"Fire away."
Diane told him the entire story, ending with Mrs. Odell behind her drapes. That part left him laughing.
"I shouldn't laugh. I'm sorry, but the image of this woman dressed in-what did you say, pink chenille?-hiding behind your draperies . . . not to mention you about to club her with a cast-iron skillet, of all things. Is it an antique?"
"Not exactly. I bake cornbread in it."
"Cornbread? Just that one thing?"
"Yes. It takes several years to season it just right for cornbread. You don't wash it, so you can't cook anything else in it."
"You're joking. How do you clean the thing?"
"You wipe it out after you take out the bread. The next time you use it, you rub it with shortening and put it in a four-hundred-and-twenty-five degree oven until it sizzles. That pretty much gets rid of any germs."
"Is that one of those Southern things?"
"Yes."
"I'll have to allow you to bake me a-do you call it anything special? It can't be a loaf, can it? I remember hearing something about a pone."
"Some call it that. I simply call it a pan of cornbread."
"You'll have to make me a pan sometime."
"I'd be happy to. Let me know when you plan to come to the U.S. I'd love for you to see my museum."
"Marguerite and the boys would love that. I'm planning a trip in a couple of months. I'll let you know. I'm sorry to hear about your friend Frank, and especially about you. I need to let you get some sleep. It sounds to me like you're still injured."
"A little pain now and then."
"Go to bed and get some sleep. Let me know how things progress. I'm still concerned about you."
"I know. It's good talking to you. It really is." Diane hung up the phone and finally tucked herself into bed. She was glad he called. Gregory had a way of helping keep her feet on the ground.
Morning came too soon. She slapped the alarm off and dragged herself out of bed and into the shower. The warm water felt soothing on her sore muscles. She thought she must be getting better. No sharp pains, and the soreness in her kidney wasn't as acute.
She pulled a pearl gray pantsuit from her closet, slipped it on and grabbed a nutrition bar for breakfast on the way out. The sun was shining. It looked like it was going to be a clear day. A surprise, because rain was in the forecast. She headed for the hospital, praying that Frank was improved.
Diane slowed down as she approached the front desk. Fear was creeping inside her, fueled by the vision of asking to see Frank and being told he was gone-dead. This is just silly This is just silly. She marched up to the desk and asked if she could visit Frank Duncan. As she asked, she saw Linc and Henry in the waiting room and walked over to them.
"He's stable," Linc said before she asked.
"That's a relief."
"You look better too."
"Got a little adrenaline rush last night." She grinned and told them about Mrs. Odell and the draperies. The two of them laughed with her, and it felt good.
"Thanks for your help last night," said Diane.
"I may be mistaken," said Linc, "but I'd be willing to bet he's an avid hockey player."
"I'm going to call Frank's partner today and ask him to put out a missing persons query. Maybe we'll come up with something."
"Would you like to see Frank?" asked Linc.
"Yes. Yes, I would."
Linc led her to the ICU and stayed outside the door as she went in. Frank was awake. He looked so pale. She took his hand.
"Hey," he whispered. "Thinking about you."
"Good, I hope."
"Always."
"Linc's been a big help. Did he tell you?"
Frank nodded. "Interesting."
"I met your partner. I thought I'd ask him to put out an inquiry about our guy."
"He'll do that."
"I won't stay long. I just needed to see how you are. Getting an infection wasn't a good idea."
"No. Seemed like it at the time, though." He gave her a wan smile.
Diane squeezed his hand. "I saw Star yesterday. She's OK. Her lawyer's trying to get her bail. I said she could stay with me."
Frank held tightly onto her hand. "Thanks."
"Get better." She kissed his cheek. "There's something I need you to do for me when you get well."
He attempted a grin. "And what would that be?"
Diane leaned over and whispered in his ear. "Teach me how to box."
"How's he doing, really?" she asked Linc on the way out of the ICU.
"Holding his own. Frank was never one to overuse antibiotics, so that's in his favor. He usually responds well to them. That's always a concern-finding an antibiotic that will work."
"Has there been any . . . other trouble?"
"No. Henry and I are always here. Most of his visitors don't go into ICU. They're content to get information from us or the desk."
"Perhaps I'm just being paranoid."
He smiled. "Maybe, but if you're not, it's good to be prepared. Henry and I don't mind."
When Diane left the hospital, she went to the jail. She didn't expect to be able to see Star, but thought perhaps the person on duty would tell Star she had been there checking on her. She was surprised when they put her in the same room as before and brought Star in to see her. Her bandages were off her arms, and Diane could see the four-inch red scars running up each arm. She also noticed that there were no telltale needle marks on either arm. Whatever drugs Star had been taking were not intravenous. That was something.
"How's Uncle Frank?"
Diane told her about the infection. She feared if Star heard it from another source and she hadn't told her, it would damage the shaky trust Star was building with her.
"He's doing well. His brothers are there. One is a doctor himself and he gives me the real p.o.o.p on how Frank's doing."
"All this is my fault, isn't it?"
"What do you mean?"
"If Mom and Dad hadn't given Uncle Frank that bone to get the police to look for me . . . that's what started everything."
"First of all, we don't know if the bone is related to what happened to them. Second, and most important, it's the person's fault who murdered them. Don't lose sight of that."
"Still."
"Star, don't borrow trouble. You have enough to deal with. How are the guards treating you?"
"The one on duty now's nice. Her name's Mrs. Torres. She's good to me."
"That's good. Are you good to her?"
"You bet. In fact, she wanted me to ask you if there are any openings at the museum for a gardener. Her son's looking for a job."
Diane laughed. "What's his name?"
"Hector Torres."
"Tell her to have him come to the museum. I'll give the head groundskeeper his name."
Star grinned. Diane could tell she liked the idea of being a broker from her jail cell. If it kept her happy and made her life easier, a job for her guard's son was a small price to pay. Diane just hoped the guy had something to recommend him.
She said good-bye to Star and got in her car. As she started it up, she realized she was counting on Star's being innocent. What if she wasn't? She didn't want to think about that possibility.
The first order of business when she got back to her office was to call the head groundskeeper and ask him to look positively on Hector Torres when he made an application.
"If he turns out to be a problem, send him to me to work it out."
"Sure thing," he'd told her. "No problem."
Whoever was trying to make Diane look irresponsible should have simply waited a while and she'd have done it herself; they need not have tried so hard forging order forms. Hiring someone just to make Star's life easier, putting both Jonas and Sylvia on the excavation-none of this had anything to do with the museum. She hoped Torres turned out to be a good worker. She shoved her feelings of guilt aside and went up to the second floor to finish with the skeleton.
As she opened the door to the vault, she half expected the bones to be gone, that someone had come in during the night and taken them away.
But the skeleton was there, brown bones laid out in basically the order they appeared in the body, on the table waiting for her to discover something else that would help identify them.
Chapter 38
Before she started Diane gave Jonas Briggs a call at the site to see how they were doing.
"Just fine. Sylvia just identified a Cebus capucinus Cebus capucinus."
"A monkey?"
"We also found a Sus scrofa Sus scrofa."
"Someone had a pig stuffed?"
"It was hard for me to imagine too."
"Interesting finds. How about a h.o.m.o sapiens h.o.m.o sapiens skull?" skull?"
"No, not so much as an H. sapiens H. sapiens tooth." tooth."
"That's too bad."
"We're still looking. Have you made another move?"
She hadn't. She thought for a moment. "King-side castle."
"That's really the most logical."
"Are you going to play both sides now?"
"You're not one of those people sensitive to critique, are you?"
"You're not one of those c.o.c.ky winners, are you?"
Jonas chuckled. "I E-mailed you my report. Testing this new computer, which the entire crew wants now. It's really nice."
"I'll tell Kenneth. He'll be pleased."
Diane thanked him for the work and started back on those bones of the skeleton that she did have, which was about 86 percent of them. She examined each bone again, looking for any mark that might give a clue as to what had happened to him.