Plum Boxed Set 1, Books 1-3 Stephanie Plum Novels)

Plum Boxed Set 1, Books 1-3 Stephanie Plum Novels) Read Free Page A

Book: Plum Boxed Set 1, Books 1-3 Stephanie Plum Novels) Read Free
Author: Janet Evanovich
Tags: Humor, Fiction, Mystery & Detective, Retail
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money,” I said to Connie. “I hear Vinnie needs someone to do filing.”
    “We just filled that job, and between you and me, you didn’t miss anything. It was a crummy job. Paid minimum wage, and you had to spend all day on your knees singing the alphabet song. My feeling is, if you’re going to spend that much time on your knees, you could find something that pays better. You know what I mean?”
    “Last time I was on my knees was two years ago. I was looking for a contact lens.”
    “Listen, if you really need a job, why don’t you get Vinnie to let you do skip tracing? There’s good money in it.”
    “How much money?”
    “Ten percent of the bond.” Connie pulled a file from her top drawer. “We got this one in yesterday. Bail was set at $100,000, and he didn’t show up for a court appearance. If you could find him and bring him in, you’d get $10,000.”
    I put a hand to the desk to steady myself. “Ten thousand dollars for finding one guy? What’s the catch?”
    “Sometimes they don’t want to be found, and they shoot at you. But that hardly ever happens.” Connie leafed through the file. “The guy who came in yesterday is local. Morty Beyers started tracking him down, so some of the prelim is already done. You’ve got pictures and everything.”
    “What happened to Morty Beyers?”
    “Busted appendix. Happened at eleven-thirty last night. He’s in St. Francis with a drain in his side and a tube up his nose.”
    I didn’t want to wish Morty Beyers any misfortune, but I was starting to get excited about the prospect of stepping into his shoes. The money was tempting, and the job title had a certain cachet. On the other hand, catching fugitives sounded scary, and I was a certifiable coward when it came to risking my body parts.
    “My guess is, it wouldn’t be hard to find this guy,” Connie said. “You could go talk to his mother. And if it gets hairy, you could back out. What have you got to lose?”
    Only my life. “I don’t know. I don’t like the part about the shooting.”
    “Probably, it’s like driving the turnpike,” Connie said. “Probably, you get used to it. The way I see it, living in New Jersey is a challenge, what with the toxic waste and the eighteen-wheelers and the armed schizophrenics. I mean, what’s one more lunatic shooting at you?”
    Pretty much my own philosophy. And the $10,000 was damned appealing. I could pay off my creditors and straighten my life out. “Okay,” I said. “I’ll do it.”
    “You have to talk to Vinnie first.” Connie swiveled her chair toward Vinnie’s office door. “Hey Vinnie!” she yelled. “You got business out here.”
    Vinnie was forty-five, 5’ 7” without his lifts, and had the slim, boneless body of a ferret. He wore pointy-toed shoes, liked pointy-breasted women and dark-skinned young men, and he drove a Cadillac Seville.
    “Steph here wants to do some skip tracing,” Connie said to Vinnie.
    “No way. Too dangerous,” Vinnie said. “Most of my agents used to be in security. And you have to know something about law enforcement.”
    “I can learn about law enforcement,” I told him.
    “Learn about it first. Then come back.”
    “I need the job now .”
    “Not my problem.”
    I figured it was time to get tough. “I’ll make it your problem, Vinnie. I’ll have a long talk with Lucille.”
    Lucille was Vinnie’s wife and the only woman in the burg who didn’t know about Vinnie’s addiction to kinky sex. Lucille had her eyes firmly closed, and it wasn’t my place to pry them open. Of course, if she ever asked … that’d be a whole other ball game.
    “You’d blackmail me? Your own cousin?”
    “These are desperate times.”
    He turned to Connie. “Give her a few civil cases. Stuff that involves telephone work.”
    “I want this one,” I said, pointing to the file on Connie’s desk. “I want the $10,000 one.”
    “Forget it. It’s a murder. I should never have posted bail, but he was from the burg,

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