Body Farm 04 - Bones of Betrayal

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Authors: Jefferson Bass

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BOOK: Body Farm 04 - Bones of Betrayal
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Bones of Betrayal
Jefferson Bass

To Oak Ridge,
and to the men and women
of the Manhattan Project,
humanity’s most daring and desperate endeavor

Contents

Chapter 1

THE COLORFUL TENTS CROWDING THE CLEARING WHERE I stood wouldn’t…

Chapter 2

FIVE MINUTES AFTER THE PHONE CALL FROM OAK Ridge, Miranda…

Chapter 3

TWENTY-FOUR HOURS AFTER I PARKED THE GURNEY in the autopsy…

Chapter 4

SHALL WE BEGIN?” IT WAS A RHETORICAL QUESTION—even as he…

Chapter 5

AS SOON AS MIRANDA HAD PLUCKED THE SMALL METAL pellet…

Chapter 6

ARMED WITH PENS AND NOTEPADS, MIRANDA, GARCIA, Emert, and I…

Chapter 7

THE KNOCK ON MY OFFICE DOOR MADE ME JUMP, AND…

Chapter 8

BY THE TIME MIRANDA, THORNTON, AND I LEFT THE hospital,…

Chapter 9

FOR SIXTY-FIVE YEARS, LEONARD NOVAK LIVED ATOP Black Oak Ridge—the…

Chapter 10

IT WASN’T OFTEN THAT I ATTENDED THE FUNERALS of people…

Chapter 11

I WASN’T READY TO LEAVE OAK RIDGE YET—I WANTED to…

Chapter 12

THE MORNING AFTER THE FUNERAL, I WOKE UP FEELING more…

Chapter 13

THREE DAYS AFTER THE MORGUE DISASTER, DR. SORENSEN had data from…

Chapter 14

ONCE UPON A TIME, BILL, OAK RIDGE BLAZED WITH brilliance…

Chapter 15

BEATRICE DEFLECTED ALL MY FOLLOW-UP QUESTIONS about Novak. “I’m tired,”…

Chapter 16

CROSSING THE SOLWAY BRIDGE OVER THE CLINCH River, I left…

Chapter 17

I DIDN’T SEE HER AT THE REFERENCE DESK, AND THE…

Chapter 18

FROM THE LIBRARY, I HEADED EAST ON OAK RIDGE Turnpike,…

Chapter 19

JIM EMERT CALLED JUST AS I WAS ABOUT TO SWING…

Chapter 20

THE NEXT MORNING MIRANDA AND I HAD A SHORT but…

Chapter 21

FOUR HOURS AFTER THE BLOWUP IN THE BONE LAB, AS…

Chapter 22

AS I PARKED AT BEATRICE’S CURB AND HEADED TOWARD her…

Chapter 23

MY FATHER DIED WHEN I WAS TEN. MY MOTHER WAS…

Chapter 24

I WALKED INTO THE BONE LAB AND SAW MIRANDA bent…

Chapter 25

THORNTON HAD SENT A PEACE OFFERING TO MIRANDA—a dozen stems…

Chapter 26

WHERE DO YOU WANT TO HAVE DINNER?”

Chapter 27

THE VEHICLES BEGAN GATHERING JUST INSIDE THE security checkpoint on…

Chapter 28

THE GRAVEL ROAD CONTINUED ALONG THE STREAMBED for another hundred…

Chapter 29

I HOPED THE BONES MIGHT TELL US MORE THAN THE…

Chapter 30

I DIALED THE OAK RIDGE PUBLIC LIBRARY AT FIVE minutes…

Chapter 31

PEGGY DID A DOUBLE-TAKE WHEN I STOPPED BY HER office…

Chapter 32

IT HAD BEEN THREE DAYS SINCE I’D WATCHED DR. Strangelove with…

Chapter 33

EMERT, THE FIREFIGHTER, AND I STARED DOWN AT the body…

Chapter 34

THE AUTOPSY OF THE THIRD OAK RIDGE VICTIM—CASE 09-03—was almost…

Chapter 35

DESPITE WHAT I’D SAID TO MIRANDA ABOUT HEADING straight home…

Chapter 36

WE WORE BADGES EVERYWHERE IN THOSE DAYS—NOT just to work,…

Chapter 37

BEATRICE TURNED TO LOOK AT ME. IT HAD COST HER…

Chapter 38

BEATRICE STUDIED THE COPY OF THE PHOTOGRAPH I’D duplicated at…

Chapter 39

THE PHONE RANG A DOZEN TIMES OR MORE BEFORE she…

Chapter 40

I CAME TO TENNESSEE ON A TRAIN FROM NEW YORK…

Chapter 41

AND WHAT DID YOU THINK OF THAT STORY?” HER VOICE…

Chapter 42

I SPENT ALL THE NEXT MORNING AND MOST OF THE…

Chapter 43

I SLID DOWN THE BANK AND INTO THE ICY WATER…

Chapter 44

OKAY, HERE’S WHAT WE’VE BEEN ABLE TO PIECE together so…

PART ONE

There will be a city on Black Oak Ridge…. Big engines will dig big ditches, and thousands of people will be running to and fro. They will be building things, and there will be great noise and confusion, and the earth will shake. Bear Creek Valley someday will be filled with great buildings and factories, and they will help toward winning the greatest war that ever will be. I’ve seen it. It’s coming.

—Tennessee backwoods preacher
John Hendrix, circa 1900

THE COLORFUL TENTS CROWDING THE CLEARING WHERE
I stood wouldn’t have looked out of place at a carnival or Renaissance fair. It would be an interesting irony: a Renaissance fair—a “rebirth” fair—here at the University of Tennessee’s Body Farm, the one place in the world that revolves around the study of the dead and how they decay.

The tents—white, red, green, yellow, blue—jostled for space at the Anthropology Research Facility. Decades earlier, an FBI agent had dubbed the UT facility “the Body Farm” after seeing the corpses scattered throughout the three wooded acres. The nickname had stuck, and now it was even inspiring a spin-off nickname: a former UT graduate student was now setting up a similar research facility in San Marcos, Texas. Even before her first research cadaver hit the ground, the Texas facility was being called “the Body Ranch.”

Several of the tents huddled together were supported by in
flatable frames, the rest by spidery arcs of geometric tubing—Quonset huts, twenty-first-century style. Normally there were no tents here; normally the brightest splash of color, apart from the grass and the leaves on the trees, was a large blue tarp draped over our corrugated-metal equipment shed and its small, fenced-in concrete pad. The tents—whose festive colors belied the barren winter landscape and bitter cold of the day—had been erected just twenty-four hours earlier, and twenty-four hours from now they would be gone again. Despite the carnival look, the tents were a stage for the acting out of a nightmare scenario, one of the darkest events imaginable: an act of nuclear terrorism.

A nude male body lay faceup on a gurney within the largest of the tents, his puckered skin gone gray and moldy from three weeks in the cooler at the morgue at the University of Tennessee Medical Center, visible just above the Body Farm’s wooden fence and barren treeline. Fourteen other bodies—selected and stored over the preceding month—were locked in a semi-tractor-trailer parked just outside the fence. The fifteen bodies were stand-ins for what could be hundreds or thousands or even—God forbid—tens of thousands of victims if nuclear terrorists managed to inflict wholesale death in a U.S. city somewhere, someday.

Five people surrounded the gurney. Their faces and even their genders were masked by goggles, respirators, and baggy biohazard suits whose white Tyvek sleeves and legs were sealed with duct tape to black rubber gloves and boots. One of the white-garbed figures held a boxy beige instrument in one hand, and in the other, a metal wand that was connected to the box. As the wand swept a few inches above the head, then the chest and abdomen, and then each arm, the box emitted occasional clicks. As the wand neared the left knee, though, the clicks became rapid, then merged into a
continuous buzz. Having spent my childhood shivering through the Cold War—practicing “duck and cover” during civil defense drills, as if my wooden school desk could shield me from a Soviet hydrogen bomb—I was well acquainted with the urgent clicking of a Geiger counter.

As the wand hovered, the other four people leaned in to inspect the knee. One took photographs; two others began spraying the body with a soapy-looking liquid and scrubbing the skin, paying particular attention to the knee. As they scrubbed, one of them removed a small orange disk, about the size of a quarter, and handed it to the team leader. A tiny, safely encapsulated speck of radioactive strontium—enough to trigger the Geiger counter, but not enough to pose any hazard—simulated contamination on the corpse. Once the scrubbing was complete, the technician with the Geiger counter checked the knee once more. This time the instrument ticked lazily, signaling normal background radiation. At a sign from the team leader, the body was wheeled out of the tent and returned to the trailer that held the other fourteen corpses, which had already undergone similar screening and decontamination procedures.

One by one, the Tyvek-suited figures rinsed off beneath what had to be the world’s coldest shower: a spray of soapy water mixed with alcohol, a last-minute addition necessitated by the day’s subfreezing temperatures. The team’s contamination, like that of the bodies, was simulated, but the goal was to make the training as realistic as possible, despite the added challenges provided by the bitter cold. Only after the shower did the goggles and respirators come off. My red-tressed, freckled graduate assistant, Miranda Lovelady, emerged from one of the white suits, followed shortly by Art Bohanan, the resident fingerprint expert
at the Knoxville Police Department. The team leader was Hank Strickland, a health physicist, one who specialized in radiation and radiation safety. Hank worked at a facility in Oak Ridge called REAC/TS—the Radiation Emergency Assistance Center and Training Site—that sent medical response teams to help treat victims of radiation accidents anywhere in the world.

But Hank, like Miranda and Art, was here today as a volunteer team member of DMORT, the Disaster Mortuary Operational Response Team. Formed in the early 1990s to identify victims of mass disasters such as airliner crashes and hurricanes, DMORT was part of the U.S. Public Health Service, but the teams were staffed by volunteers with specialized, and even macabre, skills: their ranks included funeral directors, morticians, forensic dentists, physicians, forensic anthropologists, police officers, and fire fighters—people accustomed to working with bodies and bones. DMORT volunteers, including some of my students, had performed heroic service at Ground Zero after the World Trade Center bombings. They’d also spent two months recovering and identifying bodies after Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans and the Gulf Coast in 2005.

Art himself had spent six weeks in Louisiana after Katrina, lifting fingerprints and palm prints from bloated, rotting corpses. One body was that of a man who’d been trapped in an attic by rising waters. More than a hundred days after the man drowned in the attic—how ironic was that?—Art and a colleague managed to lift a print and ID the man.

DMORT teams were acquainted with death and decay. But this training exercise represented a grim new twist to DMORT’s mission, a response to the nightmare of September 11, 2001. DMORT’s Weapons of Mass Destruction team had been formed
shortly after 9/11, in grim recognition of the fact that terrorists who would turn civilian airliners into flying bombs might also attempt acts of wholesale chemical, biological, or nuclear terrorism. Because of the contamination such attacks would create, they would pose unique problems for workers recovering and identifying bodies. The WMD team’s exercise here at the Body Farm was a first step in developing and testing DMORT procedures for handling radiation-contaminated bodies—the sorts of contaminants that would be unleashed, for example, if a radioactive “dirty bomb” were exploded in New York Harbor.

Although it grieved me that nuclear-disaster procedures had to be developed, it made me proud that my research facility could help in the process. The Body Farm was the only place in the world where an emergency-response team like DMORT could simulate a mass disaster realistically, using numerous bodies. Although fifteen bodies was a tiny fraction of the number of victims who would die in an actual dirty-bomb explosion in New York—some estimates put the worst-case number of fatalities from that scenario at fifty thousand or more—fifteen was a place to start, and that was far more bodies than DMORT would be likely to use anyplace else.

Miranda and Art emerged from the decontamination shower stomping their boots and rubbing their arms, their breath steaming in the bitter air. “Sweet Jesus, I am
so cold
,” said Miranda. I wasn’t getting sprayed with cold water, but I was cold, too; I’d gotten an artificial hip about six months before, when a bullet shattered the top of my left femur, and the cold titanium implant ached deep within my hip. Miranda’s teeth began to chatter. “Whose bright idea was it,” she said, “to do this on the coldest day of the worst cold snap on record?”

“It’s not as fun as reading by the fireplace,” Art said, “but unless you can get the terrorists to attack only when the weather’s nice, it helps to practice in the worst conditions you can.”

“I know, I know,” grumbled Miranda. “It’s just that I’m
so cold
. After that shower, I might not have an impure thought ever again.”

“I didn’t realize you’d had them before,” said Art. “I didn’t think graduate students had time for such things.”

“Only during spring break,” I said.

“Spring break? What’s spring break?” said Miranda, feigning puzzlement and indignation. “I just want to spend the next six months in a hot bath.”

Just then my cell phone rang. Tugging off a thick glove, I fished the phone from my pocket and flipped it open, the cold biting at my fingertips. According to the display, the caller was Peggy, the Anthropology Department secretary. “Hi, Peggy,” I said. “I hope you’re calling to tell me a heat wave is bearing down on us in the next five minutes.”

“I’m not,” she said. “I’m calling to tell you I have an agitated police lieutenant from Oak Ridge on the line.”

A small city about twenty-five miles west of Knoxville, Oak Ridge was home to a wide range of high-tech research and manufacturing industries, but the city’s main claim to fame was its pivotal role in the Manhattan Project, the race to develop the atomic bomb during World War II. “Did the lieutenant say what he’s agitated about?”

“They’ve just found a body they want you to take a look at,” she said. “Apparently they don’t find a lot of bodies in Oak Ridge.”

“No, the radioactivity helps protect them,” I said. “Killers are
afraid of folks who glow in the dark.” It was an old, tired joke Knoxvillians tended to make about Oak Ridgers—one that Oak Ridgers sometimes made about themselves, in a sort of preemptive first strike of defiant civic pride.

“Well, you be careful,” she said. “All those fences and guard towers and nuclear reactors and bomb factories scare me.”

She patched through the Oak Ridge officer, Lieutenant Dewar. When I hung up, I said to Miranda, “You didn’t really want that hot bath, did you?”

“No, of course not,” she said, having heard my end of the conversation. “What I really want to do is complete my transformation into the Human Icicle.”

“That’s good,” I said. “I’ve got just the job for you.”

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