Authors: Stephanie Bond
“Your probation officer is a chick? And she fol owed you?
Ain’t that il egal or something?”
Wesley stared at Chance, incredulous. “Dude, what we
were doing was il egal.”
“No money changed hands.”
Wesley looked up and down the hallway to make sure no
one was in earshot, then leaned in. “Possession is a crime,
dude. I could’ve gone to prison!”
“Stil , her fol owing you don’t seem right. What did she
do?”
“She drove up in her car and told me she’d revoke my
probation unless I gave her the bag.”
Chance’s eyes rounded. “So you just gave it to her?”
“Yeah.” Wesley squirmed. “And then she…gave it back.
Said she wouldn’t look inside or report it if I brought it
back to you.”
“She knows where you got it?”
“She only knows the building. I didn’t mention your
name.”
Chance frowned. “It’s a good goddamn thing.”
Wesley lifted his hands. “I’m sorry. I know you were
counting on me, dude.” He waited for a beat, holding his
breath. Chance and his moods could be unpredictable.
Chance sighed, then slapped Wesley on the shoulder. “It’s
okay, not your fault.”
Wesley let the air out of his lungs. “I feel bad owing you so
much money.”
His buddy chewed on his lip, then snapped his fingers.
“Take my statistics exam in the morning, and I’l knock off
five hundred.”
Wesley weighed his options. “Okay. Tel me when and
where.”
Chance pul ed a business card out of his shirt pocket and
scribbled the info.
“Nobody wil question that I’m you?”
“Are you kidding? I’m never in that class—it’s at fucking
eight o’clock in the morning. I need a B on the exam. I
know you could ace it, but if I get an A, someone wil start
asking questions, got it?”
“Got it.”
“You need a textbook or something?”
“No, I’m cool,” Wesley said.
Chance shook his head. “Man, if you’re so damn smart,
why are you hanging around with me?”
Wesley frowned and jerked his thumb toward the
stairwel . “Gotta go, man. She’s waiting for me.”
“Is she hot?”
Wesley hesitated, thinking of E.’s long, wil owy shape and
her take-no-prisoners attitude. “Yeah.”
Chance chortled. “Enjoy.” E. Jones was waiting patiently in
her car when Wesley got back to his motorcycle. “Any
problems?” she asked.
He shook his head, afraid to say anything, stil sure that
this was some kind of setup, that a cop was waiting for
him around the corner.
“Good,” she said. “I’l fol ow you home.”
Wesley climbed on his bike with acid churning in his
stomach. Carlotta would be home by now and mad as hel
that he was out on his motorcycle. If he arrived home
escorted by his probation officer, she’d want an
explanation, and E. Jones was likely to give it to her. He
didn’t want Carlotta to think he was messed up in drugs,
and besides, she’d be happy to name Chance as the source
of the transaction. He drove careful y on the way home,
conscious of the woman in the red car behind him. At the
town house, he eased into the driveway and waited for
her to pul up beside him.
She zoomed down the passenger-side window. “Is this it?”
He nodded.
“Okay, I’l see you Wednesday.”
Her nonchalance caught him by surprise. The window was
halfway up when he said, “Hey, E., why didn’t you look in
the bag?”
She leaned down until she could see him. “Because if I’d
seen the contents, I would’ve had to report it.”
“So why did you ask me to give it to you?”
She gave him a little smile. “To see if you would trust me.
See you later.”
He nodded and watched her drive away, dazed and a little
confused. She could’ve had his ass thrown in jail and been
rid of him, not to mention scored points with the D.A.
He would never understand women in a thousand years.
Wesley pushed his motorcycle into the garage, frowning
when he saw the damage to the Monte Carlo’s bumper
and side. Had Carlotta been in an accident? He jogged to
the house in the waning daylight, breathing easier when
he saw lights and heard movement in the kitchen. Carlotta
stood at the stove wearing her fuzzy yel ow bathrobe,
stirring a pot. A box of macaroni and cheese stood open on
the counter. She had to have heard him, but she didn’t
turn around.
“Hey,” he ventured.
“Hey,” she said, her voice low and tired.
“I saw your car. What happened?”
“Some jerk sideswiped me on the way home this evening.”
His heart jumped in his chest. “Are you okay?”
“Yeah, I’m fine.”
“What kind of car was it? Did you see the other person?”
She sighed. “I already gave my statement to the police. I
don’t know who it was.” Then she turned. “Why? Do you
know something that I don’t know?”
He shook his head, but they were both probably thinking
the same thing—it could have been one of his creditors
leaving a message.
“Don’t worry about it,” she said. “It was probably a run-of-
the-mil asshole Atlanta driver.” She put a lid on the pot,
then crossed her arms. “I was looking forward to those
lamb chops.”
“Sorry,” he said. “I’l make them tomorrow.”
“Where have you been and why are you driving? You
know you’re not supposed to.”
“I know. But I had to meet with my probation officer today
and run some other errands. I swear it won’t happen
again.”
She leveled her gaze on him. “I’m going to have that
engraved on your tombstone.”
His throat convulsed, glad that she didn’t know just how
close he’d come to disaster today.
“Want some macaroni and cheese?” she asked.
He relaxed, relieved that she had let the matter go. “Sure.
I’l make us a salad.” He walked to the refrigerator and
began removing ingredients. “And you know, you can
dress up the boxed mac and cheese by adding real
cheddar cheese, sour cream, brown mustard and a dash of
Worcestershire sauce.”
She sat at the table, happy to let him take over the meal,
and he was happy to do it. “Is that why yours always tastes
better?”
“Yup.”
But as the small talk continued, Wesley had a feeling from
the pinched look around Carlotta’s dark eyes that she was
getting ready to drop a bombshel .
He was right. After her first bite of salad, she announced,
“I found the postcard from Mom and Dad that you were
hiding.”
The tennis-ball can in the garage—he’d tipped his hand to
that particular hiding place when she’d visited him in jail.
“I didn’t think you’d want to know,” he said careful y.
“Detective Terry has it now.”
Anger sparked in his stomach. “You gave it to him? Why?”
“I didn’t mean to. It fel out of my purse while he was
here.”
“What was he doing at the house?”
She sighed. “I had some information regarding the deaths
of Angela Ashford and Lisa Bolton. Unfortunately, I may
have also implicated myself.”
He gaped. “How? Because you have history with that
Ashford jerk?”
“Yes. And as you’l recall, that ‘Ashford jerk’ saved me
from one of your thugs the other night, plus used his own
money to get you off the hook.”
Wesley looked down at his plate. “I know, but Jesus, sis,
he’s dragging you into a murder investigation.”
“I’l be okay,” she insisted. “They’re only leaning on me to
put pressure on Peter.”
“Are you stil in love with this guy, after all he did to you?”
She took her time answering. “Wesley, our breakup wasn’t
entirely Peter’s fault. He was young, and he wasn’t ready
to deal with everything that Mom and Dad heaped onto
me when they left.”
“Meaning me,” he said.
She wiped her mouth with her napkin. “That was part of it.
But it was mostly the scandal that Dad created. Peter’s
family didn’t want him to be associated with the
headlines…and I don’t blame them. Did you know that
Peter is working for the firm where Dad used to be a
partner?”
“No.”
“That would never have happened if he’d married me.
Breaking our engagement was the smart thing for him to
do.”
“If you ask me, it was the easy thing for him to do. He left
you high and dry.”
“No,” she said through clenched teeth, “Mom and Dad left
me high and dry. And you too.”
He sighed—they could talk in circles al evening. “You stil
didn’t answer my question—are you in love with him?”
“I don’t know,” she said, toying with her food. “The whole
situation is so confusing.”
“Do you think he kil ed his wife or that other woman?”
“No. The man I know couldn’t have done it.”
“But people change.”
She nodded and went back to eating.
“Do you ever think about what your life would have been
like if you’d married Peter?”
She shrugged. “Sometimes. I guess I got a glimpse the
other night when we were at their house. A mansion, a
pool.” She gestured to the dated, cramped kitchen and
laughed. “Compared to this, that life seems pretty
glamorous.”
“And dangerous,” he added quietly.
Carlotta squirmed in her seat. “So—the postcard. Is it the
only contact you’ve had with Mom and Dad?”
“Yeah. I’m sorry I kept it from you, but I was afraid you’d
destroy it.”
“Fair enough. But from now on, I want to know, okay?”
“Okay.”
“Are you on call this evening?”
He lifted his eyebrows at the note of interest in her voice.
“Yeah. And I have to be somewhere at eight o’clock in the
morning, so I’l be leaving early.”
She gave him a stern look. “As long as you don’t drive your
motorcycle.”
“I won’t.”
He resumed eating, casting worried glances at Carlotta
when she wasn’t looking. In love with a murderer and
possibly implicated in his crimes.
Between the two of them, man, they had trouble to spare.
34
Carlotta knew it was a dream, but she wil ed it to go on.
He stroked her skin exposed by the pale blue see-through
chemise, caressing her foot, ankle, knee. But his touch was
unexpectedly cool, and she shrank from it, confused. Was
it a sign, she wondered in her half-conscious state, that
she had misjudged him, expecting him to be one thing,
when he was something else altogether?
The coldness slid against her thigh and her eyes popped
open in panic as she realized that something was very,
very wrong. Someone was in bed with her.
No, not someone…something.
She froze, but the thing kept moving…sliding against her.
Then the large black-and-white-spotted head of Wesley’s
snake emerged from the covers.
Pure terror seized her, paralyzing her for a few blood-
curdling seconds. Then she let loose a paint-peeling
scream and levitated out of the bed, barely touching the
floor as she flung herself across the room to climb on top
of her dresser. There she scrambled to her feet and stood
with her back to the corner, gasping for breath as all six
feet of the massive snake slid from her bed to the floor.
And stayed there.
“Omigod, omigod, omigod,” she murmured, running her
hands up and down her arms. “Ew, ew, ew.” How long had
that thing been in bed with her? A ful body shiver
overtook her and she stared at the python, its exotically
spotted body ridiculously out of place against her plain
beige carpet. “Wesley!” she screamed. “Wesley, your
damn snake is loose!”
No response.
“Wesley! Come and get your snake before I make a pair of
shoes out of it!”
Nothing.
She glanced at the clock—seven thirty. He’d said he had to
be somewhere at eight and was leaving early. Oh, God, she
was here alone with a snake that could swallow her whole.
And she’d taken Wesley to the emergency room more
than once when he’d first gotten the thing to get stitches
for bite marks to his hands and face.
He’s just getting used to me, Wesley had said. Besides, his
bites aren’t poisonous.
But the bites bled, and they maimed. And were very likely
meant to distract while the snake snapped itself around its
prey and contracted like a giant spring.
“Shoo,” she yelled at it. “Get out of here!” She threw a
tissue box at it, but the mammoth reptile didn’t budge,
apparently liking where it had landed, between her and
her bedroom door. Only his head moved back and forth,
his tongue slithering in and out. Her skin crawled and she
had decided that a crying jag was the best way to go, when
she spotted her cel phone lying on the dresser near her
feet.
“Oh, thank God,” she whispered, and bent over to get it.
She tried Wesley’s cel -phone number, but he didn’t
answer and it didn’t rol over to voice mail. She cursed and
tried twice more before giving up. Thinking he was
probably on a job with Coop, she called Coop’s number
and prayed while it rang.
“This is Coop,” he answered on the third ring.
“Coop!” she yelped. “This is Carlotta.”
“Hi, there. Are you okay? You don’t sound so good.”