“Okay, so maybe I was a little scared,” Lula said. “I mean, hell, that motherfucker would of shot us dead! Shit. What was he thinking of? What's the matter with him?”
“I've got to get a new job,” I said to Lula. “I don't like getting shot at.”
“I tell you, now that I'm thinking about it, I'm starting to get pissed off. Who the hell does that jerk think he is, anyway? I've got a mind to call him up and tell him what I think.”
I handed Lula the file folder. “Be my guest. The phone number's on the first page. And while you're at it, tell him he'd better get his butt over here, because next time someone raps on his door it'll be Ranger.”
“Fuckin' A,” Lula said. “Ranger'd root that little pecker out. Ranger'd stomp on his miserable ass.”
“Boy, I really hate being shot at,” I said. “I really hate it!”
Lula wrenched her door open. “I'm not taking this shit. I'm not standing still for this kind of treatment.”
“Me either,” I said, getting caught up in the moment. “That creep needs to be locked up.”
“Yeah,” Lula said. “And we're just the ones to do it!”
I wasn't sure about that last part, but I let it slide, and Lula and I marched into the office like storm troopers invading Poland.
Connie looked up from her paperwork. “Uh-oh, what's going on?”
“We've just been shot at,” Lula said, lower lip protruding a good two inches. “Can yo
u believe it? I mean, I've been caught in drive-bys. I'm used to that shit. This shit was different. This shit was directed at me personally. I didn't like this shit one bit. This shit was offensive, you know what I'm saying?”
Connie raised her eyebrows. “Leroy Watkins?”
“Shot at us through a closed door,” I said.
Connie nodded her head. “And?”
“And we ran away,” I said. “Lula was worried about bloodstains on her new warm-up suit.”
Lula had the file in one hand and Connie's phone in the other. “That Leroy Watkins isn't getting away with this. I'm gonna call up his ass and tell him what I think. I'm gonna tell him I'm not taking this shit.”
Lula punched in some numbers and stood hand on hip.
“I want to talk to Leroy,” she said into the phone.
Someone responded at the other end, and Lula leaned forward. “What do you mean I can't talk to him? He just almost dropped a cap in me, and now he's not available to talk to me? I'll available his ass.”
The phone was returned to Connie after five more minutes of discussion.
“Snake says he didn't know it was us,” Lula said. “He said he'd go down to court with us if we come back.”
“Who'd he think he was shooting at?” I asked Lula.
“He said he didn't know who he was shooting at. He said it just pays to be careful these days.”
“He destroyed his door!”
“Guess a man in Snake's business got to worry.”
I grabbed my bag and hung it on my shoulder. “Okay, let's get this over with.”
“The filing is starting to get out of hand,” Connie said to Lula. “This won't take you all day, will it?”
“Hell no,” Lula said. “We'll be back before lunch.”