Authors: Stephanie Bond
about the fact that in a few days, that thug Tick would be
back, demanding another payment that Wesley wouldn’t
have. Even with his new job, he’d be lucky to have half of
what the fat man would want.
And then there was next week…
She sighed, swung out of her car and slammed the door in
frustration. Rounding the Monte Carlo, she gave it a kick in
the back tire, wishing she could sel the redneck car but
knowing that was impossible considering how much she
owed on it and what it was worth. She eyed her beloved
white Miata, and conceded that even crippled, it could
bring a few thousand dol ars. But that would be a last
resort. Surely there was something else she could sell.
She walked into the house and smiled at the noise and
good smel s coming from the kitchen. “I’m home,” she
shouted.
Wesley came to the doorway and waved. “How does
lasagna sound?”
“Fantastic.”
He eyed her up and down. “What happened to your
clothes? You look like you’ve been in a brawl.”
She glanced down at the black marks on her skirt and
blouse—between the Angela Ashford incident and
skidding across the parking garage, she was a mess. And
she wasn’t about to tel Wesley about her “brawl.” “I
walked out in front of a car when I was leaving work and
decided to sacrifice my outfit.”
“Good cal .”
“I thought so.”
“Go get cleaned up. Soup’s on in ten.”
“Okay,” she said, moving toward her bedroom. She rubbed
the shoulder that she’d landed on, her mind stil clicking
with worry over the bad element that continued to haunt
their lives. If only she could get her hands on enough cash
to get the loan sharks off their backs.
She turned on the shower, then backtracked to her
bedroom. From beneath her bed she pul ed a small trunk,
and from the trunk, a red House of Cartier ring box. Her
pulse raced as she raised the hinged lid and stared at the
glittering one-carat diamond solitaire engagement ring
that Peter had given her ten years ago. When he’d broken
their engagement, he’d told her to keep the ring, to sel it
if she needed to. And how many times had she been
tempted to do just that to pay for utilities or school
clothes or insurance? And how many times had she
refused to part with her only remaining link to Peter?
Carlotta fingered the sparkling stone and bit down on the
inside of her cheek. Perhaps it was time.
13
“That was amazing,” Carlotta said, pushing away her plate
and smiling at her brother.
“I know,” he said with a smirk, stil mopping up red sauce
with crusty Italian bread. He pushed up his glasses. “I
could teach you how to make it sometime.”
She batted her lashes. “And spoil your pleasure in cooking
for me? Never.”
He wiped his mouth, then wadded up the paper napkin
and threw it at her. Frowning, he leaned forward. “Hey,
what happened to your neck? It looks like someone tried
to choke you or something.”
Her hand flew to her throat and she could feel the angry
welts left by the chain that Angela Ashford had twisted
around her neck. “It’s…an allergic reaction to a necklace I
wore, that’s all.” Wesley looked unconvinced, so she
changed the subject. “When does your community service
begin?”
“I have an appointment with my probation officer
Wednesday. He’s supposed to arrange for me to work with
the city geeks on their lousy security.”
“Good—maybe that’l lead to a ful -time job.”
“I already have a ful -time job.”
“And it’s fine for now,” she said careful y. “But you can’t
move dead bodies for the rest of your life.”
“Why not? Coop does okay.”
She frowned. “But this body-moving thing is just a side job
for him too, right?”
“A side job from the funeral home, yeah. He contracts with
the morgue when the M.E.’s office is short of vehicles.”
Carlotta looked at the clock—almost seven. “You’re not
working tonight?”
“I’m on call. Coop said most weekend calls are late at
night. Shootings, drunk-driving accidents, that kind of
thing.”
She winced.
“I think he likes you.”
“Who?”
“Coop.”
Her eyes widened. “Your creepy boss likes me?”
“He’s not creepy. He’s kind of…nice. And, yeah, he asked
about you.”
She frowned, remembering that she’d looked a fright the
morning she’d met him, the morning after her crying jag
over Peter. “Asked what?”
He shrugged. “You know, if you were single and stuff. He
said he thought you were cute.”
She raised an eyebrow. “Cute? What is he, in grade
school?”
“Don’t worry, I told him that he wasn’t your type.”
“Oh.” She studied her nails—she needed a manicure badly.
Then she looked up. “What’s my type?”
Another shrug. “You know—smooth, slick. Coop said you
were probably into metrosexuals.”
She frowned. “And how could he possibly know that?
When he met me, if I remember correctly, I was in my
pajamas, wearing no makeup, and my hair was a foot tall.”
“Yeah, but stil , he could tel you were classy.”
She smiled. “You think I’m classy?”
“Don’t let it go to your head.”
She laughed and in the wake of the cozy moment, she
considered asking Wesley about the postcard she’d found
from their parents. It had been a long time since they’d
really talked about their parents. Maybe it was time to
reopen that can of worms.
“Wesley—”
The chirp of his cel phone cut her off. He lunged for the
tiny device sitting on the counter. “Hel o?” He smiled.
“Yeah, man.”
Carlotta wondered if it was that Chance Hol ander, calling
to lure Wesley into some kind of Friday-night trouble. Rich
little bastard. He surrounded himself with people like
Wesley who were impressed by the toys and good times
his money could buy—people who would do his bidding.
Wesley grabbed a pen and scribbled something on a
napkin. “Got it. I’l get there somehow.” Then he
disconnected the cal .
Carlotta set her jaw, gathering verbal arguments for
Wesley not to meet up with his troublemaker friend.
“That was Coop,” Wesley said breathlessly, his eyes
shining. “We have a job.”
“Oh,” she said, her arguments vanishing as her thoughts
turned foolishly to how she would greet Cooper Craft now
that she knew he thought she was cute.
“But there’s one little problem.”
At the catch in her brother’s voice, she was instantly on
alert. “Oh?”
Wesley chewed his lip, then sighed. “It’s a residential
pickup, and Coop was close to the address when he got
the call. Would you mind driving me there?”
“You’re not serious?”
“Wel , I could drive—”
“You know you can’t drive on a suspended license!”
“I can’t get there on the train.”
Carlotta acknowledged that her brother was right, and felt
herself wearing down. She’d hounded him about a job,
and now he finally had one. It wouldn’t kil her to drive
him; it wasn’t as if she had something better to do. “Okay,
just don’t make a habit of this.”
He whooped. “Thanks, sis. I’l grab my backpack while you
put on a bra.”
She glared and swatted at his arm as he walked by, then
pushed away from the table. The things she did for love.
She went to her room wondering what would be
appropriate to wear. She surveyed her flare-leg Levi’s,
Juicy Couture T-shirt, Michael Kors high-heeled Mary
Janes, and decided the outfit would have to do. She
donned a bra and added a brown shrug sweater against
the evening chil , then slid chocolate-pink lip balm onto
her lips to keep them from getting chapped, not because
Cooper Craft thought she was cute.
“Come on,” Wesley said from the doorway of her
bedroom. “You’re dropping me off. You don’t need
lipstick.”
“It’s lip balm.”
“Whatever, come on already.”
She swung her purse to her shoulder. “You owe me for
this.”
“Yeah, wel , add it to the list.”
They blew by Mrs. Winningham who was weeding her
flower bed. “Wait! I want to talk to you two!”
“Some other time, Mrs. Winningham!” Carlotta promised
the woman as they ran for the garage.
“But someone has been parking on the street and
watching our houses! Don’t you care?”
“No!” they yel ed in unison, ducking under the opening
garage door and bolting for the Monte Carlo.
“Christ,” Carlotta muttered under her breath. “It’s
probably that Detective Terry snooping around.”
“Yeah, probably,” Wesley said in a noncommittal voice.
Or any one of several other undesirables, she conceded
miserably. “Do you have the address?” she asked as she
backed out.
“Yeah, it’s in Buckhead.” He read off the street name and
number and Carlotta frowned. “Hmm, that’s a nice area.
Did he mention the neighborhood?”
“Yeah, it’s Martinique Estates. Know it?”
She frowned. “Maybe. It sounds familiar, but I can’t place
it.” She’d probably crashed a party there sometime, but
didn’t want to say so in front of her brother. Besides, those
days were behind her—no more party-crashing. She’d
made an exception the other night and it had put her in
the path of Peter Ashford, a scene which may have caused
the humiliating takedown today at work. Her skin crawled
at the memory and she touched the tender place on her
throat. Thank God Lindy hadn’t called the police or the
situation could have spiraled into something much more
messy.
“Did someone have a heart attack in their home?” she
asked.
“Coop didn’t say, but that’s a good guess.”
Unbidden, her parents came to mind. They would be in
their mid-fifties now. If her mother was stil drinking, she
couldn’t be in good health. And her father had smoked like
a chimney and enjoyed his bourbon. Occasionally she
wondered if she and Wesley would even be notified if they
were sick…or worse. But according to the postcard that
Wesley had kept hidden, they were stil kicking.
She glanced sideways at her brother in the dark cab of the
car, unspoken words simmering on her tongue. But his
face was a mask of concentration. It wasn’t an appropriate
time or place to bring up their parents’ latest
communication.
Ten minutes later they were winding through the
community of Buckhead, Atlanta’s premier address,
featuring enormous tree-laden lots and even more
enormous amenity-laden houses. Old money met new
money behind the soaring gates of the private
communities where residents lifted a col ective nose at the
rest of Atlanta. Carlotta knew, because she’d grown up in
just such a neighborhood.
“You missed the turn,” Wesley said, exasperated.
She frowned and looked in her rearview mirror. “I’m doing
the best I can. It’s so dark out here!”
“Turn around!”
“Shut up and put on your seat belt!”
They bickered until they pul ed up to the wrought-iron
gates of Martinique Estates. A squad car with a silent,
flashing light sat next to the gatehouse.
“Lot of commotion for a heart attack victim,” she said,
impressed.
A security guard accompanied by a uniformed police office
approached the car as she rol ed down the window.
Wesley leaned forward and flashed an official-looking
badge with his photo and something about the medical
examiner’s office. The policeman looked at it, then handed
it back and signaled for the gatekeeper to let them in.
Recalling all the tickets that Wesley had counterfeited for
her, she frowned. “Is that a fake badge?”
“What? No. Coop gave me this. I’m official. Turn here.”
She did and again had the feeling that the street name was
familiar for some reason. She stared up at the monstrous
brick houses that looked more like compounds than
homes and, God help her, she felt a stab of envy. Money
didn’t buy happiness, but it made certain aspects of life a
whole hel of a lot easier. She’d lived on both sides of that
wrought-iron gate, so she knew.
Wesley was craning for house numbers, but that became a
moot point when they both caught sight of a squad car
and an ambulance, lights flashing, and various other
official-looking vehicles parked at angles on the curb and
in the downward-sloping driveway. The megamansion sat
below curb level, judging by the way the land fel away and
by the downward gaze of the onlookers. “I think we found
the right house.” She guided the car closer, picking up an
approaching cop in her headlights, then stopped and
zoomed down the window.
“You need to keep moving, ma’am.”
“We’re here to help transport the body,” Wesley said,
sounding amazingly mature. He handed the badge to the
cop, who, after scrutinizing it, handed it back. “Okay, but
you’l have to park here and walk onto the property. The
pool is down there.”
“Pool?” Wesley asked.
“The woman drowned,” the cop said curtly.