Read Body Movers 4 - 4 Bodies and a Funeral Online
Authors: Stephanie Bond
She glanced at the door to her parents’ bedroom at the
end of the hall, then carried her folded clothes to her own
room to put away. While stowing bras and panties, she
removed the stack of Jack’s handkerchiefs she’d
accumulated and set them on top of her dresser. When
she started to close the drawer, her gaze landed on a
white leather box she hadn’t opened in a long time.
Remembering her promise to Jack from the night before,
she removed the box and carried it to her bed. She sat
cross-legged on the bedspread and lifted the lid.
A hundred memories suddenly assailed her. There was the
Cinderel a watch that she’d begged for at Walt Disney
World when she was ten years old. And strands of colored
glass beads that her mother had bought for her at a
roadside stand when they’d vacationed in Jamaica. The
purple wampum shel was from Martha’s Vineyard, and
her diaries for each year of high school stil sat in the
corner, each with a padlocked flap. One of them stil
contained the tiny tasseled skeleton key that would open
any of the locks. She set them aside to read later.
She picked up a pink satin box and opened the lid to reveal
a gold charm bracelet that her father had bought for her
when she was fourteen. Dangling from the links were
charms of teen girl things: purses and shoes, puppies and
kittens, flowers and pink lips. Her father had given her
additional charms for special occasions—cheerleading
pom-poms, a Sweet 16 charm, a little convertible for the
precious Miata he’d bought for her first car.
When her parents had left, she’d stopped wearing the
bracelet. For someone who’d had to grow up fast, it had
suddenly seemed childish. And she’d been so bitter
toward her father, she hadn’t wanted to wear anything
that once represented such a bond between them.
She snapped the box closed, reminding herself that
Randolph had broken that bond. He’d left her to cover for
him every time his name came up in police matters, like
now. The stink that he’d caused lingered stil , cloaking her
and Wesley. Frustration and anger plowed through her—
why didn’t her father just come home and face his
problems like a man? She didn’t think Randolph was
capable of murder, but if the accusation brought him out
of hiding, she wouldn’t mind. Maybe she and Wesley could
finally get some answers.
Her thoughts turned to Jack and she wondered if he’d
made it to bed yet. He and Maria were no doubt putting in
long hours over this serial kil er business. Carlotta
supposed all that togetherness would naturally make them
closer. She tried not to let it bother her. Jack had made it
clear that he wasn’t interested in more than an occasional
hook-up, and now she had Peter. In light of the phone call
Maria had taken the day she’d been at the town house, it
sounded as if the woman could use a strong shoulder to
lean on. It appeared that she’d left a bad situation in
Chicago.
Carlotta frowned when she recal ed the woman detective
“profiling” her—accusing Carlotta of dabbling in police
work because she was bored. Had it not occurred to the
woman that Carlotta helped out when she saw an
opportunity because she was good at it?
In a huff, Carlotta shoved the handkerchiefs and the
bracelet into a side compartment of her purse. In the
process, her hand brushed the file of photos that Rainie
Stephens had given her. She pul ed out the sheet of black-
and-white pictures, along with the photos that June had
given her and carried them to the kitchen to spread out on
the breakfast bar. Over a cup of coffee she looked for
inspiration on how to begin searching for the man who’d
stolen Eva McCoy’s bracelet.
And as she stared at the images, a forehead-thumping idea
occurred to her. She picked up the phone and dialed
Hannah’s number.
“I was fucking asleep,” Hannah answered.
“Wake up and focus. Can you tel where a local cake came
from just by looking at a picture?”
“I could probably narrow it down to a manageable number
of places. Why?”
“I need your help.”
Hannah sighed. “Okay, give me a few minutes to get the
cobwebs out of my eyes.”
Remembering what Maria had said about her not knowing
much about Hannah, Carlotta said, “I can come pick you
up—just give me the address.”
“Uh…no, that’s okay. I’m with a guy. See you in a few.”
“I’l have coffee.”
“I’l bring donuts.”
Carlotta ended the call and smiled. Hannah was always up
for a challenge, a no-nonsense, low-maintenance friend.
She poured coffee into two travel mugs and gathered up
the pictures, then stood by the living room window
waiting for Hannah to pul up. The mysterious black SUV
was nowhere to be seen this morning, thank goodness.
Carlotta wondered who else she could wake up to kil
some time. As she ticked through a mental to-do list, her
thoughts turned to someone she definitely wanted to
disturb.
She pul ed up the number on her phone and punched a
button to connect.
“Liz Fischer,” the woman said, her voice a croak.
“Liz—Carlotta Wren. I didn’t wake you, did I?”
“Uh, no. I think I’m coming down with some kind of bug.
What’s up, Carlotta?”
Besides your skirt? Swallowing her ire, she said, “I’ve been
thinking about my father a lot lately, and I was wondering
if you could send me a copy of his case file.”
Silence vibrated on the other end. “Can I ask why the
sudden interest?”
“No reason,” Carlotta lied. “It’s really just to satisfy my
curiosity.”
“Carlotta, my client files are confidential. You and Wesley
should both know that.”
Carlotta frowned. “Wesley asked for the files?”
“Actually, no. He stole them and I had to threaten him to
get them back. I understand that the two of you have a lot
of questions about your dad’s case, but I’m tel ing you this
for your own good, Carlotta—let it go.”
“You make it sound as if there’s something you don’t want
us to find out, Liz.”
“That’s not true. It’s just better for everyone involved.”
The woman made a retching sound. “I have to go. Bye,
Carlotta.”
“Feel better,” she sang, then disconnected the cal , her
mind racing. Why had Wesley stolen their father’s file?
Probably for the same reason she wanted it. But why
hadn’t he told her about it?
Probably for the same reason she hadn’t told him about
her snooping.
A horn sounded as Hannah pul ed her van into the
driveway. Carlotta waved, then walked outside, locking
the door to the town house behind her. She bounded
down the steps and across to the van, then climbed up
into the passenger seat, handing Hannah a mug of coffee.
“Cream fil ed,” Hannah said, pointing to a box of donuts on
the dashboard. She was dressed Goth Lite this morning,
having skimped on the black lipstick and going without her
usual dog col ar. “Let me see this cake.”
Carlotta passed her the pictures, then helped herself to a
donut. “The guy who crashed the event at Neiman’s with
this cake stole Eva McCoy’s charm bracelet. I’m thinking if
we can find out where the cake came from, maybe we can
find him.”
Hannah took a swig of coffee and studied the photos for a
few seconds. “The bad news is this is your chain grocery
variety cake.”
“Oh.”
“The good news is I know which grocery chain uses this
god-awful color of blue icing.”
“Great!”
“The bad news is I drove past at least four locations on the
way here. It could be one of forty or so locations in the
metro area.”
“So we’l start with the ones closest to the Lenox Square
mall and work our way out.”
Hannah made a face. “You’re assuming I had nothing else
to do today.”
“Do you?”
“Sadly, nothing more interesting. We’re going to need a
map of store locations.” Hannah leaned over, pul ed a
laptop from behind her seat and handed it to Carlotta. “I
know where we can get drive-by wi-fi not too far from
here.”
A few minutes later, armed with locations of the groceries,
they began to canvass each one, approaching the bakery
manager with a picture of the blue and yel ow “Let’s
Celebrate!” cake and asking if it came from their bakery.
The employees were helpful, no doubt responding to the
culinary smock that Hannah had donned, but none of the
first dozen or so recognized the cake from their stock
designs. Road traffic was terrible and before they knew it,
they’d eaten up the morning with nothing to show for it
but an empty box of cream-fil ed donuts. They stopped for
lunch at a Chick-fil-A and Carlotta fil ed Hannah in on what
she’d learned about the Eva McCoy situation.
“Do you know anything about food poisoning?” she asked
her friend.
Hannah gave a dry laugh and stuffed a waffle fry into her
mouth. “Food safety is dril ed into us at culinary school.
Small amounts of bacteria are introduced to most foods
either in the production process or in handling, but it
usually gets washed away or destroyed during heat
preparation. Either that, or it’s present in such tiny
amounts that it doesn’t affect the digestive system.”
“But?”
“But if the bacteria isn’t washed or cooked away, it can
multiply in warm temperatures, to the point that the
digestive system can’t fight it off.”
“So if foods are left out?”
“Right—or aren’t cooked to the right temperature in the
first place.”
“So uncooked foods are the most susceptible?”
“Right. That’s why you occasionally hear about E. coli
contamination in produce. E. coli is found in animal
intestines, so if produce is fertilized with manure…well,
you get the gist.”
“Apparently Eva ate at the Olympic Vil age cafeteria, along
with other athletes, but no one else got il .”
“That happens. Some people are simply more susceptible.
And even prepared ‘healthy’ foods have a higher incidence
of contamination because they contain fewer
preservatives, which can inhibit bacteria growth.”
“But is it possible to spike someone else’s food with
bacteria and make them sick?”
Hannah shrugged. “I guess so, but you’d need a petri dish,
and stil , it wouldn’t be an exact science. The better choice
would be to use some kind of poison that mimics food
poisoning.”
“Such as?”
“Lots of things. But if she was at the Olympics, her blood
was being tested for chemicals, right?”
“I think so, yes.”
“So, chances are, it would be something organic—like, I
don’t know—apple seeds.”
“Apple seeds are poisonous?”
“Not one or two, but in enough quantity. So are peach and
apricot and cherry pits. And lots of plants.”
“If you were going to poison someone with a food or plant,
what would you use?”
An employee of the fast-food place who was cleaning the
table next to them stopped and stared.
Hannah arched her eyebrows at the guy. “Do you mind?
This is a private murder conversation.”
He scurried off and Hannah considered the question. “To
kil the person, or just make them sick?”
“Just to make them sick—too sick to compete.”
“Ah, then I’d definitely go with an azalea. Every part of the
plant is poisonous to some degree, but it’s not fatal.”
“But wouldn’t carrying around an azalea plant draw
attention?”
“Yep. And it would have to be local because you can’t get
anything fresh like that past Customs.” Hannah chewed on
the straw in her fountain drink. “But really, would
someone have gone to that much trouble? Maybe the
woman just had a flu bug. It’s real y hard to tel the
difference.”
“I know,” Carlotta said. “Besides, how would you ever be
able to prove someone sabotaged her food?”
“You wouldn’t…unless you had a witness.”
Carlotta checked her watch. “We’re close to the Midtown
police precinct. Would you mind if I dropped something
off with Jack before we hit the rest of the bakeries?”
“Knock yourself out.”
At the precinct, Hannah parked the van and waited for
Carlotta. Once in the lobby, Carlotta made small talk with
her buddy Brooklyn.
“I met your brother yesterday,” Brooklyn said. “Cute little
thing.”
Carlotta frowned. “My brother, Wesley, was here
yesterday?”
“Yeah. He met with Detective Terry.”
“Oh…right,” Carlotta said, pretending she’d only forgotten.
“Is Detective Terry around? He asked me to drop off
something.”
“Yeah, go on back.”
Carlotta walked through the door the woman buzzed open
for her and fol owed a familiar trail to Jack’s office. Inside
he was sitting shoulder to shoulder with Maria Marquez,
poring over reports that were spread out in front of them,
their voices low and comfortable, the desk littered with
coffee cups. Carlotta squashed the tiny bubble of jealousy