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I rolled and pushed myself to a sitting position, brushed dirt from my clothes, and glanced around. I was alone in the lot.

Rising on shaky legs, I threw my purse and package into the backseat, slid behind the wheel, and hit the locks. Then I sat a moment massaging my throbbing shoulder.

What the hell had just happened?

All the way to High Ridge House I replayed the scene. Was I becoming paranoid, or had someone tried to run me down? Was the driver drunk? Blind? Stupid?

Should I report the incident? To Crowe? To McMahon?

Had the silhouette seemed familiar? I'd automatically thought “he,” but was it a man?

I decided to ask Ryan's opinion at dinner.

Back in Ruby's kitchen, I made tea and drank it slowly. By the time I'd climbed to Magnolia, my nerves had calmed and my hands were steady. I made a call to the university in Charlotte, not really expecting an answer. My assistant picked up on the first ring.

“What are you doing at the lab on Saturday?”

“Grading.”

“Right. I appreciate your dedication, Alex.”

“Grading exercises is part of my job. Where are you?”

“Bryson City.”

“I thought you were finished there. I mean, your job was finished. I mean . . .” She trailed off, unsure what to say.

Her embarrassment told me that news of my dismissal had reached the university.

“I'll explain when I get back.”

“You go, girl.” Lamely.

“Listen, can you grab the lab copy of my book?”

“Eighty-six or ninety-eight?”

I'd been the editor of a book on forensic techniques that had become a leading text in its field, largely due to the excellent work of the contributing authors I had managed to assemble, but including a couple of my own chapters as well. After twelve years it had been updated with a second, entirely new edition.

“The first one.”

“Hold on.”

In seconds she was back.

“What do you need?”

“There's a chapter on population differences in the calcaneus. Flip to that.”

“Got it.”

“What's the percentage of correct classification when comparing Mongoloid, black, and white foot bones?”

There was a long pause. I could picture her scanning the text, forehead creasing, glasses creeping down her nose.

“Just below eighty percent.”

“Not great.”

“But wait.” Another pause. “That's because the whites and blacks don't separate well. The Mongoloids could be distinguished with eighty-three to ninety-nine percent accuracy. That's not too bad.”

“O.K. Give me the list of measurements.”

I had a sinking feeling as I wrote them down.

“Now see if there's a table that gives the unstandardized canonical discriminant function coefficients for American Indians, blacks, and whites.” I would need these figures for comparison to coefficients I would derive from the unknown foot.

Pause.

“Table Four.”

“Will you fax that chapter to me?”

“Sure.”

I gave her Primrose Hobbs's name and the fax number at the incident morgue in Bryson City. Hanging up, I dug out the notes I'd taken on case number 397.

When I punched another number and asked for Primrose Hobbs a voice told me she was not there, but asked if I would like her number at the Riverbank Inn.

Primrose also answered on the first ring. This was my lucky day.

“Hey, sweetie pie, how you doin'?”

“I'm good, Primrose.”

“Don't you let these slanders get you down. God will do what God will do, and he knows it's all bunk.”

“I'm not.”

“One day we're going to sit down, play us some more bid whit, and laugh at all this.”

“I know.”

“Though I must say, for a smart woman, Tempe Brennan, you are the sorriest bid whit player I've ever sat a table with.” She laughed her deep, throaty laugh.

“I'm not very good at card games.”

“You sure got that right.”

Again the laugh.

“Primrose, I need a favor.”

“Just ask, sugar.”

I gave a condensed version of the history of the foot, and Primrose agreed to go to the morgue early Sunday morning. She would read the fax, call me, and I would walk her through the missing measurements. She commented again on the charges against me, and suggested anatomical locations in which Larke Tyrell could store them.

I thanked her for her loyalty and disconnected.

Ryan chose Injun Joe's Chili Joint for dinner. I chose The Misty Mountain Café, featuring nouvelle cuisine and spectacular views of Balsam Mountain and Maggie Valley. When reasonable discussion failed to resolve the impasse, we flipped a coin.

The Misty Mountain looked more like a ski lodge than a café, built of logs, with high ceilings, fireplaces, and lots of glass. Upon our arrival we were informed that a table would be available in ninety minutes, but wine could be served on the patio immediately.

Joe seated us without delay. Even when I win, I lose.

One look told me le joint catered to a different market than le café. A half dozen TVs broadcast a college football game, and men in dozer caps lined the bar. Couples and groups occupied tables and booths, denimed and booted, most looking like a haircut or shave had not played a part in their recent past. Mixed into the crowd were tourists in brightly colored windbreakers, and a few faces I recognized from the investigation.

Two men worked the bar, pulling taps, scooping ice, and pouring liquor from bottles in front of a dingy mirror. Each had pasty skin and lank brown hair tied in a ponytail and secured with a bandanna.

Neither looked Injun, and neither shopped at Armani. One wore a T-shirt plugging Johnson's Brown Ale, the other a group called Bitchin' Tits.

On a platform in back, across from a pool table and pinball machines, members of a band adjusted equipment, directed by a woman in black leather pants and Cruella makeup. Every few seconds we'd hear the amplified tap of her finger, then a count from one to four. Her sound tests barely overrode the TV play-by-play and the clicks and dings of the pinball machines.

Nevertheless, the band looked like it had enough acoustic power to reach Buenos Aires. I suggested we order.

Ryan scanned the room and made a hand gesture. A woman, maybe forty or so, with overmoussed hair and an out-of-season tan, appeared at our table. A plastic badge gave her name as Tammi. With an i.

“Whatillitbe?” Tammi poised pencil over pad.

“May I have a menu?” I asked.

Tammi sighed, retrieved two menus from the bar, and slapped them on the table. Then she looked at me with forbidding patience.

Click. Click. Click. Ding. Ding. Ding. Ding.

My decision did not take long. Injun Joe offered nine types of chili, four burgers, a hot dog, and mountain meat loaf.

I requested the Climbingbear Burger and a Diet Coke.

“I've heard you make killer chili here.” Ryan showed Tammi a lot of teeth.

“Best in the west.” Tammi showed Ryan even more.

Tap. Tap. Tap. Tap. One. Two. Three. Four.

“It must be hard to wait on so many people at the same time. I don't know how you do it.”

“Personal charm.” Tammi tilted her chin and threw out one hip.

“How's the Walkingstick Chili?”

“Hot. Like me.”

I fought a gag impulse.

“I'll go for it. And a bottle of Carolina Pale.”

“Coming atcha, cowboy.”

Click. Click. Click. Click. Ding. Ding. Ding. Ding. Ding.

Tap. Tap. One. Two. Three. Four.

I waited until Tammi was out of earshot, which, given the din, was about two steps.

“Nice choice.”

“One should mingle with the locals.”

“You were pretty critical of the locals this morning.”