“The television people were here just a little while ago,” Lula said. “We’re gonna be on the evening news. We’re famous. We’re like rock stars.”
“Was this the big new development?” I asked.
“Yeah,” Lula said. “It don’t get much more exciting than this.”
I pantomimed hanging myself.
“I hate to say it, but it’s working,” Connie said. “The scumbag losers are loving the flyers. We’re back in business.”
I looked around the bus. “What about the renovation?”
“Uncle Jimmy is starting tonight after business hours. He said it wasn’t a big deal to do the walls and the floor. The upholstered pieces will have to wait until Sunday.”
There was a loud crash, and we all looked to the bedroom.
“No problem,” Mooner said. “I just fell off my head.”
Connie went to the fridge and got a bottle of water. “For what it’s worth, my Aunt Theresa lives next to Maronelli’s garage, the one attached to the funeral home, and she said she’s been seeing Ziggy sneaking in and out. Aunt Theresa is ninety-three years old and can’t see her hand in front of her face, so there’s no guarantee it’s actually Ziggy, but I’m giving it to you anyway.”
“We’ll check it out,” Lula said. “Our motto is no stone unturned.”
“Does she see him during the day or at night?” I asked Connie.
“She didn’t say.”
My phone rang, and I knew from the ring tone it was from my parents’ house.
“I just came back from an afternoon viewing at Stiva’s funeral parlor,” Grandma said. “Marilyn Gluck took me home and we went past where the bonds office used to be and there’s a bus parked there with your picture on it. It’s a beaut. It looks like you got some of them breast implants, and we never noticed before.”
“I didn’t get breast implants. They were enlarged on a computer.”
“The phone hasn’t stopped ringing since I got home. Everybody is calling to say they saw you on the bus. Norma Klap said her son, Eugene, would like to get fixed up with you.”
“Does my mother know?”
“Yeah. She’s ironing.”
I hung up, and Lula and I went out to look for Ziggy. Lula was wearing her cross and carrying a couple cloves of garlic in her purse. I was wearing dark glasses and a ball cap, hoping no one would recognize me.
Maronelli’s funeral home is at the back end of the Burg, one street off Liberty. It’s been in the Maronelli family for generations, and with the exception of installing indoor plumbing, it hasn’t changed much over the years. The viewing rooms are small and dark. English is spoken as a second language. The Italian flag is displayed in the small lobby. Manny Maronelli and his wife live in an apartment above the viewing rooms, but they’re in their late seventies and spend most of the year in their double-wide in Tampa. Their sons, Georgie and Salvatore, run the business and keep it in the black with a diversified menu of services that includes off track betting, prostitution, and an occasional hijacking. It’s a very efficient operation since men can attend a viewing and grieve and get a BJ all at the same time.
The four-car garage is detached and to the side of the funeral home. The hearse is usually parked in the driveway, so I assumed the garage was used to store miscellaneous items that fell off the back of a truck. It was close to four o’clock when Lula and I cruised by the funeral home, and there was no sign of activity. We’d arrived between the afternoon and evening viewing.
I parked across the street, and we sat for a couple minutes scoping things out. No street traffic. No dog walkers. No kids on bikes. Lula and I got out and went to the garage and tried the side door. Not locked. I opened the door, and Lula and I stepped inside and looked around. No windows. Very dark. I flipped the light switch, closed the door, and looked around.
Mortuary supplies were stacked on one wall. Everything from cocktail napkins to embalming fluid. A black Lincoln Town Car was parked in one of the middle bays. A flower car was parked next to it. Caskets lined the entire back of the garage. One of the caskets had the lid up.
“I like the casket with the lid up,” Lula said. “That’s a first-rate casket. When I go I want to have a casket like that. I bet it’s real comfy for your eternal slumber.”
She walked over to the casket, bent over it to look inside, and Ziggy popped up.
“Eeeeeee,” Lula shrieked. “I got a cross! I got garlic! Lord help me!”
“A man can’t even take a nap no more,” Ziggy said, climbing out of the casket.
Lula pulled her gun out of her purse. “I got a silver bullet. Stand back!”
“A silver bullet’s for werewolves,” Ziggy told her. “What time is it? Is it nighttime?”
I looked at my watch. “It’s four o’clock.”
“What are you doing here anyway?” Lula asked him.
“I’m trying to sleep. It’s nice and quiet here. And it’s dark.”
“Don’t the people who own the funeral parlor mind you sleeping in their casket?”
“Actually, it’s my casket. I bought it a couple years ago. It’s very restful. I used to have it at the house, but it was freaking my sister out when she came to visit, so Georgie said I could leave it here.”
“Even for a vampire you’re weird,” Lula said.