was storage and self-repair only, no autopsies, necropsies, or assisted tissue repair. Humans on one side, Inderlanders on the other, though Ivy had told me they all had pull tabs inside in case of accidental misfiling.
I followed Glenn to midway down the Inderland side, watching him double-check the card against a slip of paper before unlocking the door and yanking it open. âCame in Monday,â he said over the sound of sliding metal as the tray slid out. âIceman didnât like the attention given to her, so he gave me a call.â
Monday. As in yesterday? âThe full moon isnât until next week,â I said, avoiding the sheet-draped body. âIsnât that early for a Were suicide?â
I met his deep brown eyes, reading a sad understanding. âThatâs what I thought, too.â
Not knowing what I would see, I looked down as Glenn folded the sheet back.
âHoly crap!â Jenks exclaimed. âMr. Rayâs secretary?â
A sour expression fixed on me. When had being a secretary become a high-risk position? No way had Vanessa committed suicide. She wasnât an alpha, but she was pretty damn close.
Glennâs surprise turned to understanding. âThatâs right,â his low voice rumbled. âYou stole that fish from Mr. Rayâs office.â
Irritation flickered through me. âI thought I was rescuing it. And it wasnât his fish. David said Mr. Ray stole it first.â
Eyebrows bunched, Glenn seemed to think it made no difference. âShe came in as a wolf,â he was saying, his manner professional as hiseyes lit on only the bruised and torn parts of her naked body. A small but gorgeous koi tattoo swam in orange and black across a high patch of her upper chest, a permanent sign of her inclusion into the Ray pack. âStandard procedure is to turn them back after the first look. Itâs easier to find the cause of death on a person than on a wolf.â
The smell of dead things in a pine forest was getting to me. It didnât help that I was running on empty. The coffee wasnât setting well anymore. And Iâd known the SOP, having briefly dated a guy who made the charms to force a shift back to human. He was a geek, but he had lots of moneyâit wasnât an easy job, and no one wanted it.
Jenks was making a cold spot on my neck, and not seeing anything out of the ordinaryâother than her being dead and her arm torn to the boneâI murmured, âWhat am I looking at?â
Nodding, Glenn went to a low drawer at the end of the room and, after checking the tag, pulled it open. âThis is a Were suicide that came in last month,â he said. âYou can see the differences. She would have been cremated by now, but we donât know who she is. Two additional Jane Wolfs came in on the same night, and theyâre giving them a little extra time.â
âThey all came in together?â I asked, going over to look.
âNo,â he said softly, gazing down at her in pity. âThereâs no connection other than the timing and that none of them can be found in the computer. No oneâs claimed them, and they donât match any missing-persons reportâU.S.-wide.â
From my shoulder came Jenksâs muffled voice saying, âShe donât smell like a Were. She smells like perfume.â
I winced when Glenn unzipped the bag to show that the womanâs entire side had been ravaged. âSelf-inflicted,â he said. âThey found tissue between her teeth. Itâs not uncommon, though theyâre usually a lot less brutal than this and simply open a vein and bleed out. A jogger found her in an alley in Cincinnati. He called the pound.â The faint wrinkles around Glennâs eyes deepened with anger. He didnât have to say that the jogger had been human.
Jenks was quiet, and I searched for cool detachment as I examined her. She was tall for a Were, but not overly so. Big