he had had with Nate over those beers so long ago. Only Gideon had been on Leon's side of the fence then. Leon put his argument very well, better than Gideon had at the time, and Gideon sympathized with his impatience even if he no longer quite agreed.

'You got to remember,” Abe put in, “sure, we're humanists, but also we're scientists, not philosophers. We got to depend on empirical data for our conclusions. If you start with lousy data, you get rotten conclusions.'

Leon laughed good-naturedly. “The two of you sound like Nate. I can see where he gets his ideas. You ought to join us at the George one night; you'd enjoy it. But I still say the proper aim of archaeology is to learn about the people who came before us, not about inanimate artifacts.'

” ‘You are not wood,’ “ said Abe, “ ‘you are not stones, but men.’ “ He shrugged. “Shakespeare,” he said apologetically. “Mark Antony.'

Leon laughed again. “You guys are really something.” He closed his paper sack. “Well, I guess I'll get back out to the dig. I really enjoyed talking to you.'

'I don't think we're finished yet,” Abe said. “I'm still not so clear on this bone you didn't find.'

Leon looked at both of them, his youthful, trimly bearded face showing its first indication of strain. “Look, if you're accusing me of something, how about telling me what it is?'

'Nobody's accusing you, Leon,” Gideon said. “We've found a pretty peculiar discrepancy, and we're just trying —'

'Well, why the hell don't you talk to Frawley?” Leon stood abruptly and pointed at the find card. “If I said I found something, I found it. That card was in the file, wasn't it? Why don't you ask Frawley why he didn't put it in the catalog?'

'We did ask him,” Gideon said. “He says he never heard about a femur, and you never turned in a card.'

'Well, he's lying.'

'Hold it a minute,” Abe said. “Let me get this straight. Now you're saying you did find it and you told him about it?'

Leon made a jerky, exasperated gesture with his hand. “I'm saying I don't remember—but if I wrote it on the card, then obviously I did. Jesus Christ, that's why we have the cards; so if we forget something, it's down on paper.” He breathed deep, closed his eyes for a moment, and smiled at them. “I'm sorry, I guess I'm a little jumpy. Who isn't? I think I need a walk, if it's okay with you.” He made for the door without waiting for an answer.

'Sure, why not?” Abe said, and then held up the sack Leon had left behind. “Don't forget your fish paste.'

* * * *

'THERE'S an old story,” Abe said, as Leon, clutching his paper bag, shut the door none too gently behind him. “Skolnick borrows a kettle from Mandlebaum, and when he brings it back, Mandlebaum says, ‘Look, there's a big hole in this kettle; how am I supposed to use it anymore? You got to give me another one.’ Skolnick says no he won't, so they argue about it, and finally they agree to go in front of the rabbi to settle it. You know this story?'

'Does a horse in a bathtub come into it?'

'No, that's a different story. In this one, they go in front of the rabbi, and here's what Skolnick tells him: ‘In the first place, Rabbi, it's a lie that I borrowed a kettle from Mandlebaum. Never did I borrow anything from him. In the second place, the kettle had a hole in it already when he lent it to me. And in the third place, it was in perfect condition when I gave it back to him. So you can see I'm completely innocent. Don't blame me.’”

Gideon laughed as he finished his coffee. He went to a sink in the corner to rinse both cups. “It sounds like Leon's story all right: In the first place I never found a femur; in the second place, if I did, I don't remember; and in the third place, I only thought I found it—it was really a steatite carving.'

'And in the fourth place,” Abe said, stretching, his hands clasped behind his neck, “it must be Frawley who made the mistake in the first place, so don't blame me.'

The find card was lying on the table. Gideon picked it up, read it once more, and waved it gently back and forth. “You know, Abe, I'm not sure what this is about, but something tells me it's important.'

'Me, too. I agree with you a hundred percent. There's funny business, all right, only what it is I don't know.'

Gideon looked at his watch. “Almost one o'clock. I'm going to go down the hill and have lunch with Julie. And I think I ought to drop by the Cormorant and talk to Nate about this.'

'Nate? I wish you luck. Twice I tried to talk to him yesterday, just to cheer him up, and he wouldn't even come to the door.” He shook his head worriedly. “All day long he sits in his room and sulks. They bring him his meals, which he doesn't eat.'

'Well, it's easy to understand.'

'Sure, but healthy it's not. Nathan's got a depressive side to him, you know that? Maybe even melancholic. Healthy,” he repeated darkly, “it's not.'

[Back to Table of Contents]

SIXTEEN

* * * *

BUT Nate, if he didn't look precisely healthy, was far from melancholic when Gideon saw him next, and he was certainly not sulking in his room or refusing to eat. He was, in fact, at a table in the George, with the scant remains of a wedge of pork pie in front of him, while the barmaid was exchanging the empty, foam-webbed pint glass on his table for a second one brimming with dark, creamy stout. There was also a nearly empty highball glass before him. Flushed and disheveled, he leered and mumbled at the waitress, who gave him the blind smile reserved for

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