officer,â I said to him.
He waved his sign.
âPig! Pig!â
âYou stop that,â Lula said to him. âI donât like your attitude. And on top of that Iâm offended by your accessorizing.â
Word went out that the television guy had arrived, and in seconds we were surrounded by protesters demanding that I release Slick. Voices were raised. Someone shoved Lula, and she took him out with an elbow to the gut. After that it was bloody chaos. There was a flash and a
BANG!
And everyone stopped punching and eye gouging and stepped back.
âThis is getting old,â Lula said. âMy ears are ringing. I better not have permanent damage.â
I thought if the sound system in her car hadnât permanently damaged her ears, the flash grenades werenât going to have an effect.
Lula put her hands to her head. âWhereâs my Farrah Fawcett wig? Someone took my wig. Iâm pressing charges. Donât anybody leave the scene.â
There were a bunch of signs scattered around, but not many protesters. Slick was gone and so were my handcuffs. The police and some Parks were cleaning up the litter. No blond wig in sight.
âIt was splattered with tomato, anyway,â I said.
âYeah, you got some on you too. And egg. And your shirt got a big rip in it. Iâm sayinâ that all in all this here was a depressing day. I need a donut.â
A donut sounded like a good idea. A dozen donuts sounded even better. It was almost nine oâclock, and the sun had set. I wasnât sure if I was up for the late dinner with Morelli. I was hungry, but I wasnât feeling like a sex goddess. I was feeling like Iâd gotten punched in the face, and my eye was swelling.
âDo I have a black eye?â I asked Lula.
âI canât tell,â Lula said. âItâs too dark here.â
We walked for two blocks and stopped.
âWhereâs your car?â Lula asked. âI could swear we parked it here.â
We looked around. No car.
âI think someone stole your car,â Lula said.
âI think youâre right.â
âThis is doodie,â Lula said. âJust when I need a donut someone goes and steals your car. Some people have no consideration.â
I reviewed my choices. I could call Morelli. I could call my dad. I could call Uber. Or I could call Ranger.
âHold on,â Lula said. âWhatâs that laying in the gutter? Looks to me like your license plates.â
I went to the curb and retrieved the plates.
âThis is looking up,â Lula said. âAt least you got your plates. All we need now is a car. How about the one across the street. It looks like a Lexus.â
âWe arenât going to steal a car.â
âI donât see why not. Someone took ours, so we should be able to help ourself to a new one. Tit for tat.â
My cellphone buzzed, and the screen told me it was Ranger. Ricardo Carlos Manoso, aka Ranger, is former Special Forces. Heâs smart. Heâs sexy. Heâs Cuban American. He grew up street tough. He has his own moral code. And he has secrets. He wears only black unless heâs undercover. He sits with his back to the wall when heâs in a public place.
When we first met, Ranger was working as a bounty hunter. Since then heâs become a successful businessman, owning and operating Rangeman, a high-tech security firm housed in a stealth building in downtown Trenton. Weâve been intimate in the past, but much like with Diesel, thereâs no possibility of marriage or even a long-term, stable relationship. Ranger has complicated life goals. He also has an overly protective attitude, and he puts trackers on my cars so he can keep tabs on me. Iâve given up trying to remove them.
âMy control room tells me your car just went for a swim in the Delaware River,â Ranger said.
âIt was just stolen. You should probably send the police to see if
Mark Russinovich, Howard Schmidt