“You’re as bad as my mother!” Quincey complained. “I don’t want my big chance ruined.”
“Being a harassment victim is a ‘big chance’?” “Show business can be rough.”
Quincey turned back to the mirror to fluff up her already high hairdo. Instead of wearing half of the hair up and the other half down her back—with one coy lock flipped forward over her shoulder—Quincey had teased the hairpieces into a mound as high as her face was long.
Her face was especially long now with teenage angst. “I don’t need ‘bodyguards.’ I’ll look like a kid or something.”
“Or something,” Temple agreed, surveying the bizarre child/whore façade Quincey had perfected, just as Elvis had ordered it done more than thirty years ago, partly to make his teenage houseguest look old enough to avoid dangerous gossip. “Frankly, bodyguards will only add to the illusion that you’re the real Priscilla. Besides, these aren’t the usual type of bodyguards. Believe me, they’ll blend right in.”
“Oh. ‘Blend in’ how? Are they the reincarnation of the Memphis Mafia? Fat old guys in dark suits and hats and sunglasses. Gross.”
Temple sighed. She knew everybody over twenty was ancient to a teen angel-vixen like Quincey. Still, she had gone to some trouble to provide low-profile protectors for the kid, and would have liked a smidgeon of credit for being cool for an old person. Apparently, having concerns for someone’s safety had cost her the “cool” credentials.
“Shall I ask them in to meet you?” Temple said. “Them? I’m gonna be trailed by two fat old guys in glasses? Double gross.”
“Not exactly.” Temple pushed herself out of the chair, her high heels clicking concrete all the way to the ajar door, and sounding just a tad miffed. “Fellas, you can come in now.”
Come in they did, two by two, just as the animals had entered the ark. Two, and then four, and then six, and then eight, and then the company’s lone last member.
They filled up the mirrors and the dressing room, six feet tall and nine strong. They loomed. They glittered. They were all Elvis, Elvis to the ninth power. They were, in a word that Quincey would respect, awesome.
She had almost knocked over her chair as she jumped to her feet to take in this manifestation. “What is this? Who are they?”
“Meet Full-spectrum Elvis, a new and original act for the competition.”
After a long pause, during which Quincey scanned every incarnation of Elvis: the raw fifties kid in the pink-and-black pants and shirt, Gold-Lame-Suit-withRhinestone Lapels Elvis, Tuxedo Elvis, Motorcycle Elvis, Blues Brothers Elvis, Karate Elvis, Cape-and- Cane Elvis, Jumpsuit Elvis, and, last but definitely not least, Oversized Elvis.
Seen in this historical perspective, it was obvious that the many overweight Elvises on the imitators’ circuit portrayed a minority version of the superstar. Only the last Elvis, Oversized Elvis, could be described as “gross.” Temple credited this man with a true actor’s devotion to a role for donning the required fat-suit beneath the jeweled jumpsuit.
The rest of them were trim, foxy-looking dudes with their naturally dark hair moussed, fluffed, and tousled, wearing their blue suede shoes or miniboots, and their various intensity of sideburns, from eyelash-thin to Bigfoot-sized radiator brush.
“How are more Elvis imitators going to do anything to guard me?” Quincey asked a bit less sullenly. She was the age when somewhat older men were intriguing. In fact, at sixteen, she was already a bit old for the real Elvis.
“That’s easy,” Motorcycle Elvis said, stepping forward so his neck-to-ankle black leather suit squeaked. “We are muscle first and musicians second.”
“And,” Cape-and-Cane Elvis added, sweeping aside the cape with his cane to reveal a sidearm, “we follow Elvis’s sterling example in accessories. Or perhaps I should say ‘steel-blue’ example.”
Quincey’s pale hazel eyes widened enough to push back the raccoon rings of eyeliner surrounding them. “Elvis was a gun nut. You guys could get into trouble for carrying concealed weapons.”
“Only if you tell on us, little lady,” Fifties Elvis said with an off-center smirk.
“Now.” Gold Lamé Elvis made a fingernail-buffing gesture on his rhinestone lapels that must have scratched his knuckles. Maybe they itched. “At least one of us will be with you at all times. The others will blend among other Elvis types and see what they can learn about whoever might have gone after your lovely neck with a razor blade.”
“I guess that’s all right,” Quincey allowed. “You guys don’t drag down my Priscilla outfit. Some of these Elvis costumes are so cheap and cheesy.” Then a girlish storm threatened. “Except him.” She pointed a perfectly manicured pale pink fingernail at Oversized Elvis. There was an awkward pause. “Really, Priscilla was out of the picture by the time Elvis got so gross. I’m only pointing this out for reasons of historical accuracy.” She eyed every one of them except Oversized Elvis. “It’s not like I have anything against Old Elvis.”
Of course she did, Temple thought. And so had the millions of people who voted a few years ago for the Young Elvis postage-stamp image, not the Mature Elvis likeness.
Oversized Elvis ebbed diplomatically to the back of the entourage. He also serves who only stands and waits.
After some discussion, it was decided that Fifties Elvis and Motorcycle Elvis should share the first-shift duties of shadowing Priscilla.
Temple retreated into the hallway with the remaining seven Elvi.
“You look terrific, guys!” she told them. “How did you rustle up such high-class King duds so fast?” She hadn’t a prayer of telling who was who behind the assorted Elvis facades and decided to refer to them as their costumes dictated.
“No problem,” said Tuxedo Elvis, his curly shirtfront ruffles matching the boyish wave in the locks that brushed his forehead. “We had the hair already, Super-glue provided the sideburns.”
“Hair is easy to duplicate. What about the costumes?” There was much blue-suede shoe shuffling.
Fifties Elvis bashfully tapped his shoe-toe on the concrete, then shrugged. “The hotel has this ‘see yourself as Elvis’ photo booth. They have everything but the suit he was buried in.”
“That would be tasteless,” Oversized Elvis said. “Even Elvis wouldn’t have liked that pale suit with the blue shirt and white tie.”
Temple was not assuaged. “Wait a minute! A photo booth does not explain how you all got duded up in period so fast.”
Karate Elvis launched himself into a fighting pose. “It’s like this, Miss Temple. We know the operator and know how to encourage cooperation.”
“Moolah.” Cape-and-Cane Elvis nodded knowingly. “And then we got Minnie the Miracle-worker to fit everything and gussy up the outfits—”
“The theatrical seamstress, Minnie Mabel Oliver. I remember her! I met her during the Darren Cooke case.”
“Was that a case?” Gold Lamé Elvis asked. “Or was it an accident?”
“The jury’s still out,” Temple said grimly.
“Just like it’s still out on Elvis’s death.” Karate Elvis executed a leap that landed him nearly on top of Temple.
“I don’t think so, boys. Besides, we don’t have to worry about a dead Elvis on the premises. It’s ‘Priscilla’ I’m concerned about. Apparently everybody around Elvis disliked her.”
“Well, she wasn’t one of the boys, was she?”
Temple stared at Blues Brothers Elvis, whichever Fontana brother he was. “That’s very true. It was a primal battle for control of Elvis: would his shy, sensitive private side win, or the adolescent bad boy that the world idolized?”
Motorcycle Elvis executed a pelvis move that left no doubt which side of Elvis he was voting for.
“Either way, I guess he was charming as a prince.” “You got that right,” Cape-and-Cane Elvis said. “A Prince of Darkness.”
“Well, you guys are all princes for taking on this bodyguard detail. You’re not actually competing, I hope.”