Read Bond, Stephanie - Body Movers 05 Online
Authors: Jill
rol ed until she hit something that stopped her. When she
opened her eyes, she was staring at the yel ow striping of
a curb. All around her were the sounds of brakes
screeching and horns honking.
She wanted to close her eyes to block out the image in her
head, but she knew the longer she lay there, the greater
the chances of being mauled by a car. So she pushed
herself up gingerly and crawled onto the sidewalk to a
fence, as far back from the road as she could go, before
turning to look at the scene.
It was chaos. Her beautiful pink scooter was scattered
across both sides of the road. Cars were parked at all
angles, many with their hazard lights flashing. She couldn’t
see the body she’d struck, but it didn’t matter. She could
stil see it in her head, the partially burned corpse, with a
piece of silver duct tape over its mouth.
To keep the charm in the mouth intact for investigators to
find?
30
“Thanks for the ride,” Wes said to Chance.
“No problem, dude. Dressed like that, you’d better get
laid.”
Wes climbed out of the BMW and closed the door, then
watched the tail ights as the car pul ed away, fighting the
urge to run after it.
He turned to look up at the “castle on Peachtree,” Rhodes
Hall, a restored white stone home from the early 1900s,
with elaborate arches, a turret and a tower. It was lit up
like a medieval torch against the summer night. He’d
ridden by it a hundred times, but had never been inside. It
was the kind of place rich people flocked to for weddings
and private corporate events. Way out of his league. What
the hel had he gotten himself into?
He pul ed out a handkerchief and mopped his forehead.
He’d swal owed an Oxy a little while ago, but with the
safety coating intact, it was taking its sweet time getting
into his bloodstream.
“Wesley?”
He shoved the handkerchief into his pocket and turned to
see Meg walking toward him from the parking lot. Holy
crap. Her long hair moved around her bare shoulders, and
the red dress fit her like a sausage skin. His dick turned to
limestone.
“Wow,” she said, smiling wide. “I almost didn’t recognize
you.”
He crossed his hands in front of his crotch. “You look nice,
too.”
“Thanks.”
She tweaked his tie and he caught a whiff of her
perfume—Jesus, she was kil ing him.
“This is going to be so boring,” she said. “Don’t hate me in
the morning.”
He swallowed hard. Was that a secret code? Did that
mean they were having sex tonight?
“Let’s go inside where it’s cool,” she said. “I’l introduce
you to my parents.”
He swallowed the bile that backed up in his throat, but
fol owed her up the stone steps—not an easy feat while
sporting wood—and inside the historic home. He inhaled
and exhaled, trying to lose the erection before he met her
father.
When he saw the crowd of suited guests, he was assailed
with another bout of nerves. He was sweating again, and
thought he might hyperventilate. It seemed as if everyone
was looking at him—did he stick out that much?
Meg curled her fingers around his and whispered, “Relax.”
When he looked down at her, a strange feeling filtered
through his chest, and it wasn’t the Oxy kicking in.
“Let’s get some punch,” she said, nodding to a banquet
table.
The event was being held in the hall’s reception room, a
fancy-schmancy space with wood floors, a large fireplace
and an intricately trayed ceiling. Pretty nice considering no
one actually lived in the house.
The punch was pink, and sweet enough to make his teeth
hurt, but it was wet and that was all that mattered. He
downed one cup, then reached for another.
“Wesley, is that you?”
He looked over to see his probation officer, Eldora Jones,
walking toward him. Her boyfriend—make that fiancé—
Leonard was a few steps behind her.
“Hi, E.,” Wesley said with a grin. She looked nice in a
yellow swishy dress.
“What are you doing here?” she asked.
“I came with Meg,” he said. “Meg Vincent, this is Eldora
Jones. E. is…a friend of mine.”
Meg extended a warm greeting, but he could tel she was
sizing up E., wondering how they knew each other, if
they’d ever been involved.
He liked it. “How about you?” he asked E.
“I came with Leonard,” E. said, then introduced Meg to her
lughead fiancé. “Leonard is a pharmaceutical-sales rep.”
Wesley had to fight back a scoff. Wes extended his hand to
Leonard and the gym rat ground the bones in Wes’s hand.
He’d warned Wes more than once to keep his mouth shut
to E. about his true vocation.
“And Leonard came at the invitation of his friend Freddy,”
E. said, indicating another couple who had just walked up.
Wes almost choked on his punch. “Freddy” was Dr.
Frederick Lowenstein, the guy who’d sat next to him
during the lecture. His wife, Tracey recognized Wesley
right away, looking him up and down, eyebrows raised.
“Wesley Wren, you clean up nice,” she said in a voice that
indicated her surprise that he’d dragged himself up from
the gutter to their level.
What a witch.
Freddy Lowenstein stuck his hand out for a shake, then
squinted at Wesley. “Have we met before?”
“Maybe at Screen on the Green,” Wesley said. “I think you
were sharing a blanket with my sister, Carlotta.”
“Oh…right,” the man said, but he was stil squinting, trying
to place Wesley. When Freddy was introduced to Meg, he
gave her red dress a lecherous look, but his eyes widened
when he heard her last name.
“Are you related to Dr. Harold Vincent?”
“He’s my father,” Meg said drily, then pul ed her hand
away.
Good girl. She could see right through the old goat.
“Excuse us, please,” Meg said, then steered him away from
the crowd to the other end of the room. Wesley
recognized Dr. Vincent immediately. And since the
attractive woman next to the man looked so much like
Meg, he assumed she was Mrs. Vincent.
He broke out in a fresh sweat.
They hung back until the couple the Vincents were talking
to moved away. Mrs. Vincent saw them and gasped in
delight as she pul ed Meg into a hug. Wesley was
mesmerized. Even though the woman was blond, she
reminded him of his mother in the way she carried herself,
from the tilt of her head to the way she held her evening
bag. Good breeding, his mother would say. There was
something fragile about Mrs. Vincent, though, something
he couldn’t quite put his finger on.
Dr. Vincent also embraced his daughter. It was evident
that Meg was the apple of his eye. Wes hung back to give
them a moment, then Meg turned to him.
“Mom, Dad, this is Wesley Wren. Wesley and I work
together in the city IT department.”
Wesley looked up to Dr. Vincent and saw the man’s hand
freeze in midair when he heard Wesley’s name.
“Nice to meet you, Dr. Vincent,” Wesley said, clasping his
hand. He almost folded under the man’s hostile glare, but
stayed strong. And then the man’s eyes narrowed. Wesley
knew the precise moment Dr. Vincent remembered him
from their elevator conversation. The indignant look on
the man’s face as he drew back slightly gave Wesley the
courage to smile. “Nice party, thanks for inviting me.”
“You didn’t need an invitation,” the man said mildly. “You
probably could’ve just walked in and acted as if you
belonged here.”
“Maybe,” Wes agreed.
Dr. Vincent withdrew his hand. “Excuse me, someone just
walked in whom I need to talk to. I’l see you later, dear.”
Wesley and Meg stayed to talk with her mom, who
seemed genuinely nice.
“Are you a student at Tech like our Meg?” Ann Vincent
asked, stroking her daughter’s hair.
“Um, no…ma’am.”
“Do you work ful -time with the city?”
He wet his lips. Since he was sure Dr. Vincent had done a
background check, considering he’d gone to the trouble of
hiring a P.I., it was at least comforting that he hadn’t
shared the info with Meg’s mother. “No, I’m part-time. I
also work for the county morgue.”
“Really? Doing what?”
He glanced at Meg, who seemed to be enjoying the
exchange. “Um…moving bodies…ma’am.”
“Oh.” The woman looked perplexed, then changed the
subject by asking Meg about one of her classes.
Wesley eavesdropped on the easy banter between mother
and daughter, envious of their obvious affection and
familiarity. As Ann Vincent was being pul ed away to meet
another guest, she smiled at Wesley. “I hope to see you
again, Wesley.”
“I’d like that, ma’am.”
Once Mrs. Vincent walked away, Meg smiled up at him.
“See, that wasn’t too bad, was it?”
“I guess not.” But his head was kil ing him, and the
sweating was getting worse. He’d brought an Oxy capsule
with him, but he didn’t want to take it in front of Meg.
She’d nail him for sure.
They got a couple of plates of finger food and found a
corner to relax, although Wesley almost swallowed a mini
quiche whole when Meg sat down and her dress pul ed
high on her thighs.
“My dad would kil you if he saw you looking at me like
that.”
Wes glanced up to see she’d caught him staring. “You
want me to look or you wouldn’t have worn that dress.”
“Maybe I wear this dress all the time,” she said haughtily.
“Okay, whatever.”
Meg leaned in and he got an eyeful of cleavage. “There’s
only one thing I hate about this dress. It’s so tight that if I
wore anything underneath, my panty line would show.”
He stopped midchew, then swallowed. “Oh, now, that’s
just cruel.”
“Down, boy, I don’t put out on the first date anyway. But I
do this.” She leaned forward and kissed him on the
mouth—a good kiss, the kind where you could taste each
other. Her lips were as smooth and juicy as he thought
they would be. But just as his pants were getting happy,
she pul ed back and popped another meatball in her
mouth.
There she went again, messing with his head. He pul ed
out the handkerchief and wiped his brow. He wanted to go
to the bathroom and take the Oxy, but he didn’t want to
leave Meg alone wearing that dress…and no underwear.
Some guy like that lech Freddy Lowenstein might try to
latch on.
Finally, though, he couldn’t stand it any longer. Between
Meg and her father, his nerves were shot. He excused
himself and went to the men’s room. He wanted to chew
the pil , but resisted the powerful urge. Instead, he ran
water into his cupped hand, then tossed back the Oxy pil
and chased it with a drink. He closed his eyes when it went
down. It would take a while for the painkil er to circulate,
but with this one in the pipeline, relief was on the way.
“Got a headache, son?”
Wesley opened his eyes to see Harold Vincent strol ing up
to a urinal. Anger spiked in his stomach. “Don’t call me
son. And as a matter of fact, I do have a headache.”
“Must be all that hard living,” the man said, then faced the
wall and unzipped his pants.
“Look, I know about the P.I. you had tailing me. I
confronted the guy and he ratted you out. That’s why I
crashed your lecture. I wanted to see what kind of man
would do that to his daughter.”
Harold Vincent kept looking at the wall. “I don’t care that
you know. My daughter’s happiness is my only concern.”
“Yeah, wel , Meg probably wouldn’t be too happy if she
knew you had me fol owed like a criminal.”
The man zipped his pants, then turned and walked to the
sink to slowly wash his hands. “You are a criminal. And I
got news for you—Meg knows about the P.I. The only
reason she invited you is because she knew I wouldn’t
approve.” He pul ed out a paper towel and dried his hands.
“She doesn’t care about you, son, she just wanted to piss
me off.” He tossed the paper towel in the trash, then
stalked to the door.
“Don’t call me son,” Wesley managed to say before the
door closed. He fisted his hands as humiliation crashed
over him. He should’ve known that Meg had an ulterior
motive for asking him out. Why would someone like her be
interested in someone like him? He caught sight of himself
in the mirror, and was disgusted. All that money spent on
a suit to impress her, and for what? A few cups of punch
and a hard-on. As far as her line about not putting out on
the first date, well, she’d never intended for them to have
a second date.
He undid the tie and yanked it off, then unbuttoned the
col ar of his shirt. This charade was over.
Wes walked out of the bathroom and threaded his way
through the crowd. He couldn’t wait to get out of this
place.
Someone touched his jacket sleeve. “Are you leaving?”
He looked up to see E. standing there.
“Uh, yeah…something came up.”
“Okay. I’l see you tomorrow?”