Chromosome 6 by Robin Cook. Chapter 1, 2, 3, 4

‘And not likely to be released for a long time,’ Lou added.

‘Or so I’d like to believe,’ Laurie said. ‘Anyway, I’m hoping that doing

the post on Franconi might provide me with some closure. I still have

nightmares occasionally.’

‘They sealed her in a pine coffin to abduct her from here,’ Lou said.

‘She was taken away in one of the mortuary vans.’

‘My god!’ Jack said to Laurie. ‘You never told me about that.’

‘I try not to think about it,’ Laurie said. Then without missing a beat

she added: ‘You guys wait out here.’

Laurie ducked into the mortuary office to get a copy of the list of

refrigerator compartments assigned to the cases that had come in the

previous night.

‘I can’t imagine getting closed in a coffin,’ Jack said. He shuddered.

Heights were his main phobia but tight, confining spaces came a close

second.

‘Nor can I,’ Lou agreed. ‘But she was able to recover remarkably. An

hour or so after being released she had the presence of mind to figure

out how to save us both. That was particularly humbling since I’d gone

there to save her.’

‘Jeez!’ Jack said with a shake of his head. ‘Up until this minute I

thought my getting handcuffed to a sink by a couple of killers who were

arguing over who was going to do me in was the worst-case scenario.’

Laurie came out of the office waving a sheet of paper. ‘Compartment one

eleven,’ she said. ‘And I was right. The body wasn’t X-rayed.’

Laurie took off like a power walker. Jack and Lou had to hustle to catch

up with her. She made a beeline for the proper compartment. Once there

she slipped the autopsy folder under her left arm and used her right

hand to release the latch. In one, smooth, practiced motion, she swung

open the door and slid out the tray on its ball bearings.

Laurie’s brow furrowed.

‘That’s odd!’ she remarked. The tray was empty save for a few blood

stains and hardened secretions.

Laurie slid the tray back in and closed the door. She rechecked the

number. There’d been no mistake. It was compartment one eleven.

After looking at the list once again to make certain she’d not misread

the number, she reopened the compartment door, shielded her eyes from

the glare of the overhead lights, and peered into the depths of the dark

interior. There was no doubt: the compartment did not contain Carlo

Franconi’s remains.

‘What the hell!’ Laurie complained. She slammed the insulated door. And

just to be sure there wasn’t some stupid logistic error, she opened up

all the neighboring compartments one after the other. In those which

contained bodies, she checked the names and accession numbers. But it

soon became obvious: Carlo Franconi was not among them.

‘I don’t believe this,’ Laurie said with angry frustration. ‘The damn

body is gone!’

A smile had appeared on Jack’s face from the moment compartment one

eleven had proved to be empty. Now, facing Laurie’s exasperated frown,

he couldn’t help himself. He laughed heartily. Unfortunately his

laughter further piqued Laurie.

‘I’m sorry,’ Jack managed. ‘My intuition told me this case was going to

give you a bureaucratic headache. I was wrong. It’s going to give the

bureaucracy a headache.’

CHAPTER 2

———

MARCH 4, 1997

1:30 P.M.

COGO, EQUATORIAL GUINEA

KEVIN Marshall put down his pencil and looked out the window above his

desk. In contrast to his inner turmoil, the weather outside was rather

pleasant with the first patches of blue sky that Kevin had seen for

months. The dry season had finally begun. Of course it wasn’t dry; it

just didn’t rain nearly as much as during the wet season. The downside

was that the more consistent sun made the temperature soar to ovenlike

levels. At the moment it hovered at one hundred and fifteen degrees in

the shade.

Kevin had not worked well that morning nor had he slept during the

night. The anxiety he’d felt the previous day at the commencement of the

surgery had not abated. In fact, it had gotten worse, especially after

the unexpected call from the GenSys CEO, Taylor Cabot. Kevin had only

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