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Full House

Page 26

by Janet Evanovich


  I narrowed my eyes. "Excuse me?"

  "You're not exactly a sex goddess," he said. "Hair from hell. Baggy sweatpants. No make-up. Lousy personality. Not that there isn't some potential. You have an okay shape. What are you, 34B? And you've got a good mouth. Nice pouty lips." He threw me another smile. "A guy could get ideas looking at those lips."

  Great. The nutcase who somehow got into my apartment was getting ideas about my lips. Thoughts of serial rapists and sex killings went racing through my mind. My mother's warnings echoed in my ears. Watch out for strangers. Keep your door locked. Yes, but it's not my fault, I reasoned. He's a crazy alien. How do you keep aliens out?

  I took his boots, carried them to the front door, and threw them into the hall. "Your boots are in the hall," I yelled. "If you don't come get them, I'm pitching them down the trash chute."

  My neighbor, Mr. Wolesky, stepped out of the elevator with his arms loaded up with bags. "Five days to Christmas and the stores are picked clean," he said. "And they all say everything's on sale but I know they jack up the prices. They always gotta gouge you at Christmas. There should be a law. Somebody should look into it."

  Mr. Wolesky unlocked his door, slid inside, and slammed the door after himself. The door lock clicked into place, and I heard Mr. Wolesky's television go on.

  Diesel elbowed me aside, went into the hall, and retrieved his boots. "You know, you have a real attitude problem," he said.

  "Attitude this," I told him, closing my door, locking him out of the apartment.

  The bolt shot back, the lock tumbled, and Diesel opened the door, walked to the couch, and sat down to put his boots on.

  Hard to pick an emotion here. Confused and astounded would be high on the list. Scared bonkers wasn't far behind. "How'd you do that?" I said, squeaky-voiced and breathless. "How'd you unlock my door?"

  "I don't know. It's just one of those things we can do."

  Goosebumps prickled on my forearms. "Now I'm really creeped out."

  "Relax. I'm not going to hurt you. Hell, I'm supposed to make your life better." He gave a snort and another bark of laughter at that. "Yeah, right," he said.

  Deep breath, Stephanie. Not a terrific time to hyperventilate. If I passed out from lack of oxygen, God knows what would happen. Suppose he was from outer space, and he conducted an anal probe while I was unconscious? A shiver ripped through me. Yuck! "What are we looking at here?" I asked him. "Ghost? Vampire? Space alien?"

  He slouched back into the couch and zapped the television on. "You're in the ballpark."

  I was at a loss. How do you get rid of someone who can unlock locks? You can't even have him arrested by the police. And even if I decided to call the police, what would I say? I have a sort of real guy in my apartment?

  "Suppose I cuffed you and chained you to something. What then?"

  He was channel-surfing, concentrating on the television. "I could get loose."

  "Suppose I shot you."

  "I'd be pissed off. And it's not smart to piss me off."

  "But could I kill you? Could I hurt you?"

  "What is this, twenty questions? I'm looking for a game here. What time is it, anyway? And where am I?"

  "You're in Trenton, New Jersey. It's eight o'clock in the morning. And you didn't answer my question."

  He flipped the television off. "Crap. Trenton. I should have guessed. Eight in the morning. I have a whole day to look forward to. Wonderful. And the answer to your question is ... a qualified no. It wouldn't be easy to kill me, but I suppose if you put your mind to it, you could come up with something."

  I went to the kitchen and phoned my next-door neighbor, Mrs. Karwatt. "I was wondering if you could come over for just a second," I said. "There's something I'd like to show you." A moment later, I ushered Mrs. Karwatt into my living room. "What do you see?" I asked her. "Is there anyone sitting on my couch?"

  "There's a man on your couch," Mrs. Karwatt said. "He's big, and he has a blond ponytail. Is that the right answer?"

  "Just checking," I said to Mrs. Karwatt. "Thanks."

  Mrs. Karwatt left, but Diesel remained.

  "She could see you," I said to him.

  "Well, duh."

  He'd been in my apartment for almost a half hour now, and he hadn't done a full head rotation or tried to wrestle me down to the ground. That was a good sign, right? My mother's voice returned. It means nothing. Don't let your guard down. He could be a maniac! Frightening, right?

  "What are you doing here?" I asked him, curiosity beginning to override panic.

  He stood and stretched and scratched his stomach. "How about if I'm the friggin' spirit of Christmas?"

  My mouth dropped open. The friggin' spirit of Christmas. I must be dreaming. Probably I'd dreamed I'd called Mrs. Karwatt, too. The friggin' spirit of Christmas. That's actually pretty funny. "Here's the thing," I said to him. "I have enough Christmas spirit. I don't actually need you."

  "Not my call, Gracie. Personally, I hate Christmas. And I'd prefer to be sitting under a palm tree right now, but hey, here I am. So let's get on with it."

  "My name's not Gracie."

  "Whatever." He looked around. "Where's your tree? You're supposed to have a stupid Christmas tree."

  "I haven't had time to buy a tree. There's this guy I'm trying to find. Sandy Claws, wanted for burglary, and now he's failed to appear for his court appearance, so he's in violation of his bond agreement."

  "Hah! Good one. That's a prize-winning excuse for not having a Christmas tree. Let me see if I've got the details right. You're a bounty hunter?"

  "Yes."

  "Very sexy."

  I did another eye-roll.

  "And you're after Santa Claus because he skipped."

  "Not Santa Claus. Sandy Claws. S-a-n-d-y C-l-a-w-s.

  "Sandy Claws. Cripes, how would you like to have that name? I bet he uses kitty litter."

  This was coming from a guy named for a train engine. "First, I have a legitimate job. I work for Vincent Plum Bail Bonds as a bond enforcement agent. Second, Claws isn't such a weird name. It was probably Klaus and changed at Ellis Island. It happened a lot. Third, I don't know why I'm explaining this to you. Probably I had a stroke and fell down and hit my head and I'm actually in ICU right now, dreaming all this."

  "You see, this is typical of the problem. Nobody believes in the mystical anymore. Nobody believes in miracles. As it happens, I'm a little supernatural. Why can't you just accept that and go with it? I bet you don't believe in Santa Claus either. Maybe Sandy Claws didn't have his name changed from Klaus. Maybe he had his name changed from Santa Claus. Maybe the old guy got tired of the toys-for-kids routine and just wanted to go hide out somewhere."

  "So you think it might be Santa Claus living in Trenton under an assumed name?"

  Diesel shrugged. "It's possible. Santa's a pretty shifty guy. He has a dark side, you know."

  "I didn't know that."

  "Not many people know that. So if you could catch this Claws guy, you'd get a Christmas tree?"

  "Probably not. I haven't got money for a tree. And I haven't got any ornaments."

  "Oh man, I'm stuck with a whiner. No time, no money, no ornaments. Yadda, yadda, yadda."

  "Hey, it's my life and I don't have to have a Christmas tree if I don't want one."

  "Everyone wants a Christmas tree. If you had a Christmas tree, Santa would bring you stuff ... like hair curlers and slut shoes."

  "Give it up. I'm not getting a tree. End of discussion. And you're going to have to leave because I have things to do. I have to work on the Claws case and then later I promised my mother I'd be over to bake Christmas cookies."

  "Not a good plan. I have a better plan. How about we find Claws and then we shop for a tree? And on the way home from the tree, we can see if the Titans are playing tonight. Maybe we can catch a hockey game."

  I did yet another eye-roll and brushed past him. I was doing so many eye-rolls, they were giving me a headache. I'd planned to take a shower but ther
e was no way I was getting into the shower with a strange man sitting in my living room. "I'm changing my clothes, and then I'm going to work. You aren't going to pop into my bedroom, are you?"

  "Do you want me to?"

  "No!"

  "Your loss." He returned to the couch and television. "Let me know if you change your mind."

  An hour later we were in my Honda CRV. Me and Supernatural Man. I hadn't invited him to ride along with me. He'd simply unlocked the door and gotten into the car.

  "Admit it, you're getting to like me, right?" he asked.

  "Wrong, I don't like you. But for some unfathomable reason, I'm not totally freaked out."

  "It's because I'm charming."

  "You are not charming. You're a jerk."

  He flashed another one of the killer smiles at me. "Yeah, but I'm a charming jerk."

  I was driving, and Diesel was riding shotgun, flipping through my folder on Claws. "So what do we do here, go to his house and drag him out?"

  "I stopped by his house yesterday and his wife said he'd disappeared. I think she knows where he is so I'm going back today to put some pressure on her."

  "Sixty-seven years old, and this guy broke into Kreider's Hardware at two in the morning and stole fifteen hundred dollars' worth of power tools and a gallon of Morning Glory yellow paint," Diesel read. "Got caught on a security camera. What an idiot. Everybody knows you've got to wear a ski mask when you pull a job like that. Doesn't he watch television? Doesn't he go to the movies?" Diesel pulled out a file photo. "Hold the phone. Is this the guy?"

  "Yes."

  Diesel's face brightened, and the smile returned. "And you stopped by his house yesterday?"

  "Yes."

  "Are you any good at what you do? Are you good at tracking down people?"

  "No. But I'm lucky."

  "Even better," he said.

  "You look like you've had a revelation."

  "Big time. The pieces are beginning to fit together."

  "And?"

  "Sorry," he said. "It was one of those personal revelations."

  * * *

  NOTE: If you purchased this book without a cover you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as "unsold and destroyed" to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this "stripped book."

  This book is a revised and enlarged version of a book which was published under the same title by The Berkley Publishing Group with the author writing under the name Steffie Hall.

  FULL HOUSE

  Copyright © 2002 by Evanovich, Inc.

  Excerpt from Visions of Sugar Plums copyright © 2002 by Evanovich, Inc.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews. For information address St. Martin's Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010.

  ISBN: 0-312-98327-1

  Printed in the United States of America

  St Martin's Paperbacks edition / September 2002

  St. Martin's Paperbacks are published by St. Martin's Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010.

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