Chromosome 6 by Robin Cook. Chapter 16-1

‘Maybe you should describe to me the exact sequence you go through when

a body leaves here.’

‘You mean everything that happens?’ Marvin said.

‘Please,’ Laurie said. ‘I mean, I have a general idea, but I don’t know

the specifics.’

‘Where do you want me to start?’ Marvin asked.

‘Right from the beginning,’ Laurie said. ‘Right from the moment you get

the call from the funeral home.’

‘Okay,’ Marvin said. ‘The call comes in, and they say they’re from

so-and-so funeral home and they want to do a pickup. So they give me the

name and the accession number.’

‘That’s it?’ Laurie asked. ‘Then you hang up.’

‘No,’ Marvin said. ‘I put them on hold while I enter the accession

number into the computer. I gotta make sure the body has been released

by you guys and also find out where it is.’

‘So then you go back to the phone and say what?’

‘I say it’s okay,’ Marvin said. ‘I tell them I’ll have the body ready. I

guess I usually ask when they think they’ll be here. I mean, no sense

rushing around if they’re not going to be here for two hours or

something.’

‘Then what?’ Laurie said.

‘I get the body and check the accession number,’ Marvin said. ‘Then I

put it in the front of the walk-in cooler. We always put them in the

same place. In fact, we line them up in the order we expect them to go

out. It makes it easier for the drivers.’

‘And then what happens?’ Laurie asked.

‘Then they come,’ Marvin said with another shrug.

‘And what happens when they arrive?’ Laurie asked.

‘They come in here and we fill out a receipt,’ Marvin said. ‘It’s all

got to be documented. I mean they have to sign to indicate they have

accepted custody.’

‘Okay,’ Laurie said. ‘And then you go back and get the body?’

‘Yeah, or one of them gets it,’ Marvin said. ‘All of them have been in

and out of here a million times.’

‘Is there any final check?’ Laurie asked.

‘You bet,’ Marvin said. ‘We always check the accession number one more

time before they wheel the body out of here. We have to indicate that

being done on the documents. It would be embarrassing if the drivers got

back to the home and realized they had the wrong corpse.’

‘Sounds like a good system,’ Laurie said, and she meant it. With so many

checks it would be hard to subvert such a procedure.

‘It’s been working for decades without a screwup,’ Marvin said. ‘Of

course, the computer helps. Before that, all they had was the logbook.’

‘Thanks, Marvin,’ Laurie said.

‘Hey, no problem, Doc,’ Marvin said.

Laurie left the mortuary office. Before going up to her own she stopped

off on the second floor to get a snack out of the vending machines in

the lunch room. Reasonably fortified, she went up to the fifth floor.

Seeing Jack’s office door ajar, she walked over and peeked in. Jack was

at his microscope.

‘Something interesting?’ she asked.

Jack looked up and smiled. ‘Very,’ he said. ‘Want to take a look?’

Laurie glanced into the eyepieces as Jack leaned to the side. ‘It looks

like a tiny granuloma in a liver,’ she said.

‘That’s right,’ Jack said. ‘It’s from one of those tiny pieces I was

able to find of Franconi’s liver.’

‘Hmmm,’ Laurie commented, continuing to look into the microscope.

‘That’s weird they would have used an infected liver for a transplant.

You’d think they would have screened the donor better. Are there a lot

of these tiny granulomas?’

‘Maureen has only given me one slide of the liver so far,’ Jack said.

‘And that’s the only granuloma I found, so my guess would be that there

aren’t a lot. But I did see one on the frozen section. Also on the

frozen section were tiny collapsed cysts on the surface of the liver

which would have been visible to the naked eye. The transplant team must

have known and didn’t care.’

‘At least there’s no general inflammation,’ Laurie said. ‘So the

transplant was being tolerated pretty well.’

‘Extremely well,’ Jack said. ‘Too well, but that’s another issue. What

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