Authors: Stephanie Bond
him to screw up his sorry life. Later.”
“Bye,” she said, then ended the call. Carlotta pressed the
little phone to her mouth to stem the tide of panic that
rose in her throat. If Wesley didn’t kick this habit, it would
eventually consume him. The information describing
OxyContin addiction she’d found online was harrowing.
Wesley could die.
“Carlotta, are you okay?”
She turned to see Patricia Alexander walking toward her,
wearing a pink Chanel skirt suit and white pumps. Carlotta
straightened and dropped the phone into her purse,
unwil ing to reveal too much about her personal life to
Patricia. “I’m fine, thanks. Just getting ready to go inside.
Are you on today?”
“Yes, until closing.”
“Me, too.” Carlotta held open the door for her coworker
and fol owed her inside Neiman’s. “Patricia, you should
know that Michael Lane was sighted at a cigar bar in town
last weekend, and his hair is now blond.”
Patricia’s eyes widened. “Blond? I’l bet he looks hideous.”
Carlotta smiled wryly at the woman’s back. “Maybe that’l
make him easier to spot.”
They walked through the store to the employee break
room. “Looks busy today,” Patricia remarked, but she
seemed distracted.
“Good. That always makes the day go by more quickly.”
“And the bil s,” Patricia said softly as she swiped her
employee ID through a card reader to unlock the door to
the break room.
Carlotta gave her coworker a sideways glance. Patricia had
descended from old, big money, the kind that came with
cobwebs and professional oversight. Carlotta had always
assumed Patricia only worked because she wanted to,
which enabled her to maintain her status in social circles.
Employment in a nonprofessional capacity, especially for
women, was looked down upon only if one had to do it.
What kind of bil s could someone like Patricia have?
Taped to the front of their lockers was a memo. Patricia
groaned. “Inventory starts next Tuesday. I assume you’re
going to take vacation like most of the old-timers so you
can get out of it.”
Carlotta frowned. “It’s called seniority.” Then she grinned.
“And yes.”
When they stored their purses, Carlotta noticed that
Patricia’s expression was tight and she seemed nervous.
“I didn’t mean to worry you when I told you about
Michael,” Carlotta offered.
“That’s not what’s bothering me,” the young woman said,
then closed her locker with a sigh. “I’m…concerned about
Leo.”
“Your boyfriend, Leo? What’s wrong?”
Patricia fingered the lion charm on her bracelet, which she
believed meant she’d been destined to meet Leo. Carlotta
didn’t put as much faith in the charms as Patricia, but it
was hard to argue, especially since the woman’s bracelet
also featured a tiny baseball mitt and Leo Tennyson played
for the Atlanta Braves farm team.
“It’s…nothing I can put my finger on.” Patricia lifted her
gaze. “He just seems…dark. Moody. Maybe a little…I don’t
know—compulsive.”
Unease bubbled in Carlotta’s stomach. She’d met Leo
Tennyson once, the night of the club auction. Patricia had
gushed that they were late because his practice with the
Gwinnett Braves had run long. Carlotta’s encounter with
the man had been brief, but he’d struck her as surly and a
bit arrogant. She’d given him the benefit of the doubt,
though, since she assumed he was tired, and from the stiff
way he’d held himself in the tuxedo, that he was
uncomfortable in the posh setting. “Can you be more
specific?”
Patricia shrugged. “He flies off the handle at small
things…and sometimes he makes comments about other
women when we’re together.”
Carlotta bristled on the blonde’s behalf. “Patricia, you
shouldn’t accept that behavior from someone who’s
supposed to care about you.”
“But we’ve only been dating for a little while. Maybe I’m
expecting too much.”
“Don’t make excuses for him. This early in your
relationship, the man should be using his best manners. If
he’s disrespectful now, just think how he might be down
the road.”
Patricia averted her gaze, then looked back. “Have you
ever been afraid of a man?”
Carlotta closed her locker door. “Never a man I was in a
relationship with.”
“Not even Cooper Craft? Rumor has it that you two dated,
and he’s a serial kil er.”
“We didn’t date,” Carlotta corrected. “But the times I was
with Coop, no, I was never afraid of him.”
“So…I could be wrong about Leo, like you were wrong
about this Craft man.”
Carlotta shook her head. “I’m not wrong about Coop. I stil
believe Michael is The Charmed Kil er.”
“Then why did they arrest someone else?”
“I don’t know,” Carlotta murmured. “I just know that a
woman should almost always trust her instincts.”
Admittedly, it was the “almost” part that tripped her up.
“You’re so lucky, Carlotta. You have Peter.” The young
woman’s eyes got a dreamy look. “And it’s clear by the
way that man looks at you how he feels.”
“Peter is a wonderful man,” she agreed.
Patricia sighed. “Oh, wel , off to smel stinky feet all day.”
She plastered on a smile that Carlotta recognized—the one
that sales associates mastered to deal with cranky
customers on an unending day while a migraine needled
the back of their head—and left the break room.
Sympathy barbed through Carlotta’s chest. She’d seen lots
of women in Patricia’s shoes…and not just in the Shoes
department. Dating a man whose actions were just good
enough not to break up with him, yet not good enough to
sleep wel at night, and manic enough to make a woman
question her own sanity.
But Patricia was right about Peter, Carlotta thought as she
rode the escalator to her department on the second floor.
She was lucky to have someone who cared so much about
her. Of the three men who’d taken up residence in
different corners of her heart recently, only Peter had
been there for her throughout. Coop had his own issues,
and Jack had to save the world.
She scanned for Herb, the block-shouldered security guy
stationed somewhat blatantly in her department, and
frowned when she spotted him talking to her boss, Lindy
Russel . Herb was studying a sheet of paper that Lindy had
presumably given him.
“Hi,” Carlotta said, walking up.
“Hi, Carlotta,” Lindy said. “I was just showing Herb the
updated APB on Michael Lane. Apparently, he’s altered his
hair color.”
“To blond, yes. Did the police fax it to you?”
“Yes, Detective Marquez, I believe. She left me a voice
message saying she’d also sent a copy to mall security, and
to the company that manages the valet service.”
“That was nice of her,” Carlotta murmured. But she knew
Maria Marquez was only doing her job. No doubt the
female detective wanted Michael brought into custody for
many reasons, but one of them was probably so she, as a
profiler, could pick his brain. So far, Marquez had been
wrong about the part where Michael would kil Carlotta if
he got the chance. He hadn’t.
Yet.
“Herb, would you excuse us for a moment?” Lindy asked.
Herb skedaddled and Carlotta held her breath, waiting to
hear what her boss had to say. It could be so many things,
ranging from “You’re fired” to “Your car blew up in the
parking lot again” to “Your wages are being garnished by
the city for an unpaid water bil .”
Lindy smiled. “Congratulations, your sales are back on
top.”
Carlotta exhaled. “That’s great news, thanks.”
Then Lindy’s smile wavered. “Carlotta, as much as I would
like to, the company can’t provide a security guard for you
indefinitely.”
“I understand. Hopeful y Michael wil be apprehended
soon.”
“Yes. I’ve been authorized to extend the security detail
through next Monday. I do, however, have the authority to
grant you up to five days of paid leave under extraordinary
circumstances, and since inventory starts next Tuesday, I
thought it might be a good time to offer it to you.”
Carlotta blinked. “Paid leave? Wow…I mean, yes, thank
you.”
“I’l take care of the paperwork.” Lindy walked away, ever
aloof and professional. Carlotta marveled again over how
many second chances her boss had given her over the
years. Mired in the drama of her day-to-day life, it was
easy to overlook all the things she should be grateful for.
Like Peter.
As her shift wore on, Peter weighed on her mind even as
she waited on customers. She was eager to talk to him and
try to put things right between them again. So when he
appeared at her station a couple of hours later wearing
jeans and a pale yel ow short-sleeve button up shirt, she
thought for a minute she’d conjured him up.
She smiled wide. “Peter.”
“I’m sorry,” he said, without preamble.
“I’m sorry, too,” she said. “I don’t want to keep things
from you. We’re supposed to be getting to know each
other.”
“You’re right,” he said. “And I realize I haven’t made it easy
for you to share with me, but I can change.”
Her heart swelled. “Me, too.”
He held up a bag. “I brought you lunch.”
She grinned. “Is this yesterday’s lunch?”
“No, I ate yesterday’s lunch. Today is peanut butter and
jel y.”
Delighted, Carlotta reached for it. “My favorite.”
“With fresh strawberries and dry-roasted peanuts.”
“Wow, I can’t wait.” She pressed her lips together. “Thank
you so much, Peter. I’ve been thinking about you ever
since I left the house.”
His eyebrows rose. “Oh?”
“I have a proposition for you.”
“I’m all ears.”
Carlotta moistened her lips, conscious of the big step she
was taking. “How about this? We make plans to leave for
Vegas next Tuesday for five days, and you don’t give me a
hard time about looking into The Charmed Kil er case
between now and then.”
A hopeful smile erupted on Peter’s face. “I think I can live
with that.”
15
Carlotta took a deep breath and strode into the lobby of
the midtown precinct of the Atlanta Police Department.
She’d been in this place so often in the past few months,
she knew how many tiles were in the lobby ceiling and
that D4 in the vending machine would drop two of
whatever snack item happened to be in the slot.
She walked up to the counter and smiled at her friend
Brooklyn who dutiful y manned the check-in process
behind a presumably bul etproof window. “Hi, Brook.”
The woman grinned and leaned. “Wel , hi, girl. What
brings you here?”
“I have an appointment to speak with GBI agents Wick and
Green.”
Brook checked her computer screen. “About your
boyfriend?”
“I’m sorry?”
“McHenry over at City Detention called to get the
lowdown on you. Said you were engaged to The Charmed
Kil er?”
“Uh…wel , that was a little misunderstanding.”
“Got Jack Terry over there in a hurry, didn’t it?”
Carlotta frowned. “Jack is a busybody.”
Brooklyn laughed. “Yeah. The man’s body has been busy
lately, if you know what I mean.”
She bit her tongue to keep from asking, but couldn’t help
it. “With Maria Marquez?”
“That’s the rumor.” The woman picked up the phone and
punched a couple of buttons. “Carlotta Wren is here.”
Carlotta wasn’t sure why the news bothered her. She’d
suspected that Jack and his new partner would hook up
eventually. They were both gorgeous, single people who
spent a lot of time together in situations where the
adrenaline ran high.
Brook hung up the phone. “Don’t look so long in the face.
Only two ways something like that can end, and you and I
know Jack Terry ain’t the marrying kind.”
“I’m just nervous about the interview,” Carlotta
murmured.
“Why? You didn’t kil all those women.”
“Let’s just say Agent Wick isn’t a fan of mine.”
The woman gave a dismissive wave. “Brother ain’t so bad.
Could use some biscuits and gravy to put a little meat on
those long bones of his, though.”
Carlotta smiled. “Brooklyn, are you crushing on Agent
Wick?”
“Crushin’ is right, if I got on top of him,” Brook said, giving
a hearty laugh that sent her generous curves bouncing.
She hit a button to unlock the secure door that led to the
administrative area. “Go on back.”
Carlotta walked through, surprised to see Jack standing at
the coffee station waiting for her. She’d assumed Brook
had been talking to one of the GBI agents. Jack looked
freshly showered. His col ar stood up and his unknotted tie
hung around his shoulders. “Hey.”
“Hey, yourself.” She hoped like hel something had
happened overnight to make her interview unnecessary.
“Give me some good news, Jack.”
He lifted his coffee cup for a sip. “Apple stock is up.”
“Very funny. I don’t suppose you’ve heard anything from