Read Bond, Stephanie - Body Movers 05 Online
Authors: Jill
“Okay, I just went completely deaf.”
“Come on, man, I’m worried.”
Wesley lost the poker hand he’d been playing and set his
jaw in frustration. “The only way your tool wil shrink is if
you’re doing steroids. Are you?”
Chance scratched his beer gut. “No.”
Wesley took in his friend’s white flabby body. “Shocking.
But that means you’re fine.”
“’Roids make your dick shrink?”
“Your balls, actually.”
“Dude, how do you know all this shit? You should go on
Jeopardy or something.”
“And you should read a book once in a while.”
Chance laughed. “Why, when I can just ask you stuff?
Having you around here is like having a search engine on
the couch.”
“Thanks,” he said drily.
“Wait a minute—if I shrink my balls, won’t my dick look
bigger?”
“You’re wearing me out, man.”
Chance pointed a meaty finger. “While we’re talking about
schlongs, smarty-pants, that Oxy wil mess with yours.
That’s why I steer clear of the stuff.”
Wesley frowned. “I’m cool.”
“For now. You keep eating them like candy, you’re going to
be serving boneless pork to the ladies, you get my drift?”
“How about I worry about my pork, and you worry about
yours?”
“I’m just saying, man. Ease up before it gets away from
you.”
Wesley gritted his teeth against a throbbing headache. He
needed a hit right now and was playing a poker video
game to keep his hands from shaking. “Why don’t you go
put on some clothes.”
Chance shot him the bird, but walked toward his bedroom.
“I’m working on getting you into another card game,” he
called over his shoulder.
Another game would be nice, Wes conceded. To try to win
back some of the cash that lunatic Michael Lane had stolen
from his room. He’d had plans for that money. It was
supposed to have made things better for his sister—pay
for some upgrades around the house and replace her car.
All those things would have to wait until he got lucky
again.
Wesley turned back to the video-poker game, but he had
trouble focusing. He took off his glasses and rubbed his
eyes, then tried again. But his reaction time was slow, and
twice he mistook one card suit for another one. He cursed
and tossed aside the control er, then stood and paced, his
mind bouncing al over the place, from E.’s engagement to
her thug boyfriend, to the identity of the decapitated man
in the morgue, to the kil er who was stalking the city.
When he got shaky, his mind turned to Meg Vincent for
some reason, as if she was something he could anchor his
thoughts to. Then he grunted and pul ed at his zipper—at
least his dick was stil working.
From his backpack, his personal cel phone rang. He pul ed
it out, but the cal was from an unknown source. Wes
frowned, then answered, “Yeah.”
“Is this Wesley Wren?” The voice was male, relatively
young and thick with a country twang.
“Who’s this?”
“Kendall Abrams.”
“Who?”
“My uncle is the chief M.E. at the county morgue.”
“Oh, right. You’re working with Coop?”
“Yeah. We got a pickup, but Coop isn’t answering his
phone. My uncle says you and me can go, if that’s awright
with you.”
Jesus, the guy sounded like a hayseed. “Sure.” Wes gave
him the address of the condo building. “What are you
driving?”
“One of the morgue’s vans. See you in a few.”
Wesley disconnected the call, uneasy about the fact that
Coop wasn’t answering his phone. He tried to reach him,
too, just in case, but Coop wasn’t picking up. Was the
pressure of working with Abrams at the lab getting to him?
It was obvious to anyone that the men had history.
It also occurred to Wesley, though, that the prospect of
moving bodies had a lot less appeal if he wasn’t with Coop.
Or Carlotta…or even Hannah. Without them, it was just a
job. And not a very pleasant one.
Chance came back into the living room. To his shorts-and-
socks ensemble he had added a towel around his neck.
“Want to order Chinese?”
“I have to go.”
“To pick up a dead person?”
“Yeah,” Wesley said, fishing an Oxy tablet out of his pack
and tossing it back.
“Wel , at least you won’t need your dick for that,” Chance
said.
Wesley snapped, irritated at the interruption to his chew-
buzz. “Shut up, dude. I got this under control.”
Chance made a clicking noise with his chubby cheek.
“That’s what they all say.”
Wesley swung his backpack to his shoulder and stalked to
the door, ignoring his friend. He could quit the Oxy
anytime he wanted to. He just didn’t want to tonight.
13
Carlotta sipped from her wineglass as she strol ed beside
the tables featuring items up for bid in the silent auction.
There were ski packages to Vail, Broadway packages to
Manhattan, spa vacations to the wine country, gambling
junkets to Vegas, cooking lessons in Paris, and sailing
adventures in the Caribbean. To her dismay, Peter had bid
on almost every trip for two on offer. She looked up and
spotted him a few yards away chatting amiably with some
guy whose name she couldn’t recall. After a while, the
faces and names all ran together.
She scanned other items up for auction—jewelry, art,
sporting events—but her mind was elsewhere. She kept
one eye on the kitchen entrance where Hannah had
disappeared a few minutes ago and hadn’t returned.
When Bebe Plank’s purse hadn’t turned up, the police had
been summoned, but Carlotta knew how things worked in
these environments enough to know that the police
wouldn’t have made themselves known to guests. Instead,
the cops would be shepherded into a private room, and
have suspects delivered to them.
Or in this case, suspect, as in singular.
From inside Carlotta’s bag, her cel phone rang. She
reached in and felt around the stun baton to pul out the
phone. Wesley’s name scrol ed onto the display.
She connected the call and covered her ear. “Wes?”
“Hey, sis, are you busy?”
She looked around the packed ballroom. “That depends.
What’s up?”
“I’m on a body run and I could use a little help.”
“Are you alone?”
“Uh—almost. And the house is in Buckhead.” He gave her
the address.
“That’s not too far from Peter’s neighborhood,” she
mused. “What happened?”
“No specifics. But the chief M.E. is already on the scene, so
I get the feeling that it’s big. Are you in?”
Another victim of The Charmed Kil er? She weighed the
experience of picking up a dead body against spending the
rest of the evening at the charity auction. Fake laughter
burst out behind her, making her wince.
“Sis?”
“I’m in,” she said. “Pick me up in front of the Bedford
Manor Country Club.”
“Okay. We’l be there in ten minutes in a morgue van.”
She disconnected the call and glanced at Peter across the
room, stil talking to Mr. Generic. Peter had been so good
to her. She was probably going to regret this.
Resolved, she drained her glass of wine, then headed
toward the kitchen. A man wearing an employee name tag
stepped in her path. “May I help you, ma’am?”
Carlotta held up her glass. “Just looking for a refil .”
“Our bar is over there,” he said, nodding. “Or any of the
servers on the floor can help you.”
She smiled. “Get out of my way.”
He held out his arm. “Ma’am, I can’t let you go back
there.”
“I’ve already zapped two guys with a stun baton this
week,” she said, patting her bag. “But I don’t mind going
for a personal best if you don’t.”
He dropped his arm. Carlotta pushed through the swinging
doors that led to the kitchen area, her head pivoting, ears
perked.
“I didn’t do it!” came the sound of Hannah’s voice behind
an office door left ajar.
Carlotta headed toward the door and flung it open.
Hannah stood in a makeshift office/storeroom, her
expression defiant. Bebe Plank and Tracey Lowenstein
stood there and from their haughty stance, Carlotta
suspected they had initiated the interrogation. A male
uniformed police officer stood nearby, eyeing the tall
Hannah warily. A block-shouldered guy was apparently
leading the questioning.
They all turned toward her when she walked in.
“Carlotta?” the blocky guy said, his voice loaded with
surprise.
Recognition hit her. “Herb.” Her rent-a-cop from the store.
“Do you work here at the club?”
“I got two kids in col ege,” he offered with a shrug. “Are
you a member?”
“A guest. And I was sitting at the table when Ms. Plank’s
purse went missing. I can vouch for Ms. Kizer—she didn’t
take it.”
“This woman is not a member of the club,” Tracey said,
gesturing to Carlotta. “She’s obviously covering for her
thuggy friend who was hovering over Bebe’s purse just
before it went missing. No one else could’ve taken it.”
Carlotta’s mouth tightened. “Hannah is a friend of mine,
and she’d never steal. Anyone could’ve taken it when the
lights were down for the film.”
“Even you,” Tracey said.
Carlotta gritted her teeth, but didn’t respond.
Herb turned to Carlotta. “You say you know this woman
wel ?”
“Yes. For many years.”
“Does your friend live around here?” he asked.
She looked at Hannah, panicked by the thought that she
didn’t really know where Hannah lived. “Uh…yes. In the
area.”
“With my parents,” Hannah supplied. “On West Paces
Ferry.”
Carlotta tried to hide her surprise. West Paces Ferry was
one of the most expensive zip codes in the county.
“I don’t believe you,” Tracey said, her voice scornful.
Hannah’s eyes narrowed, then she removed a wallet from
her back pocket, removed her driver’s license and thrust it
toward Herb.
“West Paces Ferry address,” he confirmed.
“That doesn’t mean anything,” Tracey insisted.
“Why would I steal a damn purse?” Hannah asked.
“For the money,” Tracey said. “You couldn’t make much as
a server.”
“Not when everyone tips as badly as you do,” Hannah
offered.
“Hannah has another job,” Carlotta cut in. “We work
together.”
“At Neiman Marcus?” Herb asked.
“Uh…no. We have a side…thing.” Carlotta dazzled him with
a smile. “In fact, we were just called out on a job. So I’m
afraid we have to leave.”
“What kind of job?” Tracey demanded.
Carlotta swal owed hard. Tel ing Tracey about her part-
time gig would be the equivalent of announcing it in the
Peach Buzz section of the AJC. “For…the morgue,” she said
warily, then rummaged in her wallet and came up with the
lanyard ID that gained her entrance to crime scenes and
other places where dead bodies lay in wait. “Hannah and I
are body movers, and this is an emergency.”
Tracey looked horrified. “You move dead people?”
Hannah fished out her morgue ID and they both handed
the cards to Herb. He and the uniform looked them over,
then handed them back with a nod.
Herb faced Tracey and Bebe. “Ladies, it’s your word
against Ms. Kizer’s. No one saw her take the bag, and she
doesn’t have it on her.”
“She could’ve put it on the cart she was using.”
“The cart was searched, ma’am. I think we’re done here.”
“Let’s go,” Carlotta said to Hannah.
They left with the protests of Tracey and Bebe fol owing
them like a cloud.
“Thanks,” Hannah muttered. “Are we really going out on a
job?”
“Assuming you can get away.”
“Are you kidding?” Hannah reached around to untie her
apron. “I’m so out of here.”
On the way back through the ballroom, Carlotta scanned
the crowd for Peter. When he looked up and saw her
coming, he smiled. But his smile dimmed when he saw
Hannah with her.
“Having a good time?” he asked, his voice tentative.
“Yes,” Carlotta said. “But Wesley needs our help with
something, so I have to step out for a little while.”
Peter’s face darkened. “More body moving? I thought we
agreed you wouldn’t be doing this anymore.”
“I’l be back before you miss me,” she assured him with a
pat. “Have fun and don’t worry.” She had to tug her hand
free and tried to tamp down the guilt she felt as she
turned away. But she couldn’t deny the excitement
coursing through her veins.
“Leaving so soon?”
Carlotta looked up to see Rainie Stephens standing there,
her eyebrows raised, no doubt along with her journalistic
curiosity.
Carlotta shrugged careful y. “I left something at home. I’l
be back.”
“Good,” Rainie said. “Because I’d like to talk to you about
The Charmed Kil er case.” A phone rang and Rainie
reached for her purse.
Carlotta backed away—she could guess what the call was
about. “Let’s go,” she whispered to Hannah.
They trotted to the front door of the building, and out into
the thick summer night. After the cloying atmosphere of