Read Body Movers 4 - 4 Bodies and a Funeral Online
Authors: Stephanie Bond
bouncing around in her chest. A blind person could see
where the relationship between the two of them was
headed. Not only were they physically matched to each
other, but she could tell from the expression on Jack’s face
that he was truly listening to what Maria was saying. They
were intel ectual equals, with a shared passion.
It was the way it should be.
She lifted her hand and rapped on the outside of the wall.
Both of them turned in her direction. Jack’s expression
opened, while Maria’s closed. Carlotta ignored the snub.
“Hi, Jack. I found the, um, article we talked about last
night.” She reached into her purse and pul ed out the
bracelet box, then handed it to him.
He stood and opened the box. “When did your father give
this to you?”
“When I was fourteen.”
Maria took the box from him and Carlotta stiffened.
“Did he give you all these charms?” the woman asked.
“Most of them, yes. It was our father-daughter ‘thing,’ I
guess.”
“Are any of the charms missing?” Maria asked.
“No.”
“Are you sure?”
She gritted her teeth. “That’s what I said.”
“Thanks for bringing it in,” Jack said, breaking through the
tension.
“No problem.” Carlotta crossed her arms. “Jack, why was
Wesley here yesterday?”
“Hmm? Oh…he just needed to sign some paperwork
having to do with the recent charges.”
“Good. Because I was beginning to wonder if you and your
partner were systematically accusing every member of the
Wren family of being The Charmed Kil er.” She smiled
sweetly at Maria. “Did you want me to take that polygraph
exam while I’m here?”
“We’ll let you know,” Jack intervened.
Carlotta reached into her purse. “I brought these, too,”
she said, placing the stack of folded handkerchiefs in his
hand. Maria saw the exchange and turned back to the
reports. Something fel on Carlotta’s shoe and she looked
down to see the piece of Bazooka bubblegum the
prostitute Pepper had given her.
Jack leaned over to pick it up and handed it back to her
with a smile. “Bubblegum?”
She flushed at the memory of the woman’s promise that it
would make her jaws strong and for what purpose. “I…am
trying to quit smoking.” She unwrapped it and popped it
into her mouth.
“Has the black SUV been back?” Jack asked.
“Not that I’ve noticed,” she said around the stiff gum.
“You’ll cal if you see it again?”
She nodded because her mouth was so ful , then gestured
to the exit. “Hannah’s waiting, so I should go.”
“Is that your best friend, Hannah, the one you know
nothing about?” Maria asked, her eyebrows raised.
With great effort, Carlotta maneuvered all the bubblegum
to one side of her mouth, then looked back to Jack. “I’m
leaving now.”
He shifted his feet. “We’l get the bracelet back to you as
soon as possible.”
Carlotta turned and walked away, chewing like a cow. Jack
and Maria were now a “we.”
23
Carlotta walked out of the police precinct tel ing herself
that Detective Marquez was trained to get under people’s
skin—it was undoubtedly how she gleaned information
from people to “profile” them.
Stil , when Carlotta climbed back into Hannah’s van, she
studied her friend’s profile, which was actually very pretty,
and conceded that while Hannah seemed to happily blend
into the Wren family—she was like a surrogate aunt to
Wesley—Carlotta knew next to nothing about Hannah’s
background.
“Hannah, where are your parents?”
“Hmm?” Hannah pivoted her head, then looked back to
the road. “They’re in the area.”
“What do they do?”
Hannah frowned. “What’s with the questions?”
“Just making conversation. You never talk about them.”
“Oh…they’re in business.”
“What kind of business?”
“This and that—property, mostly.”
“Do you have any siblings?”
“Yeah.”
“Wel —sisters? Brothers?”
“Yeah.”
Carlotta lifted her hands. “And?”
Hannah’s face darkened. “And we don’t get along. End of
story. Change channels.”
“Okay,” Carlotta murmured, sorry that she’d pushed her
friend, and angry with Maria Marquez for making her feel
as if she should.
They spent the afternoon driving in an ever-widening
circle, visiting more grocery store bakeries and coming up
empty until they were as far east as Decatur. Carlotta was
losing hope that they’d find what they were looking for.
She glanced at her watch.
“You got a date?” Hannah asked.
“Peter is picking me up for dinner in an hour.”
Her friend made a face.
“He’s trying to suck up to you,” Carlotta said. “He sent you
gorgonzola ice cream the other night.”
“When?”
“When Coop called about a body run Monday evening. I
was having dinner with Peter and I, um, sort of fibbed and
told him you were picking me up. He sent you ice cream
from the restaurant.”
“What happened to it?”
“Coop ate it.”
Hannah sighed. “I would’ve wanted him to have it.”
“I’m worried about Coop. I’m afraid he’s on the verge of
falling off the wagon.”
“Al recovering alcoholics are on the verge of fal ing off the
wagon,” Hannah replied as she parked the van in yet
another grocery store parking lot.
“I guess you’re right,” Carlotta murmured, then opened
the door to climb down.
A few minutes later they were standing in front of the
bakery manager, showing him the now-curled picture of
the cake. When he scratched his head, Carlotta’s shoulders
fel , but then he nodded and tapped the photograph. “Yep,
that’s one of Tina’s designs—she’s our main cake
decorator.”
Carlotta’s heart raced. “Is Tina working today?”
The man checked the clock on the wall. “She just took a
break—she should be back in forty-five minutes.”
Carlotta turned to a rack of clearance summer items in
front of the bakery counter and picked up a pack of
sparklers. This was definitely looking like the place. “We’ll
come back.”
She and Hannah went back to the van to wait, but Carlotta
was too anxious to sit stil . “Pray that this Tina knows who
bought the cake. If we need to come up with a receipt,
we’re screwed.”
“I take it Jack doesn’t know anything about this little
information-gathering exercise.”
“Uh, no. Wait—look!” Carlotta pointed. “By the
Dumpster.”
Hannah squinted. “All I see is a guy on rol er skates.”
“The guy with the cake was on rol er skates. It has to be
him!” The man wore the dark utility jumpsuit of a
handyman. He was using the rol er skates to transport a
stack of broken pallets to the Dumpster, a few pieces at a
time.
“Do you recognize him?” Hannah asked, handing her a pair
of binoculars.
Carlotta adjusted the focus. “Same height, same build.”
Then she looked at his feet. “Same skates. It’s him, I’m
sure of it.”
“Do you want to call Jack?”
Carlotta lowered the binoculars. “No, let me see if he’l
talk to me.” She opened the glove compartment and
removed a map. After opening the van door and jumping
to the ground, she set off toward the guy.
“Excuse me,” she said, waving the map—the international
damsel-in-distress signal. “Can you help me?”
He stopped and looked her up and down. “Sure.”
“I’m lost.” The closer she walked to him, the more sure she
was that he was the man who’d mown her down with the
cake cart. “I’m looking for the Lenox Square mall,” she
said.
“Honey, you’re way off. You need to get back on that road
and head toward I-285—” He stopped and narrowed his
eyes. “Do I know you?”
“I might look more familiar if I were facedown in a sheet
cake,” Carlotta said wryly.
His eyes widened and he turned to flee.
She grabbed his arm. “What did you do with Eva McCoy’s
charm bracelet?”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.” He shoved her
to the ground and lunged toward the street, swinging his
arms to gain momentum on his skates.
“Stop!” she shouted, stumbling to her feet. “Come back, I
just want to talk to you!”
A few strides later something struck him in the head and
he dropped to the ground, his legs tangled. Carlotta ran up
to him, and Hannah was right behind her. A lumpy broken
brown-and-white crumbly mess lay all around the
groaning man, who had a bloody gash on the back of his
head.
“What did you do?” Carlotta asked Hannah.
“Nailed him with a frozen chocolate cream pie. It works
the same as a Frisbee.” Her friend pointed to the tin pan
rol ing away. “It’s all in the wrist.”
“You could’ve kil ed him.”
“But I didn’t.” Hannah bent down and pul ed the guy up by
the col ar. “Tel my friend what she wants to know, or else
I got a frozen layer cake with your name on it, too.”
“I don’t know anything,” he said with a moan, holding his
head.
“What’s your name?” Carlotta demanded.
“Give me a break here—I’m on parole.”
Hannah shook him. “What’s your name, dammit.”
“James Canary.”
“Why did you steal Eva McCoy’s charm bracelet?” Carlotta
asked.
He didn’t respond, so Hannah pinched him on the back of
the arm.
He howled. “All right, all right! Somebody hired me to rol
in a cake cart and steal the charm bracelet. I cut it off the
woman’s wrist, but I dropped it. When all hel broke loose,
I got outta there.”
“Who hired you?”
“I…can’t say.”
Hannah twisted his ear. “Start singing, Canary.”
“I don’t know! Everything was coordinated over the
phone. I picked up five hundred bucks cash at a drop-off
point. I was supposed to handle getting the cake and
swiping the bracelet. She told me to toss it in the river
when I was through.”
“She?” Carlotta said.
“Yeah…it was a chick. But I don’t know her name and I
never saw her, I swear.”
Carlotta gave Hannah a curt nod and she let the man fall
back to the ground.
“Did that tel you what you needed to know?” Hannah
asked as they walked back to the van.
“I’m not sure,” Carlotta said, her mind racing, tossing
around bits of dialogue in her conversation with Eva.
You haven’t heard any news about your bracelet?
No, and I really don’t expect to…I just want all of this
charm insanity to stop…I never realized how much I’d miss
it…
When she opened the van door, Carlotta’s phone was
ringing from her purse. She thought it might be Peter, but
instead Coop’s name was on the caller ID.
“Hello?” she answered.
“Hey—we’ve got a third body.”
She gripped the phone. “With a charm?”
“Yeah. I called Wesley, but he isn’t answering. And I can’t
get hold of the new guy who’s supposed to be helping
me.”
“Where are you?”
He gave her the address. “It’s a motel, a little run-down.”
Carlotta glanced around to get her bearings. “Hannah and I
aren’t too far away. We’l meet you there.” She ended the
call and swung into her seat, reciting the address to
Hannah.
“The Charmed Kil er strikes again?”
“Looks that way.” Carlotta tightened her seat belt as
Hannah screeched out of the parking lot.
She dialed Peter’s number and he answered on the second
ring.
“Uh-oh. I’m supposed to pick you up in twenty minutes—
this can’t be good.”
“A last-minute situation,” she said. “I’m so sorry.”
“Tel me this doesn’t have anything to do with that serial
kil er.”
“Okay,” she said, wincing.
He sighed. “You’re scaring me to death.”
“I’m with Hannah, and there are police on the scene. I’m
just fil ing in for Wesley. Can I get a rain check on dinner?”
“Always,” he said. “Call me.”
“I wil .” She disconnected the call, then tried to reach
Wesley, but he didn’t answer. She left a voice message for
him to call her and cursed under her breath.
“Where’s Wes?” Hannah asked.
“I think he started his courier job today.” Carlotta pointed.
“Turn here. The High Crest Motel should be up ahead. See
Coop’s van?”
Hannah peeled into the parking lot on two wheels,
attracting the attention of everyone on the scene and
sending a couple of locals scrambling for cover. The person
wearing the biggest frown when they alighted was Jack. He
was standing next to his sedan, talking on his radio. Maria
stood in the open door of a motel room talking to an M.E.
Yel ow police tape cordoned off the area. Coop stood
nearby with an empty gurney, wearing scrubs. Carlotta
hung back and yanked on one of Hannah’s chains to keep
her at bay until Coop signaled them over a few minutes
later.
“Carlotta,” Maria said drily when they walked up. “What a
surprise to see you here.”
Carlotta swallowed a tart comment. “Detective Maria
Marquez, this is my friend Hannah Kizer.”
The women traded hel os, but she could tell from her
friend’s body language that she didn’t like the way Maria