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Notorious Nineteen

Notorious Nineteen

Titel: Notorious Nineteen
Autoren: Janet Evanovich
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expenses, and sometimes it’s the result of a drug reaction and the patient isn’t thinking clearly.”
    “Has Cubbin made an appointment for a recheck?”
    “You’d have to ask my receptionist about that. I only see my patient list for the current day.”
    His intercom buzzed and his receptionist reminded him Mrs. Weinstein was in Examining Room 3.
    I stopped at the desk on the way out and asked if Geoffrey Cubbin had scheduled a post-op appointment. I was told he had not.
    Lula was idling at the curb when I left the medical building. I buckled myself in next to her and looked into the Dunkin’ Donuts box on the floor. It was empty.
    “Where’s my donut?” I asked her.
    “Oops. I guess I ate it.”
    Lucky me. Better on Lula’s thighs than on mine. Especially since I was going to have to squeeze into a cocktail dress tomorrow night.
    “Now what?” Lula asked. “Are we done for the day? I’m not feeling so good after all those donuts. I was only going to eat two, but then I lost track of what I was doing and next thing there weren’t any more donuts. It was like I blacked out and someone came and ate the donuts.”
    “You have powdered sugar and jelly stains on your tank top.”
    “Hunh,” Lula said, looking down at herself. “Guess I was the one ate them.”
    “It would be great if you could drive me to my parents’ house so I can borrow Big Blue.”
    Big Blue is a ’53 powder blue and white Buick that got deposited in my father’s garage when my Great Uncle Sandor checked himself in to Happy Hills Nursing Home. It drives like a refrigerator on wheels, and it does nothing for my image. Only Jay Leno could look good driving this car. In its favor, it’s free.

THREE
    MY PARENTS LIVE in a small mustard yellow and brown two-story house that shares a wall with an identical house that is painted lime green. I suppose the two-family house seemed like an economical idea forty years ago at the time of construction. And there are many of them in the Burg. Siamese twins conjoined at the living room downstairs and master bedroom upstairs, with separate brains. The house has a postage stamp front yard, a small front porch, and a long, narrow backyard. The floor plan is shotgun. Living room, dining room, kitchen. Three small bedrooms and a bathroom upstairs.
    My Grandma Mazur lives with my parents. She moved in when my Grandpa Mazur’s arteries totally clogged with pork fat and he got a one-way ticket to God’s big pig roast in thesky. Grandma was at the front door when Lula eased the Firebird to a stop at the curb. I used to think Grandma had a telepathic way of knowing when I approached, but I now realize Grandma just stands at the door watching the cars roll by, like the street is a reality show. Her face lit, and she waved as we drove up.
    “I like your granny,” Lula said. “She always looks like she’s happy to see us. That’s not something happens every day. Half the time we knock on a door and people shoot at us.”
    “Yes, but that’s only half the time. Sometimes they just run away. See you tomorrow.”
    “Tomorrow, Kemo Sabe.”
    “How’s business?” Grandma asked when I got to the door. “Did you catch anyone today? Where’s your car?”
    “My car got blown up.”
    “Again? How many does that make this month?”
    “It’s the only one this month. I was hoping I could borrow Big Blue.”
    “Sure, you can borrow it whenever you want. I don’t drive it on account of it don’t make me look hot.”
    I suppose everything’s relative, but I thought it would take more than a fast car to make Grandma look hot. Gravity hasn’t been kind to Grandma. She also doesn’t have a license, due to a heavy foot on the accelerator. Still, I suspected lack of license wouldn’t stop her if she had access to a Ferrari.
    I heard a car door slam and turned to see Lula coming toward us.
    “I smell fried chicken,” Lula said.
    Grandma waved her in. “Stephanie’s mother is frying some up for dinner. And we got a chocolate cake for dessert. We got plenty if you want to stay.”
    A half hour later Lula and I were at the dining room table, eating the fried chicken with my mom, dad, and Grandma Mazur.
    “Stephanie blew up another car,” Grandma Mazur announced, spooning out mashed potatoes.
    “Technically some gang guy blew it up,” Lula said. “And the car wasn’t worth much. The battery was dead.”
    My mother made the sign of the cross and belted back half a glass of what looked like ice
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