The Breaking Point: A Body Farm Novel
noticed puzzled looks on many of the faces, and smiled, clearly pleased by the response. He turned to me. “Dr. Brockton, how would you describe the structural framework of humans?”
    “Well,” I began, “we’re primates—upright, bipedalvertebrates—with an axial skeleton and an appendicular skeleton. The axial skeleton—”
    He held up a finger to interrupt me. “Full marks,” he said. “To translate that into terms that even I can understand, you’re saying our skeleton is an endoskeleton—an interior structural framework—right?”
    “Right.”
    “Whereas bugs have . . . ?”
    “An exoskeleton,” I supplied, feeling a bit like a student being nose-led by a professor—and not particularly liking the feeling. “An external shell, made of chitin—a bioprotein or biopolymer, if I’m remembering my zoology.”
    “I’ll take your word for the chemical details,” he cracked. “A bug’s shell is light, strong, and rigid. So is an aircraft’s. Trouble is, when either one—a bug or a plane—gets squashed, the shell crumples, and the guts go everywhere.”
    “The plane’s guts,” asked Kimball, “or the pilot’s?”
    “At four hundred miles an hour? Both,” Maddox answered. “As we dig down through it, we’ll certainly recognize parts. I’m pretty good at identifying airplane pieces, and I’m told Dr. Brockton here is terrific at identifying people pieces. But basically? That plane and anybody in it? Squashed like a bug.”
    “Oh, goody,” Kimball joked. “Can’t wait.”
    It was gallows humor—a sanity-saving necessity in work this grim. But the truth was, I couldn’t wait. And unless I missed my guess, neither could eager-beaver Kimball.
    I WAS HALFWAY THROUGH MY PART OF THE BRIEFING —I had passed out diagrams of the human skeleton and had worked my way from the skull down through the spine and into the pelvis—when I noticed that my voice wasn’t theonly thing droning. Maddox was ignoring me by now, his head turned in the direction of the sound; a moment later, I saw McCready and Prescott turn toward it, too. In the distance but closing fast was the distinctive thudding of a helicopter rotor.
    When it became clear that the helicopter was landing, McCready and Prescott headed for the door, trailed by the rest of us. Maddox and I stayed in the background, watching from the command center’s steps.
    The agents fanned out on the concrete, facing the helicopter—the sheriff’s helicopter again, as I’d guessed from the low, military muscularity of the pitch. As the rotor slowed, the left cockpit door opened and a woman got out of the copilot’s seat—a woman I recognized, even through the dark hair whipping across her face, as Carmelita Janus. She was dressed in black from head to toe, but the outfit was a far cry from widow’s weeds; it looked more like a commando’s uniform for night ops—but night ops with style. She wore billowy cargo pants of what appeared to be parachute nylon, topped by a long-sleeved, form-fitting pullover; the pants were tucked into tight, knee-high boots that sported tapered toes and a hint of a heel.
    Maddox nudged me, muttering, “Is that who I think it is?”
    “If you think it’s the grieving widow,” I muttered back.
    “Christ, what’s she doing here?”
    “Trying to find out if her husband’s dead, I guess. Or maybe trying to make sure we’re not sitting around playing video games.” I glanced at McCready and Prescott; to say they didn’t look thrilled to see her would have been the understatement of the century.
    Mrs. Janus strode toward the FBI agents, who stood shoulder to shoulder, like some posse of Wild West lawmen, minusthe six-shooters and the ten-gallon hats. Her gaze swept across the group, then returned to the central figure, the one wearing the power suit. “You must be Agent Prescott,” she said.
    “Yes, ma’am,” he said. “Special Agent in Charge Miles Prescott. So, Mrs. Janus? Why are you here?”
    “To

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