“Yeah. I took one because I thought you might need to look at it.” Jane found the image on her cell phone, but paused before handing it to Maura. “You sure about this?”

“I need to know if it’s him.” She took Jane’s cell phone and stared at the dead man’s face. Remembered how that same face had smiled at her as he’d placed the champagne glass in her hand. And she remembered the name tag with the gold dot. “Eli Kilgour,” she said.

“That’s his name?”

“Yes. I met him last night, at the Museum of Science reception. He’s a donor.”

“Okay, so we’ve got a name.” As Jane took back her phone, her eyes were still on Maura. “Now you want to tell me the rest of the story? Because I can see there’s more.”

“I need to go to the ER, Jane.”

“Are you sick?”

“It’s possible-I need to be sure…” Maura moved to an armchair and sank down. “I don’t think it happened. But I need to be examined. For rape.”

“You don’t know?”

“I don’t remember!” Maura dropped her head into her hands. “I don’t remember how I got home. I don’t remember falling asleep on the sofa.”

“What do you remember?”

“The reception. Meeting him. We left the museum and I was feeling dizzy. I remember we were in the parking garage, and then…” She shook her head. “After that, I’m not sure.”

“Somehow you did manage to get home. Is your car here?”

“I haven’t looked.”

Jane walked out of the living room; seconds later, she was back. “Your car’s not in the garage.”

“But my keys are right there.” She pointed to the floor.

“Someone drove you here. Someone unlocked your front door and got you to the sofa.”

The same someone who drugged my champagne? Who’s now dead from stab wounds?

Jane placed a comforting hand on Maura’s shoulder. “I’ll drive you to the ER now, okay? And I’ll need your clothes. What you wore last night.”

“On the floor, in my bathroom. Everything’s there, my underwear, my stockings.” Maura sighed. “I know the drill.”

“You also know that I’ve got a problem, Maura. The guy you just happened to meet last night turns up murdered. And you can’t remember how the evening ended.”

Maura looked up at her. “I guess we’ve both got a problem.”

CHAPTER TWO

Jane was accustomed to seeing Maura poised and in control, the Queen of the Dead unruffled even by the horrors that landed on her autopsy table. So it was a shock to see how vulnerable Maura looked, sitting on the ER exam table, dressed in a hospital paper gown. Maura flinched as a needle pierced her vein and dark blood streamed into the specimen tube.

“That’s for the drug screen?” asked Jane.

“Dr. Murata ordered a number of blood and urine tests” was all the nurse would say as she unsnapped the tourniquet, taped gauze to the puncture site. “And that should do it. As soon as you sign the discharge form, you’re free to go, Dr. Isles. We’ll call you when the lab results come in.” She walked out with the blood tubes, sliding the privacy curtain closed.

“Thank you, Jane,” Maura whispered. “For staying with me.”

“Feel better?”

“Yes. Now that it looks like I wasn’t…” Maura’s voice trailed off before she could say the word. “I just wanted to be certain.”

“Nevertheless,” said Jane, “we’ll need to hang on to your evening clothes, as well as all the collected trace evidence.”

Maura frowned. “You’re keeping my fingernail scrapings?”

Before Jane could answer, her cell phone rang. “Excuse me,” she said, and walked out. Kept walking until she was well down the hall, where Maura couldn’t hear her. “Rizzoli,” she answered.

“You know that name you gave me, Eli Kilgour?” said her partner, Detective Barry Frost.

“You reach his next of kin?”

“Even better. I reached him. Mr. Kilgour’s alive and well and living with his male partner on Beacon Street.”

“Male partner?”

“You got it. He said he is a donor to the Museum of Science, but he couldn’t make it to the benefit because he had another engagement. The man Dr. Isles met last night must have picked up a badge from the ones remaining on the table.”

“Classic way to crash a party. But in that crowd, it carries risks. You’d think folks in their circle would know each other.”

“I called the museum, and they’ve pulled the security tapes for me. They had four hundred guests last night, so it’d be easy to slip in among so many people. He must be an old hand at this, if he comes dressed in a tuxedo. Hell, I don’t even own a tuxedo.”

“So we’re back to square one. Who is our dead John Doe?”

“Dr. Isles was with him last night, and she has no idea?”

“She says she can’t remember what happened. What about Maura’s car. Did you find it?”

“Yeah. It’s still in the museum garage, where she says she parked it last night. It was locked, nothing unusual about it.”

“If her car was left at the museum, he must have driven her home.”

“So where’s his car? There wasn’t any vehicle near the body,” Frost pointed out.

She thought about the geography of Boston, and realized that if she drove directly from the Museum of Science to Maura’s house in Brookline, the death scene would be right along the way. She didn’t like where that line of reasoning took her. It led to the possibility that John Doe was killed and dumped en route to Maura’s home. It meant she was with the killer when it happened.

Or she was the killer.

“Check the cars in Maura’s neighborhood,” Jane said. “Any vehicle that doesn’t belong.”

“You’re not thinking that…”

“We have to, Frost. We have no choice.” She glanced up as Maura emerged, now dressed, from the exam room. “Right now, she’s our only suspect.”

The vehicle was parked across the street from Maura’s residence, a black Buick LaCrosse with Massachusetts plates, registered to Christopher Scanlon of Braintree. None of the nearby neighbors knew anything about the car, only that it was already parked there when they woke up that morning.

“Unlocked. Keys still in the ignition,” said Frost. “And look what’s down there.” He pointed to the floor beneath the passenger seat, and Jane’s heart dropped when she saw the woman’s high-heeled shoe. It was the mate to the shoe she’d seen under Maura’s coffee table.

“Tow truck’s on the way now,” said Frost. “Once they get it back to the lab, I’m gonna bet CSU finds her fingerprints in there as well.”

“Oh man. This gets worse and worse.”

“If this were anyone else, we’d be reading her her rights.”

“But it’s not anyone else,” said Jane. “This is Maura.”

“And we both know a few cops who’d like to see her take a perp walk.” Maura’s recent testimony against a Boston PD officer had sent him to prison-something plenty of cops viewed as a betrayal of the thin blue line.

“What do we have on this guy, Christopher Scanlon?” she asked.

Frost pulled up the data on his smartphone. “Age forty-one, six foot two, hundred eighty pounds. Brown hair,

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