He laughs as Nose E. slides down his leg to worry tooth, nail, and nose at his pant leg. "Come on. No wiggling. Got to read this thing---ah, a phone number." Muttering the numbers over to himself while trying to keep Nose E. corralled, Mr. Matt also tries to punch the telephone buttons one-handed.
I watch in stupefaction. Who says humans are manually dexterous? But finally my hero has the phone receiver pinched between his cheek and numbing shoulder, has Nose E. penned in his lap, and is waiting for an answer.
I am waiting anxiously myself. I do not know what hours Earl E. keeps or where he hangs his hat when he is not selling wax-museum platters.
"Hello," Mr. Matt says suddenly. I notice that since he has become a radio idol his voice seems to be deeper and more deliberate. Pretty soon he will be sounding like a Crawford Buchanan clone. You do remember Crawford Buchanan? The sleazy reporter for the slimy Las Vegas Snoop who always has it in for my Miss Temple.
"I have a"--he pauses to rear back for a good look at Nose E., lo make sure he has the species right; cannot blame him- "a small dog here. Called 'Nose E.' Oh, you do. Yes, well, he showed up on my doorstep just now and he is sniffing and chewing the devil out of my pant leg.
Uh, no, I am not 'smoking dope.' "
A long silence.
"I can understand the dog is valuable to you; it looks like some kind of ... purebred. Well, I work night, so I don't know I can get him to you so fast. Um, is this address near downtown?
Uh-huh."
Human conversations! So unoriginal. So stop-and-start. So hard to interpret from one side of the fence only!
"Actually, he was with a couple of cats that are known to me. One's from this neighborhood and one is from the Crystal Phoenix up the Strip. Does not usually like cats? They seem to get along fine." Another silence. "I would rather not give you my phone number just now. Ah, I work a high-profile job and I like to keep it as private as possible. An entertainer'? I guess you could say so. Oh. The saxophone. Cool instrument. Well, Nose E. seems fine, other than digesting my clothing. Let me call a couple people I know and I will see if someone can get him back to you tonight. I know you must miss the little guy: he is quite . . . active. Yes, I know he is very valuable; I will take care of him, and call you back in a half hour or so."
He hangs up and addresses me for some reason. Perhaps it is my wise, nonjudgmental expression. "Whew. That guy was a little too anxious for my name and address. Should not be so suspicious but . . . a dog. Sort of. Hey, cut that out! I know--" Mr. Matt looks both happy and inspired as he picks up the receiver again. In a moment he is smiling, though not for us. "Temple! You are in, thank God.
"I have acquired a dog. Or it has acquired me, rather. Little white thing. Looks like a long-haired rat, maybe three or four pounds. Maltese? If you say so. Anyway, Louie and Louise escorted it to my place. It looked a little lost and it is eating my Khakis. I called the number listed on the lD tag and the guy there, I do not know. He sounded kind of. . .fishy. Do you think you could--? Great!"
Mr. Matt dumps Nose E. into my and Louise's custody and runs around the place stacking newspapers and moving coffee mugs into the kitchen. Like Martha Stewart was coming up for a white-glove inspection or something. I am just glad I am not in the apartment below watching my Miss Temple scurry around.
About five minutes later, a discreet knock at Mr. Matt's door has all our ears pricked. She is so thoughtful. No doorbell gongs to disturb Nose E.'s tiny ears. Mr. Matt opens the door cautiously so Nose E. does not run out, but Nose E. is too busy having conniptions over the scent on his trousers to run anywhere but at the nostrils.
"Matt! Is this the dog'? Or a renegade cotton ball?" Miss Temple storms in, a pair of dangly earrings swinging at her neck and her high heels clicking, and is on her knees to Nose E. as soon as you could say "pushover."
"What a darling dog. Definitely a Maltese. Well, it certainly likes you."
"Not me. My wearing apparel. How do you suppose it got here. and in such good company?"
It is only then that Miss Temple deigns to notice Midnight Louise and myself. "Louie and Louise . . . Louise is a long way from home. Maybe the dog lost its owner at the Crystal Phoenix, and Louie somehow picked the both of them up and led them here."
"No." Mr. Matt has sat clown on the sofa again, happy that Temple's petting has kept Nose E. at bay for a while. "The dog's owner lives, or works, near downtown. I have the address and phone number, but the guy was weird when I called. Asked if I was smoking dope at the moment, like I might be crazy or something."
Miss Temple sits back on her heels, the better to fawn over Nose E. One would think sitting back on high heels would be like cozying up to a beaver-tail cactus, but l have never tried such a feat, either sitting back on high heels or cozying up to a cactus.
"And then," Mr. Matt adds, "he wanted my address and phone number in the worst way.
Kept saying the dog was invaluable."
Miss Temple frowns, already showing the suspicion she is justly famed for. "Might be some kind of 'lost-dog' scam. You go to the address like a good citizen to collect your reward for returning the dog, and they jump you and take all your money, and the dog."
"Very creative," Mr. Matt says approvingly, smiling at her like she has just delivered the answer to the year-2000 computer glitch.
Meanwhile, Nose E. is trying to lunge from Miss Temple's custodial grip and shouting the obvious to all who would listen. "The sick-sweet smell, it is all over him. I cannot be sure, but there is even a trace in his hair. Let me at 'im; let me at 'im."
"Nose E.," Miss Temple notes, disinterring the tag from the animal's plentiful hair. "You would expect anyone who names a little fluff-budget like this 'Nose E.' to be weird."
"Yeah. So l put him off about giving my name and phone number and called you right away.
What is going on here?"
"The dog might be legitimately lost," Miss Temple says sensibly, "and Louie took him back here to hit up the local patsies. It worked before," she adds significantly, with a long look at yours truly.
At last I am getting some credit for masterminding this operation, even if she only sees the surface of my grand plan.
I must admit that it has a ways to go. Somehow, we must lead these incredibly dull-wilted humans to the conclusion that what Nose E. finds so attractive about Mr. Matt's pants is the trace of a killer and that Mr. Matt must lead us to everywhere he has been of late, so Nose E.
can finish his sniffing duties before poor Earl E. thinks he has been kidnapped.
While we are all contemplating worst-case scenarios, one that nobody has yet thought of makes itself painfully clear.
The taint shriek of police sirens--nowadays a scale of loud and soft yodeling that would chill the blood in a crocodile--comes hurtling toward us like a meteorite.
Apparently Earl E. is no dummy, and he has concluded that Nose E. is in the hands of a dangerous drug lord or a mad bomber. That little hairball is about to get the Circle Ritz surrounded.
Chapter 53
Our Flag is Still There...
Temple had never been so humiliated in her life.
First the entire population of the Circle Ritz had been rousted and forced outside, until it was all too clear where a certain white Maltese dog resided for the time being.
Even the police had retreated at this revelation.
Then bullhorns had blared forth for everybody left in the apartment to come out, their hands empty.
That meant leaving the cats and Nose E. behind.
She and Matt faced the audience of ousted residents, including an Electra Lark whose face had gone as white as her pixie hairdo. While uniformed officers corralled them near a squad car, bomb squad experts in what looked like beekeepers' outfits rushed past to storm the empty building.