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Authors: Kathy Reichs

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BOOK: Bones of the Lost
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“Tempe. Are you listening to me? I need the papers.”

The divorce agreement. I’d signed but not delivered it to Pete. Could have with little effort. So why the procrastination?

“Right. They’re on my desk at home. I should have given them to you ages ago. Sorry. Of course, come and get them anytime. There’s no need to take me to dinner.”

“I want to take you to dinner.”

I started to protest. Pete cut me off.

“I’ll pick you up out front. And I promise. Not a word about the wedding.”

“I don’t think—”

“How was it you planned to get home?”

Side-out, Pete.

F
IFTEEN MINUTES LATER, A SHINY
new BMW convertible swerved to the curb. Red with black leather interior.

Trophy wife. Trophy car. I fought an impulse to roll my eyes.

Less commendable was Pete’s fashion sense. Sure, he could muster a suit and tie for court, but a golf shirt and khakis was his normal attire. My ex’s guiding principle: comfy and cool.

As I dropped into the passenger seat, my brows rose at the sports jacket, blue shirt, and navy slacks.

“Don’t we look snazzy.” Excluding the sockless loafers.

“I’m having dinner with a lovely lady.”

Orbital roll beyond my control.

“Nice wheels.” Keeping it light.

“Got a good deal.”

“Uh-huh.”

“Took ’er up to Asheville over the weekend. Purred like a kitten. Summer squealed at every switchback. Almost squealed myself once or twice.”

Squeals all around.

“Goes from zero to sixty in faster than you can say zero to sixty.”

Pete understood I cared little about cars. I knew he was tiptoeing to avoid mention of the upcoming nuptials.

I grabbed the armrest as he gunned out of the lot, cut left, right, then left again.

“Zero to sixty,” I said, smiling.

“Check out the sound system.” Pete tapped something and Maroon 5’s “Payphone” surrounded us in a moving cloud of noise that rendered further communication impossible.

Just past the Queens University campus, Pete winged onto the main drive at Sharon Hall, shot the tunnel of ancient magnolias past the white-columned manor house, and braked to a gravel-spitting stop in the parking area between the carriage house and its annex. Turning his head sideways, he gave me a two-brow waggle.

“Nice.” I unbuckled my seat belt.

“I’ll wait here.”

“I’ve got to shower.”

“No rush.”

I held out a palm.

Pete pulled his keys from the ignition, removed one, and handed it to me.

“Thanks.” I flipped the door handle.

“Tempe?”

“Yes?”

“Don’t lock it in the house.”

Pete’s phone was out before I was.

The annex has a bedroom and bath upstairs, living and dining rooms, kitchen, a study/guest room, and bath down. Garden in back, grassy patch in front, patio to one side. Though cramped, the place suits me perfectly.

I let myself into the kitchen and flipped on the light.

“Bird?”

No cat.

“Here, boy.”

Nothing but a soft ticking coming from the parlor.

I found Birdie under the sideboard holding Gran’s clock. Though cats are said to lack facial musculature capable of expression, his message was clear.

“You mad?”

Pausing a moment for effect, Birdie rose, stretched, then padded toward me, cool but prepared to consider explanation. And dinner.

I bent and scratched one furry white ear.

“Sorry, champ. But tonight’s menu is a bit subpar.”

Returning to the kitchen, I plucked two eggs from the fridge, mixed in a tin of sardines, and heated the combo. When the mess congealed I scraped it into his bowl.

One thing about Bird, he does not hold grudges. All sins forgiven, the feline dived in.

Since I often spend my days with decomp and biohazard, I’ve mastered the art of the quick cleanup. And amassed a spa-worthy array of soaps, gels, and lotions. Tonight I grabbed the nearest. Out and dry in five minutes, smelling of grapefruit.

Birdie walked in as I was pondering acceptable couture for delivering divorce papers. My eyes met his.

“Screw it.”

I grabbed jeans and a black tee, added pale green seashell earrings and a black cotton jacket.

“What do you think?”

Birdie cocked his head but rendered no opinion.

I hurried down to the study, cat at my heels. As I snatched up the documents, Birdie did a figure eight through my ankles.

I glanced at my watch. Pete had been waiting a full twenty minutes.

The cat arched his back and lifted his tail. I scratched his ears and added a series of down-the-back strokes.

When I popped the Beemer door, Pete was still on the phone.

“Don’t inhale while you’re spraying.” Pause. “Okay. But really, I’ve got to go.” Shorter pause. “Yes, I’ll call when I’m on the way. I love you, too.” Sotto voce.

“Sorry. Bird—”

“No problemo. Ale House good with you?”

“Sure.” It wasn’t. Big-screen TVs. Fans cheering, groaning, coaching. Noise level at eighty-five decibels. “Is Summer having bug issues?”

Pete looked at me blankly.

“She needs to fumigate?”

“Oh, no.” He shook his head. “She’s spray-painting antique bottles to use in the centerpieces. Or some damn thing. It’s supposed to look artsy.”

Wedding talk. Nope.

A short, thrumming blast of Bob Marley, and we were at the Carolina
Ale House, a multiscreened extravaganza on the ground floor of a steel-and-glass tower in the heart of uptown. Pete managed to secure a table away from the bar. Not quiet, but out of the no-talk zone.

A waitress greeted Pete with more teeth than a radial saw and favored me with a millisecond of eye contact while mumbling that her name was April.

“Fat Tire ale?” April beamed another dental stunner at my ex.

“Good memory.” Pete did the finger-pistol thing.

I asked for Perrier and lime.

Pete chose the baby back ribs. I went for flatiron steak.

Food and drinks ordered, I pulled the documents from my purse and laid them in front of Pete. He glanced at them but did not pick them up.

A void stretched across the table, a bubble of quiet amid the din around us. So little paper. So few words for a love that had produced hopes, dreams, and a beautiful daughter. A love destroyed by an act of betrayal.

There should have been some ceremony. An unwedding? A rite of dissolution? Something beyond a Settlement Agreement and Verification. At least a better font.

“Sorry it’s taken so long.” I broke the awkward silence. “No excuse. I should have—”

“It’s not a problem, sugarbritches. I’ll have these filed before noon.”

“Don’t call me that.” Reflex.

“Okay.” The old Pete smile. “Cupcake.”

Pete slid the papers into the snazzy jacket pocket, then patted my hand.

The touch. His skin on mine. So familiar.

I groped for neutral conversational ground.

“Your wrongful-death case, barrister? How’s it going?”

“I won’t know until my doctor gets deposed in the morning.”

I told him about the criminal misdemeanor trial from which I’d escaped. He told me about a tooth that was causing him grief.

Mercifully, April arrived with our drinks. Pete chugged. I sipped.

“And you?” After another awkward pause. “How’re things with Monsieur Le Dick?”

Monsieur Le Dick, Pete’s flip name for Andrew Ryan, Lieutenant-détective, Section des crimes contre la personne, Sûreté du Québec. My colleague when I consult to the Laboratoire de sciences judiciares et de médecine légale in Montreal. My on-and-off lover. Off now. Off forever?

“He’s good.”

“Bon.”
Pronounced “bone.”

“Never speak French, Pete.”

And don’t ask about Ryan. Don’t force me to voice my anxiety over his recent coolness. His distance.

If Ryan and I truly were finished, the split wouldn’t be as wretched as the one from Pete. There would be no bitterness, no angst. No stunned child to whom an explanation was due. No moving out. No division of property. No standing in line at the DMV to record change of address. With Ryan, there’d be nothing but a murky trench of sadness.

I couldn’t bear to talk about it. To think about it.

“I’m swamped with work here,” I said.

“Anything interesting?”

“Four mummified dogs from Peru.”

Pete cocked a questioning brow.

I told him about the confiscation by ICE at the Charlotte airport.

Our plates arrived and, for a full minute, we focused on salt and pepper, steak sauce, butter, sour cream, and ketchup. April asked if I needed more ice.

Inexplicably, my thoughts went to the child in the cooler.

“We’ve also got a teenage girl,” I said to Pete. “Run down last night near Old Pineville Road.”

“The parents must be devastated.”

“We don’t know who she is.”

“Jesus. Larabee’s case?”

I nodded. “There are a couple of leads. If Slidell would get off his fat ass. In his mind—”

“Which is small.”

I smiled. “In his small mind, she’s an illegal turning tricks.”

“Proof?”

“A pink purse, needle tracks, and bad teeth.”

“That’s it?”

“Bleached hair, a dark complexion, and a Spanish note in her purse.”

“Skinny thinks she’s from south of the border.”

I nodded.

Pete chuckled and shook his head. He’d met Slidell, knew how pigheaded the man could be.

The clamor of voices hushed. Then a multi-throated groan filled the room. Some sporting event was not going well for the home team.

Pete’s ribs were stripped and stacked when he laid down his utensils and wiped his mouth.

“Can I roll something by you?”

“Sure.”

“I have a friend, Hunter Gross. I don’t think you know him. His nephew, John, is a marine second lieutenant.”

“Semper fi.” I snapped a salute.

Pete had served in the Corps, still kept the Marine flag on a small stand in his office. Every November tenth, he celebrated its birthday with his old OCC buddies.

“Until a few months ago, John was serving as a platoon leader in Afghanistan. As I understand the story, he and his men were ordered to search a village.” Pete stopped, an odd expression on his face. “I’m not sure of the details, but the kid’s been accused of murdering unarmed civilians.”

“Jesus.”

“Hunter says no way he’s guilty.”

“Your friend. The uncle.”

“Yes.”

“What’s your take?”

Pete shrugged. “I’m not sure what to think. Hunter says the kid’s a good marine, had plans to make a career of it, but I don’t know him.”

“Where is he now?”

“Cooling his heels at Camp Lejeune pending completion of an inquiry.”

“Relieved of duty?”

Pete nodded.

“Hard.” For something to say.

“Yeah. Hell on the family.”

Cold-blooded killer? Incompetent leader? Good soldier, bad decision in the heat of battle? Tough one.

In the same place Katy was posted.

Pete bunched and tossed his napkin. Looked at me. Read my mind.

“You’re thinking of Katy, right?”

I didn’t respond.

“Katy’s a private. She won’t be leading anyone anywhere.”

“She’s in artillery.”

“Behind the lines.”

“Launching rockets at people who hate us.”

“Not everyone in Afghanistan hates Americans.”

“I know. But life’s so . . . unpredictable over there. She could be killed on her way to breakfast.”

“So could I.”

“You know what I mean.”

“Katy is a survivor.”

He said it with such confidence I could almost believe him. Still. The images. Katy lying by a burning Humvee on a bleak desert road. In a body bag.

Like the girl in the cooler.

The hit-and-run victim had a mother somewhere, wondering where she was. Why she wasn’t calling. Was someone assuring her that her little girl was well?

I gulped the last of my Perrier, now mostly melted ice.

“My car—”

“Off we go!”

Pete pantomimed writing. April and her teeth reappeared with the check.

We did our usual lunge. Pete got there first, paid cash, including a tip that could have financed a presidential campaign.

Five minutes of Rihanna, and we were at the courthouse parking deck. I got out and circled to Pete’s side of the car. He lowered his window.

“So. Tomorrow we’re officially free.” Christ. Did I really say that?

“Yeppers.” Equally lame.

We shared a clumsy through-the-opening hug. Lasting a moment too long?

“All the best to you and Summer.”

“Thanks. Keep in touch?”

“Of course.”

“Do you want me to wait until you’re wheels-up?”

“I’m a big girl.”

“But lousy with keys.”

I dug out and dangled the spares from my desk. Returned his loaner.

Then Pete was gone.

My purse was still in the Mazda. The hated shoes.

Below, passing vehicles made soft whooshing sounds on Fourth Street. In the distance a drunk warbled “Lucy in the Sky.”

I dropped one set of keys into my purse and pulled out my phone.

Slidell answered after two rings.

BOOK: Bones of the Lost
5.32Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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