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The text ended with a final note.

A-1 treatment complete. Placement successful.

She rapidly scanned another five discs, finding the same sorts of tests, notes, with occasional additions of surgical corrections. Nose planing, dental corrections, breast enhancements.

Then she sat back, propped her feet on the desk, and stared up at the ceiling to think.

Anonymous patients, all referred to by numbers and letters. No names. All females-at least in her stash. Treatment was either com­plete or terminated.

There had to be more. More notes, more complete case files. If so, there had to be another place. Office, lab, something. Most of the face or body sculpting, which was supposed to be his specialty, was minor on these cases.

Tune-ups, she mused.

The records were more an ongoing evaluation: physical, mental, creative, cognitive.

Placement. Where were they placed after treatment was complete? Where did they go if and when it was terminated?

And what the hell had the good doctor been up to with more than fifty female patients?

"Experiments," she said when Roarke came through the door. "These are like experiments, right? Is that how it reads to you?"

"Lab rats," he agreed. "Nameless. And these notes strike me as be­ing his quick reference guide, not his official charts."

"Right. Just something he could flip through to check a detail or jog his memory. A lot of shields for something this vague, which is telling me it springs out of something more detailed. Still they fit my gauge of him. In each of the cases I reviewed, he's aiming for perfection. Body type, facial structure-which would be his deal. Then he veers off to stuff like cognitive skills and whether they can play the tuba."

"You got a tuba?"

"Just a for instance," she said with a wave of her hand. "What does he care? What does it matter if the patient can do calculus or speak Ukrainian or whatever? I've got nothing that indicates he worked on brain sectors. Oh, and they're all right-handed. Every one, which goes against the law of averages. They're all female-interesting-and all between the ages of seventeen and twenty-two when the notes end. With either 'placement' or 'treatment terminated.'"

"Placement's an interesting word, isn't it?" Roarke eased a hip onto the corner of her desk. "One might assume employment. If one weren't of a cynical bent."

"Which you are, which makes you a good match for me. Some people would pay a lot of money for a perfect woman. Maybe running a slavery ring was Icove's little hobby."

"Possibly. Where does he get the goods?"

"I'm going to do a search. Coordinate the dates of the case notes with missing persons and kidnappings."

"There's a start. Eve? It'd be a hell of an operation to keep this many people under control, and to keep such a thing concealed. Can you con­sider it might be voluntary?"

"I'm going to volunteer to be sold to the highest bidder?"

He shook his head. "Consider. A young girl, for whatever reason unhappy with her appearance or her lot, or simply looking for more. He might pay them as well. Earn money while we make you beautiful. Then we'll match you up with a partner. One with enough money to afford the service, one who selects you out of all the others. Heady stuff for the impressionable."

"So he's creating, basically, licensed companions, with their con­sent?"

"Or spouses, for all we know. Both, either. Or-a thought that hit my perhaps overactive brain-hybrids."

Her

eyes rounded. "What, half-LC, half-spouse? A guy's wet dream."

He laughed, shook his head. "You're tired. I was thinking more along the lines of an old, classic plotline. Frankenstein."

"The monster guy?"

"Frankenstein was the mad doctor guy who created the monster."

She swung her feet off the desk. "Hybrids. Part droid, part human? And way, way illegal? You thinking he might dabble in hybridizing humans? That's out there, Roarke."


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