Chromosome 6 by Robin Cook. Chapter 10, 11

Chromosome 6. Chapter 10, 11

CHAPTER 10

———-

MARCH 5, 1997

2:15 P.M.

NEW YORK CITY

‘EXCUSE me, Laurie,’ Cheryl Myers said, standing in the doorway to

Laurie’s office. Cheryl was one of the forensic investigators. ‘We just

received this overnight package, and I thought you might want it right

away.’

Laurie stood up and took the parcel. She was curious about what it could

be. She looked at the label to find out the sender. It was CNN.

‘Thanks, Cheryl,’ Laurie said. She was perplexed. She had no idea for

the moment what CNN could have sent her.

‘I see Dr. Mehta is not in,’ Cheryl said. ‘I brought up a chart for her

that came in from University Hospital. Should I put it on her desk?’ Dr.

Riva Mehta was Laurie’s office mate. They’d shared the space since both

had started at the medical examiner’s office six and a half years

previously.

‘Sure,’ Laurie said, preoccupied with her parcel. She got her finger

under the flap and pulled it open. Inside was a videotape. Laurie looked

at the label. It said: Carlo Franconi shooting, March 3,1997.

After having finished her final autopsy that morning, Laurie had been

ensconced in her office, trying to complete some of the twenty-odd cases

that she had pending. She’d been busy reviewing microscopic slides,

laboratory results, hospital records, and police reports, and for

several hours had not thought of the Franconi business. The arrival of

the tape brought it all back. Unfortunately the video was meaningless

without the body.

Laurie tossed the tape into her briefcase and tried to get back to work.

But after fifteen minutes of wasted effort, she turned the light off

under her microscope. She couldn’t concentrate. Her mind kept toying

with the baffling question of how the body had disappeared. It was as if

it had been an amazing magic trick. One minute the body was safely

stored in compartment one eleven and viewed by three employees, then

poof, it was gone. There had to be an explanation, but try as she might,

Laurie could not fathom it.

Laurie decided to head down to the basement to visit the mortuary

office. She’d expected at least one tech to be available, but when she

arrived the room was unoccupied. Undaunted, Laurie went over to the

large, leather-bound log. Flipping the page, she looked for the entries

that Mike Passano had shown her the previous night. She found them

without difficulty. Taking a pencil from a collection in a coffee mug

and a sheet of scratch paper, Laurie wrote down the names and accession

numbers of the two bodies that had come in during the night shift:

Dorothy Kline #101455 and Frank Gleason #100385. She also wrote down the

names of the two funeral homes: Spoletto in Ozone Park, New York, and

the Dickson in Summit, New Jersey.

Laurie was about to leave when her eye caught the large Rolodex on the

corner of the desk. She decided to call each home. After identifying

herself, she asked to speak to the managers.

What had sparked her interest in telephoning was the outside chance that

either one of the pickups could have been bogus. She thought the chances

were slim, since the night tech, Mike Passano, had said the homes had

called before coming and presumably he was familiar with the people.

As Laurie expected, the pickups indeed were legitimate, both managers

attesting to the fact that the bodies had come in to their respective

homes and were at that time on view.

Laurie went back to the logbook and looked again at the names of the two

arrivals. To be complete, she copied them down along with their

accession numbers. The names were familiar to her, since she’d assigned

them as autopsies the following morning to Paul Plodgett. But she wasn’t

as interested in the arrivals as the departures. The arrivals had come

in with longtime ME employees, whereas the bodies that had gone out had

done so with strangers.

Feeling frustrated, Laurie drummed her pencil on the desk surface. She

was sure she had to be missing something. Once again, her eye caught the

Rolodex which was open to the Spoletto Funeral Home. In the very back of

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