I have to admire the dude's courting technique. You cannot beat a good melancholy howl for making points with the ladies. Sometimes, if you are lucky, they will howl right back.
But Elvis, despite all the onscreen lovelies he serenaded in his thirty-two movies, was better off singing to them, as he continued to do with great results up to the bitter end.
So I slink away down the hall to the pleasant strains of song and story.
I am hoping that the object of my quest is a little easier to reach this time. When I arrive at the door, it is shut. Since it is made out of painted steel this is a severe setback, although not unexpected. Here my native ingenuity leaps to the four. I mean, fore. And to the four-on-thefloor I am equipped with.
Since there is nothing so formal as a threshold, I amable to thrust a mitt under the steel door, pads and shivs up. First I move my limb to the left and to the right, then I stretch and strain, and stretch and strain with all my might. I do the pokey hokey and turn my leg around, and that is what breaking in is all about.
Naturally, I feel nothing but air, empty air. No one has considerately dropped a key on the other side of the door that I can paw onto this side (so then I can go get Miss Temple and get her to open the door for me, which is the last thing I wish to do, because my investigation is not yet ready for another operative's messing with it).
I am so exasperated it almost crosses my mind to sigh, although that is entirely too doglike a thing for any self-respecting dude of my sort to do.
And then . . . I feel a flutter light as a moth in the palm of my pads. Eek! It tickles! I do not do giggles either.
So I steel myself against the teasing sensation and keep my mitt still. Smooth pad leather strokes mine. Playing footsie through the door might be a toothsome experience were the Divine Yvette or some other lissome lady on the other side, but I know what is on the other side, and I do not want it getting overfriendly with my pads.
So I pull my questing limb back under the door. Sometimes what is denied is what is most desired. Face it:
what is denied is
I hear a soft pressure on the door's other side and fix my gaze on the locked doorknob above me.
I know the Stare will not be sufficient to get me to the other side of this door, given the circumstance, but I also know that Someone on the Other Side Likes Me.
The silver steel knob jerks. Then jerks the other way. I heard the sweet snick of a deadbolt being drawn. The knob rattles.
And then the door cracks inward, and I am again al- most overwhelmed by the fruit-salad odor that sweeps out the open door.
I hold my breath, drag the cracked door open just enough to admit my svelte form, and dart into the darkness within.
I am welcomed with a raucous chatter and a crushing embrace
Chapter 39
Guitar
(Featured in the '68 Comeback Special, this Jerry Reed song was given a new Reed instrumental background by Felton Jarvis in 1980, and become Elvis's last number one song on any
It was as if Elvis had risen from the dead.
All the other Elvi's nearest and dearest stood in tribute, applauding wildly. They left their seats and stormed the orchestra pit, reaching up to this sudden embodiment of what the Kingdome was created to memorialize.
He stayed down on one knee near the stage rim, shining with the holy sheen of effort, head bowed, both the humble knight-to-be awaiting the icy touch of the naked sword, and the prideful acolyte accepting richly deserved acclaim.
Only the fact that Temple sat on the aisle kept Electra from charging out of her seat and doing likewise. "That was incredible," Temple said. "This guy is good!”
Electra flashed Temple a glance. "He's only about a tenth as good as the real Elvis." She sat back, and her voice shook a little. "But he's the best make-do I've ever seen."
“He must be KOK, and that means that the dead guy isn't."
“KOK?"
“The King of Kings. The other impersonators were talking about him like he carried the Holy Grail. I can almost see this guy justifying rumors that Elvis is alive and masquerading as one of his own imitators. How old do you think he is?"
“Does it matter? Temple, we just glimpsed something that no one has seen for over twenty years. It's like breathing the air of a pyramid that hasn't been opened since the time of the pharaohs."
“Electra, I know you're a fan, but breathe deeply. Think. Elvis isn't a pharaoh. He isn't eternal. Maybe he had extraordinary performing charisma, but . . . we all die, and he lasted longer than Jimi Hendrix and Jim Morrison and Janis Joplin, the other rock-star drug casualties of the seventies."
“Elvis wasn't like them. He didn't get into the drug culture from that disaffected counterculture. He was like us. He got into it because no one told him it was dangerous; it was prescribed.”