Vincent said.
âNo duh. Which flavor?â she said.
âNot sure, maâam, but thank ya varra, varra much,â he said in a crude rendition of Elvis speak.
âYou know Kokkoâs got a court date on last yearâs drug case?â she asked.
âWeâre aware.â
âWhy the hell didnât you tell me about this shit?â
âNeed to know,â he said. âYou know how feds think.â
Actually, she didnât. Nor did she want to. What she said was, âUh-huh, whereâs my damn costume, C.V.?â
âIâm on it,â he said, âmaâam.â
âIâll wait right here,â she said.
âThank ya varra, varra much.â
As soon as Vincent was gone, she followed him, which wasnât difficult. C.V.âs white leather jumpsuit illuminated like a chemical light stick. Back in the lot, she veered off to find Kokkoâs truck, and as providence would have it, she bumped into a person in a checked leather jumpsuit who mumbled, âYou wanâ score weed, blow, speed, pixie dirt?â
What the fuck is pixie dirt? âOne-stop shopping, that your spiel?â
âYou want to eat it, snort it, or fuck it, I got it for ya, maâam.â
âHow much for your best weed?â
âGarden Greenâs primo with supermax THC, little lady.â
âPrice?â Dillweed.
âTwenty for two lids.â
Too weird to be real. She knew this voice. âThe good shit, right?â
âThe best,â he said.
âGood, hit me,â Turco said, and when Kokko handed her two small bags, she gave him $20 and slapped a cuff on his wrist, grabbed the other, and got that one, too, all before he could even react.
When he did, what he said was, âWhat this is, motherfucker?!? â
âClean up your vocabulary, son. Our Elvis didnât use that kind of language.â
âYa, what would you fags know about the real Elvis?â he challenged.
âWell, he was heterosexual, unlike you and yours, and he was a person of color.â
Kokko tried to pull away. âYou bitch, you callinâ Elvis a colored boy!â
âNo, a person of color. Whereâs your truck, asshole?â
âFuck you,â Kokko said.
âEasy way or hard way, Bo?â Lurleen Turco asked her prisoner, who stood a foot taller than she.
The man answered with an elbow, which she calmly stepped under as she drove a fist sharply upward into his armpit, which dropped him to his knees, where she struck the heel of her hand against the side of his head and toppled him into the dirt. She hauled him back to his knees. âGlad you chose the easy way, asshole,â she told him as he moaned. âBehave or youâll ride the lightning, dude.â
âYou carry a Tasmanian?â Kokko mumbled.
Moron. âYou bet.â
âIâm allergic,â he said.
âTo what?â she asked.
âLife, I guess.â
She stifled a laugh. âTake me to your truck.â
âFuck, Iâm âpose to find it in the dark?â
âI have a flashlight, dimwit.â She started to walk with him but changed her mind, took him to a tree, undid the cuffs, and redid them with his arms around the trunk. He was too dazed or high or both to resist. âYou can stand right there, and weâll let the Elvii tribe sing in the sunrise for you,â she said.
âHow such a bloated up hillbilly get all that money and poontang?â Kokko asked her. âI ainât never understood that shit.â
âAsk the people here; I expect they could tell you.â
âThey ainât normal.â
âWe are each unique in our makerâs eyes,â she said.
âWhat the hellâs that âpose to mean?â
She noticed he was tall and sort of ruggedly handsome in the low light. Until this moment sheâd never noticed. âI donât have the slightest idea. You got a wife,
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