Lament for a Lounge Lizard. Mary Jane Maffini
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“Nice doggie.” Cyril opened the front door for Tolstoy and patted the seat.
I hoped Cyril and Tolstoy would keep each other busy while I sat in the back clutching my cleaning and quietly obsessing about Benedict. No such luck. For once Cyril didn’t want to talk about the weather.
“Boys, oh boys, Miz Silk, that dead guy in your bed sure did get the whole village buzzin’.”
“I bet it did.”
“The police even talked to me about it. Lucky for you, Miz Silk, old Cyril here’s got a one hundred per cent memory.”
We barreled through the puddles on Chemin des Cèdres with no regard for the speed limit. I can always tell we’re going too fast when the yellow Citizen and red Le Droit newspaper boxes blur.
“What do you mean?” I clung to the armrest as Cyril whipped past the ARRÊT sign and onto Autoroute 105.
“They were triple-checkin’ your story about you and Doctor Prentiss being picked up at Les Nuances high as kites and having to practically get poured through your front door by yours truly.”
“They were triple-checking?”
“You don’t think they’ll take your word about your own whereabouts in a murder case, do you?”
Silly me.
“I told them you sure didn’t kill the guy, because at the time in question you and Dr. Prentiss were both pretty well hammered.”
“Thank you, Cyril.”
“Dr. Prentiss even waved her bare feet out the window. First time that ever happened in this old cab.”
Cyril’s moon face glowed at me from the rear-view mirror.
“So everyone thinks I was deranged enough to kill Benedict Kelly in my own bed?”
“Oh, no, ma’am, we all know you were pissed as a newt, pardon my French.”
First stop, food.
We rocketed down Rue Principale and squealed to a halt in front of L’Épicerie 1759. Cyril offered to wait for me. His smile dipped a bit when I reminded him to shut off his meter.
“Of course, Miz Silk, I would of done it anyways.”
L’Épicerie 1759 was formerly known as Woody’s Health Foods, before the Quebec language police made Woody take down the English sign. Woody insists the 1759 in the new name refers to the serial number on his first cash register, since discarded, and not to the year of Wolfe’s victory over Montcalm in the Battle of the Plains of Abraham.
Woody gets his kicks trying to see how much tourists will pay for his “pure” maple syrup and “homemade” bakery products.
I left Cyril at the front of L’Épicerie humming along with the sitar music. I picked up whole wheat pita bread, some hummus and a large bag of organic dog biscuits. With Tolstoy at my side, I pushed my way past the tofu, pesticide-free leeks and giant brown bottles of beta carotene and headed to the rear of the store. The signs in the store say INTERDIT AUX CHIENS . Tolstoy doesn’t read French.
Woody lurked in the back storeroom washing down a chili dog with a can of Jolt. The Grateful Dead boomed out from all four speakers on his CD player. His grey braid drooped freely, no hair net in sight. Somehow the people who write the tourist guides never seem to sniff out the real Woody.
“Weh-hell,” he said, reeling a bit in his wheelchair, “if it isn’t the divinely dangerous Fiona. Way to go.”
“It’s not that great. Trust me.”
“You kidding? It’s fabulous. You’ve been on all the networks. That shot of you and Tolstoy slamming the door, that’s freakin’ terrific. You ask me, they’ll pick it up on CNN.”
Only one day after the big event, and already Woody had taped the headlines and cutlines from the local papers on the wall.
FLAMBEAU FATALITY: Foul play suspected as Canada’s greatest poet found dead in bed of estranged wife of prominent West Quebec lawyer.
LOVE NEST ENDING FOR ROMANTIC RHYMER: Poet dies alone in four-poster as girlfriend parties in exclusive restaurant.
Canada’s greatest poet, my fanny.
Prominent West Quebec lawyer, that would be Philip. No doubt some kind soul had already faxed him copies of the articles. Girlfriend turned out to be me. Apparently I hadn’t shut the door quite fast enough. If you were searching for a poster girl to illustrate guilt, this might do. My hair looked like it was exploding, which would account for the wild gleam in my eyes. Tolstoy might have been a white pit bull from his snarl.
“They must doctor those photos.”
“Hey, think what this kind of publicity can do for your book sales.” Woody twirled with glee.
“Oh, absolutely.”
No one mentioned Krazy Glue or that Benedict had been naked. I was grateful to Sarrazin. I wondered if Dr. Lise Duhamel had leaked the bit about the four-poster.
“Kiddo, you sure give people lots to talk about.” The wheeze was Woody’s equivalent of a fond chuckle. Sometimes, it’s not easy being the only person in the world Woody really, really likes.
I sighed. “Let’s hear what they’re saying.”
“First, your former husband.” Woody never says Philip’s name. “Lots of people think he might have done it.”
“Lots of people who never met him, I imagine.”
“Some say maybe your latest boyfriend did it because he went ballistic when Benedict crawled back into your life, and he planted the body to teach you not to fool around on him. Heeheehee.”
At this point, I helped myself to a Diet Coke. I wondered aloud who my latest boyfriend was.
“Don’t get tense, kiddo. I’m only giving you the scuttlebutt.”
“Try not to enjoy it quite so much.”
“My personal favourite is you killed the guy somewhere else, transported him to your place and made a lot of public noise with Liz Prentiss to throw the police off the scent. Hahaha.”
Even I chortled at this one. “So what was my motivation?”
“Stay tuned for the final details. It’ll get juicier,” he said, happily.
“I don’t suppose you heard any good and useful reports about Benedict lately?”
“Benedict? Nah. Not recently. Just that poetry thing. And now this dead thing. So, what you got in that bag?”
“Your