Then I figure it out. The stuff is not just seen and sniffed, like most unknown substances, it is also heard. I realize now what has fluffed my tail all along: the slight hisssss the fog makes.
Reminds me of our reptile friends, who are not always lethal, but who have propensities. I believe in giving wide berth to anything with similar propensities, so I forget the fog and take to the high ground to get a better handle on what is happening here.
Well. You would think I had jumped on the middle of their beds during a private moment or something. It is not as if there is food on the table that I might take away. No, the wood surface is as bare as Mother Hubbard's cupboard, and I have been superpolite and careful to keep all my fighting equipment stowed below deck before I sailed in this direction.
I am still casing the room, so I look for alternate routes of ingress and egress, simply because I have so recently found myself out of luck on that score, and forced to accede to the assistance of a dust-ball of long-distance feline electricity.
In fact, I spot a bright light reflected in one of the dark windows and cringe by reflex. This has everyone at the table forgetting my unwanted presence and oohing and aahing about my superior psychic senses and how a Presence from Beyond must be imminent.
They turn out to be quite right, but it is the wrong Presence and it is from a Beyond that is not as far removed as they would hope.
What happens is the camera operator moves, along with the big bright light that everybody has come to take for granted, only the reflection in the window of the big bright light does not move, but remains a little bright light.
"We are not alone," the dead-white blonde announces, and she is unfortunately too correct.
I blink, and the little bright light winks back twice to my once.
As I feared, my guardian Birman is with me, or at least a little of this Tibetan Tinkerbell's Stardust is. Where she was when I was plunging down the dark throat of the chimney, I cannot say. Perhaps she was out getting her twinkle adjusted. I sometimes suspect her headlights of being set on "dim." No doubt communing with unseen realms saps the IQ.
So I sit down to watch the evening's entertainment, even as the Little Light That Could hovers at the window to watch me. I am forgotten now that fresh phenomena threaten.
So it is with much bemusement that I watch the assembled physics stiffen and groan and twitch and sigh... and totally ignore the fascinating phenomena that show up in answer to their actions.
At first it looks like the fog has coagulated in the ceiling corner like a phantom icicle, but then I see stars glimmering through the bright white radiance and then I see a belt buckle the size of a pizza pan, and then I see a familiar, fuzzy face... and Elvis in his glitziest white jumpsuit slides down the corner of the wall like a fireman on a pole. Hey, the King still is as limber as ever, even if he has not lost an ounce in the Afterlife. And he gives me a big wink before lip-syncing a totally silent number. I think it is "Cat, Help! Falling in Love With You," but I am not a big lip-reader, and although I knew Elvis was into strange things, I did not think cross-species romance was one of them.
I look to see if the gathered experts can do a better job of translating the silent song lyrics, but they are ail staring elsewhere, oblivious. I look at Elvis, who gives me this shrug and his cute little sneery smile, then melts into the fog.
Meanwhile, my human companions are out to lunch, except there is not even food on their table. Talk about being twelve cards short of a full tarot deck!
So I clean my whiskers, Elvis's sideburns having reminded me that grooming is the mark of a gentleman, and while I am so engaged, I catch something else out of the corner of my eye.
This is a tall, portly old gent wearing a tweedy Norfolk jacket and a checked cap. He is adjusting one of the lighting sconces by looking at it and waggling his bushy white eyebrows.
Naturally, it goes faint and bright in turn, almost like one of those semaphores they used to signal people with over long distances in olden times, but do you think the assembled sensitives would notice a laser beam on their own birthday cake? No.
They are fussing at each other about how nothing is happening, and yes, the fog is interesting but what does it do?
The old dude, who is rather pale despite the plethora of plaids in his attire, pulls out a pipe and eyes me hopefully, like I should recognize him, or light his fire or something. I do not approve of smoking, so am about to do nothing of the kind, but--what do you know--the light of my life (I am being sarcastic here)--floats through the window-glass and ends up hovering over the old guy's pipe, which gives off a ghostly contrail of smoke that merges with the ubiquitous fog.
Apparently Beyond is not big on fire hazards.
The old squire's eyes light up for a moment too, until you would swear he was alive, then he starts the disappearing act, and for just a moment I think I know who he is. The name starts with d as in "detective," and if he would stay just a few seconds longer, I would make the connection and be home free. But he does not, and I do not, and life is like that, and sometimes even death is like that.
It is a pretty sad room in Vegas, however, when the dead present provide more entertainment than the living present. And I include those of my acquaintance in this judgment.
I am nothing if not impartial, and right now I would not declare my lot with the sad excuses for extrasensory perception gathered here tonight.
A few more prestigious personas from the past lend their presence to the gathering, unobserved by anyone but me. Mae West is looking as pneumatic as ever, and pale becomes her. It takes me a while to figure out who the lanky lady in the leather jacket is, and by the time I am ready to shout "Hey, Amelia, where on earth did you bow out?" she is fading away too, from lack of attention.
I tell you, it is enough to make a cat cry, to see all these newsworthy folks pass through without so much as a flicker of notice from the living. I am wondering if I can make a deal with some human with vision, and we could provide prognostications from the past, complete with the signature of the visiting ghost, when suddenly all hullabaloo breaks loose and the seance folks are looking lively.
This must be good. I look where they are looking so lively, and I see the fog has amassed in my former landing zone, the fireplace. Well, it is a lot of fog and there is a form sort of quivering on it like an out-of-focus vacation slide on a sheet posing as a screen. I can almost see a person in the vague design of light and dark, but it is nothing like the camera-ready sharp-focus of the famous folks I have been viewing in solitary splendor tonight.
In fact, the old English-squire dude comes blazing back by the wall sconce, puffing on his ectoplasmic pipe until smoke signals practically scream his presence, but no one notices. He looks happy, though, and makes fists as if to say "Yes! Yes!"
As the murmur of "Houdini" comes from the live ones around the table, I cannot help rooting for this long-dead dude myself. I always root for the underdog (only in that instance), as I always like to watch a good comeback. And if this Houdini dude came back, that would be world-class news. Not up to Amelia or Elvis, you understand, but one cannot have everything.
So I even get my ears perked up, and I am anticipating something spectacular, but instead I get more fog. This fog floats around the table like a waiter looking for a tip, giving every psychic a big charge as it nears each seat.
I think my little doll will get lines on her pert little face; she is frowning so hard during this performance. And she is right: an animated fog-sheet is not worth the price of admission. If only she were a kindred soul and could see what I see, like the old dude against the wall jumping up and down and mouthing "Houdini" right along with the chanting psychics. Doyly, that is his name. I believe that he had something to do with a British opera company called the D'Oily Carte. The British always aspire to French phrases when it comes to culture and cooking.