'Try Cantell,' Connie said. 'She should still be at home.'
Fifteen minutes later we were in front of Cantell's house in Hamilton Township. It was a trim little ranch on a small lot, in a neighborhood of similar houses. The grass was neatly cut, but it was patchy with crabgrass and parched from a hot, dry August.
Young azaleas bordered the front of the house. A blue Honda Civic was parked in the driveway.
'Don't look like the home of a hijacker,' Lula said. 'No garage.'
'Sounds like this was a once-in-a-lifetime experience.'
We approached the front door and knocked. And Cantell answered.
'Oh God,' Cantell said. 'Don't tell me you're from the bond agency. I told the woman on the phone I didn't want to go to jail.'
'This is just a rebooking process,' I told her. 'We bring you in and then Vinnie bonds you out again.'
'No way. I'm not going back to that jail. It's too embarrassing. I'd rather you shoot me and kill me.'
'We wouldn't shoot you,' Lula said. 'Unless, of course, you drew a gun. What we'd do is gas you. We got pepper spray. Or we could zap you with the stun gun. My choice would be the stun gun on account of we're using my car and there's a lot of snot produced if we give you a face full of pepper spray. I just had my car detailed. I don't want the back seat full of snot.'
Cantell's mouth dropped open and her eyes glazed over. 'I just took a couple bags of chips,' she said. 'It's not like I'm a criminal.'
Lula looked around. 'You wouldn't have any of them chips left over, would you?'
'I gave them all back. Except for the ones I ate.'
Cantell had short brown hair and a pleasant round face. She was dressed in jeans and an extra-roomy T-shirt. Her age was listed as thirty-two.
'You should have kept your court date,' I said to Cantell. 'You might have only gotten community service.'
'I didn't have anything to wear,' she wailed. 'Look at me. I'm a house! Nothing fits. I ate a truck full of Fritos!'
'You're not as big as me,' Lula said. 'And I got a lot of stuff to wear. You just gotta know how to shop. We should go out shopping together some day. My secret is I only buy spandex and I buy it too small. That way it sucks everything in. Not that I'm fat or anything.
It's just I got a lot of muscle.'
Lula was currently in athletic gear mode, wearing hot pink stretch pants, matching halter top, and serious running shoes. The strain on the spandex was frightening. I was heading for cover at the first sign of a seam unraveling.
'Here's the plan,' I said to Cantell. 'I'm going to call Vinnie and have him meet us at the courthouse. That way you can get bonded out immediately, and you won't have to sit around in a holding cell.'
'I guess that would be okay,' Cantell said. 'But you have to get me back here before my lads get off the school bus.'
'Sure,' I said, 'but just in case, maybe you want to make alternative arrangements.'
'And maybe I can lose some weight before I have to go to court,' Cantell said.
'Be a good idea not to hold up any more snack food trucks,' Lula said.
'I had my period! I needed those chips.'
'Hey, I hear you,' Lula said.
After we got Cantell rebooked and rebonded and returned to her house, Lula drove me across town, back to the Burg.
'That wasn't so bad,' Lula said. 'She seemed like a real nice person. Do you think she's going to show up for court this time?'
'No. We're going to have to go over to her house and drag her to court, kicking and screaming.'
'Yeah, that's what I think, too.'
Lula pulled to the curb and idled in front of my parents' house.
Lula drove a red Firebird that had a sound system capable of broadcasting rap over a five-mile radius. Lula had the sound on low but the bass at capacity, and I could feel my fillings vibrating.
'Thanks for the ride,' I told Lula. 'See you tomorrow.'
'You to,' Lula said. And she took off.
My Grandma Mazur was at the front door, waiting for me.
Grandma Mazur rooms with my parents now that Grandpa Mazur is living la vidu loca everlasting. Grandma Mazur has a body like a soup chicken and a mind that defies description. She keeps her steel gray hair cut short and tightly permed. She prefers pastel polyester pantsuits and white tennis shoes. And she watches wrestling. Grandma doesn't care if wrestling's fake or real.
Grandma likes to look at big men in little spandex panties.
'Hurry up,' Grandma said. 'Your mother won't start serving drinks until you're at the table, and I need one real bad. I had the day from heck. I traipsed all the way over to Stiva's Funeral Parlor for Lorraine Schnagle's viewing, and she turned out to have a closed casket. I heard she looked real bad at the end, but that's still no reason to deprive people from seeing the deceased. People count on getting a look. I made an effort to get there, dressing up and everything. And now I'm not going to have anything to talk about when I get my hair done tomorrow. I was counting on Lorraine Schnagle.'
'You didn't try to open the casket, did you?'
'Me? Of course not. I wouldn't do such a thing. And anyway, it was locked up real tight.'
'Is Valerie here?'
'Valerie's always here,' Grandma said, 'That's another reason I'm having the day from heck. I was all tired after the big disappointment at the funeral parlor, and I couldn't take a nap on account of your niece is back to being a horse and won't stop the galloping. And she whinnies all the time. Between the baby crying and the horse thing, I'm pooped. I bet I got bags under my eyes. If this keeps up I'm going to lose my looks.' Grandma squinted up and down the street. 'Where's your car?'
'It sort of caught fire.'
'Did the tires pop off? Was there an explosion?'
'Yep.'
'Darn! I wish I'd seen that. I always miss the good stuff. How'd it catch fire this time?'
'It happened at a crime scene.'
'I'm telling you this town's going to hell in a handbasket. We never had so much crime. It's getting to where you don't want to go out of the neighborhood.'
Grandma was right about the crime. I saw it escalating at the bond office. More robberies. More drugs on the street. More murders. Most of it drug and gang related. And now I had seen the Red Devil's face, so I was sucked into it.
Two
I found my mom at the kitchen sink, peeling potatoes. My sister Valerie was in the kitchen, too. Valerie was seated at the small wood table, and she was nursing the baby. It seemed to me Valerie was always nursing the baby. There were times when I looked at the baby and felt the pull of maternal yearnings, but mostly I was glad I had a hamster.
Grandma followed me into the kitchen, anxious to tell everyone the news, 'She blew up her car again,' Grandma announced.
My mother stopped peeling. 'Was anyone hurt?'
'No,' I said. 'Just the car. It was totaled.'
My mother made the sign of the cross and took a white-knuckled grip on the paring knife. 'I hate when you blow up cars!' she said. 'How am I supposed to sleep at night knowing I have a daughter who blows up cars?'
'You could try drinking,' Grandma said. 'That always works for me. Nothing like a good healthy snort before bedtime.'