You can use (a) and (b) behind a proxy (c) -- NGINX is my personal preferred server for that purpose because it is insanely fast and good on resources.
http://nginx.org/en/docs/beginners_guide.html#proxy
You'd do something like this:
server {
location / {
proxy_pass http://localhost:{port for a}/;
}
location /wp {
proxy_pass http://localhost:{port for b}/;
}
}
** note that {b} will know that it is at /wp. If you need the backend server to think that it's at root (/), you can do it with a rewrite (also in the NGINX docs)