petmobile meant. Tourists photographed the wheeled bird, but the locals didnât seem to notice or care.
Brigitte took a while to find the perfect parking spot, just like she seemed to do everywhere in Paris. âBonjour!â she called to me. She had on a green lab coat today, which was equally as dirty as yesterdayâs black one. This one was speckled with white and black droplets that I suspected were bird poop. On her head she wore a hat with a long beak.
âGood morning,â I said. âHow about we talk in the van?â I thought that would get us away from the Âonlookersâincluding Knit Cap, now strummingâwho had gathered.
âI would love some tea,â Brigitte said, and walked toward the lobby.
She said hello to Ãtienne and briefly discussed the bashful personality of his pet turtle. Then he made her a cup of tea and placed a scone from the complimentary breakfast bar on a china plate. She and I sat on a sofa in the lobby. It seemed that everywhere we went, Brigitte was treated like royalty. Itâs true: people like people who care for their pets.
Henri joined us with a plate stacked a foot high with scones, muffins, and mini bagels. He was such a boy!
âThe book of tricks worked,â he said.
âWhat book of tricks?â Brigitte asked.
We filled her in on what weâd done while trying to spy on Beef, who sat in a leather armchair with her feet propped on an ottoman, toggling between her watch and her smartphone.
âI bet sheâs looking up stuff about the airport,â I said.
âNo, thank you. I do not like bets,â Henri said. âUsually someone loses.â I really needed to watch my expressions around him.
Beef put her phone down and whipped a pocketknife out of her fanny pack. She twisted a toothpick out of it and went at her teethâpoking and picking.
I touched the key around my neck and felt each groove and bend. When my fingers felt a small nub at the end, through which the ribbon was looped, I took it off. I rubbed the nub and, squeezing a little, turned it. It twisted like a cap on a tube of toothpaste.
It opened.
âLook,â I quietly said to Brigitte and Henri, but they were already watching. I turned the key upside down, and a tiny piece of rolled paper slid out. I screwed the top back on and unrolled the paper.
âIt says: â I leap off is written here.ââ
I looked at Henri and Brigitte for a reaction but gotnone. Brigitte shook her head like I donât know, and Henri shrugged his shoulders.
Henri said, âLa bibliothèque?â The library? âEverything is written there.â
âI guess it could be. Or a plaque somewhere?â I suggested.
Neither of them had any idea. I keyed the phrase into the search engine on my phone. Nothing.
âI guess we should go to the library,â I said.
âThat is good,â Brigitte said. âI can drop the Cliquotsâ pets off at the groomer on the way.â
âI thought you were a groomer too.â We headed out to a beautifully sunny Paris day.
Henri lagged behind.
âNot for this kind of pet,â Brigitte said. Based on the feathers and beak I had a feeling I was going to find some kind of bird in the mobile.
I got into the front seat and turned to look behind me, and I did in fact find a bird. Correction: birds. Blue and orange parrots. Three cages full.
Brigitte hopped into the front seat, buckled up, and checked the rearview, each side mirror, and the rearview again. When Henri came to the mobile, his pockets were stuffed with something. I knew what it was because I had brothers. Food.
He climbed into the backseat and Brigitte asked, âReady to go?â
Then every bird, all twelve of them, repeated, âReady to go?â âReady?â âGo?â âReady to go?â They werenât in unison.
Henri jumped back in shock. âThey talk ?â
âThe best kind of feathered
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