“No way.”
“Promise, or I won’t go. If you can put up with that bathroom and this television, I can, too.”
Jeez Louise. “I’ll make an effort,” I said, “but I can’t promise.”
Five minutes later, Joyce and the croissants were out the door, almost out of my life. I carted Rex and his cage back into the kitchen and put him on the counter. I gave him fresh water and a chunk of Pop-Tart, and I ate the rest. I pulled my laptop out from under the mattress, put it on my dining room table, and plugged it in. I was making progress.
TWENTY
FRANK KORDA AND HIS WIFE, Pat, lived in a white colonial house with black shutters, a mahogany front door, and a two-car garage. It was at the end of a cul-de-sac in a middle-class residential neighborhood in Hamilton Township. Korda’s memorial service was scheduled for nine in the morning, burial was to follow, and friends and relatives were invited back to the house for refreshments. I’d driven past the house at sunrise to check it out. Everything had been quiet. No lights on. The widow wasn’t an early riser.
I wasn’t an early riser, either, but I was on a mission today. I wanted to keep Joyce out of my apartment, and I had developed a curiosity about the chest. I wanted to see the contents.
I’d called Lula and told her I needed her to stand watch for me. We were to meet at the coffee shop at eight-thirty. I suggested she dress funeral appropriate, so we didn’t look out of place should neighbors see us sneaking around. I had no idea how I was going to get into the house. Break a back window maybe. If a security alarm went off, I was out of there in a flash, and Joyce would have to live without the chest.
I was wearing my standard black funeral suit and heels, carrying a big slouchy black leather bag that would easily contain a small pirate chest.
I parked in front of the coffee shop, and Lula’s Firebird pulled in behind me. Lula got out and walked over.
“I thought you might want to take my Firebird,” she said. “It might blend in better than your truck.”
I looked back at her car. “I don’t know. It’s a toss-up. The Firebird’s really red.”
“Yeah, but my sweetie don’t fit inside your truck, and he gonna look obvious sittin’ in the back in his suit.”
“Your sweetie?”
“I thought we might need muscle, so I brought him along. I got him dressed up in a suit and everything. And I met his mama last night. She didn’t say much, but I think she liked me.”
“He can’t come,” I said to Lula. “We’re breaking into a house. It’s illegal.”
“That’s okay. He does illegal shit all the time.”
“That’s not the problem. I don’t want a witness.”
“I see what you’re saying, but I don’t know how we’ll get him out of my car.”
“Leave him in your car. We’ll take my truck. Tell him we’ll come back for him in an hour.”
Lula trotted to the Firebird, had a short conversation with Buggy, trotted back to my truck, and got in.
“It’s all set,” she said.
I pulled into traffic and Buggy followed.
“Hunh, he must have misunderstood,” Lula said, looking in the side mirror.
I wove around a few streets, but Buggy stayed close on my bumper.
“I’m losing time trying to get rid of him,” I said to Lula. “Call him on his cell phone and tell him to go away.”
“He don’t have a cell phone,” Lula said. “His mama won’t give him money for one. And he don’t make enough stealin’ purses to get one on his own. People got a misconception about purse snatchers. It’s a real hard way to make a living.”
“Then why doesn’t he get a job?”
“I guess you gotta do what you love,” Lula said. “He’s a man who follows his heart.”
I turned onto Korda’s street and the black mortuary limo glided past me going in the opposite direction. It was carrying Pat Korda to the memorial service, and that meant her house might be empty. I parked and sat watching the house for a few minutes. There were no other cars parked outside, and I didn’t see signs of activity. I’d stopped at Giovichinni’s and picked up a noodle casserole to use as cover. My story, if I needed one, was that I had misunderstood the time and arrived at the wake early.
I carried the casserole to the door and rang the bell. No answer. I listened carefully for sounds inside the house. The house was silent.
Lula and Buggy were close behind me. Lancer and Slasher were parked behind the Firebird. Lula was wearing a black spandex miniskirt, a black silky spandex wrap shirt, and a fake leopard jacket that had been designed for a much smaller woman. She was in black four-inch spike-heeled shoes, and her hair was sunflower yellow for the occasion. Buggy looked like Shamu in a Russian-made secondhand suit.