Read Bond, Stephanie - Body Movers 05 Online
Authors: Jill
parlor. Spike, aka Bernard, was in the parking lot taking a
smoke. He dropped the cigarette and stubbed it out with
the toe of his boot as Wesley wheeled up.
“You got my cash?” the guy said.
“Give me the name,” Wesley said.
Bernard dug in his pocket and removed a slip of paper.
Wesley took the scrap and scanned the words written in
skinny print. Crosby Newel or maybe Croswel Newton.
Newt Crossen? He looked up. “What the hel is this?”
“Hey, I was lucky to get a name at all. This laser tech
normally does things off the books, ya know what I mean?
But he remembers this guy’s tat. Guess they had a
conversation or something. Said the guy was a bear.”
“A bear?”
“Fat. And he paid in cash.”
Fat and shady—it sounded like the kind of guy who’d do
business with The Carver. And it was more information
than Wesley had to go on before. He pul ed out his wal et
and peeled off two hundreds. “Okay, thanks, man. Later.”
Bernard pointed to the angry scars on Wesley’s arm that
his short-sleeve shirt revealed. “Come back when your
scars fade some. I can camouflage them with a radical tat.”
Wesley looked down at the crude C-A-R that had been
sliced into his skin. “I’l think about it.”
He took his time pedaling to Piedmont Hospital, nursing
what was left of his buzz and hoping it lasted through the
lecture. He locked his bike in front of the hospital’s fitness
center that was across the road from the main building. He
waited until a member approached the door, then he
slung his backpack to his shoulder and casually fol owed
the man inside, bypassing the card reader.
Once inside the fitness center, he headed toward the
men’s locker room. Several men, chatting while they
buttoned shirts and donned jackets, were easily
identifiable as physicians who took advantage of the state-
of-the-art facility. Wesley tried to blend in as he opened an
empty locker and deposited his backpack inside.
When he unzipped the backpack, he half expected to find
a toothless head inside. Instead, he removed a clean
folded lab coat that he’d acquired as a prop for col ecting
with Mouse, and shrugged into it. Then he removed the
lanyard he’d made and hung it on his neck so that his
picture and name faced his shirt. No use broadcasting
unless someone asked to see his ID. With the hospital
name on the back, the lanyard looked legit.
He placed his combination lock on the locker, then walked
out of the fitness center and joined a group of lab-coated
doctors who were crossing the street to the main hospital.
He mimicked their posture and stride, and somewhere
between one side of Piedmont Street and the other, he
actually began to feel like a doctor. He had a slight build,
but his height and his glasses made him look older.
Besides, what was the quote on the tattoo artist’s neck?
Say something nobody understands and they’l do
practically anything you want them to. Meaning, it was
possible to bluff your way through life.
Inside the hospital, his chest swel ed with confidence as
people gave him admiring glances, stepped out of his way
or opened doors for him. They really thought he was a
doctor, al because of a lousy lab coat. If he bought a
stethoscope on eBay, he could probably talk his way onto
the E.R. staff.
He stopped to consult a hospital directory and took the
elevator to the floor with the meeting rooms and lecture
hall. On the way up, a tall salt-and-pepper-haired man
nodded to him. “Are you headed to the gene-therapy
session, son?” he asked in a booming voice.
Wesley’s back stiffened. He hated it when older men
called him “son,” as if they were a father figure to him. But
he squashed his anger, reminding himself of his reason for
coming. The key to getting into secure areas is to act as if
you belong there. He pushed up his glasses. “Yes, sir, as a
matter of fact, I am.”
“Me, too,” the guy boomed. “See you in there, son.”
Wesley gritted his teeth and let the man stride off the
elevator ahead of him, not wanting to attract any seat
companions who might want to talk medicine. Fol owing
signs displayed on easels, he fel in with a group of doctors
who were heading toward the auditorium. At the check-in
table, attendees simply picked up their printed name tags
and waved them in front of the accommodating registrar.
Wesley fol owed suit and nabbed the name tag of Wilson
Wendt, Pharm D If he was questioned, it would be easy to
say he picked up the wrong one by mistake.
He clipped the name tag onto the col ar of his white lab
coat, then entered the lecture hall and took a seat in the
rear next to nobody. As the hall fil ed with doctor types,
Wesley studied them, exchanging waves and shaking
hands—the brotherhood of the elite. Something akin to
envy washed over him. Their heads were ful of knowledge
that could heal people…stuff that could change the world.
Things might’ve been different for him if he was the
col ege type, but he couldn’t picture himself sitting in
class, pledging a fraternity, tailgating at football games.
The front of the hall fil ed first, probably because over-
achievers liked to sit up front. He’d hoped to sit alone, but
a dark-haired man dropped into the seat next to him and
nodded hel o.
The man looked familiar and Wesley panicked, trying to
jog his memory. The Oxy was working on him. His brain
chugged along as if it were underwater. He glanced at the
guy’s name tag: Frederick Lowenstein, OB/GYN. It didn’t
ring a bel , although he was sure he knew the man’s face.
Wesley stared straight ahead, but he felt the guy studying
him.
Crap.
“I’m sorry, have we met?” Lowenstein asked.
Wesley glanced at him for a split second, then shook his
head.
“You look familiar to me,” the man insisted, then leaned
forward to look at Wesley’s name tag. “Dr. Wendt.” He
stuck out his hand. “Freddy Lowenstein. Are you from
Atlanta?”
“Uh…no,” he said in his best Germanish accent. “Vis-i-tor.”
“Ah, I see. Velcome,” Lowenstein said, then chuckled at his
cleverness.
What an asshole. Suddenly Wesley had a flash of seeing
the man holding a glass of wine and a cracker of caviar…
Screen on the Green, he realized. The man and his wife—
Tracey Tul y, the daughter of one of his father’s former
partners—had been sharing Carlotta and Peter’s blanket
when Wesley had come to get Carlotta for a body-moving
job.
From the stories Carlotta had told him about Tracey, the
woman would be delighted to catch him impersonating a
doctor.
Which, now that he thought about it, was a federal
offense.
Sweat trickled down his temple, but he brushed it away,
estimating the distance from his seat to the door in case
he had to make a run for it.
A bookish man came onto the stage and introduced
himself as some sort of administrator of the hospital, then
introduced Dr. Vincent. The speaker’s professional
credentials in research and clinical trials were long and
impressive. At the end of the introduction, a man from the
front row stood and walked up the steps on the side of the
stage to the podium to enthusiastic applause.
Wesley’s mouth went dry. It was the salt-and-pepper-
haired guy from the elevator. Anger whipped through him.
Harold Vincent was having him fol owed like he was some
kind of lowlife, but had been downright chatty when he’d
thought Wesley was a doctor. He’d even called him “son.”
Wesley’s hand tightened on the armrest.
The lights lowered and Dr. Vincent led the audience
through a slide show. Wesley had to force himself to
concentrate and was sweating profusely. He conceded
that the presentation had its merits—parts of it were
fascinating. And even though some of the terminology was
over his head, he fol owed the gist of identifying tissue-
specific cancer stem cells as the targets for therapy. By
honing in on the cancerous cel s, fewer healthy cel s would
be sacrificed in the treatment, meaning treatments
ultimately would be not only more effective, but the
patient would also suffer fewer side effects throughout
the healing process.
“What we’re talking about here,” Dr. Vincent said, “is
creating patient-specific cancer treatments—designer
oncology, if you wil . Hopeful y, some of the new devices
my research team is developing, devices that are being
tested right here at Piedmont Hospital, wil streamline the
cel -targeting processes to the point that these couture
treatments wil be affordable for anyone who needs
them.”
The lights came up and applause fil ed the auditorium.
Wesley glanced around at the respect and admiration on
the faces of the attendees. Sweat trickled down his back
and his left eye was twitching. But even plummeting from
his Oxy high, Wesley recognized this as a watershed
moment for him. At the end of Dr. Vincent’s life, much
would be said and written about his mark on the world.
At the end of Wesley Wren’s life…would anyone even
know he’d existed?
Wesley pushed to his feet and sidled past Lowenstein.
“Nice to meet you,” Freddy said.
“Dankeshein,” he muttered, effectively exhausting his
German vocabulary.
Wesley left the auditorium feeling antsy and frustrated,
but he managed to smile at all the people who looked at
him with reverence. It was a heady feeling to be treated as
a physician. He rode to the first floor, lifted a pair of thin
latex gloves from a cart, put them on and walked up to a
sign-in desk.
“Excuse me.”
A woman turned his way. “Yes, Doctor, what can I do for
you?”
“Uh…I was wondering if I could get an envelope with the
hospital’s return address?”
“Certainly, Doctor. Here’s a self-sealing envelope. Do you
need a stamp?”
“Uh…sure. And a pen?” He took the items she handed to
him and thanked her, chalking up another one to the
power of the magic lab coat. He walked away from the
desk, then reached into his pocket and withdrew the scrap
of paper listing the potential names of the man who’d had
his tattoo lasered off.
Wesley turned over the paper and wrote “Decapitated
man in county morgue,” purposely altering his
handwriting. Then he stuck the piece of paper into the
envelope, sealed it and addressed it to Atlanta Police
Department, Homicide, Atlanta, Georgia. When he exited
the hospital, he stopped at a blue mailbox and hesitated,
trying to think if there was any way the envelope could be
traced back to him. His mind chugged along, turning over
all the pieces, but he couldn’t think of one.
He dropped the envelope into the mailbox, and instantly
felt relieved. Coop was right—no matter who the guy was,
his family had a right to know what had happened to him.
He would want someone to do the same for him if the
tables were turned.
He turned around to head back to the fitness center across
the street, but came up short. As if he’d conjured up Coop,
the man himself was striding toward the front entrance,
wearing holey jeans, T-shirt and tennis shoes. Wesley
turned his back until Coop had passed, then he frowned
after his boss.
If Coop was at the hospital for a body pickup, he wouldn’t
come through the front door. And he wouldn’t have
dressed so casual y.
Curious, Wesley backtracked into the hospital lobby in
time to see a flash of Coop’s T-shirt as he got on the
elevator servicing floors one through nine. When the
elevator doors closed, Wesley watched the numbers light
up to see where it stopped—on floors three, eight and
nine.
Wesley got his own elevator and a few minutes later,
stopped on the third floor. He asked a security guard if
he’d seen a man matching Coop’s description, and the
man shook his head. Wesley got back onto the elevator
and rode to floor eight. After hearing Wes’s description of
Coop, the security guard on that floor pointed down a
hallway. Wesley explored careful y, peeking through the
glass and frosted-glass doors into the waiting rooms of
individual doctors. He relaxed some, thinking that Coop
might be getting his eyes checked, or having a routine
physical. In fact, when he spotted his boss sitting in one
such waiting room, reading a magazine, Wesley exhaled in
relief…until he glanced at the practice specialty lettered on
the door.
Department of Neurological Disorders and Diseases.
Wesley’s throat convulsed as he remembered all the
validated parking receipts for Piedmont Hospital that he’d
spotted in Coop’s van. Carlotta had been worried about
Coop, had said he was acting strange and was convinced
something was wrong, something he wouldn’t share.
Carlotta was right.
Coop was sick.