Chromosome 6 by Robin Cook. Chapter 16-1

could not be any more different.’

‘Hey, that’s good news,’ Jack said. ‘Then, it was a transplant.’

‘I guess,’ Ted said without conviction. ‘But the sequence with the DQ

alpha is identical, right down to the last nucleotide.’

‘What does that mean?’ Jack asked.

Ted spread his hands like a supplicant and wrinkled his forehead. ‘I

don’t know. I can’t explain it. Mathematically, it couldn’t happen. I

mean the chances are so infinitesimally small, it’s beyond belief. We’re

talking about an identical match of thousands upon thousands of base

pairs even in areas of long repeats. Absolutely identical. That’s why we

got the results that we did with the DQ alpha screen.’

‘Well, the bottom line is that it was a transplant,’ Jack said. ‘That’s

the issue here.’

‘If pressed, I’d have to agree it was a transplant,’ Ted said. ‘But how

they found a donor with the identical DQ alpha is beyond me. It’s the

kind of coincidence that smacks of the supernatural.’

‘What about the test with the mitochondrial DNA to confirm the floater

is Franconi?’ Jack asked.

‘Jeez, you give a guy an inch and he wants a mile,’ Ted complained. ‘We

just got the blood, for crissake. You’ll have to wait on the results.

After all, we turned the lab upside down to get what you got so quickly.

Besides I’m more interested in this DQ alpha situation compared to the

polymarker results. Something doesn’t jibe.’

‘Well, don’t lose any sleep over it,’ Jack said. He stood up and gave

Ted back all the material Ted had dumped in his lap. ‘I appreciate what

you’ve done. Thanks! It’s the information I needed. And when the

mitochondrial results are back, give me a call.’

Jack was elated by Ted’s results, and he wasn’t worried about the

mitochondrial study. With the correlation of the X rays, he was already

confident the floater and Franconi were one and the same.

Jack got on the elevator. Now that he’d documented that it had been a

transplant, he was counting on Bart Arnold to come up with the answers

to solve the rest of the mystery. As he descended, Jack found himself

wondering about Ted’s emotional reaction to the DQ alpha results. Jack

was aware that Ted didn’t get excited about too many things.

Consequently, it had to be significant. Unfortunately, Jack didn’t know

enough about the test to have much of an opinion. He vowed that when he

had the chance he’d read up on it.

Jack’s elation was short-lived; it faded the moment he walked into

Bart’s office. The forensic investigator was on the phone, but he shook

his head the moment he caught sight of Jack. Jack interpreted the

gesture as bad news. He sat down to wait.

‘No luck?’ Jack asked as soon as Bart disconnected.

‘I’m afraid not,’ Bart said. ‘I really expected UNOS to come through,

and when they said that they had not provided a liver for Carlo Franconi

and that he’d not even been on their waiting list, I knew the chances of

tracing where he’d gotten the liver fell precipitously. Just now I was

on the phone with Columbia-Presbyterian, and it wasn’t done there. So

I’ve heard from just about every center doing liver transplants, and no

one takes credit for Carlo Franconi.’

‘This is crazy,’ Jack said. He told Bart that Ted’s findings confirmed

that Franconi had had a transplant.

‘I don’t know what to say,’ Bart commented.

‘If someone didn’t get their transplant in North America or Europe,

where could it have taken place?’ Jack asked.

Bart shrugged. ‘There are a few other possibilities. Australia, South

Africa, even a couple of places in South America, but having talked to

my contact at UNOS, I don’t think any of them are likely.’

‘No kidding?’ Jack said. He was not hearing what he wanted to hear.

‘It’s a mystery,’ Bart commented.

‘Nothing about this case is easy,’ Jack complained as he got to his

feet.

‘I’ll keep at it,’ Bart offered.

‘I’d appreciate it,’ Jack said.

Jack wandered out of the forensic area, feeling mildly depressed. He had

the uncomfortable sensation that he was missing some major fact, but he

had no idea what it could be or how to go about finding out what it was.

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