Tags:
Fiction,
General,
Suspense,
Thrillers,
Mystery & Detective,
Women Sleuths,
Mystery Fiction,
Conspiracies,
Women forensic anthropologists,
Missing Persons,
north carolina,
Brennan; Temperance (Fictitious Character),
Hate Groups
grounds beyond. A stone plaque identified the Southeast Regional Research Park.
Slidell stopped at the guardhouse and lowered his window. A uniformed young man emerged with a clipboard. “May I help you?”
“We’re looking for Lynn Nolan.”
“Yes, sir. I’ll check the list.”
“We aren’t on it.”
“I’m sorry, but—”
Slidell held out his badge.
The man studied it earnestly. “Do you have a warrant?”
“Why? Something going on here gonna cause problems?”
“I’ll have to call for clearance.”
“No,” Slidell said. “You won’t. Nolan works for CRRI. Where do I find her?”
“Building Three. Second floor.”
“You have a real special day.” Slidell hit a button and his window hummed up.
The man retreated, the gates opened, and Slidell drove through.
The Southeast Regional Research Park looked like a small college campus in Mississippi. Brick buildings fronted by broad steps, Greco-Roman pillars, porticos, and pediments. Covered parking garages. Well-groomed gardens. Boisterously green grass which seemed to stretch for several hundred acres. Small lake complete with ducks, geese, and a swan.
Yet nothing stirred. The effect was like one of those disaster movies in which a virus destroys life but leaves the hardscape intact.
Building 3 was a four-story number on Progress Avenue. Flanking both sides were half-completed foundations, suggesting progress had been less than desired.
Ignoring the no-parking signs, Slidell pulled to the curb. We got out and entered Building 3 through tinted glass doors.
The lobby was all gleaming rosewood and marble, with a futuristic stone sculpture parked in the center. A directory verified that CRRI was located in 204.
A spotless elevator took us to the second floor. There the decorator’s palette had been labeled something like sand or wheat. Beige walls, beige trim, beige carpet, beige chairs, each shade just a hair off the others. The only color came from framed black and whites with highlighted details. A woman’s red lips. A green umbrella. A blue and yellow tail dangling from a kite.
Room 204 was halfway down on the right.
A woman occupied a desk directly opposite and facing the door. She was tiny, with caramel eyes, sun-bronzed skin, and long brown hair spilling from a barrette atop her head.
When we entered, the woman’s eyes widened. A manicured hand flew to her mouth. “Are you really going to arrest me?”
So much for the guard not announcing our presence.
T HE WOMAN WATCHED US CROSS TO THE DESK, HER BODY RIGID with apprehension.
“Lynn Nolan?” Not a bark, but close.
Nolan nodded, lavender-tipped fingers still pressed to her lips. Slidell flipped his badge. “Got some questions about Cindi Gamble.”
Nolan’s eyes now went impossibly wide.
“You remember Cindi Gamble?”
Nolan nodded again.
“You want we should do this standing?”
The hand left Nolan’s mouth and fluttered toward two desk-facing chairs.
As we sat, Nolan’s gaze flicked to me, but she said nothing.
While Slidell started the interview, I looked around.
The furnishings were standard reception-room walnut and tweed, including Nolan’s desk, our chairs, and a love seat centered on the back wall. Fronting the love seat was a coffee table heaped with magazines. Every title contained the terms “air,” “atmosphere,” or “energy.” As in the corridor, beige ruled.
Above Nolan’s head, a mural displayed the CRRI logo, a stylized windmill with greenery twining the central post. Three words circled the blades: G ENOMICS . P ROTEOMICS . M ETABOLOMICS.
“You the receptionist?” Slidell produced his spiral, more for effect than note-taking, I suspected.
Another nod.
“What goes on here?”
“Research.”
Slidell stared at Nolan. She stared back.
“Why am I getting the impression you’re not enjoying our visit?”
“Into air pollution.”
By my count, that brought Nolan’s total word count to four.
“Research for who?” Slidell
Marissa Honeycutt
Ed Gorman
MC Beaton
Kirsten Reed
Sophie Anthony
John Sandford
Michael Crichton
Ruth Clemens
Kyle B. Stiff
Genevieve Valentine