Authors: Stephanie Bond
Stephanie Bond
Body Movers
1
“Does this make my ass look big?”
Carlotta Wren stood in the dressing room of Neiman
Marcus in the Lenox Mall in Atlanta, Georgia, her arms ful
of designer bathing suits that Angela Ashford, one of her
least favorite customers, wanted to try on. They weren’t
even halfway through the selections and already Carlotta
wanted to murder the woman.
She dutiful y glanced at Angela’s surgically sculpted glutes
falling out of a tiny patch of metallic-blue fabric. “No, your,
um, ass looks…great.”
Angela tossed her blond hair over her shoulder and
pouted at her rear reflection in the three-way mirror. “You
think?”
Carlotta’s mouth watered to say, “Way better than it
looked in high school,” but bit her tongue. It was part of
the game, after al —Angela played the role of poor little
rich girl with a confidence problem, and Carlotta played
the stroking, sympathetic friend. Both of them deserved
an Oscar.
Angela turned around and careful y rearranged her newly
acquired breasts in the bikini top that barely covered her
nipples. Then she slipped her narrow feet into the silver
high-heeled sandals sitting nearby and performed a three-
quarter turn to peruse her long, slender figure from all
angles. Carlotta tried not to compare her own ample
curves to the woman’s lean lines. Or her own gap-toothed
grin to Angela’s perfect, Clorox smile.
She was not jealous of Angela Ashford.
“This suit is a definite maybe,” Angela announced.
Carlotta managed not to rol her eyes—the sixth “definite
maybe” so far. “I have to warn you that the trim on that
suit won’t hold up to chlorine.”
Angela made a face. “Good grief, I don’t actually swim in
our new pool—I don’t even know how to swim. I just want
to look amazing.”
Carlotta bit down on the inside of her cheek. “Do you want
to choose from the ones you’ve set aside so far, or do you
want to try on the rest of these?”
Angela looked irritated. “I’l try on the rest.” Then she
smiled meanly. “And I’l be needing several new spring
outfits. With shoes, of course. Peter told me to treat
myself to anything I wanted since he just got a huge bonus
and our wedding anniversary is coming up. He’s so
generous.”
Carlotta busied herself removing the next bathing suit
from its hanger, trying not to react. Peter, as in Carlotta’s
former fiancé. Just like every time Angela came in for a
shopping binge, Carlotta reminded herself that her
relationship with Peter Ashford had ended over a decade
ago. To be precise, one week after her father had skipped
bail on his indictment for investment fraud and he and her
mother had gone on the run. The local media had had a
field day.
RANDOLPH WREN FLIES THE COOP
RANDOLPH WREN, FUGITIVE JAILBIRD
RANDOLPH WREN AND WIFE VALERIE ABANDON
CHILDREN
Just a few weeks shy of eighteen, Carlotta hadn’t been a
child, but she’d led a rather charmed and sheltered life up
to that point. Suddenly faced with raising her nine-year-
old brother, Wesley, and with no extended family to rely
upon, she had clung to her boyfriend, Peter. Too tightly,
apparently, because after the headlines had exploded, he
had explained over the telephone that their lives had
grown too far apart—he was in col ege at Vanderbilt
University in Tennessee, and she stil had to finish her last
semester of high school in Atlanta. Translation: Your name
is tainted and I don’t want to be associated with your
family scandal.
With maturity and hindsight, she had come to understand
why Peter had bowed out, but at the time, the rejection of
the man she had loved for most of her teenage years, the
man who had taken her virginity, had been akin to having
her heart surgically removed.
“I hope it doesn’t make you uncomfortable when I talk
about Peter,” Angela said as she yanked the tie to the
bikini top, baring her rigid boobs. She kicked the two-
hundred-dol ar scrap of Lycra across the floor of the
dressing room.
“N-no,” Carlotta said, scrambling to rescue her
merchandise. She straightened, then handed Angela a
one-piece suit and gave a little laugh. “Why should it?”
Angela stepped out of the minuscule bikini bottoms and
stood nude before Carlotta for a few seconds before
stretching the next swimsuit over her tight bod.
“Because, wel , you know, the whole pretend engagement
you two had when we were in high school,” Angela said,
preening in the mirror.
The Cartier engagement ring was proof that it had been
more than a “pretend” engagement, but Carlotta wet her
lips and forced a casual note into her voice. “That was a
lifetime ago. We were…kids.”
“That’s what he says,” Angela offered cheerful y. “And that
if the two of you had actually married—” she laughed at
the improbability “—that it never would have lasted.”
Carlotta’s heart twisted, but she managed a smile. “Then
everything worked out for the best, didn’t it?”
In the mirror, Angela leveled her feline gaze on Carlotta. “I
suppose so.”
Carlotta steered the conversation back to clothes and,
thankful y, Angela was distracted by the appearance of the
“perfect” bikini (two of them) and the armfuls of designer
dresses and pantsuits that Carlotta pul ed from every
couture department. A phone call to the shoe department
on the lower floor brought Michael Lane to the women’s
clothing department. He headed toward Carlotta, pushing
a hand truck laden with colorful boxes of Pucci and Gucci,
Don Ciccil o and Donald J. Pliner. “Here’s everything we
have in size seven narrow.”
“Thanks—you’re a dear.”
He gave Carlotta a wry smile. “How are you holding up?”
Carlotta scowled toward the closed door of the dressing
room. “I’m ready to strangle her.”
“Down, girl. Double-A is one of your best customers.”
Carlotta smirked at Michael’s use of her nickname for
Angela. “I got an eyeful of her latest upgrade—let’s just
say she’s no longer a double-A in the bra department.”
He clucked. “Hey, what do you expect? The competition is
tough in Angela Ashford’s social stratum.”
In Angela Ashford’s social stratum. Michael didn’t realize
that he was talking about an arena that Carlotta herself
had been destined for prior to having her life jerked out
from under her. Michael wasn’t a native of Atlanta, and
she didn’t go out of her way to tel friends and co-workers
her entire sordid family history. In fact, she usually lied.
She’d gotten quite good at lying and pretending.
“I suppose you’re right,” Carlotta conceded. “But, Christ,
she always makes me feel like such a peon. And she’s in
rare form today.”
He looked sympathetic. “Just remember that commission
is the best revenge.”
Carlotta laughed rueful y and waved goodbye as she
wheeled the shoes toward the dressing room. Why did
Angela insist on shopping with Carlotta at her beck and
call? She could shop at any boutique in Atlanta or, as her
own mother used to do, she could call the store and have
a personal shopper select items and bring them to her
home for her approval. Or she could simply seek the
assistance of another clerk at Neiman’s. But the woman
seemed to take great pleasure in shopping under
Carlotta’s care, which, Carlotta realized, was a thinly veiled
excuse for Angela to flaunt her successful life with Peter. It
stung, but in truth, Carlotta needed the commission to pay
the seemingly unlimited number of bil s that she and
Wesley, now nineteen years old, generated.
At the thought of her brother, a bittersweet pang struck
her. Wesley had never fully recovered from their parents’
abandonment and had suffered more than his share of
emotional problems. When he was younger, those
problems had manifested into behavioral issues in school,
exacerbated by the fact that his IQ was higher than that of
most of his instructors, especially in math. Despite his
intel ect, Wesley had barely graduated high school last
year, and now as a directionless adult, his problems
manifested into compulsive behavior—more specifical y,
gambling.
His affinity for poker had landed him in debt up to his
neck—and hers. And he’d been foolish enough to borrow
from some unsavory characters. A henchman for one of
the loan sharks had come to see her at the department
store a few months ago, threatening bodily harm to both
of them if Wesley didn’t make a payment. Inadvertently,
her brother always seemed to drag her into his messes,
but every time she’d considered tel ing him that he was of
age and to hit the road, she couldn’t. She couldn’t
abandon him as her parents had, yet the knot of worry in
her chest never eased. She agonized over what trouble he
might get into next, and how they might stay afloat.
Carlotta sighed. One of the worst things about living
paycheck to paycheck was imagining Angela Ashford
having a one-hundred-dol ar lunch with her friends—many
of them girls Carlotta had gone to school with and had
once considered her friends—saying, “That poor Carlotta
Wren, stil single and working retail, can you imagine?” But
if it was the price she had to pay for a hefty commission,
so be it. If Angela spent true to form, the commission on
this sale alone would be enough to pay this month’s
mortgage and electric bil .
Or at least last month’s.
Carlotta opened the door to the dressing room to find
Angela sitting on a bench, half-naked, drinking from a
silver flask. She quickly swallowed and wiped her mouth.
“Just getting a head start on my two-martini lunch.”
Carlotta remained silent but knew that anyone who
packed their own booze had a problem. Her mother had
kept a similar flask in her purse for whenever the urge
struck for a “drinkie-poo.”
“I brought shoes,” Carlotta said brightly, wheeling in the
bounty.
Angela pushed to her feet shakily enough to tel Carlotta
that she’d taken more than one “drinkie-poo” in Carlotta’s
absence, but apparently it had given the woman enough
energy to embark upon another spending binge that
included six outfits, eight pairs of shoes, including a pair of
tall, exotic black boots that Carlotta coveted, plus a rather
astonishing array of risqué underwear (“Peter likes me in
black”). Angela even ventured into the men’s department
where she chose an exquisite cashmere jacket with a crest
embroidered on the lapel—Peter’s favorite brand, Carlotta
recalled fondly. And the charcoal-gray would look great on
Peter with his fair hair and dark skin. From the size, it
appeared that he had fil ed out a little in the shoulders.
She hadn’t seen him in ages, only once in the mall a couple
of years ago. He hadn’t known she was standing a mere
ten feet from him while he ordered a double latte from a
coffee shop. She had wanted to call out his name, to smile
and say how nice it was to run into him, that she’d seen his
and Angela’s wedding announcement and photo in the