Without Mercy (Body Farm #10)

“Well, duh,” she said. “I’d be crazy not to, don’t you think?” She studied my face. “What?” She sighed. “I hoped you’d be excited for me.”


“I am,” I insisted. “It’s a great opportunity. It’s just . . . well, you know, we’ve talked about your staying on here—running the bone lab, running the body donation program. You know, as a real job, a faculty job, not an assistantship.”

“Isn’t that a bit like the plantation owner offering to pay his house slave actual wages, after she’s been freed by the Emancipation Proclamation?” She smiled to pass it off as a joke, but her words had an edge, and I felt myself flinch as they cut into me. “I’m sorry, Dr. B. I didn’t mean that. I’ve loved my time here—my course work, my assistantship, the forensic cases. I can’t imagine a better way to learn forensic anthropology. But don’t you see? If I stay here, I’ll always be your assistant. And that’s been great, but it’s time for me to leave the nest. To be a grown-up. To be the professor or the professional that you’ve trained me to be.” Her eyes seemed to be pleading now, and I thought I saw moisture welling up in her lower eyelids. “Besides, you can’t offer me a tenure-track faculty job. UT won’t allow it.”

“That’s true,” I admitted. To make sure that the university didn’t become too inbred, UT policy required that our doctoral graduates hold faculty positions at other schools for at least five years before we could hire them.

“If you create a job for me,” she persisted, “I can never get tenure here—which means I can never get tenure anywhere. I’d always, only, be the hired help.”

“That’s not necessarily true,” I protested. But it was a weak protest, and we both knew it. Academics are notoriously snobby. If you start out in the ivory tower’s minor leagues—the leagues that don’t dangle the possibility of tenure after seven grueling years of teaching, research, and service—your chances of ever playing in the tenured league are slim. Skeletally slim, in fact. “I know, it’s a gamble. But if anybody can do it—if anybody can make the jump from nontenured to tenured—it’s you, Miranda.”

“I appreciate your faith in me, boss,” she said. “But it’s not the way things work.”

“Just don’t rule out staying here,” I said. “Not yet.”

Our discussion was interrupted by a knock. A nanosecond after the knock, Peggy appeared in the open door looking astonished and amused.

“Excuse me, Dr. Brockton,” she said, “but there’s a sheriff’s deputy from Cooke County here to see you. A very large deputy.”

I grinned. “Waylon,” I called through the doorway. “This is a nice surprise. Come on in.”

He loomed into view, his immense bulk dwarfing Peggy. She backed out of the doorway to let him enter, but the space between her desk and the front wall wasn’t designed to allow two people to pass—not, at least, if one of them was Waylon. Miranda and I watched as Peggy flattened herself against the wall and Waylon squeezed past, mumbling a red-faced “’scuse me, sorry ma’am,” as his broad back rubbed across her chest, her eyes widening in . . . discomfort? dismay? delight? I shot a quick glance at Miranda, who met my gaze. Then, in unspoken agreement, we quickly looked away from each other, lest we both burst into guffaws.

I reached out and gave him a handshake. “Waylon, what brings you all the way to UT?”

“Wellsir, you asked me about going back up yonder to the scene with a metal detector,” he said, “so I did. Got lucky, too.” He began fishing a pair of large fingers into his shirt pocket.

I felt a rush of excitement. “A bullet? Did you find a bullet?” But even as I said it, I doubted it. I had taken the bones to the hospital’s radiology department for x-rays the prior afternoon, after I finished cleaning them, and the films hadn’t shown any traces of lead.

“Nah, it ain’t no bullet,” Waylon said. “But it’s kindly interestin’ all the same.” He held out his hand to reveal a clear plastic sleeve that contained a silver coin, its rim ridged all the way around. In Waylon’s palm, it appeared tiny—a dime, I thought at first, but then I realized it was much larger. “It’s a ol’ half-dollar,” he said. “Almost a hunnerd years old.” He handed it to me.

“I’ll be,” I said, examining the back. Indeed, it looked antique. Instead of the Great Seal—the stylized eagle clutching arrows in one set of talons and an olive branch in the other—this one was embossed with an eagle that looked like an Audubon engraving, wild and predatory, its wings half spread and its gaze fierce. The detail remained sharp, and the coin was virtually free of tarnish.

Miranda leaned in to look. “It’s in really good shape, to’ve been layin’ out there for all these years,” she said.

Waylon looked puzzled. “Come again?”