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Explosive Eighteen: A Stephanie Plum Novel (Stephanie Plum Novels)

Explosive Eighteen: A Stephanie Plum Novel (Stephanie Plum Novels)

Titel: Explosive Eighteen: A Stephanie Plum Novel (Stephanie Plum Novels) Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Janet Evanovich
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said. “You got a juju issue. That wasn’t a wonderful experience. You ever see anyone break out of those plastic handcuffs before? I don’t think so.”

ELEVEN
     
    GRANDMA WAS AT the front door, waving at us. “You’re just in time for lunch,” she said.
    Lula’s face brightened. “Lunch! That’s what I need after my traumatic experience.”
    Grandma led the way to the kitchen. “What happened?”
    “We almost got torn limb from limb by a idiot,” Lula said. “Only we avoided it and came here.”
    My mother was putting food on the kitchen table, trying not to rant over the thought of me getting my limbs torn off.
    “Ham, olive loaf, Swiss cheese, some macaroni salad,” she said. “Help yourself.”
    I sat down and Grandma gave me a small glass bottle.
    “Annie dropped this off for you this morning. She said youshould drink it next time you see your true love, and it’ll take care of your indigestion.”
    Lula looked across at me. “Does this mean you decided on your true love? Not that I especially care, but I was wondering for the sake of conversation if it has something to do with the ring that used to be on your finger.”
    My mother and grandmother stopped eating and leaned forward a little, waiting for my answer.
    “Oh, for goodness’ sakes,” I said. “Why is everyone making such a big deal about this stupid tan line? It’s just a tan line!”
    “Yeah,” Lula said, “but you’ve been real secret about it, and all this talk about true love and indigestion has me putting it together, and I finally got it figured out. You’re preggers!”
    My mother clapped a hand over her mouth, made a strangled sound, and went facedown into the olive loaf. For a brief moment, I thought she’d had a heart attack, and I was responsible.
    “She just fainted,” Grandma said. “She used to faint all the time when she was a little girl. A real drama queen.”
    We stretched my mom out on the floor, and Grandma got a wet towel. My mom finally opened her eyes and looked up at me. “Who? What?”
    “I’m not pregnant,” I said.
    “Are you sure?”
    I had to think about it for a minute. “Pretty sure.” I’d be more sure in a week.
    We sat my mom back in her chair, I got the whiskey from the cupboard, and we all chugged some.
    “I can’t take it anymore,” Lula said to me. “I want to know about the ring. I want to know who you married. What the heck happened in Hawaii anyhow?”
    “Yeah,” Grandma said. “I want to know, too.”
    “Ditto,” my mom said, taking another hit from the whiskey bottle.
    I’d been avoiding this. There were parts to my vacation that were spectacular, but there were also parts I’d just as soon forget … like the ending. Not only didn’t I
want
to talk about it, I had no idea what to say. It was all too awkward. Unfortunately, I owed Lula and my family an explanation. I just wouldn’t tell them
all
of it.
    “It was nothing. It was business. I’ll tell you what happened, but you have to swear not to repeat it.”
    Everyone made the sign of the cross, drew zippers across their mouths, and threw the keys away.
    “I offered the second free plane ticket to Morelli,” I said, “but he couldn’t get away from work. He
never
gets away from work. So I went by myself. I got off the plane in Honolulu, and as I was walking through the terminal, I spotted Tootie Ruguzzi.”
    “Get the heck out,” Lula said. “The Rug’s wife?”
    “Yeah.”
    “Those two disappeared off the face of the earth,” Grandma said. “We all thought they got planted.”
    Simon Ruguzzi, better known as The Rug, is a local celebrity hit man. He’s part of the Colichio crime family, but he’s also been known to do freelance. Three years ago, he executed seven members of a Hispanic gang that was trying to muscle in on Colichio territory. Two other gang members witnessed the massacre but escaped and fingered The Rug. He was arrested and charged and somehow managed to get released on a ridiculously high bail bond. That was the last anyone ever saw The Rug or Tootie. Vinnie had written the bond, and Ranger and I have been looking for The Rug ever since.
    “Was The Rug with her?” Lula asked.
    “Not in the terminal. She was alone. I followed her outside and watched her get on a shuttle to a resort. I picked up my rental car and drove to the address on the side of the shuttle. It was one of those really expensive beachfront, view-of-Diamond-Head resorts that cater to special-events

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