Temperance Brennan: Flash And Bones - Temperance Brennan: Flash and Bones Part 4
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Temperance Brennan: Flash and Bones Part 4

Currently, Ryan's only child, Lily, was in Ontario, enrolled in yet another drug rehab program. Daddy had taken leave to be there with daughter.

I read Ryan's e-mail.

Though witty and charming, when it comes to correspondence, Monsieur le Detective is not Victor Hugo. He wrote that he and Lily were well. That his short-term rental apartment had crappy pipes. That he would phone.

I responded in kind. No nostalgia, no sentimentality, no personal updates.

After hitting send, I sat a moment, a tiny knot tightening in my gut.

Screw prudence.

I dialed Ryan's cell. He answered on the second ring.

"Call a plumber."

"Merci, madame. I will give your suggestion serious consideration."

"How's Lily?"

"Who knows?" Ryan sighed. "The kid's saying all the right things, but she's smart and a champ at working people. What's new in North Carolina?"

Share? Why not? He was a cop. I could use his input.

I told Ryan about the sandpit and landfill cases. About the landfill's proximity to the Charlotte Motor Speedway. About my conversation with Wayne Gamble.

"Gamble is jackman on Sandy Stupak's crew?"

"Yes."

"The Sprint Cup Series driver?" Finally Ryan sounded a wee bit animated.

"Don't tell me you're a NASCAR fan."

"Bien sur, madame. Well, to be accurate, I'm a Jacques Villeneuve fan. I used to follow Indy and Formula One. When Villeneuve made the switch to NASCAR, I went with him."

"Who's Jacques Villeneuve?"

"Seriously?" Ryan's shock sounded genuine.

"No. I'm testing to see if you're bullshitting me."

"Jacques Villeneuve won the 1995 CART Championship, the 1995 Indianapolis 500, and the 1997 Formula One World Championship, making him only the third driver after Mario Andretti and Emerson Fittipaldi to accomplish that."

"What's CART?"

"Championship Auto Racing Teams. It's complicated, but it was the name of a governing body for open-wheel cars, the kind that race the Indy. The group doesn't exist under that name now."

"But you're not talking stock cars."

"Hardly."

"I'm going to go out on a limb here and guess Villeneuve is Quebecois."

"Born in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, he still has a home in Montreal. You know the course out on ile Notre-Dame?"

Ryan was referring to a track at Parc Jean-Drapeau on ile Notre-Dame, a man-made island in the Saint Lawrence River. Each year during Grand Prix Week, you could hear the whine of Formula 1 engines even miles away at our lab.

"Yes," I said.

"Jacques's father, Gilles, also drove Formula One. He was killed during qualifying for the 1982 Belgian Grand Prix. That year the track on ile Notre-Dame was renamed Circuit Gilles Villeneuve in his honor."

"It's a road course, not an oval, right?"

"Yes. The Formula One Canadian Grand Prix is run there. So are the NASCAR Canadian Tire Series, the NASCAR Nationwide series, and a number of other events."

Grand Prix Week in Montreal is like Race Week in Charlotte. Bucks flow like water, making merchants, restaurateurs, hoteliers, and bar owners giddy with joy.

"You surprise me, Detective. I'd no idea you follow auto racing."

"I'm a man of many talents, Dr. Brennan. Find us a backseat and I'll race your-"

"Keep me in the loop on Lily."

After disconnecting with Ryan, I deleted twelve other e-mails, ignored the rest.

I was considering alternate ways to research Cindi Gamble's disappearance when the landline rang.

"How you doing, sugar britches?"

Great. My ex-husband. Or almost ex. Though we'd been separated for over a decade, Pete and I had never bothered with paperwork or courts. Weird, since he's a lawyer.

"Don't call me that," I said.

"Sure, butter bean. How's the Birdcat?"

"Totally freaked by the storm. How's Boyd?"

Boyd is typically the reason I hear from my ex. If I'm in Charlotte, I take care of the chow when Pete has to travel.

"Unhappy with the current divisive climate in Washington."

"Is he coming for a visit?"

"No. We're cool."

A few months back, almost-fifty Pete had slipped a ring onto the finger of twentysomething-D-cup Summer, creating the need for an unmarital status that was legal and official. Currently, that was the second most frequent reason I heard from Pete.

"I've yet to receive papers from your lawyer," I said. "You need to goose-"

"That's not why I'm calling."

I know Janis Petersons like I know the inside of my ear. Twenty years of marriage will do that to people. He sounded tense.

I waited.

"I need a favor," Pete said.

"Uh-huh."

"It's about Summer."

Warning bells clanged in my brain.

"I want you to talk to her."

"I don't even know her, Pete."

"It's probably just the wedding. But she seems"-silver-tongued Mr. Petersons searched for a descriptor-"unhappy."

"Marriage planning is stressful." True. But if Bridezilla held auditions in Charlotte, Summer would be a shoo-in.

"Could you feel her out? See what's up?"

"Summer and I-"

"It's important to me, Tempe."

"I'll give her a call."

"It might be better if you invite her to your place. You know. 'Girls sharing a glass of wine' kind of thing?"

"Sure." Masking my horror at the thought. And my annoyance at Pete's failure to bear in mind that I'd popped my final cork years ago.

"Who knows, buttercup?" Relief put a bounce in Pete's tone. "You might find you like her."

I'd have preferred hemorrhoids to a conversation with Pete's dimwit fiancee.

THAT NIGHT'S STORM MADE THURSDAY'S LOOK LIKE A Fairyland sprinkle. I awoke to windows papered with soggy magnolia leaves and blossoms.

And a Chet Baker ringtone.

Relocating Birdie to my left side, I picked up my iPhone. Through one half-raised lid, I could see that the caller was Larabee. I clicked on.

"Hello." I did that thing you do when trying to sound wide awake.

"Were you sleeping?"

"No. No. What's up?"

"We didn't get a chance to talk before you left."

"I had errands to run."

"Listen, a guy came to see me yesterday. He's wondering if the landfill John Doe could be this Ted Raines guy who went missing earlier this week."

I sat up and stuffed a pillow behind my head. Birdie stretched all four legs and spread his toes.

"I seriously doubt that drum went into the landfill this week. What's Raines's story?"

"He's a thirty-two-year-old white male. Married, one kid. Lives in Atlanta, works for CDC."

Larabee was referring to the government's Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

"How tall is he?"

"Five-eight."

Males tend to embellish their actual height, and measurements taken from corpses are often inaccurate. The extra inch wasn't a problem. Raines fit my profile. But Larabee knew that. So why was he calling?

"Didn't Mrs. Flowers give you my prelim?" I asked.

"I wanted your take."

"Given what you say, there's nothing to exclude him based on physical characteristics."

Birdie recurled into a very small ball.

"What about PMI?" Larabee wanted to know how long I thought the John Doe had been dead.

"Other than Molene's speculation that the drum came from a sector of the landfill active during the late nineties, and the fact that the thing is old and rusty, I've nothing more to go on. Could be a month. Could be a decade. But I doubt it was less than a week."

"Do you have a gut?"

"You were right about the asphalt. It created an airtight envelope and kept scavengers away from the body, so the vic is in pretty good shape. But the drum is toast. Given its condition and location, I think the guy was in there a while."

"He have anything with him? Clothes, personal items, maybe a social security number?"

"Zip."

"Guess I can rule out natural death."

"Did Hawkins manage to get prints?" I asked.

"Six. I'll have them run through AFIS." The Automated Fingerprint Identification System, a national database.

"Can Raines's wife get dental records?"

"I wanted to be sure there was a point before asking."