by Gina LaManna
Lacey Luzzi Mysteries Books 1-6
Lacey Luzzi Mafia Mysteries
Gina LaManna
Published by LaManna Books, 2019.
This is a work of fiction. Similarities to real people, places, or events are entirely coincidental.
LACEY LUZZI MYSTERIES BOOKS 1-6
First edition. April 15, 2019.
Copyright © 2019 Gina LaManna.
Written by Gina LaManna.
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Lacey Luzzi: Sprinkled
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Lacey Luzzi: Sparkled
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Lacey Luzzi: Salted
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Lacey Luzzi: Sauced
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Lacey Luzzi: S’mored
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Lacey Luzzi: Spooked
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Epilogue
Author’s Note
Women’s Fiction:
Mystery and Suspense:
To my family. For the inspiration :)
Lacey Luzzi: Sprinkled
LACEY LUZZI’S ROLLER coaster of a life has been filled with the highest of highs and the lowest of lows. She just never expected the lows to be so... sparkly.
After falling on her face during an attempt to follow in her recently deceased mother’s stripper-boots, Lacey realizes she’s not cut out for life on stage. She sets out on a year-long investigation to find her true family, never expecting she’ll find it...with a capital “F.”
With a rumbling stomach, a need for money (check engine lights don’t fix themselves!), and a conscience that operates at 78% on a good day, Lacey is sucked into a whirlwind of family secrets, hard-as-cement cookies, and mysterious, sexy men who unfortunately shoot guns, sometimes aimed at her face. The long-lost granddaughter of Carlos Luzzi, the Godfather of the Italian Mafia, Lacey accepts her first assignment for the mob: finding fifteen million dollars of “the good stuff.”
Even after she enlists the help of her mouthy best friend and her cousin, a technical genius and social disaster, she finds that going toe-to-toe with the rival Russian mob is more dangerous than expected.
No one chooses their families, but Lacey Luzzi will be lucky if she can survive hers.
Chapter 1
I’VE NEVER THOUGHT of myself as a particularly good person. I also wouldn’t have said I was a particularly bad person – at least not until two years ago, when I sold my soul for a new car.
Okay, “new” was a stretch. My little Kia was more than three and less than twenty years old, the check engine light blinked at me an average of six times a month, and the alignment was twisted so far right I kept my wheel spun halfway left in order to drive straight.
But it was mine.
And I loved my car. I still do, two years later, just a little bit less than before – and that’s because I now understood what I’d sacrificed in order to afford a pretty crappy car. And it was all because I’d accepted a job with my grandfather, the Don of the Italian Mafia.
SEE, I’M THE LONG-LOST granddaughter of the St. Paul mob boss, Carlos Luzzi. Meaning, my grandparents didn’t know I existed for the first twenty-six years of my life. Carlos got his start in America after immigrating with his wife, Nora, straight from the boot that was Italy. To say the pair had been slightly more than shocked when they found me standing on their doorstep two years ago, claiming I had Luzzi blood, would be depressingly accurate.
And ever since that first “buon giorno,” I’d been sucked into a whirlwind of twisted secrets, Family history, and Sunday afternoon dinners – where the cookies were inedible and the servings fit for a soccer team of giants.
Growing up, I’d never understood why my mother had told me night after night that she didn’t have any family. She’d been a single mom, a wonderful one. So when she died three years ago, I couldn’t bear the thought that I’d be her only living relative at the funeral. As I stood next to her closest friends at the gravesite – Candy, Aurora and Cinnamon, the girls she worked with at TANGO – I vowed that I’d hunt down her family and find out why they’d abandoned my sweet, gentle mother, who ironically used the stage name Honey.
Though she wo
rked as a stripper Wednesday through Sunday nights, nine p.m. to closing, I couldn’t have asked for a better woman to call mom. Her hair was soft and blond, with long curls that danced down her back as she tucked me into bed before work. Her voice was lilting and light, reminding me of a dandelion gone to seed, the puffy wisps drifting away in the wind. When I asked her why she had a job where they made her work late all the time, she said, “Sugar, because there’s no paper trail with my job.”
This lack of paper trail, I soon discovered, was meant to keep her identity secret, so her family couldn’t track her down after she’d run away. Naturally, I set out to do some digging and searching (and investigating and stalking) and found a whole closetful of secrets about my mother’s past...and mine.
And it became blindingly clear why my mother had kept her lips sealed. After a year of sleuthing, I’d found my Family. I’d just never guessed I’d be standing at the doorsteps of a gated estate, referring to my Family with a capital F.
Sometimes, I wanted to kick all of the Family secrets I’d learned over the past few years back into the closet my mother had built around me as a child. Then I’d slam the door shut, lock and deadbolt it, cover it in gasoline, and leave a match burning on my way out the front gate.
This was one of those moments. Carlos had given me my first gig for the Family, and it was time to do or die.
I’D NEVER EXPECTED to die while standing knee deep in garbage, hiding for my life in a dumpster. The rusty blue walls felt a bit claustrophobic, and the space was made even tighter, due to the presence of my best friend, who was currently keeping watch over a man wriggling uncomfortably on the floor.
“I’ve got it all figured out. I want to be the boobs of this operation. You can be the brains.” Meg shifted her industrial-sized knockers into a push up bra that could’ve supported two watermelons. Ex-cop and current bar owner, she’d also held the title of “My Best Friend” since kindergarten. Whether that was an honor or a curse – for either of us – I was never quite sure.
“Meg, be serious. This is a test. My entire career depends on it.”
Not to mention my life.
And the lives of a few others. I glanced uneasily at the ground, where the strange man growled through the gag over his mouth.
“I am serious,” she said. “I even wore my extra supportive sports bra today so’s I could run, and jump, and hide, and shit. Well, maybe just the hide part, since if I start jumping somebody’s probably gonna get knocked out by these puppies. And it might be him.” Meg glared at the man. “What are you staring at?”
She addressed the figure sitting on the ground next to us. Actually, sitting would be an overstatement. He maybe had tape over his mouth. And he maybe wasn’t willingly on the ground, wriggling next to us. And maybe it was our fault he was tied to one of the garbage bags with a clever combination of a broom, a basketball hoop and a sock that we’d found in the garbage.
“Shhh,” I hissed. “You need to duck. Your hair is sticking up.”
“That’s okay, it’s camouflage. It’s like a bush,” Meg said. “Especially since this dumpster has so much crap in it that I bet a whole forest of bushes could grow here. ‘Cept those suckers would need to be real tough to survive; kind of like a cactus. I think I see some ketchup on your ass – at least I think that’s ketchup. And that squiggly stuff on your boot is maybe sauerkraut, or maybe something worse, the judge is TBD on that one.”
I flinched and made an effort not to look downward.
“Look on the upside, girl,” she said. “That yellow junk stuck to your earring is probably either mustard or guts. If it’s mustard, you got all the condom-ents to make a hot dog.”
“Condiments,” I said. “Cond-i-ments.”
“No kiddin’!” Meg laughed, much louder than was safe in our filthy hiding place. “I always thought it was condom-ents, on account of that’s what goes on wieners.”
“Not those wieners,” I said. “Now zip it and get down. I see lights.”
Meg obeyed my request for once, but it turned out to backfire. She shifted her good-sized frame and belly-flopped onto the single garbage bag that had actually been cinched shut and wasn’t leaking gucky fluids all over the place.
Splat.
Meg was a confident woman who somewhat resembled a bear, albeit a cute one: shaggy hair, a ferocious attitude, and plenty of weight around her middle for winter hibernation. She had so much confidence in that belly flop that it squished out a load of coffee grounds along with some Asian take-out.
“Would you look at that,” she said, brushing herself off. “Pad Thai. I had a craving for that this afternoon, did ya know that?”
“Don’t you dare eat it,” I said. “A homeless man has probably had his hands all over it.”
Meg eyed the food remains as if that weren’t reason enough to refrain.
“And he probably licked every single noodle.” I crossed my arms. “And then peed on it. Who knows? Maybe he had the chicken pox, or bird flu.”
Meg stared at the noodles as if they were her lifeline – her one meal per day (which wasn’t true considering we’d eaten four meals together already today, five if we counted the ice cream cake).
“Do you want to fit in that hot, red dress?” I asked.
“You’re right,” she said. “There’s probably extra calories on these noodles due to the gunk that’s in here. I think I’ll hold off for some more cake.”
“Good idea.” I hunkered down and peered over the side of the dumpster. “I see them,” I said. “We’ve got to be quiet.”
Chapter 2
TWO YEARS AGO, I’D been offered a job at the Luzzi Family Laundromat. It was a legitimate venture. Sort of. I’d snapped it up because I really needed the quick cash (thank you rent, loans, a humongous appetite, and a taste for mid-level wine). Plus, working at a laundromat wasn’t dangerous. Or so I’d thought.
After two years of slaving away as the lookout, or rather, front desk attendant, now was my chance to break into the real money – the real deal. It was my chance to make the whole grocery bill and car payment thing work out in my favor, consistently.
Tonight was a test.
Carlos had been clear. I was to successfully act as the lookout for a deal going down behind the crummy YMCA parking lot in White Bear. Make sure the transaction goes smoothly, and I get another job. Fail terribly, and I’m back at the laundromat. I had no problem with the laundromat, but it’s not like I could exactly get promoted there. And if I ever wanted to fix my engine light, I needed the pay bump.
I agreed to the gig, having been told that the stakeout was supposed to be easy peazy, lemon squeezy. Also, the payout was solid.
However, the assignment didn’t turn out to be a cinch like Carlos had said. No, instead here I was, covered in plenty of squeezy things that weren’t nearly as fresh as lemons.
The entire night had started rough, and continued downhill fast. We were so far down the slope that there was a man with tape over his mouth writhing on the ground next to us. It was kind of our fault he’d gotten stuck that way. And now, we weren’t sure what to do with him. So, as a short-term solution, we’d hauled him into the dumpster where we were currently crouched, trying to disappear from the shadows arriving outside, toting guns that looked like cannons back and forth across the YMCA’s parking lot.
“What are they doing?” Meg asked. “I can’t see nothin’.”
“There are four cars. They just parked.” I hit the ground. “Crapola.”
“What?”
“They’ve got some really big guns.”
“Well, they ain’t gonna use them on us, are they?” Meg asked. “We’re just chilling here in the garbage can. If they pop their heads in, we’ll just pretend to be female cookie monsters. ‘Cept sexy, and a little less blue. Maybe even less blue if you wipe that crap off your chin.”
“You mean female Oscar the Grouches.” I wiped impatiently. “How are we going to explain him?”
I give a light kick
to the man sitting on the floor. He was small and wiry, kind of like a mouse who’d been moderately overfed most of its life. He glared at me, unable to speak a word.
I turned away from his glaring eyes, pushing away the guilty feeling accompanied with kidnapping. It wasn’t like I’d kidnapped before – how was I supposed to know it didn’t make me feel very warm and cuddly inside? “We’ve got to get out of here. This isn’t how it was supposed to go down.”
“What did you expect? You’re working for the mob. But it’s okay. We’re like Die Hard over here, protecting our building. ‘Cept our building is a dumpster and we only got two teensy guns.”
“You brought two guns?” I asked. “Can I have one?”
“You’ve gotta be shitting me,” Meg said. “I only brought one gun, and it’s not that teensy, thank you very much. You don’t got a gun?”
“No,” I said. “Of course not.”
I’m not exactly Mafia material. After (almost) graduating college, I set out to be a stripper like my mother. But I wasn’t nearly as successful as her: where she was a sweet soul with soft curves and a soothing voice, I had a much sharper tongue, a bad habit of poking men in the eyes when they’d stick their fingers too close to my private places, and was not exactly the owner of the world’s largest chest-al region.
But just because I’m a feminist and watch my back on stage, doesn’t mean I can run fast, do karate, or own a gun. I’m not a scaredy cat, but I do avoid confrontation if possible. I have a few holes in my ears because I really love sparkles, but I’m afraid to get anything else pierced and I hate blood.
My hair is medium and golden (okay, brownish, but it’s kind of shiny in the sunlight). My body works for me, and it’s worked for a few of my ex-boyfriends, I guess. My stomach doesn’t hang over my jeans most days, my legs are fairly long and my mouth is much larger than average. The best academic achievement I have going for me is my spelling. I won a spelling bee once in eighth grade.
I fished deep in my pocket and pulled out a tiny, pink pepper spray canister. “I have this, at least.”
“Emphasis on least,” Meg said, her eyes taking it in. “If a dude showed me a wiener that size or color I’d turn around and leave.”