found in the aftermath of a flea market explosion and fire. I’d determined the victim was white, male, forty-five to sixty years of age. The bio profile fit John-Henry Story, the owner of the property. Story had told witnesses he was going to that location and had not been heard from thereafter. Personal items were found with the bones. A cell phone? Wallet? Watch? I couldn’t remember details.
Though the ID was circumstantial, the ME had decided it was enough. Arson investigators had probed and tested, but the barn was so old, the destruction so total, an exact cause for the blaze was never determined.
Story’s death had been big news. Prominent businessman burned to death in a building with inadequate alarm and sprinkler systems. The media had jumped on the issue of public safety at under-regulatedmarkets and gun shows. Eventually the press turned to something else, the furor fizzled, and Story’s flea market reopened elsewhere.
“Ee-yuh.” Skinny’s favorite utterance. It drove me nuts.
For years the Mecklenburg County Medical Examiner was located at Tenth and College, in a redbrick box that was once a Sears Garden Center. For years the city fathers had talked of relocation. For years nothing had happened. Then, miraculously, the plan moved forward.
At a cost of eight million smackers, a replacement facility was built on government land in an industrial area northwest of uptown. Boasting seventeen thousand square feet, the new building is four times the size of the old. Epoxy floors, Corian walls, miles of stainless steel. Instead of only two, pathologists can now perform four simultaneous autopsies. The new setup includes a pair of rooms for analyses requiring special handling due to decomposition or potential contamination.
The stinkers. My kind of cases.
And the spanking-new building is conscientiously green. Sophisticated energy recovery systems. HVAC with air ducts up to forty inches wide. Though all the action takes place on the first floor, parts of the building had to be two stories to accommodate it all.
Yet the atmosphere is reasonably peaceful. The office and public areas are done in soft blues and earth tones. The windows are large and solar shades and light shelves maximize daylight intake and minimize glare.
In other words, our new digs are the bomb.
I waited as Slidell pulled through the black security fence, circled the flagpoles, and slipped into a parking spot. Killing the engine, he threw an arm over the seatback and a wave of odor my way. Then he shifted to face me.
“John-Henry Story had holdings all over Mecklenburg and Gaston counties. Story Motors. Story Storage—”
Store your stuff with Story
. The slogan popped into my brain unbidden. It had been an annoying but effective ad campaign.
“—John-Henry’s Tavern. The list is longer than my coon dog’s tail.”
“You have a dog?”
“You want to hear this?”
“Story’s death was ruled accidental. Why are you bringing him up now?”
Slidell fixed me with a dramatic stare while reaching inside his jacket. Which was mustard and brown. With one deft move he pulled a Ziploc from the pocket of his shirt. Which was a shade of orange probably called melon.
Forcing my eyes not to roll, I leaned sideways to examine the contents of the baggie.
And felt my brows lift in surprise.
SUN GLINTED OFF the plastic dangling between slidell’s thumb and forefinger.
I waited for his explanation.
“Vic had a purse. Screeching pink, size of a burger, hooker strap.”
“I carry a shoulder bag.” Slidell’s sarcasm was, as usual, turning me surly. As was his jump to the conclusion that the hit-and-run victim was a prostitute.
“Hot pink? Shaped like a freakin’ cartoon cat?”
“You’re sure it was hers?”
“Thing was lying in the weeds, three yards from the body. Hadn’t been there long. We’re checking for prints. But, yeah, I’m sure it’s hers.”
“This was in the purse?” I indicated the object enclosed in