“Now, Louie, now? Chatter sing. Chatter swing. Now?”
“Not yet,” I tell him, trying to release my rear member from his tight grasp. “First we need to talk to Trojan on redirect.”
“Huh, Louie, huh? How we talk Trojan? I no talk Trojan. What redirect?”
“Lawyer talk. I do not have an Esquire after my name for nothing.”
“S-cried? Who S?”
“Never mind.”
I manage to ease Chatter around Rising Sun and Domino. He is all hot to crawl up on their backs and hang onto their “hair.”
I have never seen a critter so interested in hanging onto the appendages of other creatures. What he made of Trojan, who has no appendages, I cannot imagine.
When we get to the snake pit, I let Chatter open the lunch slot and bounce in first.
If Trojan is in the mood for food, I am sure monkeymeat is much more nourishing than a few scrawny feline limbs.
But the big snake is pretty much where I left him yesterday, doing the usual drowsing and digesting routine. In fact, he may still be hypnotized by my soothing feline wiles.
Chatter jumps on his back and begins playing ride ‘em, Cowboy. It would take only two lazy coils of that svelte muscular body to turn Chatter from a three-dimensional being to a two-dimensional one, and I am tempted to let nature take its course and preserve my tail.
But my Miss Temple has mysteries to solve, so I sacrifice poetic justice and the law of the jungle to serve the greater good.
“Off the furniture!” I tell Chatter.
He yips like a dog and bounds to the cage floor.
Trojan’s narrow jet-black eyes blink. I have never seen eyes so black. They are like pools of tar, and I know that if I were not hypnotizing Trojan, Trojan would be mesmerizing me into a menu item.
I begin purring, causing an irritated ripple to pulse down Trojan’s long, long scaled and mottled back.
But this is the only way I can communicate with the big fella. That reptilian tongue that doubles as a sniffer does not have a huge range of vocabulary.
“You remember Chatter?” I ask first.
The huge body shifts as if it rests on a nasty tack or something.
“I thought so. Did the monkey release you from the cage?”
“Yesssss.” Trojan turns his massive, spade-shaped head the chimp’s way.
“Why did you take the opportunity to leave the safety of your, er, artificially accurate environment?”
“To ssssee Vegassss.”
Is everybody a pushover for a good promotional campaign, or what? “How about getting into the pool?” “Pusssshed.”
Now this is interesting. “Who pushed Trojan?” “Men. Men alwayssss pussssh Trojan around.”
“Well, there’s a lot of you to push. I imagine they think they mean well.”
‘Thesssse men not mean well.”
“How do you know?”
“They put Trojan in water with carrion. I like fressssh prey.”
“So you’re saying that the dude was dead before you took a dip in the pool with him?”
“Dude?”
“Man.”
“Man dead. Trojan try to play, but man dead.” “How long?”
“In jungle river, piranhassss would eat all.”
I love the tropics: giant reptile stranglers, little bitty flesh-eating fish. Before you can take a bite out of them, there will be nothing left but your false teeth chattering like a demented chimpanzee before sinking to the bottom of the Amazon River. Remind me to stay north of the Grand Canyon.
Speaking of the devil you know, Chatter is getting restless and wrestling with the twisted length of jungle vine.
It occurs to me that this is the narrow far end of the mighty Trojan. I flash my shivs across Chatter’s knuckles. “Did you not see the signs outside? DO NOT FEED THE ANIMALS. Which is what you will be doing if you continue to toy with Trojan’s nether regions.”
With a shriek, the chimp desists, going to crouch against the glass.
I remain in the middle, caught between two highly erratic animals.
“So, sir,” I conclude, addressing Trojan respectfully, which is the only way to talk to a twenty-foot-long garrotte. “Your accidental dive into the pool had no bearing on the life or death of the poor dude—man—who shared your natatory endeavors?”
“Sssssay what?”
“Never mind. We will be leaving now. Is there anything we can do for you?”
“If you encounter anything edible besides yoursssselvesss, sssshove it through the door assss you leave.”
I look at Chatter. It is tempting, but I still need the overactive little Elvis throwback. No wonder I would dearly like to throw him back to Trojan. Another day, perhaps.
Chatter is bouncing beside me as soon as we exit single file through the food door.
“Can see more, Louie? Huh? Huh? Huh? Look up skirts? Huh? Huh? Huh?”
“Sorry, kid. Dames do not wear skirts like they used to. You will have to get another hobby.” I do not mention that I took a peek for Miss Priscilla’s garter belt just before entering Chatter’s storage closet a couple days ago. That was purely investigational.
I lead the way to my former hangout, the Medication Garden.
I have to stop the action right here to say that I do not understand the great contempt in which Elvis is held for liking a mood-altering substance. My kind has a similar weakness for a little herb called catnip in our honor. It is true that when we indulge in catnip we are transported to moods beyond our normal range. We become kittenish and clown around and roll around and generally cavort around, to the amusement of all and damage to none. Apparently the nip that Elvis used was less innocuous. Perhaps if he had tried catnip, he would have had all the enjoyment and none of the ill effects. Instead of “just say no,” perhaps humans should just say “hello” to catnip. What could it hurt?
“Have you been here before?” I ask Chatter, not hoping for much in the way of lucid reply.
He takes a lope around the pool, those disgusting knuckles brushing the pavement all the way around. He stops, sits, and shimmies the lower half of his face from side to side, as if sniffing the air.
“No,” he finally says.
I gaze around, disappointed. This was where Crawfish Pukecannon—as I renamed him long ago in honor of his disagreeable personality that begins to smell three minutes after you meet him—met up with me last. Or do I mean three seconds? Anyway, where C. B. is lurking I smell a rat. It would help my little doll no end if I could do the dirty work and dig up this rat without her mussing her dainty little high heels.
I admit to being disoriented in this garden. Someone has seeded the place with attractive but stinky plants. It smells like the respiratory infection remedy shelf of your local discount pharmacy.
I mean, menthol and mint, lemon and licorice, and not a snippet of catnip.
I am not at my best when getting a sick headache from innocuous medicinal herbs.
But does this atmosphere bother the affable Chatter? No way.
He bounds around, jumping from the top of one see-through plastic coffin to another, gazing at the garish suits within and shrieking with laughter.
I cannot blame him. Compared to the modestly jeweled jumpsuit he is wearing, these laid-out ones are over the top and around your block. They shine under the artificial dome light, a shifting sky of white clouds that take on the faces of the principal players in the Elvis Presley saga … Mama Gladys, Daddy Vernon. Baby brother Jesse Garon is a cute little unformed fluffy cloud attached to Mama and Daddy, I guess. There’s a big blue thunderhead that is either Colonel Parker or the three Memphis Mafia members who wrote the first tell-all book, Red and Sonny West and Dave Hebler, all melded together to look like Colonel Parker, another villain of the piece. There is a Priscilla cloud, an all-white thunderhead that must be all hair, and a whole bunch of babe clouds who are pretty fluffy in all the right places.
Of course, this is a subtle effect, and I do not spy LisaMarie’s cats among the heavenly cavorters, although I spot a few horses.