Authors: Stephanie Bond
else, she knew I would’ve given her her freedom.”
Carlotta recal ed Angela’s shopping sprees, her drinking.
How awful to want to cling to a loveless marriage.
“I don’t know why she wanted to stay married to me,”
Peter said. “I was never mean to her, but she knew that
she’d never have my heart, not entirely.” His voice grew
strained and he slid his palm over hers, sending little
shivers over her arms. “I left a piece of it with you.”
Her own heart expanded in response. “You took a piece of
me, too,” she murmured, entwining her fingers with his.
“At the time I thought I was going to die.”
“Me, too,” he said, his voice thick. “I was so worried about
you, but too ashamed to call and check on you. I kept
tel ing myself that your parents would return soon, that
you would be okay.” He made a choking noise. “Oh, God,
Carly, I’m so sorry. I screwed up everything, including
Angela’s life. And now, this.”
Tears gathered behind her eyes for the random events in
life that threw people together and pul ed them apart.
Angela had been caught in the middle. The woman must
have hated her, Carlotta realized sadly.
“What do you think happened to her, Peter? Who would
have wanted to kil her?”
“I can’t think of anyone,” he said solemnly, his voice tinged
with anger. “A stranger? I don’t know. It’s just such a
waste.” He squeezed her fingers. “The only good thing to
come from all this horror is that it’s brought you back into
my life.”
“Peter,” she said, swal owing her tears, “the detective said
you had a picture of me in your wallet.”
He sighed. “That’s right.”
“Did Angela know?”
“She found it…the morning she died.”
Carlotta closed her eyes. “That’s why she came to the
store and accused me of having an affair with you.” And a
few hours later, she was dead…murdered. The timing was
suspicious at best.
“I’m so sorry. I never meant for her to see the picture.”
“That wasn’t fair to her. Or to me.”
“No, it wasn’t,” he agreed. “I was an idiot, withholding a
piece of myself from my wife, and pining for a woman that
I lost because of my own stupidity.”
“We’ve discussed this, and I told you that I understand
why you did what you did. We have to put it behind us.”
He stared at their fingers twined together and gave a little
laugh. “This brings back memories, huh? Being in a car
together.”
She smiled. “The Crown Vic.”
“My dad’s hand-me-down. He couldn’t understand why I
didn’t want a new sports car. He didn’t know that the back
seat of the Vic was like a full-size bed.”
“Our Holiday Inn,” Carlotta said, her body warming at the
memory of their progression from sweet kisses to heavy
petting to the night he had taken her virginity with Rod
Stewart’s “Have I Told You Lately That I Love You” playing
on the stereo. Peter had been such a gentle, thorough
lover. She’d never felt so completely connected to a
person before…or since. Her eyes burned furiously as
emotion overwhelmed her.
Peter shifted in his seat to face her in the semidarkness. “I
love you, Carly. I never stopped loving you.”
His admission caused her breath to catch in her lungs. The
times she had lain in bed and cried in her pil ow, had he
been equally miserable, but strapped with guilt and shame
on top of having lost the woman he loved?
He reached for her and despite a tiny part of her
conscience tel ing her to resist, she went to him. He
slanted his mouth over hers and kissed her hungrily. She
responded in kind, swept up in the sweet familiarity of
Peter, of picking up where he had left her hanging
emotionally over a decade ago. Peter moaned into her
mouth, then wrapped his arms around her and pul ed her
over the console to straddle him. With her skirt pul ed up,
she settled onto his lap and lost herself in his arms.
Nothing had changed. He stil had the ability to make the
rest of the world fall away. All that mattered was that they
had found each other again.
A sharp rap on the window next to her brought her head
up and around. Oh geez, it was probably Akin Frasier doing
his rounds. While Carlotta scrambled to straighten her
clothes, Peter wiped the steam they’d generated from the
inside of the window. To her abject horror, Detective Jack
Terry frowned in at them.
Peter uttered a curse, and Carlotta wondered hysterically
if it were possible to actual y die of humiliation. After Peter
opened the door, he helped her out first, then climbed out
after her, unaware that his hair stood on end from where
she had run her fingers through it. Detective Terry stood
there with his hands on his hips, wearing a bemused
expression. “Sorry to interrupt you two lovebirds.”
“So why did you?” Peter asked hotly.
The detective frowned. “There’ve been reports of trouble
in the parking garage. I was in the area and thought I’d
cruise through. I recognized Ms. Wren’s car and saw the
commotion inside and thought she was being assaulted.”
He looked at her, his expression dark—and disgusted. “The
car was bouncing, for heaven’s sake.” He nodded to her
blouse, then averted his gaze.
She glanced down and gasped to see her button-up shirt
gaping open, revealing her white lacy bra. She turned her
back and fastened her shirt, feeling like a fool…and a slut.
“Do I have to tel you,” the detective practical y bel owed,
“how bad it looks for you two to be caught together right
now?”
“No, you don’t,” Peter said, lifting his chin. “But I don’t
care how it looks. I didn’t kil my wife.”
Detective Terry took a menacing step toward Peter. “If you
don’t care how it looks on you, Ashford, think of how it
looks on Carlotta.” He made a derisive noise. “For God’s
sake, next time at least get a damn room.” Then he stalked
away stiffly, opened the door to a dark, unmarked sedan.
He hesitated, looking back at Carlotta with disapproval
and—anger?—before swinging into his car, gunning the
engine and driving away.
“I have to go,” she said to Peter absently, walking around
to get back into her car.
“Carlotta—”
“Don’t, Peter,” she said, holding up her hand, her voice
shaking. “Don’t.” She ignored the helpless look on Peter’s
face, got into her car and, after grinding a few gears,
pul ed away. The entire way home, Carlotta’s skin stung
with shame. What must Jack Terry think of her?
Whatever it was, it couldn’t be as bad as what she thought
of herself.
Minus ten points, Carlotta.
25
Wesley blinked at the pile of chips in front of him, so tired
after thirty-six hours of cardplaying and so wired from all
the caffeine he’d consumed, he was practically seeing
double. The faint tol ing of church bel s was the only
indication that Sunday morning had dawned. The
basement of the Peachtree office building had no
windows, one mark of a good card house. Casinos
employed the same tactic to prevent gamblers from
realizing just how much time had passed since they had
entered the establishment.
Casinos also pumped uber-oxygenated air into their
facilities to help keep gamblers awake and feeling fresh.
The converted basement card room was not quite that
advanced—the air was pungent from the industrial trash
cans overflowing with discarded beer cans and take-out
bags, from the smoke of about a thousand spent cigarettes
(which probably violated numerous no-smoking
ordinances), and from the unwashed bodies of the twenty-
five players who had entered the tournament on Friday
and who had, even after they’d been eliminated, stuck
around to see who would make it to the final table.
The last five players standing would all be in the money,
ranging from the top prize of twenty-five thousand down
to three thousand. Four names had been written on a dry-
erase board that had likely been filched from an
accounting department. The fifth name would be either
Wesley’s or the man sitting across from him—“Quinn,” a
CFO of some tight-ass company who had so many facial
tics, it was difficult to know what was a “tel ” twitch and
what was just the guy’s natural neuroses.
They shared their table’s $12,500 of chips, with Quinn
having the slight advantage. But Wesley could sense that
the guy was wearing down, taking longer and longer to
make bets, his eyes and mouth drooping.
Time for the kil .
As the dealer shuffled, Wesley downed the rest of his third
Red Bul in an hour and scanned the room.
A few feet away, his buddy Chance gave him a thumbs-up,
his energy level suspiciously high—Wesley wouldn’t put it
past him to have done a couple of lines of coke in the john.
Besides making up the difference for Wesley’s buy-in,
Chance had forked over the dough for his own spot in the
tournament, too. But as much as Chance liked the action
and the atmosphere of a card game, he was lousy at
poker. Guys with big egos usually were. They sulked when
they got bad cards and slapped backs when they got good
ones. They also thought that drinking alcohol improved
their judgment. That’s what Wesley liked most about the
game of Texas Hold ’Em—it was the game of the
underdog, the thinker, the mathematician.
His game.
“Post your blinds,” the dealer said, to cal for the
mandatory bet to initiate a hand. Dealers only had to
“announce” in amateur gatherings like this one—at casino
tables, the dealer rarely spoke.
It was his turn to post the “big” blind, set at two hundred
dol ars in this game. He pushed two hundred dol ars’
worth of chips forward. Moving in slow motion, Quinn
posted the “smal ” blind, set at one hundred. The
advantage of Wesley having the big blind was that Quinn
would have to place the first bet after the cards were
dealt.
The dealer dealt them each two cards facedown, then
tossed one into a discard pile.
Wesley lifted the corner of his two cards, but instead of
glancing down, he watched Quinn look at his cards,
irritated when the man’s mouth twitched violently. Good?
Bad? The beginning of an epileptic seizure?
Looking at his own cards, he wil ed himself not to react.
Pocket kings, spades and clubs. Thank you Jesus.
“Your bet, sir,” the dealer said, nodding to Quinn.
Quinn hesitated, then glanced at his cards again. “I’l raise
four hundred,” he said, then stacked the chips and pushed
them forward.
Good. The man’s cards were strong enough to keep him in
the game. For now, he’d slow-play Quinn to draw up the
pot. Wesley fidgeted on purpose, then called the man’s
bet and pushed forward three hundred in chips to make
them even at five hundred all.
“Here comes the flop,” the dealer announced, then dealt
three cards faceup on the table—the five of spades, seven
of spades and king of hearts.
Three. Of. A. Kind.
He studied Quinn’s reaction to the flop, but the man was
smothering a yawn and his eyes were watering. The best
pocket cards Quinn could have were aces, which didn’t
stand a chance against his own three kings. Or Quinn could
be holding the other king and either a five or a seven,
giving him two pairs, which stil wouldn’t beat the three
kings. With the five and seven community cards, he could
be working a straight, or less likely, a straight flush if he
held the eight and nine of spades.
Across the table, his opponent’s eyes were bleary and
bloodshot. He looked like he wanted to quit and go home
to his Sleep Number Bed. Quinn frowned, then put his
hands on his chips. “I’l bet a thousand.”
Wesley nodded thoughtful y. With that kind of a bet, the
man must have the two pair, or, like him, three of a kind.
But if so, the best three of a kind the man could have was
sevens, and that wouldn’t beat his three kings.
He could practically smel the frankincense and myrrh.
The urge to raise was strong, but he resisted. “I’l cal ,” he
said, and added a thousand dol ars’ worth of chips to the
center.
“Here’s the turn card,” the dealer said, then flipped over
the king of diamonds.
FOUR. OF. A. KIND.
Wesley tamped down his excitement, schooling his
expression into a practiced mask, with a hint of a frown for
good measure.
Across the table, Quinn rubbed his eyes with his palms,
then said, “Oh, hel , I’m all in,” and pushed his chips
toward the center. A murmur moved across the room, and
a few people crowded closer.
Wesley waited for the hubbub to subside before he
smiled. “Call.” Then he pushed the rest of his chips toward
the center. With nothing left to bet and no card in the
deck that could improve his hand, he turned over his
pocket cards with a flourish, gratified at the crowd’s
rousing reaction.
“Four kings!” Chance bel owed. “My buddy has four