gifted student too. Itâs a damn shame thereâs so little left of that. Whatâs he think is going on?â
âHe hasnât any idea and, as he points out, the minute he remembers, heâs in more trouble than he is now. He suspects somebodyâs still after him.â
He cleaned his glasses with a handkerchief, contemplating the matter. He was a man apparently accustomed to dealing with puzzles, but I imagined his solutions were derived from symptoms instead of circumstances. Diseases donât require an underlying motivation in the same way homicide does.
He shook his head slightly, his eyes meeting mine. âOdd. The whole thingâs a little bit out of my range.â He put his glasses on, turning businesslike. âWell. We better figure out whatâs going on, then. What do you need from me?â
I shrugged. âAll I know to do is start back at square one and see if I can determine what kind of trouble he was in. Heâd worked for you for what? Two months?â
âAbout that. He started in September, I believe. I can have Marcy look that up if you want exact dates.â
âI gather he was hired here because of your relationship with his mother.â
âWell, yes and no. We generally have a slot available for a premed student. It just happened that Bobby filled the bill in this case. Glen Callahanâs a very bigcheese around here, but we wouldnât have hired him if heâd been a dud. Can I get you some coffee? Iâm about to have some.â
âAll right, sure.â
He leaned sideways slightly, calling to the secretary, whose desk was in his line of sight. âMarcy? Can we get some coffee in here, please?â
To me, he said, âYou take cream and sugar?â
âBlack is fine.â
âBoth black,â he called out.
There was no reply, but I assumed it was being taken care of. He turned his attention back to me. âSorry to interrupt.â
âThatâs all right. Did he have desk space down here?â
âHe had a desk up front, but that was cleared out, oh, Iâd say within a day of the accident. Nobody thought heâd survive, you know, and we had to bring somebody else in pretty quickly. This place is a madhouse most of the time.â
âWhat happened to his things?â
âI dropped them by the house myself. There wasnât much, but we put what we came across in a cardboard box and I passed it on to Derek. I donât know what he did with it, if anything. Glen was at the hospital twenty-four hours a day at that point.â
âDo you remember what was in it?â
âHis desk? Odds and ends. Office things.â
I made a note to myself to check for the box. I supposed there was a chance it was still at the house somewhere. âCan you walk me through Bobbyâs day and show me what sorts of things he did?â
âSure. Actually, he divided his time between the lab and the morgue out in the old county medical facility on Frontage Road. Iâve got to make a run out there anyway and you can ride along if you like, or follow in your car if thatâs easier.â
âI thought the morgue was here.â
âWeâve got a small one here, just off the autopsy room. Weâve got another morgue out there.â
âI didnât realize there was more than one.â
âWe needed the added space for the contract work we do. St. Terryâs maintains a few offices out there too.â
âReally. I didnât think that old county building was still in use.â
âOh yes. Thereâs a private radiology group that works out there, and weâve got storage rooms for medical records. Itâs a bit of a hodgepodge, but I donât know what weâd do without it.â
He glanced over as Marcy came in with two mugs, her gaze carefully affixed to the surface of the coffee, which was threatening to slop over the sides. She was young,
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