* * * *

The Peyraud “vegetable garden” was scarcely large enough to hold the four men, one woman, and one dog that stood in it. Lucien Anatole Joly, inspecteur principal of the Police Nationale's Directorate of Judicial Police, Department of Dordogne, had been looking steadily at Marielle for some time without speaking.

'You are telling me, then,” he said without expression, “that since the matter has been in your charge, no action has been taken other than to observe the animal? For three days?'

He wasn't really surprised. He had had dealings with Marielle before: a puffed-up functionary better suited to have been the village postmaster, where he could have known everybody's business even better, and without having to exert himself.

Under his stiff, blue uniform collar the back of Marielle's neck burned, but he wasn't about to let this bloodless dandy in his fine Paris suit get on his nerves, especially not in front of Noyon and that old crank, Peyraud. He smiled knowledgeably at Joly, colleague to colleague. “Well, it's not as if the bones were going to go bad in three days, you know, inspector.'

'The bones?” Joly replied without returning the smile. “No, the bones won't have been harmed by the passage of a few days. The site from which they come, however, is a different matter. Three days, we may add, during which an active and inquisitive dog has been permitted—encouraged—to disturb the scene to its heart's content.'

The aggravatingly superior tone was too much for Marielle. “And you would have done it differently, inspector?'

Joly, his head tipped back, eyed the shorter, stubbier Marielle down his nose. The man was forever arguing, forever questioning. In themselves, these were commendable traits in Joly's eyes, but only when they went along with listening and learning, which Marielle, for all his quibbling, rarely did.

'To begin with,” Joly said crisply, “I would not have permitted the animal to continue to disrupt the site,” he said.

'Very true,” old Peyraud contributed from the sidelines. “There you have it. Not permit the animal to continue to disrupt the site.” He scratched at the gray stubble on his jaw.

Marielle threw him a scalding glance but addressed Joly. “Oh? And how then would you propose to find this ‘site'?'

'Yes, that's the question, isn't it?” Joly said, speaking mostly to himself. There wasn't any point, and certainly no pleasure, in quarreling with Marielle. “What is the dog's name?” he asked Peyraud.

'He doesn't have a name.'

'Sometimes we call him Toutou,” offered Madame Peyraud.

Joly turned to the dog and bent from the waist so that his hands were on his knees. “Come here, Toutou, come on now.” Smiling, he held out one hand.

To Marielle's amazement, the cur came, sniffing at the inspector's fingers. Did it think it was going to get its bones back? Ha, good luck to it. When Joly scratched it behind a fleabitten ear, the dog licked his wrist. Well, they said Hitler had gotten along with dogs too.

'Now, Toutou,” Joly said, his tone friendlier than the one he'd been using with Marielle, “now, old fellow, we'll need to find out where you've been getting those bones. Are you going to help us?'

Toutou grinned and wagged his tail.

'Good dog.” Joly straightened up. “You won't mind,” he said to Peyraud, “if these gentlemen and I take Toutou out for an hour and look about the countryside? You have something we can use as a leash, perhaps?'

Marielle stifled his irritation. How like Joly that was. That smug assumption that the great and wise inspecteur principal could accomplish in an hour or two what the poor, benighted police force of Les Eyzies couldn't manage in three days

'Any particular direction you'd care to go in, Inspector?” he asked lightly as Joly was knotting a length of rope around the dog's collar.

'I was hoping you might help me with that, Marielle.'

'I? If I knew—'

'The wind, does it usually come from this direction?'

Marielle gawked at him. “What?'

Peyraud cut in. “Yes, almost always from the northeast. It rides up the valley.'

'Well, then, Marielle,” said Joly, “I suggest we stroll northeast with a good hold on Toutou, permit him to follow his nose, and see what we find.'

'Now that's a good idea!” cried Officer Noyon, who instantly made himself as small as possible.

'All set, Toutou?” Joly asked, coiling the end of the seven-foot rope around his hand. “Lead away, then.'

* * * *

It was as if the dog had been waiting all along to be asked. Straining at the rope, his narrow red tongue lolling between stretched black lips, he led the three men along the sloping shelf at the base of the limestone cliffs that backed up against the village, into a copse of stunted oak and juniper and out again, still skirting the undulating, cave-riddled foot of the cliffs as they curved into the forest, away from the village and the river. Never once did he stop to mark a bush, investigate an intriguing hole, or chase a rabbit, real or imaginary. Without deviating he led them to a fall of jumbled boulders that had dropped away from the face of the overhanging cliffs not so many years before—one could still look up and see the whitish patch near the top from which a vast block of the limestone had sheared off and slid down to fracture into huge pieces below.

Once there, the eager Toutou dragged them among the rocks, then sidled into a narrow crevice that had been

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