Authors: Stephanie Bond
keep out fifty bucks to pay the court, and geez, a guy
needed some pocket change.
His cel phone rang and Chance’s name came up on the
screen. Something told him not to answer it, but then he
remembered how Chance had come through when he’d
asked about a gun. Wesley pressed the call button. “Yeah,
dude, what’s up?”
“You know that big amateur-game rumor I’ve been
hearing?” Chance asked, his voice more animated than
usual. “It’s happening tonight, man. An all-weekend
tournament.”
Wesley’s pulse picked up. The promise he’d made to
Carlotta not to gamble reverberated in his head even as he
asked, “Where?”
“Basement of an office building in Brookwood on
Peachtree. It’l be a bunch of lawyers and telecom execs—
you’l clean up. Only twenty-five seats, and the top five
players are in the money. The grand prize is twenty-five
thousand, man.”
Perspiration beaded on Wesley’s lip. “What’s the buy-in?”
“Twenty-five hundred. You got it?”
Wesley hesitated. He could probably scrape together
another two hundred from his various hiding places. “I
have a grand.”
“I’l loan you the rest, man, for half of your take.”
Wes swallowed. He’d vowed never to borrow money from
Chance—somehow, it seemed even more dangerous than
borrowing money from loan sharks. He’d have to make up
something to tel Carlotta where he’d be, but he’d have his
cel phone with him if anything came up.
“Wes, are you there?”
“Yeah.”
“Are you in?”
Wesley’s mind raced. He’d been studying cards like crazy
since he’d last played, since he’d made that promise to
Carlotta. He’d watched marathon poker tournaments on
television and practiced at free online poker sites until his
computer had been confiscated. He’d become adept at
reading other players’ tel s and disguising his own. If the
cards fel his way, he could probably double his money, or
triple it. And if he won…he’d be debt free and would have
earned enough of a reputation to get a backer for the
World Series of Poker tournament on a regional level. An
opportunity like this didn’t come around very often.
“Come on, man—shit or get off the can. Are you in?”
Sending silent apologies to Carlotta, Wesley stood and
grinned into the phone. “I’m in.”
23
“You okay, Carlotta?”
She snapped out of her reverie and turned to see Michael
retying his tie in a mirror in the employee break room. She
nodded, realizing she was staring into her open locker.
What had she been looking for? She was so worried about
Wesley that she couldn’t concentrate.
“Are you sure?” he asked more gently, coming over to
stand next to her.
She closed the locker door and put a smile on her face.
“I’m fine. Just being a big sister.”
“Is Wesley giving you trouble again?”
“Actually, no. He has a job, he’s looking forward to doing
his community service, and he even asked if he could stay
with a friend this weekend.”
“So he’s behaving himself and you have the place to
yourself. Did I miss something?”
She smiled. “Mothers know that when kids are on their
best behavior, that’s the time to worry.”
“Except you’re not his mother,” Michael chided. “He’s an
adult, sweetie.”
“I know,” she said, realizing that Michael wouldn’t
understand the sixth sense she’d developed where her
brother was concerned. He was up to something, she just
knew it. And the fact that he was staying at Chance
Hol ander’s apartment did little to soothe her anxiety. She
hoped that he simply wanted a little privacy—that he was
meeting up with some girl that he didn’t want to bring
around. Thinking about Wesley’s sex life made her a little
queasy, probably because it made her think about her own
sex life, which was fictional. But stil , thinking about
Wesley hooking up with a girl was preferable to al the
other trouble he and Chance could get into.
But Michael was right—there was no sense in borrowing
trouble, especially since she already had plenty. Peter had
called again last night, and it had taken all the wil power in
her body (and a cigarette) not to pick up the receiver. She
wanted to keep her distance to give Peter a chance to
grieve, and to give the police a chance to sort things out
where Angela’s death was concerned.
“Michael,” she asked casually, “do you know a Susan
Harroway?”
He squinted. “I can’t keep the Harroway women straight—
they’re all perky blond paper dol s. Why?”
She shrugged. “No reason. I heard her name mentioned
the other day and wondered who she is, that’s all.”
“I think Susan is married to Davidson Harroway. He’s a
bigwig at the CIN cable news network. If she’s the one I’m
thinking of, she’s some kind of local tennis phenom who
was chosen to play a round with Chris Evert when she
came to town to raise money for charity.”
Carlotta’s pulse picked up. Angela played tennis—at the
funeral hadn’t one of her teammates mentioned how
much they would miss her?
They walked out to the sales floor and she fol owed
Michael to the shoe department. “You mentioned the
other day that you had a friend who worked at a Botox
clinic.”
“Uh-huh,” he murmured, readying his cash register.
“What was the name of the clinic?”
He glanced up. “Why?”
She didn’t have to fake the blush. “I’m considering a little
work.”
He snorted. “Your skin is flawless and Cindy Crawford
would kil for your bone structure. What gives?”
“I’m just thinking about a consultation.”
“I hope this doesn’t have something to do with that
Ashford guy.”
Carlotta swallowed hard. “Of course not.”
“Good, because I’d hate to see you start changing yourself
for a man.”
“Are you going to give me the name of the clinic or not?”
He tore off a piece of sales receipt and wrote on it. “Here’s
the name of the clinic. A consultation wil set you back
three hundred dol ars.”
She raised her eyebrows at her friend.
“So I’ve been told.”
Smothering a laugh, she said, “Thanks.”
Michael leaned in conspiratorial y. “Don’t look now, but
there’s an action-hero type headed your way.”
Carlotta turned and broke into an instant sweat to see
Detective Terry, dark suit and hideous tie, heading her
way. “Gotta go,” she murmured and pushed away from
the counter.
Her first thought was that Wesley was in trouble again, but
then she realized the detective could be here about a
number of things—her parents…Angela. Christ, her life
was way too intertwined with the Atlanta PD.
“Good morning, Detective,” she said as he strode up to
her.
“A private word with you, Ms. Wren?” He didn’t wait for a
response, simply grabbed her by the elbow and steered
her toward a dressing room in the adjacent men’s
department.
She trotted to keep up, trying to shake off his grasp. “I’m
coming, you don’t have to manhandle me.”
“I have a feeling,” he muttered, “that you couldn’t be
handled even if a man wanted to.”
She was stil mul ing over the meaning of his remark when
he propel ed her into a changing room, fol owed her in and
closed the door behind them.
Carlotta crossed her arms, more to protect herself from his
towering nearness than anything else. “Really, Detective,
must you be so dramatic?”
He narrowed his eyes. “You’ve got some explaining to do.”
She tried to remain aloof but failed miserably. “What are
you talking about?”
“You were questioned in a murder case last year?”
She hugged herself tighter. “So?”
“So, you didn’t think it was worth mentioning to me at
some point?”
“I fail to see what business it is of yours. Besides, I wasn’t
arrested. And they caught the murderer.”
“I know.” He frowned harder. “And you also were arrested
for assault?”
“Those charges were dropped! Besides, the big galoot
deserved to have a tire iron wrapped around his head,
trying to entice my brother into gambling so he could get
him deeper into debt.”
The detective jammed his hands on his hips and shook his
head. “Cooper Craft asked the M.E. to autopsy Angela
Ashford based on questions you raised about that men’s
jacket she bought.”
“And?”
“And after the fact, he and I both find out that your
credibility is…tainted.”
She glared. “Tainted how? I didn’t kil anyone!”
“You tried to—a tire iron isn’t a toy, Carlotta! The bottom
line is that you don’t look so good on paper.”
She was thrown off guard by the fact that he’d used her
first name…and by the strange feeling that despite his
condemnation, he seemed slightly impressed with her
outlaw status. She swallowed the retort on her tongue
because there was something bigger at stake. “So there’s
not going to be an autopsy?”
He pursed his mouth and took his time answering.
“Actually, the autopsy took place this morning.”
She inhaled. “And?”
“And…the M.E. found signs of a struggle. Angela Ashford
was probably held underwater by her neck. Her death has
been reclassified as a homicide.”
Mixed feelings stabbed at her—relief that her hunch had
been right, but horror that the woman had died at the
hands of…someone.
Then she frowned. “So what was all that crap about me
not being credible?”
He frowned harder. “If you ask someone to pul in a
professional favor, it’s only fair that you put everything on
the table so there aren’t any surprises. Coop really went
out on a limb for you on this one.”
Coop, the man who thought she was smart. She angled her
chin at the detective. “Then I guess it’s a good thing I was
right.”
“Guess so…except now you realize, don’t you, that your
boyfriend is our prime suspect?”
“Peter Ashford is not my boyfriend.”
“Really? I found a valet driver at the Four Seasons hotel
who saw Peter Ashford kissing a dark-haired woman
standing next to a Monte Carlo the night you said you ran
into him at a party there.”
Wow, the man had eyes and ears everywhere. Did he also
know that she’d crashed the party? “That kiss
was…spontaneous. It didn’t mean anything.”
Detective Terry leaned in and pressed one hand on the
wall behind her, effectively pinning her in, his body mere
inches from hers. His dark gaze lowered to her mouth. “I
could see how that could happen,” he murmured, his voice
throaty.
She moved her head back and held her breath, taking in
his cleanly shaven jaw that hinted of the beard that would
reappear in a few hours. She wondered how often the
man shaved, and if his propensity for hair extended to his
broad chest. She’d never been much for hairy chests,
although suddenly the idea wasn’t repulsive.
“But you have to admit,” he said, his breath close to her
cheek, “the fact that someone saw you kissing in public a
couple of days before the man’s wife was murdered
is…coincidental.”
Her breathing became shallow. Carlotta lifted her hand
and pressed against his chest until he stepped back, giving
her room to breathe, although her lungs stil didn’t work
as wel as she would’ve liked. Her hand tingled with
awareness of the wall of muscle beneath his shirt and tie.
“Peter and I weren’t and aren’t having an affair,” she said
as steadily as she could manage. “I told you that our
relationship ended years ago.”
“Really? Then why does Peter Ashford carry a photo of you
in his wal et?”
She blinked. “What?”
His eyebrows went up. “You didn’t know?”
“Of course I didn’t know.”
“But his wife probably did. Which might explain why she
attacked you here the day she was murdered.”
Her throat convulsed. “I…I…you know about that?”
He gave her a tight smile. “Your security department has
been helpful. The question is, why didn’t you tell me that
she became violent?”
“I didn’t think it was…relevant.”
“Oh, wel , that makes everything okay,” the detective said
sarcastically. Then his jaw hardened. “It’s starting to look
as if Peter Ashford kil ed his wife over you.”
“He didn’t,” she said with conviction. “I know Peter and he
could never do anything like that.”
One eyebrow quirked. “I thought you said the other night
was the first time you’d talked to him in years.”
“That’s right. In over ten years, in fact.”
One side of the detective’s mouth slid back. “People can
change a lot in ten years.”
“I know,” she conceded. Look at her, for instance. “But
Peter simply isn’t capable of murder.”
He gave her a flat smile. “Everyone is capable of murder,
Ms. Wren. And some people just might think that you
were in on it with him.”
“Th-that’s ridiculous.”
“Is it? I spoke to your associate, Michael Lane. He said that
you’d threatened to strangle Angela.”