Look Alive Twenty-Five (Stephanie Plum 25)
Page 63
“Not until we find Hal,” Ranger said. “And it’s not that bad. Stretch makes an effort to keep things clean, but it’s an old building in a rat-infested neighborhood.”
I switched all the lights on, and Raymond walked in.
“I would not be here on a Sunday if I could find someone to sell me a green card,” Raymond said. “I would find work at a superior establishment.”
“I thought you had a green card, but you lost it,” I said.
“Yes. That is what I meant. I lost my green card and I cannot find someone to sell me another. Soon I fear I will not even be able to buy the recreational drugs that are flowing freely from Mexico. I will pay much more for them when they must come from Colorado.”
Stretch ambled through the door. “Sorry I’m late,” he said. “I had a hard time convincing myself to come to work.”
“That is exactly my point of view,” Raymond said.
A little before five Lula and Ella arrived.
“I was torn between being an Internet sensation and taking a day off from the limelight today,” Lula said. “Being a celebrity has its downsides. I can’t be a bitch without it showing up on somebody’s Twitter feed. What’s with that? Maybe I was tired of standing in line at the checkout while some moron couldn’t figure out how to find a barcode.”
“So, you decided to be an Internet sensation anyway?” I said.
“Hell, no. I’m in my looking-normal clothes.”
“They have a lot of sequins, and your hair is purple and green,” I said.
“Yeah, but the sequins are on a tank top. That’s like dressing down. It’s not even like I’m wearing my going-to-church clothes.”
“You go to church?”
“Hell, yes. You go to hell if you don’t g
o to church. Everybody knows that. I’ve been born again a bunch of times. I don’t take no chances. I believe in getting saved. I’m like a big Jesus fan.”
“I’m sort of a Catholic.”
“That’s okay,” Lula said. “It’s not as good as being a Baptist, but it’s better than nothing. Us Baptists got better music. We got a relationship with Jesus on account of he gets down with us.”
“I have heard this,” Raymond said. “I personally am Hindu on occasion, but I have heard Jesus is a cool dude.”
* * *
¦ ¦ ¦
Customers began straggling in around six o’clock. Not the numbers we’d seen for the last two days, but the tables and booths were filled. We’d recorded a message that the deli was no longer taking phone orders, so Lula was able to help wait tables.
“I got a number eighteen up,” Stretch yelled.
“Not me,” I said.
“Not me neither,” Lula said.
Stretch leaned out, over the counter. “This looks like Lula writing.”
“Yeah, but I don’t need a number eighteen,” Lula said. “I need a number sixteen.”
“You wrote eighteen,” Stretch said.
“I wrote sixteen,” Lula said. “You need glasses.”
“You need to learn to write,” Stretch said.