Bones of the Lost

Bones of the Lost Read Free Page B

Book: Bones of the Lost Read Free
Author: Kathy Reichs
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remains to verify that they are nonhuman. Should that be the case, archaeologists will date, authenticate, and send the materials on to . . . somewhere.”
    “Why’s this litter of dead Chihuahuas—”
    “The bundles are from Peru, not Mexico.”
    “Yeah, sure. So, how come these pooches get the ME treatment?”
    “Customs officials snagged them at the airport. Some bonehead’s been accused of smuggling them into the country. The illegal import of antiquities is a crime, you know.”
    “Ee-yuh.” We rode a few more moments without talking. Then, “Ol’ Dom Rockett got lassoed by the feds.”
    Though curious, I waited, knowing Slidell would expound.
    “Dom Rockett, king of folksy shit from around the world.”
    “The whole world?” I couldn’t help myself.
    “South America, mostly. Our amigos down there got enough shit for the world.”
    Slidell is definitely fair-trade offensive.
    “Junk bracelets, rings, crap to loop around your neck. Llama-mama shawls, wall hangings. Fleas from overseas.”
    “You’re a poet, detective.”
    “Word is ICE thinks Rockett’s expanding his horizons, maybe branching out to include real antiques.” Slidell was referring to theU.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement. “Unreported ones.”
    I said nothing.
    “Wouldn’t surprise me. The guy’s pond scum.”
    “You know him?”
    “I know of him. Scum knows scum.”
    I didn’t ask what that meant.
    “Can you turn up the air?”
    “Feet won’t get cold?” Deadpan.
    I shot Slidell a don’t-go-there look. Which was pointless, since the Ray-Bans were fixed on the road.
    Slidell reached out and flipped a button, then hammered the dash with the heel of one hand. A blue light flickered and tepid air oozed from the vents.
    “If what you say is true, Rockett might have thought he could sell the mummy bundles to a museum,” I said. “Maybe a private collector.”
    “I’m sure ICE will be querying his ambitions. Turd will roll on whoever he’s dealing with.”
    Past I-77, West Trade swung west, then cut east again. Slidell took the curve fast, shooting paper bags and carry-out cartons across the floor in back. My mind threw up images of foodstuffs long gone. Fried chicken? Barbecue? Scavenged roadkill?
    Finally, curiosity won out.
    “What were you up to with Larabee?” I asked.
    “Hit and run came in this morning. Female. No ID.”
    “Age?”
    “Old enough.”
    “Meaning?” Sharper than I’d intended.
    “Mid to late teens.”
    “Race?”
    “Wetback. You can take that to the bank.”
    “No name, but magically you know the girl’s Latina, and therefore undocumented?”
    “She’s moving with no ID and no keys.”
    Rather like I was, I thought, but didn’t say it.
    Seconds passed.
    “Where was she found?” I asked.
    “Intersection of Rountree and Old Pineville roads, just south of Woodlawn. Doc Larabee’s putting time of death somewhere between midnight and dawn.”
    “What was she doing out there?” Mulling aloud.
    “What d’you think?”
    I was thinking Old Pineville was one deserted stretch in daytime, let alone in the middle of the night. There was a smattering of small businesses, but none that would attract a teenage girl.
    “Any witnesses?”
    Slidell shook his head. “I’ll do some canvassing once I’m done with Doc Larabee. My guess, she was out working.”
    “Really.”
    Slidell shrugged one beefy shoulder.
    “Unidentified teenage girl, that’s what you know. But you’ve got her down as an illegal turning tricks. That speed detecting?”
    He mumbled something.
    I blocked him out. After years of practice, I’ve gotten better at it.
    My gray cells offered a collage of images. A young girl alone in the dark on an empty two-lane. Headlights. The impact of a bumper.
    “—Story?”
    “What?”
    “Do you remember John-Henry Story?”
    The change of topic confused me. “The fire death last April?”
    Six months back I’d examined fragmentary

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