Wesley said he’d sold his motorcycle to buy the TV, but she knew the television had cost more than his bike was worth. She figured he’d been gambling again, despite his claims to her that he’d stopped.
She turned her head to look at her friend. “Where could he be?”
“A thousand safe places,” Hannah assured her.
“Or a thousand unsafe places. Those thugs for The Carver who tried to force me into their van the other day said that Wesley had pulled a stupid stunt and was in big trouble. What if they kidnapped him?”
“Look on the bright side—his loan sharks probably won’t kill him because they want to collect their money.”
Carlotta glared at her.
Hannah’s smile fell. “Sorry. Just trying to lift the mood.” She flipped channels past the midmorning game shows, and stopped on a local talk show, Atlanta & Company, where local celebutante KiKi Deerling was being interviewed in all her silky blond, micro-mini glory, snuggling her pet pug on her lap. It was the guilty pleasure that Carlotta needed to take her mind off Wesley.
But a minute into the interview, Hannah scoffed, “Give me a break. This girl is only famous for being famous. She’s a total poser.”
Carlotta nodded, but nursed a little pang of envy toward the young woman who had inherited beauty, money and a last name that adorned a jewelry empire headquartered in Atlanta. “It would be fun to live her life for a day, though. No worries, just party after party.”
She gave Hannah a pointed look. “For once, we wouldn’t have to crash.”
“That girl is a waste of human skin. You’d think with all that cash she’d buy some underwear. I’ve seen her twat more than my own.”
“Thanks for the wholesome image.”
“And you’d think she’d learn by now that if she’s going to have sex with someone, she should sweep the room first for hidden cameras. I always do.”
“Really?” Carlotta said. “What married man are you dating this week?”
“His name is Troy and he’s a college professor.”
“What does he teach?”
“Ethics.”
“Oh, well then, plus ten points.”
On television the starlet held up her pet pug, which she’d dressed in a T-shirt bearing the name of the camp she was promoting.
“Camp Kiki?” Hannah said. “Is that where kids go to breathe fresh air, learn to snort coke and become anorexic?”
“Cut her some slack,” Carlotta said with a little laugh. “I’ve heard of this camp. It looks like she’s at least trying to do something good for underprivileged kids.”
“Underprivileged to her probably means anyone who doesn’t have a driver.” Hannah gave Carlotta a sideways look. “Sorry. I forgot that you used to be rich.”
“Not that kind of rich.”
“Are there classifications for how rich you are?”
“Sure.” Carlotta used the fingers on her good hand to count them off. “There’s inherited wealth, the kind that’s so massive the heirs live off the interest. Then there’s inherited wealth that has to be maintained, like taking over the reins of a family business. There are ranks within inherited wealth, depending on how prestigious the business—jewelry is near the top of the list. Then there’s aristocratic wealth, meaning there’s no cash flow, everyone just kind of exists off their family name and estate. My parents were farther down in the pecking order—they were bourgeois rich. My dad worked for his money.”
Hannah lifted an eyebrow.
“Or stole it, depending on who you believe.”
“And who do you believe?”
The note her father had slipped to her scratched the skin of her chest where she was keeping it in her bra. She was afraid that Wesley might find it if she left it in her bedroom. And truthfully, she just wanted to keep it close. “I honestly don’t know. He was indicted for fraud, so the D.A. must have had a case, right?”
“Maybe. Maybe it was personal. What do you really know about the D.A.?”
“Just that he’s a lying asshole for reneging on our deal.”
“Well, there you go. Maybe he had some other motivation for charging your dad.”
“So why didn’t Dad stay and fight it? Why skip town and abandon his own kids?”
“I don’t know.”
“Would your parents do something like that?”
Hannah shifted on the couch, and it occurred to Carlotta that she had never talked about her parents. And frankly, Carlotta couldn’t picture the people who had spawned her bizarre friend.
“Has your father called you again?” Hannah asked, neatly sidestepping Carlotta’s question.
“No.”
Not that it had been much of a conversation. He’d phoned her at work a few weeks ago and said, “It’s Daddy.” She’d been so startled, she’d dropped her cell phone—and the connection.
“And I broke my cell phone, so I couldn’t even call back.”
Hannah frowned and pointed to the end table. “Whose cell phone is that?”
“Mine, but … it’s a new one.”
“How did you afford a new phone?” Hannah asked suspiciously.
“Peter gave me an extra one that he had lying around.”
Hannah picked up the sleek, razor-thin phone. “Right. This state-of-the-art gadget was just lying around. Did it belong to his murdered wife?”
“No!” At least Carlotta didn’t think so.
“Is he paying for your service, too?”
“It didn’t cost anything to add me to his plan,” she said defensively.
“Yet. Don’t kid yourself—the man plans to collect.”
“Peter’s been very good to me,” Carlotta murmured.