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9780743233477

Monday Mourning; A Novel

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780743233477

  • ISBN10:

    0743233476

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2004-06-14
  • Publisher: Scribner

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Supplemental Materials

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Summary

Following the worldwide raves for her recent "Bare Bones," Kathy Reichs returns with a riveting new Temperance Brennan novel--filled with all the forensic details that readers love. On a trip to Montreal, Tempe recovers three skeletons from shallow graves in the basement of a pizza parlor.

Author Biography

Kathy Reichs is forensic anthropologist for the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, State of North Carolina, and a professor of anthropology at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

Excerpts

Chapter 1 Monday, Monday...Can't trust that day... As the tune played inside my head, gunfire exploded in the cramped underground space around me. My eyes flew up as muscle, bone, and guts splattered against rock just three feet from me. The mangled body seemed glued for a moment, then slid downward, leaving a smear of blood and hair. I felt warm droplets on my cheek, backhanded them with a gloved hand.Still squatting, I swiveled."Assez!" Enough!Sergeant-detective Luc Claudel's brows plunged into a V. He lowered but did not holster his nine-millimeter."Rats. They are the devil's spawn." Claudel's French was clipped and nasal, reflecting his upriver roots."Throw rocks," I snapped."That bastard was big enough to throw them back."Hours of squatting in the cold and damp on a December Monday in Montreal had taken a toll. My knees protested as I rose to a standing position."Where is Charbonneau?" I asked, rotating one booted foot, then the other."Questioning the owner. I wish him luck. Moron has the IQ of pea soup.""The owner discovered this?" I flapped a hand at the ground behind me."Non. Le plombier.""What was a plumber doing in the cellar?""Genius spotted a trapdoor beside the commode, decided to do some underground exploration to acquaint himself with the sewage pipes." Remembering my own descent down the rickety staircase, I wondered why anyone would take the risk. "The bones were lying on the surface?""Says he tripped on something sticking out of the ground. There." Claudel cocked his chin at a shallow pit where the south wall met the dirt floor. "Pulled it loose. Showed the owner. Together they checked out the local library's anatomy collection to see if the bone was human. Picked a book with nice color pictures since they probably can't read." I was about to ask a follow-up question when something clicked above us. Claudel and I looked up, expecting his partner.Instead of Charbonneau, we saw a scarecrow man in a knee-length sweater, baggy jeans, and dirty blue Nikes. Pigtails wormed from the lower edge of a red bandanna wrapped his head.The man was crouched in the doorway, pointing a throwaway Kodak in my direction.Claudel's V narrowed and his parrot nose went a deeper red. "Tabernac!" Two more clicks, then bandanna man scrabbled sideways. Holstering his weapon, Claudel grabbed the wooden railing. "Until SIJ returns, throw rocks." SIJ -- Section d'Identite Judiciaire. The Quebec equivalent of Crime Scene Recovery.I watched Claudel's perfectly fitted buttocks disappear through the small rectangular opening. Though tempted, I pegged not a single rock. Upstairs, muted voices, the clump of boots. Downstairs, just the hum of the generator for the portable lights. Breath suspended, I listened to the shadows around me.No squeaking. No scratching. No scurrying feet. Quick scan. No beady eyes. No naked, scaly tails. The little buggers were probably regrouping for another offensive.Though I disagreed with Claudel's approach to the problem, I was with him on one thing: I could do without the rodents.Satisfied that I was alone for the moment, I refocused on the moldy crate at my feet. Dr. Energy's Power Tonic. Dead tired? Dr. Energy's makes your bones want to get up and dance. Not these bones, Doc. I gazed at the crate's grisly contents.Though most of the skeleton remained caked, dirt had been brushed from some bones. Their outer surfaces looked chestnut under the harsh illumination of the portable lights. A clavicle. Ribs. A pelvis. A human skull. Damn. Though I'd said it a half dozen times, reiteration couldn't hurt. I'd come from Charlotte to Montreal a day early to prepare for court on Tuesday. A man had been accused of killing and dismembering his wife. I'd be testifying on the saw mark analysis I'd do

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