Read Body Movers 4 - 4 Bodies and a Funeral Online
Authors: Stephanie Bond
floorboard by his own feet.
“Dude…is that a head?” Wesley jerked back.
“Yeah,” Mouse said. “Special project today, I need you to
pul out the teeth.”
Wesley gaped. “What? I don’t think so.”
Mouse gave a little laugh. “You know, one of the reasons
The Carver agreed to let you have this job is because of
your expertise with dead people.”
“I move bodies to the morgue, I don’t disassemble them.”
“I got you covered—chisel and hammer, pliers and gloves.
Oh, and a safety mask ’cause it’l be kind of messy and a
flying tooth could put your eye out.”
Wes retched, then covered his mouth and pul ed his feet
back from the bag. “I don’t think I have the stomach for
it.”
Mouse sighed. “Okay, Little Man, here’s the deal—the low
man on the totem pole gets the shit work. That would be
you. Unfortunately, young people don’t have the work
ethic my generation had, so sometimes we have to store
up a little col ateral to get jobs done.”
Wesley squinted through the haze of the Oxy, trying to
fol ow what the man was saying. “Col ateral? What do you
have on me?”
“Your nice dress jacket soaked in that guy’s blood right
there.”
Wesley blanched.
“Classy jacket, by the way. The monogram on the inside
pocket is a nice touch.”
“That’s my sister’s doing,” he mumbled.
“Your sister has good taste. Anyway, just so you know, we
wouldn’t be turning the jacket over to the police—we’d be
turning it over to this guy’s friends, capiche?”
Wesley nodded miserably.
“So, I’m gonna give you a few minutes to think things
over.”
Wesley tried to swallow past the bile that had backed up
in his throat. Jack had told him to call if he needed the
cavalry, but Wesley hadn’t yet turned in the phone to get
the GPS chip installed.
And when it came right down to it, it wasn’t life or death—
it was just teeth. If he were a dentist, if wouldn’t even be
il egal.
“Okay,” he managed to say. “I’l do it.”
Mouse smiled. “Good decision.”
29
Carlotta looked around at the crowd of somber faces at
the memorial service for Cheryl Meriwether, and knew her
own expression was equally tense. The Charmed Kil er was
slaying victims at a frightening pace, and his indiscriminate
choice of target, M.O. and venue was frightening in its
scope alone. Only his signature remained the same—
always the charm, always in the mouth.
She stood in the back of the Cathedral of Christ the King
with hundreds of other mourners, many of whom, like her,
hadn’t known Cheryl Meriwether personally, but had been
so moved by the senselessness of her death that they’d
felt compel ed to attend.
There were lots of cops in attendance, some in uniform,
most not. Jack was in her line of sight, standing on the left
side of the church, surreptitiously scanning every single
face in his vision. Maria was on the opposite side of the
church, wearing a modest scarf over her hair, performing
the same methodical exercise. Carlotta knew it wasn’t
unusual for kil ers to attend the services of their victims. It
completed their compulsive circle.
In deference to his height, Coop stood in the back. She
glanced in his direction a few times, but she didn’t think he
knew she was there. Behind his glasses, his eyes were
sunken and dark-rimmed, lined with sadness. He appeared
to be listening to the priest, but didn’t participate when it
was time for the audience to respond with affirmations.
Coop struck her as a very spiritual man. Perhaps he wasn’t
Catholic. Or maybe he was experiencing a crisis of faith?
Peter hadn’t attended, not that she’d expected him to.
And he’d seemed surprised she was going. Carlotta bit
down on the inside of her cheek when she realized she
was playing right into Maria’s profile of her, attending a
memorial service simply because it was a case in which she
felt invested.
She kept glancing toward the door looking for Wesley—
he’d said he would attend if he didn’t have a delivery to
make. Apparently he’d met the Meriwether woman a few
times during this last round with the D.A.’s office. Wesley
had said the woman hadn’t been anything special, but
he’d used a tone of respect that said she hadn’t been
phony, either. Wesley appreciated people who didn’t try
too hard.
Carlotta tried not to let her mind wander too much during
the service, tried not to think about secular
things…material things. But never too far from her
thoughts these days was what they were going to do with
Wesley’s recent windfal .
She’d love some new living room furniture, but she knew a
TV would be high on Wesley’s list ever since his beloved
big-screen plasma TV had taken a bul et to the electronic
brain during a drive-by shooting into their house. And she
wanted him to be able to enjoy whatever they bought.
He’d been so great lately about pitching in to take care of
the household chores. She needed to remember to make
more of an effort to thank him when she noticed that little
things had been done.
“Amen,” said the minister. “God be with you.”
“And also with you,” the mourners responded.
She filed out of the cathedral with the others into a
muggy, overcast day, looking for familiar faces. She ran
into Coop first and noticed little changes about him—his
appearance seemed less polished than usual, but he had a
ready smile for her.
“How’s the library diorama coming along?” she asked.
“Slowly.”
“You haven’t called me or Wes lately for a pickup.” She
grinned. “Fess up—are you secretly working with
Hannah?”
He laughed. “I’m working with a new guy—he’s Abrams’s
nephew. He doesn’t strike me as being very smart, but
he’s wil ing enough.” Then he shrugged. “Besides, I don’t
like the idea of you working so close to the periphery of
this case. It’s just too dangerous.”
“It’s scary, not knowing when or where he’s going to strike
next,” she agreed.
“Personally, I think he sees something he likes and he goes
after it. If I had a wife or a daughter right now, I wouldn’t
want her outside.”
Carlotta gave a little laugh. “That’s not very practical.”
“I know. I don’t mean to be morose.”
“How are things with you?” she asked.
“I can’t complain,” he said, but didn’t make eye contact.
“How about you? I saw in the paper this morning that you
single-handedly found Eva McCoy’s infamous charm
bracelet and uncovered a conspiracy against her. Pretty
impressive.”
“Nobody does anything single-handedly,” she said. “You
were a great help. And the reporter might have
exaggerated a tad.”
“I know Rainie,” he said. “She’s honest.”
“And cute,” she said, wondering if Coop could be Rainie’s
source.
“Yeah, she’s cute and bubbly,” he agreed, then nodded to
someone behind her. “Speaking of cute and bubbly.”
She turned around to see Jack and Maria walk up.
The women greeted each other, then Maria smiled. “I’m
surprised to see you here, Carlotta. Did you know the
A.D.A?”
“Only through my brother,” Carlotta said stiffly.
Jack shook hands with Coop, then looked at her and
nodded toward the door. “A word?”
“Sure.” She fol owed him, then realized that Maria was
joining them as wel . Outside the church, he stopped in the
nearest patch of shade. “I just wanted to let you know that
CSI was able to piece together the device that was on your
car. That explosion was no accident.”
She swallowed hard. “So what was it?”
Jack shook his head. “I don’t know. But the more I think of
those knuckleheads involved in that charm bracelet heist,
this just doesn’t fit. It’s too sophisticated for them. I’l keep
working every lead. Meanwhile, promise me you’l be
careful.”
She smiled and nodded down to her purse. “You’l be
happy to know that I’m trying to get into the habit of
having my hand on your baton.”
He grinned, then wiped the smile away, probably for his
partner’s sake.
Maria stepped closer, between Carlotta and Jack. “You
also need to know that the Georgia Bureau of
Investigation is getting involved with The Charmed Kil er
case, so chances are good that they’re going to want to
question you again about your father as a person of
interest.”
Carlotta nodded. “Thanks for the heads-up.”
“We’l talk.” Jack waved, then he and Maria strode toward
his car, purpose and teamwork in every step.
With Jack’s warning in mind, she splurged for a taxi home
rather than ride the train. When she checked her phone,
she had several calls from Wesley wanting to know if she’d
moved his money.
Carlotta frowned. Why would she move his money? She
called him back, but he didn’t answer. Imagining him
peddling away, delivering some very important document
across town, she left him a message asking if he was
joking. Of course she hadn’t moved his money.
On the way inside the town house, she suddenly felt
magnanimous and not only stooped to pick a white
dandelion flower to blow, but waved to Mrs. Winningham
as wel . “Hel o!”
“Don’t blow that in the direction of my yard,” the woman
called. “That’s why you have so many weeds, you know!”
Carlotta laughed to herself and went into the house,
pul ing off her dress clothes and shoes as she walked to
her bedroom. In the hall, though, she paused and looked
to the closed door of her parents’ room. So her father was
stil a “person of interest” in The Charmed Kil er case. The
GBI would probably be less gentle with her and Wesley
than Jack had been.
She padded down the hall to the door and pushed it open,
with the intention of examining her father’s cigar box ful
of dried-up stogies.
But when she opened the door, she froze. Things
were…different. Fresher…cleaner, maybe? Wesley had
really gone on a domestic binge.
But then her gaze landed on a green scrubs outfit lying on
the bed, torn and stained but neatly laundered and folded,
and clearly imprinted with Northside Hospital. She’d seen
those scrubs before—Michael Lane had been wearing
them in his infamous on-camera run from the law.
Her gaze flew to the unused door that led out onto the
deck, the door that had been dead-bolted from the inside
for so long…but no longer was.
Terror seized her as realization dawned. The scrubs
belonged to Michael, who was somehow alive…and living
in her parents’ bedroom…doing extra chores around the
house while they were gone…
Watching them at night when they slept.
Oh, God, and she thought she’d been imagining it.
She turned to run and slammed into a man’s body—a man
wearing a mask.
Carlotta didn’t think, she only reacted with her hand that
was already curled around the stun baton in her purse.
She pul ed it out, fumbling with the power switch as she
fel back, trying to push herself away from the stranger,
even as she pushed the electric end of the baton into his
clavicle.
It was a direct hit. The man jerked, then fel to his knees,
sprawled on the floor, his hands twitching. Only when she
looked up to his face did she realize that she’d tasered
Peter, who was wearing the dog mask from Breakfast at
Tiffany’s. Next to him lay the matching cat mask—
presumably hers.
“Omigod, omigod, omigod,” she said, dialing Jack on her
phone, trusting him more than 911.
“Carlotta, what’s up?”
“I just tasered Peter by mistake. Wil he be okay?”
“Yeah,” Jack said, although she could hear the laughter in
his voice. “Give him about fifteen minutes and he’l be
okay. How did that happen?”
“Wel , I hate to be the one to break it to you, Jack, but
Michael Lane isn’t dead. I came into my parents’ room and
found his clothes—the same ones he was wearing when
he went over the bridge. He’s been living here.”
“That’s beyond creepy. Was he with you last night when I
was there?”
“I don’t know. When I walked into the room, I freaked out
and turned around and thought Peter was Michael so I
zapped him.”
“But you’re sure Lane is gone?”
She put her hand to her head as Wesley’s frantic voice
mail message began suddenly to make sense. “Yeah. In
fact, he has about ten thousand reasons to be gone.”
“Look, I’m swamped with something at the moment, but
I’ll be over in an hour or so to look around. Meanwhile, I’l
put out an APB on Lane and send a uniform over to keep
you company.”
She heard Maria’s laughter in the background and—the
tinkle of glass? Jack didn’t sound as if he was in the
car…maybe in a hotel room?
Peter groaned, a welcome sound to her ears. “He’s coming
around, Jack. Thanks.”
She ended the call, then leaned over Peter as he opened
his eyes and tried to focus. “What happened? Where am