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Bones of the Lost

Bones of the Lost

Titel: Bones of the Lost
Autoren: Kathy Reichs
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strap.”
    “I carry a shoulder bag.” Slidell’s sarcasm was, as usual, turning me surly. As was his jump to the conclusion that the hit-and-run victim was a prostitute.
    “Hot pink? Shaped like a freakin’ cartoon cat?”
    “You’re sure it was hers?”
    “Thing was lying in the weeds, three yards from the body. Hadn’t been there long. We’re checking for prints. But, yeah, I’m sure it’s hers.”
    “This was in the purse?” I indicated the object enclosed in the Ziploc.
    “Along with one tube of come-fuck-me red lipstick.”
    “Cash?”
    “A ten and two ones. Forty-six cents. Loose. Like she just jammed it in.”
    “Anything else?”
    “Nada … except—” He waggled the baggie. The Amazing Slidell, Magician of Mecklenburg.
    I took the bag and studied the plastic rectangle inside, certain I’d misread the tiny black letters on its surface.
    I hadn’t.
    “What the flip?”
    “Thought it might interest you.”
    The yellow-and-brown US Airways club card had an expiration date of February of the upcoming year. The account was in the name of John-Henry Story.
    “She had John-Henry Story’s airline club pass?”
    Slidell nodded.
    “How?”
    “Insightful question, doc. And here’s another. Story crisped six months back. Where’s his plastic been in the meantime?”
    This wasn’t making sense.
    “What we got here is Story dies, but his card lives on. Or goes into suspended animation,” Slidell said. “I checked. Last time he used the lounge was six weeks before the fire.”
    “Where was he going?”
    “I’m working on that.”
    “Was anyone with him?”
    “One guest.”
    “The girl?”
    “They don’t enter that information.”
    Slidell drew another Ziploc from his pocket. “And this was also in her purse.”
    I examined the slip of paper through the plastic. On it was scribbled:
Las clases de Inglés. Saint Vincent de Paul Catholic Church
.
    I looked at Slidell. He looked at me and shrugged.
    I moved to gather my belongings before exiting the Taurus, but, of course, I had no belongings. No shoes, no purse, no house or car keys, no phone, no cash, no cards.
    Another time I could have called Katy for the spare key she keeps for my place.
    Oh, God. Katy
.
    “Listen, thanks for swinging by for me. I—”
    “—owe me one? Don’t worry about it now.”
    Now?
Great.
    I hiked up my pants, eased from the Taurus, and hurried to the vestibule door. Stepping up onto the smooth concrete floor was asclose to pleasure as I’d come all day. I paused a moment, taking relief from the cooling stone.
    Waiting in my office were scrubs and sensible shoes. Soon I’d be reasonably presentable.
    As with Slidell, my appearance wouldn’t shock so much as amuse those inside. I’d arrived looking, and smelling, worse.
    Except for Mrs. Flowers. She would signal disapproval by the briefest narrowing of the eyes, by a flurry of rearrangement of her already meticulously ordered desk.
    I nodded at Mrs. Flowers through the reception window. After buzzing me in, she motioned me over with a finger waggle.
    Though Mrs. Flowers has a first name—Eunice—to my knowledge she’s never been addressed as anything other than Mrs. Flowers. The name so suits her I’ve wondered at times what she’d be called if she’d married a suitor named Smith or Gaspard. She is a peony of a woman, full-bodied, with pale pink skin that must have seen pampering since the stroller. The perfect complexion’s one flaw? Mrs. Flowers colors in the presence of the opposite gender.
    Blusher or not, Mrs. Flowers has the skill and motivation to keep every document filed and accessible, every report typed, proofed, and delivered promptly, all while answering the phone and triaging members of the public who show up at her window. Given a staff of three pathologists, numerous death investigators, the occasional specialty consultant, and myself, it’s quite a feat.
    “My word.” Mrs. Flowers’s upraised hand dropped to her yellow silk blouse.
    “It’s a long story,” I said. Don’t ask, I meant.
    One carefully plucked brow arched slightly, but she let it go.
    “Dr. Larabee wishes to see you.” Southern as Tara. “He’s in the main autopsy room.”
    “Thanks.”
    Two small hallways, called biovestibules by those who designed them, connect the administrative and public sectors of the building with the autopsy area. I passed through one, pausing briefly to check the erasable board.
    Four new cases. A single-vehicle accident
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