Kathy Reichs - Grave Secrets
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- Название:Grave Secrets
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Grave Secrets: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация
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“My husband has made a few calls. The DA will contact you to make arrangements for your analysis of the Paraíso remains.”
“I’ll be allowed access?” I was stunned.
“Yes.”
I started to thank her.
“No, Dr. Brennan. It is I who should thank you. Excuse me.”
She drew a cell phone from her purse, and spoke a few words.
We continued in silence. Music edged from open doors as we walked past bars and bistros. A bicycle clicked by. A drunk. A granny with a shopping cart. I wondered idly if she was the old woman we’d seen in the park.
As we approached the hotel, a black Mercedes glided to the curb. A dark-suited man climbed out and opened the rear door.
“I will be praying for you.”
She disappeared behind tinted glass.
At ten the next morning the Kaminaljuyú skeleton lay on stainless steel at the Morgue del Organismo Judicial in Zone 3. I stood over it, Galiano at my side. Dr. Angelina Fereira was at the end of the table, flanked by an autopsy technician.
On Fereira’s instructions, the remains had been photographed and X-rayed before our arrival. The clothing had been removed and spread on the counter at my back. The hair and body bag had been searched for trace evidence.
Cold tile, stainless steel table, shining instruments, fluorescent lights, masked and gloved investigators. All too familiar a scene.
As was the process about to commence. The poking and scraping, the measuring and weighing, the stripping of tissue, the sawing of bone. The relentless exposure would be a final indignity, an assault after death to exceed any she might have endured at the end of life.
A part of me wanted to cover her, to wheel her from these sterile strangers to the sanctity of those who had loved her. To allow her family to put what remained of her in a place of peace.
But the rational part of me knew better. This victim needed a name. Only then could her family bury her. Her bones deserved an opportunity to speak, to scream silently of the events of her last hours. Only then could the police hope to reconstruct what had befallen her.
So we gathered with our forms, our blades, our scales, our calipers, our notebooks, our specimen jars, our cameras.
Fereira agreed with my assessment of age, sex, and race. Like me, she found no fresh fractures or other indicators of violent attack. Together we measured and calculated stature. Together we removed bone for possible use in DNA profiling. It wasn’t necessary.
Ninety minutes into the autopsy Hernández arrived with Claudia de la Alda’s dental records. One look told us who lay on the table.
Shortly after Galiano and his partner left to deliver the news to the De la Alda family, the door opened again. In came a man I recognized from the Paraíso as Dr. Hector Lucas. His face was gray in the harsh light. He greeted Fereira, then asked that she leave the room.
Surprise flashed in the eyes above her mask. Or anger. Or resentment.
“Of course, Doctor.”
She removed her gloves, tossed them into a biological waste receptacle, and left. Lucas waited until the door swung shut.
“You are to be allowed two hours with the Paraíso skeleton.”
“That’s not enough time.”
“It will have to be. Four days ago seventeen people were killed in a bus accident. Three more have died since. My staff and facilities are overwhelmed.”
While I felt sympathy for the crash victims and their families, I felt more for a pregnant young woman whose body had been flushed like last week’s refuse.
“I don’t need an autopsy room. I can work anywhere.”
“No. You may not.”
“By whose order am I limited to two hours?”
“The office of the district attorney. Señor Díaz remains of the opinion that an outsider is not needed.”
“Outsider to what?” I asked in a rush of anger.
“What are you implying?”
I drew a deep breath, exhaled. Steady.
“I am implying nothing. I am trying to help and don’t understand the DA’s efforts to block me.”
“I am sorry, Dr. Brennan. This is not my call.” He handed me a slip of paper. “The bones will be brought to this room at a time of your choosing. Phone that number.”
“This makes no sense. I am allowed full access to the Kaminaljuyú remains, but practically barred from those recovered at the Paraíso. What is Señor Díaz afraid I might find?”
“It is protocol, Dr. Brennan. And one more thing. You may not remove or photograph anything.”
“That’ll leave a gap in my souvenir collection,” I snapped. Like Díaz, Lucas was bringing out the worst in me.
“Buenos días.”
Lucas walked from the room.
Seconds later Fereira reappeared, smelling of cigarette smoke and wearing a scrap of paper on her lower lip.
“An audience with Hector Lucas. Your lucky day.” Though we’d stuck to Spanish throughout the autopsy, she now spoke English. It sounded Texan.
“Yeah.”
Fereira rested elbows on the counter, leaned back, and crossed her ankles. She had gray hair, cut very short, Pete Sampras eyebrows over dark brown eyes, a body like a Frigidaire.
“He may look like a bird dog, but he’s an excellent doctor.”
I didn’t reply.
“You two butting heads?”
I told her about the septic tank. She listened, face serious.
When I’d finished, Fereira took in what remained of Claudia de la Alda.
“Galiano suspects these cases are linked?”
“Yes.”
“I hope to God they’re not.”
“Amen.”
She thumbnailed the paper from her lip, inspected then flicked it.
“You think the Paraíso skeleton could be the ambassador’s kid?”
“It’s possible.”
“Suppose that’s the reason Díaz is stonewalling? Diplomatic embarrassment?”
“It doesn’t make sense. Specter’s the one who got me access.”
“For two hours.” Her voice dripped sarcasm.
Fereira was right. If Specter was powerful enough to overrule Díaz, why not obtain full clearance?
“If there’s even a remote chance it is his daughter, why wouldn’t Specter want to be sure?” Fereira posed the exact question that was in my mind.
“Could Díaz have other reasons for not wanting me near those bones?”
“Such as?” she asked.
I could think of no “such as.”
“Lucas claims it’s the bus crash,” I said.
“It’s been pretty crazy around here.” She pushed to her feet. “If it’s any comfort, it’s not you. Both Lucas and Díaz abhor interference.”
When I started to object, she raised a hand.
“I know you’re not interfering. But that may be how they see it.” She looked at her watch. “When do you plan to examine the bones?”
“This afternoon.”
“Anything I can do?”
“I have an idea, but it would require help.”
“Shoot.”
I told her my plan. Her eyes slid to Claudia de la Alda, returned to mine.
“I can do that.”
Three hours later Fereira and I had finished the De la Alda autopsy, eaten a quick lunch, and she’d moved on to one of the bus victims. Claudia de la Alda had been wheeled to a refrigerated compartment, and the Paraíso skeleton occupied the same table. The autopsy tech sat on a stool in the corner of the room, helper turned observer.
The bones were as I remembered, though clean now of muck and debris. I inspected the ribs and pelvis, recorded the state of fusion of every crest, cap, and cranial suture, and examined the teeth.
My gender and age estimates remained unchanged. The remains were those of a female in her late teens.
I’d also been correct in my impression of Mongoloid ancestry. To confirm my visual observations, I took skull and facial measurements for computer analysis.
I searched for evidence of peri-mortem trauma, but found nothing. Nor did I spot any skeletal peculiarities that might be of use in identification. The teeth showed no anomalies or restorations.
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