Authors: Stephanie Bond
you remember?”
The woman stopped and looked Carlotta over. “Are you a
cop or something?”
“Heavens, no. I work at Neiman’s and we sold a lot of
these bracelets.” She fingered the charms. “The rumor is
that the charms tel a person’s future. I just wondered if
there was anything on your friend’s bracelet that…I don’t
know—spooked her?”
The woman scratched behind her ear. “Let’s see, there
was a bird of some kind—a chicken, I think.”
Carlotta’s pulse leaped. The fact that the kil er had taken a
charm from Shawna’s bracelet and put it in her mouth was
huge. It proved Coop hadn’t added the charm to Shawna
Whitt’s mouth when he arrived on the scene to move the
body. It was all Carlotta could do not to whip out her
phone and call Jack on the spot.
“And there was a question-mark charm,” Monica
continued, “which seemed to fit Shawna because she
usually worked the information desk.” She snapped her
fingers. “Wait. There was a charm that freaked Shawna
out a little. It was a woman asleep or something, with her
arms crossed over her chest.”
Carlotta’s mouth went dry. She picked up the corpselike
charm from her own bracelet. “Like this one?”
“That’s it! Wow, how creepy that the two of you have the
same charm.”
“I’m sure there were lots of duplicates,” Carlotta
murmured, then took a sip from her coffee cup. “The
intertwined-hands charm sounds interesting. Did Shawna
have a boyfriend?”
“No.”
“Are you sure? Maybe someone she knew from online?”
“Not Shawna. She was thinking about joining an online
dating service, but she didn’t have the chance.”
Carlotta poured a packet of creamer into her cup. “I
suppose the police came by and asked all kinds of
questions.”
Monica shrugged. “I heard a detective came in on one of
my days off, but I didn’t talk to him. I didn’t know
anything, and I was just so sad, I had to get away from
here for a few days.”
“Did Shawna mention if any customers made her feel
uncomfortable?”
Monica laughed. “If you work retail long enough, you meet
your share of weirdos. But I don’t remember her saying
anyone in particular was bothering her.”
Carlotta smiled. “Being a bookstore, you probably get lots
of loners.”
“Oh, yeah. The guys who can’t get a date on weekends put
on their toupees and cruise the aisles ogling the help.”
Monica offered a wry smile, then glanced down the
counter to see another customer waiting in front of the
pastry case. “Excuse me.”
Carlotta nodded and walked away sipping her coffee,
thril ed with the information she’d gleaned—information
that apparently Jack had missed out on due to bad timing.
She walked back through the bookstore to study the
information desk—a tall, curved counter with a phone and
computer. It was unmanned at the moment. Carlotta
imagined the plain, slender woman standing behind the
counter, offering up shy smiles to customers. Had she
gotten too chatty with a psychopath? Inadvertently ticked
him off in some way?
The last two victims, the Georgia State coeds, had been
found with book charms in their mouths. Maybe the
charms were clues to the murderer’s identity. Maybe he
was an intel ectual, or fancied himself to be. If so, it made
sense The Charmed Kil er would hang out in a bookstore.
But Michael Lane certainly didn’t fit that profile.
“May I help you?” a young man asked, stepping up to the
information counter.
Carlotta gave him a big smile. “Does your store specialize
in a certain type of book? Or is there a unique section that
would bring in a particular customer?”
“We sel more textbooks than anything else, mostly to
students, of course. But we have lots of professionals
come in to buy reference books, too.”
“What type of professionals?”
He shrugged. “Engineers, doctors, architects, you name it.”
Any one of whom might have latched on to Shawna Whitt.
Carlotta pul ed out a picture of Michael Lane. “Have you
seen this man in here?”
The man squinted. “He looks familiar, but…I don’t think
so.”
Eager to further exonerate Coop by proving he didn’t
know Shawna Whitt, she pul ed out a picture of him taken
on their road trip to Florida. In it, Coop looked tanned and
happy, a far cry from his disheveled appearance being
flashed on television and in newspapers. “How about this
man? Have you ever seen him in here?”
The clerk bit his lip, then nodded. “Yeah, that’s the white-
van guy. He’s in here a couple of times a week, checking
out the medical books. I figure he’s a med student or
something.”
The breath stalled in her lungs. “How…how do you know
he drives a white van?”
“Hard to miss, it’s so big. He parks it across the street.”
The man turned and pointed out the window at the
metered street parking. “Are you looking for him?”
She nodded, but the effort was painful. Tears pushed on
the backs of her eyebal s. “He’s a long-lost friend. Thank
you for your time.”
She stumbled to a comfortable chair in a seating area to
gather herself. So what if Coop came into the store often?
It didn’t mean he’d known Shawna Whitt.
But if he was a regular customer, wouldn’t he have seen
her at some point? If so, why hadn’t Coop mentioned
when they’d arrived to pick up the woman’s body that she
seemed familiar?
Her palms were sweating against the paper cup of coffee.
She opened the notebook and forced herself to write
down the details about Shawna and her charm bracelet,
but her handwriting was shaky. Carlotta ached to call
Hannah or Wesley for support, but she was afraid to give
voice to the questions and doubts revolving in her head.
Tel ing herself that more information about Shawna Whitt
might reveal another direction she could fol ow, Carlotta
left the bookstore and drove to the woman’s home. She
kept an eye on the side mirror, but didn’t notice anyone
tailing her. Maybe she was all wrong about Michael
fol owing her into the ladies’ room at Moody’s Cigar
Bar…or perhaps he’d simply lost interest.
She didn’t remember the exact address of Shawna Whitt’s
Berkley Heights home, so she drove through the older
neighborhood until she spotted the little house. Except for
the overgrown yard, it was a dream cottage for a single
woman—neat and picturesque. Carlotta parked on the
street and got out to stretch her legs. She glanced at the
neighboring houses. A curtain moved in the window of a
bungalow across the street.
Carlotta smiled and headed in that direction. Nosy
neighbors could be a treasure trove of information. She
cringed, thinking of all the things her neighbor Mrs.
Winningham would spil about the Wrens, if given the
opportunity.
From the looks of the bungalow, the occupant had lived
there for a while. The houses on either side looked
updated. Carlotta strode up to the door and knocked.
When she didn’t get a response, she knocked again. Finally
the door opened a few inches to reveal a woman’s
wrinkled, wary face. “Yes?”
“Hi,” Carlotta said with a smile. “My name is Carlotta
Wren. I was wondering if you could answer some
questions for me about the lady who lived across the
street.”
“The one who got murdered?”
“Yes, Shawna Whitt.”
“Didn’t know her,” the woman said.
“That’s okay,” Carlotta said. “I’l bet you’ve lived in this
neighborhood for a while.”
“That’s right.”
“And you have a nice vantage point to be able to look out
for your neighbors. You probably notice things that other
people don’t.”
“Sometimes,” the woman admitted.
“Did you see anything strange the day that Shawna Whitt
was found in her home?”
The woman’s eyes narrowed. “Who are you?”
“I’m working close to the investigation,” she hedged. “I
was here the night Miss Whitt’s body was removed.” The
woman seemed satisfied with the vague identification.
“May I ask your name, ma’am?”
“Audrey Cole.”
“Ms. Cole, please try to remember. Did you notice
anything out of the ordinary that day?”
“Like what?”
“People in the neighborhood who didn’t belong? Strange
vehicles?”
“No.”
Carlotta pressed her lips together, her mind racing for
another approach. “What about the day before?”
“Now that’s another matter entirely,” the woman declared
with a smile. “I noticed a van cruising through the
neighborhood. I figured it was the phone company, or Ms.
Rosen three doors down getting new carpet. That woman
buys new carpet every eighteen months.”
Carlotta swallowed. “What color?”
“Same color every time—Sante Fe beige.”
“No, I meant what color was the van?”
“Oh. It was white.”
Her stomach rol ed. “Are you sure?”
“Yes. A long, white van.”
“Did the van stop at Shawna’s house?”
“No, but it did slow down—once when it went up the
street, and again when it came back down. Like the driver
was checking for an address.”
“Did you happen to see the driver?”
“No. My eyes aren’t as good as they used to be.”
That made Carlotta smile. “Just one more thing, Ms. Cole.
Did you tel the police about the white van?”
“I talked to a big, nice-looking man in a suit, but I didn’t tel
him about the van.”
“Why not?”
“He didn’t ask.”
Carlotta pursed her mouth. So unless another neighbor
had been as attentive as Ms. Cole, neither the APD nor the
GBI had this bit of information.
And now that Carlotta had it, what was she going to do
with it?
She thanked the woman and made her way back to her
car, her mind racing. She needed more info on the case,
and no way was she going to get it from Jack or Maria.
On impulse, she opened her phone, pul ed up a number on
her contacts list, and connected the call. The phone was
answered on the first ring, as Carlotta would’ve expected
from any self-respecting newspaper reporter who was
afraid to miss a scoop.
“Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Rainie Stephens speaking.”
“Rainie, it’s Carlotta Wren.”
“Hi, Carlotta. What can I do for you?” The woman’s tone
was equal parts curiosity and suspicion. Since Rainie and
Coop had shared some kind of relationship before Carlotta
had met either one of them, the reporter had to know why
Carlotta was calling.
Carlotta smiled into the phone. “Let me buy you lunch,
Rainie.”
10
“Salad and water,” Rainie Stephens said, handing her
menu to the waiter.
Carlotta smiled at the server. “Scratch that. Bring us an
appetizer platter and two martinis with lots of olives.”
After the man left, the curvy redhead angled her head
toward Carlotta. “Are you trying to get me drunk?”
“Are you trying to stop me?”
“Are you kidding? So far, this is the best date I’ve had all
year.”
Carlotta laughed, then clasped her hands on the table in
front of her. “You and I made a pretty good team
recovering Eva McCoy’s stolen charm bracelet.”
“Glad to help. Although I’ve spoken to Eva and she’s
worried sick that all the media she got over her Olympic
Lucky Charm Bracelet might have set off this kil ing spree.”
“I can see why she’d be upset, but who knows how or why
the charms figure into the murders.”
“That’s what I told her.”
“So…you don’t know?” Carlotta probed careful y.
Rainie shook her head. “No.”
Carlotta didn’t know whether to believe her, but she
backed off a notch. “The Charmed Kil er case has been
good for the newspaper business.”
Rainie nodded. “It’s the kind of story that reporters dream
of…and it’s the most horrendous thing I’ve ever
experienced. I’d give anything if it had never happened. I
can’t believe that Cooper—” Her voice broke and she
fought for composure. “The past couple of days have been
a nightmare.”
“I know. I went to see Coop in jail.”
Rainie leaned forward. “How is he?”
“Not good. But I don’t believe he did this, Rainie.”
“I don’t want to believe it, either.”
“Your articles about the The Charmed Kil er murders—was
Coop your source in the morgue?”
“You know I can’t reveal my sources, Carlotta.”
“But I need your help, and so does Coop.”
Rainie squinted. “Is there…something going on between
you and Coop?”
“No.” Carlotta shifted on the chair. “I mean, there was a
time…a brief window when we might have…” She arched
an eyebrow. “Did you and Coop have a thing?”
Rainie’s smile was coy. “We had our window. I was wil ing,
but Coop was going through a rough time. It was after he’d
gotten out of jail, out of rehab—do you know about that?”
Carlotta nodded. “The woman he wrongly pronounced
dead on the accident scene?”
“Right. Everything had worked itself out by the time I met
him, but he was stil …searching. But the Cooper Craft I