He was in his early fifties and had the air of a provincial bank manager. Short, neat, graying hair. A gray pin-striped suit, a pale gray shirt, and one of those rather naff matching tie and pocket handkerchiefs, both in purple. All that was missing were his shoes and there was a good reason for that.
His feet were missing too.
His legs ended just below the bottoms of his trousers, in two blackened, cauterized stumps. Darkened bloodstains lay on the carpet beneath them. In the man’s slowly blinking eyes, Grace could see a vision of hell.
He could see something else too, as his eyes became increasingly accustomed to the dimness in here. One entire wall of the room was full of rows of glassed-in shelving, like in a museum. Lined along each row of shelves were perfectly preserved human feet.
“Rodney Tidy?” Grace asked.
“Help . . . me.”
The voice was weak and parched, more a faint croak.
Grace ran forward, and it took him only moments to realize why the man was motionless.
Arms, hands, the back of the head, shoulders, and the entire spine were all bonded to the chair.
With superglue.
LEYTON GRAY, ACCOMPANIED BY HIS solicitor, an intensely serious woman in her early thirties, sat opposite Carol Jordan and another colleague in the small, starkly furnished interview room.
For the benefit of the CCTV recording Jordan announced, “DCI Carol Jordan and DS Paula McIntyre interviewing Leyton Gray under caution in the presence of his solicitor, Susan Ansell. The time is 10:05 a.m., Wednesday, July twelfth.”
Then she leaned forward. “Mr. Gray, can you tell us your relationship with Mr. Rodney Tidy?
“Rivals. We’ve always been rivals.”
Ignoring his solicitor’s signals for him to keep quiet, he went on.
“I had to stop him. I had to, somehow. He always beat me to the best feet. He just always did. He told me once how much he loved to stare at feet. That he loved nothing more than to sit in a room and look at his latest trophies. So I obliged him. I’ve stopped him from ever getting to feet ahead of me again, and he gets his dream, to sit and look at feet. Did you see his own up there? They’re not exactly beautiful, but I thought it would be a nice touch. That is, of course, if he’s smart enough to understand my signal. Rodney, old boy, you’ve been de-feeted.”
KATHY REICHS AND LEE CHILD
I WAS FIRST PUBLISHED IN 1997 when Killing Floor introduced the world to a quiet wanderer named Jack Reacher. Kathy Reichs also came along in 1997 when Déjà Dead brought us forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan.
Kathy freely admits that both she and Temperance have the same curriculum vitae. Getting the science right is important to Kathy, and she routinely turns to her own real-life experiences as a forensic anthropologist when writing a Temperance Brennan adventure. With Reacher I’m constantly asked if he’s based on me. Truth be told, there’s a lot of me inside him. It’s almost unavoidable that a character created by a writer not be a little autobiographical. Reacher is pretty much a wish fulfillment for both me and the reader. What I (or they) would be, if we could all get away with it. How he acquired his name is simple. Both I and Reacher are tall. So back in the 1990s, while writing Killing Floor and grocery shopping, my wife remarked that “if the writing didn’t work out I could always be a reacher in a supermarket.”
Talk about fortuitous.
In creating our story, Kathy and I both agreed on the rough outline, then we wrote in turns. She likes things all planned out. I prefer to wander. But we found a happy medium in which to work. I must confess to being a little nervous working with her, given her reputation for thoroughness, but we discovered that our actual writing styles are somewhat similar. This sometimes happens with collaborations. It helped that we’ve both written screenplays. Kathy with the television series Bones, which is based on her characters, and myself with my daughter. There’s a process to fashioning a screenplay that’s different from crafting a novel. Much more give-and-take is there between the various contributors, since rarely is a screenplay written by only one person. Luckily, we were both comfortable with that process.
And the result is an intriguing adventure that involves—
Faking a Murderer.
FAKING A MURDERER
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 0940 EST
“OVER THE PAST DECADE, THIS academy has taken a good hard look at itself. We have evaluated the theory and methodology underlying each of our disciplines. Formalized statements on ethics. Developed clear and open paths toward board certification.”
The hall was dim, the stage blazing like a Hollywood set. She could see little from the podium. Rows of shadowy heads. Here and there, a triangle of white bisected by a tie. A wink of reflection off a plastic-sheathed badge.
“No longer can unqualified individuals hang out their shingles, call themselves experts, and practice without oversight. Without adherence to rigorously verified standards.”
The other speakers sat behind her in well-behaved silence. To either side of them, screens displayed projected images of the logos of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences and the Marriott Wardman Park Hotel. Flanking the screens were stairs to ground level.
“This year’s conference is titled ‘Reliable Relevant and Real Forensic Science.’ Anthropology. Pathology. Toxicology. It doesn’t matter the section. That trifecta is the goal of everyone here.”
At the base of each set of steps, an electrified sign indicated an exit. In her peripheral vision, she noticed two men shape up in the red radiance shed by the one to her right.
“As each presenter in this plenary session has so aptly demonstrated, we are working hard to achieve that goal. For law enforcement. For the courts. For justice. I thank you for your attention. And I wish you an informative and enjoyable conference.”
There was a swell of applause as the houselights came up. More than the usual courteous clap. Long and heartfelt. Those behind her rose and gathered their notes, faces saying they were pleased with themselves. And relieved. The presentation had been well received by a very tough crowd. Their colleagues. The audience began to disperse. The aisles filled and the murmur of voices picked up volume.
As she closed her laptop, the two men climbed the treads and crossed toward her. Each wore a navy suit, white shirt, and tastefully understated tie. Black socks, shiny shoes.
Approaching the podium, the pair fanned out slightly. The guy who stepped left was tall and burly and had a nose that looked like it might have been broken. More than once. His shaved scalp gleamed like polished mahogany under the stage lights.
The guy who stepped right was close to her height. He had heavy dark brows over very small eyes, thick black hair, olive skin.
“Dr. Temperance Brennan?” Dark Brows’s voice was surprisingly deep for a man of his size.
“Yes.” Guarded. She suspected their purpose, accepted consults only through formal channels. “And you are?”
“Special Agent Pierre Dupreau.” Displaying a badge to prove it.
“Bonjour,” she said.
No hint of a grin.
“I speak English,” she said.
Nope.
She looked at Broken Nose. He badged her with the same wrist motion employed by his partner. Special Agent Byron Szewczk. She wondered if Szewczk envied Dupreau his abundance of vowels.
“Are you armed, Dr. Brennan?” Dupreau, little eyes scanning her body for telltale bulges.
“Excuse me?”
“Are you carrying a—”
“The question was clear. I want to know why you posed it.”
Sensing tension, a few stragglers eyed them while pretending not to.
“We’d like you to come with us,” Dupreau said, voice lowered a hair.
“No.”
“I’m afraid we must insist.” Dupreau, steely.
“I’m afraid I must decline.” Brennan, steelier.
Dupreau withdrew a photo from one navy pocket and handed it to her. A beat to indicate annoyance, then she glanced down at the image.
The subject was male, white, probably midforties. His hair was center parted and held back with a binder. Black plastic-framed glasses sat low on his nose. A camera hung from his neck. He looked like a middle-aged uncle who enjoyed shooting wildflowers in his spare time.
Brennan’s eyes rolled up, one brow cocked in question.
“Don’t pretend you don’t know him,” Dupreau said.
“I don’t know him,” Brennan said.
Dupreau’s gaze cut to his partner. Szewczk wagged his head slowly, clearly disappointed.
“Lose the theatrics,” Brennan said. “Who is he?”
“Jonathan Yeow,” Dupreau said. “Until yesterday, an investigative reporter with the Washington Post.”
“Why are you telling me this?”
“Yesterday, Yeow’s house cleaner found him in his kitchen, asphyxiated with a plastic bag over his head.” Delivered with an impressive level of disgust. “Murdered.”
“I’m sorry for the man’s misfortune.” Handing back the photo. “But his death has nothing to do with me.”
“Au contraire.” Flick of a smile, no humor. “Your prints were on the plastic bag.”
“That’s impossible.”
“Let’s go.” Dupreau’s tone now carried an aggressive edge.
“May I phone my attorney?”
“I definitely would.”