When Qwilleran handed in his copy for Friday’s paper, Junior scanned it and said, “We’d better alert the bank to get some hundred-dollar bills out of the vault. People around here think that nothing over a twenty is negotiable.”
Qwilleran commented, “That was a nice piece on the Kit Kat Agenda in yesterday’s paper.”
“Yeah, Mavis Adams makes a good interview. She has all the facts, and she’s articulate. She’s an attorney, you know, although she doesn’t look like one.”
“What is a woman attorney supposed to look like, Junior? After all, you don’t look like a managing editor.”
Ignoring the barb, Junior said, “Wait till you see the big ad on page five—”
He was interrupted by the breezy arrival of Hixie Rice. “Hi, you guys! What’s new and exciting?”
“Old proverbs,” Qwilleran replied. “Just to test your cultural literacy, see if you can finish this one. Three comforts of old age are . . .”
Neither she nor the managing editor could fill in the blanks.
“I'm ending my column with a quiz. Readers will be given the three or four opening words of several proverbs. If they can’t complete them, the answers will be in my Tuesday column.”
“So what are the three comforts of old age?” they wanted to know.
“You’ll have to wait until Tuesday.”
Hixie objected. “That’s too long a wait. Readers will lose interest. I have a better idea. Bury the answers in today’s paper—in the want ads, real estate listings, or wherever.”
Junior, always under Hixie’s spell, seconded the motion, and Qwilleran was outvoted. Reluctantly he handed over the answers, and Junior rushed them off to the production department.
Qwilleran asked Hixie, “And how are the plans progressing for the Sesquicentennial?”
With her usual enthusiasm she said, “The committee has tons of ideas! And we have a whole year to work on it! It’s going to be the biggest little Sesquicentennial in North America!”
“More power to you!” he said.
Qwilleran’s next chore was to take Polly’s long shopping list to Toodle’s Market, and in the paper goods aisle his loaded cart collided with that of a Pleasant Street resident. “Sorry,” he said. “I have insurance, in case I've broken your eggs, or curdled your coffee cream.”
It was Jeffa, the new wife of Whannell MacWhannell. “Qwill! Isn’t that a large load of groceries for a bachelor and two cats?”
“They’re Polly’s,” he explained. do her shopping while she’s at work, and then I get invited to dinner.”
“Smooth! I never had an arrangement like that when I was in the workplace... By the way, that was an excellent feature on the Kit Kat Agenda in your paper.”
“Are you involved?”
“Mac has okayed a kitten colony as long as they have their own room and don’t run all over the house getting in his shoes and pants legs. There’s a meeting Tuesday night to plan the Kit Kat Revue. I hope you’ll be there.”
When Qwilleran returned to the barn, Yum Yum greeted him with affectionate ankle-rubbing, but Koko was sitting stiffly and defiantly on one of the bookshelves.
Qwilleran thought, That rascal! He’s knocked it down again, just to be funny.
The book on the floor was not Poor Richard’s Almanac but another old book from the late Eddington Smith’s store: a historical novel by Winston Churchill. And that raised a question:
Eddington had named his cat Winston Churchill—a dignified gray longhair with plumed tail and an impressive intellect. The bookseller attributed the latter to the cat’s literary environment. Now it occurred to Qwilleran that Winston had been named for an American author—not a British statesman! The book on the floor was a historical novel about the American Revolution published in the late nineteenth century. Titled Richard Carvel, it was by the most popular author of historical novels of his time.
At two o’clock, Qwilleran walked down the lane to pick up his newspaper. Eager to read the ad on page five, he sat on the bench at the front door of the Art Center.
The ad announced the opening of Thelma’s Film Club in the old opera house featuring old movies from the Golden Age of Hollywood... for members only... cabaret style. Beer and wine at the evening show and a full bar at the late-night show. There was a phone number to call for further information. It was a Lockmaster exchange.
As Qwilleran was marshaling the questions he wanted to ask, the front door of the Art Center was flung open, and Thornton Haggis shouted, “Hey, Qwill! What kind of tricks are you playing on your long-suffering readers’?” He was waving a copy of the Something. “I've been through this whole paper, line by line, and I can’t find a single reference for your readers about old sayings!”
“Oh-oh! Let me use your phone,” Qwilleran said.
In the office he got Junior on the phone. “What happened!”
The managing editor groaned. It was all set up for the business page! And it disappeared! Don’t ask me how. Our phone has been ringing nonstop. Hixie’s doing a recorded message: If you wish the answers to the "Qwill Pen" quiz, please press one. Then the nine sayings are read... There’s always something, isn’t there, Qwill?”
Another of Hixie’s ideas had gone awry. Qwilleran began to fear for the Sesquicentennial.
When he arrived at the barn, Qwilleran phoned the Moose County Something and “pressed one’ as instructed. A voice said, “We apologize for the computer error that omitted the answers to the proverb quiz in the "Qwill Pen" column. The correct answers are . . .”
1. Three comforts of old age are an old wife, an old dog, and ready money.
2. A cat in gloves catches no mice.
3. An empty bag can never stand upright.
4. Eat to live and not live to eat.
5. A used key is always bright.
6. He that lives on hope dies of starvation.
7. There never was a good war or a bad peace.
8. Blame-all and praise-all are two blockheads.
9. Keep your eyes wide open before marriage and half shut afterwards.
When Qwilleran arrived at Polly’s condo for dinner, he used his own key to let himself in and was met by Brutus with a challenging stare.
He said to the cat, “Do you want to see my driver’s license or social security card? Or will my press card do?”
“Come in! Come in!” Polly called from the kitchen, “and tell me what went wrong at the Something today? The library was swamped with calls!”
“What did they want?”
“The answers to your quiz—that should have been in the paper and weren’t. We looked up the sayings in Bartlett, and the clerks have been reading them off to callers.”
He said, “You always have everything under control, Polly. Shall we have dinner on the deck? The temperature is perfect; there’s no wind.”
“Any bugs?”
“Too early”
The first course was a grapefruit compote with blueberries and he said, “I don’t remember any grapefruit on your shopping list today”
“Wait till you hear the story!... One of our volunteers received a shipment of grapefruit from an orchard in Florida—with birthday greetings from someone called Miranda. She doesn’t know anyone by that name, and her birthday is in November. She phoned the orchard. They didn’t seem concerned—just blamed computer error and told her to enjoy them... Well, she’s a widow, living alone, so she brought them to the library.”
“It seems to me,” Qwilleran said, “that the computers make more errors than humans ever did.”
“And human errors seemed more understandable and forgivable.”
“I must say it’s the best grapefruit I ever tasted. Welcome to the Brave New World of Computer Errors.”
The main course was a casserole combining several recent leftovers, and Qwilleran congratulated her on creating a flavor hitherto unknown to the human palate, even though it looked like a dog dinner. “It beggars description,” he said. “I hope there are seconds.” They consumed it in a silence of rapture or stoicism.
“And now are you ready for the salad, dear?”
“As ready as I'll ever be!”
Talking to take his mind off the spinach, endive, kale, and arugula, he asked, “Did you see the ad for Thelma’s Film Club? I phoned the number and got a recorded message, of course. Memberships are fifty dollars for the evening show; a hundred for the late-night show—good for a year. Admission tickets are five dollars. Members may buy tickets for guests. The speaker identified himself as Dick Thackeray, manager, but he added that Thelma Thackeray will host the evening shows.”
Polly wondered if the idea would go over in Moose County.
“It’ll draw from Lockmaster and Bixby Counties chiefly, I'd guess. But there’s no doubt it will benefit Pickax restaurants.”
Dessert was frozen yogurt with a choice of three toppings. Qwilleran had all three.
“Any news in your exciting life, Qwill?”
He had to consider awhile. “Yum Yum threw up her breakfast... Koko staged a three-alarm yowling fit to let me know one of the faucets was dripping . . .”
“How were Thelma’s waffles?”
“Good, but rich. You wouldn’t have approved... The parrots were amusing and strikingly beautiful.”
“What was Thelma wearing?”
“A long yellow garment and two armfuls of bracelets -just gold hoops as thin as wire, but lots of them.”
“They’re called bangle bracelets,” Polly said. “Incidentally, I ran into Fran Brodie at the hair salon today, and she said that Thelma has decided jeweled pins and necklaces and bracelets are too flashy for Moose County. She’s put them in her bank vault. She’ll just wear her tiny diamond ear-studs and diamond-studded sunglasses and bangle bracelets.”
Qwilleran huffed into his moustache and wondered, Are they in her bank vault?... or on the way to California with the kidnappers?
He was thinking of his theory—that the ransom demand had been for jewels, not cash. Did the kidnappers follow her here from California? Did she give them everything except diamond ear-studs and bangle bracelets? What jewelry would she wear to visit Pop’s grave and have dinner at the Boulder House Inn?
He helped Polly remove the dinner appurtenances from the deck, and then they made plans for the following evening: dinner at Tipsy’s Tavern and then an opera on stereo at home. Polly suggested La Traviata.
“Are you going to Homer’s birthday celebration in the morning, Qwill?”
“Just as an observer,” he said.
Qwilleran described the birthday celebration in his personal journal.
Saturday, April 19—The lobby of the Ittibittiwassee Estates was trimmed with colorful balloons and crowded with city and county officials, local and state media, and Derek Cuttlebrink with his guitar. Residents were restrained behind roping. Everyone was facing the elevator door.
When it opened, out rolled Homer in a wheelchair pushed by his young wife. He was wearing a gold paper crown tilted at a rakish angle. One could tell by the expression on his furrowed face that neither the crown nor the cameras nor the balloons were his own idea. Sorry, Homer; when you become a civic treasure, you give up certain individual rights. When the prolonged applause began to subside, Derek strummed a few chords and sang in a nasal voice to the tune of George M. Cohan’s ‘You’re a Grand Old Flag’:
He’s a grand old guy with a spark in his eye
And as bright as the Fourth of July!
And they say that he’s
Got both his knees
And still takes his brandy with rye.
Now he’s ninety-nine
And he’s feeling fine
And he still takes the curves in high!
We’ll all be here
Again next year
To cheer Homer the grand old guy!
They weren’t the best lyrics I'd ever written, but Derek made them sound good. As the applause reached a crescendo, the elevator doors opened, the wheelchair rolled back into the car, the door closed, and the green light signaled UP.