Page 150 of Evil Bones

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Boots with yellow laces slogging across flooded concrete.

But this aroma included something else. Something organic.

The heavy thud of Slidell’s feet snapped me back.

I followed his retreating form down the treads. He’d been right about the bulb. A lame forty watter above and to the left was casting eerie copies of my movements onto the wall to my right.

Thirteen steps, then I felt hardness beneath my sneakers.

New smells took over. Mildew. Mold. A hint of damp concrete.

A furnace occupied the center of the room. Three doors surrounded it, roughly ten feet out. All stood open.

With a gesture that could have meant anything, Slidell disappeared through the farthest door on the left. I trailed him into a surprisingly well-lit room and looked around.

Ropes crisscrossed the small space, looping a few feet below the ceiling. Clipped to the lines by old-fashioned wooden clothespins were dozens of animal paws and several human hands, each neatly severed from the limb to which it had once been attached.

A counter ran along the back wall, tiled on top, with a small sink at one end. Metal shelving stretched floor to ceiling on both side walls. I crossed to inspect the unit on the left.

The shelves held scores of lidded plastic tubs in varying sizes. Each was marked by hand with a black Sharpie.

I scanned the labels at eye level.Degreasers. Picklers. Tanners. Deodorizers. Neutralizers. Preservatives.

My gaze dropped to a lower shelf.

Glass eyes. Ear liners. Jaw sets. Tongues.

“Follow me.”

Not waiting to see if I’d heard, Slidell strode from the room.

As before, I scurried after him.

The second room was identical to the first.

A set of clothing lay in crumpled disarray on the speckled laminate surface covering the back counter. A pair of jeans. A blue polo with black collar and sleeves.

I felt the edges of my mind go fuzzy.

Could it be?

I didn’t want to know.

I had to know.

Barely breathing, I stepped closer and lifted the shirt with a pen that I drew from my purse. Saw a logo. A single word with an arrow swooshing below.

Frantic strobe shots slammed together in my brain.

Suddenly, it all made sense.

An Amazon truck on the circle drive the day I fell.

An Amazon truck blocking the nun’s view at Cordelia Park.

An Amazon truck now parked outside on the street.

I tried to swallow but found that my mouth had gone dry.