EIGHTEEN
WHEN I WALKED in, Grandma was in the kitchen, chopping vegetables for soup.
“Help yourself to coffee,” she said. “Would you like me to make you some eggs? Your mother is at mass.”
“I already ate breakfast,” I said, “but coffee would be great.”
“I guess you’re happy now that Jimmy Poletti’s behind bars,” Grandma said.
“Yep. Briggs is out of my life, and I can afford to get a car of my own. Thanks for helping with the takedown.”
“I got a good start on my bucket list,” Grandma said. “Not that I’m planning on getting planted anytime soon, but I figure why not get all that stuff out of the way, right?”
“There’ve been some rumors that you’re stalking Joe’s Grandma Bella.”
“You bet I’m stalking her. I’m freaking her out. She tried to put the whammy on me a couple times, but I just whammied her back.”
“You know how to do that?”
“I Googled it. I’m pretty sure I got it right.”
Joe’s Grandma Bella is the scourge of the Burg. She looks like an extra from a Godfather movie. Steel gray hair pulled back into a bun. No makeup. Ferocious black eyebrows. Eyes like a fish hawk. Five long black chin hairs. She’s short and stooped and wears black shirtwaist dresses and flat black shoes. The longer she’s lived in this country, the stronger her Sicilian accent has become. And she is feared for her ability to give people the eye. The eye is some weird Sicilian curse that makes your hair fall out, your face break out in warts, your teeth rot in your mouth, and your private parts shrivel. Intelligent people cross the street rather than pass too close to Bella. Grandma prefers to pass as close as possible and double-dare Bella to look at her cross-eyed. And Bella is happy to comply. The result is sometimes an ugly display of old lady bitch slapping. And God forbid they should simultaneously get to the cookie table at the funeral home with just one cookie remaining.
“I know getting the best of Bella is on your bucket list.”
“You bet it is. I’m going to get her good. She’s messed with me one time too many. Remember when she called me an old slut?” Grandma whacked a carrot in half. “Well, I’m not all that old. And she bumped me on purpose with her shopping cart at the grocery store. She said I wasn’t moving fast enough. And then she tried to push in front of me in the checkout line.”
My mom came into the kitchen at the end of Grandma’s tirade.
“She’s a silly old lady,” my mother said. “You could be a good Christian and turn the other cheek.”
“I’m a plenty good Christian,” Grandma said, “but I got it on good authority that God wants me to get Bella for Him.”
My mother made the sign of the cross and wistfully looked over at the cabinet where she keeps her booze. Being a good housewife and Christian woman, she knew it was too early in the day for medicinal help from Jack Daniel’s.
“I have to get to work,” I said to Grandma. “Don’t do anything that’ll get you arrested.”
“Don’t worry,” Grandma said. “I’m going to be sneaky.”
“Wow,” Lula said when I got to the office. “Is that Ranger’s car you’re driving?”
“Yeah, it’s a loaner.”
“You must have done something real good to get that car as a loaner.”
“Sadly, no.”
“I have a new skip,” Connie said. “It just came in. Gloria Grimley. She’s in Hamilton Township.”
“What did she do?” I asked.
“She held up the bakery on Nottingham Way. Armed robbery.”
“How much did she take?”
“No money, but she cleaned out the cannoli display.”
“And she got arrested for that?” Lula said. “That’s just terrible. Obviously the woman needed a cannoli. I don’t know what this world’s coming to when you get arrested for needing a cannoli.”
I took the file, paged through it, and stopped at her picture.
Lula looked over my shoulder. “What’s that on her face in her mugshot?”
“I think it’s chocolate,” I said.
“At least she knows what she’s doing when it comes to stealing cannoli,” Lula said. “And that bakery on Nottingham was a good choice. They make excellent cannoli. And they stuff them with all kinds of shit, too. Not just the usual stuff.”
I left Ranger’s two-seater Porsche at the office and took Lula and the Buick. Gloria lived in Hamilton Township. I knew the area. Classic suburbia. Three-bedroom, two-bath ranch houses built in the sixties. Enough yard for a swing set. A driveway but no garage.
Her house was painted a cheerful yellow and white. A Honda Civic was parked in the driveway. Lula and I went to the door and rang the bell.
“This here’s a house where happy people live,” Lula said. “I can tell these things. I got a good feeling about this house. This woman probably just accidentally left her purse at home and needed to celebrate something with a pastry. I know the feeling. I’ve been there a couple times myself. ’Course I never robbed a store for a pastry, but only because I never forgot my purse.”
I rang a second time, the door opened, and a fiend from hell looked out at us. She vaguely resembled the booking photo, but her hair was way beyond bed head, she had dark circles under her bloodshot eyes, she had a huge herpes sore at the corner of her mouth, and she was wearing a pink flannel nightgown with what looked like gravy stains splotching the front of it. Her nose was running, and she had a balled-up tissue in her hand.
“What?” she asked.
“Whoa,” Lula said, backing up.
I held my ground. “Gloria Grimley?”
“Yes.”
“Are you okay?” I asked her.
“Yes,” she said. “I’m fine.” And she burst into tears. “F-f-f-fine.”
“Where’s the happy people in this house?” Lula asked. “I was pretty sure this was a happy house.”
“The son of a bitch left me,” Gloria said, sniffing up some snot. “Just like that. One minute everything is roses, then he says he’s met someone else, and he’s sure she’s his soulmate. Can you believe that?”
“What about this here cheerful house?” Lula asked.
“Rented,” she said. “I’m stuck with a year’s lease.”
“Good news,” Lula said. “You’re up for armed robbery. By the time you get out of the pokey, your lease will be up.”
This got another giant sob.
“I don’t suppose you’ve got any of those cannoli left,” Lula said.
“I ate them,” Gloria said. “All of them. I was depressed.”
“I saw the report, and that was a lot of cannoli,” Lula said.
Gloria looked down at her nightgown. “Tell me about it. This is the only thing that fits.”
“We need to take you downtown to get you rebooked and rebonded out,” I said to Gloria. “It would be good if you could find something else to wear.”
“Maybe you got some big-ass sweatpants or something,” Lula said.
Gloria shuffled off to her bedroom and came back minutes later in jeans and a T-shirt. The jeans were only zipped halfway.
“That’s got a advantage,” Lula said, “being that you won’t have to give them your belt.”
“I forgot something,” Gloria said.
She turned, went back into her bedroom, and Bang! Lula and I went dead still.
“Oh crap,” Lula said.
Bang, bang, bang!
We ran to the bedroom and found Gloria pumping half a clip into a picture of her ex-husband.
She dropped the gun onto the floor, turned, and mooned the picture and farted.
Lula and I took a step back.
“Sorry,” Gloria said. “I get gas when I eat too much sugar.”
We loaded Gloria into the Buick, and I called Connie on our way to the municipal building so she could rebond Gloria. An hour later we were all back at the office. Connie was at her computer. Lula was on the couch reading Star magazine. I was looking at used cars on Craigslist.
The door crashed open and Briggs staggered in, dragging his duffel bag. His hair was sticking out every which way, his eyes were bugged out, and he had black sooty smudges all over his face and clothes.
“Someone blew up my car,” he said. “Lucky I wasn’t in it. I have one of those remote starters so I can get the air-conditioning going if I want. I pushed the starter when I came out of my cousin’s house and kaboom. It knocked me on my ass.”
“Your ass is pretty close to the ground anyways,” Lula said.
“It was a big fireball,” Briggs said. “If I was any closer I’d be a cinder now.”
“So how come you got your duffel bag with you?” Lula asked.
“It’s my clothes. My cousin kicked me out of his house, being that someone still wants to kill me.”
“Oh no,” I said. “No, no, no, no.”
“You gotta help me out,” Briggs said. “It must not have been Poletti. I need a safe place to live.”
“How about Florida?” I said. “You could rent a condo somewhere on a bus line so you don’t need a car.”
“I don’t want to live in Florida. It’s too hot. And they have big bugs and alligators.”
“You want to see a big bug, you should go into the storeroom here,” Lula said. “There’s the roach that ate Tokyo back there.”
“I don’t get it,” Briggs said. “I was sure it was Poletti. He tried to run me over. I saw him.”
“Who else’s wife did you sleep with?” Lula asked.
“Recently?”
Lula turned to me. “And we’re supposed to be keeping him from getting a rocket up his butt why?”
I didn’t have an answer to that one, so I stepped outside and called Ranger.
“Are you still in New York?” I asked him.
“I’m on my way home. Vlatko left the consulate this morning with two other men. They got into a car, and we lost them in traffic. I left Rich and Silvestor there to watch the building, but I doubt Vlatko will be back.”
“Is there anything I can do for you?”
“Babe,” Ranger said.
“Besides that.”
I thought I heard him smile just before he disconnected.
I went back into the office, and Briggs was sitting in one of the cheap orange plastic chairs. His duffel bag was between his feet, and he looked depressed.
“Okay,” I said, “let’s think about this. Someone wants you dead. And it’s someone who doesn’t want to get his hands dirty. If you take Poletti out of the equation, you have two rocket-propelled firebombs and a car bomb. Very impersonal. Death from a distance.”
“Or it could be someone who likes explosions,” Lula said.
I looked at Briggs. “Do you know anyone who likes explosions?”
“All the poker players,” Briggs said. “They were always going out to the Pine Barrens to blow stuff up. One time they blew up a refrigerator. Sometimes they took their kids. Like it was family fun day. Poletti’s older kid never went, but the stoner loved it.”
“There are three poker players left,” I said. “Ron Siglowski, Buster Poletti, and Silvio Pepper. Out of those three, who wants to kill you the most?”
“I don’t know,” Briggs said. “I didn’t boink any of their wives. Ron Siglowski and Buster Poletti don’t even have wives. And Pepper’s wife is comatose by noon.”
“Sounds like your kind of date,” Lula said.
“There are advantages,” Briggs said.
“What about Scootch and Tommy Ritt?” Connie asked. “They were shot at close range. How does that fit?”
“It doesn’t fit,” I said. “Maybe we’re looking at two different killers.”
“So far, only one of them is a killer,” Lula said. “And the other one has no luck at all.”
“Maybe you could let me live here at the office for a couple days until I figure things out,” Briggs said. “I could sleep on the couch, and if someone shoots a rocket through the window I’m close to the hospital.”
“Not happening,” Connie said.
“How about a motel room?” I said. “There are some inexpensive motels on the road to White Horse.”
“I’d be a sitting duck in a motel.”
“Maybe if you weren’t such a sleazebucket you wouldn’t be in this predicament,” Lula said. “You ever think of that?”
“Talk about the pot calling the kettle black,” Briggs said. “I never took money for sex acts.”
“That’s ’cause no one would pay you,” Lula said.
Dillan Ruddick called on my cellphone.
“I have your apartment pretty cleaned up, and the claims adjuster is going to be here in ten minutes,” he said. “I thought you might want to walk through with him.”
“Sure,” I told him. “I’m on my way.”
“What about me?” Briggs asked. “Am I on my way too? What was that about?”
“I’m going to meet the claims adjuster at my apartment.”
“I could be helpful,” Briggs said. “I have a good head for finance. I could take notes for you.”