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"Maybe, but-I hate to keep bringing this up, but that isn’t Helmut Kassel down there with the notch in his rib."

"Perhaps not, perhaps not." Joly nodded abstractedly; his attention was wandering. "Do you mind if we don’t stay for coffee? I think I should be getting back."

Gideon lifted his wine to finish it, but for the second time he checked it in midair and put it back on the table. "Something in the past, did you say? Inspector, didn’t anyone tell you about Alain du Rocher? About how Claude was responsible for his murder?"

Joly’s expression made it amply clear that nobody had. Head down, he listened, scowling, to Gideon’s explanation, not pleased that the information had failed to surface during his interviews. And also, Gideon thought, not too thrilled about having to get it from the Skeleton Detective of America.

"Perhaps I’ll have a little more wine after all," he said when he’d heard it all. He poured about a tablespoonful into his glass, rolled it around the bottom, and drank it grimly down. "Strange that no one should think of mentioning it to me."

"Well, maybe they just wanted to keep an old family scandal quiet. Maybe they forgot about it, or didn’t see any connection."

Joly tilted his head back and barked. "Yes, and maybe oysters grow on trees."

They had agreed to pay for their own lunches, and Joly, who thought he might have been overcharged, carefully compared his bill to the prices written on a blackboard behind the grill. But he had trouble reading the posted prices, tilting his head up, then down, and finally raising his glasses slightly and peering along his nose at the chalkboard.

"I have had these damned bifocal lenses for a week," he muttered, "and I’m no more used to them than on the first day. I still can’t see anything, except through the bottoms. It’s very hard on the neck. May you never have to wear them, Dr. Oliver."

Gideon’s cheeks burned suddenly. And well he deserved to blush. All those smug and uncharitable observations about Joly’s haughty posture and down-the-nose stare, and it had turned out to be a matter of new bifocals, not stiff-necked pomposity at all. Or only a little. Even the inspector’s wide, clean upper lip suddenly looked more human, less invulnerable, than before.

"Inspector," Gideon said, "do you suppose we know each other well enough for you to call me by my first name? It’s Gideon."

"Oh," Joly said, groping through his coin purse, "yes, of course. Mine, ahum, is Lucien."

Gideon had the impression it was something he hadn’t told many people.

When they got back to the manoir they were met by an excited Sergeant Denis, who herded them breathlessly into the cellar. Another find had been unearthed, this one not wrapped in a package, but simply dumped into the ground about ten feet from the first; nine pieces in all, soiled and discolored. Not bones this time, but articles of military dress.

A pair of cracked, black boots with straps over the insteps; a leather, Sam Browne-style belt, also black, with a disk-shaped buckle; a shoulder cord of braided metal; some tarnished medals and military insignia; and a peaked, black cap. And on the cap, darkened by time but still glinting malevolently after all these years, the SS Death’s Head, lovingly molded in dull white metal.

Gideon and Joly looked at each other over the head of the thrilled and garrulous Denis.

"Son of a gun," Gideon said.

"Voila," said Joly.

TWELVE

"So you were wrong," John said philosophically. "It’s not like it never happened before, you know."

"I’m not wrong," Gideon maintained. "I don’t make that kind of mistake with skeletal material; you know that."

"What about those bones they found scattered along the Massachusetts Turnpike near, where was it, Stockbridge? Remember? You were sure as hell wrong there."

"True, but that was an understandable mistake, a minor misinterpretation."

John stopped walking and stared at him in mock incredulity; or perhaps it was outright incredulity. "Telling us the bones belonged to a five-to-seven-year-old when the guy was really thirty-two is a minor misinterpretation?"

"Well, Jesus Christ, John, the guy turned out to have cleidocranial dyostosis. You know how rare that is?"

"I don’t even know what it is."

"His ossification schedule was all screwed up. How was I supposed to know that? All I had to go on were a couple of maxillary bones and a clavicle-"

John played an imaginary violin.

"Come on, John, that was just my preliminary report, anyway. When they found the rest of the post-cranial skeleton I came up with the right age, didn’t I? Well, didn’t I? I practically identified the guy for you."

"That’s true," John admitted, and they began walking again. "But you don’t have very much to go on down in the cellar either. Remember, you were the one who said it was just a gut feeling. Maybe this Kassel was a huge guy with little hands and feet. Maybe he had polio as a kid and his spinal column shrunk up or something. Isn’t that possible? Couldn’t you be wrong about his size?"

"No," Gideon said. He shook his head back and forth as they continued their slow pace. "Absolutely not. Uh-uh. Nope."

"Well, as long as you keep an open mind." John’s twinkly child’s laugh burbled out and Gideon laughed too.

They had been walking around the pond behind the manoir for almost an hour, along the gravel path cut into the terraced bank. The early March twilight had come while Gideon had filled John in on the day’s events, and above them, on a knoll, the great stone building loomed, silhouetted against what was left of the light, its complex, steeply pitched roof angles and tall stone chimneys as featureless, black, and sharp as paper cutouts. In the rear courtyard, a few stunted, gnarled oak trees, still bare, were outlined against the empty, rose-gray sky.

In all, Gideon mused, downright sinister-looking; a fine setting for skeletons in the cellar and murders in the drawing room. Or the salon, as they called it.

"Let’s go around one more time," John said. "I’ve got some ideas about Fougeray’s murder." They went a few steps in silence while he arranged his thoughts. "From what you said, Joly’s got more motives than he knows what to do with."

"Right. Everything from Alain’s death almost fifty years ago right up through some muddy insinuations Claude tossed around when they read the will. Plus the fact that he antagonized everybody in the place from the first day he got here. Joly hardly knows where to start."

"Well, I think maybe I do. The first thing he needs to do is find out when the murder was planned. If the killer didn’t set it up until this week, then it might be on account of something new. But if it got planned before this family council ever started, then obviously Claude got killed on account of something that happened before."

"I suppose Joly’d agree with you, but how is he supposed to figure out when it was planned?"

"By finding out when the cyanide got bought."

"And how-"

"How is he supposed to find that out? By using those little gray cells these French detectives are supposed to have so many of."

"Belgian, not French. Poirot was Belgian."

"Big deal; same thing. Look: If the murder was planned ahead of time, then the killer could have gotten hold of the cyanide ahead of time. But if it got planned since this family meeting started, then he had to get it in the last few days, right?"

"I suppose so," Gideon said, his interest deepening. When John started sounding like a cop he was generally on to something.

"What do you mean, you suppose? People don’t go around with a vial of cyanide on them in case they just happen to run into somebody they’d like to bump off. They get it for a reason. So all Joly has to do is find out if this particular cyanide got bought before this week or not. If it got bought before, then the murder was planned before; it has to be one of the old motives, not a new one, and nothing Claude did or said after he got here had anything to do with it."