Dead Past

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Authors: Beverly Connor
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light speed.
    “Thank you, Neva. I’ll let you know on that. I’m sorry to burden you with another matter. Have you had a chance to process my car?”
    “Yes. Early on, the fire crew wouldn’t let us have access to the house site because of hot spots they were still trying to put out. David and I processed the carjacking site then. We worked the area around your car, as well as the area of the attempted Keith carjacking. Then I had your car towed to the crime lab and locked in the garage until we can get back to it.”
    “Thank you, Neva. If I haven’t told you lately, I really appreciate the way you always come through when the going gets tough.”
    “You know that if I can do it, I will. Please let me know about Star.”
    “As soon as we know anything.”
    “Process your car?” asked Frank after Diane had closed her cell phone.
    “Long story. I’ll tell you later after we find Star.”
    He was satisfied with that. It was unusual for him not to try to pry the story out of her if he suspected she had some dangerous near miss. But, focused on the snowy road ahead, he was quiet now as he drove toward campus. They were almost to the library when he spoke.
    “How many . . . how many bodies have you processed?”
    Processed. So cold and clinical. He’s trying to keep a distance, she thought. “Seven, maybe more. Jin and I . . .” She shut her mouth, unwilling to say Jin and I have examined many body parts. “We’ve only been working for a little over three hours. We think there may be thirty-two altogether.”
    “How many females have you processed of the seven?” asked Frank.
    “Three,” she answered.
    Frank was a math person. She wondered if he thought he could somehow figure out the possibility that one was Star based on the math. Of course not. Silly. He was just trying not to break down by asking questions that had a definite answer.
    “Three,” he repeated. “If your sample is random, then of the thirty-two victims, thirteen or fourteen of them would be female.”
    “We don’t know if they were randomly located in the house when . . . when it exploded—or randomly recovered.”
    “No.” He shook his head. “I’m just trying to occupy my mind. Here’s the library.”
    He parked his dark blue Expedition and they walked up the columned entrance to the library. Since 9/11, the entrance had huge concrete planters out front so that a vehicle loaded with explosives couldn’t get close to the front entrance. They walked past the planters containing spruce trees and up the granite steps.
    The information desk was manned by a young woman who looked as if she might be a student herself. Frank asked if there was a way to page a patron in the library. No, there was not. From the sympathetic look they got, they were not the first to ask.
    “I’m afraid you’ll have to go to each floor and look,” she said. “If you know what courses your . . .”
    “Daughter,” supplied Frank.
    “Daughter is taking, you might start where those books or journals are shelved.” She handed them sheets of paper stapled together. “This is a map of the library.” She gave them a sympathetic smile that seemed to say, “I wish I could do more.”
    “Do you know what courses she’s taking this semester? Isn’t American History one?” asked Diane.
    Frank studied the maps of the floors. “American History, Anthropology, English, Algebra, and Fencing.”
    “Fencing?” said Diane.
    “She’s pretty good. She’s thinking about joining the fencing team,” said Frank.
    Extracurricular activities. She’s getting interested in college, just as Diane had hoped. Please, don’t let her be . . . Diane couldn’t even finish the thought.
    They decided to check the library floor by floor instead of going to the different subject areas. It seemed more methodical. The danger was over. There wasn’t a hurry to find Star, except for their own peace of mind. They wanted to be thorough.
    Bartram University’s library was a

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