spent it."
Paul wondered if it was time McKoy knew about Grumer. Should he show him the wallet? Tell him about the letters in the sand? Perhaps he knew all along about the chamber being barren and simply withheld the information. What had Grumer said this morning? Something about suspecting the site was dry. Maybe they could blame everything on him, a foreign citizen, and claim justifiable reliance.If not for Grumer, McKoy wouldn't have dug.That way the partners would be forced to go after Grumer in the German courts. Costs would skyrocket, perhaps making litigation an economic impracticability. Maybe enough of a problem to send the wolves in retreat. He said, "There's something else I need-"
"Herr McKoy," Grumer said as he rushed into the salon. "There's been an incident at the site."
Rachel studied the worker's skull. A knot the size of a hen's egg sprouted beneath the man's thick brown hair. She, Paul, and McKoy were in the underground chamber. "I was standing out there," the man motioned to the outer gallery, "and the next thing I knew, everything went black."
"You didn't see or hear anyone?" McKoy asked.
"Nothing."
Workers were busy replacing the blown-out bulbs in the light bars. One lamp was already glowing again. She studied the scene. Smashed lights, bulbs obliterated in the main shaft, one of the canvas awnings ripped down the side.
"The guy must have got me from behind," the man said, rubbing the back of his head. "How do you know it was a guy?" McKoy asked.
"I saw him," another worker said. "I was in the shed outside going over the tunnel routes for the area. I saw a woman race out of the shaft with a gun in her hand. A man came out right after. He had a knife. They both disappeared into the woods." "You go after 'em?" McKoy asked.
"Shit, no."
"Why the hell not?"
"You pay me to dig, not be a hero. I headed in here. Place was black as soot. I went back out and got a flashlight. That's when I found Danny lying in the gallery." "What did the woman look like?" Paul asked.
"Blonde, I think. Short. Fast as a jackrabbit."
Paul nodded. "She was at the hotel earlier."
McKoy said, "When?"
"While you and Grumer were talking. Came in for a minute then left." McKoy understood. "Just the fuck long enough to see if we were all there." "Looks that way," Paul said. "I think it was the same woman from my office. Different look, but there was something familiar about her."
"Lawyer intuition shit?" McKoy said.
"Something like that."
"Did you get a look at the man?" Rachel asked the worker.
"Tall guy. Light hair. With a knife."
"Knoll," she said.
Visions of the knife blade from the mine flashed through her mind. "They're here, Paul. Both of them are here."
Rachel was uneasy when she and Paul climbed the Garni's stairs to their second-floor room. Her watch read 8:10P.M. Earlier, Paul had telephoned Fritz Pannik but got only an answering service. He left a message about Knoll and the woman, his suspicions, and asked the inspector to call. But there was no return message waiting at the front desk.
McKoy had insisted they eat dinner with the partners. Fine by her-the more crowds, the better. She, Paul, McKoy, and Grumer had divided the group between them, the talk all of the dig and what might be found. Her thoughts, though, stayed on Knoll and the woman.
"That was tough," she said. "I had to watch every word I said so no one could say later I misled them. Maybe this wasn't such a bright idea?"
Paul turned down the hall toward their room. "Look who's not adventurous now." "You're a respected lawyer. I'm a judge. McKoy has latched on to us like Velcro. If he did bilk these people, we could become accomplices. Your daddy used to say all the time, 'If you can't run with the big dogs, get back under the porch.' I'm ready to climb back under."
He fished the room key from his pocket. "I don't think McKoy ripped anybody off. The more I study that letter, the more I read it as ambiguous, not false. I also think McKoy is genuinely shocked by the find. Now, Grumer-him, I'm not so sure about." He unlocked the door and switched on the overhead light.
The room was wrecked. Drawers were yanked out. The armoire door swung open. The mattress was askew with the sheets half off. All their clothes lay strewn on the floor.
"The maid service in this place sucks," Paul