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“More prom photos? Who’s this? Oh, wait; that’s Brandon, isn’t it? And she’s quite a knockout, isn’t she? Wow!”

If he had hoped that Shannon would take an interest and come over to see who he thought was hot, Josh must have been disappointed when she just shook her head sadly, like a mother over the antics of her little boy. Josh’s cheeks flushed, but he continued gamely. “And is this Derek? Whoa! How long ago was this?”

“Seventeen years, give or take,” I said as Shannon abandoned Ricky to lean on Josh’s shoulder. He handed the page to her. Paige looked worried, and she kept her hand under Ricky’s elbow as they came closer. Just in case he toppled, I guess. Although I don’t know what she’d be able to do if he did; he was approximately twice her size.

“Who’s this?” Josh asked. I looked back to him and what he was looking at.

“Oh, that’s Brian Murphy. The man who used to live in this house. The one who killed his family. That’s his wife Peggy, in the bonnet. The Murphys had a son, as well…”

I broke off to watch Ricky turn away with a muttered apology. He blundered toward the front door and almost fell over a big can of spackling paste on the way. The kid really needed a haircut, bad. Paige started after him, her elfin face worried. We heard the front door open and then close behind them both before anyone spoke.

“What’s wrong with him?” Josh asked. Shannon shrugged, a tiny wrinkle between her brows.

“I guess maybe he got too close to the pizza?”

We looked at the pizza, a few feet away on the counter. Could be.

“I guess we’d better go, too.” Josh folded the papers again and handed them back to me. “I’ll go tell Dad we’re outta here. You’d better try to catch up with them, see what’s wrong.”

Shannon nodded, and with a polite good-bye to me, left.

She went out the front door, while Josh undoubtedly sneaked a peek at the excavations in the crawlspace while he told his father that the four of them were leaving. I folded the papers back into my bag and finished cleaning up the pizza before I headed out the back door and down to the crawlspace, too.

8

“What now?!”

Wayne turned with a bark when he heard me come through the door, and then he calmed down when he saw me. “Oh, it’s you.”

“Sorry,” I said, straightening up. Unlike the tall chief of police, who had to stand hunched over, with his shoulders curled and his head retracted like a turtle’s, I had plenty of headroom downstairs. “Your son left and took his friends with him.”

Wayne nodded. “He told me.”

“There’s still a crowd outside the crime scene tape, and if it gets any bigger, you’ll probably have to call in reinforcements.”

“I’ll go out there and keep the peace in a minute. I just hope the newspapers don’t get wind of this.”

“I didn’t say anything to them,” I said, trying hard not to peer past him to the excavation. It drew me, even as I didn’t want to look at it.

“You want to see?” Wayne asked. “From a safe distance?”

I shook my head. “I don’t think so.”

“You sure?” Derek asked. He was standing with his hands in his pockets, watching, as Brandon labored on his hands and knees in the dirt. “They’re just bones. And it’ll probably be the only chance you’ll ever have to see a human skeleton in situ.”

“Let’s hope.” But I minced closer and glanced into the shallow pit Brandon had excavated, catching a glimpse of the discolored bones of an arm and a leg, before turning away. “Lovely.”

And then I stopped and turned back. “Is that a button or something?”

“Something,” Derek agreed, watching Brandon brush at the small, round object with what looked like a big paintbrush.

“Can I see it?” I glanced at Wayne, who hesitated for a few seconds before he nodded.

Brandon, who was not only digging, but also working on a schematic drawing of the excavation, complete with numbered and labeled grids, marked the location of the button before grabbing it with a pair of tweezers, putting it into a small plastic box, and handing that to me. “Don’t touch.”

“Wouldn’t dream of it,” I said, peering into the box. “Thought so.”

“Thought what?”

“Cherokee.”

“Indian?” Wayne asked, his eyes big.

I shook my head. “Cherokee is a brand name for a line of ready-made clothing-pants and blouses and such-sold at Target stores.”

“No kidding?” Wayne was scribbling in his notebook again. “There’s a Target in Topsham, and one in South Portland, too. If we can’t get an identification any other way, I guess we can go back through the sales receipts.”

“Unless she paid cash,” I said. Wayne grimaced.

“There’s that. Still, good catch, Avery. Thank you.” He took the box back. “I guess it’s becoming more and more certain that we’re looking at a female. Seeing as the button is pink and all.”

I nodded. “There’s a Target store in Brooklyn. I went there once to look at the Isaac Mizrahi line.”

“Did he do this Cherokee thing, too?”

I shook my head. “That’s someone else. I don’t know who. I actually came down here to ask what I should do now. You don’t want me to do any work upstairs, right? That’s what you said?”

“I’d prefer it,” Wayne agreed. “At least for the rest of the day.”

“What about tomorrow?”

“Tomorrow we may still be digging. We’ll have to dig up every square inch of this basement to make sure there are no more skeletons buried down here.”

“What are you expecting?” Derek asked, “A mass grave?”

“I’m not expecting anything,” Wayne answered. “It’s just something that has to be done. I’ll be very surprised if we find any more bones after today. I don’t think anyone has used your crawlspace as a dumping ground for murder victims, if that’s what you’re concerned about. We haven’t lost that many people, for one thing. And if someone kept showing up, dragging things into the basement, sooner or later the neighbors would notice. Miss Rudolph has been living next door for over twenty years, and not much gets past her. She noticed the squatters and the kids coming to make out. She called us about them. She’d have noticed someone else hanging around, too.”

“Unless it was someone who belonged,” I suggested. “Like the handyman, who came by to clean the gutters on a regular basis. Or the heat-and-air guy, to service the system. Or the lawn guy.”

“David Todd,” Derek said. “But I don’t think he had anything to do with this. He doesn’t strike me as the type who’d kill women and bury them under houses.”

“I wasn’t suggesting that he had,” I said. “But how about someone else? Maybe an employee? Does he have a crew?”

“I think he hires some seasonal help for the couple of months during the summer when the grass grows the fastest. The rest of the time it’s just him and his wife.”

“I’ll talk to him,” Wayne said, making a note. “Not because I think he had anything to do with this-I know Carrie Todd, and she wouldn’t stand for it-but just in case he has noticed anyone hanging around. I should track down the handyman, too. And the heat-and-air guy.”

“Before you do any of that,” Derek said, “it might be a good idea to figure out just how long she,” he gestured over his shoulder at the bones, “has been here.”

“I intend to. As soon as you,” he turned to Brandon, “get me a head, so I can begin to think about matching dental records.”

Brandon nodded.

“I’d like to stay,” Derek said to Wayne. “It’s my crawlspace; plus, I’m curious. Avery-” He turned to me.

I nodded. “I’m outta here. Bones are bad enough, a skull is worse. I don’t want to see it.”

“Just keep the truck. Wayne and Brandon will make sure I get home safe when we’re done here. Unless you think you’ll be here all night?” He glanced at Wayne, who shook his head.