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"Go ahead and put a red flag beside it," said Diane. "I'll check it out later."
There was more conversation during the last half of the search. But as Diane glanced at them, they never took their eyes off the ground. When the last leg of the initial survey was finished, there were small patches of flags around the pit from five to twenty-six feet-marking places where, in all probability, animals had dragged carrion from the pit. There were very few yellow flags. Diane wondered in pa.s.sing if the guy had marked the arrowhead or simply picked it up.
"Let's break for lunch," she said, rubbing her sore back. "I know it's sort of a late lunch. And I thank you for the good job you're doing."
They had all brought packed lunches and now looked for comfortable shade to sit down in and eat. The only shade was in the surrounding woods several yards from their search area. Diane found a rock beside Jonas Briggs and sat down with her peanut b.u.t.ter sandwich, apple and bottled water. She was more tired than she thought she should be. Must be old age creeping up on me, Must be old age creeping up on me, she thought, but there was Jonas, looking as refreshed as when he started. She took a long drink of water. she thought, but there was Jonas, looking as refreshed as when he started. She took a long drink of water.
When she was in the jungle digging, on those occasions when she was close enough to get back to the compound in a reasonable amount of time, she'd sometimes drive a couple of hours or more and arrive so hot and tired she'd collapse on the cot in one of the two rooms she rented from the mission school. Ariel would come with a bottle of water, pat her arm and snuggle up to her. As hot as Diane was, Ariel's warm little body was always a comfort. She'd tell Diane everything that had happened at the mission that day or what she'd learned in school. Diane would tell her a story, and before long she wasn't tired anymore. Sometimes the worst of her feelings was regret-that terrible wishing that more than anything she had taken Ariel out of the country. The wish sucked at her heart, hurting all the way to her throat, filling her eyes with tears.
"The Abercrombies are letting the crew bed down on the floor of their den," said Jonas, jolting Diane from her thoughts. "Mrs. Abercrombie's a very gracious woman. She's fixing us all supper this evening."
"That certainly is nice of her."
"It seems as though she likes to entertain, but her husband doesn't. This is her chance. Lucky for us."
Diane tucked away her sad thoughts and asked the crew members what each of them did. Two were looking for positions at universities, three were professional archaeology field-crew members, and two were working on their doctorates. During lunch she got a summary of their interests, which ran from taphonomy to pottery types and debitage, which was explained to her as the waste flakes from projectile-point production. Another of the doctoral students was about to explain behavioral-chain a.n.a.lysis when Frank and Whit arrived with the sheriff. Diane got up to greet them, feeling guilty at her relief for not having to listen to the explanation.
"How are things going?" asked Frank, looking out over the terrain of flags and string.
"Got a good start. After we eat, we'll begin excavating."
"I appointed a couple of deputies to stay at the site," said the sheriff. "Maybe some of the guys would like to help them with guard duty. A couple of them said they always stay with their archaeology digs to warn off pot hunters. I didn't know there were people out in the woods actually looking for the stuff. Seems to me you wouldn't want to come upon somebody's patch."
"I think they mean people who steal artifacts," said Diane.
"Oh, well, that makes more sense. Got a call from your-all's chief of detectives yesterday." The sheriff laughed. "He's not real pleased with this project here. Thinks we're interfering. I asked him how locating the rest of a body to go along with that foot bone you found in my jurisdiction is an interference in anything he's doing in his city."
"And?" asked Frank.
"Came down to he didn't want me mentioning it to the newspapers that some of us think it might be connected to the Boone murders. G.o.d forbid facts might get in the way of his theory on the case."
"What's the deal with them?" asked Diane. "Why aren't they anxious for leads? Even if they don't lead anywhere, you don't know until you investigate."
"As far as they're concerned, they've got the killers in jail and the case is solved. This is the first big test of the mayor and his new chief of police's ideas for better police work. It's the mayor's chance to show the city council and the rest of Georgia that he's a man who gets things done in a big-city way. I'm sure he's making his campaign signs for governor right now."
"So," said Whit. "You have a collarbone and a foot bone. That's at least one, maybe two people." He suddenly laughed uneasily. "Two people buried here would look bad for us, wouldn't it?"
Frank and the sheriff looked askance at him. "Yeah," said the sheriff. "It sure would. One could be pa.s.sed off as an accident. Two would be downright carelessness."
"Lady," Whit addressed Diane. "I really hope you don't find more than one person here."
"Right now we have a minimum number of one," said Diane, almost smiling at his sudden discomfort.
"Oh," said Frank, taking a large envelope from under his arm and handing it to her. "Here. I called your office, and Andie asked me to come by and bring this to you."
Andie had written on the envelope: Fax from Ranjan Patel. Fax from Ranjan Patel.
"That was quick. It's the results from the stable isotope a.n.a.lysis."
Chapter 25
The phrase stable isotope a.n.a.lysis stable isotope a.n.a.lysis must have leaped out of their conversation and over to the crew, for suddenly they stopped talking and came over to Diane, carrying their sandwiches and drinking water. must have leaped out of their conversation and over to the crew, for suddenly they stopped talking and came over to Diane, carrying their sandwiches and drinking water.
"You had an SIA done on some material?" asked one of the doctoral students.
"On the original bone that started all this." Diane looked at the fax transmitted by her friend, Ran. It wasn't a particularly good copy, but she a.s.sumed he sent her an original in the mail. The first page had a list of numbers in a table. The other pages were Ranjan's conclusions, written in his typical pedantic manner.
You're in luck. Your fellow was a vegetarian-note the values in the table. However, I don't think your person was a vegan, nor did he, I think, consume an abundance of legumes. Interesting. The delta numbers and the levels of the trace element strontium suggest that he ate fish and sh.e.l.lfish. I am most excited about this. Another interesting possibility to think about: You said the fellow was young, perhaps an older teenager. This would mean he had these eating habits from childhood. Is vegetarianism in children common? You must identify the fellow so we can test what the values seem to indicate. Also, I would say death took place five years ago.
Ranjan's report went on to explain the numbers in detail and listed all the caveats a.s.sociated with them. Bottom line, however, was that this a.n.a.lysis could be a clue in identification. His last paragraph explained the oxygen-hydrogen stable isotope ratios.
"Your person grew up in a climate that is cold and humid," he wrote. "See table."
"Cool," "great stuff," and "let's find the guy" were the sentiments of the excavation crew.
"Ain't that something?" said the sheriff.
"d.a.m.n. You did it," said Frank. "You not only told me what the guy had for his last meal, but where he had it."
"Ranjan's warnings weren't just cover-your-a.s.s warnings. The conclusions aren't written in stone," warned Diane. "There are many variables."
"Sure," said Frank. "But it's several d.a.m.n good leads. We have a young man, perhaps in his late teens, perhaps a vegetarian, may have disappeared five years ago and may have grown up somewhere in the North. That's enough to start looking at the missing person database."
"Would the database have their eating habits?" asked one of the crew.
"Sometimes," said Frank. "Particularly if there's some kind of medical condition or distinguishing trait. The family usually tries to give as much information as they can."
"Do you think he lived on the coast-maybe Maine or somewhere on the East Coast?"
The crew was getting into the spirit of the hunt. They liked the idea that their science might solve the mystery.
"Maybe," said Diane. "He could just as well be from Michigan, North Dakota, Washington State or Canada, for that matter. If you guys are finished with lunch, we'd better start digging. Ranjan's going to be calling me every day to see if I've found him-or her."
"I'm going to go over and watch the digging for a while," said Whit, following the crew.
The sheriff watched Whit's retreating back and gave a half-hearted chuckle. "I think ol' Whit's a little nervous. Be funny if he and his family turned out to be serial killers."
Frank laughed. "Yeah, that'd be just hilarious."
They were joking, but as Diane watched the crew gather their tools and remembered that they were staying in the Abercrombies' home, she said, "You don't think?" She let the question hang.
"No, of course not," said Frank. "Whit and I went to school together."
"Everybody went to school with somebody," said Diane. "You didn't go to school with his father, did you?"
"What's this about?" asked Frank.
"Nothing. It's just that the crew is staying in the Abercrombie house."
The sheriff laughed. "Boy, wouldn't that be funny."
"It might be Mrs. Abercrombie," said Frank. "Maybe this vegetarian fellow was a guest, and he insulted her by not having any of her pot roast."
"This isn't funny at all," said Diane.
"Yes, it is," said Frank. "I know these people. Do you think Whit would lead us right to the dump site if it'd been him? I think you-and the sheriff," Frank glared at him, "are letting your imaginations run away with you."
The sheriff chuckled again, clearly enjoying letting his imagination run away with him. "I'm going back to the office. I'll tell my deputies to keep an eye out if they see one of the Abercrombies wielding an axe. Seriously, Ms. Fallon, I've know'd ol' Luther all my life. He's a good ol' boy and wouldn't hurt a fly. Neither would Whit. They're good churchgoing folk." The sheriff took a deep breath before he started back to his car. "I do wish the perp could have picked a more convenient place to dump the body," he was saying as they watched his stout body disappear through the trees and underbrush.
"Maybe you're right," said Diane. "How's Star?"
"Angry. Angry at the guards who found her before she bled to death, angry at the police for arresting her and not looking for whoever wiped out her family, at her parents for dying, at herself for not dying with them. I think she's afraid if she gets over the anger, the grief will be more than she can stand."
Like all the people who couldn't find anything to say to her, Diane couldn't think of any comfort for Frank. She couldn't say that Star would get over it, because that would be a lie. Or that time will heal-it hadn't healed her. She'd learned to get by, day by day, but that was hardly a comfort.
"Maybe anger's a good thing right now. It takes up s.p.a.ce," she said.
"I'm going back to see her this evening. I've been staying with her at the hospital as much as I can-to let her know she's not alone. Why don't you come with me tonight to visit? You can tell her what you're doing."
Diane hesitated a moment, not wanting to watch someone else's grief when she had no comfort to offer her, but in the end relented. "Sure, if you think it will help. When do you have to get back to work?"
"The end of next week. Think we can solve this thing by then?"
Diane offered a weak smile. "I don't see why not."
Frank shook his head. "I can't help but wonder"-he gestured toward the pit where the crew were laying grid lines to start excavating-"what if this is not related to what happened to George and Louise and we've wasted all this time and energy in the wrong direction?"
"This is someone who needs justice too. Besides, what are the chances that your friends find a human bone, then get murdered within the week? My gut feeling is that someone didn't want this site found. Have you talked to people they might have told about the bone?"
"Some. So far, looks like they either told no one or no one is admitting it."
After arranging with Frank to pick her up at the museum later on, she went back to digging. The crew had laid out a grid of string and stakes. One of the guys was setting up the tripod and transit for mapping. Another guy and one of the women were setting up a screen to sift out the smaller objects from the dirt they removed. The remaining members of the crew were either driving stakes around the outlying bones or beginning excavation of the grids. It was going well; they didn't seem to need her. How tempting to just leave in their hands this thing that looked too much like a ma.s.s burial.
Let's just do it and get it over with, she told herself, squatting down beside a grid containing exposed bone. There was a row of teeth that looked like a deer's. Not human; that was good. She took her trowel and began removing the dirt from the bone. Before long she'd uncovered a deer skull. The top skull plate had been sawed through to remove the antlers and a portion of the skull. Normal find for a taxidermist's pit.
By the end of the day, a large portion of the first layer of the pit had been uncovered, leaving a tangle of exposed animal bones standing out in relief.
"We'll call it a day," said Diane, standing up, observing the completed work. "You guys are doing a good job. Fast too." She carefully walked among the grid squares, surveying the bone. All animal that she saw. A little easier than a pit of all humans, but it was death just the same. She didn't think she could be a hunter. As she started to step out of the grids so they could cover the area with plastic for the night, she spotted the end of a bone just about to be uncovered. Diane walked over and squatted down beside the woman who was working on that square.
"See something?" the young woman asked.
"It's been gnawed on by one of the canine family, but it's the distal end of a human humerus-the end that fits with the radius and ulna, the bones of the forearm," said Diane. She had expected to find an arm and perhaps a shoulder girdle close to the surface, since the original clavicle had made its way to the surface. She liked it when her expectations were met.
"Think the rest of him is close by?" asked the woman.
Diane shrugged. "Maybe. Or an animal could have separated the arm from the torso and dragged it here, or it may have percolated to the top."
"Grim stuff," she said.
"Yes, that's the word for it. Grim Grim."
Diane went from the site to the museum to check the day's activities before meeting Frank. Andie had left notes on her desk. Nothing urgent. She showered in her private bathroom off the conference room of her office. She slicked back her short wet hair, put on her minimalist makeup, and changed into denim pants, a black tee and maroon shirt jacket. It was good to feel clean.
There were more people in the museum after hours these days; the closer they got to the public opening, the more people stayed late. Her absence today reminded her that she needed to find an a.s.sistant director. She hadn't liked any of the applications that had come across her desk and wasn't sure she wanted to promote anyone in house.
She took the stairs to Jonas' office. Inside, she studied his chessboard. She had started the game to make Jonas feel at home, and was surprised how much she enjoyed it. It had been a long time since she had played her last game with Gregory. He nearly always won, except that time she had beat him in forty-six moves. She moved her other knight to the bishop three position and left the office, locking it behind her, and went down to meet Frank.
The museum seemed to be looking gentler-not quite so harsh as her first images of it-perhaps due to the good work of the groundskeepers, who were constantly planting, landscaping and manicuring.
"Dr. Fallon."
Diane turned from looking at the building to two girls coming up the steps-Emily, the cellist, and Lacy, the violist from the string quartet.
"h.e.l.lo. You here to meet Melissa and Alix? Are they working late?"
"No. We came to see you," said Emily.
"Maybe we shouldn't," said Lacy, grabbing her friend's arm.
"You want a job?" asked Diane, smiling at them. "We can always use energetic workers."
"No, it's not that," said Emily. "It's something else." She looked up at the windows as if looking for a spy. "It's kind of personal."
"Would you like to go to my office?"
"That would be better."
As Diane led them to her office, she called Frank and told him she would be running a little late. Entering her office from the private door, she led the two young women to her conference room. The stuffed sofa and chairs in the corner were more comfortable and less forbidding than her main office. She sat in one of the chairs and motioned for Emily and Lacy to sit on the sofa.
"Now, what can I do for you?"
"It's about Melissa," said Emily. She hesitated a moment, and Lacy interrupted.
"We're friends with Mike Seger, her boyfriend, too." She stopped a moment and took a breath. "This is really hard for us. We promised."
"Go on." Diane sat, waiting for a revelation. She couldn't have been more shocked when it came.
"I know you think Mike is. .h.i.tting Melissa," said Emily. "He's not. It's Alix."