hair will seem a bit longer because of her dehydration. If she was kidnapped, she likely wasn’t kept very long.”
Marino’s face is dark red, his eyes wide, as if he’s reminded of something that really upsets him.
“What’s the matter with you?” I insert an eighteen-gauge needle into the left femoral artery.
“Nothing.” He talks the way he does when it’s something.
I try the subclavian next, inserting a needle below the clavicle. No luck, and I try the notch to puncture the aorta, and manage to get a few drops. When I open her up later today, what I’ll find is that her vessels are almost completely empty, the walls stained with hemoglobin, what looks like rust. For the most part, iron is all that’s left.
I drip thick, dark blood on two sample areas of an FTA micro-card and place it under a chemical hood to air-dry.
“If you’ll get her back inside the cooler, and this room stays locked. No one’s to come in here,” I tell Marino, as I pull off my lab coat. “Call DNA, let Gloria know they can collect the card within the hour. It should be dry by then, and we want a DNA profile as fast as they can manage, and it needs to be entered into NamUs, NDIS, with as little delay as possible.”
I toss the lab coat, shoe covers, and gloves into a bright red biohazard trash can and push open the door that leads into the air-locked vestibule, then the second door that leads into the corridor. It’s twenty past two and I can’t remember the last time I was this late for court or, better put, as late as I know I’m about to be. It will be at least two-forty-five, possibly as late as three-fifteen by the time Marino gets me to Fan Pier on Boston’s waterfront, I calculate, and that’s if traffic is reasonable.
Elevator doors slide open on my floor, and I jog along the corridor, not caring what a ridiculous sight I must be in a gray drysuit liner and tactical boots, carrying an orange jacket and a garbage bag. I scan my thumb to unlock my office, hurrying inside, as Bryce emerges from my bathroom, startling me. He’s in his coat, his sunglasses parked on top of his head, and carrying the stainless-steel pitcher and demitasse cups Lucy and I drank café Cubano out of what seems light-years ago.
“I thought you were at the vet’s.” I drop my bag of wet clothes and jacket on the floor and stoop down to take off my boots. “I’m really, really late. Have you heard from Dan Steward? How’s your cat?”
“Good God in heaven, what do you have on?” Bryce stares disapprovingly at the way I’m dressed. “Did you escape from the Ozarks? From a POW camp? Are you a biohazard? Kind of sexy, actually like a warm-fuzzy dive skin, but why gray? These are going into the dishwasher. Lucy must have cleaned up, am I right? Scummy milk film, and sticky enough to attract a flock of hummingbirds.”
“I’m late for court, and you need to scoot so I can get ready. What are you doing in here, and does Dan understand what’s going on?”
“Low on coffee and bottled water avec gaz et sans, completely out of trail mix, sugar-free granola, protein drinks, and those awful little crackers you like that supposedly are whole-grain or rice or particleboard. Dan’s been dragging out cross-examining the witness who’s right before you. . . .”
“Thank God.” I pad barefoot to my desk and dig through files.
“But apparently the judge asked where you were and Dan told him but said judges don’t give a shit about excuses and to hurry and get there.”
“Have you seen my Mildred Lott file?”
“So I stopped at Whole Foods and just got here a minute ago.” He opens my closet door. “And of course noticed your little kitchenette in there is a mess just like it always is after Lucy helps herself. She needs to find a nice wife, because her domestic skills don’t exist. It’s right next to your microscope, where you left it. Under some histology reports?”
He retrieves my suit and blouse.
“I don’t know what you did with your pantyhose. Figured you pitched them. I realize they don’t have much of a shelf life.”
I have no idea what I did with them. I probably tucked them in a desk drawer. I don’t care.
He drapes my clothes over the conference table.
“I absolutely know Indy wasn’t exposed to onions. Ethan