Chapter 15As we were discussing Carmie’s antics—the two crimes spurred by youth and ignorance and/or pressure, her three-year relationship with Bosch, a man of dubious background, and her equally questionable brother—a bombshell fell. NYC fact-finder Sally called to inform us about Carmie’s quasi-secret marriage at the age of nineteen. The Jersey-born gal had been married three weeks to Elvis Teevo. Little information was available about the man other than he’d had a handful of art exhibits. Two had received lukewarm reviews—one in a trendy Soho café-gallery and one in a small Brooklyn gallery owned by a musician and sculptor named Dill Squid. There’d also been half-a-dozen mentions, but nothing more. Elvis Teevo had been a fly-by-night artist and was now a long forgotten name. It was 2:

