Hardcore Twenty-Four (Stephanie Plum 24)
Page 24
I took the file from Connie, and Lula and I headed out in the Mercedes. First stop would be Diggeryville. Get the snake responsibility over first.
“That snake could be anywhere by now,” Lula said. “It could be in Delaware.”
“Usually a pet will stay close to home,” I said.
“It might be different if there’s zombies around. Ethel might be worried about her brain. Okay, so it’s about as big as a walnut, but it might still make a good zombie snack.”
I crept down the rutted dirt road, looking side to side. I parked in Diggery’s yard, got out, and looked around. No boa in a tree. No boa sunning herself in front of the double-wide stoop. I cautiously walked to the makeshift steps and peeked through the open door. No boa in sight.
BEEP! BEEP! BEEP!
Lula was blowing the horn and waving at me. Frantic. I could see her mouth working, and knew she was yelling something at me, but I couldn’t hear over the horn beeping.
I ran back to the SUV and got in.
“Get me out of here,” Lula said. “Go now! I saw them. They were coming to get me.”
“Who?”
“The zombies. I saw them. Two of them. All raggedy and dead looking. Their eyes were red and glowing and sunken in, and the one had a big hole in his forehead. That’s probably where some other zombie sucked out his brain.”
I looked around. “I don’t see any zombies.”
“They went back into the woods when I started blowing the horn. They were horrible! I could even smell them. They smelled like dirt and mold and rotting carnations.”
“Carnations?”
“Yeah. I’m thinking they were the funeral home head robbers, and they picked up the carnation stench while they were there.”
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sp; I put the SUV in gear and drove back to the main road, being careful not to run over any zombies.
“Maybe you nodded off and dreamed there were zombies,” I said to Lula.
“I wasn’t nodded off. I know what I saw, and I saw zombies. And I didn’t like the way they were looking at me. Like I was lunch or something. Like they wanted to suck out my brain. You know how when men get scared, their gonads shrink up inside their body? That’s how my brain was feeling. If my brain was a gonad it’d be all sneaked up behind my kidneys.”
“Good thing it’s not a gonad then.”
“You bet your ass,” Lula said.
I turned onto State Street. “Johnny Chucci and Zero Slick are in the wind. Pick your poison,” I said. “Who’s first on our list?”
“I got a real interest in Zero Slick. He looks like an unpleasant chubby little nerd, but he picked himself an excellent name. He’s like an enigma, right?”
I thought he was more loser than enigma but hell, who am I to judge.
“We haven’t got much to go on with him,” I said. “He doesn’t have an address, but he seems to have a neighborhood. I guess we could ride around the building he blew up and see if we get lucky.”
I was a block away when Connie called me.
“I’m listening to the police band, and a call just came in about a boa spotted on the three hundred block of Pilkman Street,” Connie said. “Pilkman backs up to the patch of woods by Diggery’s double-wide. If you hurry you could get there ahead of animal control.”
I made an instant U-turn. “I’m on it.”
“I’m not on it,” Lula said. “I’m not in favor of this. Suppose it’s Ethel? Then what? You gonna escort her into your Mercedes and put a seatbelt on her? You gonna talk her into turning around and following you through zombie country, back to Diggery’s place?”
“I’ll think of something.”