but,â Terry sniped.
âThatâs four,â said Bertie, looking down at her watch. âHurry up, Terry. Weâre almost due at the ring.â
He stopped brushing the Maltese and counted silently on his fingers. Luckily there were only five finalists. âWhoâd I miss?â
â We donât know,â I said impatiently. Bertie was right, we needed to get the Poodles down off their tables and start heading over to the ring. I saw Crawford threading his way through the other setups, probably coming back to get his own Poodles. âYouâre the guy with the gossip.â
âShhh, not so loud.â Terry dropped his voice. He saw Crawford coming, too. âItâs Brando.â
Bertieâs head whipped around. Aunt Pegâs eyes widened. Either response would have gotten my attention. Both, brought me up short.
âWho?â I asked.
âBrando the Boxer.â
âOh dear,â said Aunt Peg.
âDitto,â said Bertie.
That didnât sound good, did it?
4
âW hat are you doing standing around talking?â
Crawford asked. âToy bitches are already in the ring.â He leveled a look at Terry. âWere you going to bring me my specials dog or did you expect Drucilla to come over here and judge him at the setup?â
âOops,â Terry muttered. He slid the Maltese into an empty crate and swept Crawfordâs Toy Poodle up off another grooming table. Fortunately, aside from the bright pink vet wrap holding the little dogâs ear hair in place, he was ready to go.
Crawford reached over and plucked the silver Toy out of Terryâs arms. âThis late, youâd better bring the Minis. You know Drucilla, she doesnât waste any time. Hey Peg, nice to see you.â
The handler spun around and was gone again before anyone had a chance to utter a word.
âWho put a bee in his bonnet?â asked Bertie.
âItâs nothing,â Terry said quickly. âAbsolutely nothing. All my fault.â
Interesting, I thought. Terry never voluntarily took the blame for anything; indeed he never needed to. The man was made of Teflon. Heâd never seen a sticky situation he couldnât wiggle out of with aplomb. Something was definitely up.
I would have asked Aunt Peg what she thought but, ever practical, she was already moving to lend a hand. She slipped between the rows of crates that marked the end of Bertieâs setup and the beginning of Crawfordâs. Terry had three Miniature Poodlesâall brushed out, sprayed up, and ready to go to ringsideâand two arms.
âIâve got one,â Peg told him. âLetâs go.â
That left Bertie and me with her two, the Standard dog Iâd been working on, and her Mini entry that was apparently due in the ring shortly. We loaded up gear and Poodles and joined the caravan heading across the grassy expanse between the grooming tent and the rings.
By the time we reached Drucilla Melvilleâs ring, Crawford and his silver special were already inside and being judged. Heâd been right, we were running late. Quickly I consulted with the steward and picked up our numbered armbands. I was sliding a rubber band up Bertieâs arm to hold the numbers in place when Crawford was awarded Best of Variety.
Mrs. Melville made short work of her Mini dogs, then it was Bertieâs turn in the ring with the bitch. She beat Crawford to win the Open class, then picked up two points and the purple Winners ribbon. Minutes later, both handlers lost to another pro in Best of Variety.
Waiting next to the gate, I took Bertieâs Mini when she exited the ring and handed over her Standard dog. Since Bertie had already gotten her share of the winnings in Minis, neither one of us was surprised when her Standard Poodle managed to garner only a low ribbon in his class.
âHow stupid is that,â she said, as we headed back to the setup. âHeâs a better Poodle