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Monday Mourning Part 4

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Both shots had been taken from above and to my right. In the first, I was talking to Claudel, eyes angry, gloved finger jabbing the air. The caption might have read "Attack of the Shrew."

The second captured the shrew on all fours, a.s.s pointing skyward.

"Any idea how the Journal Journal got these?" Ryan asked. got these?" Ryan asked.

"The owner's slimeball a.s.sistant."

"Claudel caught the case?"

"Yes." I picked bread crumbs from the tabletop.

Ryan reached out and placed his hand on mine. "Claudel's come around a lot."

I didn't reply.

Ryan was about to speak again when his cell phone twittered.

Giving my hand a squeeze, he pulled the unit from his belt and checked the caller ID. His eyes flicked up in frustration. Or irritation. Or something I couldn't read.

"I've got to take this," he said.

Pus.h.i.+ng back from the table, he moved off down the hall.

As I cleared dishes I could hear the rhythm of the conversation. The words were m.u.f.fled, but the cadence suggested agitation.

In moments, he was back.

"Sorry, babe. I've got to go."

"You're leaving?" I was stunned.

"It's a thankless business."

"We haven't eaten your pastry."

The Irish blues would not meet mine.

"I'm sorry."

A peck on the cheek.

The chef was alone with her uneaten surprise.

4.

I AWOKE FEELING DOWN AND NOT KNOWING WHY AWOKE FEELING DOWN AND NOT KNOWING WHY.

Because I was alone? Because my only bed partner was a big white cat? I hadn't planned my life that way. Pete and I had intended to grow old together. To sail married into the afterlife.

Then my forever-hubby shared Mr. Happy with a real estate agent.

And I enjoyed my own little fling with the bottle.

Whatever, as Katy would say. Life marches.

Outside, the weather was gray, bl.u.s.tery, and uninviting. The clock said seven-ten. Birdie was nowhere to be seen.

Pulling off my nights.h.i.+rt, I took a hot shower, then blow-dried my hair. Birdie strolled in as I was brus.h.i.+ng my teeth. I greeted him, then smiled into the mirror, considering whether it was a mascara day.

Then I remembered.

Ryan's hasty retreat. The look in his eyes.

Jamming my toothbrush back into its charger, I wandered to the bedroom and stared at the frosted window. Crystalline spirals and snowflake geometrics. So delicate. So fragile.

Like the fantasy I'd constructed of a life with Ryan?

I wondered again what was going on.

And why I was acting the featured ditz in a Doris Day comedy.

"Screw this, Doris," I said aloud.

Birdie looked up, but kept his thoughts to himself.

"And screw you, Andrew Ryan."

Returning to the bathroom, I layered on the Revlon.

The Laboratoire de Sciences Judiciaires et de Medecine Legale occupies the top two floors of the edifice Wilfrid-Derome, a T-shaped building in the Hochelaga-Maissoneuve district, just east of Centre-ville. The Bureau du Coroner is on the eleventh floor, the morgue is in the bas.e.m.e.nt. The remaining s.p.a.ce belongs to the SQ.

At eight-fifteen the twelfth floor was filling with white-coated men and women. Several greeted me as I swiped my security pa.s.s, first at the lobby entrance, then at the gla.s.s doors separating the medicolegal wing from the rest of the T. I returned their "bonjour" "bonjour"s and continued to my office, not in the mood to chat. I was still upset from last night's encounter with Ryan. Make that nonencounter.

As at most medical examiner and coroner facilities, each workday at the LSJML begins with a meeting of the professional staff. I'd barely removed my outerwear when the phone rang. Pierre LaManche. It had been a busy night. The chief was anxious to begin.

When I entered the conference room, only LaManche and Jean Pelletier were seated at the table. Both did that half-standing thing older men do when women enter a room.

LaManche asked about the Pet.i.t trial. I told him I thought my testimony had gone well.

"And Monday's recovery?"

"Except for mild hypothermia, and the fact that your animal bones turned out to be three people, that also went well."

"You will begin your a.n.a.lyses today?" asked LaManche in his Sorbonne French.

"Yes." I didn't mention what I thought I already knew based on my cursory examination in the bas.e.m.e.nt. I wanted to be sure.

"Detective Claudel asked me to inform you that he would come today at one-thirty."

"Detective Claudel will have a long wait. I'll hardly have begun."

Hearing Pelletier grunt, I looked in his direction.

Though subordinate to LaManche, Jean Pelletier had been at the lab a full decade when the chief hired on. He was a small, compact man, with thin gray hair and bags under his eyes the size of mackerels.

Pelletier was a devotee of Le Journal. Le Journal. I knew what was coming. I knew what was coming.

"Oui." Pelletier's fingers were permanently yellowed from a half century of smoking Gauloises cigarettes. One of them pointed at me. Pelletier's fingers were permanently yellowed from a half century of smoking Gauloises cigarettes. One of them pointed at me. "Oui. "Oui. This angle is much more flattering. Highlights your lovely green eyes." This angle is much more flattering. Highlights your lovely green eyes."

In answer, I rolled my lovely green eyes.

As I took a chair, Nathalie Ayers, Marcel Morin, and Emily Santangelo joined us. "Bonjour" "Bonjour"s and "Comment ca va" "Comment ca va"s were exchanged. Pelletier complimented Santangelo on her haircut. Her look suggested the subject was best left alone. She was right.

After distributing copies of the day's lineup, LaManche began discussing and a.s.signing cases.

A forty-seven-year-old man had been found hanging from a cross-beam in his garage in Laval.

A fifty-four-year-old man had been stabbed by his son following an argument over leftover sausages. Mama had called the St-Hyacinthe police.

A resident of Longueuil had slammed his all-terrain vehicle into a s...o...b..nk on a rural road in the Gatineau. Alcohol was involved.

An estranged couple had been found dead of gunshot wounds in a home in St-Leonard. Two for her, one for him. The ex-to-be went out with a nine-millimeter Glock in his mouth.

"If I can't have you no one can." Pelletier's dentures clacked as he spoke.

"Typical." Ayers's voice sounded bitter.

She was right. We'd seen the scenario all too often.

A young woman had been discovered behind a karaoke bar on rue Jean-Talon. A combination of overdose and hypothermia was suspected.

The pizza bas.e.m.e.nt skeletons had been a.s.signed LSJML numbers 38426, 38427, and 38428.

"Detective Claudel feels these skeletons are old and probably of little forensic interest?" LaManche said it more as a question than a statement.

"And how could Monsieur Claudel know that?" Though it was possible this would turn out to be true, it irked me that Claudel would render an opinion entirely outside his expertise.

"Monsieur Claudel is a man of many talents." Though Pelletier's expression was deadpan, I wasn't fooled. The old pathologist knew of the friction between Claudel and me, and loved to tease.

"Claudel has studied archaeology?" I asked.

Pelletier's brows shot up. "Monsieur Claudel puts in hours examining ancient relics."

The others remained silent, awaiting the punch line.

"Really?" Why not play straight man?

"Bien sur. Checks his p.e.c.k.e.r every morning." Checks his p.e.c.k.e.r every morning."

"Thank you, Dr. Pelletier." LaManche traded deadpan for deadpan. "Along those lines, would you please take the hanging?"

Ayers got the stabbing. The ATV accident went to Santangelo, the suicide/homicide to Morin. As each case was dispensed, LaManche marked his master sheet with the appropriate initials. Pe. Ay. Sa. Mo.

Br went onto dossiers 38426, 38427, and 38428, the pizza bas.e.m.e.nt bones.

Antic.i.p.ating a lengthy meeting with the board that reviews infant deaths in the province, LaManche a.s.signed himself no autopsy.

When we dispersed, I returned to my office. LaManche stuck his head in moments later. One of the autopsy technicians was out with bronchitis. With five posts, things would be difficult. Would I mind working alone?

Great.

As I snapped three case forms onto a clipboard, I noticed that the red light on my phone was flas.h.i.+ng.

The minutest of flutters. Ryan?

Get over it, Doris.

Responding to the prompts, I entered my mailbox and code numbers.

A journalist from Allo Police. Allo Police.

A journalist from the Gazette. Gazette.

A journalist from the CTV evening news.

Disappointed, I deleted the messages and hurried to the women's locker room. After changing into surgical scrubs, I took a side corridor to a single elevator tucked between the secretarial office and the library. Restricted to those with special clearance, this elevator featured b.u.t.tons allowing only three stops. LSJML. Coroner. Morgue. I pressed M and the doors slid shut.

Downstairs, through another secure door, a long, narrow corridor shoots the length of the building. To the left, an X-ray room and four autopsy suites, three with single tables, one with a pair. To the right, drying racks, computer stations, wheeled tubs and carts for transporting specimens to the histology, pathology, toxicology, DNA, and odontology-anthropology labs upstairs.

Through a small gla.s.s window in each door, I could see that Ayers and Morin were beginning their externals in rooms one and two. Each was working with a police photographer and an autopsy technician.

Another tech was arranging instruments in room three. He would be a.s.sisting Santangelo.

And I was on my own.

And Claudel would be here in less than four hours.

Having begun the day down, my mood was descending by the moment.

I continued on to room four. My room. A room specially ventilated for decomps, floaters, mummified corpses, and other aromatics.

As do the others, room four has double doors leading to a morgue bay. The bay is lined with refrigerated compartments, each housing a double-decker gurney.

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