Authors: Stephanie Bond
Behind the bar was an older gentleman with a ponytail. He
nodded to the women, his gaze raking Carlotta with
appreciation.
“May I offer you a drink, Carlotta?” June asked. “On the
house.”
“A martini, thank you,” Carlotta said to the man, taking in
the art deco barware, decanters and glasses. “Nice place.”
“I’m glad you like it,” June said, nodding her approval
when the man dropped two olives in each crystal-clear
martini. “Thank you, Nathan. Wil you ask Tonia to keep an
eye on the shop? Carlotta, let’s take our drinks in here.”
Carlotta picked up her martini and fol owed the woman
into a room where more tables and chairs were situated
around a fireplace that, even unlit, was a welcoming
feature. It was easy to see why Moody’s was a busy little
place and Carlotta wondered with consternation why she
hadn’t heard of it before now.
“How long have you been in business?” she asked June as
they sat in sumptuous gold-colored club chairs.
“It was my father’s business,” the woman said, taking a sip
of her drink. “He passed away four years ago. It’s been my
place since then.”
Carlotta surveyed all the men sitting back, cradling drinks
and puffing on cigars. “I wondered where all the straight
men in Atlanta were hiding.”
June laughed. “They’re right here, darlin’. Bring in your
girlfriends sometime.”
Carlotta smiled at the thought of bringing Hannah and
Michael to this place. They wouldn’t exactly “blend.”
Carlos appeared and handed June a small, slender cigar
about five inches long. June thanked him, then handed the
cigar to Carlotta. “I hope you don’t mind. I took the liberty
of choosing a cigar I thought you’d like.”
“Not at all,” Carlotta said. “But I don’t know what to do
first.”
“Some people take off the band, but I like to leave it on so
that the tobacco doesn’t stain my fingers, at least until it
burns down.”
She read the colorful band: Key West Havana Cigar
Company. “Okay.”
“Here’s a cutter,” June said, handing her one of the small
guil otine-looking devices that littered the tables next to
enormous art-glass ashtrays. “The tapered end is the cap
end. That’s the end that you cut and light. See the cut
line?”
Carlotta scrutinized the cigar, and saw the faint
impression. “Yes.”
“Don’t cut beyond the line or you’l risk cutting the
wrapper leaf.”
Carlotta situated the cutter and severed the cap with
surprising little effort.
“Good. Do you have a lighter?”
She withdrew from her purse the trusty mother-of-pearl
lighter that she’d unearthed from a bureau drawer
yesterday—just in case a cigarette fel into her lap.
“Hold the cigar in your hand and rotate the cigar tip near
the flame. It’s best if you don’t actually touch the tip to the
flame. Just let it char from the fumes.”
Carlotta did as she was told, fascinated. When embers
began to appear, June said, “Okay, now put the cigar to
your mouth and draw by pul ing in your cheeks, like this.”
She imitated the woman, noting the unfamiliar, but not
unpleasant, taste of the leaf upon her lips. She was
gratified when the tip of the cigar began to glow.
“Good.” June sat back in her chair and raised her martini
to her mouth. “It’s like giving a blow job, only more
enjoyable.”
Carlotta inhaled sharply at the unexpected comment and
her lungs rebel ed, sending her into a coughing spasm.
“Don’t inhale,” June said, laughing. “Take it slow, puffing
occasionally to keep it lit.” She smiled. “Also like a blow
job.”
Carlotta recovered, thinking it was a good thing that her
memory was long, or the comparison would be lost on her.
But she acknowledged that she liked the feel of the cigar in
her hand, and that she was very tempted to like the
woman across from her, although admittedly, June Moody
was difficult to read.
“So,” June said, turning her head to exhale, “tel me about
the Dominican Cohiba.”
Carlotta recognized the name as the brand of the cigar
she’d brought in. Her mind whirled for an explanation
more reasonable than the real one. “I work in a
department store, and someone left it. I’m just trying to
find the owner.”
“I see,” June said mildly. “That’s mighty generous of you.”
Carlotta smiled guiltily.
“Did you actually see the person who left it?”
“N-no.”
“You just found it?”
“In the pocket of a men’s jacket that had been returned.”
“Ah. So why couldn’t you just check the sales receipt?”
June puffed on her cigar casually, but her eyes were wary.
Carlotta averted her gaze and pretended to concentrate
on her cigar.
“If you expect me to give you the name of my best
customers,” June said, “you’re going to have to come up
with a better story than that.”
With a sigh, Carlotta decided to come clean with the
woman. What choice did she have? “The jacket that I
found the cigar in was purchased by a woman named
Angela Ashford, who’s…dead.”
She had June’s ful attention now. “Go on.”
“Angela drowned, but the circumstances around her death
are suspicious and I thought…that is, I wondered…if she
could have been involved with a man who had…hurt her.”
June exhaled, then gave Carlotta a pointed look. “You
mean, kil ed her?”
“I don’t know.”
“If her death is suspicious, then why aren’t the police
involved?”
“Let’s just say they’re not interested.”
“So you thought you’d do a little investigative work on
your own?”
Carlotta nodded.
“Were you friends with this Ashford woman?”
“Sort of,” Carlotta hedged.
“Was she married?”
“Yes.”
“So this jacket, the cigar—they don’t belong to her
husband?”
“No.”
June’s eyebrows shot up. “I see. So the person who bought
the cigar could have been a lover?”
“Maybe. Again, I don’t know.”
June sat forward and tapped ash into the beautiful
ashtray. “So you’re asking me to divulge the names of the
customers who bought this particular kind of Cohiba,
knowing that it could lead to an investigation?”
Carlotta nodded again. “If it’s an expensive cigar, it
couldn’t be that many customers.”
“Only a handful,” June confirmed.
Carlotta’s heart began to beat faster, partly due to the
nicotine infusion, partly due to the feeling that she was
onto something. She puffed on the cigar, then exhaled in a
frustrated sigh. “Are you going to help me?”
June studied her for a few seconds, then leaned forward
and used her cigar to gesture to the people around them.
“Carlotta, most of the guys in here are decent fel as who
come to hang out because their wives don’t want cigar
smoke stinkin’ up the living-room curtains. But some of my
customers—wel , they aren’t the nicest people. Are you
sure you know what you’re getting yourself into?”
Carlotta swallowed a mouthful of the martini, then shook
her head against the sting of alcohol. “No. But this
feels…necessary.” Besides, she was starting to get used to
having “not nice” people in her life: a fugitive father,
lurking loan sharks, a detestable detective.
June lifted her glass. “Fair enough, darlin’. I’l give you
what you want. But you’d better watch your step. If your
suspicions are correct, one dead girl is plenty enough.”
21
“Mrs. Susan Harroway,” Carlotta read from the napkin on
which she’d written the names that June Moody had given
to her the night before, after the cigars had been smoked
and another round of martinis exhausted.
“Harroway is an old Atlanta name,” Hannah said, reclining
on Carlotta’s bed in ful goth getup and fingering the silver
barbel piercing her tongue. “I don’t know a Susan in
particular, but I’ve catered parties for various Harroways.”
“I’l ask Michael at the store. Maybe he’l know something
about her.” Carlotta worked her mouth from side to side.
“But June told me the woman said the cigar was a gift, so
that could mean her husband, her father, a brother.”
“Or a boyfriend,” Hannah added.
Carlotta frowned. “Not everyone cheats on their spouse.”
“Sure they do, if they live long enough. Who else is on the
list?”
“Dr. Joseph Suarez. I looked him up in the phone book and
he’s a plastic surgeon. His office is in Buckhead.”
“A plastic surgeon in Buckhead? Ooh, big surprise.”
“Michael mentioned that he had a friend who worked in a
clinic where Angela got Botox injections. Maybe Dr. Suarez
works there.”
“Hmm. Next name?”
“Bryan D’Angelo. June says he’s an attorney and I got the
feeling that he’s a little shady.” She bit the end of her
fingernail. “Maybe Liz Fischer knows him.”
“Who’s that?”
“Wes’s attorney,” she said dryly. She hated the thought of
calling the woman. Liz’s history with Detective Terry made
her even less palatable in Carlotta’s eyes.
“Do you have a beef with Liz?”
“She was my dad’s attorney, too.”
“Oh?” Hannah’s voice rose in curiosity, probably, Carlotta
presumed, because she rarely mentioned her father.
“What about Dennis Lagerfeld?” Carlotta asked to redirect
Hannah’s attention.
Her friend squinted, as if the name was familiar.
“His is the last name on the list. June said he used to be a
professional athlete.”
“Oh, right,” Hannah said, nodding. “Receiver for the
Falcons, maybe ten years ago. Man, he was fucking
gorgeous. I wonder if all that muscle has gone to fat.”
“There’s no obvious connection to Angela.”
“They could have met anywhere—at a party, at the club,
at a day spa.”
“Or he could be a client of Peter’s,” Carlotta murmured.
Mashburn and Tul y prided themselves on representing
the investments of athletes and celebrities. Part of the
reason she had first begun col ecting autographs when she
was a teenager was due to the access her father had once
had to famous people.
“So what if you find out that one of these people does
have a connection to Angela Ashford? Are you going to
confront them, Nancy Drew?”
“I don’t know.” Carlotta sighed. “I’l cross that bridge if I
get there.”
“Any news on whether there’s going to be an autopsy?”
“No. I haven’t talked to Coop since the funeral.”
“What, you need an excuse to talk to the hunky
undertaker? Step aside and let me at him.”
Carlotta smirked. “You just want to have sex in a coffin,
don’t you?”
“Doesn’t everyone?”
“You need help, you know that?”
Hannah smirked. “So have you heard from the grieving
husband?”
Carlotta laid the napkin on her nightstand. “He’s called a
few times.” Six, to be exact. “But I haven’t answered.”
“Did he leave messages?”
“Just that he called and would like to talk to me.” In the
last couple of messages, though, she’d detected a bit of
desperation in Peter’s voice.
“Are you going to call him?”
“Probably,” she admitted. “Eventually.”
Hannah held up a pack of menthol cigarettes. “Want a
smoke?”
“Yes,” Carlotta said, then moaned. “No. I have such a
headache after smoking that cigar last night…of course,
the martinis probably didn’t help.”
“I can’t believe you didn’t take me with you.”
“You were working.”
“Stil .”
Carlotta smirked as she reached for a cigarette. “I’l take
you back sometime—you’d love it. Everyone there looked
married.”
Hannah clapped her hands. “This is great. I thought when
you gave up the party-crashing, you were going
mainstream on me. But then you kissed a married man,
and now you’re smoking again!”
“I can’t afford to start smoking again. I’m already broke,
and do you know how much cigarettes cost these days?”
“Yeah,” Hannah said holding up the box of cigarettes from
which Carlotta had taken a smoke. “I kind of bought these.
And for someone who’s always broke, you always seem to
always have money to spend on clothes.”
Carlotta looked at her closet that was too full for the
double doors to close. Designer bags and shoes, belts and
coats, dresses and jeans bulged past the door frames. She
thought of the money from her pawned engagement ring
that was rapidly dwindling. “Too bad I can’t sel some of
this stuff.”
“You can,” Hannah sang. “eBay.”
“Under the rules of Wesley’s probation, we can’t have a
computer in the house.”
“Oh. Bummer.” Then Hannah brightened. “I know a
place—Designer Consigner, in Little Five Points. They’ll
take all this name-brand crap off your hands.”
Carlotta frowned. “For how much?”
“You set your price, and they add a percentage. You get
paid when it sel s, and you know this shit wil sel , like,
instantly.”
Carlotta picked up the purse she’d carried last night—last
season’s Coach, but stil in prime condition. And she had at
least two dozen more like it, al different brands. Even if