Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

206 Bones: A Novel
206 Bones: A Novel
206 Bones: A Novel
Ebook421 pages6 hours

206 Bones: A Novel

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

()

Read preview

About this ebook

#1 New York Times bestselling author Kathy Reichs delivers another “outstanding” book (Publishers Weekly) in her “cleverly plotted” (The New York Times) Temperance Brennan series, the inspiration for the hit FOX television series Bones.

There are 206 bones in the human body. Forensic anthropologists know them intimately, can use them to reconstruct every kind of violent end. When Tempe finds herself regaining consciousness in some kind of very small, very dark, very cold enclosed space—bound, hands to feet—Tempe begins slowly to reconstruct...

Tempe and Lieutenant Ryan had accompanied the recently discovered remains of a missing heiress from Montreal to the Chicago morgue. Suddenly, Tempe was accused of mishandling the autopsy—and the case. Back in Montreal, the corpse of a second elderly woman was found in the woods, and then a third. Seamlessly weaving between Tempe’s present-tense terror as she’s held captive and her memory of the cases of these murdered women, Reichs reveals the incredible devastation that would occur if a forensic colleague sabotaged work in the lab. The chemistry between Tempe and Ryan intensifies as this complex, riveting tale unfolds, proving once again, that Reichs is the dominant talent in forensic mystery writing.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherScribner
Release dateAug 25, 2009
ISBN9781439166239
Author

Kathy Reichs

Kathy Reichs’s first novel Déjà Dead, published in 1997, won the Ellis Award for Best First Novel and was an international bestseller. Fire and Bones is Reichs’s twenty-third novel featuring forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan. Reichs was also a producer of Fox Television’s longest running scripted drama, Bones, which was based on her work and her novels. One of very few forensic anthropologists certified by the American Board of Forensic Anthropology, Reichs divides her time between Charlotte, North Carolina, and Charleston, South Carolina. Visit her at KathyReichs.com or follow her on Twitter @KathyReichs, Instagram @KathyReichs, or Facebook @KathyReichsBooks. 

Read more from Kathy Reichs

Related to 206 Bones

Titles in the series (20)

View More

Related ebooks

Related articles

Reviews for 206 Bones

Rating: 3.722039428947369 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

608 ratings50 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Just what the doctor ordered. Intrigue, murder, and a disgruntled coworker to boot! I enjoyed this very much, including the nostalgia factor. Definitely didn't blow me away though. Was a touch formulaic.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Kathy Reichs in not only a superb story teller, she is the vice president of the American Academy of Forensic Scientists. As such, she brings a wealth of detailed knowledge to her stories. She has the ability to weave the details of forensic anthropology into her stories without beating the reader over the head with it. 206 Bones is complete with multiple subplots and the details of the work done by a forensic anthropologist in identifying bodies that have been decayed to the point of skeletonization. Temperance Brennan, the forensic scientist and member of the Laboratoire de Sciences judiciaires et de medicine legale (LSJML)in Quebec at the center of 206 Bones, is facing a slow death. The book opens with her regaining consciousness in a cold dark space. The book jumps from the present to the past and draws the reader into the story of how she ended up in her present predicament. It is a tale of familiar characters and new faces that moves with the typical fast pace of earlier Kathy Reichs books. Over the years Tempe Brennan has matured as a character, and I thoroughly enjoyed reconnecting with her. The interplay between the main character and the various others in the book is classic Reichs. Tempe and Lieutenant Ryan continue their off-on relationship with the expected complications. The politics of the laboratory in Quebec are even more complex than in earlier books I had read because the head of the lab, Dr. LaManche, is on medical leave and his replacement doesn't seem up to the job. Reichs does a masterful job of weaving office intrigue into the various ongoing investigations, and never drops the ball doing it. She does a good job of making her readers wonder if the cases are related, with some surprises and some expected results. Those who have enjoyed earlier books in this series will undoubtedly enjoy this one as well. Those who are new to Temperance Brennan should also enjoy the book, though I think the book works best as part of the series rather than a stand alone book. There are too many things going on that rely on past events to really allow the reader to fully comprehend the interactions of characters without having read at least some of the earlier books. My suggestion is to start at the beginning and grow with the main character through all the books. I don't think you will be disappointed, and you will learn a great deal about forensic anthropology while getting to know Temperance, her family, her friends, and her enemies.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This twelfth in the series is as enjoyable as all the others. The relationship between Tempe and Ryan is still tangled, but there are signs that things might work out. I still find the technical descriptions fascinating and integral to the story. I actually figured out who the protagonists were fairly early in the book, so the storyline could have used some tightening. Overall, though, I enjoyed it and am looking forward to the next book.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Number 12 in this series, the books has Temperance trying to save her reputation and her job. While not as strong as others, this volume tries up some loose ends including Ryan's relationship to Tempe.Fans will enjoy
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    206 Bones offers its readers a double-layered plot with a different feel than other entries in this series because this time this time the secondary threat comes from within, and has a cold feel that comes from the pettiness of the treachery. In this book, we are introduced to more of Brennan's family, who are all the more interesting for being her soon-to-be-ex husband's relations who endearingly refuse to relinquish their binds with Brennan for a little thing such as an impending divorce.The admirable endurance of those bonds serves to highlight the later betrayals with which Brennan must contend as she helps to track a serial killer who preys on older women. Reich's temporal switch-backs heighten the suspense, and I confess to being happy that Brennan and Ryan seem to be back together at the end.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Maybe my favorite mystery/whodunit authors aren't grabbing me as much as they used to. Although I enjoyed the pacing of this book, I found there were too many characters I didn't care about and too many deaths to keep track of. I found the conclusion to be obvious and not very interesting. I need my YA fiction now!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I've been a Tempe Brennan fan since the first book came out, and yes, there have been books that have been better than others in this series. But all of them have something in them that just keeps me coming back. I really enjoyed this 12th book in the series. I find that Tempe has matured with each book. I also find that Kathy Reichs' success is based on the fact that she keeps everything real in her books. This book has a number of different story lines that somehow go along separately until they begin to mesh together. The suspense is tight and I loved the storyline. And of course I love Tempe! She is a fascinating character. There's lots of real forensic information in this book, but I felt that the explanations enhanced the clarity of the story. Way to go Kathy Reichs! Keep them coming.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I purchased this book simply because the television show ‘Bones’ is based on and inspired by Kathy Reichs. Early in the book I wished I had not wasted my money for several reasons which I will not detail here. However, at the two thirds mark I have found, that like fungus, it has grown on me. Instead of a one star rating it is now heading for a two or three star rating. The story line has improved and although I still keep thinking of Television's Bones and Booth at times, I find increasingly that I want to read the next chapter.

    If ‘206 Bones’ is on your reading list do not give up in the early chapters.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Easy read, was not overly impressed with this book, I almost guessed the ending, which is never a good thing. Good to read on a Sunday, but not much of a story line, nice descriptive details and a vague outline of background characters, but felt this book would have made a much better short story.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Temperance Brennan and Detective Andrew Ryan, former lovers and co-workers in the present, are escorting the remains of a Chicago woman who died in Quebec back to Chicago. For Dr. Brennan it is a chance to also visit with her ex-husband's family but Ryan is supposed to fly home after the handoff. However, someone has called the survivors to tell them that Tempe screwed up the cause of death. Tempe and Ryan spend hours detailing the work that went into their investigation and finding that death was accidental. That delay puts them smack in the middle of a Midwest storm and Ryan also has to stay over. Brennan's family feeds him and gives him a place to stay and take him into their capacious heart. Brennan gets caught up solving a mystery about a lost nephew which entails many hours in the Cook County Coroner's office. Then both Brennan and Ryan get calls that there is a case in Quebec demanding their expertise. That case involves the skeletal remains of an old woman and soon another older woman's body is also found. Is there a killer targeting old women who live alone? Brennan counted 206 bones recovered from the first case but several finger bones which could help with the identity are missing when she goes to look for them. While she goes on Christmas holidays the new hire at the lab goes back out to the burial site and finds the missing bones. That doesn't look too good for Dr. Brennan and when she misses a crucial bit of evidence with some other bones she starts to doubt herself. She even wonders if the Chicago woman really did die of accidental causes.Interwoven with this plot are chapters with Tempe finding herself in an underground cell with her hands and feet tied. We know that there must be some connection to the lab cases but Brennan can't remember anything from the recent past.Either I am getting better at solving clues or Dr. Reichs is making them easier because I figured out most of the plot twists before they were revealed. That didn't make the read any less enjoyable for me (witness the almost missed bus stop). In fact I was quite proud of myself.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Brennan awakes in a cramped, dark space, bound at the hands and feet and completely alone. As she reconstructs the events preceding her predicament, Tempe assembles a case of sabotage and murder that runs from Montreal to Chicago.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Another excellent book in the Temperance Brennan series. This time, Temp is the target of a hate campaign intended to oust her from her beloved post in the north. There has been a series of murders of elderly women in the area which Temp and Ryan attempt to solve. There is also the recovery of 4 poorly preserved skeletons which challenges her efforts to identify them. Is Temp losing her touch or is there someone trying to ruin her reputation as a forensic anthropologist? She finds herself in a very dangerous situation as she tries to find the answers to her questions.There are side-issues with her nutty neighbour and things seem to be looking up with Andrew Ryan. All in all a good read.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Whoa, followed closely by wow.To start with the bad, it was a little preachy, but, I sorta guessed that it might be when I saw it was dedicated to the various American boards of sciences that certify the scientists who analyze our forensic info. I don't disagree that they're wicked important, they're great and awesome too. And it didn't totally distract from the story, it wasn't focused preaching, it just seemed to run through the whole story, as a sort of secondary theme.Other than that I th ought it was a great book. I always think it's a positive sign when, as a reader, you want to knock the antagonistic characters over the head with a baseball bat (even those who aren't the 'bad guy' or 'bad gal' and are just annoying. And that happened more than once in this novel.What's the most interesting thing about this book and Kathy Reichs' more recent Temperance Brennan books is how much the Temperance Brennan of the TV show "Bones" and the Temperance Brennan of the books are getting closer and closer in characterization. I'm not sure if it's on purpose, or not, or what, but it is an interesting phenomenon for someone (me) who likes both the books and the TV show for both their differences and their similarities. And it will be interesting to see if it keeps happening in the next novel (Spider Bones).
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I had heard wonderful things about this author and her previous books from family member and was thrilled to receive a copy of the book through Early Reviewers. Generally I really like medical thrillers (Tess Gerritsen, Robin Cook, etc) and I while I enjoyed this book, it did not live up expectations (which might be unfair). I liked the way the book transitioned back and forth from present to previous weeks - the author did this very effectively. Unfortunately I got lost a little in the medical terminology and the french language. Finally, I was not fully engrossed with the characters. Will I try another one of her books - I will probably borrow it from the library. Overall good but not great.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    In 206 Bones by Kathy Reichs, Temperance Brennan, is handcuffed and buried in some place underground. She does not remember how she got there, she is injured, and terrified, but attempts to save herself. Then Ms. Reichs shows us the series of events that led up to the abduction. This is a first for me author and so I was not 100% sure of what to expect, because I like the TV series Bones, which I frankly love, but I know that some things don't translate well from book to screen. I think what surprised me the most about this was the one thing that irritated me the most -- the French (language that is). I do not speak the language, do not understand the language, and don't read it. Without the translations I would have been at sea in a heavy fog without knowing where in the heck I was going. I understand that most of the book takes place in Quebec Canada, and that French and English are both spoken there, but I could have really done without so much of the language. For those that may not know whom I'm talking about - Temperance Brennan is a renowned forensic anthropologist who seems to divide her time between labs in Quebec Canada and helping others -- and being with family in North Carolina. Her friend and romantic interest appears to be the good looking Lieutenant/detective Andrew Ryan, who works for the Surete du Quebec, but there is also mention of another gentleman in North Carolina that she seems to care for. The two (Ryan and Tempe) seem to have an on again off again romance that is currently off, although they have remained good friends, and Ryan seems to want to restart the romance. There are several very unusual things going on in this book -- again not being familiar with Ms. Reich's work I'm not sure if this is usual or just the tone of this book. The mysteries, include the deaths of three or four elderly females. As a favor to a friend, Temperance also tries to learn what happened to a young man who disappeared years ago. Temp also has to tolerate a newcomer or two in her lab in Canada, and things there aren't what they seem either.When Temperance talks bones, I listened, due in a large part I'm sure to Ms. Reich herself being such a well known and respected anthropologist. Ms. Reich's talents however do not all lie in just that one field as she also shows the harshness of a Montreal winter, with heavy snows, bad roads and lousy temps, and the fluidity of a well written mystery or would that be mysteries? Another thing that surprised me was that the weather seemed to mirror Temperance's mood/attitude for the most part, again I'm not sure if this is a common occurrence or just the way things went for this book. She is ticked that an ambitious newcomer named Marie-Andréa Briel is challenging her knowledge and apparently succeeding in making her look bad. Otherwise, I kind of enjoyed the book almost as much as I like the TV series. When Temperance spoke I listened, the book has a faint romance going on between Temperance and the detective Ryan, but the book is mainly a mystery, and it was written well enough that someone that doesn't usually read mysteries enjoyed herself. Would I buy the book in hardback, I'm afraid not, in paperback if I didn't have something else to read, maybe? That is the main reason I'm only giving this a 3 star, simply because while I enjoyed the book, it just didn't make me want to run out and find more by this author right away.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book had a lot of technical jargon that at times was difficult to follow. A pleasant read and look forward to the next book in the series.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I am a Kathy Reichs fan vrs. a Pat Cornwell. Reichs stories have a more plausible plot and an easier read. I am grossed out by Cornwall every so often. This book was a fast satisfying read.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    206 Bones was my first introduction to Reich's Temperance Brennan, other than the TV series. I was a good book and I'll be finding some of the other books in the series to read. The story moved very slowly in the beginning but picked up through the book. It was a great read that let me escape my day to day life for a little bit.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan is called to North Carolina, where she is accused of mishandling an autopsy. Brennan is determined to find out who is behind the accusation through an incriminating phone call, but the man who received the call dies shortly after he relays this. Brennan returns to Montreal and, with her former lover Lt. Andrew Ryan, begins investigating the deaths of several older women that may be connected, although she and Ryan are having a hard time finding the one thing that links them. As their investigation proceeds, Brennan is accused of ineptitude more than once and begins to strongly suspect she is being sabotaged by an ambitious newcomer whose motives lie with advancing her career. Coworkers are acting mysterious around her and her boss is hinting at dismissal, but Brennan plunges ahead, unknowingly placing her life in danger.Reichs’s series is always rich with forensic anthropology, a good mystery and plenty of suspense. This 12th installment, however, does not live up to prior books in the series with regard to mystery and suspense. Brennan comes across as flighty and not too observant, as if she’s off her game. She seems more concerned with her relationship with Bryan than the fact that someone is out to get her and her career may be in jeopardy. The plot moves slowly at times, although forensics data is, as always, interesting and well delivered.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Great read with interesting story lines.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A good instalment in this series of crime thrillers. After a few books set away from Montreal its a relief to get back to the scene of the first few novels in this series, with all the local colour and the cold. I particularly enjoyed how the office politics at the morgue slowly intertwined itself around Brennan's life and her various investigations and her interactions with her cat hating neighbour. Good to see the series is back on track.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    My first Reichs read. Being as claustrophobic as I am, I had a hard time with the subject matter (NO SPOILERS). I also felt that she was trying to politicize her obvious bias about the professional credentials required for various forensic experts. I'll read another one before passing judgment on the series.Basically, Temperance Brennan, a forensic anthropologist, is working various cases in Montreal and in North Carolina. (I gather our heroine bi-locates). When bad calls appear in her examinations and reports, she sets out to discover who or what may be sabotaging her good name. There is a love (on again, off again?) interest with a detective named Ryan, a wonderful cat and a snarky neighbor. The lineup is good, the plot was well developed, and without the campaigning it would have been an enjoyable read.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    This was SO predictable! Tempe is supposed to be smart, yet it was obvious who the crooks were pages before she even considered the possibility! Still very readable but in a frustrating kind of way. And only the tiniest bit of movement on the overarching series plotlines around Andrew Ryan and her family. Not one of my favourite Reichs novels.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I enjoy the author's writing style. And the first books in the series were great. The last few were too predictable and not all that interesting; but they were still an okay read. I was surprised that I actually really enjoyed this latest one. I knew what, where, who and why really early on; but it didn't matter too much. It was more in the style of the original stories. I will continue to read her books because they are educational as well as a fairly good mystery; but there are others who tell a more interesting tale.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I read this at work. The author knows her subject but i felt that there was not enough action and too much nondescript stuff to get through. Overall a bit too slow for my taste.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I always look forward to Reich's new books and was a bit disappointed when I saw how slim this one was. It was a good read, but not as good as her earlier books. The plot was pretty slim and the characterizations for this-book-only people were a bit one-note. The overall feeling I was left with was twofold; first that Reichs wanted to talk about irresponsible forensic work, and second that she had a book due and cranked this out. I hope the next book in the series is more in keeping with the quality that I've come to expect from her.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Is Tempe Brennan losing her mind? Or is there something more sinister going on? Is she really responsible for things disappearing and the anthropological mistakes she is making? In this novel, someone is trying to discredit and possibly oust Tempe, and is doing a moderately good job of it in the beginning but that soon escalates. Kathy Reichs has a writing style that builds the tension throughout, and drives you on to discover what you will find at the end. No disappointment there!She is accused of mishandling an autopsy by an unknown tipster. With the body exhumation she just attended she counted and bagged 206 bones, in other words all bones accounted for. But strangely when she comes to complete reconstruction of the body, and looks for the most accurate marker she knew could give a positive ID, she finds she is now down to 203 bones. Tempe is then accused of mishandling evidence; she requests that she be allowed back to the site to see if they really had been left behind, but is turned down. When the newest member of the team is allowed to recheck the exhumation site, she remarkably 'discovers' the bones. Missed diagnoses are brought to light by the oh-so-helpful young Dr. Briel, who has insinuated herself into almost everyone's work. Tempe must find out how she could have made an error worthy of a warning that "someone's out to get you". She is also beginning to doubt herself.Cases are suddenly piling up of suspected murders of elderly women, but each died in a different manner, in a different location, and over a period of years. Is there a link or not? Throw in a few old bones dredged from a lake just to bring a little more excitement into the mix and you have a number of mysteries to gnaw on.. ID'ing most will be an almost fruitless job, but Tempe is sure she is up to the task. Teaming up with her detective partner Ryan, they both link up with colleagues and associates in Chicago and other areas over the elderly deaths trying to find a common denominator other than that they are all elderly, but when they arrive in Chicago, Tempe finds herself already in hot water. With all the red herrings, sidetracks, and downright dirty tricks in this book, you just know you are going to enjoy going along for the ride. Who of the many possibilities is out to get Tempe, and just how far will he or she go? In the version of "206 Bones" I'm reviewing, there is an essay with facts and explanations of some of the things Temperance talks about which I found to be very interesting as well. I appreciated learning (in an aside), a bit more about the 1990 "Oka Crisis" that we in the west didn't hear about on the news at the time. The interaction with Tempe's family and Ryan were pure entertainment. Another great forensic mystery by a person who knows what she's talking about, Kathy Reichs.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    One Last End-Of-The-Summer Beach Read.Just in time for that long, Labor Day weekend, Kathy Reichs brings us another Temperance Brennan/Andrew Ryan fun, fast-paced read.For those familiar with the novels, you'll see the usual cast of characters (Claudel, Harry, Katy), but those only familiar with the "Bones" television series should be forewarned: Tempe is the only name you'll recognize and her character is very different from that on the t.v. show. That shouldn't however keep anyone from enjoying the read and in fact, provides a nice change-of-pace.Rather than the "Bones/Booth" banter we see on t.v., we have Tempe/Ryan; where Booth is an FBI agent, Ryan is a detective in the Sûreté du Québec (In the novels, Brennan is a forensic anthropologist, who divides her time between teaching in North Carolina, and working in Montreal for the Laboratoire des Sciences Judiciaires et de Médecine Légale for the province of Quebec.); and the sexual tension between Booth and Bones in the t.v. series is an actual (albeit on-again, off-again) relationship between Tempe and Ryan. If you're new to the novels, never fear, Reichs provides enough background to anchor the story as a stand-alone tale. However, if you're a veteran of the series, you may find (as I have) that Ryan rescuing Tempe one more time has grown tiresome (then again, you may find that predictability comforting).Overall, I give it a solid B+ for being a satisfying, light weight, end-of-the-summer read. CL
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Temperence Brennan is back again as a forensic anthropologist investigating several cases involving the deaths of elderly women who were murdered in seemingly unrelated circumstances. At the same time, Tempe finds herself the victim of attacks both in her home and in her professional career, as it appears that someone is trying to sabotage her work. This "Bones" book opens differently than the others as Tempe finds herself buried alive and begins to have flashbacks about the events that preceded her situation. As usual, her detective/ex-boyfriend Andrew Ryan provides notable comic relief to offset the gruesome murder scenerios. Their chemistry is particuarly electric in this story, much like the Mulder & Scully of yore. I enjoyed this intellectual thriller which was quick paced and a fun summer read.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I didn't realize this, but this is the 12th book in a series featuring Temperance Brennan and is the basis for the television show, Bones.Overall, I enjoyed this book and I will be looking forward to reading more in this series! I've only seen the television show a couple of times, so I can't compare the two. This is a series I would recommend to the mystery/thriller lovers!

Book preview

206 Bones - Kathy Reichs

Cover: 206 Bones, by Kathy Reichs

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP

A genius at building suspense (New York Daily News), Kathy Reichs delivers page-turning forensic excitement in these acclaimed bestsellers

206 BONES

With her usual blend of cutting-edge forensic science and a stubborn, compelling heroine, Reichs manages to juggle several story lines without losing an ounce of momentum.

Publishers Weekly (starred review)

The forensic procedures take center stage as they always do in this cleverly plotted and expertly maintained series.

The New York Times

DEVIL BONES

#1 New York Times bestseller!

Reichs keeps the roller coaster on track and speeding along, page after page.

—Jeffery Deaver, New York Times bestselling author of The Burning Wire

Her expertise is snappily and entertainingly delivered.

—Booklist

I’m amazed by how seamlessly Reichs makes the transition from scientist to great storyteller. What’s not to admire and envy?

—Sandra Brown, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Tough Customer

The suspense is intense . . . and the forensic education is graduate level.

St. Petersburg Times (FL)

"Devil Bones is her best yet."

The Globe and Mail (Toronto)

206 Bones is also available from Simon & Schuster Audio

BONES TO ASHES

We can’t get enough.

More magazine

BREAK NO BONES

A rare treat. . . . Mesmerizing.

—Ann Rule, #1 New York Times bestselling author of In the Still of the Night

CROSS BONES

"A spirited rival to The Da Vinci Code. . . . Reichs is in top form."

Sunday Times (London)

MONDAY MOURNING

The science is downright snazzy, the mystery plenty devious. . . .

Houston Chronicle

BARE BONES

[Tempe’s] dedication, intelligence, dry wit, and femininity really shine through.

Booklist

GRAVE SECRETS

Powerful. . . . A page-turner.

The Hartford Courant (CT)

FATAL VOYAGE

The plot moves with electric force. . . . Morbid yet captivating.

Publishers Weekly

DEADLY DÉCISIONS

A high-octane forensic thriller.

People

DEATH DU JOUR

Another scary ride through evil past and present. Read it and creep.

Mademoiselle

DÉJÀ DEAD

Winner of the Crime Writers of Canada’s Arthur Ellis Award for Best First Novel

"Déjà Dead can lie side-by-side with the works of Patricia Cornwell. . . . Both do a fine job of telling a good, sometimes scary tale."

The Washington Times

Critics adore Kathy Reichs and Temperance Brennan!

The science is fascinating, and every minute in the morgue with Tempe is golden.

The New York Times Book Review

Reichs has brought the detective story into the twenty-first century.

Toronto Sun

Scary enough to keep the lights on and the dog inside. Reichs is that good.

—New York Daily News

"Fans of TV’s CSI: Crime Scene Investigation should be in heaven."

People

Breathtaking technical detail.

Entertainment Weekly

The queen of forensic thrillers.

City Vision (Western Cape, South Africa)

Temperance Brennan is the real thing.

—New York Newsday

206 Bones, by Kathy Reichs, Scribner

Contents

Acknowledgments

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

Chapter 34

Chapter 35

Chapter 36

Chapter 37

Chapter 38

Chapter 39

Chapter 40

Chapter 41

Chapter 42

Chapter 43

From the Forensic Files of Dr. Kathy Reichs

‘Spider Bones’ Teaser

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

This book is dedicated to my colleagues in the forensic sciences who have demonstrated their professional commitment and aptitude by applying for and obtaining legitimate board certification.

The exam was a bear, but we did it!

Bravo!

American Board of Forensic Anthropology

American Board of Criminalistics

American Board of Forensic Document Examiners

American Board of Forensic Engineering and Technology

American Board of Forensic Entomology

American Board of Forensic Odontology

American Board of Forensic Psychology

American Board of Forensic Toxicology

American Board of Pathology

American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology

1

COLD.

Numb.

Confused.

I opened my eyes.

To dark. Black as arctic winter.

Am I dead?

Obeying some limbic command, I inhaled deeply.

Smells registered in my brain.

Mold. Musty earth. Something organic, hinting at the passage of time.

Was this hell? A tomb?

I listened.

Silence. Impenetrable.

But no. There were sounds. Air moving through my nostrils. Blood pounding in my ears.

Corpses don’t breathe. Dead hearts don’t beat.

Other sensations intruded. Hardness below me. Burning on the right side of my face.

I raised my head.

Bitter bile flooded my mouth.

I shifted my hips to relieve pressure on my twisted neck.

Pain exploded up my left leg.

A groan shattered the stillness.

Instinctively, my body went fetal. The pounding gained volume.

I lay curled, listening to the rhythm of my fear.

Then, recognition. The sound had come from my own throat.

I feel pain. I react. I am alive.

But where?

Spitting bile, I tried reaching out. Felt resistance. Realized my wrists were bound.

I flexed a knee toward my chest, testing. My feet rose as one. My wrists dropped.

I tried a second time, harder. Neurons again fired up my leg.

Stifling another cry, I struggled to force order onto my addled thinking.

I’d been bound, hands to feet, and abandoned. Where? When? By whom?

Why?

A memory search for recent events came up empty. No. The void in recollection was longer than that.

I remembered picnicking with my daughter, Katy. But that was summer. The frigid temperature now suggested that it must be winter.

Sadness. A last farewell to Andrew Ryan. That was October. Had I seen him again?

A bright red sweater at Christmas. This Christmas? I had no idea.

Disoriented, I groped for any detail from the past few days. Nothing stayed in focus.

Vague impressions lacking rational form or sequence appeared and faded. A figure emerging from shadow. Man or woman? Anger. Shouting. About what? At whom?

Melting snow. Light winking off glass. The dark maw of a cracked door.

Dilated vessels pounded inside my skull. Hard as I tried, I could not evoke recollection from my semiconscious mind.

Had I been drugged? Suffered a blow to the head?

How bad was my leg? If I managed to free myself, could I walk? Crawl?

My hands were numb, my fingers useless. I tried tugging my wrists outward. Felt no give in my bindings.

Tears of frustration burned the backs of my lids.

No crying!

Clamping my jaw, I rolled to my back, raised my feet, and jerked my ankles apart. Flames roared up my left lower limb.

Then I knew nothing.

I awoke. Moments later? Hours? No way to tell. My mouth felt drier, my lips more parched. The pain in my leg had receded to a dull ache.

Though I gave my pupils time, they took in nothing. How could they adjust? The dense blackness offered not a sliver of light.

The same questions flooded back. Where? Why? Who?

Clearly, I’d been abducted. To be the victim in some sick game? To be removed as a threat?

The thought triggered my first clear memory. An autopsy photo. A corpse, charred and twisted, jaws agape in a final agonal scream.

Then a kaleidoscope sequence, image chasing image. Two morgues. Two autopsy rooms. Name plaques marking two labs. Temperance Brennan, Forensic Anthropologist. Temperance Brennan, Anthropologue Judiciaire.

Was I in Charlotte? Montreal? Far too cold for North Carolina. Even in winter. Was it winter? Was I in Quebec?

Had I been grabbed at home? On the street? In my car? Outside the Édifice Wilfrid-Derome? Inside the lab?

Was my captor a random predator and I a random victim? Had I been targeted because of who I am? Revenge sought by a former accused? By a conspiracy-theorist next of kin? What case had I last been working?

Dear God, could it really be so cold? So dark? So still?

Why that smell, so disturbingly familiar?

As before, I tried wriggling my hands. My feet. To no avail. I was hog-tied, unable even to sit.

Help! I’m here! Someone! Help me!

Over and over I called out until my throat grew raw.

Anyone! Please!

My pleas went unanswered.

Panic threatened to overwhelm me.

You will not die helpless!

Trembling from cold and fear, and frantic to see, I shifted to my back and started bucking my hips, stretching my hands upward as far as possible, oblivious to the agony in my leg. One thrust. Two. Three. My fingertips scraped hardness little more than a foot above my face.

I lunged again. Made contact. Sediment cascaded into my eyes and mouth.

Spitting and blinking, I rolled onto my right side and shoved backward with one arm and both feet. The rough ground abraded the skin on my elbow and heels. One ankle screamed in protest. I didn’t care. I had to move. Had to get out.

I’d advanced a very short distance when I encountered a wall. Rectangular contours surrounded by mortar. Brick.

Heart hammering, I rolled to my other side and inched in the opposite direction. Again, I soon hit a wall.

Adrenaline flooded my body as terror piggybacked onto terror. My gut curdled. My lungs drew great heaving breaths.

My prison was no more than thirty inches high and six feet wide! Its length didn’t matter. Already I felt the walls pressing in.

I lost control.

Scooching forward, I began yelling and beating the brick with my fists. Tears streamed down my cheeks. Over and over I called out, hoping to attract the attention of a passerby. A worker. A dog. Anyone.

When my knuckles grew raw I attacked with the heels of my hands.

When I could no longer flail with my arms, I rolled and lashed out with my feet.

Pain ripped from my ankle. Too much pain. My calls for help morphed into agonized moans.

Defeated, I fell back, panting, sweat cooling on my icy flesh.

A parade of faces marched through my mind. Katy. Ryan. My sister, Harry. My cat, Birdie. My ex-husband, Pete.

Would I never see them again?

Great heaving sobs racked my chest.

Perhaps I lost consciousness. Perhaps not. My next awareness was of sound.

A noise outside my body. Not of my making.

I froze.

Tick. Tick. Tick. Tick. Tick.

A cerebral crack opened.

Memory slipped through.

2

ANOTHER WRISTWATCH CHECK. ANOTHER SIGH. MORE shifting feet.

Above us, a wall clock ticked steadily, indifferent to Ryan’s restlessness. It was the old-fashioned analog kind, round, with a sweep second hand that jumped in one-second increments with sharp little clicks.

I surveyed my surroundings. Same plastic plant. Same bad print of a street scene in winter. Same half-empty mugs of tepid coffee. Phone. LCD projector. Screen. Laser pointer. Nothing new had magically appeared since I last looked.

Back to the clock. A logo identified the manufacturer as Enterprise. Or perhaps that was a name for this particular model.

Did people christen timepieces? Arnie Analog? Reggie Regulator?

OK. I was as edgy as Ryan. And very, very bored.

Tick. Tick. Tick. Tick. Tick.

Old Enterprise said it was ten twenty-two. Oh-six. Oh-seven. Oh-eight. We’d been waiting since nine o’clock.

Finger-drumming recommenced on the tabletop. Ryan had been performing off and on for thirty minutes. The staccato beat was getting on my nerves.

He’ll meet with us as soon as he can, I said.

Our coming here was his idea.

Yes.

How do you lose a stiff in a morgue?

You heard Corcoran. They’ve got over two hundred bodies. The facility is overstretched.

While I have been described as impatient, Lieutenant-détective Andrew Ryan, Section des crimes contre la personne, Sûreté du Québec, takes the term to a whole new plane. I knew the routine. Soon he’d be pacing.

Ryan and I were in a conference room at the Office of the Cook County Medical Examiner, on Chicago’s West Side. We’d flown from Montreal at the request of Christopher Corcoran, a staff pathologist with the CCME.

More than three years earlier, a fifty-nine-year-old woman named Rose Jurmain had taken a trip from Chicago to Quebec to view the fall foliage. On the fourth day of her visit she’d left her country inn for a walk and never returned. Her belongings remained behind in her room. No one saw or heard from her again.

Thirty months later remains were discovered in a forested area half a mile north of the inn. Decomposition was advanced and animal damage was extensive. I’d done the ID. Ryan had led the investigation. Now he and I were bringing Rose home.

Why the personal service? For me, friendship with Corcoran and an excuse to visit the old hometown. For Ryan? A free trip to the Windy City.

For Chris Corcoran and his boss? That would be one of my very first questions. Surely a CCME employee could have come to Montreal to collect the remains. Or a transport service. Until now the family had shown no interest in what was left of Rose Jurmain.

And why the request for our presence in Chicago nine months after resolution of the case? The Bureau du coroner had ruled Rose’s death an accident. Why the special interest now?

Despite my curiosity, so far there’d been no time for questions. Ryan and I had arrived to find media vans lining Harrison Street and the facility in lockdown.

While parking us in the conference room, Corcoran had provided a quick explanation. The previous day, a funeral home had attempted to collect a body for cremation. Inexplicably, the corpse was nowhere to be found.

All hands were engaged in crisis control. The chief was spinning for the press. A frantic search was under way. And Ryan and I were cooling our heels.

I suppose the family is going ballistic, Ryan said.

Oooh, yeah. And the media is loving it. Lost bodies. Shocked loved ones. Embarrassed politico. It’s the stuff of Pulitzers.

I’m a news junkie. At home I read, or at least skim, each day’s paper from front to back. On the road, I tune in to CNN or a local station. Earlier, in my hotel room, I’d flipped between WFLD and WGN. Though aware of the story, I’d not anticipated the resulting chaos. Or the impact on us.

Sure enough, Ryan got up and began pacing the room. I checked my pal Enterprise. Inspector Irritable was right on schedule.

After logging roughly thirty yards, Ryan dropped back into his chair.

Who was Cook?

I was lost.

Cook County?

No idea, I said.

How big is it?

The county?

My aunt Dora’s fanny.

You have an aunt Dora?

Three.

I stored that bit of familial trivia for future query.

Cook is the second most populous county in the U.S., the nineteenth largest government in the nation. I’d read those facts someplace.

What’s the largest?

Do I look like an almanac?

Atlas.

Some almanacs contain census data. Defensive. After the trip from Montreal, I was no longer in the mood for teasing.

Though generally cheerful, Ryan is not a good traveler, even when the aviation gods are smiling. Yesterday they’d been grumpy as hell.

Instead of two hours, our flight from Pierre-Elliot Trudeau International to O’Hare had taken six. First a weather delay. Then a mechanical complication. Then the crew went illegal for dancing naked on the tarmac. Or some such. Annoyed and frustrated, Ryan had passed the time nitpicking everything I said. His idea of jolly good banter.

Several moments passed.

Tick. Tick. Tick. Tick. Tick.

Ryan was pushing to his feet when the door opened and Christopher Corcoran entered, dressed in lab coat, jeans, and sneakers. With his pale skin, green eyes, red hair, and freckles, Corcoran was a walking Irish cliché. And decidedly nervous.

I’m really sorry for the delay. This missing body thing turned into an Italian opera.

I hate it when corpses go walkabout. The old Ryan wit.

Corcoran gave a mirthless smile. Especially when the decedent’s under your care.

It was your case? I asked.

Corcoran nodded. As I looked at him, a million memories flooded my mind. A scrawny kid, all spindly limbs and wild carrot hair. Wrought-iron desks floor-bolted in long straight rows. Impromptu street games on hot summer nights. Interminable Masses on hard wooden pews.

As kids, Corcoran and I were back-fence neighbors in a South Side neighborhood called Beverly, and card-carrying members at St. Margaret’s of Scotland. Keep in mind that Chicago Catholics map people by parishes, not geography. An oddity, but there you have it.

When I was eight, my father and baby brother died, and my family relocated to North Carolina. Corcoran stayed put. We lost touch, of course. I grew up, attended the University of Illinois, then graduate school at Northwestern. He studied at Michigan, undergrad through med school, then completed specialty training in pathology. It was forensics that brought us back into contact.

Reconnection occurred in ’92 through a case involving a baby in a suitcase. By then Corcoran had married, returned to Chicago, and purchased a house on Longwood Drive. Though a little farther east and a lot upmarket, Corcoran had returned to the old spawning ground.

Turns out it was here all along. Corcoran’s voice brought me back. The guy was so scrawny he got hidden behind an obese woman on an upper gurney shelf. The techs just missed him.

Happy ending, Ryan said.

Corcoran snorted. Tell that to Walczak.

It was said of Stanley Walczak that only his ego surpassed his ambition in raw tonnage. His cunning was fierce too. Upon the resignation of the previous ME nine months earlier, having forged a complex web of political connections, to the surprise of few, and the dismay of many, Walczak had called in his chits and been appointed Cook County Medical Examiner.

Walczak is pissed? I asked.

The man detests bad publicity. And inefficiency. Corcoran sighed. We handle roughly twenty pickups a day here. Between yesterday and this morning the staff had to phone over sixty funeral homes to see if a delivery had been made to the wrong place. Four techs and three investigators had to be pulled off their normal duties to help check toe tags. It took three sweeps to finally locate the guy. Hell, we’ve got half a cooler set aside just for long-term unknowns.

Mistakes happen. I tried to sound encouraging.

Here, misplacing a body is not considered a career-enhancing move.

You’re a fantastic pathologist. Walczak’s lucky to have you.

In his view, I should have been on top of the situation sooner.

You expect fallout? Ryan asked.

The family’s probably lawyer-shopping as we speak. Nothing like a few bucks to assuage unbearable anguish, even when there is no injury. It’s the American way.

Corcoran circled the table and we all sat.

"Walczak says he won’t be long. He’s closeted with the Jurmain family lawyer. You’re gonna love him."

Oh?

Perry Schechter’s a Chicago legend. I once heard him interviewed. Explained his style as confrontational. Said being abrasive knocks people off their stride, causes them to reveal flaws.

Character flaws? Testimonial flaws?

Beats me. All I know is the guy’s a pit bull.

I looked at Ryan. He shrugged. Whatever.

Before they arrive, I said. Why are we here?

Again, the mirthless smile. Ever eat a Moo-Moo Bar or a Cluck-Cluck Pie?

When Harry and I were kids, Mama had packed dozens of the little pastries into our lunches. Though uncertain of the relevance, I nodded recognition.

Ryan looked lost.

Think Vachon, I translated into Québécois. Jos. Louis. May West. Doigts de Dame.

Snack cakes, he said.

Thirteen varieties, Corcoran said. Baked and sold by Smiling J Foods for two generations.

Are they still available? I couldn’t remember seeing the little goodies in years.

Corcoran nodded. Under new names.

Quite a slap in the face to our barnyard friends.

Corcoran almost managed a genuine grin. The J in Smiling J stood for Jurmain. The family sold out to a conglomerate in 1972. For twenty-one million dollars. Not that they needed the cash. They were bucks-up already.

I began to get the picture.

So did Ryan.

Family fortune spells political clout, I said.

Mucho.

Thus the kid gloves.

Thus.

I don’t get it. The case was closed over nine months ago. The Jurmain family got a full report but never responded. Though the coroner sent registered letters, until now no one has shown any interest in claiming the remains.

I’ll do my best to summarize a long but hardly original story.

Corcoran looked to the ceiling, as though organizing his thoughts. Then he began.

The Jurmain family is blue-blood Chicago. Not ancient, but old enough money. Home in East Winnetka. Indian Hills Country Club. First-name basis with the governor, senators, congressmen. North Shore Country Day, then Ivy League schools for the kids. Get the picture?

Ryan and I indicated understanding.

"Rose’s father is the current patriarch, a sorry old bastard named Edward Allen. Not Ed. Not Al. Not E. A. Edward Allen. Rose was a black sheep, throughout her life refusing to follow any course Edward Allen deemed suitable. In 1968, instead of making her debut, she made the Tribune for assaulting a cop at the Democratic National Convention. Instead of enrolling at Smith or Vassar, she went off to Hollywood to become a star. Instead of marrying, she chose a lesbian lifestyle.

When Rose turned thirty, Edward Allen pulled the plug. Deleted her from his will and forbade the family to have any contact.

Until she saw the light, I guessed.

Exactly. But that wasn’t Rose’s style. Thumbing her nose at Daddy, she chose to live on a small trust fund provided by Grandpa. Money Edward Allen was unable to touch.

A real free spirit, I said.

Yes. But things weren’t all sunshine and poppies. According to her partner, Janice Spitz, at the time of her disappearance, Rose was depressed and suffering from chronic insomnia. She was also drinking a lot.

That clicks with what we learned, Ryan said.

Did Spitz think she was suicidal? I asked.

If so, she never said.

So what gives? I asked. Why the sudden interest?

Two weeks ago, Edward Allen received an anonymous call at his home.

Corcoran was always a blusher, did so often and deeply when embarrassed or anxious. He did so now.

Concerning Rose’s death? I asked.

Corcoran nodded, avoiding my eyes. I felt the first stirrings of uneasiness.

What did this anonymous tipster say?

Walczak didn’t share that information with me. All I know is I was tasked with overseeing a review of the case from this end.

Tabarnouche. Ryan slumped back in disgust.

I could think of nothing to say.

Tick. Tick. Tick. Tick. Tick.

Corcoran broke the silence.

Edward Allen is now eighty-one years old and in failing health. Perhaps he feels like a schmuck for having driven Rose from his life. Perhaps he’s still the same controlling sonovabitch he always was. Perhaps he’s nuts. What I do know is that Jurmain called his lawyer. The lawyer called Walczak. And here we are.

Jurmain thinks the case was mishandled? I asked.

Corcoran nodded, gaze locked on the tabletop.

Walczak shares that belief?

Yes.

Mishandled by whom? It came out sharper than I meant.

Corcoran’s eyes came up and met mine. In them I saw genuine distress.

Look, Tempe, this is not my doing.

I took a calming breath. Repeated my question.

Mishandled by whom, Chris?

By you.

3

I GLANCED AT RYAN. HE JUST SHOOK HIS HEAD.

You can’t let on that I shared any of this. Corcoran looked more anxious than I’d ever seen him.

Of course not. My tone was surprisingly calm. I appreciate—

The door opened. Corcoran and I sat back, casual as hell.

Two men entered, both wearing suits fitted by Armani himself, one blue, one gray.

I recognized Blue Suit as Stanley Walczak, peacock and legend in his own mind. Especially concerning his impact on women.

I had met Walczak at American Academy of Forensic Sciences meetings over the years, been favored by his attention on at least one occasion. For a full five minutes.

Why’d I bomb? Easy. I’m forty-plus. Though well past fifty, Walczak prefers ladies just out of training bras. Big ones.

Gray Suit, I assumed, was Perry Schechter. He had sparse black hair and a long craggy face that had taken at least six decades to form. His briefcase and demeanor screamed attorney.

As we rose, Walczak performed a quick but subtle assessment. Then he crossed to Ryan and shot out a hand.

Stanley Walczak.

Andrew Ryan.

The two shook. Corcoran jiggled keys in his lab coat pocket.

Tempe. Yards of capped dentition came my way. Walczak followed. Each time we meet you look younger and younger.

Digging deep, I managed to

Enjoying the preview?
Page 1 of 1