John D McDonald – Travis McGee 07 Darker Than Amber

“Know her address?”

“I expected to find out what it was last night. We’d been in the same party one other time, and I remember her saying she had friends up here, or a family or something. So when the description of the hit-and-run, and how it was a girl maybe her age and hair color, came over the radio, and it said you didn’t have an identification, I thought I could.. find out for sure.”

“We still haven’t made her, but we got the car about noon. Somebody stuck it in an empty lot, residential area. It was clouted off a shopping-center lot sometime before eleven last night. The guy who owned it was in the movies there with his wife. This year’s Olds. It figures to be kids. We’re getting more of that than we should. It was wiped clean. The stupidest kid knows enough for that. When they clout a car it’s a pack of them, and one will open up. A thing like this, a kid can’t handle it too long.”

He turned to an empty page in his pocket notebook, wrote, tore it out, handed it to rue. “You take this over to City Memorial, give it to the fellow there that’s on duty in the morgue. Six blocks west from here. If it’s this Marie Bowen, you phone me from there, otherwise, thanks for the effort. And if it is or it isn’t, it still won’t be any fun taking a look.”

I looked at the note on the way out. It gave me a strange jolt. “Give bearer a look at the Jane Doe. Kibber.”

The Gray Lady at the visitor’s desk directed me to the right corridor. The down stairway was at the end. Basements are a rarity in Florida. It was all linoleum and battleship gray. A colorless young man sat at a steel table under a hanging lamp reading a tattered Playboy. He took the note, crumpled it and dropped it into a wastebasket, got up and led me to a heavy door, pushed it open, turned on the inside lights. It was a small chilly room with lots of pipes and duets suspended from the ceiling. They had a filing system I had never seen before. They were modular installations, looking like heavy office filing equipment. The doors were gray steel, about six and a half feet long, horizontal, and eighteen inches or so high. Each storage case was four bodies high. They had three of them. I saw that a small ruby light glowed on the edge of the case next to an off-on toggle switch on five of the drawers, the two middle ones in two of the four-high units, and one of the middle ones in the third. They were the ones at the handiest height.

He took hold of the handle on one of the doors, lifted it and slid it back into a slot above the body compartment. He pulled the shelf which held the body outward. It rolled easily on its bearings. It clicked to a stop at the limit of its transit, and a bright built-in lighting system came on automatically. All the light was focused on the cotton sheet covering the body. I felt against my face a stir of air colder than that in the small room.

He reached and took the sheet and slowly turned it down. He turned it all the way down to her waist, and moved just a little bit to the side.

I imagine they had left the eye open to aid identification. The other side of her head and the other side of her face could be identified as probably being of human origin. From the waist down it was not a woman-shape under the sheet, just a lumpiness like a bed carelessly made up to resemble someone sleeping there, and the shoulder on the bad side of her was pushed in in a curious and sickening way.

I looked at that eye. An eye which has dried has an oddly dusty look. Like a cheap glass eye in a stuffed owl. It was the color I knew it would be. Darker than amber. With green flecks near the pupil.

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