The report wasn’t there.

Slidell returned after ten minutes, smelling of Camels, armpits, and sweaty hair cream.

“I found Cagle’s case files.”

“Oh, yeah?”

Slidell leaned over me, breathing cigarette breath.

“The Lancaster report isn’t with the others.”

“Suppose Wally-boy misplaced it?” Slidell asked.

“Doesn’t seem likely, but keep looking.”

Slidell went back to banging drawers.

I returned to the desk and surveyed the bulletin board. Like Mrs. Flowers, Wally Cagle insisted on equidistant spacing and ninety-degree angles.

A postcard sent by someone named Gene. Polaroids taken at an archaeological dig. Three pictures of a cat. A printout of names followed by four-digit university extensions.

The center of the board held a handwritten list of tasks followed by a column of dates. Those up through Thursday had been crossed out.

“Look at this,” I said.

Slidell joined me at the desk.

I pointed to an item among Cagle’s uncompleted tasks: Pull photos and report for Brennan.

“He uses a ruler to cross things out? Jesus, this guy’s one tight spitter.”

“That’s not the point. Even though the secretary didn’t see him, Cagle’s been here as recently as last Thursday. Does the fact the item is not crossed off mean he never pulled the file? Or did he pull it, then forget?”

“Looks like Wally-boy never took a dump without itemizing and crossing it off.”

“Maybe he was interrupted.”

“Maybe.”

“Maybe someone else took the file.”

“Who?” Slidell’s voice dripped skepticism.

“I don’t know.”

“Who even knew the damn thing existed?”

“Cagle’s graduate student,” I snapped. Slidell’s attitude was making me churlish. “He read parts to Cagle over the phone.”

“Maybe Cagle took the stuff to a home computer.”

“Maybe.”

“But he never sent you the report.”

Good, Skinny. State the obvious.

“Or the photos.”

“Nothing.”

Slidell hitched his belt. It slid back into the groove below his spare tire.

“So where the hell are they?”

“An astute question.”

“And where the hell is the good professor?”

“And another.”

I was starting to get a bad feeling about Cagle’s safety.

My gaze fell on the computer and its flatbed scanner. The setup looked like it might have been purchased when the Monkees were big.

Slidell watched me walk over and press the “on” button. As the CPU dragged through a boot, the Texas deb receptionist appeared in the doorway.

“What is it you think you’re doing?”

“I located Dr. Cagle’s case files, but the one in question is missing.”

“So you think you’re going to use his computer?”

“It might tell us if the photos were ever scanned.”

As if on cue, the CPU beeped and the monitor flashed a password request.

“Do you have it?” I asked the deb.

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