance-reviewer pay level to boot!
“Back in the game,” she sighed happily, then yelled up at the musicians, “Hey! Anybody got any Cheez Doodlies?”
Gina sat at her Grandmama Angie’s kitchen table, dutifully drinking her rosehip tea. Her grandmother watched her with a sharp eye but a faint smile, so Gina knew she wasn’t in as much trouble as she’d thought. When she finished the tea, her grandmother nodded. “All right, now; let me see the leaves,” she directed.
As she’d been taught, Gina put her saucer over the china cup and quickly flipped them over together, waited a couple of seconds, then lifted the cup away. She sat quietly, watching Grandmama Angie’s face, as the old woman leaned over the table, peering through her tiny spectacles at the damp tea leaves and rosehip pieces spattered on the saucer. “Ohhhh…I see! Well now! Angelina, you have been very naughty! Oho ho ho!” the old woman chuckled.
Gina blushed. “Grandmama, I’m not six anymore. I don’t go by that name now.”
The old woman abruptly turned a scowl on her granddaughter. “What? So now my name isn’t good enough for you? The name my own grandmother gave to me, back in the old country?”
“Grandmama…” Gina groaned, pushing her hair back and rolling her eyes. They’d had this exact discussion so many times.
“Hmf! I see, I see how it is with you these days. Hanging around with those ugly boys with the tattoos and the earrings!”
“Grandmama…you told me Gandpappa had earrings and tattoos.”
“What?” The old woman’s gaze turned sharply to Gina, then slowly softened. She nodded. “Yes…yes he did. But that’s different. He was of the people.”
“Grandmama…I know this is a visit. I know I’m dreaming. What did you need to tell me?” Gina waited, both arms resting on the table. The kitchen was as her grandmother had left it, years back: it had far more herbs hanging in it, and the walls were plastered white, not golden. Still, it was nice to see the crusty old Gypsy again, and Gina’s patience returned. She sat and studied her grandmother’s round, worn face beneath her shawl, watched as wrinkled hands carefully touched the edges of the tea leaves on the saucer.
The old woman sighed. “You know how to read these.”
Gina nodded, but looked at her grandmother, not at the saucer. “Rosehip tea is for love fortunes.”
“Oh, so you do remember some of what I taught you! I wonder sometimes, what with you running around in jeans with tools like some kind of gadji mechanic!”
Gina sighed, slumping in her chair. “Grandmama…”
“Fine, fine, I’m dead, it’s not for me to judge, right?” The old woman stopped the scolding, looking at her granddaughter soberly. She sighed deeply. “Does he make you happy?”
“Yes he does. Very much.”
“You know he’s older than you. I’d be a poor matchmaker if I didn’t warn you how—“
“I know that! It doesn’t matter!” Gina tried to suppress a sudden grin. “He certainly doesn’t look that much older…or act older…”
“Angelina!”
“Sorry…” Gina looked up apologetically. Her grandmother tried, but couldn’t keep a smile from her own lips. After a moment, both women started snickering and snorting. The old woman burst into loud laughter, and then they were both smacking the tabletop with their hands, laughing so hard they had tears forming.
Gina wiped her eyes, looking sadly across at the tiny little woman, wondering again how she herself had ever grown from such a small-statured family tree. “Grandmama…I’ve missed you,” she said quietly.
Her grandmother smiled, and touched her hand. Gina wrapped her fingers around the old woman’s. Grandmama Angie sighed. “You really want to be involved with a Muppet? You know how easily duped they are, right? Who’s to say some gadji blonde won’t turn his head and leave you alone and penniless?”
“Grandmama…I have my own income! And no. He won’t do that. He’s not like that.”
The old woman sighed, shaking her head. “No, no, you’re right…the boring ones don’t go astray. Still, this whole business with his soul and yours being in conflict…I don’t like it.”
“The scientists said it was because our souls were so much alike,” Gina argued.
“Scientists! Pah! What do they know?” Grandmama Angie shook an angry little finger at the necklace around Gina’s neck; it appeared now to be a wreath of roses. “You know what that foolish necklace they built is doing? Right now, is doing!”
Gina set her jaw. “I know it’s going to keep him safe.”
Grandmother and granddaughter glared at one another. Finally the old woman looked away, sighing. “My little fire…you’ve grown so much. I just…I only want for you to be happy. This is to be the last time we talk. This is to be your last knowing dream.”
“What? Why?” Gina was startled. This same old woman had taught her how to listen to her dreams, how to recall them and use them; it had never occurred to her she might one day lose the gift.
Grandmama Angie gestured angrily at the necklace. “Because of that! That thing is like a wall between you and your gift, little fire! You will become like…like a tiny coal too small to even light a cone of incense! You will be…like them. The gadjo. Blind to this world, seeing only what your eyes can see.” She stared seriously at Gina. “You won’t be able to see what’s coming at him.”
Frightened, Gina touched the roses. Not be able to help Newsie? “But…but they said it would stop the bad things! They said it would make him able to be with me without causing more accidents!”
The old Gypsy nodded. “They’re right about that one. He’ll be what he always was, and you’ll be…without the gift. Like your stupid cousin Ada, hah! Talk about unlucky! Oh, I warned your Aunt Majel it was a bad idea marrying that dry cleaner from Des Moines!”
“And…and what about his heart?” Gina asked softly, daring a glance at the tea leaves.
Grandmama Angie sighed. Then she smiled sadly, and put a hand on Gina’s arm. “He has a good heart. You’ve given him back that. When I met him, he’d forgot what it even was! Pah! Too caught up in being boring and stupid with his all-so-important news things!”
“Wait…what?” Gina stared at her grandmother, wideyed. “When did you—“
“I have to leave now,” her grandmother said. She reached up to give Gina a hug, and kissed her forehead. “You have a wonderful, bright, amazing life, my little fire. Know this: I am so, so proud of you.” She smiled, her eyes light with tears. “Hah! Look at that. You make the old turnip cry, eh?”
“Wait – what about the leaves?” Gina cried, looking worriedly from her fading, ethereal-seeming grandmother to the fading tea leaves and fading cup and fading table.
“Little fire…my Gina…you already know what they say.”
Gina gulped back a sob. “I…I love you, Grandmama Angie. I always will.”
“And I love you, Angelina.” Everything began to swirl, and Gina knew she was about to wake up. Suddenly her grandmother’s fierce voice cut through the haze one last time: “Oh, and tell them to look for him where the marsh is ****** up at the creek. He’s not going to Pittsburgh.” Gina heard a faint snort. “Who’d ever want to go to Pittsburgh?...”
Gina inhaled deeply, opened her eyes, and stared up at the soft beige ceiling of the hospital room. Her heart monitor beeped quietly, steadily. She blinked away her tears, and murmured, “Goodbye, Grandmama.”
“Gina? You okay?” a scratchy voice asked, and a furry hand touched her own. Gina turned her head slowly, mindful of all the injuries, and saw Gonzo gazing worriedly at her, perched in one of the uncomfortable chairs, a magazine abandoned by his side. Camilla snored softly, perched on the back of his chair.
“I’m okay, Gonzo, thanks.” She sighed. “Just a…just a dream.”
“Oh. Yeah. I have some bad ones too sometimes. There’s this one about Carl Sagan and a baloney sandwich…”
“What makes you think it was a bad dream?”
“You were crying,” Gonzo said, bewildered.
Gina shook her head gently. “No. Not bad. A little sad, but not bad.” She peered around the room; Beaker and Pepe had fallen asleep in the other chair, and the TV was tuned to some sort of old game show with a wide-smiling man and a bunch of sheep, pigs, and cows with the sound off. Honeydew had crashed on the unoccupied bed, and Rizzo was scarfing down a Jello cup with an old Small Mammal Illustrated Swimsuit Edition propped open against the scientist’s feet on the end of the bed. Gina tried to stretch, feeling more alert than she had in hours. “What time is it?”
Gonzo checked his cell phone. “Uh, almost four-thirty.”
Gina nodded. “Can I borrow your phone?”
“Sure…”
“Does it have Kermit’s number?”
“Oh, yeah. It’s that one there.”
Gina grinned. “The one labeled Being Green?”
“Yeah. Seemed easier to remember that way.”
Gina hit call, and waited for Kermit to pick up.
Kermit hung up, and leaned forward to tap Scooter’s shoulder. “Uh? Whuh? I’m awake!” Scooter yelled, the bus swerving as he jerked upright.
“Ack! Scooter!”
“Oh…sorry, chief. What’s up?”
“Do we have a road map?”
“Uh…sure.” Scooter handed the map over his shoulder. “Why?”
“That was Gina. She said the Newsman isn’t going to make it to Pittsburgh.”
“Oh…well, that’s good! I’m not sure the bus is, either!”
“Like, are we there yet? I rully need a break,” Janice called up.
“Yeah, man! How far can that guy run, anyway?” Floyd complained.
Kermit sighed. “Scooter, take this next exit and look for someplace with a bathroom, okay?”
“On it, boss!”
Kermit settled back in his seat, opening the map out. Piggy looked at it, then at him. “Um…what’s going on?”
Kermit shook his head, studying the map. “Gina said she had some kind of a…a dream, and she believes the Newsman didn’t stay on the train. She said to look for him where the marsh is ****** by the creek.” He met Piggy’s raised eyebrows with a shrug. “It didn’t make much sense. That’s all she knows, she said.”
“Uh, are we stopping? ‘Cause I think your drummer is about to start eating someone else’s seat,” Rhonda pointed out. Kermit looked to the back of the bus. Animal was chewing a chunk of old foam from his seat, which looked hardly anything like a seat anymore.
Kermit shuddered. “Eeesh! Yes, we’re stopping.” As he spoke, Scooter eased the ungainly bus off the highway and down an exit ramp. They’d left Philly behind a short time ago, and the lights of houses had become farther apart. He hoped they could find something out here, and wished he’d had the foresight to call for a pit stop farther back.
“Good,” Rhonda sighed, yawning. She noticed the map, and Kermit’s intense study of it. “What’re you looking for?”
“Some kind of marsh, or dam, or creek…I’m really not sure,” Kermit sighed.
Rhonda pointed ahead out the windshield. “Like that?”
They all looked up as a sign loomed overhead: MARSH CREEK STATE PARK, 5 MILES.
Kermit nodded. “That could do it!”
Crickets chirped, and unseen things rustled the grass. Darting fearful, blurry glances in every direction, the Newsman stumbled along the dirt path. He was rapidly regretting his decision to head away from the lights of a small town. Whatever Scott had given him had worn off, and he’d been rudely awakened by rough hands grabbing him by one arm and one leg and throwing him out of the kitchen of the diner car when the train slowed for a curve in the tracks. He hadn’t even had the chance to point out he was technically luggage, not a stowaway; he reflected now that maybe climbing up into the kitchen from the storage bin had been his mistake. But it had been so cold…
Shivering now, rebuttoning his sports coat to try to retain some little body heat, he walked slowly along, with no idea where he was heading, no idea how far from Pittsburgh he might yet be; no idea how long he’d napped, curled into as small a space as he could manage in the warm kitchen, before he’d been discovered. He couldn’t see much, with his glasses missing and the trees looming overhead. He really should at least have stopped at that gas station (at least, it had smelled like a gas station) and asked directions. Being lost and alone had been one of his worst fears since he was a child, ever since he’d been separated from his third-grade class trip in the museum (and mean Randy Higgins had run off with his glasses, laughing cruelly). Gulping, Newsie squinted into the surrounding darkness. Tree branches swayed overhead. Something hooted at him! He whirled, glaring, but the joker kept right on with his odd laugh: “Hoo…hoohoo! Hoohoo!”
Even lost in the wilderness, people laughed at him. Great.
Something sparkled up ahead. Thinking it might be a building, or some other sign of civilization, Newsie sped his pace up, trying not to trip on the rough footpath. The trees closed in, making him even more nervous. Suddenly he was right on top of the sparkling thing! Startled, he fell backwards, and sat there shaking, unmoving, for some time before he realized nothing else stirred. He reached forward and cautiously touched the sparkling thing. It was a road. The kind of road with shiny mica in the asphalt. Relaxing slightly, he blew out a breath he didn’t realize he’d been holding, and got to his feet. Looking up, he saw a bright moon slowly going down. Its light danced over the road. Relieved, Newsie decided to follow the pavement. There must be some sort of civilized place ahead, right? He’d find someone, and ask where he was, and…and…
He had no idea what to do after that. He couldn’t go home. Swallowing hard, he forced his feet into motion, his body still aching from the tragedy earlier that night. Had he not been a Muppet, he surely would’ve been laid up in a hospital bed…just like… No. No! He shouldn’t even think of her. She’d be better off without him around. She’d be safer. Nodding to himself, he walked along the road, barely able to discern something else sparkling ahead. Unlike the road, this appeared to be moving. He could smell green things, and plants decaying, and fish…water? He swallowed dryly. If he could find any that was safe to drink, he’d certainly like to wet his throat.
After a few minutes’ walk, during which he looked around constantly, never quite able to see what it was rustling through the underbrush on either side of the road, he saw a broad expanse of moving, shifting water ahead. The road seemed to come right down alongside it. He saw larger shapes stacked near the water’s edge, and then thought he noticed movement among the shapes. Stopping, he squinted ahead, unable to see anything but blurry forms. The larger things might be tables, or boats, or stacks of sandbags. As he tried to figure them out without coming closer, something smaller definitely shifted, moving away from the stacks…moving closer to him? “H-hello?” Newsie called out. His voice sounded very, very alone in the quiet night.
The thing paused, then hopped closer. It seemed to have…horns! Frightened, the Newsman backed away. Monsters! Monsters, out here in the country! All the stories he’d heard were true! The thing waggled its horns at him, then hopped closer again. With a yelp of fright, the Newsman turned and pelted down the road. As he headed into the darker part among the trees, unable to find the entrance to the dirt path again in the night, enormous yellow eyes suddenly came around a bend at him, and something huge roared and belched. “Aaaaah!” Newsie cried, nearly tripping as he tried to reverse. He ran back toward the water, sure the other monster was awaiting him still, but hoping it would also be spooked by the giant creature now hot on his rear. The glowing eyes blinked at him as the monster snarled over a bump, and now he could hear voices! Oh, no – those must be the screams of all its prior victims, trapped in its belly! It was huge! It would eat him! It would –
“A-HAH!” a tall reddish thing growled, jumping in front of him. With a shriek, Newsie’s feet locked in fright, and he pinwheeled frantically before keeling over. He didn’t even have time to experience the pain of his head hitting the asphalt before the skinny-legged reddish thing was bending over him – its hand reaching for him – its brow going up to reveal large staring eyes – its wide mouth gaping –
“TAG! You’re it,” the thing said, tapping his shoulder. “Hah hah hah hah!”
The drummer? His mind choked, recognizing the furry face and wide grin. Then the head injury caught up to the rest of him, and Newsie passed out.
They’d managed to avoid being ticketed somehow, even after Animal ate the highway patrolman’s ticket book; Kermit took cell phone photos of all of them with the cop and Piggy flirted a bit with him while she posted the pics to Facebook. Thank goodness he’s a fan, Kermit thought, waving goodbye with everyone else as the cop sped off on his motorcycle. Animal was scolded for trying to catch cars, and the Electric Mayhem broke into a spirited rendition of “Hold On (I’m Comin’)” as the bus pulled back onto the New Jersey Turnpike. Piggy gave her frog’s flipper a squeeze, and he sighed and leaned back in the stuffing-deprived seat.
“Feels kinda good to be on the road again, huh?” Scooter asked Kermit, checking all his mirrors. As cranky as this old bus was, he found he’d missed driving it.
“Yeah,” Kermit agreed, nodding. “I wish the circumstances were different. How far to Pittsburgh?”
“Oh, another…five or six hours, maybe…”
“Great,” Kermit sighed. There was no way he could even nap with the band playing so loud. Sitting there holding Piggy’s hand, he thought about what Rhonda had explained to him as they disembarked an hour ago: how the simple fact of the Newsman’s being involved with Gina apparently wreaked havoc on his own odd tendency to attract accidents, and the damage he’d unwittingly caused was only due to some energy he had being influenced by someone else with similar energy…or something like that. Rhonda had promised him Honeydew could explain it more clearly, which Kermit doubted, but he understood the gist of it. Feeling sad and a little guilty still, he gazed out the dark window at the lights of towns skating by. Piggy gave his hand another squeeze.
“What is it, Kermie? You look a little down,” she murmured to him.
Kermit sighed. “Well, I was just thinking…”
“Mm-hmm; what about?”
“About the Newsman and Gina,” Kermit said. He pulled his fingers away to gesture out the window. “He’s somewhere up ahead of us right now on a train, probably lonely and depressed, and convinced he has to run away to protect Gina! I mean, just imagine…I’m pretty sure this is the first time he’s ever been in love – she’s definitely the first girl who’s ever been fascinated with him – and he believes he has to stay away from her! I can’t even imagine how awful he must feel right now.” Kermit swallowed, shaking his head. “I mean…I know how I’d feel, if something awful had happened to you, Piggy, and I thought I’d caused it! I’d hate to be…” He looked at Piggy. Her eyes were closed. She was humming faintly. “Piggy?”
“Hmmm?” Innocent blue eyes opened for him. She removed one of the earbuds of her iPig mup3 player. “I’m sorry, Kermie, did you say something?”
Kermit scowled, shaking his head. “Never mind!”
In the rear of the bus, Rhonda tried to use a couple of instrument cases to dampen the noise. “Marty? Marty, can ya hear me?” she squeaked into her cell phone. “Okay, listen: I have an exclusive on the Muppet Theatre catastrophe and the Sosilly Theatre accident! I know the guy who caused ‘em both! Yeah, turns out it wasn’t even his fault; it’s a long story and a really juicy one, lots of sex and discrimination… Yeah, I’m going to pick him up right now, but it may be a while. We’re trying to catch him in Pittsburgh.” She paused, listening as her editor gabbled at her with his usual about-to-go-to-press-on-the-morning-edition panic. “Well I don’t know why Pittsburgh! I’ll ask him when we get there. Yeah. Yeah, I’ll phone in the story. The guy’s girlfriend is in the not-too-badly-hurt people’s ward at St Pancreas, and we’ll be bringing him back to her for the big tearful reunion soon as we can. Oh, and, uh…I’ll be needing per diem on this one. What? Well I don’t care what Rupert says! This is too good to miss, so you tell him the rat gets travel expenses, at least! Okay. Later.” Hanging up, she settled into an empty guitar case in satisfaction. This was shaping up great! Newsie reunited with Gina; the dangerous energy stuff cancelled out through the wonder of modern science; and a lovely human-interest story to boost her out of the freelance-reviewer pay level to boot!
“Back in the game,” she sighed happily, then yelled up at the musicians, “Hey! Anybody got any Cheez Doodlies?”
Gina sat at her Grandmama Angie’s kitchen table, dutifully drinking her rosehip tea. Her grandmother watched her with a sharp eye but a faint smile, so Gina knew she wasn’t in as much trouble as she’d thought. When she finished the tea, her grandmother nodded. “All right, now; let me see the leaves,” she directed.
As she’d been taught, Gina put her saucer over the china cup and quickly flipped them over together, waited a couple of seconds, then lifted the cup away. She sat quietly, watching Grandmama Angie’s face, as the old woman leaned over the table, peering through her tiny spectacles at the damp tea leaves and rosehip pieces spattered on the saucer. “Ohhhh…I see! Well now! Angelina, you have been very naughty! Oho ho ho!” the old woman chuckled.
Gina blushed. “Grandmama, I’m not six anymore. I don’t go by that name now.”
The old woman abruptly turned a scowl on her granddaughter. “What? So now my name isn’t good enough for you? The name my own grandmother gave to me, back in the old country?”
“Grandmama…” Gina groaned, pushing her hair back and rolling her eyes. They’d had this exact discussion so many times.
“Hmf! I see, I see how it is with you these days. Hanging around with those ugly boys with the tattoos and the earrings!”
“Grandmama…you told me Gandpappa had earrings and tattoos.”
“What?” The old woman’s gaze turned sharply to Gina, then slowly softened. She nodded. “Yes…yes he did. But that’s different. He was of the people.”
“Grandmama…I know this is a visit. I know I’m dreaming. What did you need to tell me?” Gina waited, both arms resting on the table. The kitchen was as her grandmother had left it, years back: it had far more herbs hanging in it, and the walls were plastered white, not golden. Still, it was nice to see the crusty old Gypsy again, and Gina’s patience returned. She sat and studied her grandmother’s round, worn face beneath her shawl, watched as wrinkled hands carefully touched the edges of the tea leaves on the saucer.
The old woman sighed. “You know how to read these.”
Gina nodded, but looked at her grandmother, not at the saucer. “Rosehip tea is for love fortunes.”
“Oh, so you do remember some of what I taught you! I wonder sometimes, what with you running around in jeans with tools like some kind of gadji mechanic!”
Gina sighed, slumping in her chair. “Grandmama…”
“Fine, fine, I’m dead, it’s not for me to judge, right?” The old woman stopped the scolding, looking at her granddaughter soberly. She sighed deeply. “Does he make you happy?”
“Yes he does. Very much.”
“You know he’s older than you. I’d be a poor matchmaker if I didn’t warn you how—“
“I know that! It doesn’t matter!” Gina tried to suppress a sudden grin. “He certainly doesn’t look that much older…or act older…”
“Angelina!”
“Sorry…” Gina looked up apologetically. Her grandmother tried, but couldn’t keep a smile from her own lips. After a moment, both women started snickering and snorting. The old woman burst into loud laughter, and then they were both smacking the tabletop with their hands, laughing so hard they had tears forming.
Gina wiped her eyes, looking sadly across at the tiny little woman, wondering again how she herself had ever grown from such a small-statured family tree. “Grandmama…I’ve missed you,” she said quietly.
Her grandmother smiled, and touched her hand. Gina wrapped her fingers around the old woman’s. Grandmama Angie sighed. “You really want to be involved with a Muppet? You know how easily duped they are, right? Who’s to say some gadji blonde won’t turn his head and leave you alone and penniless?”
“Grandmama…I have my own income! And no. He won’t do that. He’s not like that.”
The old woman sighed, shaking her head. “No, no, you’re right…the boring ones don’t go astray. Still, this whole business with his soul and yours being in conflict…I don’t like it.”
“The scientists said it was because our souls were so much alike,” Gina argued.
“Scientists! Pah! What do they know?” Grandmama Angie shook an angry little finger at the necklace around Gina’s neck; it appeared now to be a wreath of roses. “You know what that foolish necklace they built is doing? Right now, is doing!”
Gina set her jaw. “I know it’s going to keep him safe.”
Grandmother and granddaughter glared at one another. Finally the old woman looked away, sighing. “My little fire…you’ve grown so much. I just…I only want for you to be happy. This is to be the last time we talk. This is to be your last knowing dream.”
“What? Why?” Gina was startled. This same old woman had taught her how to listen to her dreams, how to recall them and use them; it had never occurred to her she might one day lose the gift.
Grandmama Angie gestured angrily at the necklace. “Because of that! That thing is like a wall between you and your gift, little fire! You will become like…like a tiny coal too small to even light a cone of incense! You will be…like them. The gadjo. Blind to this world, seeing only what your eyes can see.” She stared seriously at Gina. “You won’t be able to see what’s coming at him.”
Frightened, Gina touched the roses. Not be able to help Newsie? “But…but they said it would stop the bad things! They said it would make him able to be with me without causing more accidents!”
The old Gypsy nodded. “They’re right about that one. He’ll be what he always was, and you’ll be…without the gift. Like your stupid cousin Ada, hah! Talk about unlucky! Oh, I warned your Aunt Majel it was a bad idea marrying that dry cleaner from Des Moines!”
“And…and what about his heart?” Gina asked softly, daring a glance at the tea leaves.
Grandmama Angie sighed. Then she smiled sadly, and put a hand on Gina’s arm. “He has a good heart. You’ve given him back that. When I met him, he’d forgot what it even was! Pah! Too caught up in being boring and stupid with his all-so-important news things!”
“Wait…what?” Gina stared at her grandmother, wideyed. “When did you—“
“I have to leave now,” her grandmother said. She reached up to give Gina a hug, and kissed her forehead. “You have a wonderful, bright, amazing life, my little fire. Know this: I am so, so proud of you.” She smiled, her eyes light with tears. “Hah! Look at that. You make the old turnip cry, eh?”
“Wait – what about the leaves?” Gina cried, looking worriedly from her fading, ethereal-seeming grandmother to the fading tea leaves and fading cup and fading table.
“Little fire…my Gina…you already know what they say.”
Gina gulped back a sob. “I…I love you, Grandmama Angie. I always will.”
“And I love you, Angelina.” Everything began to swirl, and Gina knew she was about to wake up. Suddenly her grandmother’s fierce voice cut through the haze one last time: “Oh, and tell them to look for him where the marsh is ****** up at the creek. He’s not going to Pittsburgh.” Gina heard a faint snort. “Who’d ever want to go to Pittsburgh?...”
Gina inhaled deeply, opened her eyes, and stared up at the soft beige ceiling of the hospital room. Her heart monitor beeped quietly, steadily. She blinked away her tears, and murmured, “Goodbye, Grandmama.”
“Gina? You okay?” a scratchy voice asked, and a furry hand touched her own. Gina turned her head slowly, mindful of all the injuries, and saw Gonzo gazing worriedly at her, perched in one of the uncomfortable chairs, a magazine abandoned by his side. Camilla snored softly, perched on the back of his chair.
“I’m okay, Gonzo, thanks.” She sighed. “Just a…just a dream.”
“Oh. Yeah. I have some bad ones too sometimes. There’s this one about Carl Sagan and a baloney sandwich…”
“What makes you think it was a bad dream?”
“You were crying,” Gonzo said, bewildered.
Gina shook her head gently. “No. Not bad. A little sad, but not bad.” She peered around the room; Beaker and Pepe had fallen asleep in the other chair, and the TV was tuned to some sort of old game show with a wide-smiling man and a bunch of sheep, pigs, and cows with the sound off. Honeydew had crashed on the unoccupied bed, and Rizzo was scarfing down a Jello cup with an old Small Mammal Illustrated Swimsuit Edition propped open against the scientist’s feet on the end of the bed. Gina tried to stretch, feeling more alert than she had in hours. “What time is it?”
Gonzo checked his cell phone. “Uh, almost four-thirty.”
Gina nodded. “Can I borrow your phone?”
“Sure…”
“Does it have Kermit’s number?”
“Oh, yeah. It’s that one there.”
Gina grinned. “The one labeled Being Green?”
“Yeah. Seemed easier to remember that way.”
Gina hit call, and waited for Kermit to pick up.
Kermit hung up, and leaned forward to tap Scooter’s shoulder. “Uh? Whuh? I’m awake!” Scooter yelled, the bus swerving as he jerked upright.
“Ack! Scooter!”
“Oh…sorry, chief. What’s up?”
“Do we have a road map?”
“Uh…sure.” Scooter handed the map over his shoulder. “Why?”
“That was Gina. She said the Newsman isn’t going to make it to Pittsburgh.”
“Oh…well, that’s good! I’m not sure the bus is, either!”
“Like, are we there yet? I rully need a break,” Janice called up.
“Yeah, man! How far can that guy run, anyway?” Floyd complained.
Kermit sighed. “Scooter, take this next exit and look for someplace with a bathroom, okay?”
“On it, boss!”
Kermit settled back in his seat, opening the map out. Piggy looked at it, then at him. “Um…what’s going on?”
Kermit shook his head, studying the map. “Gina said she had some kind of a…a dream, and she believes the Newsman didn’t stay on the train. She said to look for him where the marsh is ****** by the creek.” He met Piggy’s raised eyebrows with a shrug. “It didn’t make much sense. That’s all she knows, she said.”
“Uh, are we stopping? ‘Cause I think your drummer is about to start eating someone else’s seat,” Rhonda pointed out. Kermit looked to the back of the bus. Animal was chewing a chunk of old foam from his seat, which looked hardly anything like a seat anymore.
Kermit shuddered. “Eeesh! Yes, we’re stopping.” As he spoke, Scooter eased the ungainly bus off the highway and down an exit ramp. They’d left Philly behind a short time ago, and the lights of houses had become farther apart. He hoped they could find something out here, and wished he’d had the foresight to call for a pit stop farther back.
“Good,” Rhonda sighed, yawning. She noticed the map, and Kermit’s intense study of it. “What’re you looking for?”
“Some kind of marsh, or dam, or creek…I’m really not sure,” Kermit sighed.
Rhonda pointed ahead out the windshield. “Like that?”
They all looked up as a sign loomed overhead: MARSH CREEK STATE PARK, 5 MILES.
Kermit nodded. “That could do it!”
Crickets chirped, and unseen things rustled the grass. Darting fearful, blurry glances in every direction, the Newsman stumbled along the dirt path. He was rapidly regretting his decision to head away from the lights of a small town. Whatever Scott had given him had worn off, and he’d been rudely awakened by rough hands grabbing him by one arm and one leg and throwing him out of the kitchen of the diner car when the train slowed for a curve in the tracks. He hadn’t even had the chance to point out he was technically luggage, not a stowaway; he reflected now that maybe climbing up into the kitchen from the storage bin had been his mistake. But it had been so cold…
Shivering now, rebuttoning his sports coat to try to retain some little body heat, he walked slowly along, with no idea where he was heading, no idea how far from Pittsburgh he might yet be; no idea how long he’d napped, curled into as small a space as he could manage in the warm kitchen, before he’d been discovered. He couldn’t see much, with his glasses missing and the trees looming overhead. He really should at least have stopped at that gas station (at least, it had smelled like a gas station) and asked directions. Being lost and alone had been one of his worst fears since he was a child, ever since he’d been separated from his third-grade class trip in the museum (and mean Randy Higgins had run off with his glasses, laughing cruelly). Gulping, Newsie squinted into the surrounding darkness. Tree branches swayed overhead. Something hooted at him! He whirled, glaring, but the joker kept right on with his odd laugh: “Hoo…hoohoo! Hoohoo!”
Even lost in the wilderness, people laughed at him. Great.
Something sparkled up ahead. Thinking it might be a building, or some other sign of civilization, Newsie sped his pace up, trying not to trip on the rough footpath. The trees closed in, making him even more nervous. Suddenly he was right on top of the sparkling thing! Startled, he fell backwards, and sat there shaking, unmoving, for some time before he realized nothing else stirred. He reached forward and cautiously touched the sparkling thing. It was a road. The kind of road with shiny mica in the asphalt. Relaxing slightly, he blew out a breath he didn’t realize he’d been holding, and got to his feet. Looking up, he saw a bright moon slowly going down. Its light danced over the road. Relieved, Newsie decided to follow the pavement. There must be some sort of civilized place ahead, right? He’d find someone, and ask where he was, and…and…
He had no idea what to do after that. He couldn’t go home. Swallowing hard, he forced his feet into motion, his body still aching from the tragedy earlier that night. Had he not been a Muppet, he surely would’ve been laid up in a hospital bed…just like… No. No! He shouldn’t even think of her. She’d be better off without him around. She’d be safer. Nodding to himself, he walked along the road, barely able to discern something else sparkling ahead. Unlike the road, this appeared to be moving. He could smell green things, and plants decaying, and fish…water? He swallowed dryly. If he could find any that was safe to drink, he’d certainly like to wet his throat.
After a few minutes’ walk, during which he looked around constantly, never quite able to see what it was rustling through the underbrush on either side of the road, he saw a broad expanse of moving, shifting water ahead. The road seemed to come right down alongside it. He saw larger shapes stacked near the water’s edge, and then thought he noticed movement among the shapes. Stopping, he squinted ahead, unable to see anything but blurry forms. The larger things might be tables, or boats, or stacks of sandbags. As he tried to figure them out without coming closer, something smaller definitely shifted, moving away from the stacks…moving closer to him? “H-hello?” Newsie called out. His voice sounded very, very alone in the quiet night.
The thing paused, then hopped closer. It seemed to have…horns! Frightened, the Newsman backed away. Monsters! Monsters, out here in the country! All the stories he’d heard were true! The thing waggled its horns at him, then hopped closer again. With a yelp of fright, the Newsman turned and pelted down the road. As he headed into the darker part among the trees, unable to find the entrance to the dirt path again in the night, enormous yellow eyes suddenly came around a bend at him, and something huge roared and belched. “Aaaaah!” Newsie cried, nearly tripping as he tried to reverse. He ran back toward the water, sure the other monster was awaiting him still, but hoping it would also be spooked by the giant creature now hot on his rear. The glowing eyes blinked at him as the monster snarled over a bump, and now he could hear voices! Oh, no – those must be the screams of all its prior victims, trapped in its belly! It was huge! It would eat him! It would –
“A-HAH!” a tall reddish thing growled, jumping in front of him. With a shriek, Newsie’s feet locked in fright, and he pinwheeled frantically before keeling over. He didn’t even have time to experience the pain of his head hitting the asphalt before the skinny-legged reddish thing was bending over him – its hand reaching for him – its brow going up to reveal large staring eyes – its wide mouth gaping –
“TAG! You’re it,” the thing said, tapping his shoulder. “Hah hah hah hah!”
The drummer? His mind choked, recognizing the furry face and wide grin. Then the head injury caught up to the rest of him, and Newsie passed out.