Ted Kosmatka - Prophet of Bones

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Paul Carlson, a brilliant young scientist, is summoned from his laboratory job to the remote Indonesian island of Flores to collect DNA samples from the ancient bones of a strange, new species of tool user unearthed by an archaeological dig. The questions the find raises seem to cast doubt on the very foundations of modern science, which has proven the world to be only 5,800 years old, but before Paul can fully grapple with the implications of his find, the dig is violently shut down by paramilitaries.
Paul flees with two of his friends, yet within days one has vanished and the other is murdered in an attack that costs Paul an eye, and very nearly his life. Back in America, Paul tries to resume the comfortable life he left behind, but he can’t cast the questions raised by the dig from his mind. Paul begins to piece together a puzzle which seems to threaten the very fabric of society, but world’s governments and Martial Johnston, the eccentric billionaire who financed Paul’s dig, will stop at nothing to silence him.

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“Sure.”

“You drive,” she said. She walked around to the other side of his car and climbed in. They pulled out of the lot.

“Take a left here,” she said. She guided him to the museum.

They parked in the employee lot. They climbed out of the car and she led him around the side of the building.

“We’re not going in?” Paul asked.

“Even better. I’m in the mood for a walk.” They passed beneath a steel brachiosaur, and she took his hand in hers.

It was a ten-minute walk to Millennium Park. Skyscrapers served as backdrop, glass spires stretching upward into the darkness all around.

The sculpture, if you could call it that, was impossible not to like. You approached it from a distance, waiting to see yourself in it, a mirrored heaven.

“Cloud Gate,” he said, reading the sign.

“Locals call it the Bean.”

“Some bean.”

The whole of the Chicago city skyline was reflected in its silvery curvature. A story and a half of oblong, polished steel.

They followed the shoreline back to the museum, and once there she didn’t lead him to the car. She took him around to the side entrance near the parking lot and let them into the building. A girl of keys, still. They took the elevator to the third floor, to the maze of lab suites and research offices. A place that was off-limits.

Wood paneling lined the halls, a deep reddish brown.

He followed her down the narrow corridor. It was an old place of wood and books—and down one sleek, wooden hall, near the research library, behind a locked door, there was the bone room.

“Do you want to see?” she asked.

* * *

An hour later, at her apartment, they were careful about it. Touching slowly first, with their hands. Then the rest of themselves. They started in the front room, on the couch, knocking cushions to the floor.

Her apartment was tiny, colorful. The dining room table sat a few feet from the front door. Beyond that, the kitchen cubicle—and beyond that, the hall. She led him by the hand, pulling him toward the bedroom.

The bed angled out from the far corner—white blankets, neatly made, and, against the wall, shelves of books.

The sounds of the street below filtered through the windows. A distant car horn, sporadic traffic. She pulled his shirt over his head.

“Now you,” he said, unbuttoning her blouse. She shrugged out from beneath it, her golden brown shoulders suddenly exposed.

She sat on the bed, fumbling with his belt.

His pants thumped to the floor, and then she stood, kissing him again, slipping out of her slacks.

When they were naked, she slid backward onto the pillows, pulling him toward her.

It was what he remembered, and a little more.

* * *

Afterward, in the darkness, she slipped her hand into his.

She reached up to touch his eye patch. “Does it ever hurt?”

“Sometimes. You’re sure it doesn’t bother you?”

“No.” She smiled. “Honestly, you could be way less good-looking and I still would have dragged you into bed.”

“You should write Hallmark cards.”

“I should. I can see it now: Happy Valentine’s Day. You could be twenty-five percent less sexy and I’d still want to sleep with you.”

“Better than the alternative, I guess.”

“What do you mean?”

“I could be barely hot enough. One wrinkle away.”

She laughed. “Who are you?”

“Just me. The same.”

“No, not the same. Everyone is always two people at the same time.”

“What do you mean?”

“Who we are, and who we’re becoming. People change.”

“Do you always think this much?”

“It always happens the same way,” she said.

“What?”

“What comes next.”

“And what’s that?”

“Not this week, or next week. But eventually.”

“What?” he coaxed.

She touched his arm, sliding a finger along his bare skin. Her face grew sad in the half-light spilling in through the window. “I get bored,” she said.

Paul was silent for a long time. “Is that what happened last time?”

“With you? No. I learn everything I can, like there’s this hunger inside, but then something happens to it.”

He squeezed her hand, running a finger along her narrow forearm.

“It happens every time,” she continued. “Once I learn everything there is to learn.”

“You lose interest.”

“Yes. But you were always different.”

“How?”

“I never thought I learned everything. Sometimes it felt like I barely knew you at all.”

33

Paul stayed in Chicago over the weekend, sleeping at Lilli’s apartment for another two nights.

She gave him a mug of coffee for his drive, and he left for home the same time she left for work.

When he got back to town, eleven hours later, he slowed at his apartment complex. Two men stood outside, smoking. They were the same two men he’d seen in the hall the previous week. Only this time they weren’t coming or going. They were waiting. It didn’t take a great leap of deductive reasoning to figure out who they were waiting for. Paul slunk down in his seat and drove past without slowing. The men didn’t see him, but there was no question that something had changed. The noose around his neck was tightening.

The computer guy picked up on the third ring.

“Hello.”

“Alan, it’s Paul.”

“Hey.”

“Did you finish the analysis?”

“The report is almost done, but I wanted to double-check some of the fine-grain analysis.”

“How fine-grain?”

“Just eliminating confounds.”

“Do you have a result?”

“Yeah.”

“That’s good enough. Whatever is done, I need to pick it up.”

“I can have the rest of the report done by morning.”

“That’s too late.”

There was a pause. “I don’t really like you changing the game plan on me.”

“It can’t be helped.”

“You in some kind of trouble, man?”

“No, no trouble.”

“Then what’s the hurry?”

“I just need to square things away.”

“Whatever the fuck that means.”

“Yeah, whatever the fuck. I’ve got the money. Full price.”

“Your money, man.” There was silence. Then: “Come by and pick it up anytime.”

“I’m on my way.”

“You mean now?”

“Yeah.”

“Okay, I’ll save the report to the same drive you gave me, and you can have your data back.”

“Sounds good to me.”

“And after this… don’t call me again. You make me nervous.”

“That’s a deal.”

Paul hung up and sat considering his phone for a while. He texted Lilli: When can you have the tests done?

Her reply came a minute later: Should be able to test in a few days.

He texted back: The sooner the better.

* * *

A half hour later, Paul pulled onto Alan’s block. He drove past the apartment twice.

He didn’t see anyone waiting. No men in suits. Nothing suspicious. But still, things didn’t feel right.

He opened his phone and punched the numbers.

“Hello.”

“You need to meet me,” Paul said.

There was a pause on Alan’s end. “I thought you were coming here?”

“No, it’s better we meet somewhere else. You bring the drive and I’ll bring the money.”

“You’re acting real sketchy, man,” he said.

“It’ll be fine.”

“I don’t like this.”

“You don’t have to like it.”

“Maybe I just smash this drive with a hammer and forget I ever met you.”

“You’d be doing us both a favor.”

“Then maybe I will.”

“Do what you have to.”

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