Is this Las Vegas, or what? You gotta love it.
While I am basking in my achievements of the damsel-saving sort I pause to wrinkle my brow. It is true that my upstart maybe-offspring took on the evil Siamese feline fatale Hyacinth all by her lonesome, thereby usurping my customary role of muscle man.
(However, since my long-term plans for the aforesaid Hyacinth may include an alliance of a romantic nature, perhaps it was best to let the little spitfire do the dirty work.) Speaking of dirty work, I lather my chest hair into a damp curly tangle that the dames love to run their nails through.
Apparently my washing motions shake the bed, for my Miss Temple uncurls, sits up, squints at me as she does when her contact lenses are out, and says like this: “Louie! Are you getting your nice smooth ruff all messed up again? Enough already with the compulsive grooming! I know that you were at Baby Doll’s and wailed `Sweet Tail-o’-Mine’ or whatever along with your Pet Shop Quartet of alley-cat buddies to alert me to the lurking presence of the Stripper Killer. Thanks, but settle down now. I need my beauty sleep.”
At that she turns over and ignores me. So much for my irresistible chest hair. Sometimes dames can be unpredictable, but what the heck, that is why we love them.
So I sit upright, pounce down to the floor, and swagger into the main room, ruffled but unreformed.
Barely do I hit the living room than I am aware of a soft scritching sound on the French doors to our unique triangular patio.
There is nothing unique about that sound: a feline footpad is out and about and I think I know who.
I amble over to the glass framed between these frilled wooden rectangles. In the lowest one on the left of this particular door is featured the jet-black kisser of my erstwhiledaughter and new partner-in-crime-solving, Miss Midnight Louise.
Woe is me. I take her into the family enterprise last night and here she is at the crack of dawn making like an alarm clock. First rule of the experienced shamus: do not rise until 10 A.M. Noon is even better, but I do not want my moniker to be High Noon Louie, so I settle for ten o’clock, as in scholar. A self-employed dude cannot be too erudite in this town.
I jump up to unlatch the door and watch Miss Louise swish in. For an offspring of mine she is long in the fur, but I must say that it looks good on the female of the species. Any species. I do wish Miss Temple would let her curly red locks grow, but that does not seem to be her style.
“I am surprised you are up and about,” Miss Louise notes, passing me with a half-hearted brush of greeting.
We may be partners in Midnight, Inc. Investigations, but she is as antsy about the alliance as I am.
“I am surprised that you are up already,” I return politely, “given the hair-pulling match you got into with Miss Hyacinth last night.”
“That! That just smoothed the rough edges off my nails,” she says, sitting down to manicure the razor-sharp appendages in question.
“No curare, huh?”
“I am walking, am I not? You must not believe every public line a deadly dame will throw a private dick, Daddykins. Curare on her nails? More like Cutex. Get real.”
“Cutex” means nothing to me, but I suppose it is some beauty product the ladies use on their nails. I try not to know too much about their little deceptions in the looks department. I like to be surprised.
“So why are you here?” I ask.
“Why not? We are partners now, n’est pas?”
I cringe. Louise is alley born and bred. She has no right to assume the adorable foreign habits of the Divine Yvette, mon amour.
“C’est yeah,” I reply loftily, “but that does not mean you can take liberties and muscle in on my relationship with Miss Temple.”
“Muscling in? Who sez I am muscling in? If I were, you would know it, Daddy-o.” Miss Louise narrows her golden eyes. “I thought you might be interested to know the fuzz is in the building.”
“The fuzz? You mean those martial arts ninjas from the Cloaked Conjuror’s place? Havana Browns and Burmese, by their body types and buzz cuts. Ugly customers.”
“Not that kind of fuzz! The human sort. Lieutenant Molina is chitchatting with Matt Devine one story up.”
“So? It is his place. He can entertain whom he likes. And frankly, my dear, I am pleased that he is out of my Miss Temple’s hair. I detest romantic triangles.”
“Dream on. Your human ginger cat is a meal ticket, and that is all. Besides, she has a human panther for a partner.”
I wrinkle my nose at mention of the Mystifying Max Kinsella, ex-magician but unfortunately not ex-significant other in my Miss Temple’s life. He is not good enough for her, but neither is Mr. Matt. I would be, if I were about six-three and 180, instead of being a thirty-six long stretched out and eighteen going on twenty … pounds.
“Miss Lt. C. R. Molina is hardly going to mess with us,” I point out. “She does not speak our language.”
“Apparently she does not speak Matt Devine’s either, from what I saw through the patio window. He looked like a grilled catfish fillet.”
“You spied on them?”
“We are an investigative unit. Undercover surveillance is what we do best. Speaking of what we do, why are we so interested in the Cloaked Conjuror’s hidden digs?”
“Because Mr. Max is, and I always find that trailing him leads to crime. Who do you think has been sneaking around that place as much as you and me these days?”
“It is not hard to figure,” she says, sitting down to slick back her whiskers. “Mr. Max is a retired magician. He would have much in common with the Cloaked Conjuror.”
“Not so!” I protest. “Mr. Max has done the Cloaked Conjuror a good turn or two only because CC is a target of those disgruntled magicians, the Synth, that Mr. Max wants to smoke out. CC is so presona non grata among the magic-making set that someone has sent death threats his way faster than a vanishing dove. That is why CC always wears a full-face mask, and his assistant may have been killed at TitaniCon because he was dressed up like CC. Mr. Max is interested in the villains CC attracts, not the man himself. He has no more time than the Synth for a so-called magician whose act betrays the secrets of magical illusions in his show nightly.”
“Why would Mr. Max care? He is not a practicing magician anymore. No, I saw him lurking about after the excitement last night, visiting our pals the Big Cats.”
“Osiris the leopard and Mr. Lucky the black panther? I guess that figures. Mr. Max helped us rescue them from certain death during my last big case.”
“Previous case, Pop. ‘Last’ always sounds too final in the PI game.” Miss Louise eyes me slyly through the mitt that is doing a mop-up operation on her shiny little nose. “Or . . Mr. Max may be interested in that Lady Mandarin magician who also hides out at CC’s Los Muertos spread.”
“No way! Mr. Max is utterly bewitched by my Miss Temple.”
“Are you sure? I watched the two of them have a little heart-to-heart out by the Big Cat compound last night. I admit that they did not seem on lovey-dovey terms, but among humans you know how the mating dance can start with a preliminary spat.”
“Among us felines too, if you ever had a chance to experience such a fandango before you got the politically correct surgery.”
“Who needs to know the steps to recognize the dance? This Shangri-La magician dame was giving off plenty of pheromones during their tete-a-tete.”
“Love and hate are not as easy to read among humans as among our superior species. I cannot believe that Mr. Max would be seriously untrue to our Miss Temple.”
“Who is to know what the male of any species may be up to?”
“And that is the way it should be. How else can we keep you nosy females guessing? So that is your report? Fuzz a floor up, more nocturnal slinking at Los Muertos. None of that is worth writing Holmes about.”
Louise stops her eternal grooming—dames!—to cock an ear at the door. “Oh, good. I was hoping to observe a police interrogation firsthand and I believe I am going to get my wish.”