She is so cute when she sounds annoyed with me. Like I do not know she will come over forthwith and scratch my chin and tickle my tummy and tell me I am a bad, bad boy. I must admit that these humans have foreplay down cold.
“Louie.”
She is crooning now, in the palm of my paw. I stretch out a foreleg, casually, and let her hold my, er, hand.
“You naughty boy! Why do you have to knock everything off a shelf before you lie on it?”
Because I
I tell you, leading these humans around by the nose hairs is a very fatiguing business. What? You say I am the one with nose hairs? I beg your pardon. These whiskers are vibrassae, a high-toned Latin-language accessory if there ever was one.
But, hush! My Miss Temple is noticing. And thinking. At last.
“Gosh.” She sits on her heels and pages through a few of the paperback tomes I have cast to the floor to make room for my luxuriating torso. “I remember reading these books way back when while waiting up for Max to do his last show at the Goliath and come home.”
Now she is sniveling! Not my desired reaction!
“Short stories by H. H. Munro, known as
“And . . . oh, my goodness. My favorite Agatha Christie.”
Warm.
“I always loved the ones with exotic settings.”
Warmer.
“This was my favorite. Reminds me of a Russian blue cat, in a way.”
Skip the rival breed! I am an all-American alley cat. And black to the bone.
“A Russian blue is an exotic breed but basically . . . gray.”
She sits up as if she had borrowed a swordfish’s spine.
“Oh! That might be why . . . that might be it . . . that might be the answer!”
The Murderer in the
Gray Flannel Suite
Temple breezed in to the New Millennium the next morning and asked Pete Wayans for the use of the gray flannel suite.
“We are way past planning sessions, Miss Barr. In case you haven’t noticed, our exhibition is ravaged, our magic show is compromised, and our joint credibility is zilch. It’s not your fault, but you were a major hire.
“No.
“That would cost hundreds. If you deduct it from your contract.”
“Of course, but if I solve your murders, the same amount goes to me as a bonus.”
“A bonus? I’m sorry but the police solve murders.”
“Sometimes. Sometimes I do if I must. A clean slate would give this exhibition and show a new lease on . . . death.”
By then Randy had joined them. “What’s up, chief?”
“Your little Miss Barr. She’s making bail-out noises.”
“Not me wanting to bail out,” Temple said. “Me wanting to bail you guys out.”
“We could use a bail out,” Randy said. “I advise we listen.”
“Your job is at risk.”
Randy visibly braced himself. “Could things get any worse? I say we go along to get along.”
“Crudités,” Wayans snarled.
“A large happy carrot stick to you too,” Temple said.
She couldn’t help being upbeat, although Randy winced as Wayans stalked (get it, celery!) away.
“He’s the big man, Tee. Our futures are riding on this.”
“I’m feeling very futuristic. Can you make sure that all concerned show up?”
“Yeah, but why?”
“I have places to go and people to see. See you later, defribulator.”
Randy clutched the area of his heart but headed out to do his duty.
Temple speed-dialed her cell phone. “Dear Detective Alch,” she began.
He swore. Conservatively but colorfully and with a certain paternal certainty that she would absorb every rough syllable and still twist him around her little finger. . . .
The main thing was that Molina was
This was a totally not-Molina operation.
Temple glanced at Alch. He knew that she knew he was bucking the command structure. She knew that he knew that she knew he had a soft spot for earnest young women with agendas. And that Molina no longer qualified. Too old. Too wired. Too seriously screwed. Too hung up on Max. Either way.
Temple eyed the full complement of White Russian exhibition professionals around the conference table, from the aristocratic elders to the brave new proletariat.
“Two people have died in the course of mounting this exhibition,” she began.
Lips were bitten, heads lowered, crocodile tears shed, so to speak.
“In the course of mounting this exhibition, the prime piece on display, the Czar Alexander scepter, has been stolen in plain sight.”
More feet shuffling under the long conference table, more downcast eyes. Temple stood at the head of the table. Several file folders shifted under her fingernails.