Authors: Stephanie Bond
Michael?”
He frowned. “No. Uniforms are canvasing every motel and
hotel in the city, but nothing so far.”
“He has to be living somewhere.”
“We already know he can break into a house. Maybe he’s
living in one of the thousands of empty ones that are up
for sale in the metro area.”
She winced. “That narrows it down.”
“Exactly.” Then he winked. “Don’t worry. We’l get him.”
She stepped up to slide his tie around and fashion a knot.
He let her. “Sleeping at the office again?”
“Yeah, why?”
“Rumor has it you’ve been sleeping elsewhere lately.”
His mouth twitched. “Don’t believe everything you hear.
How are your sleeping arrangements these days?”
“Separate,” she murmured.
“Really? When you didn’t answer your phone last night, I
wondered if Peter had accidentally stumbled into your
bedroom instead of the butler’s pantry, looking for Grey
Poupon.”
She tightened the knot with a bit more force than
necessary.
He grunted, then grinned and flipped down his shirt col ar.
“Good morning,” a honeyed voice sounded behind
Carlotta.
She turned her head to see the exotic Maria Marquez
heading toward them, ducking a tea bag into a mug. She
looked amazing in an off-white pantsuit and peach-colored
silk blouse.
“Good morning,” Carlotta offered, stifling a stab of envy
that the woman was so comfortable in Jack’s world.
“Another meeting with the state guys about The Charmed
Kil er case?” Maria asked.
“Right,” Carlotta said. “I’m hoping they’l eventual y catch
the right guy.”
“I’m sorry, Carlotta, but we have the right guy,” Maria
said, then sipped from her mug.
“Because Coop fits your profile?” Carlotta crossed her
arms. “I’d like to see this bul etproof profile you came up
with, Detective.”
Jack cleared his throat. “That’s not going to happen.” He
nodded toward the hallway that led to the interview
rooms. “Come on, Carlotta, I’l take you back.”
Carlotta frowned, but fol owed him. “Whose side are you
on?”
“We’re all on the same side. We all want justice for the
victims. Maria, too.”
“I think she wants to make a name for herself.”
“Funny, she says the same thing about you.”
Carlotta glared. “So, what do you think the state guys want
to talk to me about?”
“I don’t know. But I wil get to listen in this time.”
“They’re letting you work on the case again?”
“I’m growing on them,” Jack said. “At least they’re keeping
me more informed. Right now, though, I’m focused on
finding Lane and trying to figure out who planted the
explosive under your car.”
“Do you still think they’re related?”
“I hope so. It would be nice to kil a flock of birds with one
stone.” He stopped in front of an interview room. “Don’t
let them rattle you, darlin’. Remember, you can leave
anytime you want to.” He rapped on the door and opened
it. “Carlotta Wren is here at your request,” he said, then
stepped aside to let her walk into the interview room.
GBI Agent Wick, tall and slender, had a grim smile for
Carlotta. “Good to see you, Ms. Wren.” His teeth were
white against mahogany skin.
She nodded, then turned toward Agent Green, a stocky
white guy who seemed to be relegated to the position of
stenographer. “Hel o, gentlemen.” The last time she’d
seen them had been when they’d arrested Coop right in
front of her at Neiman’s.
“Have a seat,” Wick offered.
She took the seat across the table from them. They
opened one folder, then another, murmuring back and
forth between themselves for a few seconds. Final y, Wick
looked up.
“How are you, Ms. Wren?”
“Better than the last time you saw me.”
“Yes, wel , that was an unfortunate scene, but necessary. I
understand you visited our suspect—” He checked his
notes. “Friday.”
“That’s right.”
“What did you talk about?”
“Why don’t you listen to the tape?”
He smiled. “Actually, we have. I was just seeing if you
would lie to us…again.”
At the reference to her failed polygraph, she shifted in her
chair.
Wick gestured to Green, who handed him a printout.
“Speaking of which, we have the polygraph examiner’s
report right here. Deception indicated on questions six,
seven, and nine,” he read, then looked up. “Question six
was about having a romantic relationship with Detective
Terry.”
She didn’t respond.
“You denied having one.”
“I remember what I said.”
“Would you like to change your answer?”
“No. Detective Terry and I don’t have a romantic
relationship.” With Jack, it was all about sex.
The agent frowned. “Okay, moving on. Question seven—
when asked if you knew the whereabouts of your father,
you said no.”
“Correct.”
“But according to this report, you were lying.”
She shrugged. “I guess I thought of the postcards we’ve
received over the years from different states. But I don’t
know where Randolph is now. If I did, believe me, I’d drag
him back to Atlanta myself.”
Wick’s eyebrows rose. “Stil nursing animosity toward your
parents for abandoning you and your brother?”
“Yes,” she admitted. In fact, she could feel her blood
pressure rising now. When Randolph disappeared, he’d
put her in the position of having to defend him, of having
to make excuses for him. Wesley had made up outlandish
stories of international espionage to explain away their
father’s absence, but she hadn’t possessed the
imagination and optimism of a nine-year-old. Ten years
later, she was stil covering for Randolph.
“But you’re stil claiming you don’t know where your
father is.”
Inside, she kicked and screamed. “That’s right.”
Wick sighed noisily, then looked back to his report.
“Question nine was about the identity of the person
known as The Charmed Kil er. You said you didn’t know
who had committed these crimes, but the polygraph
indicates that you do.” He dropped the report and looked
at her expectantly.
“I believe Michael Lane is responsible,” she said. “But I
responded no because I’m not positive.”
Wick leaned toward his partner. “I think she knows her
buddy Cooper Craft is responsible.”
Under the table Carlotta clasped her hands. “Coop isn’t a
monster.”
“But he’s a drunk.” Wick continued talking to Green, as if
they were having a private conversation. “A drunk who put
a woman in a body bag while she was stil alive.”
Her throat convulsed. “He paid for his mistake.”
“Yeah, he lost everything—his title, his job, and his ability
to practice medicine. That would really work on a man,
make him crazy…maybe even homicidal.”
She shook her head. “You’re wrong. Coop was happy with
his life.”
“He got lonely,” Wick said to Green, ignoring her. “But
women aren’t exactly clamoring to go out with a guy who
spends more time with dead women than live ones, you
know what I mean?”
Green nodded, absorbed in the story.
Carlotta sighed. “Is this going somewhere? I thought I was
here to help you get to the bottom of these murders.”
“Hang on, I’m getting to the best part,” Wick said. “So Dr.
Craft meets a woman and falls head over heels for her.
But, not surprisingly, the woman doesn’t feel the same
about him. So, he starts to obsess over her…and he back-
slides into the bottle…and then he starts to hate her.”
Green’s eyes grew larger. “And then what?”
Wick frowned at his partner. “And then he decides if he
can’t kil her, he’l kil someone else—another
woman…and then another…and then another.”
Wick looked back to Carlotta. “Now what do you think of
my story?”
“I think you’ve been spending a lot of time with our
resident profiler.”
“So would you be surprised to learn that Craft had a
picture of you on his refrigerator?”
She hesitated, realizing how that must look. “I gave him
that picture. And I saw it on his fridge when I was at his
place. But that doesn’t mean anything. I’m sure he had
other pictures of friends around his place.”
Wick shook his head. “Nope. Just the one of you. Did Dr.
Craft ever make any romantic overtures toward you?”
Under the table, Carlotta wiped her wet palms on her
slacks. “Coop let me know that he was interested in me
romantically, yes.”
“So the two of you were involved?”
“No, we only worked together occasionally. And I went on
a road trip with Coop a few weeks ago to pick up a VIP
body.”
“Oh?”
“My brother Wesley went with us.”
“Let me be more specific. Did you and Craft ever sleep
together?”
Carlotta slid her gaze to the mirrored window, half
wondering if Jack had put Wick up to asking that particular
question. “It’s no one’s business, but no, Coop and I were
never intimate. I consider him to be a good friend.”
“So you rejected him?”
She wet her lips. “That’s not what I said. It was a mutual
agreement that we wouldn’t pursue a romantic
relationship. There were no harsh words, there was no
argument.”
“Did he stalk you?”
“What? No!” Carlotta leaned forward. “But guess who is
stalking me, Agent Wick? Michael Lane. He’s the man you
should be looking for.”
“The good men and women of the Atlanta Police
Department are handling that case.”
“It’s the same case,” she said through gritted teeth.
Agent Wick studied her. “You should know that we’ve
been able to prove Dr. Craft frequented the same places as
many of the victims. He purchased books from the
bookstore where Shawna Whitt worked, he belonged to
the same gym as Cheryl Meriwether, he shopped at the
grocery store where Marna Col ins shopped. And from
your statement, we know he knew where the prostitute
Pam Witcomb hung out.” The man angled his head at her.
“What do you have to say about that?”
Still trying to process the information, Carlotta swallowed
hard. “Coincidence.”
The agent’s expression hardened. “Ms. Wren, we found
charms in Dr. Craft’s home.”
Panic blipped in her stomach. “Charms?”
“All kinds of charms. Now why would a single adult man
have a stash of charms?”
Her mind raced, then her shoulders dropped in relief.
“They’re for his dioramas.”
“Beg your pardon?”
“It’s Coop’s hobby. He recreates scenes in miniature in
cigar boxes. He uses charms as pieces in the scenes. He
built one for June Moody, the owner of Moody’s Cigar Bar.
It’s a complete replica of her store in one little box. It’s
amazing.”
Wick exchanged a glance with Green. “Sounds like a very
strange hobby.”
Green nodded in agreement.
“He said it helped him quit drinking, that it kept his hands
busy,” Carlotta said. “When I was at his place, he showed
me the one he’s working on now—it’s a miniature library.”
“And the charms found in the mouths of the last two
victims were books. Now that is quite a coincidence.”
When she realized she was only reinforcing Wick’s case,
frustration sent her lunging to her feet. “Coop didn’t do
this. I don’t care what you found in his home, or what kind
of DNA you have.”
The man leaned back in his chair and clasped his hands
behind his head. “Did I say we had DNA?”
She frowned. “I have my sources, too, Agent. And DNA can
be planted.”
The agent laughed. “So…you think someone framed him?”
Her chin went up. “Maybe. Or maybe you quit looking
when you came across a suspect who was easy to
apprehend.”
“Back to Michael Lane again?”
Carlotta averted her gaze, then turned and walked away
from the two men, away from the mirrored window. They
were obviously unconvinced that Michael was their man.
She was torn. She had information about Coop’s
connection to the first victim that would further cement
him in the minds of the GBI agents as The Charmed Kil er.
On the other hand, she had a piece of information that
could send them off on another tangent that might buy
Coop a little time. She rubbed the back of her neck to
combat the tension vibrating through her body. The fact
that she was hesitant to divulge something distasteful her
father had done made her even more angry toward
Randolph. He didn’t deserve her loyalty.
“Ms. Wren, is there something you’d like to share?”
Randolph hadn’t been there for her for the past ten years,
but he could be useful to her—useful to someone who
meant a great deal to her—right now, at this moment.
She turned to face the agents. “You asked me in the last
interview if I knew that the second victim, Alicia Sil s,
worked in the same office building as my father. Or if I’d
ever heard Randolph mention her name.”
Wick dropped his hands—she had his attention. “And you
said no.”
She nodded. “Right. And that was the truth. But since