Authors: Stephanie Bond
smile that had driven men crazy. It seemed impossible that
her radiant smile had been snuffed out forever.
“Excuse me.”
Carlotta looked up to see a young man, maybe twenty,
with bright red hair and pale blue eyes, wearing a dark suit
and a priest’s col ar. He carried a small ornate box.
“Yes?” she asked.
“I’m here to bless the body of Kiki Deerling.”
She lifted her eyebrows. “And you are?”
“Father Albert Morgan, minister to the Deerling family.”
She took in details. He wore black combat boots, not
exactly what she’d expect from the clergy. And he had
tattoos on his knuckles. Sure, priests could have a
checkered past and make questionable fashion choices,
but he did not strike her as someone the Deerling family
would have sent on such a delicate errand.
Carlotta pretended to check the log behind the desk. “Your
name isn’t on my list, Father Morgan. May I see some
identification?”
He smiled and nodded, then turned on his heel and bolted
for the exit.
“Kook,” she murmured. He probably had a camera in that
box. And how had he gotten through security? Even their
cel phones had been held at the checkpoint.
She rol ed up the magazine and went in search of a
bathroom, wandering down what looked to be a likely hall,
since a pay phone and a water fountain sat at the end. She
found the ladies’ room and relieved herself. When she
emerged from the bathroom, a man stood at the pay
phone, his back to her. He wore the uniform of an orderly,
but his shoes were Ferragamo. More strangely, next to
him was a gurney, with a body bag on it—an occupied
body bag.
“It’s time,” he said into the phone, talking fast. “Bring the
SUV around to the west entrance now. Tel the helicopter
pilot to stand by.”
Carlotta frowned. Helicopter? The man slammed down the
phone, then saw her, and his eyes narrowed to a point. He
reached for her and managed to grab the end of her
ponytail. She wrenched loose, minus a few hair fol icles,
and ran to find Coop.
She burst through the glass double doors that he and
Wesley had gone through, racing down hallways, calling
his name. A couple of orderlies stopped her, and she asked
to be taken to the chief medical examiner, that it was an
emergency. At the sound of hurried footsteps, she looked
up to see Coop, Wesley, a man who fit the description of
the doctor the clerk had described, and another man she
assumed to be the coroner running toward her.
“The body is gone,” Coop informed her quietly.
“There’s a body on a gurney next to the pay phone on this
floor,” she said. “Hurry! I heard the guy say a helicopter is
standing by.”
She led them back to the phone, but the gurney and the
man were gone. They took the stairs to the first floor and
ran outside to see a long black SUV peeling out of the
parking lot, but heading away from the paved entrance
and toward an open, marshy field.
“I’ll radio security,” the coroner said, looking completely
panicked.
Coop ran to his van. Carlotta and Wesley fol owed and
vaulted inside. Coop turned over the engine and slammed
the vehicle into gear, then turned it toward the black SUV
and gave chase over the bumpy field. She and Wesley
hung on while the gurney and other equipment in the back
clanged noisily. Ahead of them, the SUV blew a back tire
and slowed, but kept going. Coop pul ed close enough to
ram the back of the SUV, and sent it spinning into a
shallow, sandy ditch. The driver opened the door and
jumped down.
“That’s the guy I saw by the pay phone,” Carlotta
confirmed.
Ferragamo Shoes made a run for the tree line without
looking back. By the time they stopped the van and
climbed out, he had disappeared.
Coop opened the back door of the SUV to reveal a body
bag. He checked the tag on it and nodded. “It’s her.”
He unzipped the bag a few inches and his jaw hardened.
Carlotta glanced at the girl’s startlingly white, famous face.
Her hair looked freshly washed, the only thing about her
that stil seemed alive. The area around her nose was
swol en and irritated, probably where tubes had been
inserted. Her neck was bluish, and a red circular imprint
stood out on her col arbone.
Coop zipped the bag closed. “Give me a hand, Wes.”
While they loaded the body into the back of the van,
Carlotta heard a helicopter in the distance. She looked up
and saw a chopper come into view, then veer away from
the property.
Security vehicles descended on them. The shaken chief
medical examiner emerged from one of the cars and
verified the body was the correct one. In the melee, Dr.
Talon, the other man who had come to claim the body,
had vanished.
“If that was even his name,” the coroner said, clearly
distraught. “He said he was Ms. Deerling’s personal
physician, that the family wanted him to view the body.
His papers seemed to be in order.” Dr. Shores wrung his
hands. “This is highly unusual. I’m going to need all of you
to give a statement to the police.”
“I understand how you feel,” Coop said to the medical
examiner in the same voice she’d heard him use with
victims’ family members. “But if the police get involved,
then it’s a matter of public record and wil reflect badly on
your morgue. Do you really want to feed the media frenzy
and put the Deerling family through that? We have Ms.
Deerling, and that’s what’s important, isn’t it?”
Dr. Shores considered Coop’s words, then nodded. “You’re
right. And the sooner she’s out of my morgue, the better.”
“There’s just one thing,” Coop said. “I noticed the body
hasn’t been autopsied, and I understood I was to take it
directly to the funeral home. Has there been a mistake?
Do I need to take it to the Atlanta morgue?”
“No,” the man said. “The family objected to an autopsy,
and because of the young woman’s history of asthmatic
attacks, I agreed to it, after examining the body. Like you
said, there was no use putting the family through
unnecessary suffering.”
Coop nodded, but from the set of his mouth, Carlotta
knew he wasn’t satisfied with the doctor’s explanation.
They waited another hour while paperwork was
processed, the body was placed in a box with dry ice, and
a Florida license plate was added to the van. Then they
made the long drive back to col ect their phones at the
security checkpoint, and exited with two other vans. The
vehicle behind them was sparkling clean, with a pink bow
tied on the antenna—the decoy van.
“Don’t look at the cameras,” Coop said. “Don’t give the
vultures any footage.”
They pul ed away and, as hoped, the media descended on
the van behind them. Coop turned toward the interstate
and they were all quiet for a long while, conscious of the
pop-culture significance of their cargo. Wesley, especial y,
was silent. He was probably thinking how close in age he
was to Kiki Deerling, and realizing that a young life could
end just as quickly as an old one.
Carlotta’s heart was stil thudding overtime in her chest.
“Have you ever had anything like that happen before?”
Coop shook his head, his expression solemn. “This is a
first.”
“Do you think those two men were in cahoots?” Wesley
asked.
Carlotta leaned over to pick up the rol ed magazine she’d
accidental y lifted from the check-in counter and then
dropped on the floorboard during the chase. “There were
three men.” She told them about the nervous redheaded
“priest.” “Maybe they were all in on it together.”
“Maybe,” Coop said. A muscle jumped in his jaw.
“What would someone do with a body?” Carlotta asked.
“Al kinds of bad things,” he replied. “There are a lot of
sickos out there, especial y when a celebrity is involved.”
“What are the penalties for stealing a body?” Wesley
asked.
“Abuse of a corpse is a felony,” Coop said. “Stealing a
corpse, receiving it il egal y, al felonies.”
“So if those guys were caught, they’d go to prison?”
“For several years,” Coop confirmed.
“What paparazzo would risk going to prison?” Carlotta
asked.
Coop shrugged. “Someone who was going to be paid wel
for photos, or for the body itself.”
“That’s so vile,” she said. “Coop, you saw the body. Did it
look like she’d had an asthma attack?”
He answered without looking at Carlotta. “I don’t have
enough information to form an opinion.”
“But why was her neck so bruised?”
He shrugged. “She could’ve fallen and bruised herself
during the attack. Or it could have been caused by
someone in the hospital holding her down, or a piece of
equipment they used to try to resuscitate her. There are a
lot of possible reasons.”
“What happens during an asthma attack?”
“The muscles in a person’s airways start to spasm, and to
make matters worse, the respiratory system produces a
thick mucus.”
“Why?”
“There are many different triggers, some of them
environmental, such as chemicals.”
“What about pet hair? She had a pug.”
“That can be a trigger, too, and pugs are notoriously heavy
shedders. Drugs can also be a trigger, both over-the-
counter and il egal ones. And sometimes there’s no
obvious trigger at all.”
“But don’t most people with asthma have an inhaler?”
“They’re supposed to. Quick-relief inhalers wil help relax
the spasms and reopen the airways.”
“So she must not have had her inhaler with her.”
“Or maybe she couldn’t get to it fast enough, or perhaps it
was out of medicine. There are lots of possibilities.”
“So her death might have been prevented.”
“If it was an asthma attack, then yes, with the right
treatment administered as quickly as possible, her death
might have been prevented.”
Carlotta frowned. “If?”
Coop shifted in his seat, then glanced in the rearview
mirror. “Let’s all be alert. I won’t relax until we’re back in
Atlanta.”
“This has been a wild trip,” Wesley offered.
Coop glanced over at Carlotta and murmured, “You can
say that again.”
She warmed at his reference to their near miss in the hotel
room, and felt a pang of guilt for deceiving him about the
Daytona stopover. “I really do appreciate you inviting me
to come along.”
“Glad you were at least able to get some business done,”
he said quietly, so Wesley wouldn’t hear.
“Business and pleasure,” she said.
“You don’t have to humor me.”
“I’m not.”
He opened his mouth to say something, but Wesley’s head
suddenly appeared between them. “When are we going to
stop and eat lunch?”
Coop pushed up his glasses and pinched the bridge of his
nose as if in pain. “This trip can’t be over soon enough.”
17
It was a couple of hours before Coop gave in to Wesley’s
wheedling and pul ed off on an exit ramp to find a
restaurant. Coop picked a table next to a window where
the van was visible. They placed an order, then Wesley
excused himself to go to the men’s room.
“He’s probably stealing a smoke,” Carlotta said.
“You think so?”
“It’s what I want to do,” she said with a laugh.
“So you both smoke, but are trying to keep it from one
another?”
“Apparently.”
“To be so close, you and Wesley aren’t very honest with
each other.”
“I think that’s our secret to staying close.”
“Why didn’t you want to tel him about your father leaving
you the note? Or that his fingerprints were found in
Daytona?”
She sighed. “You’ve been around Wesley long enough to
know that he doesn’t exercise the best judgment.”
“Yeah, I noticed.”
“He thinks our dad is completely innocent of everything
he’s accused of. He has this fantasy that one day our
parents are going to come home and we’l all be one big,
happy family again. I just don’t want him to get his hopes
up.”
“He’s not a kid anymore, Carlotta. You can’t protect him
from disappointment.”
“I know. But now he’s old enough to react recklessly and
get himself in real adult trouble. If I’d told him about the
hotel robbery, he would’ve crashed in there and
complicated things.”
“Or he would’ve helped you,” Coop said. “You said that
Jack underestimated your father. I think sometimes you
underestimate Wesley. He’s smart. And he has as much at
stake here as you do.”
Carlotta opened her mouth, but she didn’t know how to
respond.
The waiter delivered their drinks and Wes reappeared. She
studied her brother as he sat down. He was looking a little
gray—maybe the smoking wasn’t agreeing with him.
Sometimes he seemed so mature, but other times, he was
all teenager. Stil , he wasn’t a malicious person. Even when
he did bad things, it was usually with good intentions.
Or was that the mother in her taking up for him again?