The Silent Girl
many people, from his social worker to his psychologist, had warned her that the boy was too troubled, that taking him into her life could lead to consequences she’d regret. Now she watched that troubled boy calmly unpack his clothes and hang them neatly in the closet, and she thought: Thank God I never listened to them. To any of them.
    “Have you made friends at school?” she asked. “Do you like the other students?”
    “They’re a lot like me,” he said. He opened a dresser drawer and placed socks and underwear inside.
    She smiled. “You mean they’re special.”
    “They don’t have parents, either.”
    This was news to her. When Sansone had told her he was offering the boy a scholarship to the Evensong School, he had emphasized the institution’s academic strengths and rural campus, its international faculty and superb library. He had said nothing about it being a school for orphans.
    “Are you sure about that?” she asked. “There must be some parents who come to visit.”
    “Sometimes I see someone’s aunt or an uncle. But I’ve never met anyone’s mom or dad. He says we’re each other’s family now.”
    “He?”
    “Mr. Sansone.” Rat closed the dresser drawer and looked at her. “He asks about you all the time.”
    Maura felt her face redden and she focused on Bear, who was turning around and around in the dog bed, getting a feel for this new luxury. “What sort of things does he ask?”
    “If you’ve written me any letters lately. If you’re ever coming to visit the school. Whether you’d like to teach a class there.”
    “At Evensong?” She shook her head. “I’m not sure a class in forensic pathology is appropriate for high school students.”
    “But we’re learning a lot of cool stuff. Last month, Ms. Saul showed us how to build a Roman catapult. And they let me teach a class on animal tracks, because I know so much about it. We even dissected a horse.”
    “Really?”
    “He broke his leg, and they had to put him down. We cut him open and studied his organs.”
    “Didn’t you find that upsetting?”
    “I’ve dressed deer. I know what dead things look like.”
    Yes, you do, she thought. In Wyoming, he had watched a man bleed to death. She wondered whether he sometimes startled awake at night, as she did, haunted by the memories of what had happened to them both in the mountains. He seemed so calm and controlled ashe set his schoolbooks on the dresser, as he took his toothbrush into the bathroom, all his emotions shuttered up tight.
He is more like me than I care to admit
.
    In the kitchen, her cell phone was ringing.
    “Can I go outside and see the yard?” he asked.
    “Go ahead. Let me get this call.”
    She walked into the kitchen and pulled the cell phone out of her purse. “Dr. Isles,” she answered.
    “This is Detective Tam. I’m really sorry to be calling you on the weekend.”
    “Not a problem, Detective. How can I help you?”
    “I wondered if I could ask your opinion on an old homicide. It happened nineteen years ago, a shooting in a Chinatown restaurant. There were five victims. At the time, they called it a murder-suicide.”
    “Why are you pursuing something that happened nineteen years ago?”
    “It could be connected to our Jane Doe on the rooftop. It may be the reason she came to Chinatown. It seems she was seeking out people who knew about that restaurant shooting.”
    “What do you want me to do, exactly?”
    “Review the autopsy reports on those five people, particularly the shooter’s. Tell us if you agree with the conclusions. The pathologist who performed them is no longer with the ME’s office, so I can’t ask him.”
    From the kitchen window, she saw Rat and the dog were outside and circling the yard, as though hunting for a way out, an escape into the wider world. He was a boy meant for the wilderness.
    “I’m busy this week,” she said. “You might try asking Dr. Bristol instead.”
    “But I was really

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