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“An elegant sufficiency,” he said, grinning.

“I hope your dog likes this.”

“Thank you,” he said, rising to take the bowl from me. “You were real nice to ask me in.”

“My pleasure. I hope we didn’t bore you with the pictures.”

“Just one thing,” he said. He set down the bowl and began rummaging through the pictures scattered among the dishes. Mike came in from the study with a deep, serious expression on his face.

“That was Bronkowski,” he said. “The coroner called in. They’re still working on the ID, but they found something tangled with the body that was interesting.”

“What?” I said.

“It was really charred and they had some trouble cleaning it up enough to read, had to use the infrared in the end.”

“Mike.” I was out of patience. “What was it?”

“Dogtags.”

Caesar tapped my arm, and when I turned, he handed me a snapshot. I took it without looking at it.

“Mike,” I said, with some heat. “Whose?”

“Marc Duchamps, USMC.”

“Say that again?” I said.

Caesar was pulling on my sleeve. “See him?”

“Who?” I snapped.

“That’s him who I saw at the wishin’ well that time. I told you, he was lookin’ for the doc.”

I held up the picture. Caesar had handed me a snapshot Marc had sent from Vietnam. He was snapped standing in the jungle, in the rain, with his face grinning out of an olive drab poncho. I had never noticed before how thin his nose was.

Chapter Twenty-One

A giant plastic wreath hanging on the Boyle Heights Holiday Inn was the only color showing against the night sky as we drove along the wrecking yards on Mission Road. It was a bleak landscape, leftover land among the railway tracks at the edge of the city.

“The best thing to do when you first go inside is to take a deep breath,” Mike said. “Get used to the smell in a hurry.”

“Is it bad?” I asked. I was past having second thoughts and was well into the acceptance of the idiocy of bravado.

“It’s not so much bad. I mean, things in your refrigerator can smell worse if you leave them too long. This is just different, and you won’t ever forget it.”

“Good to know.” I rolled down my window a few inches to let in some air.

“And don’t expect things tidy like Quincy. Not sheet-covered bodies with toe tags sticking out.”

“No toe tags?” I asked.

“Toe tags, yes. No sheets.”

“Gross.”

“I told you it wouldn’t be nice,” he said gruffly. “But you’re so damn determined to see for yourself. So you have to walk down highway one between the deep freeze and the autopsy rooms. There’s no way to detour around the cadavers waiting to be processed.”

“Listen, Mike,” I said, turning in the seat to face him. “If the body taken from the wreckage is my brother, Marc, then this time I’m going to have a good look at him before he’s sealed up in his box. So stop trying to scare me.”

“I am not trying to scare you,” he snapped. “But you have to be prepared for what you’re going to see in the morgue. Forewarned is forearmed, right?”

“I’m a big girl. Remember me, the correspondent from the front lines in El Salvador?”

His laugh was smug. “How many bodies did you see?”

“Plenty.” Two, actually, not counting livestock. I was not about to tell him that.

Mike had slid into his tough-cop shtick during the short drive from downtown. “There are more bodies picked up every week-end on the streets of Los Angeles than most G.I.‘s saw during their entire tours in Vietnam.”

“And you personally pick up every body, right?”

“Damn right.” He reached across the seat and took my hand. “Why are you mad at me?”

“No one else is available.”

“I can live with that.”

He pulled into the parking lot beyond the delivery entrance of the county morgue. “Last chance. I can back right out of here and take you home.”

“Let’s just get on with this.”

The morgue sits on a downslope corner of the vast campus of the L.A. County-USC Medical Center Hospital, tucked among the oldest, occasionally condemned, buildings of the facility. All around the morgue corner, it was very dark, except for the green-tinged lights of the loading bay. We got out of the car and walked past technicians garbed in rubber aprons, boots, and gloves who were hosing down battered fiberglass gurneys and washing the residue into a sump hole. A coroner’s van with its doors open was parked in the cargo bay. In sum, it was a proper entrance for a charnel house.

“Maggie, there’s a little office up front here. The pathologist can bring you pictures and talk to you there.”

“Mike, pictures aren’t good enough.”

“It’s not a pretty cadaver.”

I know that,” I said. “I was there, remember? I saw the fire. Quit fussing.”

“Any time you want to change your mind

“I’ll let you know.” If he had shut up, I probably would have backed out. He had to make an issue, so I had to prove something. Now I was fated to take a look at a corpse that had been both exploded and charred. The closer I got, the worse I knew it would be. Some things have to be done.

The box that came home from Vietnam with Marc’s name on it had been put into the ground without anyone looking inside to make damn sure Marc was in there. There were health and esthetic reasons why we were not to break the seals. It was a mistake I still had difficulty living with.

I never knew exactly how Marc had died. No one would talk to me about it. Not knowing fed many fantasies. Now and then, Marc still comes into my dreams. At first, I’m always glad to see him. Many nights I drift away from my dream reassured, happy to have spoken to him again, simply to have seen him. But there are other, darker nights when Marc comes to me in his sealed coffin. He begs me to open the box and let him out. I wake up in a hot sweat, afraid to sleep again for days.

I have always known that unless I found some way to see inside the box, I would dream about Marc for the rest of my life. It was a long shot, but as I walked into the morgue, I felt this might be my only chance to put him, finally, to rest.

Mike opened a side door and we went into a small, unadorned lobby. He clipped his photo ID to his lapel and signed us in.

“Ready?” he asked.

“Yes.”

When he opened the inner door, I took a handful of his elbow and filled my lungs. The air was cold and heavy with an odor that was at the same time sweet and repulsive. It seemed to lodge at the back of my throat so I smelled it even when I breathed through my mouth.

Naked dead on gurneys lined the hallway on both sides. Their skin was often paler than the beige-painted walls, so anything with color, pubic mound, the red-staining of morbid lividity, bruises, vivid holes, stood out. I found it difficult to look at their faces and quit looking altogether when I saw that the gurney closest to the first autopsy room held a body with no face at all.

The first autopsy room was a hive of green-gowned workers. Mike had been right-it wasn’t Quincy. There was no clinical gleam. The tools were pruning shears and soup ladles, electric saws and meat scales. Debris of towels and tools and pans littered the floor. There were four cadavers in various stages of processing: tops of skulls removed and the brains gone, the torsos sliced in long and wide cruciforms and laid open from pubis to throat, until they look like anatomical kits disassembled. When I thought about what was happening in there, I felt some-thing rise in my throat. There wasn’t much left at that point that seemed obviously human.

The hall angled right and there was a second autopsy room. Here the bodies were waiting three deep, heaped like discarded rag dolls rather than laid out on their gurneys. There were so many, we had to walk single-file past them. I was worried that the people walking ahead of us might come back and try to squeeze past us. There wouldn’t be room for them to go by me without forcing me against a gurney. I was afraid to touch anything.