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Skeleton Dance

Page 24

by Aaron Elkins


  What he learned made him suspicious enough to have the plane impounded for examination. And despite a few deceptive alterations and papers by the dozen seemingly proving that it had been bought from a Tunisian clock manufacturer named Sadiq who had owned it for the previous six years, an exacting physical examination proved beyond any doubt that it was Carpenter's old Cessna, the plane that had supposedly been rusting on the muddy bottom of the Bay of Biscay for the last three years.

  From there, it was only a small step to wondering if it hadn't been Navarosse in the pilot's seat that night, Navarosse who had made the emergency call to air traffic control, Navarosse—

  "But what was his connection to—" began Julie.

  Joly, who disliked having his narrative rhythm disturbed once he got it going, frowned, waited for silence, and continued.

  Navarosse, it turned out, had had a sister, Angélique, who, until her death six years before, had lived in Les Eyzies, where she had been the wife of a renowned archaeologist named—

  Rashly, Julie did it again. "Michel Montfort! They were brothers-in-law!"

  Just so, said Joly, giving up on narrative rhythm with a sigh. At that point the connection to Montfort was established. He had been saddled for twenty-five years with a black-sheep brother-in-law whom he had helped out time and time again, not so much from a sense of familial loyalty as from one of self-preservation. Navarosse, it seemed, had not been above using the distinguished Montfort's aversion to scandal to get himself out of his frequent scrapes. Through the years Montfort had grudgingly provided him with false alibis and even with false purchase orders and receipts to keep his wife's name (and his own) out of the papers. And of course every "favor" had tightened Navarosse's hold on him for the next one.

  "This time, however," Joly said, it was Montfort who demanded favors in return—first the faked airplane crash and then the retrieval of the bones from St.-Cyprien."

  "The business with the plane was a two-way favor," Gideon pointed out. "Navarosse wound up with an expensive piece of equipment."

  And a useful one, said Joly. A long-time pilot, he'd been using the plane, one of three that he owned, in the illegal transportation of everything from liquor and cigars to cashmere sweaters and primitive sculpture. And like most enterprising smugglers he had a front: an import company in Le Bugue that specialized in exotic game-meat from Spain and North Africa, for which, of course, he maintained—

  Joly paused fractionally, looking at Julie, who came in on cue.

  "A cold storage warehouse!" she cried. "Freezers!"

  Joly nodded and for a minute or two the three of them sat quietly, mulling it all over. "You know," Gideon finally said thoughtfully, "I think that just about wraps things up."

  "Yes," said Joly, "the circle closes. The snake grasps its own tail."

  "Only this time it doesn't disappear," Gideon said.

  On a shared impulse all three of them clinked glasses and drank.

  "Well, then," Joly said, draining his glass. "What next? Where are the Olivers off to?"

  "Oxford," said Julie, "for a few days' library research. And a little sightseeing. And a little just plain relaxing."

  Joly smiled at Gideon. "What, no bones?"

  "No, not this time, I'm afraid."

  Julie solemnly shook her head. "Gee,that sure is a shame."

  «——THE END——»

  Table of Contents

  SKELETON DANCE

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

 

 

 


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