Название: 4 Bodies and a Funeral
Автор: Stephanie Bond
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Современная зарубежная литература
isbn: 9781408957264
isbn:
“I know you said you had an old one, but maybe it’s time you replaced it.” Patricia shrugged. “You know—start some new memories.”
Carlotta sighed. She really didn’t want to have to like the woman, dammit. But she accepted the box and murmured, “Thanks.” She opened the box and pulled out the tray that held the silver charm bracelet.
“What did you get?”
Carlotta squinted as she fingered the tiny dangling charms. “This one looks like a puzzle piece.”
“Ooh, that’s intriguing—as if you need to figure out something.”
Carlotta pursed her mouth again. As if. “And this one says aloha.” She shrugged. “I certainly wouldn’t mind visiting Hawaii someday. And this one … it’s hearts.”
Patricia frowned. “There’s something wrong. There are three hearts instead of two.”
“Uh-hmm,” Carlotta murmured. “Strange, huh?” But her pulse quickened in spite of her skepticism. Three hearts, three men in her life.
“Oh, look!” Patricia said with a squeal. “It’s two champagne glasses. That must mean you’re going to have something to celebrate. Oh, you’re so lucky!”
Carlotta scoffed. “It doesn’t mean anything—it’s just a charm. This is like opening a box of Cracker Jacks. Don’t take it seriously.”
“What’s that one?” Patricia asked, pointing to the last charm, a long, slender piece of shaped metal.
“It looks like … a woman. Just a woman.”
“Her arms are crossed over her chest—maybe she’s a cheerleader.”
Carlotta’s eyebrows went up. “Uh, yeah.”
“Were you a cheerleader?”
“A lifetime ago.” Actually, high school seemed like another century. On another planet.
“Well, that must be it then,” Patricia said eagerly.
Carlotta nodded and allowed Patricia to help her fasten the catch on the bracelet. She didn’t want to say what the last charm looked like to her—a woman in corpse pose. And she wasn’t talking yoga.
Pushing the eerie charm from her mind, she craned her neck, trying to get a three-hundred-sixty-degree glance around, wondering where the dynamic detective duo had disappeared to. Maybe they’d found an empty dressing room to inspect.
She wrestled with the unreasonable stab of jealousy. She and Jack had had a nice time in the sack when he’d stayed at her house once doing surveillance, but that episode had ended disastrously. They were on opposite sides of too many issues, including her father. Besides, since the reckless bout of bone-jarring sex with Jack, she’d flirted with a fling with Cooper Craft, and now … she’d made promises to Peter. In fact, she had a dinner date with Peter after work.
Which left no time for worrying about who—er, make that what—Jack was in to.
“I think that lady is trying to get your attention,” Patricia said, nodding to someone in the crowd.
Carlotta turned to look and was pleased to see June Moody, the owner of Moody’s cigar lounge, waving. Carlotta threaded through the horde of bodies to clasp the woman’s hands. June was dressed elegantly, as always, in a slim skirt and starched white shirt. Her hair and heels were high, and her smile, wide.
“I was hoping you’d be working today,” June said, then touched the arm of a broad-shouldered man next to her. “Carlotta Wren, meet my son, Sergeant Mitchell Moody.”
Remembering that June had once hinted that she and her military son weren’t close, Carlotta was able to mask her surprise by the time he turned in her direction.
The first thing that struck her about Mitchell Moody was his sheer physical authority—the man was the size of a small mountain, with lots of impressive hills on the upward climb. The second thing she noticed were his eyes—they were the palest blue and laser-intense. Even in jeans, a red polo-style shirt and athletic shoes, the man screamed military. His head was shaved and tanned, his cheekbones sharp, his posture rifle straight. It wasn’t hard to imagine him dressed in fatigues and combat boots, wielding a weapon and defending the American way.
A little shiver traveled up her spine. The man was rather … what was the word?
Hot.
“Hi, Carlotta,” he said with a smile that seemed rusty. He swept an appreciative glance over her, and she flushed with … patriotism.
“Nice to meet you, Mitchell.”
“Call me Mitch.” His voice was low and clear, with the rumbling undertone of a well-tuned engine.
“Mitch is visiting for a couple of weeks,” June supplied, sounding almost giddy.
“I understand you’re a career army man,” Carlotta said.
“That’s right. Thought I’d be retiring in a few months, but with everything going on in the world, that’s up in the air for the moment.”
If he’d put twenty years into the army, that made him around thirty-eight years old, she estimated, although he seemed much more mature. More worldly.
“How do you two know each other?” he asked.
Carlotta met June a few months ago when she’d walked into Moody’s cigar bar, asking about a stogie she’d found in the pocket of a men’s jacket that Peter Ashford’s wife had returned to Neiman’s before she’d subsequently been murdered. But Carlotta tried to put a more philosophical spin on it. “I walked into the cigar lounge looking for answers, and your mother had them.”
“I’ve been trying to persuade her to try a new occupation,” Mitch said, glancing at June meaningfully. “Maybe she should give counseling a try.”
“Now, now,” June said, patting his arm. “Let’s not go there.”
Aware of the sudden tension, Carlotta changed the subject. “I assume you’re both here to see Eva McCoy?”
June nodded to her son. “Mitch knows Eva.”
“We belonged to the same running club in Hawaii where I’m based,” Mitch said.
Carlotta’s lips parted in surprise. “Hawaii—really?” Her hand closed over the charm bracelet that held the aloha charm. It was a coincidence, of course, but still …
Mitch nodded. “Fort Shafter. Eva trained there for the Olympic marathon.”
“Carlotta, will you take our picture?” June asked.
“Of course.”
Mitch handed her a digital camera. “Just push the silver button.”
She СКАЧАТЬ