Cocktails at Seven, Apocalypse at Eight: The Derby Cavendish Stories

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by Don Bassingthwaite




  Praise for

  Don Bassingthwaite

  “Rumours of these stories, previously only read live, had reached a near mythic level for those in the know, but not the GTA—those rumours pale to the notorious truth. Whether it’s fruitcake zombies, overly possessive sweaters, or the holiness of a hockey arena, Bassingthwaite can skewer any tradition with Derby Cavendish’s dry martini wit. Cocktails at Seven, Apocalypse at Eight is sassy, salacious, and superb!”

  —Chadwick Ginther, award-winning author of the Thunder Road trilogy

  “If H. P. Lovecraft, P. G. Wodehouse, and J. K. Rowling somehow collaborated on a book together, it still wouldn’t be as weird, witty, and wonderful as Don Bassingthwaite’s collection of stylishly silly stories. Defending the world from the forces of darkness with bravery, brains, and bitchiness, Derby Cavendish is the hero we’ve always needed and deserved!”

  —Scott Dagostino, manager of Glad Day Bookshop and book columnist at DailyXtra.ca

  Cocktails at Seven, Apocalypse at Eight: The Derby Cavendish Stories © 2016 by Don Bassingthwaite

  Cover artwork © 2016 by Erik Mohr

  Cover and interior design © 2016 by Samantha Beiko

  All Rights Reserved.

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either a product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Distributed in Canada by

  Publishers Group Canada

  76 Stafford Street, Unit 300

  Toronto, Ontario, M6J 2S1

  Toll Free: 800-747-8147

  e-mail: [email protected]

  Distributed in the U.S. by

  Consortium Book Sales & Distribution

  34 Thirteenth Avenue, NE, Suite 101

  Minneapolis, MN 55413

  Phone: (612) 746-2600

  e-mail: [email protected]

  Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication

  Bassingthwaite, Don

  Cocktails at seven, apocalypse at eight : the Derby Cavendish stories / Don Bassingthwaite.

  Issued in print and electronic formats.

  ISBN 978-1-77148-376-6 (paperback).--ISBN 978-1-77148-373-5 (pdf)

  I. Title.

  PS8553.A823C64 2016 C813'.54 C2016-904207-3

  C2016-904208-1

  CHIZINE PUBLICATIONS

  Peterborough, Canada

  www.chizinepub.com

  [email protected]

  Edited by Samantha Beiko

  Proofread by Sandra Kasturi

  We acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts which last year invested $20.1 million in writing and publishing throughout Canada.

  Published with the generous assistance of the Ontario Arts Council.

  Contents

  Fruitcake

  Sweater

  Dreidel

  Naughty

  Special

  Organ

  Longest

  Green

  1. New Year’s Eve

  2. Mardi Gras

  3. St. Patrick’s Day

  4. The End of the Rainbow

  5. Friends Like These

  Publication History

  Acknowledgements

  About the Author

  Good night, Buddy Cole, wherever you are.

  I knew something was wrong at the East Sykes United Christmas Bazaar when I opened my bag from the Ladies’ Senior Auxiliary Grab-Your-Sack table and found a Ximec huahua fetish inside.

  Fortunately, my trusted associate Matthew Plumper was with me. I grabbed him from where he was browsing the jams and jellies. “Do you know what this is?” I hissed, thrusting it under his nose.

  Matt has extensive experience with things thrust-ing under his nose, but apparently a huahua fetish was new to him. His eyes crossed and bulged as he stared at the colourful ceramic stick, glazed as smooth and shining as a fresh Brazilian. “Derby Cavendish! Put that away!”

  “Exactly,” I said. “What is a huahua fetish doing at a church bazaar?”

  Matt blinked. “A wha-what?”

  “Hua-hua,” I repeated, enunciating carefully. “A sacred artefact of the ancient Mexican Ximec tribe.”

  “Thank fuck. For a second, I thought you were waving around the world’s ugliest pottery dildo.”

  I looked at the huahua, then at Matt, then back the huahua. “It’s a fertility symbol.”

  “Oh my god, it is a dildo!”

  “Ximec shamans used it to bring the dead back to life!”

  Matt gave me a narrow glance. “How?” he asked.

  I looked at Matt, then at the huahua, then back at Matt. “It’s a dildo.”

  The poor boy’s eyes nearly popped out of his head. “Do you mean they—?”

  I put my free hand over his mouth. “Please, Matthew. We’re in a church. And it’s Christmas.” I held up the huahua. “We need to find out what this is doing here.”

  The same experience Matt has with things thrust-ing under his nose, I have with the supernatural and otherworldly intruding on my life. They seem to be drawn to me. I’ve had to study them for my own protection—and for the protection of those around me. A huahua floating around without proper attention is as dangerous as a man putting on a dress for the first time: It may look harmless, but you never know how freaky things might get.

  My old friend Edie North was working the Grab-Your-Sack table when we stepped up to it. Edie, a lovely old dyke, is the reason I come to the bazaar every year. She’s laid more carpet than Home Depot but her face still lit up when she saw the huahua in my hand. “Derby, you lucky mincer! You got Faith McGilligan’s fruitcake faddler.”

  “Her what?”

  “Her fruitcake faddler. At least that’s what she called it. She said it was the secret to her Christmas cake. Usually fruitcake batter can get too thick to mix, but her faddler made it easy. She used to say she’d never need a man around as long as she had her faddler.”

  I raised my eyebrow at her. “Really, Edie?”

  She slumped a bit. “Lord, Derby, would you have wanted to tell an old woman she’d been using an antique dildo to beat her fruitcake for thirty years? Do you know how hard it was to keep a straight face while Mrs. McGilligan went on about how the bumps and ridges were there so you could really get a good grip?”

  Matt giggled. I kept my face solemn. This was a serious matter. “She’d been using it for thirty years? And nothing unusual ever happened?”

  Edie shook her head. “I’ll say this: whatever the thing is, it makes for a damn good fruitcake. As far as I’m concerned, Faith was welcome to call it whatever she wanted. Apparently her great-great-grandmother was a missionary somewhere in Mexico and brought it back. It became a family heirloom, passed from mother to daughter. Faith cherished it like nothing else. Mavis Anderson asked to borrow it one year and the way Faith reacted, you’d think the thing came with a scrotum and a wedding ring.”

  I pounced on that little clue. “If she cherished it so much, why is it up for grabs at a church bazaar?”

  “Ah.” Edie’s face fell. “That’s the tragedy. Faith is gone—”

  “Dead?”

  I may have gotten a little excited. Matt elbowed me like a bride at a wedding dress sale and Edie looked appalled. “
Moved! She retired to Fort Lauderdale last summer. When she downsized, she decided it was time to pass the faddler on and gave it to her daughter-in-law, Joy. But Joy didn’t want it—she donated it to the Grab-Your-Sack.”

  “How come you didn’t take it, then?” Matt asked.

  “First rule of Christmas bazaar,” said Edie. “Nobody takes from the donations.” She wrinkled her nose. “Plus there were too many of us who wanted it. Someone would have noticed. Derby, if you wanted to sell that ugly lump of pottery, you could get a good price for it around here.”

  I squeezed my fist around the huahua. “I’m attached to it like it had a scrotum, Edie. But tell me: Where can I find Joy?”

  ※

  It turned out that Joy was also at the bazaar, manning the bake sale. As we hurried downstairs to find her, Matt asked me, “Derby, if Mrs. McGilligan used the hoohoo stick—”

  “Huahua.”

  “Whatever. If she used it to make her fruitcake for thirty years, maybe there’s nothing to worry about.”

  That was when we turned the landing and almost tripped over a staggering man with cheap jeans and dead eyes. He might have been a husband dragged to the bazaar against his will, but there was something dark and sticky smeared around his drooling lips. Matt squeaked and pressed himself back against the wall. The man ignored him, swinging his head toward me—and the huahua stick. When I moved it, his eyes followed and he gave a low moan. I raised the stick high. He reached for it.

  I kicked him neatly in the balls. I dated a soccer player for two months once and some of the things I learned then still come in handy. “Sorry,” I said as he crumpled to the stairs, moaning more than before and clutching himself like he was looking for a prize. I grabbed Matt and pulled him after me.

  “Oh my God!” Matt yelped. “What was wrong with him? What was that around his mouth?”

  “Fruitcake,” I said grimly. “We have something to worry about.”

  The bake sale was set up near the front door of the church, a temptation for anyone entering or leaving. We slid to a halt in the middle of it. “Joy McGilligan?” I called.

  A sour-faced woman who didn’t look like she’d ever had a huahua near her hoohoo glanced up. When she saw the stick in my hand, her mouth puckered even tighter. “Take that thing away! I don’t want it back!”

  I brandished it at her. “Did you use this to make fruitcake?”

  She snorted. “Do you want some?” She reached behind the table, pulled out a basket, and set it down. It made a thud as if it were filled with foil-wrapped bricks. “Mother McGilligan swore by her faddler, but I tried using it and my batter just turned into a sticky lump around it. My husband could barely pull it out.”

  I had no doubt that he had trouble pushing it in, too, but aloud I said, “I understand the faddler was a McGilligan heirloom. Did your mother-in-law give you special instructions for how to use it?”

  Joy looked at me like I was insane. “She said to only stir clockwise. How stupid is that? What difference would that make?”

  Clockwise. From left to right. The path that the sun follows from dawn to dusk. I drew myself up. “It makes the difference between life and death. Who has eaten this fruitcake?”

  Maybe some of the danger had filtered into her mind. She looked a little frightened. “No one. We kept it aside in case we ran out and still needed something to sell. No one has eaten any of it yet.”

  “Oh, that’s not true,” said a sprightly woman behind the next table. “We took some of everything for the tea room. Plenty of people will have eaten it there—everyone loves the famous McGilligan fruitcake.” She smiled just a little too sharply at Joy.

  Joy glared back at her. “You’re still mad about the faddler, aren’t you, Mavis?”

  There was no time for their petty arguments. I seized the basket of fruitcake, pushed it into Matt’s arms, and swept from the bake sale back through the church hall to the parlour where the tea room was located.

  My timing was, as always, superb. Just as we reached the tea room doors, they flew open. Terrified parishioners came racing out. “Call 9-1-1!” someone screamed. “They’ve gone crazy!” screamed someone else.

  A teenaged girl with more piercings, heavier make-up, and a clearer sense of reality than her elders hit the nail on the head, though. “Fucking damn it, call the army—they’re fruitcake zombies!”

  Indeed they were. Standing my ground, I let the frightened mob pass by, then stepped up to the doors. Inside the parlour, a dozen of East Sykes United’s fine, upstanding members grunted and moaned as they shuffled around the room. Dark and fragrant fruitcake smeared their faces. Tea and punch stained their clothes. Baked goods caked their hands. And I knew in my gut that at any moment, their craving could change from Christmas sweets to sweet, sweet flesh.

  “Derby!” Matt whined. “Do something!”

  One works with what one has. I raised the huahua high and I said “Stop!”

  The zombies stopped—and turned toward me, their deadened eyes going to the ancient fetish. For a moment, they were still, awed by the power of the huahua.

  Then they gave a collective moan and lurched toward me.

  “Derby!”

  I held out my free hand. “Fruitcake!” I ordered.

  Bless Matt’s flapping little ass, if there’s one thing he does well, it’s respond to commands. Instantly, a heavy package slapped into my palm. Without pausing to unwrap it, I tossed it to the zombies. They fell on it like paparazzi on a slipped nipple.

  “That won’t hold them for long,” I said, taking the basket of cursed fruitcake from Matt. “Go back to the bake sale and bring everything you can.”

  “And then?” asked Matt.

  I looked down at the fruitcake piled into the basket and an idea crept into my head. “Find me rum,” I said. “A lot of rum. I think this cake looks a little dry.”

  ※

  And that was how the minister, the head of the Ladies’ Senior Auxiliary, and half of the choir ended up being carried out of the tea room at the East Sykes United Church Christmas Bazaar suffering from alcohol poisoning and badly upset stomachs. One works with what one has and I had fruitcake soaked in enough rum to put the zombies down while I used the huahua to undo Joy McGilligan’s unwitting curse.

  Of course, no one at East Sykes will ever know that I saved the bazaar, Christmas, and possibly the world from a fruitcake zombie apocalypse. They blame it all on mass hysteria and rivals from the Anglican Advent Market armed with a tray of pot brownies. I’m happy to let them think that. There are some things better kept secret. Besides, I’m Derby Cavendish—and I know that I’m the meanest fruitcake there is.

  Something evil entered the room with Beth-Anne Morrison.

  At first I thought it was the covered casserole she carried, vintage cookware in a shade of avocado green that died with appliances in the ’70s. A potluck dinner is a breeding ground for the dark side of humanity and that casserole dish could have been imprinted with the psychic toxins of forty years of potlucks and church lunches.

  “Oh my god, Derby,” said my trusted associate and back-up dinner date, Matthew Plumper. “Is that a Pyrex Verde 2½-quart covered oblong?”

  I know the supernatural and otherworldly. Matt knows his collectible kitchenware. “Matthew,” I told him, “it could be a 2½-quart bed pan for all I know.”

  He gasped and slapped my arm in outrage. I kept my attention on Beth-Anne. The Christmas potluck is the highlight of the Bluewater Belles and Beaus Dinner Club’s annual schedule of rotating dinner parties. No one wants to host an extra party in December, so the club gets together for one big table-breaking covered dish extravaganza. To be honest, I was only there because my friends Rick and Rick (or Ricky and Lucy as they like to say and everyone else is tired of hearing) were the new Bluewater chairs. I’d been dragged into joining up for the year, but now it seemed as if
fate itself had called Derby Cavendish to spend his Saturday night in an overheated church basement. To my honed senses, the evil that trailed Beth-Anne Morrison was as obvious as bad tuck on a drag queen in a cheap miniskirt.

  But it wasn’t the casserole. As Beth-Anne set down her dish to exchange air-kisses with Rick One, the evil clung to her. Was it her hair, combed up and hairsprayed into architectural magnificence? Was it her holiday makeup, her cheeks like rosebuds, her nose like a cherry? No. I let my vision go out of focus, the better to see with the second sight, the third eye—or as Matthew calls it “that expression that looks like you’re dropping a load in your shorts.”

  Dark shadows spread around Beth-Anne and the evil was revealed. It wasn’t in her makeup or her hair or nestled among the shredded cheese, crushed corn chips, and refried beans of her infamous Tijuana Serenade casserole.

  It was in her sweater.

  I couldn’t tell if the sweater was handmade or came from some godforsaken store, but it was an unnatural shade of green, the chunky yarn brushed into an imitation of evergreen needles and twined through with sparkling silver. It turned Beth-Anne into a walking plus-size Christmas tree complete with tinsel. I was surprised it didn’t have twinkling lights, too, but then she pulled on her brooch and, lo, there was light.

  Even Matt squeaked and turned away at the excess, but I studied Beth-Anne, trying to ascertain the exact nature of the darkness the Christmas sweater exuded—at least until Matt’s squeak turned into strangled moan and he grabbed my arm hard enough to break my concentration. The shadows of Beth-Anne’s sweater vanished. “Matthew!”

  “Oh, Derby, you want to see this.” He dragged me around with the wide-eyed lack of discretion that, along with certain other talents, has earned him the nickname Slack Jaw McPlumperson.

  And for once, I couldn’t blame him. Gracing the door with his presence, a big pan of kugel in one hand and a bottle of wine in the other, was as handsome a daydream as ever stepped out of a Sears catalogue. Tousled blond hair, broad shoulders, square jaw, and fingers completely unhampered by a wedding ring.

 

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