Authors: Stephanie Bond
dash as Chance zigzagged through traffic and wondering if
some day he and Coop would be peeling his buddy off a
guardrail.
“So you got probation in your case, huh? You must’ve had
a kick-ass attorney.”
“Yeah, she was great, not bad to look at either.”
“Did you fuck her?”
“What? No. She’s a woman—she’s not interested in me.”
“Don’t be so sure,” Chance said. “And trust me, older
women are great in bed.”
Wesley smirked. Chance had more women than he could
count. The guy was legendary in his conquests, and
bragged that he’d once bedded four women at once.
Wesley didn’t doubt it. Girls loved Chance’s money and his
parties and to hear Chance tel it, his dick.
The guy had it made, Wesley thought, shaking his head. As
his friend guided the little sports car down the street
toward the town house, he said, “Thanks for the ride
home, man. And the piece.”
“Call it a bonus for taking care of the speeding tickets.”
Chance laughed. “I pretended to be an employer doing a
background check and called to see if the tickets were
gone. My record is clean as Clorox.”
“Great.” Wesley jerked his thumb toward the town house.
“Want to come in?”
“Nah, I’l pass,” Chance said. “All that talk about women
got me horny. I think I’l go get a massage, if you know
what I mean.”
He did. Chance liked paying for sex, even though he didn’t
have to. But his trust fund had to be spent somehow.
“Catch you later,” Wesley said.
“I keep hearing rumors of a high-stakes poker game being
put together. When it happens, I’l give you a call.”
“Okay,” Wesley said, and stepped away from the car. He
approached the house with trepidation, looking up and
down the street for suspicious cars. Seeing none, he
breathed a little easier and went inside.
After he reached his room, he closed the door and
inspected the gun again, taking a couple of test aims in his
mirror. Then he glanced around for a hiding place, trying
to think of somewhere that Carlotta—and the police—
would never look. He considered and discarded the top of
his closet, the clothes hamper and a boot. Then he glanced
at Einstein’s enclosure and smiled. No one would look
there.
He unlocked the pin, slid the screen top aside and reached
in to place the small revolver and box of shel s in the base
of a driftwood decoration that he seemed to like more
than Einstein did. As he expected, Einstein barely moved.
“Hungry yet?” He retrieved the squeaking mouse from its
temporary home and dangled it in front of the python,
without consequence. “A few more days and I’l have to
force-feed you,” Wesley warned, returning the mouse to
its container. “Just don’t swallow my gun. I’d have a hel of
a time explaining that one to the veterinarian.”
And to Carlotta. She’d never understand that having the
gun within reach made him feel better able to protect her.
He smirked, thinking of his green-eyed, flame-haired
probation officer. If she knew he had a gun, she, too,
would have his hide.
He lay down on his bed and crossed his hands behind his
head. Of course, that might be fun.
Yes, things were definitely looking up.
20
“Is everything okay, Carlotta?”
Carlotta started from her reverie as she nodded to her
boss. “Fine, thanks.”
“Glad to hear it,” Lindy said. “You’ve seemed preoccupied
of late. Last week’s sales reports just crossed my desk and
for the first time that I can remember, your name wasn’t
at the top.”
A flush burned its way up Carlotta’s face. “Um, I guess I’m
going through a little slump.”
“It happens,” Lindy said. “I just hope it doesn’t last too
long. There are lots of sales associates who’d love to have
a crack at your department.”
Carlotta’s stomach did a little flip and she dipped her chin.
The fact that Neiman’s prided itself on having the best,
sharpest employees was what had attracted her to the
company in the first place—next to the employee
discount, of course. “I understand, Lindy. Don’t worry,
things are…back to normal.”
“Good,” Lindy said. “Carry on.”
Watching her boss stride away, Carlotta gave herself a
mental shake. She had to get her mind back on her job and
off the preoccupations that threatened to drive her
insane, namely, Angela’s death, and Peter’s possible
involvement.
Oh, and then there was everything else that was wrong in
her life.
It had been three days since Angela’s funeral, three days
since she’d spoken with Coop about the men’s jacket and
her suspicions concerning Angela’s death, and the more
time that passed, the more she wished she’d kept her big
mouth shut.
Detective Terry was right—her deep-seated guilt over her
feelings for Peter were driving her to make preposterous
assumptions about the jacket issue, which could’ve been
innocent and completely unrelated to Angela’s marriage
and drowning.
Scowling at her own stupidity and determined to be rid of
the jacket, she went to the dressing-room area and
searched through a long rack of items tagged to be
returned to the floor or to the manufacturer. She located
the jacket and decided the best place for it was the trash—
it was paid for, and no one was going to claim it. And with
the heavy scent of smoke clinging to it, clearly it couldn’t
be returned to the floor.
She took the jacket from the hanger and wadded it up,
cursing herself for even getting involved, and felt
something unyielding in the inside breast pocket. Curious,
she reached inside and pul ed out a cigar encased in a
small plastic bag with a zip top. Peter had an aversion to
smoke—surely the cigar wasn’t his. She held up the jacket
and checked the size. When Angela had purchased the
jacket, Carlotta had assumed that Peter had fil ed out in
the past ten years, but now that she’d seen him, this jacket
was way too big for Peter. She squinted, recalling the thin
frame of Angela’s father. This jacket was way too big for
him as wel .
The hair on the back of her neck tingled as she considered
the jacket and the cigar. She careful y rehung the jacket
and covered it with a garment bag. There was no way she
could smuggle it out and take it home—employees’ bags
were checked when they left the store.
But the cigar…
She studied the eight-inch brown cylinder, wondering if it
could help her locate the person who had purchased it. On
the back of the plastic zip bag was a gold seal. She
squinted to make out the letters: Moody’s Cigar Bar,
Atlanta, Georgia.
She considered calling Detective Terry and tel ing him
about this new development, but the thought of his
sarcastic reaction stopped her short. She had enough
trouble with the man as it was. Besides, the cigar might
lead to nothing at all, and it would be easy enough for her
to locate Moody’s and ask a few discreet questions
herself. A quick check of the phone book at the checkout
counter gave her a street address—on the fringes of
downtown Atlanta in an unpredictable part of town.
Despite her promise to Lindy and to herself to get her
mind back on her job, she was distracted and jumpy until
her shift ended, then blew off Michael in the employee
locker room in her rush to get to her car. Traffic was
horrible, as usual, the roads choked with commuters vying
to get home and tourists flocking to the aquarium. She
craved a cigarette in the worst way—God, it didn’t take
long to fall back into a bad habit.
Like Peter, for instance.
Toying with the radio buttons and tapping on the steering
wheel helped to keep her hands busy, but her mind
continued to rehash the events of the past couple of
weeks. She had hoped that sel ing his engagement ring
would help her to sever the bond she had foolishly
maintained with Peter’s life. Yet with this little field trip,
would she open yet another can of worms? Insinuate
herself further into his affairs? She kept telling herself that
she should just let it go, but something compel ed her to
keep moving.
She got lost twice trying to find the address, but finally
spotted the smal neon sign—Moody’s—in a dark window,
and darted in front of another car to nab a lone parking
space. The area was on the verge of gentrification, but
Moody’s, sandwiched between a new trendy-looking
coffee shop and an adult video store, appeared to be part
of the old neighborhood.
She climbed out, dropped a few coins in the parking meter
and made her way inside. A brass bel tinkled when she
opened the big, solid door with a leaded glass insert. The
shop was what the name implied—a dark, atmospheric
space housed in a deep, narrow storefront with tal
ceilings, art deco light fixtures and original black-and-red
checkerboard linoleum tile floors. The lazy swirl of low-
hanging ceiling fans did little to dispel the acrid odor of
tobacco that permeated the air, tickling her nose and
throat, making her want a cigarette even more.
A horseshoe-shaped black lacquered counter dominated
the center of the store. The wal s were lined with glass
cabinets housing boxes of cigars and clear canisters fil ed
with fragrant blends of loose tobacco. A scratchy recording
of big band music sounded from an unseen source. The
crammed, quaint space gave her the feeling that she’d
stepped back in time, back to when pompadours and
polka-dot dresses were in style, when men wore sock
suspenders and hats with their suits.
She liked it instantly.
The sound of footsteps drew her attention to a stairway
near the back of the room that she hadn’t noticed. A pair
of shapely legs preceded a gray pencil skirt hugging slim
hips, a prim white blouse straining over generous breasts
and a nice double strand of pearls. The woman’s face
appeared, and the words steel magnolia sprang to
Carlotta’s mind. The pink-lipstick smile was welcoming, but
beneath the teased pouf of bleach-blond hair, the kohl-
lined eyes were piercing.
“Hel o,” the woman said as she made her way down the
stairs, her drawl low and smooth. She was wel into her
fifties, and looked as if she’d kicked some ass in her day—
and could stil cause some serious harm if the situation
called for it. In her elegantly manicured hand she held a
half-smoked cigar, its smoke plume wafting behind her. At
the bottom of the stairs a sign with an arrow pointed to a
martini and wine bar on the upper level and Carlotta
realized suddenly why the parking places were ful and the
store empty.
“Hel o.”
“Can I help you, darlin’?”
“Maybe,” Carlotta said, suddenly nervous as she reached
into her purse and withdrew the cigar. She walked deeper
into the store and could hear the buzz of a crowd
overhead. “I’m looking for the person who purchased this
cigar from your store.”
The woman stepped forward with a little frown between
her eyebrows. She set her cigar in one of the dozen
colored glass ashtrays lining the massive black bar, then
reached for the plastic bag. A young man wearing a
waiter’s waist apron came clopping down the stairs and,
referring to a notepad, moved from case to case, selecting
cigars, obviously fil ing orders.
A knot of customers came down, businessmen all of them,
ties loosened and voices raised. “See you next time, June,”
they said to the woman, and she called them each by
name when she said goodbye.
When the door closed behind them, the woman handed
the plastic bag back to Carlotta, then picked up the cigar
she’d been smoking and took a hearty puff. “That is a very
expensive cigar, Miss—?”
“Um, Carlotta. Carlotta Wren.”
“I’m June Moody,” the woman said with a slow nod. “May
I ask how it came into your possession?”
“I…found it,” Carlotta said, hedging.
The woman’s mouth twitched. “Do you smoke, Carlotta?”
“Not cigars.”
June Moody smiled. “You ever tried?”
“No.”
“Would you like to?”
Carlotta hesitated. “Wel …sure.”
The woman’s smile lit her eyes and Carlotta had the
feeling that she’d just passed some sort of test. “Why
don’t you join me upstairs, and we can talk about how you
happened to find such a fine cigar.”
Intrigued and edgy, Carlotta fol owed the woman upstairs.
“Carlos,” June said as they ascended, “would you please
bring me an Amelia when you come up?”
“Sure thing, Miss Moody.”
They walked upstairs, where the furnishings were plush
and the air was rich with smoke. The martini and wine bar
resembled an old-fashioned parlor, with deep velvet chairs
and thick rugs. The bar lined one side of the landing,
surrounded by groupings of chairs and couches around
low tables. Most of the seats were occupied by
businessmen, with a stray woman here and there.