one.'
'I don't understand.'
'Well, what we found . . . are you sure you want to hear this?'
'Yes, I do,” she said staunchly. “I want to know what's going on too, and if you can stand watching an autopsy, I guess I can stand hearing about one. And better before dinner than during.” She pulled the car to the curb near the center of the village, shut off the ignition, and turned attentively toward him, her elbow on the steering wheel. “Proceed. Only no gratuitous repulsiveness, please.'
Gideon was no more in favor of gratuitous repulsiveness than Julie was and explained, as non-graphically as he could, that the timetables of the various processes of decay and putrefaction, by which the time of death was usually estimated, were seriously out of whack in Bousquet's case. The withered, puttylike skin and the advanced decomposition of the brain (when the skull had been sawn open there had been little more than gray-brown slush inside, he didn't bother to tell her) went along with his estimate of four or five days. On the other hand, the relative freshness of the abdominal organs—minimal bloating, color change, or odor—supported Roussillot's estimate of only two days. And that was it, in a nutshell. Roussillot was inclined to go with the insides, Gideon with the outside and with the brain.
'You know, there's something familiar about all that,” Julie said. She'd relaxed; apparently she'd been expecting something worse. “Weren't you involved in something similar once?'
'No, I'd remember it if I had.'
'Hm. But it's pretty unusual, isn't it? To have differences like that?'
'Unusual yes, but it happens. Maybe one part of the body was mostly in the shade and another part in the sun, or some parts, being in contact with the ground, stayed cooler, or maybe the funny weather, hot in the daytime and chilly at night, had something to do with it. Or it could have had something to do with what he'd been eating—all kinds of things come into play. I could easily be wrong; Roussillot could easily be right. We'll just have to wait and see what the lab comes up with.'
'Right, good thinking, I'm for that.” She plucked the key out of the ignition. “Okay, have we finished talking about people's insides?'
Gideon laughed. “Is it safe to go get something to eat, you mean? I think so, yes.'
The rain had slackened off again and the filtered late-afternoon sunshine had brought some life back into the village streets in the form of strollers and shoppers. A few feet from their car, waiters on the sidewalk terrace of the Cafe de la Mairie were drying chairs and tables, and it was there that they went, neither of them being in the mood for a full-fledged French dinner.
They were halfway through the
'Why?” Julie said, thinking out loud. “What would have been the advantage of making it look as if Bousquet killed himself? Wouldn't it have been easier and safer to just leave his body in the woods—maybe bury him—where he'd never be found? Or at least not for years.'
'Ah, but then there'd be some of those loose ends left. Or as Lucien might put it, the snake wouldn't have swallowed itself. The police would still be poking into things, trying to find him.'
'All right, I can see that, but why in the world use that funny air rifle to do it? Was that supposed to mean something?'
'Good question. Possibly it was to ‘help’ us make the connection between Bousquet and Ely's death. Maybe to imply that Bousquet was consumed with guilt and self-recrimination over it.'
Julie tipped her head to the side. “I don't know, it sounds pretty far-fetched to me.'
'Yeah, me too.'
She spooned up soup for a few moments, thinking. “We
'Sure, Occam's Razor
'I agree. All right, now tell me this: why would the murderer have kept that rifle all this time? He couldn't have known he'd want it again three years later to kill Bousquet.'
'That's a
'And
'And what was Bousquet doing back here anyway? If he's really been dead four or five days, that means he was here before anybody even knew I'd identified the bones as Ely's. So what brought him? What did he want?'
'Whew, we don't have very many answers, do we?'
'No,” Gideon said, “but are we ever doing great on questions.'
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Chapter 24
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The “new” home of the Perigord Institute of Prehistory, was actually five centuries old, a large, rectangular