Authors: Stephanie Bond
over this campus. He’s nowhere. I found a couple of
people who know him and they said he’s already skipped
town.”
Mouse uttered a curse questioning Logan’s relationship
with his mother. “Okay, if he’s gone, he’s gone.”
“I’l keep looking,” Wes offered magnanimously.
“Good. Are you okay? You sound high.”
“High?” Wes scoffed. “No, man, I’m just tired. From
looking for Logan,” he added for good measure.
“Okay, let me know if you find the fucker. Otherwise, we’l
sort things out Monday.”
“Okay,” Wes murmured, weak with relief. He ended the
call, congratulating himself for talking his way out of a
serious jam.
Suddenly fatigue overwhelmed him. His limbs felt like lead.
His head was an anvil. His bicycle might as wel have been
a mile away. Even if he made his way to the bike rack and
managed to get it unlocked, he’d never be able to ride it
except maybe into a tree. Wes considered the cool ground
underneath him, the soft, overgrown grass. He gauged the
distance between the foundation of the house and the
bushes. There was enough room for a skinny dude to grab
a nap. He crawled into the space and pul ed a few dry
leaves over him to ward off the damp chil .
Damn women trying to convince him he needed to do
something with his life. His life was fine, just the way it
was. He had everything under control.
14
Sunday morning in the suburbs was depressing, Carlotta
decided. In Lindbergh, she was accustomed to hearing
neighborhood noise and church bel s, something to
remind her that people were nearby. Here in Peter’s
subdivision, there was just this pervasive, profound
silence. It was maddening.
She stood on the veranda outside her bedroom, smoking a
cigarette. Yesterday’s marathon of digging into details
surrounding The Charmed Kil er case had left her confused
and afraid. Every turn had led back to Coop. The tumor of
anxiety in her stomach when she thought of him locked
away in the city detention center was rivaled only by the
sympathy she felt for the victims. To have one’s death so
horribly showcased—it was abominable.
And it was just the kind of media spectacle that Michael
would revel in. But if he was The Charmed Kil er, why
hadn’t he struck again? Had he suspended his kil ing spree
to make Coop look more guilty? Would Michael vanish
into thin air, satisfied with getting away with one of the
most hideous series of murders the city had ever seen? Or
would he wait until Coop was convicted, then kil again to
show everyone that he stil had the upper hand?
She shivered in the warm morning air, then took another
drag on the cigarette. Her hand shook and she felt antsy all
over. She needed to do something. All this waiting was
eating at her.
At a noise below, she walked to the edge of the veranda
and looked down. Peter was unrol ing a hose, preparing to
spray down the stone and concrete surfaces around the
pool and the pool house. He wore only swim trunks. He
was tall and lean, built like an elegant athlete. The muscles
in his tanned chest and back bunched as he moved. His
blond hair shone in the morning sun. Her chest expanded
with feminine appreciation—he was gorgeous. And he’d
been so good to her since he’d come back into her life. But
it worried her that they couldn’t seem to get back in sync,
not the way they’d been when they were younger.
He glanced up and saw her, then grinned and waved. She
dropped the hand holding the cigarette behind her and
waved with the other. When he looked back to his task,
she sneaked another drag, then snubbed out the butt. If
Peter was going to be busy for a while, she could use the
computer to do more research before she left for work.
He’d told her she could help herself to it whenever she
wanted, but she knew he’d object to her delving into The
Charmed Kil er case. Last night over dinner in a nearby
restaurant the subject hadn’t even come up. Of course,
Peter had thought she’d been working all day instead of
driving all over town playing Sherlock.
She ducked back inside the house and closed the door,
then grabbed the notebook holding all the details on the
case and jogged downstairs. Her footsteps echoed through
the big, empty house.
Peter’s office featured a state-of-the-art desktop
computer system with a large hi-res monitor, plus a
scanner, a black-and-white printer, a color printer, and
video equipment. Nearby was another station where Peter
used his laptop. A bookcase ful of technical and business
reference books lined one side of the room.
A wry smile curved her mouth—Wesley would love it here.
He’d always been such a techno geek. In fact, he’d made
enough money working on other people’s home
computers to cobble together a system for himself. But all
of his equipment had been confiscated when he’d been
arrested for hacking into the courthouse records, and
terms of his probation prohibited him from working
around computers except as part of his community
service.
She shook her head. He’d risked jail to try to get
information on Randolph’s case. It was more than their
father would do for either one of them.
“Where are you, Dad?” she whispered as she sat down in
front of the monitor. While the machine booted up, she
scanned her notes. Where to start?
She decided to search for recent articles on The Charmed
Kil er case, to see if any new details had come to light. The
number of media hits was astronomical, and after several
minutes of tedious skimming, she hadn’t discovered
anything new. What she needed was underground info.
Wes had once given her tips on using search engines,
advising using more formal language when searching for
sources with legitimacy, and informal language for more
unofficial sources. She reframed her searches to include
words such as “rumor,” “gossip” and “leak,” and found
more interesting fare.
One was a blog maintained by someone who called
himself Ear To The Ground. He claimed that a source in the
Georgia State crime lab reported that latex gloves with
fingerprints, hairs, and other personal objects on The
Charmed Kil er crime scenes were matched to the suspect
in custody.
Carlotta murmured a cry of dismay.
“What’s wrong?”
She looked up to see Peter standing in the doorway. He
had donned a T-shirt, and his cheeks were pink from sun
and exertion.
“Nothing,” she said, trying to switch the screen to
something innocuous, but fumbling over the keyboard.
His gaze fel on the notebook at her elbow. He’d found it
once before and chastised her for playing detective. Peter
frowned and walked over to the printer, then flipped
through the news items she’d printed. He held them up,
his expression pinched. “I thought we talked about this,
about you not getting involved.”
“We did,” she murmured. “I’m just…uh, surfing to see if
my dad’s name has been brought up again in connection
with the case.”
“Really? Then where were you yesterday?”
She frowned. “What do you mean?”
“I dropped by the store, and you weren’t there. Your boss
told me you weren’t scheduled to work.”
Anger spiked through her chest. “You were checking up on
me?”
“No.” He looked sheepish. “I brought you lunch.”
She looked down, contrite. “Why didn’t you say anything
last night at dinner?”
“I hoped you were doing something with friends, enjoying
yourself. But you weren’t, were you?”
She pursed her mouth. “I did have lunch with a friend.”
“Hannah?”
“No.” She wet her lips. “Rainie Stephens.”
His mouth tightened. “The AJC journalist who happens to
be the lead reporter on The Charmed Kil er story?”
“Uh…right. And I did go to the mall.”
“To shop?”
“Not exactly. I…was hoping to find where the kil er might
have bought the charms.”
He wiped his hand over his mouth. “Carly, why are you
doing this? The Charmed Kil er is in custody.”
“Because I don’t believe Coop did it. He told me—” She
stopped and her cheeks warmed.
“He told you what?”
“Coop told me he was glad I was here with you, glad that I
was safe. He wouldn’t have told me that unless he knew
The Charmed Kil er was stil out there.”
Peter crossed his arms. “When did he tell you this?”
She hesitated. “When I went to see him in jail.”
Peter’s head went back, as if he’d been hit. “The
authorities just let you in to chat with a serial kil er?”
“I…might’ve fudged a little about my and
Coop’s…relationship.”
He clenched his jaw. “I assume you didn’t tel them you
were his sister?”
“Uh, no. But it was for a good reason, Peter. I had to talk
to him. I had to look in his eyes and see for myself.”
“And what did you see?”
“He’s wrestling with demons, there’s no doubt about it.
But I don’t believe he did these things, not Coop.”
“You trusted Michael Lane, too,” he reminded her quietly.
“This is different.” She stood and turned off the computer,
then took the papers from his hands and shoved them in
the notebook. “I’m sorry, Peter, but I have to see this
through.” She glanced at her watch. “And I have to get to
work.”
He looked dubious.
“Really,” she said. “I have to go to work.” She brushed by
him, her chest tight with frustration—at him, and at
herself. And at the general disarray of her life.
A few minutes later, as she backed the Honda rental out of
the garage, she stopped to stare at the remains of the
beautiful concrete fountain that had once sent sheets of
water cascading down, a lovely centerpiece for the circular
driveway. Now it was a broken mass of rock because she’d
sideswiped it with Peter’s Porsche, which had toppled the
entire structure—into his car. In one fell swoop she’d
demolished both the fountain and his beloved sports car.
And stil he put up with her.
Carlotta drove toward the Lenox Square Mall, racked with
guilt. Was she subconsciously testing Peter to see how far
he was wil ing to go to make up for abandoning her when
they were younger? He knew she was up to her gapped
front teeth in debt. He didn’t approve of her body-moving
activities. He hated her smoking. She’d asked him to
conceal a phone call from her fugitive father from the APD.
She’d convinced Peter and herself they had a future in
order to keep him from taking a job in New York because
she didn’t want to risk losing the flimsy connection to her
father in case he tried to contact Peter again. And now
she’d asked Peter to conceal evidence from the GBI about
Randolph’s involvement with one of the recent murder
victims. And all of this was under the strain of their
unsuccessful attempts at lovemaking.
By the time she parked the Civic in the parking garage at
the mall, she’d decided to ask Wesley how soon they could
move back to the townhouse. Sure the place was in
shambles, but the security system worked, so she would
feel safe. And with Hannah spending more time at
Chance’s place, Wes would probably be amenable to
coming home and the two of them could work on repairs
in their spare time.
On the way into Neiman’s, her cel phone rang—it was
Hannah.
She connected the call. “Hey, Hannah, what’s up?”
“Okay, I feel like a total narc, but I thought you should
know.”
Carlotta’s pulse spiked. “Should know what?”
“Your brother just rol ed in looking like he spent the night
in a ditch. He’s also stoned.”
“Oh, no.” Carlotta stopped just outside the store entrance
and choked back sudden tears. “What should I do?”
“Nothing for now. He’s getting ready to make some body
runs with that goober Kendall Abrams. Chance has cut off
his supply, even if Wes has the money.”
“Oh, God, that’s a relief.”
“But if he has a stash somewhere, it might take a while for
him to run out.”
“I was just thinking we should both move back to the
townhouse soon. I can keep a better eye on him there.”
“I’l let you have that conversation with your brother. By
the way, Chance and I have a list of those, um, chemical
outlets you asked for…and Chance did some drive-by
research last night along Ponce de Leon Avenue.”
Where a buffet of prostitutes could be found any night of
the week. Hopeful y one of them had known Pepper.
“I have some information to share, too,” Carlotta
murmured. Maybe between the four of them, they could
think of reasons to explain away the coincidences that
incriminated Coop. “I have to talk to the GBI again in the
morning. Can we meet at the townhouse at one to discuss
what we found?”
“Yeah. I’l make sure Wes knows.”
She sighed. “Okay. Thanks, Hannah, for the heads up.”
“Ah, wel , the shithead’s like a brother to me. I don’t want