"Maybe ... something at work, the economy being what it is. Some of the girls she works with have been laid off," Mrs. Darien said. "She gets in moods like everybody else. Especially this time of year. She doesn't like winter weather."
"Any medications you might be aware of?"
"Just over- the- counter, as far as I know. Vitamins. She takes very good care of herself."
"I'm interested in who her internist might be, her doctor or doctors. Mr. Darien didn't fill in that part."
"He wouldn't know. He's never gotten the bills. Toni's been living on her own since college, and I can't be sure who her doctor is. She never gets sick, has more energy than anyone I know. Always on the go."
"Are you aware of any jewelry she might have routinely worn?
Perhaps rings, a bracelet, a necklace she rarely took off?" Scarpetta said.
"I don't know."
"What about a watch?"
"I don't think so."
"What looks like a black plastic sports watch, digital? A large black watch? Does that sound familiar?"
Mrs. Darien shook her head.
"I've seen similar watches when people are involved in studies. In your profession, I'm sure you have, too. Watches that are cardiac monitors or worn by people who have sleep disorders, for example," Scarpetta said.
A look of hope in Mrs. Darien's eyes.
"What about when you saw Toni at Thanksgiving," Scarpetta said. "Might she have been wearing a watch like the one I just described?"
"No." Mrs. Darien shook her head. "That's what I mean. It might not be her. I've never seen her wearing anything like that."
Scarpetta asked her if she would like to see the body now, and they got up from the table and walked into an adjoining room, small and bare, just a few photographs of New York City skylines on pale- green walls. The viewing window was approximately waist- high, about the height of a casket on a bier, and on the other side was a steel screen-actually, the doors of the lift that had carried Toni's body up from the morgue.
"Before I open the screen, I want to explain what you're going to see," Scarpetta said. "Would you like to sit on the sofa?"
"No. No, thank you. I'll stand. I'm ready." Her eyes were wide and panicked, and she was breathing fast.
"I'm going to push a button." Scarpetta indicated a panel of three buttons on the wall, two black, one red, old elevator buttons. "And when the screen opens, the body will be right here."
"Yes. I understand. I'm ready." She could barely talk, she was so frightened, shaking as if freezing cold, breathing hard as if she'd just exerted herself.
"The body is on a gurney inside the elevator, on the other side of the window. Her head will be here, to the left. The rest of her is covered."
Scarpetta pushed the top black button, and the steel doors parted with a loud clank. Through scratched Plexiglas Toni Darien was shrouded in blue, her face wan, her eyes shut, her lips colorless and dry, her long, dark hair still damp from rinsing. Her mother pressed her hands against the window.
Copyright (c) 2009 by CEI Enterprises, Inc.
It may be a week before Christmas, but Kay Scarpetta is in an unholy mess. Her increased visibility as senior forensic analyst for CNN is prompting unsettling on-air phone calls, particularly one from a former psychiatric patient of Benton Wesley’s. Is the suspicious package awaiting Kay when she returns home a threat from the caller warning off her latest case, a surreal plot involving a famous actor accused of an unthinkable sex crime and the disappearance of a millionaire? Adding to Kay’s anxiety is the invitation to host her own TV show—and the worry that viewers will come to think she has an uncanny knack for solving cases. If only it were so!
The Scarpetta Factor is Patricia Cornwell at her brilliant, page-turning best.
Hardcover: 448 pages
Publisher: Putnam Pub. Group ( October 20, 2009 )
Item #: 94-1081
ISBN: 9780399156397
Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 8.25 x 1.07 inches
Product Weight: 16.0 ounces

I've missed a couple in the Scarpetta series so thought maybe I just needed to go back and catch up. I had such a difficult getting my mind around the events as they were (weren't) unfolding. I felt I had to force myself to read this book; it was that boring. Ok, it's not me. This book is boring!
Reviewer: poryan61
Use to love these books but this one was a bore. It was all over the place and really didn't focus on its characters. This is the last time I buy one of her books. The author has run out of plot and this book proves this. So long Kay--you deserved a decent burial.
Reviewer: Barbara R
...because I was so happy this horrible book was finally done!
I have read every Scarpetta mystery. This, by far, was her worst book! I read the whole thing since its a character series. But I feel this book was put out for the sake of having a yearly Scarpetta book out.
Awful. Awful. Awful. Makes me think twice whether I want to continue to know what happens with Scarpetta and bunch.
VERY disappointed.
Reviewer: Christine S
Ever since her wild books from France, the disappearance of Benton, the drunken episode w/Marino...wow! Where's the author of ALL of her previous books that I have read over and over? Well, that's it...she has forgotten how to write. Couldn't finish her last two books...I'll invest in another author before I write a check for anymore of Cornwell's boring and rambling books.
Reviewer: Shari
I've read every one of Kay's books & love them but this one something went wrong because unlike being able to put it down I cannot get through it. It is so boring, no plot, just a lot of nothing. I hope she gets back on track & gives us something great to read
Reviewer: Marlene M