Part 15 (2/2)

Suckers. Jeff Strand 51130K 2022-07-22

”I think my husband went to his parent's house,” she said after smacking her lips.

”What am I supposed to do with half a Zinger? It's like the size of my thumb.”

”I said I think my husband went to his parent's house.”

”Who?”

”My husband. After his parents died, he refused to sell it. I'm not allowed to go over there. He's got all kinds of locks and security devices. I think he may be hiding something.”

I scarfed down the rest of the cheese curls, then washed them down with the remaining half a Zinger. It wasn't even half. Maybe a third, at best.

”I'm the detective, lady. I'll decide if he's hiding anything. Gimme the address.”

She gave it to me. It was in the neighborhood of Streeterville, less than a mile away.

”I'll call you in exactly two hours. If you don't hear from me, I want you to call Lt. Jacqueline Daniels in District 26 and tell her where I am. Tell her it's an emergency. Did you get that?”

”Yeah. Is that apple juice?”

I glanced at my pee bottle.

”Yeah. But it's warm.”

”I have ice in the house.”

”Help yourself.”

She took the p.i.s.s, and I started the car and drove off. Little did I know I was about to face the darkest moment of my entire career. A moment so dark, that had I known it was coming, I would have done something else instead, like see a movie, or go to the zoo and bang on the windows in the monkey house. But I didn't know what was going to happen, because I couldn't predict the future, because if I could I would have predicted the lottery numbers and been super-rich and never would have needed the money that caused me to go to that house in Streeterville, which was the darkest moment of my entire career. So that's where I went. Unbeknownst to me.

In hindsight, I really shouldn't have gone.

aka The Darkest Moment Of My Career So I had no idea I was heading into the darkest moment of my career, but I went anyway.

Before going there, however, I stopped for red hots at Fat Louie's Red Hots on Clark and got a dog with the works. It was terrible, and I have really low standards. In my humble opinion, hot dogs shouldn't have veins. Or anything resembling a foreskin. I could barely choke the third one down.

Uncomfortably sated, I pressed onward to Phil's parent's house. The house was una.s.suming enough. Split-level, single family, red brick exterior. There was an oak tree out front, and a chainlink fence part.i.tioning off the tiny backyard. I parked on the street, then took out my remote control surveillance tank. After double-checking the batteries, servos, memory card, remote sensor, camera focus, tread alignment, and wireless frequency, I gingerly set the tank down in the street and a taxi ran it over.

d.a.m.n taxi jerks. I decided to charge it to Mrs. Drawbridge's bill.

My next course of action was to figure out my next course of action. I played a little more air guitar, broke an air string, put on a new one and spent a minute air tuning it, and then decided on my approach.

I could put on my ghillie suit-a mesh s.h.i.+rt and pants with real and fake gra.s.s and shubbery sewn into it that I ordered from PsychoSniper.com-and then slowly belly-crawl across the lawn, traverse the fence using a carbide steel bolt cutter, inch my way into the backyard, creep up the porch in slow increments stopping often to pretend to be a potted plant, trick his surveillance system by recording a loop from his outdoor camera and feeding the playback into the main line, drill into his door frame using a cordless screwdriver to disable the burglary alarm sensor, pick the pick-proof Schlage deadbolt, and sneak inside his house using my Invisible Voyeur NightVision Goggles, which I bought at CautiousStalker.org.

Or I could knock on the front door and ask what's up.

”What's up?” I asked when the front door opened.

Since I'd seen him yesterday, Ken had gone from half a sunburned face to a full sunburned face. The smell coming from his house was real bacon, which sure beat the smell of fake bacon, which my mother used to make out of soy and library paste and brown Crayons.

”Who are you?”

”Housing inspector.” I flashed him my PI badge, too fast for him to read it. ”I'm here to check for gas leaks. Are you leaking any gases?”

”No. Can I see that badge again?”

”I smell something. Are you cooking in there?”

”No, I'm not.”

”Is it bacon?” I smacked my lips. ”I love bacon. I read somewhere that you could shave with bacon. Rub it on your face raw, and it lubricates better than shaving cream. Have you ever heard of that?”

”No.”

”I tried it once. Closest shave I ever had. But I got an E. Coli infection and they had to remove eight yards of my large intestine. Can I come in?”

”No. Hey, you look kind of familiar.”

I flashed an aw shucks grin. ”I get that a lot. I've made a few videos. You might know my screen name, Sir Dix-A-Lot.”

”I don't think that's it.”

”Ever see Snow White and the Seven b.l.o.w.j.o.bs?”

”No.”

”Robin Hood, Prince of a.n.a.l?”

”I don't think so.”

”The Empire Strikes Scat?”

”Maybe you should come in. I may have some gases for you to check on.”

I nodded, stepping into his humble abode. It was no surprise he let me in. Fast talking is one of my special skills. That and being able to swallow pills. If I had a super power, it would be the ability to swallow a whole handful of pills at once. Big pills too. None of that baby aspirin c.r.a.p for babies. I secretly hoped that one day I'd get cancer, and the doctor would prescribe me a lot of pills, and he'd tell me to s.p.a.ce them out throughout the day because there were so many, but I'd tell him no need to and grab the whole handful and swallow them up right there while he watched, amazed.

That's what I was thinking about when Phil hit me in the head with the hammer.

I awoke from a terrible dream that I was trapped in a coffin with an inhumanly large-t.e.s.t.i.c.l.ed man, to the terrible reality of being tied to a chair in some freak's bas.e.m.e.nt.

Said freak was standing over me, staring.

”You're awake,” he said.

”No I'm not.”

I shook my head, which caused a spike of pain. My left eye stung, and I looked down my nose and saw some dried blood on my cheek. The freak still held the hammer. He waved it in front of my face in a way I'm sure he thought was menacing, which actually was pretty menacing.

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