Copyright © 2018 Vito Zuppardo

This book is a work of

fiction. Names, characters,

businesses, organizations,

places, events, and

incidents are the product

of the author’s imagination or are used in a fictional manner.

All rights reserved.

No part of the book may be

reproduced, scanned, or

distributed in any printed or

electronic format without

permission.

A special thanks to my wife, Diane Zuppardo,

for the cover picture of her original artwork.

WHAT READERS

ARE SAYING

VOODOO LUCY “TUPELO GYPSY”

Tupelo Gypsy average 4,5 star rating

Patrick ( Peggy): This book is fantastic!

This is a very fast paced, unputdownable till the end book. I loved it and am looking forward to book two of the series. It's a standalone book with no cliffhanger, which I really like and appreciate. Lucy is one amazing individual who walks a fine line beside law enforcement and the gang leader. Much of what she does isn't legal, but who gives a crap? It's a terrific book that I thoroughly enjoyed.

JoBear: What a THRILL!!

Lucy starts off as a poor girl starting over to someone who owns her own business befriends a gang member and a police officer. The story about how she goes from the bottom to the top and what she has to do to get there is absolutely fabulous. I couldn't turn the pages fast enough. Great read.

Regina Armes: Great Series

Loved this book!! Just wish it was a little longer. Looking forward to more!

ALSO BY

VITO ZUPPARDO

True Blue Detective series

True Blue Detective

Crescent City Detective

Vieux Carré Detective

Street Justice

Escape to New Orleans

Voodoo Lucy series

Tupelo Gypsy

Revenge

Lady Luck series

Alluring Lady Luck

Tales of Lady Luck

Two chapters of REVENGE Book 2 of

Voodoo Lucy Series: is at the back of this book.

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Table of Contents

Copyright

A special thanks to my wife, Diane Zuppardo...

What Readers are Saying

Also by Vito Zuppardo

Get Vito Zuppardo’s Starter Library FOR FREE

Tupelo Gypsy

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

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Author's Note

About the Author

Voodoo Lucy Series Book 2 “Revenge”

Special Preview

CHAPTER ONE

The French Quarter never slept. Jazz music wafted out of clubs until the first sign of morning, to be replaced by the much less agreeable clanks and screeches of a garbage truck picking up trash in the alleyway that separated Bourbon and Royal. One side of the alley was lined with trash cans from some of the hottest nightclubs on Bourbon Street, the other with mostly boxes from the art galleries that faced Royal Street. With a hydraulic whine, the truck crushed cans, bottles, and boxes into its steel belly.

The sanitation truck was a block away, and that was the sound she was waiting for. “Anything you’d like to say?” Lucy asked. Her real name was Lucinda Jones, but some called her Lucia, and most recently, she was known as Voodoo Lucy to street punks like Picklehead, who seemed to be struggling to process her question. In truth, she had several names. The one she used at any moment depended on what con she was running.

Lying on a flat cart used to move heavy furniture, Picklehead glared up at her, his head tightly held by a donkey harness attached to the handles of the steel cart.

“Well?” she asked, pressing on his neck with her foot.

“Yeah, I’ve got something to say—you’re a dead bitch.”

Lucy smiled at Picklehead. He was blinking rapidly, and he had a grayish cast to his face. He must be coming down from his big rush, something he’d enjoyed only a short time ago.

“Didn’t that little hit of coke take the edge off?”

With a look that could kill, Picklehead asked, “What do you want?”

“You can’t take advantage of women without consequence.”

Given the increasingly loud clatter of trash cans, the garbage truck was one building away. Standing in front of the cart staring at Picklehead, Lucy wondered what made people do such horrible things. The truck’s brakes squealed as it stopped in the alley near the furniture shop’s door. Shortly after, as she expected, the truck’s hydraulics kicked in, the crusher’s noise deafening.

Lucy pulled a syringe from her pocket, checked for an air bubble, and plunged it into his arm. That’s when Picklehead let out a scream and then another, only to be drowned out by the sound of the truck’s hydraulics, which lasted for twenty seconds. By the time the clatter stopped, so had Picklehead’s heart.

The sound of the truck receded as it rumbled down to the next block. Her heart beating fast, Lucy eyeballed the alleyway, then pushed the cart carrying Picklehead out to it. Stripping off the harness and flipping his body to the ground, she propped him against a building. Working quickly, she placed Picklehead’s thumb on the syringe, with the needle pushed into his arm. His hand dropped to the ground, the needle dangling from his skin as if Picklehead had squeezed every last ounce of juice from the syringe.

The furniture cart cleaned of fingerprints and rolled back into place as if it had never moved, Voodoo Lucy walked through the building and out the front door to Royal Street. She crossed the street and took her usual seat at Café Beignet. Now it was a waiting game—to see how long it would take for someone to discover what appeared to be another junkie overdosed in an alley.

CHAPTER TWO

Lucinda Jones always walked the streets of New Orleans with mixed feelings. Whispers of “Voodoo Lucy” reached her ears from the gossips as she passed. Others worshipped her as a goddess, calling her “Ms. Lucy,” and were proud to be her friend.

The legend of Voodoo Lucy had started eight months ago, shortly after twenty-eight-year-old Lucy and her mother Wanda arrived in New Orleans. Lucy had taken a part-time job at Bluff Salon, where her mother had also obtained employment as a beautician. The two received small salaries, decent tips, and free lodging in a tiny apartment above the salon on Royal Street. It was the new start they

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