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Watching Kori Davies shovel eggs, bacon, sausage, and potatoes onto two sagging plates as I inhaled her eau de marijuana cologne should have rekindled my nausea. Except that Kori distracted me and my stomach with an avalanche of comments.
“How do you feel about being the other Bad Example?”
She hadn’t yet looked at me.
“Well, it’s a team effort. I couldn’t have done it without my dog.”
“I couldn’t have done it without a lot of people’s dogs.”
“Yeah?”
“Oh yeah. Susan hooked me up with her Afghan hound friends. She knew I loved dogs, so she figured I’d love handling them in the show ring. I do, kind of. But not the way Susan wants me to do it.”
“Then why do it?”
When Kori shrugged, her double-wide load of food threatened to hit the floor. But she rebalanced her cargo.
“It’s a chance to play with big beautiful dogs and mess with Susan’s head at the same time. Why not do it?”
Kori’s bloodshot eyes twinkled.
“Did Susan teach you to handle dogs?” I said.
“She tried, yeah, but I didn’t make it easy for her. So she asked some other people to work with me. I learned the most from Matt Koniger. He’s Brenda Spenser’s boy-toy… this week. And I learned the least from the Two L’s. They don’t just show bitches, they are bitches. Did you have the pleasure of meeting them yet?”
I nodded.
“The real question,” Kori said, “is how did you get on Susan’s shit list?”
“I’m here as a professional courtesy. Her husband-your uncle-is doing business with my company.”
Some part of my answer struck Kori as hilarious.
“Finding everything you need?”
Susan gracefully inserted herself in the buffet line between her niece and me. I assumed the question was mine to answer, but Kori intercepted it.
“Duh.”
She raised her mounded plates to Susan’s eye level.
“You might want to go a little easy on the calories,” Susan advised. “That new suit I bought you is a size four.”
“Your size. Not mine. And now if you’ll excuse me, I need to feed.”
She scooted away. Susan tossed me a pained “see-what-I-mean?” glance and added, “You should eat more than dry toast. It’s going to be a long day.”
I begged off. Watching Kori load her plates was almost more than my stomach could bear.
“We’ll have a short program for breeders and their guests,” Susan went on. “All you’ll need to do is follow my lead.”
As long as her lead didn’t come with a collar, I could handle it. At the head table, Kori was tucking into both plates at the same time. I’d never seen anyone eat two-fisted before.
“Is that all you’re having?” She eyed my nearly empty plate, her mouth full of eggs.
I nodded.
“Are you on a diet or something?”
“I’ve got a bad stomach.”
It didn’t take long for her to finish both plates. When she pushed back from the table like a satisfied lumberjack, I expected her to rock the room with a belch.
Instead she said, “How do you like the Specialty so far? ‘All Afghans, All the Time.’ More like, all attitude all the time.”
I thought about it. “So far everybody’s been nice to me. Except maybe the Two L’s.”
Kori snorted.
“If you don’t mind my asking,” I said, “what makes you a bad handler?”
“Can’t you tell?”
“I haven’t seen you in action.”
“You’ve seen how I dress. A handler is supposed to be ‘invisible’ behind the dog. But this is who I am, and I’m not changing. I don’t care about protocol or tradition or whatever they want to call it. And I don’t care how many dark suits Susan buys me. She picks stuff she wants to wear, anyhow, so she can keep it.”
Kori was guilty of having a whopping bad attitude, plus lousy taste in wardrobe. But those were minor offenses compared to, say, shooting a breeder. And yet Kori was attracting a whole lot more negative attention than whoever had murdered Mitchell Slater. I hadn’t heard anybody even mention that.
Which raised another question: Whoever shot at Susan and Ramona hadn’t come close to hitting either of them, but presumably the same person managed to kill Slater. With a single bullet.
Were Susan and Ramona a warning, a distraction, or target practice?
Kori was not so discreetly checking the contents of her crinkled pack of cigarettes. I wondered if any of them contained tobacco.
“I sure would like a smoke, but there’s no way Susan’s letting me out of her sight now.” She studied me. “You snitched, didn’t you?”
“Pardon?”
“You told Susan I was outside smoking.”
My face got hot. “Well, I-“
“I don’t care. It’s more fun when she comes after me. She’s always afraid that I’ll embarrass her. Again.”
I changed the subject. “How come nobody’s talking about what happened to Mitchell Slater? I thought it would be the main topic of conversation this morning.”
“You don’t know dog-show people,” Kori said. “The main topic of conversation is always their dogs. And if it isn’t their dogs, it’s themselves. Plus, Perry Stiles slid a memo under everybody’s door asking them to have a moment of silence for Mitchell-on their own time. He doesn’t want anything dragging down the spirit of the show.”
“But a man was murdered,” I said. “A breeder, no less. Also the chair of several committees.”
Kori shrugged. “The show must go on.”
I scanned the room. “Where is Perry Stiles? I thought he was in charge of everything.”
“He is. That’s why he’s the one talking to the cops.”
“Right now?”
She nodded. “I bet the cops think one of the breeders did it.”
“Why do you say that?”
“Cops always suspect the person closest to the victim.”
“True enough,” I said. “But that’s usually a spouse or lover or ex-lover.”
“Well, it can’t be Mitchell’s ex-wife cuz she lives in London,” Kori said.
I waited to see if she’d suggest that Susan and Mitchell had history, but she didn’t. So I prompted her a little.
“Why would you think a breeder did it?”
“I don’t know if a breeder did it or not,” Kori said. “But I think the cops would think a breeder did it when they start checking things out.”
Now that was interesting. Before I could check things out, however, Susan called the room to order. After going over some very boring doggy details, she introduced Ramona as co-chair of the Breeder Education Committee and gave her the floor.
Ramona’s silvery ensemble seemed over-the-top for a breakfast meeting. Or any meeting before cocktail hour.
I asked Kori, “How does she get away with dressing like that?”
“She hires handlers who don’t.”
When the applause faded, Ramona addressed the room.
“As you all know, Susan and I have been at this for quite a few years, and we’ve learned a lot along the way. We’re convinced that the best method for teaching new breeders and handlers how to do things right is to show them how to do things wrong. For the breeders, Susan has invited Whiskey Mattimoe with her bitch Abra. For the handlers, we have Kori Davies. Please watch them closely and observe their many mistakes. This morning Kori will be in the show ring with one of Susan’s dogs. How typically generous of Susan to make a personal sacrifice for the sake of breeder education!”
Ramona cued the audience to applaud. As they did, I reflected on her bathroom reprimand of the Two L’s. Why would Susan care if Lauren and Lindsey bashed Kori? Susan had admitted to me that she couldn’t stand her niece; she was publicly bashing her by presenting her as a Bad Example. Either Ramona simply liked to advocate for Susan, or she wanted to create the impression that she did. Or maybe Ramona was just a two-legged bitch.
She told her audience, “Whiskey and Abra will not, of course, be permitted in the show ring! But this afternoon Whiskey will walk Abra through the exhibit hall so that you can observe the dog’s condition as well as her owner’s complete lack of control. I promise, it will be an education!”
An appreciative murmur rippled across the room.
“It’s customary for the event chairperson to speak at this time,” Ramona said. “As you know, however, Perry Stiles is dealing with an unfortunate incident involving local law enforcement. So I will do the honors. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to this year’s Midwest Afghan Hound Specialty. Let the show begin!”
As breeders and guests applauded, I couldn’t help but marvel at the phrase “unfortunate incident.” I’d never heard a murder described that way.