

Jeffery Deaver
The Bone Collector
The first book in the Lincoln Rhyme series, 1997
For my family,
Dee, Danny, Julie, Ethel
and Nelson…
Apples don’t fall far…
And for Diana too.
I . KING FOR A DAY
The present in New York is so powerful
that the past is lost.
– JOHN JAY CHAPMAN
ONE
Friday, 10:30 p.m., to Saturday, 3:30 p.m.
SHE WANTED ONLY TO SLEEP.
The plane had touched down two hours late and there’d been a marathon wait for the luggage. And then the car service had messed up; the limo’d left an hour ago. So now they were waiting for a cab.
She stood in the line of passengers, her lean body listing against the weight of her laptop computer. John rattled on about interest rates and new ways of restructuring the deal but all she could think was: Friday night, 10:30. I wanna pull on my sweats and hit the hay.
Gazing at the endless stream of Yellow Cabs. Something about the color and the similarity of the cars reminded her of insects. And she shivered with the creepy-crawly feeling she remembered from her childhood in the mountains when she and her brother’d find a gut-killed badger or kick over a red-ant nest and gaze at the wet mass of squirming bodies and legs.
T.J. Colfax shuffled forward as the cab pulled up and squealed to a stop.
The cabbie popped the trunk but stayed in the car. They had to load their own luggage, which ticked John off. He was used to people doing things for him. Tammie Jean didn’t care; she was still occasionally surprised to find that she had a secretary to type and file for her. She tossed her suitcase in, closed the trunk and climbed inside.
