cookstove. A wrinkled, bent, dour man-“No English” had been his curt, muttered greeting on being introduced-he seemed to have come directly from bed and didn’t look any too pleased about it. He was close to eighty, with sleep-mussed white hair, a week-old stubble of beard, and a drooping mustache that covered his mouth like a filter of tobacco-stained baleen. In the open neck of his misbuttoned shirt could be seen what looked like the top of a pair of grimy longjohns. This, el-Basset said in barely accented English, was Dr. Dowidar, consulting physician to the Ministry of Public Security, who would be conducting the official examination of the body.

On second thought Gideon decided that it might be a good idea to point out those abrasions after all.

“General,” he began, as Dowidar put his case on the deck and leaned grumbling over the body, “I’m a physical anthropologist, and I do a lot of work with the police in my country. I’d-”

El-Basset examined him closely for the first time, not hostilely, but not cordially either. “Oh, yes?”

Police, thought Gideon, were the same everywhere, at least in one regard: they did not appreciate unsolicited incursions onto their turf. Sometimes not even solicited ones.

“As you know, I’ve just looked at Dr. Haddon, and I thought I should call to your attention-”

“Thank you, but for now I wish to examine these matters for myself. And I wish first to speak with this boy, who was first at the scene of the accident.”

Mahmoud, seeing himself indicated, responded instantaneously with a toothy, accommodating grin. Either that, Gideon thought, or he was having a psychomotor disturbance induced by extreme terror. It was probably the first time he’d had direct intercourse with a police official as grand as the Commanding General of River and Tourist Police. Most of the policemen to be seen in Egypt were ragged recruits like the sleepy young man with the safety- pinned private’s stripe who’d been guarding the boat at el-Amarna. He’d been wearing laceless blue sneakers, not soft, gleaming boots, with his old woolen uniform.

“You will excuse me for the time being?” el-Basset said, already turning away.

“General,” Gideon said, “I’m not sure it was an accident.”

El-Basset paused to look at him again with a tolerant smile. “Not an accident? What then?” He might have been speaking to a precocious twelve-year-old.

Don’t get touchy, Gideon told himself. It’s just the guy’s manner. “There are some indications of trauma that suggest-”

“No, no,” el-Basset said, waving the rest away, “I’m extremely sorry but we must get on with our procedure now.”

“But-”

“Please.” El-Basset raised a peremptory hand. “Everything in good time.”

“Look, General,” Gideon said, openly bridling now, “what-”

“Urn-” Phil touched Gideon’s elbow. “Time to go, I think.”

On the stairs Gideon was fuming. “Did you see that? He didn’t hear anything I said. He barely knew I was there.”

“ ‘The barking of a dog does not disturb the man on a camel.” “ Phil said. ”Old Egyptian proverb.“

“Great, just what I need.”

When they got back upstairs, Phil laid a hand on Gideon’s arm. “Would you like a word of advice?”

“Sure.”

“I wouldn’t go around telling the Egyptian police how to do their job.”

Gideon nodded. “Or any police,” he said.

Julie shook her head doubtfully. “But how can you be so sure he didn’t get those scratches when the sailors pulled him up? It would have been a struggle getting him into the boat.”

“No,” Gideon said, stripping the peel from a finger-sized Nile banana, “I think Mahmoud and his pal were telling the truth.”

“Even if they were, they might have hit his face against something without knowing it.”

“I don’t think so. Postmortem abrasions have a funny look to them-yellow, almost translucent. If they happen before death, they’re sort of rust-colored, pretty much the way they are on living people-and that’s what these were.”

“I’m impressed. I didn’t know you knew so much about that kind of thing.”

“I guess I’ve seen enough of it by now,” Gideon said. “Unfortunately.”

He looked at the banana and decided he didn’t want it after all. Instead, he poured himself some more coffee.

A simple buffet breakfast had been laid in the dining room. Gideon and Julie had taken a pitcher of coffee and a plate of fruit, pastries, and hardboiled eggs up to the swimming pool area, preferring the outdoors to the grim atmosphere of the dining room and the subdued but glittery-eyed discussions of Haddon’s demise. Julie had started on some date bread while Gideon told her about what had happened, but she soon lost her appetite. Gideon had never had any.

“So the question is,” she said, “what would make marks like that?”

“Right. I keep trying to come up with a simple, innocent explanation. Sometimes if a person is hit with the flat side of something hard and narrow-a board, say-you get those parallel lines, because the edges dig into the skin. But a lot of bruising usually goes along with that because the flat part crushes blood vessels underneath. And there isn’t any bruising on Haddon.”

“So what would be a simple, innocent explanation?”

“That he accidentally hurt his face sometime between dinner and the time he fell over. I’d just feel more comfortable if I could figure out on what. It’s that X that’s so peculiar. What would do that? A tool of some kind? A… Hi, Phil.”

Phil had slipped into a vacant chair at their table with a self-satisfied expression on his face and a tray with a cup of tea and a couple of gooey, stringy cakes drenched in honey in his hands. “You two are looking mightily puzzled.”

“We were talking about those marks on Haddon. I still can’t-”

“Well, it wasn’t anything in his room, I can tell you that.” He lifted one of the dripping cakes above his head, lowered it carefully to his mouth, end first, and bit half of it neatly off. Not a driblet of honey made it to his chin.

“You went to his room?” Gideon said.

Phil nodded, chewing. “Certainly I went to his room. Of course I went to his room.”

Gideon leaned back. “Why am I not surprised?”

“As I remember it,” Phil said, “you said you couldn’t go in there. That’s fine. I didn’t say I couldn’t go in there. Don’t worry, I didn’t step on any clues.”

“Phil-”

“What did you find?” Julie asked.

“Nothing that could have made those marks. No convenient mirror, or picture frame, or table, or box with sharp corners that he might have cut his face on, no projecting cupboard doors, no convenient X-shaped rivets on the walls. Nothing.”

“Well, that’s something to know,” Gideon said.

“So I thought I’d walk around the deck and see what I could find.” In went the other half of the pastry, to be followed by a swig of tea.

“And?” Gideon said.

“And I did,” Phil said around the mass of food, then set himself to serious chewing.

Gideon looked at Julie. “Do you suppose he’s planning to tell us what he found anytime soon?”

“Not just something,” Phil said, getting most of it down. “I found what we’re looking for.”

Abruptly, he was out of his chair. “Come along, Skeleton Detective, I’ll explain the whole thing to you.” He led them rapidly around the swimming pool to the port railing.

“There you are,” he said, pointing straight down, toward their feet.

They were standing near the center of the ship at a gate in the railing that was now closed and locked, but was used for boarding from the port side. At those times the gangplank was hooked to a grating in the deck, a two-by-three-foot rectangle fitted into a space that had been cut in the flooring for it, and on which they were now standing. There was an identical arrangement on the starboard side, to which the gangplank was now attached.

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