Read Body Movers 4 - 4 Bodies and a Funeral Online
Authors: Stephanie Bond
He looked contrite. “Sorry. You’re right, I took them, and I
got the refil s. You said you didn’t need them and my arm
was kil ing me.” He wrapped his hand over the site of The
Carver’s handiwork. “I just needed something to take the
edge off.”
She softened toward him. “It’s okay. I just wish you
would’ve said something.”
“I didn’t want you to worry.” Then he suddenly looked
concerned. “Is your arm stil bothering you?”
“It’s nothing that over-the-counter painkil ers can’t take
care of.”
“Okay. Good.” Wesley shifted his backpack on his
shoulder. “Uh, I don’t suppose you’ve heard from Dad
again, have you?”
She shook her head.
“So what are we supposed to do?”
Carlotta inhaled for strength. “What we’ve been doing for
over ten years—we wait. He said he’d be in touch.”
“Do you believe him?”
“I…” She swallowed a mouthful of doubt. “Yes, I do.”
His shoulders fel in obvious relief. “Me, too. And you’ll tel
me if you hear from him again, won’t you?”
“Yes, I’l tel you.” Then she gave him a pointed look.
“Meanwhile, in case Pops decides to pop up, let’s make a
pact to stay out of trouble, okay?”
9
Wesley looked into his sister’s dark brown eyes and had to
squash the urge to laugh. A pact to stay out of trouble?
He was on the verge of il egal y accessing the records of
their father’s criminal case through the city computer
system. Chance was trying to get him into a poker game
that would, if Wesley were caught, effectively violate his
probation and land his ass in jail. And before the week was
over, he’d be on the payrol of one of the most dangerous
loan sharks in the city.
“Sure, Sis, no problem,” he said, dropping a kiss on her
cheek. Carlotta was beautiful, with their mother’s great
bone structure, dark complexion and knockout figure. No
wonder Jack, Coop and Peter all leaked brain cel s when
they were around her. After Peter had bailed him out of a
jam, Wesley had promised to put in a good word for him
whenever he could, and to play interference between
Carlotta and the other two men, but there was no pinning
down his sister.
He actually felt sorry for the three guys. Even the one who
was lucky enough to eventually snag her was doomed to a
life of trying to keep up with her.
“I think I’l crash at Chance’s tonight if that’s okay. I told
him I’d help him get ready for a math exam.” In truth, they
were going to play as many practice hands of poker as
they could squeeze in. “I already fed Einstein.”
She hesitated, but then nodded. “Okay, but be careful?”
Her smile revealed the gap between her front teeth that
he—and many others—found so endearing.
“Always,” he said. “See you later.” He turned and jogged
across the lawn, feeling like he’d dodged a bul et where
the Percocet was concerned. On top of all the other grief
he’d caused his sister, the last thing he needed was for her
to think he had a drug problem.
Not having a bike genuinely sucked, but at least a MARTA
station wasn’t too far away. He put in the earbuds for his
iPod and made the hike, keeping an eye out for the
mysterious black SUV that had been haunting the curb. He
stil didn’t know who was behind the tinted glass, but he
figured they’d make themselves known when they were
ready.
The train platform at Lindbergh was crowded with
morning commuters, but at least he didn’t have to worry
about running into Mouse. In Atlanta, loan sharks and far-
flung suburbanites had one thing in common: they both
shunned public transportation.
So for him and other people living ITP (Inside The
Perimeter of the I-285 beltline), MARTA was a safe zone.
A few minutes later he boarded a packed train and
grabbed an overhead bar, mul ing the day ahead while
sleep-deprived bodies leaned into him. The Oxy made him
feel tolerant of the close quarters. If he stared at a fixed
point, he could achieve a dreamlike state and imagine how
good things were going to be one day.
His parents would come home and Randolph would be
vindicated. They’d be a family again and work through
their problems together. Things would go back to the way
they used to be, when his parents were always laughing,
hosting parties or going out to the club. They’d been the
golden couple, beautiful and successful, the envy of their
friends. The Wren family had been happy. And they would
be again.
He’d stolen his dad’s folder from Liz’s client cabinet in her
home office. Among the pieces of correspondence
between client and attorney, he’d found a love note his
father had written to Liz. When he’d confronted Liz with
proof of her affair with his father, she’d said she’d been in
love with Randolph, but that she’d accepted he would
never leave Wesley’s mother.
And after she’d admitted to the affair with his father, she
and Wesley had had sex.
If his father returned, the situation could be…sticky.
Although the inevitable question had skated through his
mind: Which Wren man would Liz prefer?
Wesley shook his head free of the sordid thought. There
wouldn’t be a choice because he planned to stop banging
Liz. He’d really only started in order to gain access to the
files in her home office anyway, and he’d seen those.
Before Liz had noticed the missing file and reclaimed it,
he’d gotten the dates and case numbers he needed to
build keys. Once fed into a computer program, he’d be
able to retrieve his father’s courthouse records. But it
would take time to build more keys in ranges narrow
enough to include his father’s data, yet broad enough to
pick up sufficient extraneous data that his father’s info
wouldn’t stand out on a report to his supervisor or to
auditors. And since he was doing al of it in conjunction
with his official assignment of adding encryption to the
database records, he’d have to adhere to the schedule
already set up to run tests against the data.
So having hours added to his community service actually
worked to his advantage—it would give him more time to
make sure he gathered every bit of information linked to
his dad’s case.
He was supposed to call Detective Terry at the Midtown
police precinct to set a time to powwow on how to best
worm his way into The Carver’s organization. It was only a
matter of time before Mouse tracked him down again, so
he wanted to be able to start laying a foundation.
Of lies.
And just in case Mouse circumvented him before Jack
Terry worked out a plan, Wesley had two hundred sixty-
seven dol ars in his wallet. Mouse wouldn’t be happy with
such a paltry payment, but it would be enough for the man
to let Wesley live.
He got off at the Garnett Station and walked the few
blocks to the city hall building on Trinity Avenue. The Oxy
made him feel like a mil ion bucks, but it slowed him down
a little. Stil , the trade-off was worth it.
He trudged through security with everyone else, then
climbed the stairs to the seventh floor of the seventeen-
story structure where Atlanta Systems Services (fondly
referred to as “ASS” by most of the employees), was
housed under the umbrel a of the city’s Department of
Information Technology. His heart was racing in
anticipation of accessing his father’s data.
His accelerated pulse had nothing to do with the fact that
he’d see Meg today.
The ASS offices were aged and crammed with cobbled-
together machines and cabled networks snaking over
floors and up the wal s of tweed-covered cubicles. The air
carried the faint smel of burnt wiring and…he
winced…BO?
When he turned the corner to his shared four-plex
workstation, he saw the source of the stench—one of his
station mates, Jeff Spooner, was sitting in front of his
laptop wearing headphones and playing a game with a
homemade joystick. An open foam container of wing
bones and a half-empty two-litre bottle of Mountain Dew
was next to the computer. Two crumpled bags of chips lay
nearby, a half-eaten burrito, and a Moon Pie wrapper. A
distinct funk surrounded the guy. His hair was rumpled
and his Georgia Tech T-shirt was stained. Jeff glanced up
and grinned, then lowered the headphones to his neck.
“Dude, I was here all night designing a new game. I think
I’m on to something. It’s a card game, but the characters
on the back of the cards are at war, so it’s two games
going on at the same time!”
“Happy for you, dude,” Wes replied, waving his hand back
and forth. “But I got one word for you—deodorant. You
better go sponge off in the men’s room before Meg gets
here.”
Across from Jeff, Ravi Chopra, the germophobe, opened a
drawer at his knee, removed a can of Lysol and began
spraying the air.
“Hey, watch my food,” Jeff said, spreading out his arms.
Wesley dropped his backpack on his desk and flipped on
the computer the foursome had jerry-rigged for him from
components they’d begged, borrowed and stolen from all
over the department.
“Where were you yesterday?” Ravi asked Wesley. “Moving
bodies?” The guy was morbidly fascinated by Wesley’s
job—constantly asking for gory details, yet appalled when
he got them.
“Yeah,” Wesley lied. “Didn’t you hear about the pileup on
I-20? Bodies everywhere, man. I spent the day scraping
intestines off the asphalt with a metal spatula.”
Jeff stared and Ravi retched over his garbage can.
“Don’t believe him. He’s a pathological liar,” Meg said,
sliding into her chair holding a to-go cup of coffee, giving
Wesley a pointed look. She wore wide-leg jeans, platform
sandals and a vintage pink Izod shirt that was snug in all
the right places. Rhinestones sparkled from the corners of
her cat glasses and her hair was pul ed back in a messy
ponytail that was somehow sexy.
Wesley scratched the back of his neck. “I was just messing
with you, Ravi. No need to lose your cookies, man.”
Meg tossed Ravi a pack of saltine crackers from her desk
drawer. He gave her an adoring look.
“Meg,” Jeff said breathlessly, “you wanna see my new
game?”
“No. And you’d better not let McCormick see it, either,”
Meg said, referring to their boss. “We al signed papers
saying anything we develop using city resources becomes
the property of the city, remember?”
Jeff looked panicked. “Even on our own time?”
“Yep.” She tossed him a flash drive. “Download everything
and I’l look at it on my Mac during lunch.”
Jeff perked up. Like Ravi, he was head-over-heels in love
with the bril iant, cool Meg.
Then she wrinkled her nose. “Meanwhile, Spooner, your
work area is smel ing a little ripe. Try to have it tidied up
by the time Wes and I get back, okay?”
Wes straightened. “Where are we going?”
“McCormick’s office.” Her smile was flat. “Apparently I’m
going to be working with you on encrypting the mainframe
databases. Fun, huh?”
Wesley had to put on his poker face to keep from reacting
with utter dismay. Meg was going to be looking over his
shoulder while he tried to pinch his dad’s files?
He was so screwed…and not in the good way.
10
Carlotta turned over the engine to the hateful Monte
Carlo, but sighed in relief when it caught. Plus ten points.
“Okay, I’m sorry for some of the bad things I said about
you,” she muttered to the car.
She gave Hannah the thumbs-up and waved goodbye as
her friend backed her refrigerated van down the driveway.
When Carlotta pul ed onto the road, she looked for the
mysterious black SUV, but didn’t see anything out of the
ordinary up and down the tree-lined street. She depressed
the gas, trying to put the matter out of her mind. At least
her car was running.
And really, in the scheme of things, a temperamental
vehicle was the least of her problems.
She was glad that she’d talked to Wesley about the
painkil ers, glad he had come clean and that the
explanation had made sense. Where that madman had cut
his initials into Wesley’s arm must have hurt like the devil,
especially after it had gotten infected. Coop had given him
antibiotics, but couldn’t prescribe narcotics for him. She
should’ve offered the rest of her pil s to Wesley anyway.
Remembering how Coop had helped tend to Wesley’s arm
brought back other memories of their weekend in Florida,
and how close she and Coop had come to consummating
their…friendship.
The thought of the bottle of vodka under his van seat kept
coming back to her. She wasn’t conceited enough to think
that their bungled attempt at a romantic weekend had
driven him back to the bottle, but if he was in trouble,
she’d never forgive herself for not checking up on him.
Carlotta dialed his cel number, trying to think of a breezy
message to leave in case he didn’t answer. He did answer,