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A LETTER TO THE LUMINOUS DEEP
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Secret Identity, Small Town Romance
Available 4.15.24


Excerpt of 4 Bodies And A Funeral by Stephanie Bond

Purchase


Body Movers #4
MIRA
April 2009
On Sale: March 31, 2009
Featuring: Wesley Wren; Carlotta Wren
320 pages
ISBN: 0778326683
EAN: 9780778326687
Mass Market Paperback
Add to Wish List

Romance Suspense

Also by Stephanie Bond:

Love Can Be Murder, December 2012
e-Book (reprint)
Stop the Wedding, November 2012
e-Book
Once Upon A Valentine, February 2012
Paperback / e-Book
Irresistible?, August 2011
Paperback
Baby, Don't Go, July 2011
Paperback
Baby, Drive South, June 2011
Paperback
Baby, Come Home, June 2011
Mass Market Paperback
The Blaze Collection, February 2010
Paperback
Her Sexy Valentine, February 2010
Mass Market Paperback
Seduction By The Book, October 2009
Mass Market Paperback
Sand, Sun...Seduction!, July 2009
Mass Market Paperback (reprint)
6 Killer Bodies, June 2009
Mass Market Paperback
5 Bodies To Die For, May 2009
Mass Market Paperback
More Than Words, Volume 5, April 2009
Hardcover
4 Bodies And A Funeral, April 2009
Mass Market Paperback
No Peeking..., December 2008
Mass Market Paperback
In A Bind, November 2008
Mass Market Paperback
Under The Mistletoe, November 2008
Hardcover (reprint)
Watch And Learn, October 2008
Mass Market Paperback
Body Movers: 3 Men And A Body, August 2008
Paperback
Three Men and a Body, August 2008
Trade Size
2 Bodies For The Price Of 1, July 2008
Mass Market Paperback
2 Bodies For The Price Of 1, August 2007
Paperback
She Did A Bad, Bad Thing, July 2007
Mass Market Paperback
Body Movers, July 2007
Mass Market Paperback
Heat Wave, July 2007
Mass Market Paperback
Finding Your Mojo, November 2006
Paperback
Just Dare Me?, October 2006
Paperback
Three Guys You'll Never Date, August 2006
Paperback (reprint)
Body Movers, August 2006
Trade Size
In Deep Voodoo, October 2005
Paperback
Love Me Tender, August 2005
Paperback (reprint)
My Favorite Mistake, February 2005
Paperback
Whole Lotta Trouble, October 2004
Paperback
Tempt Me Twice, August 2004
Trade Size (reprint)
Party Crashers, April 2004
Paperback
Strangers In Paradise, January 2004
Paperback
Kill the Competition, November 2003
Paperback

Excerpt of 4 Bodies And A Funeral by Stephanie Bond

Still reeling from a visit from her fugitive father, Carlotta Wren is wrestling with her decision to cozy up to her former fiancé Peter (the best person to help prove her father’s innocence), and how she’s going to conceal her body-moving hobby from her new boyfriend.

And then a close friend’s behavior begins to spin out of control…

And then Detective Jack Terry turns up the heat on her father’s case…

And then Carlotta discovers her brother Wesley’s gambling debts are child’s play compared to his new vice…

And then a serial killer with a bizarre signature unleashes his wrath on Atlanta. No one is safe, and everyone is a suspect—including Carlotta’s long-lost father!

------------------------------------------------------------ --------------------

Excerpt from 4 Bodies and a Funeral

Carlotta Wren skidded onto the sales floor of the Neiman Marcus at Lenox Square in Atlanta soaked in a flop sweat. Late on her first day back—minus ten points.

“Welcome back.”

Carlotta turned and manufactured a smile for Lindy Russell, her boss, who was standing with arms crossed. “Thank you. It’s good to be back.”

Lindy pursed her mouth. “Too bad you couldn’t make this morning’s staff meeting.”

Carlotta’s smile wavered, but she massaged the flexible cast on her arm. “Sorry. This morning was the first time I’d driven in a while, and my car battery was dead.” And the MARTA trains were being single-tracked for construction. Still, she decided not to dwell on transportation challenges since her recent medical leave had come on the heels of a two-week suspension to “get her personal issues worked out.”

Personal issues such as her brother’s gambling debts, her ruined credit, the fact that her parents were long-lost fugitives, and that she’d been entangled in a couple of murders as a byproduct of her part-time hobby as a body mover for the morgue.

“Things happen,” Lindy conceded. “Is your arm healing well?”

Carlotta flexed the fingers of the arm that had been broken when a killer had pushed her over the balcony of the Fox Theater where she’d dangled with her skirt around her waist for all the attendees of an Elton John concert to see. “Almost as good as new.” In truth, though, at the moment it was aching like a tooth.

Sympathy crossed Lindy’s face. “I can’t tell you how sorry I am about Michael.”

Michael Lane, a.k.a. the person who’d pushed her over the balcony, Carlotta’s former coworker and friend who had turned out to have some very dark secrets.

“Me, too,” Carlotta murmured, wishing her heart could be splinted like her arm had been.

“I don’t suppose you’ve heard from him?”

She shook her head. “I was told he’s in the psych ward at Northside Hospital until he’s deemed competent to stand trial.”

“So terrible.” Lindy sighed and checked a clipboard she held. “Well, life goes on, doesn’t it?”

Carlotta blinked. It was true, but still…

“I’m glad you could come back in time for the Eva McCoy appearance.” Lindy swept her arm toward the small dais that had been erected on the sales floor with several rows of cordoned-off chairs for seating.

Olympian Eva McCoy’s return to her hometown had been hyped on all the media outlets for weeks. “That’s today?”

Lindy arched an eyebrow.

Carlotta backpedaled. “I mean…that’s today.”

“Since you missed the staff meeting, here’s the info.” Lindy handed over a memo. “It’s going to be a mob, so I’ll need all my best employees on the floor.”

Pleasure suffused Carlotta’s chest—her history of being a consistent top salesperson still meant something.

“And here’s one now,” Lindy said, looking past Carlotta’s shoulder. Carlotta turned and swallowed a curse to see Patricia Alexander, a.k.a. Stepford Salesclerk, complete with rounded-collar suit, helmet hair, and strand of pearls, walking toward them.

The blonde flashed a waxy smile. “I’d heard you were coming back, Carlotta, but when I didn’t see you at the morning staff meeting, I assumed that something else had happened. You’re so…accident prone.”

Carlotta’s mouth tightened.

“I’ll let you two catch up for a couple of minutes before the crowd arrives,” Lindy said, and handed them each a roll of tickets to be passed out to customers who wanted to meet the guest of honor. Then she gave Carlotta a pointed look. “I tend to agree with Patricia. There’s going to be a lot of security on hand today, so try not to do anything that might draw extra attention.” Lindy walked off, leaving Carlotta properly chastised—in front of her nemesis.

“Ouch,” Patricia chirped.

Carlotta was able to hold her tongue because she knew she deserved far worse from her boss than a reprimand for all her…mishaps. Determined to get along with Lindy’s new pet employee, she turned toward Patricia. “I suppose you took Michael’s place in shoes?”

“Yes. It’s such a shame, isn’t it, that he turned out to be totally insane?”

Carlotta bit her tongue.

“So, I’ll bet you’re happy to be back to work,” Patricia offered. “You were probably bored to death doing nothing all day.”

“I didn’t exactly do nothing,” Carlotta muttered, although she couldn’t exactly tell Patricia about the road trip for a VIP body pickup, the unexpected appearance of her father, and the capture of a murderer while she’d been “incapacitated” on leave with a broken arm. Instead she pasted on a smile. “But I am happy to be back in my element.”

Patricia made rueful noises in her throat. “I hope you had time to rest, you poor thing. The heartbreak that you’ve been through the past decade—you must be close to the brink of insanity yourself.”

Carlotta’s hands fisted. Patricia moved in the Buckhead social circles, knew the sordid Wren family history—that ten years ago Carlotta’s father had been accused of stealing from his investment clients and had skipped town rather than face a trial, with her mother in tow, abandoning her and her younger brother to fend for themselves.

At the thought of her brother Wesley, she stole a glance at her watch. He should be arriving at the Fulton County D.A.’s office right about now, hopefully working out a plea agreement in return for testifying against one of his loan sharks in return for reduced charges for aiding in the attempted theft of a body. His attorney Liz was hopeful that Wesley would get off with having his community service sentence from a prior computer hacking charge extended, but Carlotta was worried that even Liz Fuck-Me Fischer wouldn’t be able to parlay enough sexual favors to make it happen. Carlotta had wanted to go with Wesley today, but he’d refused, saying it was something he needed to take care of himself. It might have been the moment she’d been most proud of him.

Except for the fact that he could be ensconced in jail before her shift ended.

What would she do for bail money? And what would she do if Wesley didn’t get out this time?

Patricia waved her hand in front of Carlotta’s face. “Did I lose you?”

“No,” she said, squaring her shoulders. “And I’m coping with everything just fine.”

Patricia leaned in. “If you need something to take the edge off, I can spot you some anti-anxiety meds.”

“No, thank you,” Carlotta said through gritted teeth, although beneath the cast her arm was pinging with pain. Knowing it would really hurt, though, if she slugged the woman, she changed the subject. “Looks like we’re going to have a big crowd today for Eva McCoy.”

“Yeah, speaking of crazy—the woman wins a marathon after a bout of food poisoning, gives all the credit to a lucky charm bracelet, and suddenly charm bracelets are selling like mad.” Patricia shook her head, apparently bemused with the trend.

Carlotta smirked—her coworker was only frustrated because she wasn’t working in jewelry, earning commissions on the trinkets that Eva would be promoting.

Customers were already gathering in the area of the dais where posters featured the smiling, fit Olympian with a gold medal around her neck and an Eva Lucky Charms Bracelet on her slender wrist.

Carlotta and Patricia positioned themselves in front of the Get Your Tickets to Meet Eva McCoy Here sign and began handing out tickets and directing early comers where to sit or stand.

“So,” Patricia asked without making eye contact, “how are you and Peter Ashford?”

Choosing her words carefully, Carlotta said, “Peter and I are old friends.”

“So I’ve heard. Tracey Tully Lowenstein belongs to my club. She said that you and Peter used to be quite the item before…your family issues.”

“That was a long time ago,” Carlotta murmured.

“Tracey said that you two have picked up where you left off.”

“Tracey talks too much,” Carlotta said pointedly.

“I think it’s nice that you and Peter have each other,” Patricia said. “With his wife having been murdered and all that you’ve gone through.” The blonde winced. “Wait a minute—weren’t you a suspect in her murder? Gee, that has to be a little awkward.”

“Not at all,” Carlotta said pleasantly.

Patricia sniffed and turned her back.

Carlotta shot lasers into the woman’s bony shoulder blades. In truth, Carlotta was still wrestling with her recent decision to cozy up to her former fiancé. When her father had walked up to her unannounced and in disguise at a rest area a few weeks ago in Florida, he’d told her to stay close to Peter, that since Peter worked for Mashburn & Tully Investments where her father had once worked, he was in the best position to help prove Randolph Wren’s innocence. Until that moment, Carlotta would have sworn that if her long-lost father had ever approached her, she would slap him, kick his shins, spit in his face, call the police. Instead she’d been gelatinous and cooperative and… hopeful.

The fact that he made her want to believe that he’d been framed for his white collar crime made her feel used all over again.

Her father was using her, and she was using Peter. Since his wife’s untimely death, Peter had made no secret of the fact that he wanted them to get back together. He’d even recovered the Cartier engagement ring that she’d pawned and he’d had a diamond added on either side of the original solitaire. He was holding it for her, in hopes that she would agree to pick up where they’d left off years ago, just as if he hadn’t ripped out her heart and turned his back on her when she needed him most.

But he was trying to make amends, she conceded. He’d helped Wesley out of some bad scrapes and continued to be attentive to her. A couple of weeks ago, though, after she’d returned from Florida, his patience had worn thin— he’d been offered a position in New York and had been going to take it unless she could give him hope that they had a future and made room for him in her life. She couldn’t risk him leaving on the chance that her father might call or put in another appearance soon, in need of Peter’s inside access. So she’d told Peter to stay and had committed to making their relationship a priority.

Normally, being on the receiving end of attention from a handsome, rich man wouldn’t pose a problem, but there were… extenuating circumstances. Namely, two other men bouncing around in her head and in her heart.

“I wondered if I’d see you here.”

At the sound of a familiar rumbling voice, her pulse spiked. She turned around to see one of the two men, Detective Jack Terry, standing there with a sardonic smile on his ruggedly handsome face, as if she’d conjured him up. Her entire body smiled. “Hi, Jack.”

“Back to work, huh?”

She nodded. “First day.”

“Are you okay? You look flushed.”

She put a hand to her warm cheek. “Hectic morning. What are you doing here?”

“Extra security for Eva McCoy, a favor for the mayor.”

Carlotta frowned. “What does the city have to do with her appearance?”

“Apparently her uncle is a state senator, they want APD on the scene to make everyone feel good. They thought a uniform would send the wrong signal, so—” He shrugged. “Here I am.”

She surveyed his gray suit and gave his red tie a tug. “You look good.”

“I keep telling him that red is his color.”

At the sound of a purring voice, Carlotta turned her head. A doe-eyed, exotic beauty in a dark suit stepped into Jack’s personal space.

Jack gave the woman a proprietary smile. “Carlotta, I don’t think you’ve met my new partner, Detective Maria Marquez. Maria, this is Carlotta Wren, a friend of mine.”

Carlotta tried not to react. Friends—is that what she and Jack were?

Excerpt from 4 Bodies And A Funeral by Stephanie Bond
All rights reserved by publisher and author

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