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Excerpt

Excerpt

Finger Lickin’ Fifteen: A Stephanie Plum Novel

ONE

When I was a kid, I was afraid of spiders and vegetables. As an
adult, I’ve eliminated vegetables from my fright-o-meter, but
I’ve added a whole bunch of other stuff. Homicidal maniacs,
serial rapists, cellulite, Joe Morelli’s Grandma Bella, rabid
bats, and any form of organized exercise.

My name is Stephanie Plum, and I work as a bond enforcement
officer for Vincent Plum Bail Bonds. It’s not a great job,
but it allows me to avoid organized exercise, and I hardly ever
encounter rabid bats. The remaining fright-o-meter items lurk in
the dark shadows of my daily life. Fortunately, there are also good
things in those shadows. Joe Morelli without his Grandma Bella,
fellow bounty hunter Ranger without his clothes, my crazy family,
my hamster, Rex . . . and Lula. Lula actually fits somewhere
between the rabid bats and the good stuff. She’s a former
’ho, now working as the of ce le clerk and apprentice bounty
hunter. Lula’s got a plus-size personality and body, and a
petite-size wardrobe. She’s got brown skin, blond hair, and
last week she had tiny rhinestones pasted onto her eyelids.

It was Monday morning. Connie, the office manager, and I were in
the bonds office enjoying our morning coffee, and Lula slid her red
Firebird to a stop at the curb. We watched Lula through the big
plate-glass window in the front of the small office, and we did a
joint grimace. Lula was in a state. She lurched out of the
Firebird, beeped it locked, and burst into the office, her eyes
wild, rolling around in their sockets, her hands waving in the
air.

“I saw it all,” she said. “It was terrible. It
was horrible. I couldn’t believe it was happening. And right
in front of me.” She looked around. “What do we got? Do
we got doughnuts? ’Cause I need a doughnut. I need a whole
bag. And maybe I need one of them breakfast sandwiches with the egg
and cheese and bacon and grease. I got a big grease
craving.”

I knew it would be a huge mistake to ask Lula what she’d
seen, but I couldn’t stop myself.

“What was terrible and horrible?” I asked.

Connie leaned forward, elbows on her desk, already knowing the
telling of the story would be a car crash. Connie is a couple years
older than me, and while my heritage is half Hungarian and half
Italian, Connie is Italian through and through. Her hair is jet
black, her lipstick is re-engine red, her body is va-va-voom.

Lula paced in front of Connie’s desk. “First off, I
hardly had time for anything this morning. I had a big date last
night, and by the time I booted his butt out of my bed, I already
missed a lot of my beauty sleep. Anyways, I got up late, and then I
couldn’t decide what to wear. One day it’s hot out and
next thing it’s cold. And then I had to decide if I needed to
wear shoes that kicked ass or were good for ass kicking, on account
of there’s a difference, you know.”

“Jeez Louise,” Connie said. “Could you get to
it?”

“The point bein’ I was late,” Lula said.
“I was tryin’ to put makeup on and drive, and I missed
a turn, and before I knew it I was someplace I didn’t want to
be. So I pulled over to look around and figure things out, and when
I did that my makeup case rolled off the seat next to me, and
everything went all over the floor. So I was bent over to get my
makeup, and I guess it looked like there was no one in the car,
because when I came back up there were two big hairy morons
standing right in front of my Fire-bird, and they were removing a
head from some guy’s body.”

“Excuse me?”

“This one moron had a giant meat cleaver. And the other
moron had a hold of this man in a suit. And whack! No
head. The head popped off its neck and bounced down the
street.”

“And then what happened?” Connie said.

“Then they saw me,” Lula said. “They looked
real surprised. And I know I looked real surprised. And
then I laid down about two feet of rubber and took off.”

“Do you know who they were?”

“No.”

“Did you know the guy in the suit?”

“No, but it was a real nice suit. And he had a nice
striped tie, too.”

“Did you go to the police?” Connie asked.

“No. I came straight here. It’s not like the police
were gonna put Humpty Dumpty back together again,” Lula said.
“Didn’t seem like there was a big rush, and I needed a
doughnut. Holy cow. Holy shit. I really need a doughnut.”

“You need to call the police,” Connie told Lula.

“I hate the police. They give me the willies. Except for
Stephanie’s Morelli. He’s a hottie.”

Joe Morelli is a Trenton plainclothes cop, and Lula is right
about Morelli being a hottie, but Lula is wrong about Morelli
belonging to me. Morelli and I have had an off-and-on relationship
for as long as I can remember, and we are currently off. Two weeks
ago, we had a disagreement over peanut butter that turned into a
disagreement over everything under the sun, and we haven’t
seen each other since.

Connie dialed into the police band, and we listened for a couple
minutes to see if we could pick up anything to do with
decapitation.

“Where did this happen?” Connie asked.

“The three hundred block of Ramsey Street. It was right in
front of the Sunshine Hotel.”

The Sunshine Hotel is a roach farm that rents rooms by the hour.
No one coming or going from the Sunshine Hotel would ever report
anything to anyone.

“I seen lots of stuff,” Lula said, “but this
was disgustin’. Blood shot out like one of them oil gushers.
And when the head hit the ground, I swear the eyes were
lookin’ at me. I guess I need to tell the police, but I only
want Morelli.” Lula fixed on me. “You gotta call
Morelli.”

“No way. I’m not talking to him. You can
call him.”

“I don’t know him like you know him.”

“I don’t know him that way anymore. I’m done
with him. He’s a jerk.”

“All men are jerks,” Lula said. “That
don’t mean they aren’t good for some things. And
Morelli’s a hot jerk. He could be a movie star or a underwear
model if he wasn’t a cop. He got all that wavy black hair and
dreamy brown bedroom eyes. He’s kind of puny compared to some
men I know, but he’s hot all the same.”

Morelli was actually six foot tall and solid muscle, but Lula
used to be engaged to a guy who was a cross between an Army tank
and Sasquatch, so I suppose by comparison Morelli might measure up
short.

“I’ll call Morelli,” Connie said.
“He’s a cop, for crying out loud. You don’t need
a complicated relationship to call a cop.”

I was halfway to the door. “I’m leaving. Things to
do. And I don’t want to see Morelli.”

“Oh no,” Lula said. “You get your boney ass
back here. We’re in this together. Through thick and through
thin.”

“Since when?”

“Since now. And before that, too. Remember when I rescued
you from that big snake in the mobile home? And what about when we
were lost in the Pine Barrens?”

“You ran screaming like a little girl when you
thought you saw the snake. And Ranger found us in the Pine
Barrens.”

“Yeah, but if he hadn’t found us, I would have got
us out.”

“You were up to your armpits in a cranberry
bog.”

“I don’t never want to see another cranberry,
neither,” Lula said.

Twenty minutes later, Morelli sauntered in to the bonds office.
He was dressed in jeans and running shoes, a blue button-down shirt
that was open at the neck, and a navy blazer. He looked entirely
edible and a little wary.

“What’s up?” Morelli asked, eyes on me.

Okay, so I was no longer interested in Morelli. At least I was
pretty sure I wasn’t interested. Still, I was wishing
I’d spent more time on my hair and makeup this morning, so
he’d feel really rotten about what he was missing. I have
naturally curly shoulder-length brown hair that was currently
pulled back into a ponytail. I have blue eyes that look a lot
better when they have a swipe of liner and mascara, an okay mouth
that so far hasn’t needed artificial plumping, and a little
nose that I consider my best feature. Morelli always thought my
best feature was located considerably lower on my body.

“It was horrible! It was terrible!” Lula said.
“I almost fainted.”

Morelli shifted his attention to Lula. He didn’t say
anything, but he looked over at her and raised his eyebrows a
little.

“I never saw nothin’ like it,” Lula told him.
“One minute, I was having a day like any other, and then
whack and this guy didn’t have no head. And blood
came out of him like he was a fountain. And when his head hit the
ground, his eyes were lookin’ at me. And I think the head
might have smiled at me, too, but I’m not sure of
that.”

Morelli was back on his heels, thumbs hooked into his jeans
pockets. “Is this for real?”

“Hell yeah,” Lula said. “Who makes up shit
like that? Don’t I look traumatized? I’m practically
turned white. I think my hand might even be shaking. Look at my
hand. Is it shaking?”

Morelli’s eyes cut back to me. “Were you with
her?”

“Nope.”

“Did anyone call 911?”

“Nope.”

Lula was hands on hips, starting to look pissed. “We
called you,” she said to Morelli.

Morelli did a fast office scan. “You don’t have the
head here, do you?”

“So far as I know, the head and everything else is still
in front of the Sunshine Hotel,” Lula told him. “And
I’m not sure I like your attitude. I’m not sure
you’re takin’ this seriously.”

Morelli stared down at his shoe. Hard to tell if he was trying
hard not to laugh or if he was getting a migraine.

After a five-count, he took out his cell phone, called dispatch,
and sent a uniform to the Sunshine Hotel.

“Okay, ladies,” Morelli said when he got off the
phone. “Let’s take a field trip.”

I made a big show of looking at my watch. “Gee, I’ve
got to run. Things to do.”

“No way,” Lula said. “I need someone with me
in case I get faint or something.”

“You’ll have him,” I said.

“He’s a fine man, but he’s the cop
representative here, and I need someone from my posse, you see what
I’m saying. I need a BFF.”

“It’s not gonna be me,” Connie said.
“Vinnie is picking up a skip in Atlanta, and I have to run
the office.”

Morelli looked at me and gave his head a small shake, like he
didn’t believe any of this. Like I was a huge, unfathomable
pain in the ass, and in fact maybe that was how he felt about women
in general right now.

I understood Morelli’s point of view because it was
precisely my current feeling about men.

“Terrific,” I said on a sigh. “Let’s get
on with it.”

Lula and I followed Morelli in my ten-year-old Ford Escort that
used to be blue. We didn’t take the Escort because we liked
riding in it. We took it because Lula thought she might be too
overwrought to drive her Firebird, and she suspected she would need
a bacon cheeseburger after visiting the scene of the crime and
Morelli might not be inclined to find a drive-through for her.

There were already two cruisers angled into the curb in front of
the Sunshine Hotel when Lula and I arrived. I parked, and Lula and
I got out and stood next to Morelli and a couple uniforms. We all
looked down at a red splotch that sprayed out over about a
four-foot diameter. A couple smaller splotches trailed off the big
splotch, and I assumed that was where the head had hit the
pavement. I felt a wave of nausea slide through my stomach, and I
started to sweat.

“This here’s the spot,” Lula said. “You
can see it’s just like I told you. There was a big gusher of
blood when they whacked the head off. It was like Old Faithful
going off, only it was blood. And then the head rolled down the
sidewalk. It was like the head was a bowlin’ ball with eyes.
And the eyes were like big googly eyes kinda popping out of the
head and lookin’ at me. And I think I might have heard the
head laughin’, or maybe it was the guys who did the
whackin’ who were laughin’.”

The uniforms all did a grimace, Morelli was impassive, and I
threw up. Everyone jumped away from me, I gagged one last time and
did some deep breathing.

“Sorry,” I said.

“No problem,” Morelli told me. “I feel like
throwing up a lot on this job.”

One of the uniforms brought me some paper towels and a bottle of
water, and Lula stood a good distance away.

“You got lots of room for lunch now that you’re
empty,” she yelled to me. “I could get a early start
with one of them extra-crispy bird burgers they’re
servin’ at Cluck-ina-Bucket. Have you heard about them? They
got some new secret sauce.”

I wasn’t interested in secret sauce. I wanted to go home
and go to bed and not get up until it was a new day. I was done
with this one.

“We got a couple footprints heading south,” a
uniform said. “One of these guys had real big feet. Looks
like a size fourteen. And there’s some skid m arks where they
dragged the body to the curb. Imagine they dumped it into a car and
took off.”

“You need to come downtown and give me some
information,” Morelli said to Lula.

“No way. Nuh-ah. I got a allergic reaction to police
stations. I get irritable bowel and hives and the
heebiejeebies.”

“You witnessed a murder.”

“Yeah, but there’s extenuating circumstances here. I
got a medical condition. I got a extreme sensitivity to
cops.”

Morelli looked like he wanted to pull his gun out of its holster
and shoot himself.

“I’ll get you some cheeseburgers and a side of onion
rings,” he said to Lula.

Lula stood hands on hips. “You think I could be bought for
some lame-ass burgers? What kinda woman you think I am?”

“I’ll throw in a bucket of chicken and an ice cream
cake from Carvel,” Morelli said. “That’s my final
offer.”

“Deal,” Lula told him. “We goin’ in your
car? On account of I’m not riding in a cop car, and I hate to
say this, but Stephanie don’t smell too good.”

Twenty minutes later, I parked in the lot to my apartment
building. My building straddles the line between Trenton proper and
Trenton improper. It’s a three-story utilitarian brick box
filled with tenants who are struggling to make ends meet.
Frequently, I have a gap between my ends, resulting in a lot of
dinners mooched from my parents, who live ten minutes away in a
blue-collar chunk of Trenton called The Burg.

My apartment is on the second floor and my windows look out at
the parking lot. My only roommate is a hamster named Rex. I manage
to keep a good supply of hamster food in my fridge and in my
cupboards. People food is spotty. I own a fry pan and a pot.
Perfectly adequate since I mostly eat peanut butter sandwiches.
Peanut butter and banana, peanut butter and jelly, peanut butter
and potato chips, peanut butter and olives, and peanut butter and
marshmallow goo. So sue me, I like peanut butter. The rest of the
apartment consists of dining alcove, living room with television,
one bedroom, and bath.

I hustled from my car to my apartment, stripped, and jumped into
the shower. I was approaching boiled lobster skin tone when I
finally emerged and wrapped myself in a towel. I stepped out of the
bathroom and spotted Ranger lounging in the club chair across from
my bed. I gave a startled yelp and jumped back into the
bathroom.

“Babe,” Ranger said.

I stuck my head out and looked at him. “What are you doing
here?”

“I need to talk to you.”

“You could have called. Or how about ringing my
doorbell?”

Ranger looked like he was thinking about smiling. His attention
focused on the top of my towel and slowly moved to the bottom hem
that hung a half-inch below my doodah. His brown eyes dilated
black, and I took a stronger grip on my towel.

Ranger was the second biggest complication in my life, and now
that Morelli was out of the picture, I supposed Ranger was elevated
to numero uno. He’s close to six foot, one way or the other,
is Latino, with medium brown skin and dark brown hair cut short.
His teeth are white and even, and he has a killer smile that is
seen only on special occasions. He dresses in black, and today he
was wearing a black T-shirt and black cargo pants. His given name
is Carlos Manoso. His street name, Ranger, is a holdover from time
spent in Special Forces. These days, he does the occasional
high-risk bond enforcement job, and is the managing partner of a
security rm located in a stealth building in center city.
I’ve seen him naked, and you can take it to the bank when I
tell you he’s all hard muscle and perfect in every possible
way. And I mean every possible way.

Ranger and I have three things in common. We’re the same
age. We’re both single. And we both were previously married
for about ten seconds. That’s where the common ground ends.
I’m an open book with a lot of blank pages. His book is
filled with life experience but written in disappearing ink. I have
three locks on my front door, plus a sliding bolt, and I was sure
they were all in place. Somehow, this never stops Ranger.
He’s a man of mysterious talents.

Ranger crooked his finger at me. “Come here.”

“No way.”

“Afraid?”

“Cautious.”

“That’s no fun,” Ranger said.

“I didn’t know you were interested in
fun.”

There was a very slight curve to the corners of his mouth.
“I have my moments.”

I had a big, cuddly pink robe in my closet, but I had to cross
in front of Ranger to get to it. I wasn’t worried Ranger
would jump me. My fear was that if I got too close, I’d get
sucked into his force field, and I’d jump him. And
jumping Ranger was a dangerous deal. He’d made it clear that
his emotional involvement would always have limitations. Plus,
there was Morelli. Morelli was currently out of the picture, but
he’d been out before, and he’d always slid back in.
Getting naked with Ranger would make a reconciliation with Morelli
much more difficult. Of course, that wasn’t currently an
issue, because I wasn’t in a mood to reconcile anything.

“What did you want to talk to me about?” I asked
him.

“Three of my clients have been robbed in the last two
months. All three had state-of-the-art security systems. And in all
three cases the systems were shut down for exactly fifteen minutes
and then reactivated. My clients weren’t home at the time.
There was no sign of physical tampering.”

“I see them using gizmos in the movies that can gure out
codes.”

“This isn’t a movie. This is real life.”

“Someone hacked into your system?”

“No.”

“That leaves an unpleasant possibility,” I said to
Ranger.

“In theory, there are only a few people in my organization
who have access to the codes, and I can’t imagine any of
those men being involved in this. For that matter,
everyone I employ is rigorously screened. Plus, the entire
building, with the exception of private living spaces, is monitored
twenty-four hours.”

“Have you changed the codes?”

“I changed them after each break-in.”

“Wow.”

“Yeah,” Ranger said. “Someone on the inside is
beating my system.”

“Why are you telling this to me?”

“I need you to come in and snoop around without raising
suspicion. I can’t trust anyone already inside.”

“Even Tank?”

“Even Tank.”

Tank is exactly what his name would imply. He’s big and
solid inside and out. He’s second in command at Rangeman, and
he’s the guy who watches Ranger’s back.

“You’ve worked for me before doing computer
searches, and that’s where I’d like to put you again.
Ramon has been doing the searches, but he’d like to get out
of the cubby and back on the street. You’d be working on the
fifth floor in the control room, but you’d have total access
within the building. Every man in my organization knows you and
understands that you’re my personal property, so
they’re not going to talk freely when you’re around,
but they’re also not going to think I hired you to snoop.
They’ll assume I gave you the job to have you close to
me.”

“Personal property?”

“Babe, you’re the only one who would question
it.”

I narrowed my eyes at him. “I am not personal
property. A car is personal property. A shirt is personal property.
A human being is not personal property.”

“In my building, we share cars and shirts. We don’t
share women. In my building, you’re my personal property.
Deal with it.”

At a later time, when I was alone and had given it some thought,
I’d probably find the flaw in that reasoning, but oddly
enough it made sense at the moment.

“What about my cases at the bonds office?” I asked
him.

“I’ll help you.”

This was a really good deal, because I was a crappy bounty
hunter and Ranger was the best. Not to mention I’d be drawing
salary from Rangeman. All I had to do was keep my hands off Ranger
and everything would be peachy.

“Okay,” I said. “When do you want me to
start?”

“Now. Do you have uniforms left from the last time you
worked for me?”

“I have a couple T-shirts, and I have some black
jeans.”

“Good enough. I’ll have Ella order some
more.”

Ella and her husband, Louis, serve as live-in property managers
for Rangeman. They keep the building clean and running efficiently,
and they keep the men fed and clothed. They’re both in their
early fifties, and Ella is dark-haired, and dark-eyed, and pretty
in a no-nonsense kind of way.

“I assume you still have your key fob?” Ranger
asked.

“Yep.”

The key fob got me into the high-security Rangeman building, and
it also got me into Ranger’s private seventh-floor apartment.
In the past, I’d used the apartment when I felt I was in
danger. It wasn’t a move I made lightly, because I had to
weigh the danger at hand against the danger of living with
Ranger.

Ranger’s cell phone buzzed, and he looked at the screen.
“I have to go,” he said. “Tank and Ramon are
expecting you. Ramon will bring you up to speed and then you should
be able to take over. You know the drill.” His eyes moved
from my face to the towel and then back to my face.
“Tempting,” he said. And he left.

Excerpted from FINGER LICKIN’ FIFTEEN: A Stephanie Plum
Novel © Copyright 2011 by Janet Evanovich. Reprinted with
permission by St. Martin's Paperbacks. All rights reserved.

Finger Lickin’ Fifteen: A Stephanie Plum Novel
by by Janet Evanovich

  • Genres: Fiction, Mystery
  • Mass Market Paperback: 352 pages
  • Publisher: St. Martin's Paperbacks
  • ISBN-10: 0312383290
  • ISBN-13: 9780312383299