Chromosome 6 by Robin Cook. Chapter 13, 14

problem?’

‘Only that Bingham went mildly ballistic,’ Jack said. ‘And I was hauled

in as the culprit.’

‘Gosh, I’m sorry,’ Lou said. ‘It didn’t dawn on me it could cause a

problem here. I guess I should have run it by you. Well, I owe you.’

‘Forget it,’ Jack said. ‘It’s already patched up.’ He poured himself

some coffee, shoveled in some sugar, and added a dollop of cream.

‘At least it had the desired effect on the street,’ Lou said. ‘And we

learned something important already. The people who killed him were

definitely not the same people who took his body and mauled it.’

‘Doesn’t surprise me,’ Jack said.

‘No?’ Lou questioned. ‘I thought that was the general consensus around

here. At least that’s what Laurie said.’

‘She now thinks the people that took the body did it because they didn’t

want anyone to know he’d had a liver transplant,’ Jack said. ‘I still

favor the idea it was done to conceal the individual’s identity.’

‘Really,’ Lou said pensively, sipping his coffee. ‘That doesn’t make any

sense to me. You see we’re reasonably sure the body was taken on orders

from the Lucia crime family, the direct competitors of the Vaccarros,

who we understand had Franconi killed.’

‘Good grief!’ Jack exclaimed. ‘Are you sure about that?’

‘Reasonably,’ Lou said. ‘The informer who divulged it is usually

reliable. Of course, we don’t have any names. That’s the frustrating

part.’

‘Just the idea that organized crime is involved is appalling,’ Jack

said. ‘It means that the Lucia people are somehow involved in organ

transplants. If that doesn’t make you lose sleep, nothing will.’

‘Calm down!’ Raymond yelled into the phone. The moment he’d been about

to leave the apartment, the phone had rung. When he heard it was Dr.

Daniel Levitz on the line, he’d taken the call.

‘Don’t tell me to calm down!’ Daniel shouted back. ‘You’ve seen the

papers. They have Franconi’s body! And already a medical examiner by the

name of Dr. Jack Stapleton has been in my office asking for Franconi’s

records.’

‘You didn’t give them, did you?’ Raymond asked.

‘Of course not!’ Daniel snapped. ‘But he condescendingly reminded me

that he could subpoena them. I’m telling you, this guy was very direct

and very aggressive, and he vowed to get to the bottom of the case. He

suspects Franconi had a transplant. He asked me directly.’

‘Do your records have any information at all about his transplant or our

program?’ Raymond asked.

‘No, I followed your suggestions in that regard to the letter,’ Daniel

said. ‘But it’s going to look very strange if anybody looks at my

records. After all, I’d been documenting Franconi’s deteriorating status

for years. Then all of a sudden, his liver function studies are normal

without any explanation, nothing! Not even a comment. I’m telling you

there’ll be questions, and I don’t know whether I can handle them. I’m

very upset. I wish I’d never gotten involved in all this.’

‘Now let’s not get carried away,’ Raymond said with a calmness that he

himself did not feel. ‘There’s no way Stapleton could get to the bottom

of the case. Our concern about an autopsy was purely hypothetical and

based on an infinitesimally small chance someone with the IQ of Einstein

could figure out the source of the transplant. It’s not going to happen.

But I appreciate your calling me about Dr. Stapleton’s visit. As it

turns out, I’m on my way this very minute to have a meeting with Vinnie

Dominick. With his resources, I’m sure he’ll be able to take care of

everything. After all, to a large measure, he’s responsible for the

present situation.’

As soon as he could, Raymond got off the phone. Appeasing Dr. Daniel

Levitz wasn’t doing anything for his own anxiety. After advising Darlene

what to say in the unlikely chance Taylor Cabot called back, he left the

apartment. Catching a taxi at the corner of Madison and Sixty-fourth, he

instructed the cabbie how to get to Corona Avenue in Elmhurst.

The scene at the Neopolitan Restaurant was exactly the same as it had

been the day before, with the addition of the stale smell of a couple of

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