Authors: Stephanie Bond
back against the cool tile on the wall. No matter what he
did, he seemed to screw up. He’d thought he was
protecting his sister when he and Chance had embarked
on the Great Strip Club Caper. Instead he had humiliated
one of the most dangerous men in Atlanta for no reason—
a man he stil owed a great deal of money.
Wesley gave a little laugh. They’d just had a fake funeral
for Carlotta, and his parents hadn’t bothered to show.
He’d told Carlotta that their father had smel ed a setup,
but with so much time on his hands to think in this grimy,
stinky john, he’d begun to wonder if Carlotta had been
right all these years—that their parents didn’t give a damn
about them, and wouldn’t risk apprehension even if one of
their kids was lying in a pine box.
No, he told himself with a mental shake. The fact that he
was doubting his father was just proof of how isolation
and lack of food could mess with your mind.
It was his own fault if The Carver decided to carve him up
and scatter his parts all over the city. He’d come to the
shabby warehouse office in East Atlanta with a peace
offering—the memory chip holding the photos he’d taken
of the man with Cherry, a wel -endowed transvestite, and
a payment of nine hundred dol ars on his loan. But before
he could state his good intentions, he’d been hauled off
his bike, relieved of his wal et, handcuffed, then tossed in
this box.
They hadn’t fed him, but he’d drunk from the sink faucet
to keep from becoming dehydrated. Mouse, The Carver’s
col ections man, told him they were keeping him until the
boss decided what to do with him.
Wesley surveyed the tub he was in, wondering how many
other people The Carver had dissected here, allowing their
blood to run down the drain before gathering their limbs
in garbage bags and disposing of them with the junk mail.
A scratch sounded at the door. Wesley glanced at the
crack at the floor to see the shadows of two sets of
shoes—Mouse had brought company this time. Wes’s
heart jumped to his throat.
The dead bolt slid open, then the knob turned and the
door swung wide. Mouse and another man walked in and
unceremoniously hauled him up out of the bathtub.
“What’s new, fellas?” Wesley asked congenial y.
“Shut up,” Mouse told him as they half dragged him out of
the room and down a hallway. The floor was concrete and
the studded walls had been gutted of drywall. “The boss
wants to talk to you.”
“I can talk better with my hands,” Wesley said. “How
about uncuffing me?”
Mouse clocked him up the side of the head. “I said shut
up.”
Wesley blinked until the starbursts faded, and decided to
take Mouse’s sage advice. They deposited him in an
office—if thugs had offices. It was pretty much just a
windowless room with a rickety straight-back chair and
some menacing-looking stains on the concrete floor. There
was a drain in the corner—just in case the room had to be
hosed down, he guessed.
They slammed him into the chair and left, closing the door
behind them.
He concentrated on not sweating, visualized glaciers and
avalanches and other cold scenes. Ice fishing…igloos…polar
bears…Klondike bars.
But when the door burst open, so did his pores. The last
time he’d seen The Carver, the man had been inebriated
and sitting on the john with his pants around his ankles, a
piece of duct tape over his mouth, his wrists bound with a
cable tie.
He had recovered well.
The loan shark was impeccably groomed, his skin tanned
and glowing, his salt-and-pepper hair smoothed back from
his face, every strand in place. Wesley didn’t know much
about clothes, but the brown suit and col arless shirt
looked expensive, as well as the square-toed shoes. The
only thing that hinted the man was a gangster was the
thick rope of gold around his neck.
Oh, and the switchblade in his hand.
With one click, a six-inch blade appeared. Wesley leaned
forward and vomited the water that had been sitting in his
stomach, splashing the man’s expensive square-toed
shoes.
“Christ,” the loan shark said, taking a few steps back. “Are
you going to piss yourself next?”
Wesley lifted his head and licked his dry lips. “I hope not.”
“Me, too.” The Carver leaned down to get in Wesley’s
face. “You stupid little shit, I ought to gut you for what you
did to me.”
“I’m sorry,” Wesley mumbled.
He looked incredulous. “You’re sorry?”
“Someone shot up my house when my sister was home. I
thought it was your guys. I was wrong.”
The Carver paced all around him. Wesley tensed,
expecting to feel the blade plunge into his bony body,
disemboweling him. Sweat rol ed off his nose and dripped
onto the floor.
“I brought the memory chip from the camera to give you,”
he offered.
“Where is it?”
Wesley kicked off one of his tennis shoes. “Under the
insole.”
The Carver used the knife to lift the insole, then withdrew
the blue memory card, pierced on the tip. “This is the only
copy of the pictures?”
“Yes.”
The man dropped the punctured card on the floor, then
stomped on it for good measure. Every time his heel came
down on the chip, Wesley flinched.
When The Carver stopped, he was panting and slightly
disheveled. Using his hand, he smoothed his hair back in
place, then bestowed a slow smile on Wesley. “But I can
understand that you were trying to protect your sister.”
Wesley swallowed hard. “You can?”
“Sure. I have sisters. That’s why I’m going to let you live.”
Relief flooded Wesley’s body.
“In return for a fee.”
“Fee?”
The man began grooming his nails with the tip of the knife.
“For pain and suffering.”
“H-how much?”
“Twenty-five large.”
Wesley felt weak again. “I don’t have twenty-five grand.”
“Then you need to raise it, Wesley. By five o’clock.”
“I don’t know anyone who has money like that.”
“Think hard,” the loan shark said. “Because if you don’t
come up with the money, you’re a dead man. Then who’s
going to protect your sister?”
Wesley bit down on the inside of his cheek until he tasted
blood.
“I’m a busy man, so you’d better be thinking of who you
need to call. I’m going to have a sandwich. I’m sending
Mouse in with your cel phone—he’ll make the cal s for
you. If you try to signal someone or get the police
involved, your sister is as good as dead.” He walked closer.
“Here’s a little incentive.”
The Carver grabbed Wesley’s arm and with a twist of his
wrist, sliced a two-inch letter C into Wesley’s forearm.
The pain was intense. Wesley gasped as his blood dripped
onto the floor to mix with the other stains. Since his hands
were stil cuffed, he pressed his arm to his chest to stem
the bleeding. He ground his teeth to keep from crying out
in pain.
“With every phone call, you get another letter,” The
Carver said, his voice deadly calm. “So unless you want my
entire name tattooed on your arm, you’d better make
them count.”
The man strode out of the room and nodded to someone.
Mouse walked in holding Wesley’s cel phone, all business.
“Who do you want me to call?”
Wesley’s mind raced.
“You don’t want to keep the boss waiting,” Mouse
advised.
“Chance Hol ander.”
“Is the number in your phone?”
“Yeah.” His arm was throbbing. “Can you uncuff me, man?
My hands are numb.”
“No can do.” Mouse operated the phone with his fat
fingers, then held it to Wesley’s ear. “The volume is turned
up so that I can hear everything. No funny stuff, got it?”
“I lost my sense of humor on the floor,” Wesley said.
“Watch your step.”
He prayed that Chance would pick up. After two rings, he
did. “Wes?”
“Yeah, it’s me.”
“Where the fuck are you, man? Your sister is worried sick.
She came over with some pierced chick and they kicked
my ass—”
“Dude, listen. I’m in a bind and I need twenty-five grand.
Can you help me out?”
“Twenty-five grand, are you nuts? Have you been
kidnapped or something?”
“Or something. Can you get it?”
“Yeah, sure. But it’l take me a couple of days.”
“I don’t have a couple of days. What can you scrape
together in a couple of hours?”
“Bad timing, dude. I just paid my carriers, and my girls, and
I bought a new hot tub—”
“How much?”
“It was a steal—a ten-thousand-dol ar model, but I got it
for five.”
Mouse rol ed his eyes and Wesley grimaced. “Not the hot
tub! How much can you get together?”
“I could probably find a grand in the couch cushions, but
that’s about it.”
Wesley swal owed against his disappointment. “Okay,
thanks anyway.”
“Dude, where are you—”
Mouse closed the phone. “You know what this means.”
“Come on, man,” Wesley pleaded. “Give me a mul igan.”
Mouse frowned. “What’s a mul igan?”
Note to self: Don’t use golf terms when negotiating with
street criminals. “A freebie. No one has to know.”
“No can do.” The big man went to the door, opened it and
shook his head.
The Carver came in stil chewing his sandwich, and sighed
heavily, as if Wesley were causing him to miss his favorite
TV show. He opened the switchblade. “Hold him, Mouse.”
Wesley resisted, but could only look away. It took more
strokes to carve an A into his skin, more finesse, more
blood. He screamed like a girl.
The Carver used a white handkerchief to wipe the blood
off his knife. “I hope for your sake your next call is more
productive.” He retracted the blade and left the room.
Mouse held up the phone. “Who now?”
Wesley couldn’t think for the pain. His blood was
everywhere.
“Come on, kid. We all want to go home. Give me a name.”
“Liz Fischer. The number is in there.”
Mouse dialed it, then held the phone up to Wesley’s
mouth.
Liz had been his father’s attorney and had gotten Wesley
off on probation when he’d been busted for hacking into
the courthouse database. Recently they’d started
banging—everything that Chance had told him about older
chicks was true. Carlotta would have an aneurysm if she
knew.
Liz answered on the first ring. “Wes? Are you okay? Jack
Terry called me asking if I’d seen you.”
So Carlotta was beating the bushes. “Uh, I’m fine…for now.
But I have a situation here and I need some cash. A lot of
it.”
“How much?”
“Twenty-five grand.”
She gasped. “What kind of trouble are you in?”
“The expensive kind.”
“Wesley, you know I adore you. But I can’t get involved in
whatever mess you’re in. I have my career and reputation
to think about.”
He tried to keep his voice steady. “I wouldn’t ask if it
wasn’t important.”
“I’m sorry. I just can’t help you. Maybe you should call the
police—”
Mouse flipped the phone shut, then sighed. “I should’ve
worn a dark suit.” He went to the door, opened it and
shook his head.
The Carver reappeared, a paper napkin tucked in his col ar
like a bib. Wesley considered making a run for it, but he
was having trouble even holding his head up. Besides, he
was stil wearing only one shoe. And he wouldn’t get far
with his hands cuffed. Mouse held him for the next
carving, but Wesley didn’t put up much resistance as an R
was engraved on his arm. He didn’t even have the strength
to squeal. The Carver left with no conversation.
Wesley was on the verge of passing out.
“You’re kil ing me, kid,” Mouse said. “Give me a name—a
good one.”
With what little strength he had left, Wesley considered
his options—all of them bad, but one of them viable.
Objectionable, but viable.
He gave Mouse the name and hoped for the best.
5
Carlotta stood in her living room and glared up at Jack.
“Why are you just standing there? Do something!”
Jack seemed to struggle for patience. “Carlotta, we can’t
just send in a SWAT team to storm the place. We need a
warrant, and I can’t get one without probable cause. I
need some kind of proof that Hol is Carver kidnapped
Wesley or—” He broke off. “Or that he’s holding him.”
“You were going to say proof that he’s kil ed him, weren’t
you?” “No.”
“So that’s the guy’s real name—Hol is Carver?”
Jack nodded.
She threw her hands in the air, and cringed when pain
zipped up her left arm. “If you’re on first-name basis with
this criminal, why don’t you call him up and ask him if he
has Wesley?”
He hesitated. “With Hol is Carver, the communication is
one-way.”
“Meaning what?”
“Meaning,” Hannah interjected, her eyes narrowed at
Jack, “The Carver is a narc. And the police leave him alone,
right?”
Carlotta looked back to Jack. “Is that true?”