Cat in a Hot Pink Pursuit (20 page)

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Authors: Carole Nelson Douglas

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I cannot have her disturbing my crime scene, so I
rush over.

Well, well, well. I will have to see that the Las Vegas
CSI, the real-life ones, find this prime piece of evi
dence pronto. It is a can of Razor's Edge shaving
cream, lime scented.


Good job, girls," I say. "Now huff your ruffs back in
side. I will be sure to direct my associate's attention to
this useful clue."

“You must visit us and tell us what happened, Louie,"
Solange manages to say as I hustle them toward the
glass sliding doors where they can paw pitifully until
admitted.

“Where will I find you?"

“Lavender Wing, with the judges and Team Queen members.”

With that I return to the deserted pool area and the
too-obviously abandoned shaving cream can. This job
must have taken several cans. Where are they?

I sit and regard the empty can. I wonder what the
CSI will make of the pad prints amid whatever human
traces remain. Which is likely nothing. This can is a
message, not a clue.

I picture the cops "fingerprinting" the Divine Yvette
and Solange when their presence at this overall crime
scene is detected.

Then they will be "soot foots" indeed!

I am very glad that I will not be wielding the inkpads
on that occasion.

Ouch!

 

Chapter 21

Hanky
Panky

Temple and Mariah huddled in their room that night, comparing notes on hastily scrawled pages they tore up and packed away.

As befitted a 'Tween 'n' Teen Queen competition, half
of their shared notes concerned the rules of the contest,
the rituals of competition, psyching out the judges, and a
keen awareness that their every word and gesture could
be recorded.

The other half concerned the skullduggery.
Skullduggery. Temple liked that word but Mariah
adored it.

She was her mother's daughter, though the very expression would have made Mariah howl. She was so into being "not Mother" at the moment.

For a final consultation, they huddled in the bathroom for a fast five minutes, shower running full blast and steaming up the mirrors, the air, and possibly parboilingany electronic bugs and cameras. Such devices weren't allowed in the bathrooms anyway.

Still, that was the underlying paranoia of reality TV. One could never be sure.

So their conversation was as veiled as the air. -"What if that shaving cream had been acid?" Mariah theorized, "and all of us had been lying there exercising
and trying to get tans and burning our skins off?”

“You have a morbid imagination."


Thanks. Whatcha think?"

“Thanks for asking. I think it was a stunt to get attention, which worked. And I don't know if we really have a stalker among us, or if it's the producers trying to throw the contestants off-balance, or—"

“Or a crazy killer?"


Right. Like there are a lot of sane ones." Temple
leaned her arm past the shower curtain to crank the water force up the last notch. "Hand me that razor, please.”

Mariah did, looking a little jealous that Temple was so proficient at shaving her armpits. Hey, this was Feminine Hygiene 101. She should be a pro.

“I don't think my mother shaves," Mariah said glumly. "Are you sure?"

“No, but it doesn't seem like something she would do. You're really good at it."


Thanks." Temple tore off a hunk of toilet paper and
put it on the nicked shin that had happened when Mariah had opined that she didn't think her mother shaved. Only her mustache!

“Those drawn-on tattoos are cool."

“Tattoos are cool when they're temporary. When they're permanent, they're a problem waiting to happen.”

“why?"


Well, we always reinvent ourselves as we toddle
through life. We should aim to be a blackboard, not a pincushion with no expiration date."

“Huh? Oh, I get it. You're funny."


I hope so, because this situation is getting less so
every day."

“It's like boot camp." Mariah picked at the dead skin
around her big toenail. She sounded 'tweenage sullen again. Temple found herself suddenly sympathetic to
ward Carmen Molina. "Everybody tells you what to do.
`Exercise.' `Suck in your stomach.' `Eat your vegetables.'
`Smile.'“

Temple smiled. "Imagine making smiling an order? How many of those rules does your mother harp on?”

“The vegetables."

“That's not too bad."

“No. But being a girl is harder than that."

“Being a
girly
girl is harder. We don't all have to be pretty in pink.”

Mariah squinted up at Temple. "I can't see the real
you in pink. But it does go with that Elvira wig in a
weird sort of way.”

Temple pushed the hot, damp hairdo back on her forehead. It felt like a heavy wet turban.

“This thing makes one admire Cher in concert. Pink doesn't go with my natural hair color, so it's kinda fun to wear it now. I feel like a 1958 Cadillac convertible.”

Mariah giggled. 'You're not big enough to be a hugerrific car like that."

“No, but I can think I am. You see anything suspicious around the camp today?"

“I snooped, like you said, and I found six cans of Razor's Edge in the contestants' lockers."

“Good work! Empty? You didn't touch them?"


No! Only picked 'em up with a towel. All of them
were pretty light. You know what I'm thinking?”


That whoever sprayed those yoga mats used what was
on hand?"

“Yeah. How'd you know?"

“With this vast cast of competitive characters, it's so easy to spread the blame. I bet our perp used latex gloves though.”

Mariah nodded. "My mom has a whole box at the
house. She never leaves home without 'em.”

Temple giggled this time. "She sounds like a gynecologist."


Ah, I have my first appointment after this is over.”


The pits!"


Is it scary?"


Oh, yeah, but you get used to it. I mean, we all have to
do it. Consider it a badge of courage.”

Mariah considered while Temple watched, remembering her own first gynecological exam. No matter how prepared you were, it was always a bit of a psychic violation.

“We heard about that in school," Mariah was saying. "The badge of courage story. It was about war.”

The red badge of courage for women was a different kind of war, Temple thought. The onset of menstruation. Of being different from men. Of being capable of being hurt just for your gender, physically and psychologically.

Temple was a modern girl. She bought her own "sanitary protection" with careless regularity, somewhere be
tween the way she bought breath mints and condoms.
The euphemistic phrase "sanitary protection" still made the process seem dirty and secret, even today. What did you tell a girl on the brink? Relax and enjoy the anxiety,
the shame of doing something guys don't and some
times mock?

Where was Carmen Molina when you needed her? Adolescence was murder.

For guys too, remember.

Temple pointed to the bloody nick on her shin. "Noth
ing is smooth, Mariah. Everything hurts a little. That's
how we know we're alive. And we want to stay that way.

I'm afraid someone around this competition doesn't feel the same way."


Yeah." Mariah ran the disposable pink razor up her
still fuzzy lower leg. "That's obvious. We gotta find out who. That's why my mother sent you here."

“You think so?"

“No, she wanted you here as my babysitter but I'm not
a baby anymore, so you might as well do something more
useful.”

Temple gave her a high five. "Baby, you are so right!”

They were all on a schedule. Boot camp for beauty. That made them predictable targets.

Temple didn't like being separated from Mariah for
most of the day but they were on opposite ends of the age
meridian.

The moment when Temple realized that she was old enough to be Mariah's mother, she got cold chills. And
then she heard her own biological clock ticking. What did
she want? To be a pal or a parent?

But this wasn't about her.

And then there were more one-on-ones with the judges
in their advisor capacity.

First up was her very own maternal aunt, Kit Carlson.

Temple went to that one chewing a wad of gum big
enough to choke a camel (and therefore disguise her
voice).

She slumped on her tailbone on the single rattan chair before the Consultant Room One desk, and snapped gum.

Aunt Kit remained admirably cool to the whole act as she flipped through Xoe's file.

“You wouldn't be here at all if Manship hadn't liked your cheeks," Kit finally noted, slapping the file shut to
gain Xoe's attention, and staring at her over the rims of
her half-glasses."Men are easy."

“Men are only fifty percent of the vote."

“Yeah, what's that Elvis guy here for anyway?”

“Apparently local color. I think he's like Jai on
Queer Eye for the Straight Guy.
A cultural consultant, always a vague and unrewarding position.”

Temple shrugged. "Who cares what any of you do or think? I don't want to win anyway."


I bet not. Losing can become a way of life. You get to
sneer at the winners, whine, be cynical."

“Cynical. Like it's a
sin?
Sins are cool."


You try not to show it but you're obviously a very
bright girl.”

Temple sat up, indignant. "What makes you say that?" Kit smiled, making Temple feel like a rat for the masquerade.

“You worked that guy like a pro," Kit said, woman to woman.

“Pro what?"

“Pro girly girl. No prob. That's what this exercise in media exposure is about. Question is, is there a real person under that persona?"


Persona? Lady, what big words you use. I'm more
real than all those bottle blondes out there put together.”

“Granted. But what wins? The obvious. I almost voted
against admitting you to the contest but I had to admire
the crass way you played on Manship's crassest inclinations. I have a weakness for chutzpah."

“Is he really the deciding vote?"

“He's the audience favorite. Everyone has a mean little devil inside aching to bust out. He feeds that need. That makes him a man of power. The temptation for women everywhere is to play the man of power. That's the way women lose it. Lose it for winning."


So what are you doing here if the game's so
crooked?"


Restoring balance? Plus, I've never done anything
like this. I thought it'd be interesting. And it'll help my career."

“You're just in it for the fame and fortune."

“Anything wrong with that?"


Just don't go pretending you actually care about any
of us."

“But I do.”

When Temple snorted and looked away, Kit went on.
"If we women leave it up to men to judge women,
we'll end up with the Taliban.”

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