Read Body Movers 4 - 4 Bodies and a Funeral Online
Authors: Stephanie Bond
see a man at their breakfast table—Carlotta had never
allowed men she dated to spend the night while he was
growing up.
Carlotta looked up and smiled. “I didn’t expect to see you
this morning.”
That much was obvious. “I came back to get a clean shirt,”
he said, gesturing vaguely toward his room.
Coop bent down a corner of his paper. “Hi, Wes.”
“Uh, hi. How’s it going?”
“Good,” Coop said, biting into a piece of toast. “You?”
“Same.” He cleared his throat. “Did Carlotta tel you that
the D.A. reduced the charges to a misdemeanor?”
“Yeah, she mentioned it.”
“So, do you think I could come back and work for you
sometime? I swear, no messing around.”
Coop rubbed his chin. “I’l give it some thought.”
“Want some eggs?” Carlotta asked, pointing to a skil et on
the stove.
“Uh, no, thanks.” Wesley scratched his neck. Apparently
he was the only person in the room feeling awkward. His
sister was dressed in work clothes and Coop was ful y
dressed, too, although his hair looked damp and fresh
from a shower. It was clear that interpersonal activities
had taken place.
At the sound of footsteps behind him, Wesley turned to
see Jack Terry emerge, his gun by his side, his dress shirt
hanging open, his hair also wet from a shower.
“I heard the motion detector go off,” Jack said.
“It’s just Wesley,” Carlotta supplied unnecessarily. “Do you
want eggs, Jack?”
“Sure,” he said, setting his gun on the counter. “Hey,
Wes.”
Wesley gaped, looking back and forth between the
threesome. “Would someone please tel me what’s going
on here?” Then he held up his hands. “Wait—I don’t want
to know. I’l be out of your way in two minutes.” He turned
and strode toward his bedroom.
He heard Jack start to fol ow him, saying, “I got this,” but
he kept walking.
“Dude, I’m serious,” he said over his shoulder. “Spare me
the sordid details.”
When he opened his bedroom door, he noticed his bed
was neatly made, with a pile of sheets at the foot.
Jack walked in behind him and closed the door. “Don’t cal
me dude, dude. And it’s not what you think. Coop slept in
here last night and I slept on the couch.”
“Is that some kind of hinky way for both of you to keep the
other one from sleeping with my sister?”
Jack jammed his hands on his hips. “No. Michael Lane
escaped from the psych ward, so I came over to keep an
eye on Carlotta. Coop came by after midnight—I think he
was having some kind of crisis. Carlotta asked him to stay.”
“Ruined your plans, huh?”
Jack straightened, but by the way he averted his gaze,
Wesley knew he was right.
“Look,” Jack said, “like it or not, your sister has a life.”
“No, my sister needs a life,” Wesley retorted, stepping
closer. The man towered over him and outweighed him by
eighty pounds, but he was past worrying about it. “You
don’t care about anything except getting into her pants.”
“That’s not true.”
“Dude, I know you’re banging Liz Fischer, and probably a
few other broads, too. Carlotta’s just another booty call to
you.”
A muscle worked in the detective’s jaw. “I understand you
and Liz have been getting busy.”
Wesley lifted his chin. “That’s right. And Liz is probably
getting it from a half-dozen other guys besides us, man—
that’s what she’s about. But my sister wants the fairy tale,
and after all she’s been through, she deserves it.”
Jack closed his eyes briefly. “I know.”
“Then step back, man. She digs your big, bad cop routine,
but you can’t give her what she wants. At least Coop and
Peter both care about her. If you take your dick out of the
equation, maybe she can settle down with someone she
has a chance of being happy with.” He walked over to his
closet and pul ed out a clean shirt.
Silence boomed in the room. Finally Jack said, “Since when
did you get so smart?”
“Haven’t you heard?” Wesley stripped off the old shirt and
shrugged into the clean one. “I’m a genius, dude.”
Jack’s mouth flattened. “Wel , get your genius ass to the
station sometime this week. I need to talk to you and your
attorney about this business with Hol is Carver.”
While Wesley buttoned his shirt, he squinted, trying to
recall his schedule. Lately his short-term memory was like
Swiss cheese. “I have my community service this morning,
then I have to meet with my P.O. How about tomorrow
afternoon?”
“Won’t work for me. Let’s shoot for Friday afternoon. I’l
give Liz a call and see if she can make it.”
Wesley glanced at his watch. “I gotta get going or I’l be
late.”
“Your community service—how’s that going?”
“It sucks a big hairy one,” Wesley said. But even as he said
it, he admitted he was looking forward to seeing what Meg
would wear today.
“Earth to Wes.”
He blinked and pushed up his glasses, then lifted his gaze
from the vee of Meg’s T-shirt where it gaped open just
enough to reveal a pink-and-green plaid bra.
She leaned across the table where reams of paper were
strewn between them. “Are you stoned?”
He scoffed. “What? Of course not.”
“Your pupils look smal .”
“It’s the glasses, man.”
“I’m not a man.”
“I noticed.” When she raised her eyebrows, a flush
crawled up his neck.
Meg was obviously unconvinced by his denial. “You’re
moving in slow-motion—what gives?”
“Just tired, I guess.”
“You’re too young to be tired. What are you going to be
like when you’re forty?”
“Probably dead,” he said matter-of-factly. Especial y
considering the company he’d been keeping.
“That’s not close to being funny,” Meg said with a frown.
She stood and started gathering her notes, her body
language angry.
“What’s your problem?” Wesley asked.
“You. You have everything going for you, yet you’re pissing
your life away.”
“What does that mean?”
“You’re a smart guy. Figure it out.”
He lifted his hands, at a loss. “I thought we were supposed
to work together on this project.”
“Isn’t it time for you to leave?” Meg asked, pecking on her
watch.
He glanced at his watch. “Oh. Right.”
“You’re welcome to join me and the guys for lunch,” she
offered halfheartedly.
“Uh, no, thanks. I need to be somewhere.” He had to meet
his probation officer.
“Do you need to be anywhere tomorrow night?”
He frowned. “Why?”
“We’re going to Screen on the Green in Piedmont Park if
you want to drop by…or not, it’s up to you.”
He scratched his temple. “What’s playing?”
“Breakfast at Tiffany’s.”
His back stiffened. “That’s a chick flick.”
“It’s a classic, idget. Forget it, you wouldn’t appreciate it
anyway.” She dismissed him with an exasperated sigh. “I’l
keep working on the encryption this afternoon and we’l
pick up tomorrow morning. Try to show up sober and be
ready to do something besides stare at my chest for four
hours, how about it? And read this.” She tossed a
hardcover manual at him. He tried to catch it, but his
reflexes were slow. It bounced off his chest and fel on the
floor with a thud. She shook her head, then turned and
walked away.
Wesley watched, wondering if her panties matched the
preppy, plaid bra. Then he leaned over and picked up the
manual he’d already read twice. He pushed up his glasses,
wondering how Meg could tel that he was on something
and if she’d rat him out.
As he left the ASS offices and walked to MARTA to make
the trek to his probation officer’s building, he mul ed over
Meg’s comment.
Why did women assume that if you weren’t going to
school to pursue some kind of corporate ball-and-chain
gig, you were pissing your life away?
Although maybe he’d think about taking some col ege
classes in the fall. A popular professional poker player had
once commented that a col ege course in logic had given
him the edge he’d needed to win some of the biggest pots
in the history of the game.
He was feeling a little shaky by the time he reached the
building that housed his P.O.’s office, but he decided it
might not be such a good idea to pop an Oxy just before
his appointment. He had the vial of neutralizer to add to
the cup if E. Jones asked for a urine sample, but he didn’t
want to push his luck.
He walked into the waiting room and scanned the diverse
col ection of people slumped in chairs before walking up to
the check-in window.
“Wesley Wren to see E. Jones.”
“Sign in and take a seat,” a woman said without looking
up.
He did, easing into an empty chair and trying to relax. His
neck was wet with sweat and his heart was beating a little
too fast. Behind his glasses, his left eye was twitching. He
passed the time by looking around the room and trying to
decipher people’s “tel s,” the mannerisms that everyone
exhibited that divulged something about them to anyone
interested or observant enough to study them for a while.
The prostitutes and the thugs in the room were easy to
pick out from their costumes, questionable piercings and
bad tattoos. The more interesting prospects were the
people who looked as if they didn’t belong on this end of
the legal system. Take the suburban-looking woman
wearing enormous sunglasses, for instance. Judging from
the way she kept wetting her lips and swallowing
convulsively, she’d probably gotten one too many DUIs.
And the guy with grease under his nails who kept cracking
his knuckles was probably a car thief. The professional-
looking guy in the suit who paced near the door using his
BlackBerry with an angry scowl was probably in trouble for
poisoning a neighbor’s barking dog. He continued around
the room, making up stories that matched the tics and
body language he read. People-watching kept him sharp
between card games.
“Wren, you’re up!” the check-in lady shouted a few
minutes later.
He pushed to his feet and walked to the door that led to a
hallway of offices, then headed toward the one labeled E.
Jones. When he neared it, the door opened and his P.O.’s
boyfriend, Leonard, walked out, closing the door behind
him.
Wesley blinked. The big beefy guy who ran drugs for
Chance had swapped his black jeans, black T-shirt and
biker boots for a suit, dress shirt and…loafers?
When Leonard looked up, he did a double take, his face
quickly turning from friendly to furious.
“Going to a funeral?” Wesley asked.
The big man glanced over his shoulder to the closed door,
then shoved his face into Wesley’s. “Yeah, yours if you say
anything to Eldora about my little side business.”
“Mum’s the word, dude.” He sniffed. “Nice cologne. Is it
Celine Dion’s?”
Leonard hooked his foot behind Wesley’s leg and in one
motion, Wesley landed on his back with an unff.
The door opened and E. stepped out. She wore dark slacks
and a silky blouse, and her long red hair was twisted into a
knot at the nape of her neck. Her lovely face was creased
in concern. “Leonard? Wesley?”
“A little col ision,” Leonard said with a smile, then reached
down to pull Wesley to his feet as easily as if he were a
little girl. “You okay, man?”
He gave Wesley’s shoulder a squeeze near his neck with
enough precise pressure to immobilize his left side.
“Yeah,” Wesley managed to say.
“You sure?” Leonard said, increasing the pressure until
Wesley’s eyes watered.
“Yeah, I’m sure.”
Leonard released him. “Good. See you around.” He turned
to E. “I’l see you tonight, babe.”
She nodded, casting her beautiful smile on the
undeserving oaf. When he’d gone, she turned to Wesley.
“Ready?”
“Sure,” he said, then fol owed her into her office.
“Sorry about that,” E. said as she walked behind her desk
to sit. She gestured to a chair, so he could do the same.
“Wasn’t your fault,” he said, riding a line of frustration that
she was oblivious that her boyfriend was such a shady
character. “What does your boyfriend do for a living?”
She flipped through file folders on her desk. “Leonard is a
pharmaceutical sales rep,” she said absently.
Wesley almost smiled. The best lies were mostly true.
“What kind of drugs?”
“Cancer drugs,” she said with a proud smile.
“Really? Wow.” He gave the man points for originality.
Somehow he doubted the pharmaceuticals in the duffel
bags Chance handed off to Leonard had anything to do
with chemo.
“So, how are you?” E. asked, clasping her hands.
“Good,” he said, nodding. A trickle of sweat slid over his
temple and down his cheek. He caught it with a brush of
his hand and hoped she didn’t notice. His left eye was
twitching again and his skin felt as if ants were crawling al
over him. He was craving another hit of Oxy.
“I see another thousand hours was added to your