Between the Plums

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Between the Plums Page 25

by Janet Evanovich


  “You say ‘faith and begorrah’ again, and I’m going to hit you,” Diesel said.

  “You can’t hit me,” Snuggy said. “I’m old, and I’m half your size.”

  “Yeah, it’d be embarrassing,” Diesel said, “but I think I could force myself to do it.”

  Snuggy shuffled foot to foot. “Well, anyway, the money’s mine. And I want it back.”

  “I think it might be finders keepers, losers weepers,” I told Snuggy. “And besides, Grandma’s spent a lot of it.”

  Snuggy went bug-eyed and a red scald started to creep from his neck to the top of his head. “What? No way! I need that money. It’s a matter of life or death. They’ll kill Doug!”

  Oh boy. “Who’s Doug?”

  “He’s a horse. Douglas Iron Man III. We’ve known each other for years. He was a four-year-old when I retired. He was really something back then. He won the Preakness. Anyway, times have been hard for him lately. I ran into him last week when I went to visit a friend in Rumson. They had Doug in a stall, waiting to get put down. He had a sore on his leg, and they’d decided it’d be too costly to treat.”

  “That’s so sad.”

  “It’s more than sad. It’s criminal. Poor Doug. He was really depressed. He could hardly pick his head up. He looked at me with those big brown eyes, and I knew I had to do something. So I returned that night, and I sneaked him out and drove him to Trenton. My cousin has a house on Mulberry Street, and he let me put Doug in his garage until I could make arrangements for his leg operation. There’s a real good equine veterinary hospital in Pennsylvania. Problem was, I had to get the money to pay for Doug’s care. When I heard about Delvina, I thought it was perfect. It’s not like he earned the money and deserved it. I figured it was better spent on Doug.”

  I nodded. “Makes perfect sense.”

  “It didn’t make perfect sense to the guy who owned the horse,” Diesel said. “He woke up missing a horse. And he wasn’t happy.”

  “I left a note,” Snuggy said. “I even offered to buy Doug.”

  “We have people working to smooth things over,” Diesel said. “Until that happens, you and Doug need to keep a low profile. Doug can’t stay in a garage in Trenton.”

  “It’s worse than you think,” Snuggy said. “Delvina followed me to the garage last night and took Doug. Now he’s holding him for ransom. Delvina wants his money. All of it. Or else he’ll do something terrible to Doug.”

  “Great,” Diesel said. “It wasn’t bad enough that I had to find a guy who thinks he’s a leprechaun, now I have to rescue a horse.”

  “He’s not just any old horse,” Snuggy said. “He’s very intelligent. And he’s sensitive. It hurt his feelings when he found out they weren’t going to fix his leg. He worked hard all those years to stay in shape so he could win races. And then he was put out to stud, and he worked night and day impregnating mares. And it’s not like they were all love matches. Doug said sometimes they were downright cranky.”

  “Maybe Doug should have paid closer attention,” I said. “No is no.”

  “It was his job,” Snuggy said. “He was caught between a rock and a hard place.”

  Diesel gave a snort of laughter.

  “You’re supposed to help me,” Snuggy said to Diesel.

  “No,” Diesel said. “I’m supposed to remove you from action so you don’t do something stupid and end up on Letterman telling everyone you talk to animals.”

  “Jeez,” I said. “I feel really bad about this. I can’t just walk away and let Delvina kill Doug.”

  Diesel looked like he had another cramp in his ass. “You’re not going all girly and gushy on me over this horse, are you?”

  “I am absolutely not relegating some poor horse to the glue factory just because he has a sore on his leg. It’s a horse! Horses are amazing.”

  “Have you ever seen one up close?” Diesel asked.

  “Not lately. But they look wonderful on television. And I read all the Walter Farley books about the Black Stallion.”

  Diesel choked back a smile. He thought I was amusing. “Do you know where Delvina is keeping Doug?” he asked Snuggy.

  “No.”

  “How do you get in touch with Delvina?”

  “He calls me. He gave me until three o’clock tomorrow to return the money. He said if he didn’t get it by three, he’d shoot Doug.”

  “That’s plenty of time,” I said. “We just get the money from Grandma and give it to Delvina. Probably he won’t notice if there’s a little missing. These things happen, right?”

  I called Lula. “Don’t spend any more of that money,” I told her. “We need it.”

  “Too late,” she said. “It’s all gone. And I’m wearing everything I bought. I’m dressed in my supermodel clothes. And I was real lucky on account of I found that photographer at the craps table and he took pictures of me so I’d have a portfolio tomorrow morning.”

  “Uh-oh.”

  “What uh-oh? There’s no uh-oh. It’s all good. He spent a hour taking pictures, and he said they were the most fabulous he’s ever done.”

  “Did you pay him to take the pictures?”

  “Yeah. It was expensive, but it was worth the money. I tell you, he knows what he’s doing.”

  “Where is he now?”

  “I don’t know. I just come back to the casino, and he didn’t come with me. We took the pictures outside. It was cold, but he said the light was real good. Where are you?”

  “I’m on the fourteenth floor. I’m waiting for Grandma to wake up. She wanted to take a nap.”

  “I’ll come up there.”

  I disconnected and called Connie.

  “Are you still at the blackjack table?”

  “Yeah.”

  “I don’t suppose you have any money left?”

  “Nope. Lost every last cent.”

  “Maybe you’d better come up to the fourteenth floor. We have a situation.”

  Grandma’s door opened, and Grandma stuck her head out. “What’s going on?” She spotted Snuggy and sucked in some air. “It’s the robber! I’d know him anywhere.” She ducked into her room and, an instant later, was in the hall with a gun in her hand. She squeezed off a shot and took out a wall sconce before Diesel could disarm her.

  “She’s insane!” Snuggy said. “She’s a crazy woman. Someone do something.”

  “Must be something wrong with that gun,” Grandma said. “I don’t usually miss by that much.”

  “He’s lucky,” I told Grandma.

  “I’m pretty sure I’m a leprechaun,” Snuggy said.

  Grandma eyeballed him. “I guess that could explain it.”

  Diesel emptied the gun, pocketed the shells, and gave the gun back to Grandma. “Do you have any idea how much money you’ve spent?”

  “No. I wasn’t paying attention. Randy was keeping track of that.” She looked around. “Where is he?”

  “He went to the men’s room.”

  “Maybe the leprechaun made him disappear,” Grandma said. “Everybody knows you can’t trust a leprechaun.”

  I told Grandma about Doug and Lou Delvina.

  “Sounds like a lot of baloney,” Grandma said.

  “I’ve got pictures,” Snuggy said, taking his phone out of his pocket. “I took pictures so I could send them to the vet in Pennsylvania.”

  We all looked over Snuggy’s shoulder at the pictures of Doug.

  “He looks real, all right,” Grandma said. “And he’s a beauty. He’s got pretty eyes.”

  Lula stepped out of the elevator and made her way over to us. “What are we looking at?”

  I filled her in on Doug and Delvina, and I checked out her new clothes. Spike-heeled gold Louboutins, metallic gold miniskirt, and a long black satin tuxedo jacket. She took the jacket off and she was wearing a gold bustier that wasn’t nearly big enough to contain the girls.

  Snuggy was eyeball-to-headlight with Lula, and he looked like he’d swallowed his tongue when she turned to face him. Di
esel was rocked back on his heels, smiling. I’m solidly heterosexual, but I have to admit, I was mesmerized by the sight of all that boob spilling out over the gold top.

  “Boy, you got some hooters in that getup,” Grandma said to Lula. “I wouldn’t mind having an outfit like that.”

  “I was worried it might not fit just right,” Lula said.

  “It looks good from down here,” Snuggy said.

  “I’m not complaining,” Diesel told her.

  The elevator binged and Connie stepped out. “What’s going on?”

  I repeated the Doug and Delvina story, and Connie got a look at the photo.

  “We gotta rescue this horse,” Lula said. “I can’t take a chance on crappin’ up my karma now that I’m gonna be a supermodel.”

  “What’s with all this feng shui and karma stuff?” Connie asked Lula.

  “I got my horoscope done, and it said I needed to be more spiritual. I looked into being a Catholic and it sounded like a real pain in the ass, so I’m going with Asian shit.”

  “I guess I wouldn’t mind giving my money over to save Doug,” Grandma said. “And I still got my RV, so I’m pretty lucky when you think about it.”

  We all trooped into Grandma’s room and waited while Diesel counted the money.

  “We have six hundred and forty thousand,” Diesel said to Snuggy. “How much did Delvina say you stole?”

  “Eight hundred and ninety thousand.”

  Diesel dumped the money back into the bag and zipped it closed. “We’re short a quarter of a million.”

  “I went through ten,” Connie said.

  “I went through another ten,” Lula said.

  “I got a good price on the RV,” Grandma said. “It was only thirty thousand. And I paid some to Randy for guarding the money and driving the RV.”

  Diesel was smiling at Grandma. “You blew through almost two hundred thousand and you were playing dollar slots? That’s impressive.”

  “Especially since some of that time I was winning,” Grandma said.

  “Twelve dollars?”

  “Yep. I was on a roll.”

  “Delvina isn’t going to be happy,” Snuggy said. “He wanted all his money back.”

  “Delvina shouldn’t get any of that money back,” Diesel said. “Delvina’s lucky he’s still alive and walking upright.”

  “Yeah, but we gotta think about the horse,” Lula said. “We gotta focus on the horse. How’re we gonna get the horse safe and sound?”

  “Why don’t you do something lucky?” Grandma said to Snuggy. “You’re the leprechaun. You’re supposed to go around finding pots of gold.”

  “I could, except you need a rainbow to follow, and it was cloudy today. And I can’t do it at night. And anyway, I’m a Polish/Irish leprechaun, so the pot of gold business might not work for me. Mostly, I find it’s easier to steal the gold.”

  “I got a idea,” Lula said. “Suppose we take the money we have left, and we let it ride on the craps table. Okay, so we got a half-assed leprechaun, but this is still lucky money, right? I got lucky with it. And Grandma got lucky with it.”

  I looked over at Diesel. I knew who had the ability to win at craps. I suspected Diesel could make the spots change on the dice if he put his mind to it.

  “No,” Diesel said.

  “I didn’t say anything.”

  “You didn’t have to. I know what you were thinking.”

  “Now you’re reading minds?”

  “Cutie Pie, that thought flashed in neon across your forehead.”

  “I don’t think it’s a good idea to gamble with all the money,” Snuggy said. “Maybe we should each take a small amount and see how it goes.”

  “It’s your money and your horse,” Diesel said. “How much do you want to hand out?”

  “A thousand apiece,” Snuggy said.

  Diesel gave Lula, Connie, Grandma, and Snuggy a thousand and didn’t take any for himself.

  “Where’s Randy?” Grandma asked. “I need him to guard my money while I get lucky.”

  I called Briggs on my cell phone.

  “Yeah,” Briggs said.

  “Where are you?”

  “I’m with a girl. She’s twice my size and half my age and I’m busy. What do you want?”

  “Grandma’s awake and wants to go back to the casino.”

  “Jeez, give her a pill or something. I think I’m in love here.”

  “How long do you think this love will last?”

  “Ten minutes. Twenty, tops.”

  I disconnected Briggs.

  “Briggs is temporarily indisposed,” I told Grandma. “I’ll hold the bag for you.”

  “Okay, let’s do it,” Grandma said. “Let’s kick some behind in this casino.”

  “What about you?” I asked Diesel.

  “I’m babysitting the leprechaun.”

  “Was that sarcasm?” Snuggy asked.

  Diesel held the door for him. “You have a problem with sarcasm?”

  4

  We all piled into the elevator and took it to the casino level. Snuggy and Diesel walked off toward the blackjack tables. Lula headed for roulette. And Connie and I followed Grandma to her favorite video poker machine.

  “I can feel a big payday coming up,” Grandma said. “I was just getting warmed up before.”

  We got Grandma settled in, and Connie nudged me.

  “Look across the aisle at the blackjack table closest to us,” Connie said. “I think that’s Billy Major in the striped shirt.”

  Billy Major has a stable of hookers who work the projects. To my knowledge, he’s never been arrested for procuring. However, he has been arrested several times for possession of controlled substances, and the latest charge was outstanding. Billy Major was on my list of active skips. Major failed to appear for his court appearance, and until this moment, I hadn’t been able to locate him. Probably because I was looking in Trenton, and he obviously was in Atlantic City.

  I had a credit card and twenty dollars in my back pocket. My purse with all my bounty hunter paraphernalia was upstairs in Grandma’s room. “I haven’t got any equipment on me,” I said to Connie.

  Connie’s purse was on her shoulder. She rooted around in it and came up with cuffs and a stun gun and a semi-automatic Smith & Wesson .45. I took the cuffs and stun gun and left her with the Smith & Wesson. Connie was a lot tougher than I was, but capturing felons was on my side of the division of labor.

  I wedged the duffel bag with the remaining money between Grandma’s stool and the poker machine. “I’ll be right back,” I told her. “In the meantime, keep your eye on the money.”

  I crossed the aisle and stood behind Major for a couple minutes, watching him play. I had the cuffs tucked into the back pocket of my jeans and the stun gun in my sweatshirt pocket. The dealer shuffled the cards, and I leaned over Major.

  “Excuse me,” I said, close to his ear. “Billy Major?”

  “Yeah.”

  He turned and looked at me, and recognition registered. This wasn’t the first time I’d apprehended him.

  “Oh shit,” Major said.

  I clapped a cuff on him, and he yelped and jumped, knocking into the gaming table, sending chips flying. Everyone stood, the dealer called for security, overturned drinks dripped onto the carpet.

  I struggled to get the second cuff on Major. “Bond enforcement. Hold still!”

  “Fuck this,” Major said, ripping the cuffs out of my hands, taking off for the exit on the far side of the room.

  He had a head start, but he was hampered by high-heeled boots and forty pounds of gold chains hanging around his neck. He was plowing into people, but I was trying to be careful, dodging cocktail waitresses and casino guests. He crashed into an old woman with a walker and stumbled, and I took a flying leap and tackled him. My momentum took us to the ground.

  I’ve never had formal martial arts training. Mostly, I rely on the fact that men tend to underestimate my desperation. I curled my fingers into Majo
r’s shirt, knowing casino security would help secure him if I could just hang on until they arrived. We were tumbling around, and I caught a flash of gold in my peripheral vision and realized it was Lula.

  “Outta my way,” Lula said.

  I rolled off, and Lula sat down hard on Major. Major let out a woof of air, farted, and went inert.

  An old man looked down at Major. “He’s dead.”

  Lula got off Major, I attached the second cuff, and Major still didn’t move. We all took a closer look.

  “I might have seen him breathe just then,” Lula said.

  “I got a defibrillator on my Rascal,” someone said. “You want to try to jump-start him?”

  “I got oxygen,” someone else said.

  Lula got her foot under Major and turned him over. His eyes were open. His lips were pressed tight together.

  “Christ,” Major said through clenched teeth.

  “He just got breathless,” Lula said. “I have that effect on men on account of I’m a supermodel.”

  The security guys had arrived and were mixed in with the gawkers. The gawkers looked like they were enjoying themselves, but security didn’t look happy.

  Connie pushed her way through the crowd, corralled the senior rent-a-cop, showed him her documentation, and vouched for me as her representative. The gawkers began to disperse, and two tables down, I could see Diesel smiling at me. I flipped him the bird, and the smile widened.

  “What are we gonna do with this fool?” Lula wanted to know. “I’d take him back, but I got my photo shoot tomorrow morning. I’m sleeping here so I wake up fresh as a daisy. Grandma said I could bunk with her. She’s got that big ol’ suite with a pull-out couch.”

  “I’ll take him,” Connie said. “I haven’t got my gambling mojo going today. Let me borrow your Firebird, and I’ll give you my thousand.”

  “Deal,” Lula said. “I’m feeling hot. I probably don’t need the extra thousand, but I’ll take it just in case.”

  We dragged Major to his feet and walked him out of the casino into the parking garage. We got shackles out of the trunk of Lula’s car, trussed Major up, and put him into the backseat. Connie got behind the wheel, and we watched her drive away.

 

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