'Well, I'm the anthropologist who's been working with Inspector Joly. I'm supposed—'
'Of course, forgive me, the
Gideon did, resorting to shaky Latin when his French didn't extend to the diffuse periosteal lesions that he would be hunting for on the ribs.
'How interesting. Shall we examine the ribs, then?'
'If you don't mind, I'd rather set everything out in anatomical order first. It'll only take a minute. Will you give me a hand?'
'Certainly,” said Roussillot.
Gideon started at the head-end. Roussillot began with the lower body, removing the left femur from its sack, and grasping it firmly around the shaft. “I'm sorry about this,” he said. “I don't see any other way.'
'Hm?” Gideon said absently, absorbed in scraping a bit of dirt from a clavicle. “Sorry about—'
* * * *
He was sitting on the floor.
His legs were crumpled in front of him. His head hung loosely forward with his chin digging into his sternum. He was staring dully at his hands, one of which lay, palm-down, flat against the cool smoothness of the linoleum floor; the other was loosely curled in his lap. A hard, sharp, vertical edge, a corner of something, cut into his spine. When he shifted to ease the discomfort, the sudden loss of support sent him flopping bonelessly over backwards, banging his head on the floor and wrenching a grunt of pain out of him.
The sound startled, then steadied, him. His body and his mind began to come together. He waited for the white flash of pain to dim and for the billows of nausea to recede, then gingerly reopened his eyes. He was looking at a ceiling bank of blue-white neon lights shielded by metal grills. When they began a slow, circling tilt from left to right he shut his eyes again and kept them shut while strength and consciousness flowed—trickled—back into him.
Where was he? What had happened to him? He'd had a quick lunch with Julie in Les Eyzies, he remembered that. They'd taken marinated roast-beef-and-tomato sandwiches, bottles of
The bones! His eyes flew open. The ceiling started its tilt again but this time he stuck it out, staring hard at the lights and willing them to be still. When they settled down to no more than a shimmering wobble, he gathered himself together and pulled himself slowly up with the aid of the autopsy table. For the first time he was aware of a jack-hammer pain behind his left ear, just above the mastoid process. He put his fingers on the spot and winced when they touched a tender, walnut-sized knot. At least he now knew what had put him on the floor in the first place.
He also knew, even before he'd made it to his feet, what he would find, and find it he did. The bones were gone, the satchel was gone, Dr. Roussillot—the so-called Dr. Roussillot—was gone.
But the
As he got his fingers clumsily around it, the walls began their slow wheeling again, the edges of his sight to grow dark. Clutching the table Gideon let himself back down to the floor, making it just as the black, sick void reared up and engulfed him again.
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Chapter 10
* * * *
'I talked to the doctor,” Julie said. “The tests were all negative, nothing broken. It was just a simple concussion. He was really happy with the results.'
'Oh, just a simple concussion, is that right?” Gideon said, slumped in an armchair, with his head leaning back and a damp towel thrown across his eyes. “Just a little neuroaxonic fragmentation? Merely some cortical ischemic necrosis, is that all? Just some trifling disintegration of the midline reticular nuclei here and there? Oh, I'm delighted to hear he's happy.'
'Something tells me you're not in a very good mood.'
'No? Well, you wouldn't be either. What else did he say?'
'He said you'd probably be feeling worse before you felt better—'
'He got that right.'
'—but a good night's sleep should take care of it. He left you some sleeping pills. If you still feel funny tomorrow, he wants you to go back and see him again.'
'Right, sure.” He took the towel from his eyes and threw it ill-humoredly onto the high-backed sofa, squinting at the bright afternoon light streaming into the room.