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Bones of the Lost

Bones of the Lost

Titel: Bones of the Lost
Autoren: Kathy Reichs
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of photos, names, and lines, willing the answer to make itself known. Stared at Candy’s bloodless face, frustrated, desperate to fulfill my promise to her.
    What was eluding me?
    Rockett. Why did he make trips to Texas and come back empty? Or did he?
    John-Henry Story. Why was his lounge card in Candy’s purse? Was Story really dead?
    Discouraged, I got a hand lens from the study and started moving from picture to picture.
    Candy, face bruised and fractured. Blond hair bound by the little-girl barrette.
    No. No tears
.
    I sipped some coffee, now tepid, checked on Charlie, then turned back to the photos.
    Story and Rockett at John-Henry’s Tavern, neither man smiling. Story rodent lean. Rockett’s mangled features shadowed by a hat pulled down to his brows.
    I moved the lens across the snapshot, taking in details.
    A brass rail paralleled the right edge of the bar, a strip of brightness lighting the curvature of its surface.
    “Camera flash,” I muttered to no one.
    Beyond the table, a jukebox. On the wall above, three or four decals, none larger than a man’s palm.
    No, not decals. Military patches. I hadn’t noticed them on my visit with Slidell. The patches were similar to the ones I’d seen at the Green Bean at Bagram.
    Was that the heads-up my hindbrain was offering?
    I raised and lowered the lens, trying to make out unit totems or names. The image quality was too poor. Tomorrow I’d take the photo to the MCME and view it under higher power with the dissecting scope.
    My eyes continued tracking across the magnified image.
    Suddenly stopped.
    I nearly dropped the glass.
    The photo’s upper left corner caught a section of the old mirror in the main eating area. The glass was angled, not flush with the wall. I guessed it hung by a horizontal wire placed a bit too low.
    The mirror reflected a ten-foot bubble of space in front of the table at which Rockett and Story were seated. In it stood a man, arms raised, elbows flexed, face largely obscured by a small box camera and the sunburst of its flash.
    The man’s body was visible from the neck down. He was in jeans and a dark T-shirt. And had a tattoo I’d seen before.
    I felt adrenaline start to seep into my blood.
    All my theories skidded sideways.

IMPOSSIBLE.
    Yet there he was.
    Coincidence?
    I don’t believe in coincidence.
    But how did he work it?
    Didn’t matter.
    I retrieved a brown corrugated file from the study, emptied the contents onto the dining room table, and began reading every page.
    It didn’t take long.
    How had I missed it?
    Oblivious to the possibility.
    Careless?
    Sudden realization. Another possibility overlooked?
    I went to the parlor, took Candy’s photo from the lineup, and studied it again under magnification.
    The dusky skin. The dark-rooted blond hair.
    Rosalie D’Ostillo spoke Spanish to the girls but got no response. Fear of their handler? Or another explanation?
    My mind was on fire now, spitting data forgotten since the time it was stored.
    I raced upstairs and snatched a photo from the bureau. Sat on the bed. Placed the bureau photo on my knees beside the morgue shotof Candy. Looked from one to the other, forcing the lens steady in my hand.
    Holy shit.
    I flipped the bureau photo. Read the handwritten list on the back.
    Holy free-flying shit.
    I grabbed the phone and dialed.
    Got Slidell’s voicemail.
    “Jesus H. Christ!”
    My eyes flew to the clock. 10:40. Slidell was probably at the massage parlor in NoDa.
    I left a message. Call me ASAP. It’s urgent.
    I disconnected. Tossed the handset onto the bed. Got up and paced.
    Everyone carries a mobile. Why couldn’t Slidell keep his turned on?
    10:45.
    Come on. Come on
.
    More pacing.
    10:50.
    Keep busy
.
    I double-stepped down the stairs and made myself more coffee, knowing caffeine was the last thing I needed. To keep my mind occupied, I returned to the papers covering the dining room table.
    Verified.
    Thought about the implications.
    Of course. That had to be it.
    11:05.
    Where the hell was Slidell?
    I ran to the study. Punched speed dial on that handset.
    “‘Lo.” Pete sounded groggy.
    “It’s Tempe.”
    “Yes.” Pete yawned. “I know that.”
    “I need a favor.”
    A woman spoke in the background, words also sleepy thick.
    “You’re up late. Partying?”
    “Does it sound like there’s a party here?” I snapped.
    “Whoa. Bad day?”
    “I have a question for you.”
    “Bring it on.”
    I asked.
    “Maria … no, Marianna. Mariette? No, definitely
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