Explosive Eighteen

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Explosive Eighteen Page 14

by Janet Evanovich


  “It’s not drugs,” I said. “She’s developed this weird attachment to Buggy.”

  “He’s adorable,” Lula said. “Like Shrek. I could just love him to pieces.”

  “That’s wrong,” Connie said. “That’s very, very wrong.”

  “I’m all excited,” Lula said. “I’m getting my first bondee. It’s like going to the animal shelter and adopting a kitten.”

  “This isn’t a good idea,” Connie said. “Buggy isn’t a kitten. Buggy is a …”

  “Dullard?” I suggested. “Slackard, village idiot, leach on society, clod, brute, oaf, dumb ox, not to mention purse snatcher and car thief?”

  “You be careful what you say about my honey,” Lula said. “And makin’ him my bondee is a perfectly good idea. I got a right to adopt a felon. I’m gonna take care of him, too.”

  “How are you going to post bond?” Vinnie asked. “Where are you going to come up with the money? What are you going to put up as collateral?”

  “I got my Firebird,” Lula said.

  We all gasped. Lula loved her Firebird.

  “This is serious,” Connie said. “You need to take her to the clinic and get a blood test. Or maybe she just needs to go home and lay down for a while. She could be having some sort of reaction from all the sugar in the doughnuts.”

  “I just got a big heart,” Lula said. “I got a heart of gold, and I recognize goodness in places it don’t seem to be. Like, you look at Lewis and you see apple-cider vinegar, and I see a big apple dumpling.”

  “You never saw apple dumplings before,” Connie said.

  “Well, I got my eyes open now,” Lula said. “Hallelujah. And on top of that, I’m takin’ love at first sight for a test-drive. I might have drinked a love potion.”

  “I like it,” Vinnie said. “If Buggy goes AWOL, I get the Firebird. I could give it to DeAngelo, and he might not kill me.” Vinnie passed papers over to Lula. “Sign where I made a mark.”

  Lula was on her feet. “I want to go with you when you get my sweet patooti released,” she said to Vinnie. “I want to take him home.”

  “I need you to help me capture Joyce,” I said to Lula.

  “No problem,” Lula said. “This won’t take long. Soon as I get my honeybee out of jail, I’ll help you with Joyce.”

  I was gagging on the sweet-patooti, honeybee, adorable-apple-dumpling stuff, but I needed to get Joyce out of my apartment, and I needed the money from her capture.

  “Excellent,” I said. “We’ll follow Vinnie to the police station, we’ll spring Buggy, take him home, and go get Joyce.”

  “WHAM!” Lula said.

  I stepped outside and waved at Slasher and Lancer. They were parked across the street again.

  “You lied to me!” Lancer yelled. “You’re not going to heaven if you keep fibbing to people.”

  Vinnie took off in his Cadillac, Lula and I followed, and Lancer and Slasher brought up the rear. Vinnie went straight, I turned right, and Lancer followed me. I drove two blocks, turned left, and zipped through a traffic light. Lancer wasn’t going to make the same mistake twice. He ran the light and got T-boned by a Jeep. I pulled to the side to see if anyone was hurt.

  “They all look okay,” Lula said, “but they don’t look happy.”

  SEVENTEEN

  I DROPPED LULA off at the municipal building and waited for her in the truck. I checked my mail on my phone and listened to some music. I was afraid to nap. With my luck, Raz would stumble on me. I’d been sitting there for almost an hour when Connie called.

  “Your friends are back across the street,” she said. “And their car is all bashed in. Are you okay?”

  “I’m fine. They tried to run a light and got T-boned. Have a pizza delivered to them and put it on my tab.”

  Minutes later, Lula, Vinnie and Buggy walked out of the building. Vinnie jumped into his Caddy and sped away. Lula and Buggy got into my truck. Lula took the front seat, and Buggy wedged himself into the small jump seat behind us.

  “I don’t fit here,” he said. “I want to drive.”

  “Here are your options,” I told him. “You can stay where you are, or you can walk.”

  “I want to drive!”

  “Isn’t he the cutest thing,” Lula said. “You should let him drive. He’s a real good driver.”

  “How do you know?” I asked her.

  “I could tell. And all the times he stole your car, he never wrecked it.”

  “He’s not driving,” I said. “End of discussion.”

  “I’ll hold my breath,” Buggy said.

  I cranked the engine over and looked at him in the rearview mirror. “Fine by me. I don’t care if you turn blue and die.”

  “I always pee my pants when I hold my breath,” Buggy said.

  “That’s endearin’,” Lula said. “I bet Shrek pees his pants, too.”

  I cut my eyes to Lula. “He’s going to have to get out and ride in the back.”

  “Sweetums, you want to ride in the back?” Lula asked.

  “No. I want to drive.”

  Lula rooted through her purse and found a Snickers bar. She got out of the truck and threw the Snickers bar into the back. “Go fetch,” she said.

  Buggy rolled out of the cab, ran around, climbed over the tailgate, and I stepped on the gas just as he wrapped his hand around the Snickers.

  I took Broad to Hamilton, turned onto Pulling, and stopped in front of the Bugkowski house. I stuck my head out my window and yelled at Buggy. “You’re home. You can get out now.”

  “Nuh-ah,” Buggy said.

  “Isn’t that special,” Lula said. “He doesn’t want to leave me. We bonded real good.”

  “And now you’re going to have to unbond because we need to bring Joyce in.”

  “It’s just so sad to have to leave him,” Lula said.

  She pulled another Snickers bar out of her purse and threw it out the window onto the Bugkowski front lawn. Buggy bounded out of the truck bed, snatched up the Snickers, and I put my foot to the floor. Adios, muchacho.

  • • •

  Joyce was still watching television when we walked in.

  “You’re late,” she said. “I’m starving. Where’s my chicken salad? Where’s my wine?”

  “It’s in the fridge,” I said. “Help yourself.”

  “Are you sure this is Joyce?” Lula said. “She don’t look like tramp. She look more like bag lady.”

  “Get out of my way, fatso,” Joyce said to Lula, brushing her aside to get to the fridge.

  Lula glared at her. “Say what?”

  Joyce opened the fridge door and I stepped behind her. Zzzzzzzt. Joyce crashed to the floor.

  “You don’t mind if I kick her, do you?” Lula said.

  “Yes, I mind. I don’t want to deliver her with unexplainable bruises.”

  I was about to cuff Joyce, and Connie called.

  “I don’t know if this is good news or bad news,” Connie said, “but the charges have been dropped against Joyce. The court’s returning the bond.”

  “I just stun-gunned her.”

  “Good for you,” Connie said.

  I disconnected the phone and passed the message on to Lula.

  “Does this mean I can kick her since we’re not bringing her in?” Lula asked.

  “No!”

  “What are we gonna do with her?”

  “We’re going to get her out of my apartment.”

  We dragged Joyce and her belongings into the hall, I locked my door, and Lula and I went back to the truck.

  “I feel much better,” I said to Lula. “It would have been satisfying to take her to jail, but at least she’s out of my space.”

  “Yeah, now all you gotta do is get rid of her cooties. You want to buy some bleach today, and maybe you can get some of that holy water to sprinkle around.”

  “I’ll add it to my shopping list.”

  “She had a good idea with the chicken salad,” Lula said. “We should stop at Giovichinni’s an
d get some. I’m gonna eat healthier and set a good example now that I got my honey pot.”

  I motored down Hamilton and slowed when I passed the bonds office construction site.

  “They’re making good progress,” Lula said. “They got windows in now, and they’re putting on the brick front. Too bad Vinnie gonna be dead when they finally finish.”

  There was room for me to pull the truck to the curb in front of Giovichinni’s. Lula and I got out and went straight to the deli counter. I got a chicken club sandwich, and Lula got a large-size tub of chicken salad, a large-size tub of coleslaw, and a large-size tub of rice pudding.

  Gina Giovichinni was at the register when we checked out.

  “Omigod,” she said, looking at my black-and-green eye. “I heard Morelli beat you, but I didn’t believe it until now.”

  “He didn’t beat me,” I said. “I fell in a parking garage.”

  “He pushed you, right?” Gina said.

  “No!”

  I grabbed my sandwich, went through the store’s front door, and stopped short. Buggy was sitting in the back of my truck.

  “It’s my apple dumpling!” Lula said. “Are you hungry?” she asked him.

  Buggy eyed the bag. “Yuh,” Buggy said.

  Lula handed him her food and ran back to Giovichinni’s to get more. I got behind the wheel, locked the doors, and ate my sandwich. I unlocked the doors when Lula returned and relocked them as soon as she was settled. I was afraid the apple dumpling would yank me out of my truck and drive away.

  “Now what?” Lula clicked her seat belt in place.

  “I think our luck has changed. We captured Buggy. We got Joyce out of my apartment. I say we go get Lahonka.”

  “Wham,” Lula said. “And double wham!” She turned and looked out the back window at Buggy. “We should take him with us.”

  “What?”

  “If you take him back to that empty house, there’s no telling what could go on. He’s such a bad boy.”

  I checked the bad boy out in the mirror. He had a glob of rice pudding on his shirt. “I thought he was an apple dumpling.”

  “You could be a apple dumpling and a bad boy all at the same time,” Lula said. “They could go together. That’s what makes him so appealing. He looks like a acorn squash, but he’s real complex. I like that in a man. And besides, I don’t have any more Snickers bars. I don’t know how we’re gonna get him out of the truck.”

  Good point. I put the truck in gear and drove to Lahonka’s apartment. Lula and I got out, and Lula told the acorn squash to wait in the truck.

  “Nuh-ah,” Buggy said, throwing a leg over the side.

  “He’s your responsibility,” I said to Lula. “I don’t want him taking my keys, my messenger bag, or my truck.”

  I marched up to Lahonka’s door and banged on it. Lula and Buggy were right behind me.

  “That door has a Band-Aid on it,” Buggy said.

  “It’s covering the hole I made when I shot it,” Lula said.

  “Go away,” Lahonka yelled from inside. “I hate you.”

  “She’s not nice,” Buggy said.

  “She’s a felon,” Lula told him. “We need to arrest her.”

  Buggy pushed us aside, gave the door a head butt, and the door came off its hinges.

  “What the hell?” Lahonka said.

  She had her foot wrapped in a big bandage, and she was standing on crutches.

  “What’s wrong with her foot?” Buggy wanted to know.

  “I shot it,” Lula said.

  “Har!” Buggy said. “Good one.” He looked at Lula. “Do you want her in the truck?”

  “Yeah,” Lula said. “We have to take her to the police station.”

  “The police station isn’t so bad,” Buggy said. “They gave me a cheeseburger.”

  He grabbed Lahonka and tucked her under his arm like she was a rag doll, while I scrambled to get her crutches.

  “I’m just about gonna faint on account of my honey pie is so strong,” Lula said. “I’d never say anyone was fat due to that bein’ hurtful, but let’s face it, Lahonka’s a sandbag. I carry a certain amount of weight, but mine’s perfectly distributed. My big beautiful bubble butt balances out my oversized boobs. Lahonka here got all her weight sunk into one of them low-slung behinds. It gotta be hard to get someone like Lahonka off the ground.”

  “You got a lot of nerve sayin’ those things about me!” Lahonka yelled at Lula. “You’re not nothin’ but a big ’ho.”

  “Am not,” Lula said, hands on hips. “I gave up bein’ a ’ho.”

  “I like ’hos,” Buggy said. “It’s like goin’ to Cluck-in-a-Bucket. You order something and that’s what you get.”

  “Sugar, it’s like that with a girlfriend, too,” Lula said.

  “Hunh,” Lahonka said. “Not with me. You get what I want to give you, and then you better say thank you.”

  Not with me, either, I thought. My new policy was nobody gets anything!

  Buggy carted Lahonka to the truck and dumped her into the back.

  “We need to cuff her, Sweetums,” Lula said, handing Buggy cuffs.

  Lahonka was spitting and clawing and swearing, and Buggy was having a hard time catching a wrist.

  “You don’t hold still for me, and I’m going to kick you in your foot,” Buggy said.

  Lahonka went still for a beat, digesting the threat, and Buggy sat on her and cuffed her.

  “Good job,” Lula said to Buggy. “Don’t let her escape. She’s sneaky.”

  Buggy looked at Lula. “Do you have any more of them Snickers?”

  “No,” Lula said, “but we’ll get more as soon as we drop Lahonka off.”

  “You aren’t gonna leave me back here with King Kong, are you?” Lahonka said. “He got his fat ass on me, and I can’t breathe. Isn’t it enough you shot up my foot? I’m just a poor workin’ woman. I got kids to support.”

  I drove to the municipal building and parked in the lot. I didn’t need police assistance. I could get Buggy to cart Lahonka across the street if she refused to walk. Lula and I got out and went to the back of the truck.

  No Lahonka.

  “I could have sworn Lahonka was here when we took off,” Lula said.

  Buggy was sitting with his back against the rear window. “She got out at the last light.”

  “You were supposed to make sure she didn’t escape,” I said to him.

  “Yeah, but she said she was a mama, and she was cryin’. So I let her go.”

  “That’s so sweet,” Lula said to Buggy. “You’re a man with a good heart.”

  “It’s not sweet!” I said. “Lahonka Goudge is a con artist and a felon. She steals people’s identities. And Mr. Potato Head here just let her go.”

  “Do I get my Snickers now?” Buggy asked.

  “You get nothing,” I said. “NOTHING.”

  Buggy squinched his face up. “You promised.”

  “The deal was you’d get Snickers after we delivered Lahonka. Did we deliver Lahonka?” I asked him. “No, we did not. So you get nothing. There are consequences to all actions.”

  “Nuh-ah. I do lots of things without them consequences.”

  “Not in my truck,” I told him. “There are consequences in my truck.”

  “That’s a good policy,” Lula said. “Just think where we’d be if we didn’t pay attention to consequences. Like, there’s consequences if you don’t got bullets in your gun. And there’s consequences if you eat bad potato salad. And there’s consequences if you’re not taking precautions with your sweetie pie.”

  I had a flash of panic recalling a small inadvertent lapse in my birth-control program in Hawaii.

  “Are you okay?” Lula asked me. “You got real pale just now, and you’re sort of sweating.”

  “I was thinking about consequences.”

  “Yeah, they freak me out, too,” Lula said.

  EIGHTEEN

  I OFF-LOADED LULA AND BUGGY at the bonds office so Lula could get her car
. Slasher and Lancer were still parked there, both of them sound asleep. Vinnie’s car and Connie’s car were gone, and the office was closed. Everyone left early on Saturday.

  “I’m going to take you home in my Firebird,” Lula said to Buggy.

  Buggy’s eyes got wide. “I want to drive.”

  “Of course you do,” Lula said, “but this here’s a finely tuned machine.”

  “Yuh.”

  “Well, okay, since you’re so adorable,” Lula said. And she handed him her key.

  “Get in fast, before he takes off without you,” I said to Lula.

  “He wouldn’t do that,” Lula said. “He’s my big honey.”

  The big honey rammed himself behind the wheel and took off.

  “Hey!” Lula said. “Wait for me.”

  “Get in the truck,” I told her. “I’ll catch him.”

  Three blocks later, Buggy was stopped in traffic. Lula jumped out, ran to the Firebird, wrenched the passenger-side door open, and got in. Mission accomplished, as far as I was concerned.

  I stopped at the supermarket and got a couple bags of groceries. Bread, milk, juice, peanut butter, olives, bag of chips, a frozen pizza, Vienna Fingers cookies, a bucket of assorted fried chicken parts, strawberry Pop-Tarts. I made one more stop and got a six-pack of beer and a bottle of red wine. I was going to have a feast tonight. I was going to have fried chicken, beer, and Vienna Fingers. Tomorrow, I’d have pizza and wine. No men. No Joyce. No Apple Dumpling. Just me and Rex and the TV.

  I lugged the bags up to my apartment, set them on the kitchen counter, and a chill ran down my spine. The television was on. I grabbed the Glock and peeked into the living room. It was Joyce. “What the heck?”

  “That was really shitty,” Joyce said. “You dumped me out in the hall. If I had any other place to go, I’d be there.”

  “How did you get back into my apartment?”

  “I had to climb up the stupid fire escape again. It’s getting old.” She came into the kitchen and looked at the food I was unpacking. “Where’s my chicken salad and wine?”

  “I didn’t get chicken salad. I didn’t think you’d be here. But here’s the good news. The charges have been dropped against you.”

 

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