Virals

Wait!


The subliminal message fired into my conscious inbox.

Ground slump. Vegetative change. Six foot radius.

Oh my God.

For a hot moment I forgot to breathe. Then I sucked in six or seven deep gulps, hyperventilating.

Could it be? What to do?

Obvious. Go find out.

I opened Twitter and buzzed my crew: CHAT ROOM NOW!

Then I logged on to our webpage and stared at the screen, waiting.

Come on. Come on.

My fingers drummed the desk. Five minutes. Ten. Finally, the gang was convened.

I posted: Back to Loggerhead tomorrow afternoon. Highest importance! Will explain at school.

The boys responded quickly, succinctly, and in total accord with each other. Ben typed that returning to the scene of our crime was wildly risky. Foolhardy. Shelton and Hi agreed, Hi using all caps to drive the point home.

I hadn't wanted to share my fears online, but their opposition left me no choice. I launched a flurry of posts, firing my suspicions into the ether.

Finished, I sat with eyes glued to the monitor, awaiting reactions. I needed their support. This was too big to handle alone.

For a good half minute, zero response. Then Ben and Shelton said they'd think about it. Following an impressive string of profanities, Hi consented to sleep on it.

Logging off, I felt confident my team would come through. At least I hoped so. What I suspected was simply too terrible to ignore. They'd require more details, sure, and some cajoling, but, in the end, they'd trust my judgment. After all, I was the niece of Dr. Temperance Brennan. I knew certain things.

In the dark, under the covers, the implications of my theory horrified me.

Don't be right!

Had I ever wished that before?

But we had to go back.

Had to dig.

Had to check for a grave.





CHAPTER 21


Brian Limestone was anxious.

Though puzzling, his instructions had been clear all those years ago. So far back he'd almost forgotten. Almost.

He'd advanced in the hierarchy since that day, his first on the job. Indeed, Limestone felt he had a decent shot at head librarian when old lady Wilkerson hung up her bookmark.

The old biddy must be two hundred by now, he thought wryly. Surely she'll kick it soon. Then me. My chance.

The library was closed and locked. Limestone had just finished re-shelving materials dislodged by the day's scholars.

Time to follow orders.

Descending three flights, Limestone used an old brass key to let himself into a small basement office. The room was dusty from disuse, empty but for a single filing cabinet. He unlocked the rusty relic and pulled a folder from the bottom drawer.

Fifteen years earlier, Brian Limestone had sat in this room with the man he'd been hired to replace. Fenton Dawkins was a strange old coot, possessive and distrusting. Limestone had sensed the reluctance with which Dawkins had revealed his secret.

The deal was simple. An unknown benefactor paid a yearly, thousand-dollar stipend to the research librarian of the public library's main branch. Should the fact of this bonus ever be disclosed--to anyone--it would cease to exist.

A single duty came with the money: vigilance concerning a specific name.

Katherine Heaton.

Should anyone ask about Ms. Heaton, Limestone must obstruct the party in any manner possible. In addition, should such inquiry occur, he must return to this office and open a sealed envelope for further instruction.

That's all.

Limestone had agreed without hesitation. Free cash was free cash.

So there he sat, holding the magic packet. With a firm hand Limestone tore open one side and removed a single slip of paper.

Nine digits. Typed, not handwritten or computer printed. Recognizing the obvious, Limestone returned to the main desk and dialed the number.

A male voice answered on the third ring.

"Yes."

"My name is Brian Limestone. I'm research librarian at the Charleston Public Library."

Limestone waited.

Dead silence.

"Years back I was tasked with calling this number should a certain event ever transpire. Today it happened."

Still no response.

Limestone glanced at the phone's display, assuring himself that the call hadn't disconnected.

Get it over with, he thought. No big deal.

"Three students visited the library, one a young lady named Tory Brennan. I failed to catch the other names. The children were asking about a Katherine Heaton."

Limestone laughed nervously. "Does that make any sense to you?"

Another pause, then a soft click.

Dial tone.

"Hello?"

Limestone waited a beat, then slammed the receiver. "Nuts!"

Having fulfilled his obligation, Brian Limestone trashed the phone number and headed home to his cats.





CHAPTER 22


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