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CHAPTER FIFTEEN At nine o’clock in the morning life wasn’t such a win-win. I didn’t have a car. Lula was supposed to pick me up, but she was a half hour late. I was about to give up and call
my dad for a ride when the red Firebird rumbled into my parking lot and stopped in front of me. “Sorry I’m late,” Lula said. “I had a fashion dilemma. Tuesday is always boho day, but my
ankle boots didn’t look right with my boho fringe bag. Both of them go with my paisley dress, so you see the problem.” She looked around the lot. “Where’s your car? Why do you need a ride?”
“My car no longer exists.” “Say what?” “It got blown up last night. Bombed.” “Get the heck out.” “I’m thinking it was Zane Walburg, but I don’t know for sure.” Lula left the lot and
connected with Hamilton Avenue. “Do you want to visit him?” “No. I want to go to the office and get a doughnut. Then I want to get the kid who drove the fire truck into the Garden of Life. I
need the capture money to get a new car.” “Doesn’t sound like you’re worried about the kidnappers.” “I haven’t heard from them. I think they wrote it off.” “I don’t know about that,” Lula
said. “I’m still creeped out. If it was me, I’d have a hard time walking away from eleven million. I think Connie’s creeped out too. I noticed yesterday she was parked in front of the office
and when I went by today, she was parked there again. She always used to park in the alley spaces and use the storeroom door. She could have PTSD.” I thought back to all of the scary things
that had happened to me since I started working for Vinnie. The fear and horror didn’t immediately go away. There were night sweats and sick stomachs and a reluctance to go out in the dark.
And there was always the temptation to quit and stay home and hide. So far, I haven’t quit. The interesting question is, why not? Ranger and Morelli stick with it because they believe in
the job. I used to think I stuck with it because I was too lazy and uninspired to find something else. I’m coming to realize that’s no longer true. Maybe it was never true. If I’m honest
with myself, I have to admit that I like the chase. And I like when I succeed. Truth is, I might be a bit of an adrenaline junkie. And while I’ll never have the skills of Ranger or Morelli,
I’m actually halfway decent at retrieving felons. Go figure. “When you have a bad experience like Connie had, you become more careful,” I said to Lula. “At least for a while.” “I always park
in the front,” Lula said. “I don’t want my car getting dinged by people throwing things in the dry cleaner dumpster that’s next to us.” I checked the street when we got close to the office.
I was looking for two stocky guys in hoodies. They could be walking on the sidewalk or slowly cruising past the office in a Camry with JZ on the license plate. I was telling myself that
they’d given up, but I was still looking. Connie stood at her desk when we walked in. “I need someone to babysit the office for an hour,” she said. “One of my burns doesn’t look good. I’m
going to the walk-in clinic.” “No problem,” Lula said. “I’m good at being the temporary office manager. I got a talent for it.” “Vinnie won’t be in until later, and I’ve done the mail. There
was a notice for a delivery this morning. No details. Just keep an eye out for it. It’s coming by truck. Probably something weird that Vinnie got in Atlantic City.” “Remember I brought
Walburg in yesterday?” I said to Connie. “Do you know if he’s already gotten bonded out?” “Not my bad,” Connie said. “I wouldn’t have bonded him, but Vinnie likes him.” I took a doughnut and
sat in one of the uncomfortable plastic chairs. Lula took her position behind the desk. Ten minutes later a large truck pulled up in front of the office. A guy got out and came to the door.
“I got a delivery for the office manager,” he said. “The only name I got is Lula.” “That’s me,” Lula said. “Where do you want it? You want me to bring it all in here?” “What have you got?”
Lula asked. “Furniture. It’s from Mel’s One Stop Shopping.” Lula jumped up. “It’s the stuff I ordered online. I forgot all about it. Bring it in!” “Did you tell Vinnie about this?” I asked
Lula. “Hell no. Even if I remembered about it, I wouldn’t have told him.” The men were unpacking on the street. A couch, a couple armchairs, a desk chair, a rug, a coffee table, end tables.
An hour later, the old office furniture was in a heap next to the dumpster and the new furniture was in place. “What do you think?” Lula asked. I was speechless. It was nice. Shockingly
nice. A big comfortable dark brown couch that was genuine leather. Two cream, brown, and pumpkin striped armchairs in front of the desk. A couple side tables with lamps. A coffee table that
matched the side tables. A new ergonomic desk chair for Connie. And a low-pile tweed rug. “Wow!” I said. “It’s fantastic. I love it.” “That’s ’cause I got taste,” Lula said. “I got vision
for this stuff. Mel’s One Stop Shopping got rooms already arranged for you, and soon as I saw this room, I knew it was the one. It’s casual but sophisticated for a comfortable business or
home environment.” Lula arranged some past copies of Star magazine on the coffee table. “Now it’s perfect,” she said. Connie walked in and stopped in the middle of the room. “Am I in the
wrong place?” she asked. “That looks like my desk.” “I made some purchases while I was temporary office manager,” Lula said. “And then I forgot about them until the truck got here, what with
all the drama going on.” “Does Vinnie know about this?” “Hell no,” Lula said. “How’s your burn?” “It’s okay,” she said. “They gave me some antibiotic salve to put on it. They said it looked
like I work the fry basket at Cluck-in-a-Bucket.” Vinnie’s Cadillac screeched to a stop in front of the office and Vinnie rushed in. “I need forms,” he said. “I got a guy locked up
downtown. Harry’s cousin. Not someone I want to keep waiting.” Connie pulled a packet out of her desk drawer and handed it to Vinnie. Vinnie took the packet and the last remaining doughnut
and he left. “He didn’t notice,” I said. “Sort of disappointing,” Lula said. “I was looking forward to him going on a rant. I like when his eyes bulge out and his face gets purple.” Connie
answered the office phone and immediately put it on speaker. “Time is running out,” a man said. “We’re taking another hostage if we don’t get our money immediately.” He instantly
disconnected. “These people are losers,” Lula said. “They’ve got no imagination. All they can think of is taking a hostage.” “It’s not going to be me,” Connie said. “I’m paying attention and
I’m carrying.” “Ditto on that,” Lula said. “Not gonna be me either.” I was lacking confidence that it wouldn’t be me. “Business as usual,” I said. “Let’s collect the guy who drove the fire
truck into the flower shop.” “You haven’t got a car,” Lula said. “And my car isn’t suitable for transporting felons.” “What’s wrong with your car?” I asked her. “It’s too nice. Why don’t we
just go get you a car.” “I haven’t got enough money. I need the money from the fire truck guy.” “I know a guy who practically gives cars away,” Lula said. “We could talk to him.” “Are they
legal?” “Mostly it’s that they’re refurbished.” “Refurbished would be okay.” +++ Lula drove us down Stark to the end and pulled into the junkyard. “Hold on,” I said, “this is the junkyard.”
“Yeah, they have a side business going,” Lula said. “Some of the cars get a second chance at life. It’s like when you go to the animal shelter, and you adopt one of the dogs or cats and give
them their forever home. Only these cars are more like getting a last-gasp home. I know about this because I sort of date one of the guys here. Andy. I called and told him to expect us.”
Andy was waiting at the gate. He looked okay. Jeans and T-shirt. Some muscle. Shaved head. Large gold tooth front and center. He motioned for us to park in a cleared area that was next to a
line of sad cars. “So here are the cars,” he said to me. “They all run, and the tires have some miles left on them. Just pick one out.” This is what my life has come to, I thought. Last-gasp
cars. “What do you think?” I asked Lula. “Do you see anything you like?” “If it was for me, no. But your cars never last more than a couple weeks before they get blown up or smashed by a
garbage truck. How about the pink one?” “I don’t think I can do pink,” I said. “Truly, the best one here is the little gray Whatever,” Andy said. “I think most of it is Toyota. You can’t go
wrong with Toyota.” “Does it smell inside?” Lula asked. Andy walked over and sniffed at it. “It smells like a used car.” “How much is it?” I asked. “How much do you have?” Andy asked. “Four
hundred and fifty dollars,” I said. “That’s a little shy,” Andy said. “Lula’s gonna have to make up for it in lovin’.” “You wish,” Lula said. Andy grinned at her. “That’s the truth.” “What
about papers and plates?” I asked. “They come with the car,” Andy said. +++ Steven Plover lived in a two-story white colonial with blue shutters. The lawn was excellent. There was a new
Mercedes in the driveway. The neighborhood was extremely respectable. I did some background and found that his father was a doctor, and his mother was a Realtor. I parked my gray Whatever in
front of the neighbor’s house so I wouldn’t tarnish the Plover image, and Lula and I went to the front door. Steven answered the doorbell. I knew him from his photo. Brown hair, cut by
someone who knew what they were doing. Five feet ten inches. Medium build. Pleasant looking. Jeans and T-shirt. New and expensive. I introduced myself and explained that he had to
reschedule. “Sure,” he said. “I haven’t got anything to do anyway. I guess I forgot about court.” “I’m curious,” Lula said. “Why did you take the fire truck and crash it into the flower
shop?” “There’s this girl I really like, Jessica. She was in my art appreciation class at Rutgers, and she lives here in the neighborhood. She was home for the weekend, and I wanted to ask
her out, but she doesn’t know I exist. So, I got this crazy idea that I’d show up at her house in the fire truck and ask her if she’d like to go for a ride. I mean, who could resist a ride
in a fire truck.” “You were high, right?” Lula asked. “Yeah, maybe a little,” Steven said. “I’m almost always high. Anyway, it was easy to borrow the truck. They wash it in the morning and
then they leave it out all day. They even leave the key in it. “I took the truck and then I thought I should bring Jessica some flowers, so I drove to the flower shop. Only the truck
wouldn’t stop fast enough, and I accidentally drove through the big window in the front of the store and took out the case with the orchids. It was pretty funny but sort of embarrassing.”
“Did Jessica ever go out with you?” Lula asked. “No,” Steven said. “She thinks I’m an idiot.” “Not much of a surprise there,” Lula said. “Are your parents home?” I asked him. “Negative.
They’re never home. It’s just me.” “Lock up the house, and I’ll drive you to the courthouse so you can reschedule.” “Okay, I’ll get the back door,” Steven said. He disappeared into the house
and Lula and I exchanged glances. “He’s gonna run,” Lula said. “That would be my guess,” I said. Seconds later we heard the garage door open on the side of the house. Lula and I took off
and reached the garage just as Steven rocketed out in a red Tesla. “That car’s got excellent acceleration,” Lula said. “And you can’t go wrong with red.” “True and true,” I said, heading for
my gray Whatever. “And red is going to make it easier to spot Steven.” “He turned right when he went out of his driveway,” Lula said. I went straight for three blocks until I got to
Mulberry. Mulberry was the first road that wasn’t part of Steven’s neighborhood. There was a gas station on one corner and a convenience store next to it. The red Tesla was parked at the
convenience store. “This is too easy,” Lula said. “Kinda takes the fun out of it.” Not for me. I liked easy. I parked behind the Tesla, preventing Steven from backing up. I could see Steven
at the cash register, talking to the clerk. I had my cuffs in my back pocket and an illegal stun gun in my sweatshirt pocket. Lula and I walked in and stood on either side of Steven. “I
don’t suppose I could borrow some money from you,” he said. “I ran out of the house without my wallet, and I have a rad craving for gummy bears.” I paid for the gummy bears and cuffed Steven
with his hands in front so he could eat. We got him into the backseat of the Whatever and drove him to the police station on North Clinton. I called Connie after we dropped him off. “Is
Vinnie still in the municipal building?” I asked Connie. “I don’t know,” she said. “I haven’t been able to reach him.” “I brought Steven Plover in just now. He’s going to want to be bailed
out before court closes shop for the day.” “I’ll take care of it,” Connie said. “I’ll call his mother.” “Tell her the Tesla is parked at the convenience store on Mulberry. Have you heard any
more from the kidnappers?” “No,” Connie said. “There was just that one call.” “Who do you think they’re going to take?” Lula asked when I hung up. “Me,” I said. “They tried to get me after
the viewing and Grandma scared them away. I’m sure they think I have the money.” I turned onto Hamilton Avenue and saw that I’d picked up a tail. Black SUV. Rangeman. Ranger had no doubt
tapped into the call from the kidnappers and reached the same conclusion I’d reached. That I had a big target on my back. Plus, I had a new Whatever that wasn’t yet tagged with a tracker.
Lula got out at the office, and I continued on to my parents’ house. I parked on the street, got out of the Whatever, and waved at the Rangeman guy. My mom was knitting, and Grandma was on
her iPad when I walked in. “I’m going to mooch lunch,” I said. “Help yourself,” my mom said. “There’s leftover pot roast for sandwiches with gravy, or there’s deli meat and cheese.” I went
with the pot roast, no gravy. “What’s new on Facebook?” I asked Grandma. “I wasn’t on Facebook,” she said. “I was on Twitter. I like to watch the rocket launches. What’s new with you?” “I
have a new car. Actually it’s not new. It’s just different.” “What does it smell like?” “It smells like used car.” “That’s a step in the right direction,” Grandma said. “How’s Connie
looking? That was all they were talking about at the bakery. Her disappearance is a big mystery. Even her mother doesn’t know where she was. I just about got a rupture trying to keep the
secret.” I made myself a pot roast sandwich with mustard, horseradish, and slices of dill pickle. I can’t cook but I can make a sandwich. “Connie’s good,” I said. “She’s back at work.” “Have
you heard any more from the kidnappers?” Grandma asked. “Only that they want their money.” “Can’t blame them,” Grandma said. “Are you going to give them their money?” my mother asked me.
“No,” I said. “I can’t. I don’t have it.” “Suppose you did have it,” Grandma said. “Would you give it to them?” “Yes. Would you?” “Heck no,” Grandma said. “How about you?” I asked my mom.
“Would you give the money back?” “How much was it?” she asked. “Eleven million.” “That’s a lot of money,” she said. “A person could do wonderful things with that much money.” “Like what?” I
asked. “What would you do with eleven million dollars?” “I’d go to Paris,” my mother said. “I’d buy a horse,” Grandma said. “I always wanted a horse. I’d name him Brownie. What would you do
with the money?” Grandma asked me. “I’d get new towels for my bathroom,” I said. “And I’d get a new bathroom.” It seemed boring compared to a horse and Paris, but I had a really ugly
bathroom. I finished my sandwich and pushed away from the table. “I have to get back to work,” I said. “Stay safe. Be careful.” I went to my Whatever and noted that the Rangeman car was
still in place. I suppose it should make me feel safe to have them following me around, but it did the opposite. It increased my anxiety. It was a reminder of the danger. It was like the TSA
people at the airport who were there to keep flyers safe, but their presence screamed out that it was perfectly possible for your plane to get exploded at forty thousand feet in the air. I
drove the short distance to the office and sat in my car for a moment, thinking about the eleven million. Suppose it dropped in my lap. What would I really do with it? First thing, I’d buy a
condo. Nothing elaborate and not too big, but I’d want it to be new. New paint. New appliances. It should have its own washer and dryer. What else? New furniture. Maybe a fish tank for the
living room. And I’d get a pedicure. And a new car. I didn’t want to spend time in Paris or get a horse. Probably I should quit my job, but what would I do all day? I could learn to play the
piano. No, scratch that. I couldn’t see myself playing the piano. I could join a gym and get a trainer and get in really good shape. Ugh. That was a horrible thought. Or I could go to
culinary school like Julia Child. She got a husband because she could cook. I have two amazing men in my life but neither of them wants to get married, and I don’t think acquiring cooking
skills would change that. Maybe if I went to culinary school, I’d meet someone new who appreciated that I could make a soufflé. Something to consider. A black Mercedes drove past me for the
third time. Carpenter Beedle was behind the wheel. I called him and he picked up. “Why are you driving past the bail bonds office?” I asked him. “We’ve been checking to make sure things are
okay. I see Connie is back at work. That’s a relief. We’re sorry we caused so much trouble, but it looks like everything’s good now, right?” “Wrong. The kidnappers want the money.” “Most of
it’s spent,” he said. “How could you go through eleven million dollars that fast?” “It got divided up three ways so we each got a little over three and a half million. Half of that I
invested in bonds for everyone. They’ll have a good yield, but we can’t touch them for five years. The rest of the money went to clothes, cars, boats, and entertainment. GoComic wasn’t
cheap. Benji got his own apartment. Sparks married the hooker who gave him the lap dance.” “What about you?” “I paid the mortgage off on my mom’s house and I bought this car. I got an
expensive haircut and some clothes, and I have some money put aside for a defense lawyer. This was found money to us. We didn’t know someone was kidnapped over it. We ran out and spent it.
Even if we sold off some of the stuff we bought, we couldn’t come near to the eleven million.” “Are you going back to panhandling?” “I don’t know. I enjoyed panhandling, but I really liked
moving money around and investing it. I might look for a job in finance if I can avoid going to jail.” “Not accounting,” I said. “Not accounting. That ship sailed and sank.” “Good luck,” I
said. “Don’t forget your court date.” “I never forget a date,” Beedle said. I looked across the street at the Rangeman car. Now I had Rangeman, Sir Lancelot, Benji, and Beedle working as
security. Why didn’t I feel safe? +++ It was five o’clock when Connie got back to the office. “Sorry I’m so late. I almost didn’t get him out today,” she said. “He was last up. The judge
wanted to go home, but Steven’s mother started crying. Bawling her eyes out. When the judge reconsidered and set bail, Steven’s mother turned and winked at me. I bet she’s a hell of a
Realtor.” “We didn’t mind staying,” Lula said. “It’s real comfy in here now. It’s nicer than my apartment except it doesn’t have a bed and TV.” “Anything new?” Connie asked, sitting at her
desk, pulling up the email. “Nope,” Lula said. “I checked about an hour ago. There was a threatening email from Vinnie’s bookie, but I deleted it.” “I don’t see anything that can’t wait,”
Connie said. “I’m closing up. Mom’s making an early dinner tonight.” “She going to bingo or a viewing?” Lula asked. “Viewing,” Connie said. “Marion Foscatelli. Pancreatic cancer.” “That’s a
nasty one,” Lula said. We closed the office and I drove home with Rangeman close behind. I parked in my lot and took a moment to look around. I didn’t see anyone hiding behind a car, waiting
to jump me. I walked to the building and thought this was the tricky part. The Rangeman guy was in the parking lot. No telling who was in the building. I took Ranger’s gun out of my
messenger bag and decided the stairs were the safest way to go. I reached the second floor and found Sir Lancelot in full costume standing watch at my door with his new sword at his side.
“Carpenter wanted to make sure you got into your apartment without getting kidnapped,” he said. “Thanks,” I said. “I’ll be okay now.” “If you want to go out you can call us.” “Good to know.
I hear you got married.” He smiled. “Yeah. Who would have thought? And she likes going to Renaissance fairs.” “That’s great. Congratulations.” I unlocked my door and stepped inside. “Have a
nice night and thanks for looking after me.” “No problem. Make sure you lock your door.” When you’re in a situation like this a safe haven can feel a little like a prison. Still, it was
better than the alternative, which could have been a dark room with a chemical toilet and getting burned with a fire starter. I was eating cereal out of the box when Morelli called. “I saw a
car parked in front of the bail bonds office today. I’m afraid to ask if it’s yours,” he said. “What kind of car was it?” “I don’t know. The front looked like a Toyota, but the back looked
like spare parts held together with Bondo.” “Yep. That’s mine.” “Aside from the bargain car purchase, how did your day go?” “It could have been worse. I brought Steven Plover in. That was my
highlight.” “He stole the fire truck, right?” “Borrowed it. He wanted to take a girl for a ride. He said he might have been a little high.” “That’s one of the better reasons to borrow a
fire truck. Are you locked in for the night?” “Yes. And I’ve got a Rangeman car in my parking lot. It follows me everywhere. I need to reinvent my life. I can’t keep living like this. Do you
think it would help if I got a different job?” “It would depend on the job. Even then I’m not sure. You’re like a magnet for disaster. How many of your cars have gotten blown up?” “I don’t
know. I lost count.” “How many of my cars have gotten blown up?” “Zero?” “Wrong,” Morelli said. “Two. Both of them because of you. Car number one you ‘commandeered’ and it got blown up in
your parking lot. Car number two you parked in my garage, left the garage door open, and Mama Macaroni blew the car and the garage halfway to hell.” “Maybe I need an exorcist.” “Let’s assume
it’s your job and not the Devil. If you quit your job, what would you do?” “That’s the hitch,” I said. “I don’t know.” “There must be something that’s always in the back of your mind that
you would like to try. A fantasy job.” “Nope. I’ve got nothing.” “Do you like kids? Old people? Sick people? Animals? Clothes? Cars?” “I like all those things, but I don’t want a job
associated with them. I guess I don’t love them on a group level.” “What do you love?” “Peanut butter.” “That’s a little limiting, cupcake.” I could tell he was smiling when he said that.
“It just popped out. I also love olives and wine with screw caps. What do you love?” I asked him. “I love my job and I love Bob and I love you.” That made me feel warm inside. “I love you
too,” I said. “Do you want to give me a job?” “Maybe. What can you do?” “You know what I can do.” “I definitely want to give you a job. Are you available tonight?” “No, I’m in my bunker. I’m
under surveillance. I’m going to bed and hide under the covers.” +++ I was in the kitchen eating Ritz crackers and finishing up a bottle of Chianti that I found in the back of my cupboard
when Ranger let himself into my apartment. He eased me close into him and kissed me with a touch of tongue. “Ritz crackers and red wine,” he said. “Makes me hungry.” “For Ritz crackers?”
“No.” “For red wine?” “Wrong again. Unfortunately, I’m going to have to stay hungry because I’m working. I’m taking a shift with a new man. I’ve got him sitting in the lot with Hal.” “Hal is
my night watchman?” “Until twelve.” “It’s really not necessary to have someone out there all night. I’m sure I’m safe here in my apartment.” “The alternative is to have me in your apartment
or for you to move in with me.” “I’ll consider it,” I said. “Is there anything new that I should know?” “You heard the phone call.” “I did.” “I haven’t had any contact since.” “This is
getting tedious,” Ranger said. “I’d like to go more proactive but all we’ve got so far are dead ends.” He took a silver medallion necklace out of his pocket. The medallion was engraved with
a cross. “Don’t take this off,” he said. “Ever. Wear it in the shower.” “GPS?” I asked. “Next generation.” He fixed it around my neck, and he gave me a quick kiss. He thought about it for a
beat and kissed me with a lot more passion. “Think about the alternatives,” he said. He left and I did a lot of thinking about the alternatives. CHAPTER SIXTEEN There are laundry
facilities in the basement of my building, but I’ve always suspected that a troll lives behind the dryer. A better solution to the laundry problem is to cart my laundry to my parents’ house
once a week and turn it over to my mom. Since my underwear drawer was empty and I had no clean jeans, this was the day. I skipped breakfast, hung my messenger bag on my shoulder, and hauled
my laundry basket out to the parking lot. The Rangeman SUV was one row away with a clear view of my Whatever. I was certain the occupants were awake and on the job, ever vigilant. No doubt
hoping for a hooded guy to jump out from behind a car and try to stun gun me. Then they could pounce on him and this whole nightmare would be over. I was hoping for this too. I slowly walked
to my car, giving the bad guys plenty of time to rush me. The bad guys didn’t appear, so I drove to my parents’ house with Rangeman following at a discreet distance. I handed my laundry
over to my mom, and I sat down to bacon and eggs and crumb coffee cake. “Anything new from the gossip line?” I asked Grandma. “Nothing worth repeating from bingo,” Grandma said. “And I
didn’t go to the bakery this morning, so I’m not up on the latest. We had a beauty of a thunderstorm last night, though. Woke me up. And I think I heard fire trucks, but nobody called so far
about anything burning down.” “Do you need help with the laundry?” I asked my mom. “No,” she said. “I’ve already got the darks in the washer.” “Are you going after anybody interesting
today?” Grandma asked. “Murderers or rapists? Animal abusers?” “None of the above,” I said. “Business has been slow.” “We’re having pork chops tonight,” my mother said. “If you want to come
to dinner and pick up your laundry.” “I’ll see how my day goes,” I said. “Thanks. I’ll let you know.” Grandma looked at me and rolled her eyes. No one ever wanted to eat my mom’s pork chops.
She was a good cook, with the exception of pork chops. You couldn’t cut her pork chops with a steak knife. You couldn’t cut them with a hatchet. I left the house and drove to the office. I
was a block away when I saw the lone fire truck and some random cars. I inched closer and saw that there was no office. There was just rubble where the office used to stand. Connie and Lula
were in front of the office remains. I parked and joined them. “What?” I asked. “Boom!” Lula said. I turned to Connie. “Was it hit by lightning?” “Hard to say for sure at this point,” she
said. “My best guess is it was hit by Zane Walburg. It didn’t catch fire. It just imploded. At least that’s what they told me.” I looked around. “Where’s Vinnie? Does he know?” “I talked to
Lucille,” Connie said. “She said he didn’t come home last night. Not that this is unusual for Vinnie.” “Where was he?” “He bailed out one of his father-in-law’s relatives and that was the
last anyone heard from him. He’s probably passed out in a strip club.” “I can’t believe this happened after I did all that decorating,” Lula said. “What about your records?” I asked Connie.
“Everything is in the cloud,” she said. “I can get it all back. The only thing we can’t get back is what we had in the storeroom. Items we had in the file cabinets might be intact. I haven’t
combed through the debris yet. They won’t let us any closer than this.” “I suppose we should talk to Walburg,” I said to Lula. “The mad bomber? I don’t think so,” Lula said. “Let the police
piss him off this time.” “I don’t want him blowing up any more things. Like my apartment.” “You’ve got a point,” Lula said, “but I’m not going without Bella.” Bella was in the front
passenger seat of my Whatever. She was clutching her purse, staring straight ahead with her eagle eyes bright under her fierce eyebrows. “I want to see what he did,” she said. “Before I give
him the eye, I want to see damage.” I drove her to the office and idled on the opposite side of the street. “This is good,” she said. “This boy, he do good work.” “He blew up the office,”
Lula said from the backseat. “I just decorated that office, and I had all my Star magazines there.” “I like Star magazine,” Bella said. “That’s a mark against him. Vincent Plum I don’t
like.” “He put up your bail bond money,” I said to Bella. “You would be in jail if it wasn’t for Vinnie.” “I want lunch when we’re done,” she said. “More chicken.” “Absolutely,” I said.
“Chicken for lunch.” Traffic was light at this time of the morning. People were commuting toward the city, and we were traveling away from it to Hamilton Township. I took the driveway into
Curly Tree Gardens and parked in a slot reserved for Walburg’s neighbor. “Now that we’re here, what are we going to do?” Lula asked. “We’re going to bring him in for bond violation.” “We
going to sneak up on him?” “There’s no good way to sneak up on someone in a garden apartment,” I said. “Go around back and make sure he doesn’t escape. We’ll go in the front door.” Bella and
I waited in the car until Lula texted that she was in place. “This like in the movies,” Bella said. “I like this. Maybe instead of the eye, I shoot him, like James Bond.” “No! No shooting.
Not ever. James Bond didn’t use real bullets.” “I think he did,” Bella said. “Well, we don’t shoot people. Stay behind me when we get to the door.” I knocked on the door and Walburg
answered. “You again,” he said. “Now what?” “You’re in violation of your bond.” “Says who?” “Says me,” I said. “Me too,” Lula said, coming in from the back door. “And me,” Bella said. “Make
my day, scumbag.” “Are you kidding me?” Walburg said. “You got the creepy old hag with you again? Big deal. I’m prepared. I googled ‘creepy old hags.’ ” “What Google say?” Bella asked him.
“Follow me,” Walburg said. “I’ve got it in the kitchen.” We went to the kitchen and Walburg took a bowl off the counter and tossed everything in the bowl at Bella. “What this is?” Bella
said. “Salt,” Walburg said. “It’s death to demons.” “I’m not demon,” Bella said. “Salt only good for soup and radishes.” “Okay, that didn’t work,” Walburg said. “How about this?” He took a
pot of water that he had sitting on the counter next to the bowl of salt and he threw the water at Bella. It hit her square in the face and soaked her hair and her black dress. Bella had her
face scrunched up and her hands balled into fists. “Do not shoot him,” I said to Bella. “I don’t get it,” Walburg said. “It worked in The Wizard of Oz.” “I’m not witch,” Bella managed to
say through clenched teeth. “What are you?” Walburg asked. “I’m Sicilian,” Bella said. “I give you the eye.” “No poop!” Lula and I said. “I make his teeth fall out,” she said, putting her
finger to her eye. We all stood perfectly still, staring at Walburg. “This one takes longer than poop,” Bella finally said. I cuffed Walburg and we walked him out to my car and stuffed him
into the backseat. The Rangeman guys were parked next to me. They looked bored. Cluck-in-a-Bucket was my first stop on my way to the police station. It was early for lunch, but I got lunch
for everyone anyway, including the Rangemen. “I’ll take the Rangemen their chicken and biscuits,” Lula said. “And I’ll hitch a ride with them being that they got a better car than you, and
their car don’t have the bomber in the backseat.” She climbed out of the Whatever and looked back at Walburg. “No offense meant,” she said to him. “No offense taken,” he said. The next stop
was the Morelli house. “Thanks for the help,” I said to Bella, handing her buckets of chicken, biscuits, and coleslaw. “You still slut,” she said. I watched her scuttle away and disappear
inside her house. “Do you think I have to worry about my teeth?” Walburg asked. “Eventually,” I said. “I don’t suppose you’d consider not taking me back to jail?” “You bombed my car and the
bail bonds office.” “Yes, but I didn’t bomb your apartment.” “Not yet,” I said. “Why are you doing this?” “It’s what I do.” “Yes, but you’re going to jail for a long time for it. Doesn’t
that bother you?” “I won’t go to jail,” he said. “The government wants me. I’m a genius. They’ll get me off, just like always. At the very worst they’ll put an ankle bracelet on me and set
me up in a lab in the desert. I have friends in high places. I’ve done favors for them. They won’t want those favors to come to an end. And the military needs my expertise.” “Do you like the
desert?” “I like to make bombs. I don’t care where I make them. If I don’t want to stay in the desert after a while, I’ll cut a deal.” I cut across town, parked in the municipal building
lot, and got Walburg out of the Whatever. The Rangeman SUV parked alongside me. “Do you need help getting him in?” the driver asked. “No, but thanks. This shouldn’t take long.” Almost an
hour later I returned to my car. “Sorry,” I said to the Rangemen, “I had to give a statement about the two bombings.” I looked in the SUV. “Where’s Lula?” “She got tired of waiting and
called someone to pick her up.” +++ I drove past what used to be the office on my way home. The collapsed building was ringed with crime scene tape, and a CSI truck was parked at the curb.
Three men were poking around in the rubble and Connie was standing on the sidewalk, watching the men. I parked across the street and walked over to Connie. “What’s happening?” “Two of the
CSI guys are looking for evidence, and someone from the fire marshal is trying to determine if it’s safe for me to access the file cabinets.” “The CSI guys don’t need to find a lot of
evidence,” I said. “I brought Walburg in, and he confessed to both explosions. I hope Vinnie isn’t going to bond him out again. My apartment is probably next on Walburg’s fun list.” “I
haven’t heard from Vinnie,” Connie said. Her eyes shifted to the street. “Holy mother!” It was Lula behind the wheel of an ancient, rusted-out yellow school bus. She beeped the horn at us
and parked behind the CSI truck. She opened the door and stepped out. “I got us a mobile office,” she said. “It’s got a bathroom and everything. What do you think?” I had no words. “Um,”
Connie said. “I was sitting in the parking lot with the Rangeman guys, waiting for Stephanie, and I remembered seeing this when we went to get Stephanie a car. So, I called Andy and he came
and picked me up and made me a real deal. Actually, he gave it to me because no one wanted it. It’s perfectly okay as long as you don’t drive it too far on account of it gets three miles to
a gallon.” “Ingenious,” I said to Lula. “No shit,” Lula said. “You gotta go in and see it. Somebody decked it all out to make it a mobile home. They took the seats out and put in a couch and
a TV and a teeny kitchen. And the refrigerator has a freezer. It’s got a bedroom in the back, only there’s no bed so we could put a desk there.” Connie and I went in and looked around. It
was sort of horrible but not entirely. “It needs some cleaning up,” Lula said. “It’s been sitting in the junkyard.” I opened a cupboard over the kitchen counter and found a dead mouse. “At
least it’s dead,” I said. Connie picked it up in a tissue and threw it out the door. “If we park this in the back lot, we can hook it up to electric,” she said. “I can do my decorating
magic,” Lula said. “I might take it up professionally. I could specialize in old-school buses and crap-ass offices. I could have business cards made up.” Connie’s phone rang and she looked
at the number. “It’s the office number,” she said. “Unknown caller.” She put it on speakerphone. “I guess you aren’t leaving messages in the window anymore,” the caller said. Connie handed
the phone to me. “Lightning strike,” I said. “Where’s our money?” “No clue,” I said. “Yeah, I almost believe you. Guess who I’ve got?” “Who?” There was some fumbling noise on the phone and
the sound of someone growling. “Vinnie?” I asked. “Twenty-four hours and we start peeling his skin off.” The phone went dead. “Omigod,” I said. “They snatched Vinnie.” “We should get a
bottle of wine and some chips to celebrate our new office,” Lula said. “But they have Vinnie,” I said. “And?” Lula asked. “He said they were going to torture him.” “Vinnie loves that shit,”
Lula said. “He pays Madam Zaretsky good money to whip him and do God knows what else.” “That’s true,” Connie said. “If they pull off his fingernails, he’ll get an erection.” “Anyway, what
can we do?” Lula asked. “These idiots want money we don’t have.” The office number rang again, and Connie put it on speakerphone. “I forgot to tell you the best part,” he said. “After
twenty-four hours, when we roast this weasel on a spit like a hot dog, we’re coming after you, sweetie pie.” “Which sweetie pie would that be?” I asked him. “You know which sweetie pie,” he
said. And he hung up. “Okay, that’s disturbing,” I said. “Yeah, it would give us more incentive to do something if we knew what to do,” Lula said. Morelli appeared in the doorway. “Knock,
knock,” he said. “Is this the new office?” “Yep,” I said. “It’s leaking something.” “It’s motor oil,” Lula said. “It’s okay, I got a case of it. It came with the bus.” Morelli crooked his
finger at me. “Can I see you outside?” We walked a short distance from the bus and away from the CSI people. “We found Vinnie’s car,” he said. “They just pulled it out of the river. Vinnie
wasn’t in it.” “That’s because the kidnappers have Vinnie,” I said. “We got the phone call a couple minutes ago.” “Why did they take Vinnie?” “I guess they thought we cared if he lived or
died or got tortured.” “That’s a tough one.” “Yeah, on the surface it doesn’t seem like he’s worth saving.” “But below the surface?” “Ditto.” “It’s a dilemma,” Morelli said. “On the plus
side, I delivered the bomber today.” “I heard. Nice.” He looked over at the bus. “That has to be at least twenty years old. It’s a dumpster fire on wheels.” “It has a refrigerator with a
freezer, and it had a dead mouse, but Connie got rid of it.” “Good to know. Where do you go from here?” “Do you mean about the office?” “I mean about the kidnapping and the death and torture
threats.” “I don’t know. I guess I have to wait for them to make a move. We’re at a stalemate. I can’t give them what they want, and they refuse to believe that I don’t have it.” “Is Ranger
making any progress?” “Nothing significant. Anything on your end?” “We aren’t officially involved,” Morelli said. The CSI guys went to their truck, and the fire marshal walked over to us.
“The site seems to be stable,” he said. “The explosion didn’t scatter the structure, and it was single-story frame construction so there isn’t a lot of the debris that you would see in
higher-rise buildings. This basically just collapsed in on itself. There was no fire and all utilities have been disconnected. I see no reason why you can’t sort through this. Just be
careful where you walk.” “We need to salvage what we can from the storeroom,” I said to Morelli. “Connie said all the records are in the cloud, so things could be worse.” “At least Vinnie
isn’t available to bond out Walburg again.” For a moment I’d forgotten about Vinnie. No matter what was said in the bus, the thought of Vinnie being held hostage wasn’t a good one. He was
pimple pus, but he was our pimple pus. “I need to get back to work,” Morelli said. “There’s preseason hockey tonight if you want to come over and share a pizza.” “Sounds good. I’ll bring the
pizza.” “Game is at eight o’clock.” I watched Morelli drive away, and I went into the bus to tell Connie and Lula that we had permission to sort through the office remains. “I can’t go
climbing over all that junk in my Louboutins,” Lula said. “I’m going to the hardware store to get boots.” “I’m okay in my sneakers,” I said. “I’ve got running shoes in my tote,” Connie said,
“so I’m okay too, but as long as you’re going out you can get some big plastic bins.” “And air freshener,” I said. “Something to get rid of the dead- mouse smell.” Connie changed her shoes
and we stood on the sidewalk and looked at the mess in front of us. “Vinnie had a safe in his office,” Connie said. “We want to make sure it’s secure. I don’t know what he had in his desk
drawers, and I don’t want to know. I want the gun from my desk. Beyond that everything would be easier to reach from the alley.” “I’ll walk around to the back and start looking for the file
cabinets. You can start looking for your gun,” I said. The Rangeman SUV was parked behind my Whatever. The two men got out of the SUV and walked over to us. I recognized one of them. Raul.
The other man was new. His name tag said he was Bek. “Are you looking for something?” Raul asked. “We need to salvage what we can from this wreck,” I said. “We can help.” “That would be
amazing,” I said. “Bek can go with Connie. She’s working in the front of the office, and you can come with me. I’m going to walk around to the back so it’s easier to get to the items we took
in as security.” By five o’clock we had everything from the file cabinets in bins, plus we had assorted larger items that we found in the rubble. The gun safe was located and cleaned out.
The guns were all packed off to Rangeman for storage. Connie had her desk gun, and we were waiting for the safe company to finish hauling Vinnie’s safe through the debris to their truck.
This would also go to Rangeman. I was standing by the bus with Connie and Lula, watching the Rangeman guys stuff the bins in our cars. “It’s a good thing we had Raul and Bek helping us,”
Lula said. “We couldn’t have done this without them.” “We would have been done a half hour ago if your skirt wasn’t so short,” Connie said. “Every time you bent over Raul’s eyes almost fell
out of his head.” “I didn’t know you could see something,” Lula said. “Everybody could see everything,” Connie said. “Not everything,” Lula said. “I’m wearing undies. I’m covered up as much
as when I’m on the beach.” I’d seen Lula on the beach, and it was something not easily forgotten. An hour later, the safe was trucked away, and we put the crime scene tape back in place. The
bus was parked at the curb for the night, and we felt comfortable that there wasn’t a lot left to steal. We formed a caravan with our cars, drove to Connie’s house, and unloaded everything
into her garage. We thanked Raul and Bek and they went back to their SUV. “Good thing we’re done,” Lula said. “I couldn’t pick up one more thing or carry any more bins anywhere. I feel like
my back is broken. We should have let Bella make that stupid bomber poop himself again.” “Opportunities missed,” I said. “Fuckin’ A,” Lula said. Connie’s mother was standing watch at the
edge of the garage. “I heard that,” she said. “We don’t allow that kind of language in this house.” “Sorry,” Lula said. “I wasn’t thinking it might be offensive. It seemed like an
appropriate comment for what we were saying about the poop spell.” “We don’t say that P-word either,” Mrs. Rosolli said. “You mean ‘poop’?” Lula asked. “What do you call it?” “We call it
plops,” she said. Lula and I looked at Connie. Connie rolled her eyes and gave up a sigh. “Plops and pleeps,” she said. “That’s just wrong,” Lula said. “I can see where it’s coming from, but
I don’t want to admit to making a plop. Maybe men make plops. My experience is they don’t care what they do.” I had my hand clapped over my mouth. I was trying not to laugh out loud, but
squeaking sounds were escaping from between my fingers. “For God’s sake, just go ahead and laugh before you pleep yourself,” Connie said. Mrs. Rosolli made the sign of the cross and asked
forgiveness for her daughter. “We don’t take God’s name in vain,” she said. _From _GOING ROGUE _by Janet Evanovich. Copyright © 2022 by Evanovich, Inc. Reprinted by permission of Atria
Books, an Imprint of Simon & Schuster, LLC._