her guns, slogging through dense, scholarly translations of Homer, Plato, Sophocles, and Aristotle, and recently moving on to the Romans. When he had left she was a third of the way through the Aeneid and giving every indication of enjoying it.

Indeed, he heard the thump of a book being closed, the clink of glass.

'You sound wonderful,” he said.

'You do too.'

'God, I can't believe it's only been—what, three days?” he blurted. “Ah, Julie, you have no idea how much I miss you. Without you around, I'm just not whole. I can't wait to get back...hold you...kiss you...tell you how much I love you... .'

'My goodness.” There was a pause while she took this in. “Say, who is this?'

'This is your husband,” he said tolerantly.

'Husband, eh? How do I know you're who you say you are? You could be anybody.'

Sometimes she was like this, kittenish and coy. In anyone else it would have made his toes curl, but in Julie it charmed him utterly. As did just about everything else about her.

'I love the way your pyramidalis nasi wrinkles your nose when you laugh,” he said. “I never get enough of your incredibly sexy popliteal fossae. Your subtrochanteric—'

'It is you!” she cried. “I knew it, I was just testing.'

'How's everything there?” Gideon asked. “How's Virgil? How're the elk?'

'The elk are fine, they send you their best. Tell me what's been happening there.'

'Well, to start with, John damn near got us both arrested.'

'What? Start at the beginning.” He heard her settle herself more comfortably, and then the plumping of a pillow. She had been reading in bed, not in a chair.

He started at the beginning. He told her about Nick's sudden change of mind when they arrived, about the contretemps with Bertaud, about the adventure in the graveyard and the giant gendarme with his climactic Arretez-vous, s'il vous plait. By that time she was laughing, and her pretty laughter had him thinking that maybe it had been funny after all, even if it had seemed anything but at the time.

Julie had always been a good listener, and Gideon went on from there to tell her about Nick, and Maggie, and Therese, and the rest of the clan, about the family dinner the evening before, about his tour of the farm with Tari. And about Brian's skeleton.

The end of the narrative was greeted by five cheerful little pips. She had taken the cordless telephone and gone to the kitchen to heat some more hot chocolate in the microwave. “So he was murdered,” she said.

'Yup. Care to offer any ideas on the perp?” He asked the question offhandedly but he knew from long experience that Julie had a way of sorting the data that he gave her and coming up with things that had gotten by him, of making out forests where he saw nothing but trees, or not even trees but only twigs and branches.

'A few,” she said meditatively. “What about you?'

'Well, I keep coming back to Maggie. Not in any serious way, but there is that business with the shed and then with the jeep. I don't know, it probably doesn't amount to anything, and besides I can't think of a reason for Maggie in particular to want to get rid of Brian—I mean, any more than anyone else did.'

'Oh, I can help you there.'

She tossed it out so carelessly that it made him laugh. “Can you, now.'

'Jealousy,” she said. “And resentment.'

Maggie was Nick's eldest daughter, she went on; homely, hardworking, ambitious—

'I don't know how ambitious she is,” Gideon said. “She seems to like it pretty well where she is.'

Be that as it may, Julie told him, certainly she was possessive enough as a daughter to be hugely resentful when the son Nick had always wanted walked in in the form of youthful, handsome Brian Scott and proceeded not only to appropriate her only sister but to pretty much take over the place piece by piece, including a substantial chunk of Nick's fatherly affections. Wasn't that enough of a basis on which to suppose that Maggie might fervently wish him gone? Possibly even enough to kill him herself?

'You know,” Gideon said slowly, “that's a point.'

'Are you honestly going to tell me it never occurred to you?'

'Um...no, it didn't.'

He heard her chuckle. “Gideon, you're amazing. You are probably the most intelligent man I know, and yet sometimes—'

'Well, I guess I wasn't thinking along those lines,” he said, laughing. “Hey, what do you mean, ‘probably'?'

She ignored the question. “I wasn't really thinking along those lines either, as a matter of fact. You know who I was thinking about—'

'Let me guess. Therese.'

'Why Therese?'

'Because I made the mistake of saying she was gorgeous, and as a woman you're naturally inclined—'

'Oh, baloney. You happen to be right, it's Therese —'

Вы читаете Twenty Blue Devils
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