Chromosome 6 by Robin Cook. Chapter 13, 14

wait.’

‘Curiosity!’ Bingham roared. ‘That was the same lame excuse you used

last year when you disregarded my orders and went over to the MGH.’

‘At least I’m consistent,’ Jack said.

Bingham moaned. ‘And now here comes the impertinence. You really haven’t

changed much, have you?’

‘My basketball has improved,’ Jack said.

Jack heard the door open. He turned to see Calvin slip into the room.

Calvin folded his massive arms across his chest and stood to the side

like an elite harem guard.

‘I’m not getting anywhere with him,’ Bingham complained to Calvin, as if

Jack were no longer in the room. ‘I thought you said his behavior had

improved.’

‘It had, until this episode,’ Calvin said. He then glared down at Jack.

‘What irks me,’ Calvin said, finally addressing Jack, ‘is that you know

damn well that releases from the medical examiner’s office are to come

from Dr. Bingham or through public relations, period! You examiner

grunts are not to take it upon yourselves to divulge information. The

reality is that this job is highly politicized, and in the face of our

current problems we certainly don’t need more bad press.’

‘Time out,’ Jack said. ‘Something’s not right here. I’m not sure we’re

talking the same language.’

‘You can say that again,’ Bingham asserted.

‘What I mean is,’ Jack said, ‘I don’t think we are talking about the

same issue. When I came in here, I thought I was being called onto the

carpet because I bullied the janitor into giving me keys for this office

so I could find Franconi’s films.’

‘Hell, no!’ Bingham yelled. He pointed his finger at Jack’s nose. ‘It’s

because you leaked the story about Franconi’s body being discovered here

at the morgue after it had been stolen. What did you think? This would

somehow advance your career?’

‘Hold up,’ Jack said. ‘First, I’m not all that excited about advancing

my career. Second, I was not responsible for this story getting to the

media.’

‘You’re not?’ Bingham asked.

‘Certainly, you’re not suggesting that Laurie Montgomery was

responsible?’ Calvin asked.

‘Not at all,’ Jack said. ‘But it wasn’t me. Look, to tell you the truth,

I don’t even think it’s a story.’

‘That’s not how the media feels,’ Bingham said. ‘Nor the mayor for that

matter. He’s already called me twice this morning, asking what kind of

circus we’re running around here. This Franconi business continues to

make us look bad in the eyes of the entire city–particularly when news

about our own office takes us by surprise.’

‘The real story about Franconi isn’t about his body going on an

overnight out of the morgue,’ Jack said. ‘It’s about the fact that the

man seemingly had a liver transplant that no one knows about, that’s

hard to detect by DNA analysis, and that somebody wanted to hide it.’

Bingham looked up at Calvin, who raised his hands defensively. ‘This is

the first I’ve heard about this,’ he said.

Jack gave a rapid summary of his autopsy findings and then told about

Ted Lynch’s confusing DNA analysis results.

‘This sounds weird,’ Bingham said. He took off his glasses and wiped his

rheumy eyes. ‘It also sounds bad, considering that I want this whole

Franconi business to fade away. If there is something truly screwy going

on like Franconi getting an unauthorized liver, then that’s not going to

happen.’

‘I’ll know more today,’ Jack said. ‘I’ve got Bart Arnold contacting all

the transplant centers around the country, John DeVries up in the lab

running assays for immunosuppressants, Maureen O’Conner in histology

pushing through the slides, and Ted doing a six polymarker DNA test,

which he contends is foolproof. By this afternoon, we’ll know for sure

whether there’d been a transplant, and, if we’re lucky, where it had

taken place.’

Bingham squinted across his desk at Jack. ‘And you’re sure you didn’t

leak today’s newspaper story to the media?’

‘Scout’s honor,’ Jack said, holding up two fingers to form a V.

‘All right, I apologize,’ Bingham said. ‘But listen, Stapleton, keep

this all under your hat. And don’t go irritating everyone under the sun,

so that I start getting calls complaining about your behavior. You have

a knack for getting under people’s skin. And finally, promise me that

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