through her mind. She had to laugh.

She squatted down beside him and put a hand on the disc. “This is what caused the damage.”

“My Explorer? What damage?”

“No. Not yours, but one like it.” Diane was thinking about the damage to the shoulder girdle on the bones of the skeleton. “Before you put your tire on, will you make me a cast of the bottom part of the brake disc?”

“Sure. I can do that. It’s a little weird, but that’s what I’ve come to expect.”

“There should be some quick-drying stuff in the museum.”

“I’ve got some in the geology lab. I’ll get right on it.”

They walked into the museum together. Diane went to her office, Mike to the second floor.

“Diane, you look great!” Andie gave her a hug. “How are you feeling?”

“I’m fine. Just have to take it easy.”

“Anything you need, just ask. By the way, Donald was very relieved when he discovered your attack was about the bones. He thought it was Mark Grayson and the real estate business. He is really being nice. I hope it sticks.”

“It will for a while anyway.”

“I can’t believe what Signy Grayson tried to do to you. What if she’d gotten away with it?”

“She didn’t.”

Things seemed back to normal at the museum. It was a comfort. Andie and the staff had done a good job keeping up with things. She called Jonas’ office.

“Hi. We found the skull,” he said when he heard who it was. “I have it here. It had fallen through empty cavities in the pile, like you thought. The team is wrapping things up. Oh, and I got the correct site number.”

“I’ll be right up.”

The skull was resting on a doughnut ring on Jonas’ desk. The mandible was beside it. Diane picked it up. It was a typical male skull: prominent brow ridges, large nuchal crest at the back of the head to hold the heavier male neck muscles, large mastoid process, square jaw. Not that females couldn’t have these characteristics; they sometimes do, and some male skulls downplay the characteristics most often consistent with maleness. The skull also had typical Caucasoid characteristics. It was nice when everything fit.

However, the feature that was the most prominent was the angle shaped compression fracture on the frontal bone over the right orbit and another similer fracture higher up on the parietal. She now had the cause and manner of death: blunt force trauma to the head-murder.

She told Jonas who he was.

“I’ll be damned. Good girl. You can turn everything over to the sheriff now and be done with this. No one will have a reason to be after you.”

When he said that, Diane realized she wanted to finish it. She wanted to be sure the person was caught. “Where was the site?” she asked.

“The site was in Massachusetts, like the nineteen indicated, near the border with New York. It was excavated about twenty years ago by the archaeology department at Harvard.”

“Twenty? That long. So it might not have been associated with Aidan Kavanagh at all?”

“Twenty years doesn’t change anything. It was probably stored in the department, and he could have somehow gotten his hands on it.”

“He dabbled in archaeology.”

“So that fits.”

“Yes, it does. He later switched over to the Harvard Business School.” Diane was struck by a sudden insight. “Oh, my God,” she said. “That’s not possible.”

“What?” Jonas looked at her with concern. “Sit down, you look pale.”

“Jake’s son, Dylan Houser, also went to Harvard Business School around the same time.”

Chapter 49

She picked up the phone book and looked up the number for the city jail. She dialed and asked for Star Boone, telling them it was an emergency. She knew that would scare Star to death, but if she was right, she wanted to act quickly. It took about ten minutes, but Star came on the line.

“Is Uncle Frank all right?”

“Yes, he is, Star. This is Diane Fallon. He’s fine. I’m sorry to have frightened you. I have an important question I need to ask you. It’s important,” she said again. “Did Jay know Dylan Houser?”

“Sure. They went hunting and fishing together with Dad and Mr. Houser. Jay idolized him.”

“What did you think of him?”

“I thought he was an arrogant prick. Mom and Dad thought he hung the moon. What’s this about?”

“Right now it’s confidential, so don’t tell anyone about this conversation. I mean it.”

“OK. I can keep a secret. You don’t think. .”

“Don’t think about what I just asked. Forget about it. OK?”

“You’ll tell me later?”

“Sure. I’ll tell you everything later. I talked to Frank this morning. He’s up and around and looking really good.”

“When they called me to the phone and said it was an emergency, I was afraid. .”

“I know. It is an emergency, just not with Frank. I’m sorry I scared you.”

“They told me you were in the hospital too.”

“You have a pretty good grapevine going there.”

“If it’s something that tortures me, they tell me about it. Actually, Mrs. Torres told me about you. She said her son found you in the lake and you were OK.”

“I was in the hospital, but I’m fine now.”

“Is everything going to be all right?”

“Yes, Star, it is. I don’t think you’ll be there much longer.”

Diane got off the phone just as Jonas was opening the door for Mike Seger. He had a semicircular cast in his hand. “OK, you going to tell me what I’m doing with this?”

Diane took the cast from him. “This is great. Thanks. Now, would you mind getting your tire iron for me and meet us in the conservation lab vault?”

Mike looked at Jonas, who shrugged at him.

“Sure. Be right back. I have to say, you’re the most unusual boss I’ve ever had.”

“Why, thank you, Mike.” She smiled at him.

Mike went on his errand. Diane and Jonas went to the conservation lab, carrying the skull and the cast.

“You found the skull,” said Annie. Several of Korey’s staff followed her and Jonas into the vault.

She opened the double boxes and took out the right scapula, the one with the damage, and aligned the cast of the brake disc with the straight indentation in the crushed bone.

“Not an exact match, but close-it’s a good possibility.”

Mike came in with the tire iron and laid it on the table. “So that’s why you wanted the cast. You think a jack slipped.”

“He’d have to slip too,” said Diane. “And somehow end up with his right shoulder under the disc.”

“That hurts just thinking about it,” said Mike, rubbing his own shoulder.

Diane set the scapula down and gently picked up the skull and tire iron, fitting the curved heavier end into the compression fracture. It was a good fit.

“What happened?” asked Mike. “The guy has a car fall on him and somebody caves in his skull with a tire iron? That’s a bad day.”

“Perhaps the car falling was afterward, to make the murder look like an accident,” said Diane. “But then why dump the body someplace else? I don’t know. I’ll have to think about it.”

Diane put the scapula back in the box. “Look, guys, don’t mention the bones are here in the vault to anyone. I’d rather people not know it.”

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