Read Body Movers 4 - 4 Bodies and a Funeral Online
Authors: Stephanie Bond
He squirmed. “You know about me and Liz?”
“I figured it out. Can I see the file?”
“Why do you want it? Has Dad contacted you again?”
“No. But Peter and I have decided to start looking into
things in the interim. I’m going to review the external
paperwork, and Peter’s going to poke around inside
Mashburn & Tul y.”
“Won’t that get Peter in trouble at the firm?”
“If they find out, yes. I was hoping I could count on you to
help me.”
He nodded eagerly, pushing at his glasses. “Let me get the
file.” He disappeared into his room and came back carrying
a folder. “This is what I have so far.”
“There’s more?”
He nodded. “I’m getting all the police reports and
courthouse records for the case.”
“I thought those were available only to Dad or his
attorney.”
He lifted his coffee cup for a deep drink.
“Wesley, what are you up to?”
“Remember when I broke into the courthouse database?”
“To fix your traffic tickets, yeah.”
“I didn’t hack into the computer to fix my traffic tickets.”
He took another gulp of coffee.
She gaped. “You broke in to get Dad’s records?”
“More specifically, I broke in to leave a backdoor so I could
get back in later.”
“Later?” She covered her mouth with her hand. “Your
community service—”
“Is pretty convenient.”
She crossed her arms and tried to look harsh. “Almost as if
you planned it.”
He pursed his mouth and nodded. “Almost.”
Carlotta shook her head in wonder. “Why didn’t you tel
me?”
“I thought it was better if you didn’t know. Besides, at the
time, I didn’t think you’d be so keen on trying to help
Dad.”
She held up her finger. “I didn’t say I was going to help
Randolph. I’m going to follow the truth and see where it
leads me.”
“Sounds good,” Wesley said happily. He was so certain
that their father would be exonerated, he couldn’t imagine
another outcome.
For his sake, she hoped that was the case.
From his pocket a cel phone rang, and Wesley seemed
slow to answer it.
“Is that a new phone?”
“For my courier job,” he said, then flipped up the cover.
“This is Wes…hey…Yeah…Yeah…okay.” He closed the
phone. “Gotta go.”
She frowned. “You’re making a delivery on Sunday
morning?”
“Uh…some of our clients are in church.”
“You mean some of your clients are churches?”
“Right. If it’s late and I’m on the other side of town when
I’m finished, I might crash at Chance’s for the rest of the
weekend.”
She bit her tongue to keep from saying anything bad about
Chance. “Wesley?”
He turned back.
“Where are you going to put the money?”
“In my sock drawer for now.”
“I’m just throwing this out there—how about the bank?”
He looked appalled. “Records? Taxes? No, thanks.”
“It was only a suggestion,” she cal ed. “Wesley?”
He turned back.
“I’m proud of you. Your methods may be questionable, but
your heart is in the right place.”
He smiled and flushed scarlet, then left the kitchen. A few
minutes later, he shouted goodbye before he banged
through the front door.
She smiled into her coffee, then went to the breakfast bar
to study the pictures from the Eva McCoy event with fresh
eyes. Now that she knew James Canary had cut off the
bracelet and dropped it, perhaps she would see who’d
taken it. Unfortunately, none of the pictures revealed
anything new.
Knowing that Eva herself might have funded the bracelet
robbery made her think about the food poisoning incident
at the Olympics. Had the woman spiked her own food, or
was her life truly in danger? Maybe she’d even faked the
il ness? Carlotta’s conversation with Hannah floated back
to her.
How would you ever be able to prove someone sabotaged
her food?
You wouldn’t…unless you had a witness.
A witness…footage of the venue…of the event itself?
She picked up the phone and dialed Coop’s number. After
several rings, he answered, his voice gluey. “Hello?”
“Coop…it’s Carlotta. Is this too early?”
“Not at all,” he said, over a yawn. “Is this going to become
a habit of yours?”
She laughed. “No, I’m sorry. You mentioned once that you
recorded the women’s Olympic marathon event. Do you
stil have it?”
“Yeah, somewhere.”
“Can I borrow it?”
“To watch on your TV?”
“Good point. Can I watch it on yours?”
“Sure. When do you want to come over?”
“Now?”
“Okay.” Coop’s laugh rumbled over the phone, then he
gave her directions. “See you in a few.”
26
Carlotta had never seen Coop’s place before, but when she
pul ed up to the two-story concrete building with a red
door, she immediately liked it. He lived in the eclectic
neighborhood of Castleberry Hil , known for its art
galleries, novel restaurants and offbeat hair salons. Instead
of condos, many early residents had bought entire
commercial buildings and converted them into residences.
Coop’s home looked like it had once been some kind of
business with a sidewalk storefront and garage, maybe an
auto parts or repair shop, with a storeroom on top. The
exterior had been stripped of all ornament, leaving it sleek
and minimal, masculine and appealing.
The tall midcentury garage door was raised and Coop
emerged to guide her inside. He looked lanky and
handsome in old jeans, a white button-down shirt and
tennis shoes. The first floor, she realized as she was
steered inside, was actually an open-plan story and a half
that housed his white Corvette convertible, his white van,
a piano, home theater and kitchen on a shiny sealed
concrete floor. A row of tall orange cabinets lined the wall
opposite the cars, flanked by a drafting table. A set of
stairs led to another floor, and an old-fashioned freight
elevator sat in the corner.
She climbed out of her car and turned to greet him after
he lowered the door. “Coop, this is amazing.”
He grinned. “I like it. I’m glad you do, too. Coffee?”
“Do you have decaf? I’ve already hit my limit of caffeine
for the day.”
“Up bright and early, huh?”
“Hardly. I didn’t sleep wel .”
He made a rueful noise. “No wonder, after last night’s
incident.”
“Coop, have you ever seen anything like this serial kil er
before?”
“No.”
“What’s happening? Why would someone do this?”
He pul ed his hand down his face. “I don’t know. Jack said
his partner would have a ful profile soon. Fortunately and
unfortunately, the more murders, the more information
they have to go on.”
“And they’re sure the first two deaths were murders?”
“No, not yet.”
“If they’d listened to you on Shawna Whitt, she could’ve
been autopsied properly.”
“Water under the bridge. They have their hands ful now.”
“I hear you’re helping on the cases?”
He shrugged as he loaded the coffeemaker and started the
drip. “I help when I can, where I can.”
“How’s Abrams?” she asked, glancing around the kitchen.
The photograph of her that he’d lifted from the envelope
of extras at Moody’s was attached to the side of the
stainless steel refrigerator with a magnet.
“Abrams is the same. We try to stay out of each other’s
way.”
“So who hired you back?”
“I’m not really an employee…more like an advisor.”
“It must have been someone over Abrams’s head?”
“The state M.E. suggested it, and Abrams went along.”
So someone at the top was looking out for Coop.
“If you don’t mind me asking,” he said, “why are you so
interested in the footage of the Olympic marathon?”
“I’m hoping it’ll tel me something—about Eva McCoy,
about her competitors, about the venue. She thinks
someone sabotaged her.”
“Do you believe her?”
“I don’t know. She could be paranoid…or maybe she likes
the limelight more than I think she does.”
He set a mug under the drip spout until it was ful , then
handed it to her. “Well, let’s see, shal we?”
The boxy sofa was surprisingly comfortable. Coop loaded
the DVD he’d burned and sat down in front of the screen
beside her to watch. “Let me know if you want to skim,
skip, rewind, whatever.”
“Okay. Tel me anything you think seems pertinent.”
“This is a shot of the Olympic Vil age.”
Carlotta nodded at the elaborate sign and landscaping that
marked the entrance. “This is familiar.”
“Yeah, they showed it a lot during the Games. And there
are the announcers talking about the possibility that Eva
McCoy won’t run in the marathon.”
He allowed it to play and she studied the pictures of the
two female athletes who, according to the statistics, had
the most to gain from Eva dropping out: a runner from
Great Britain named Bianca Thaler and a Venezuelan, Ruda
Napor. The announcers indicated there was no love lost
between the three women, either. Thaler and Napor were
very competitive and had been accused of unethical
behavior in the past, such as tossing spent water bottles in
the path of other runners, and bumping against
competitors when it got down to the sprint at the end.
“So chances are,” Carlotta said, “if they didn’t get along,
those two women wouldn’t have had access to Eva’s
food.”
“I don’t see how,” Coop agreed. “Okay, here are the racers
at the start, and there comes Eva in the back.”
“Pause it, and go back a few frames. Can we watch Thaler
and Napor take their places at the line?”
He found the spot and forwarded the frames slowly.
“There’s Thaler…and there’s Napor.”
Carlotta frowned at the screen. “Thaler keeps scanning the
crowd as if she’s trying to find someone. Let’s see if the
camera catches who she’s looking for.”
Coop slowly advanced the screen. “There—her hand
doesn’t go up, but her head does.”
“And there,” Carlotta said, pointing. “Someone nods in
response. Can we get a closer view?”
Coop took it out of view mode and into edit, where he cut
and pasted, zooming in on the person in question—or
rather, the man in question.
Carlotta gasped. “It’s Ben Newsome, Eva’s boyfriend.”
“Maybe he and Thaler just know each other from having
competed at all the meets,” Coop suggested.
But as the race got underway and Eva’s miracle run
unfolded, her face pale and her skin waxy, it seemed that
when the camera panned the crowd, Ben Newsome was
always looking someplace else. Not once did he give Eva a
thumbs-up or a big smile.
“What’s that in his shirt pocket?” Carlotta asked. “It’s
some kind of flower—a buttercup?”
“Maybe a daffodil,” Coop said. “If I remember correctly,
they were all over the Olympic Vil age. Remember the
flowers in the opening shot?”
Her conversation with Hannah about organic plants came
back to her. “Are daffodils, by chance, poisonous?”
Coop pursed his mouth. “Yes, the bulbs are. They contain
narcitine and narcicysteine.”
“What are the symptoms of daffodil poisoning?”
“Nausea and cramping.”
“Like food poisoning?”
Coop nodded. “And it can be fatal.”
“Maybe that’s how Ben did it,” she said excitedly.
Coop looked dubious. “It fits, but narcitine poisoning
seems a little extreme.”
“Not if Ben Newsome is in love with Bianca Thaler and was
trying to knock Eva out of the running so Bianca had a
better chance of winning.”
“Stil , unless someone saw him spike Eva’s food, it would
be impossible to prove.”
Carlotta pressed her lips together in thought. “Wait a
minute. Don’t the athletes have their blood drawn
regularly for doping testing?”
“Yes.”
“Would the poisons you mentioned show up during
toxicology screening?”
“Sure…if you were looking for it. But it’s not likely the
testers would be watching for that.”
“It would stil be in her blood sample that’s been stored,
though. Right?”
He smiled. “Yes, it would.”
“Wel , at least that gives Eva recourse. Can you make me a
copy of this DVD, Coop?”
“Sure, give me a few minutes.”
While he was setting up the machine to tape, she
wandered over to the drafting table sitting next to the row
of orange cabinets. On the table was a ruler, mechanical
pencils and a finely detailed drawing on thin paper. “Is this
your work area?”
“My hobby area,” he said, walking over to join her. He
opened various cabinets to reveal stacks of cigar boxes,
and trays of tiny supplies. “It’s where I build the
dioramas.”
“Do you have any finished ones?”
“Just a work in progress,” he said, then careful y pul ed out
a cigar box and opened the lid.
She looked inside and smiled. “It’s a library—how
wonderful.”
“It’s far from finished,” he said, then removed one tiny
book with a spine that read POE. He opened it and she was
astonished to see that it had writing on the pages.