Synopsis:
Hannibal Lechter clone Nick Parrish is the hideous “star” of Burke's latest Irene Kelly mystery. Parrish, arrested for the torture-murder of Julia Sayre, promises to show the cops where he’s buried Julia’s body in the mountains above Las Piernas. Journalist Kelly has followed the Sayre case since it began, and the police grudgingly allow her to come along the gruesome trip to Julia’s grave. True to his word, Parrish leads the group to the decomposing body, then offers to show them the graves of other victims he claims he’s killed. But Parrish has booby-trapped the graves, and once the bomb goes off, he escapes in the ensuing confusion. A heart-stopping chase through the mountains, with Irene as Parrish’s intended victim, would provide a fitting climax for the story, but Burke has more suspense in store. Irene is rescued, but Parrish is still loose, and over the following months he stalks Irene relentlessly. Gruesome “gifts” and a campaign of physical and psychological terror would turn most folks into basket cases, but Parrish’s tricks only make Irene more determined to track him down. Burke’s latest is very impressive — deviously plotted, cleverly crafted, full of screw-tightening suspense. This may be the book to take Burke to the top tier of literary and popular suspense in the genre.
BONES
Jan Burke
The seventh book in the Irene Kelly series
Copyright © 1999 by Jan Burke
To Judy Myers Suchey and Paul Sledzik
and the AFIP Forensic Anthropology Faculty for their compassionate work and for teaching me to see more than bones
and
in memory of Shadow and Siri
The gate was open and the drawbridge down.
He galloped across, but when he got to the end of the drawbridge, someone yanked the cable so abruptly that Parzival was nearly thrown, horse and all, into the moat.
Parzival turned back to see who had done this to him. There, standing in the open gateway, was the page who had pulled the cable, shaking his fist at Parzival. “May God damn the light that falls upon your path!” the boy cried. “You fool! You wretched fool! Why didn’t you ask the question?”
“What do you mean?” Parzival shouted back. “What question?”
by Wolfram von Eschenbach,
as retold by Katherine Paterson
1
FOUR YEARS LATER