The Woman
in the Fifth
DOUGLAS
KENNEDY
About the Author
Douglas Kennedy’s novels —
Temptation
State of the Union
A Special Relationship
The Pursuit of Happiness
The Job
The Big Picture
The Dead Heart
Chasing Mammon
In God’s Country
Beyond the Pyramids
For Frank Kelcz
‘Everything she had told the Superintendent was true, but sometimes nothing is less true than the truth.’
One
THAT WAS THE year my life fell apart, and that was the year I moved to Paris.
I arrived in the city a few days after Christmas. It was a wet, gray morning — the sky the color of dirty chalk; the rain a pervasive mist. My flight landed just after sunrise. I hadn’t slept during all those hours above the Atlantic — another insomniac jag to add to all the other broken nights I’d been suffering recently. As I left the plane, my equilibrium went sideways — a moment of complete manic disorientation — and I stumbled badly when the cop in the passport booth asked me how long I’d be staying in France.
‘Not sure exactly,’ I said, my mouth reacting before my brain.
This made him look at me with care — as I had also spoken in French.
‘Not sure?’ he asked.
‘Two weeks,’ I said quickly.
‘You have a ticket back to America?’
I nodded.
‘Show it to me, please,’ he said.
I handed over the ticket. He studied it, noting the return date was January 10.
‘How can you be “not sure”,’ he asked, ‘when you have proof?’
‘I wasn’t thinking,’ I said, sounding sheepish.
‘
I headed off to baggage claim, cursing myself for raising official questions about my intentions in France. But I had been telling the truth. I didn’t know how long I’d be staying here. And the airplane ticket — a last-minute buy on an Internet travel site, which offered cheap fares if you purchased a two-week round-trip deal — would be thrown out as soon as January 10 had passed me by. I wasn’t planning to head back to the States for a very long time.
Since when does proof ever provide certainty?
I collected my suitcase and resisted the temptation to splurge on a cab into Paris. My budget was too tight to justify the indulgence. So I took the train. Seven euros one-way. The train was dirty — the carriage floor dappled in trash, the seats sticky and smelling of last night’s spilt beer. And the ride in to town passed through a series of grim industrial suburbs, all silhouetted by shoddy high-rise apartment buildings. I shut my eyes and nodded off, waking with a start when the train arrived at the Gare du Nord. Following the instructions emailed to me from the hotel, I changed platforms and entered the
I emerged out of the
‘Good morning,’ I said. ‘My name is Harry Ricks. I have a reservation for—’
‘
He spoke this sentence quickly, and I didn’t catch much of what he said.
‘
‘You come back at three p.m. for the check-in,’ he said, still speaking French, but adopting a plodding, deliberate, loud voice, as if I was deaf.
‘But that’s hours from now.’
‘Check-in is at three p.m.,’ he said, pointing to a sign next to a mailbox mounted on the wall. All but two of the twenty-eight numbered slots in the box had keys in them.
‘Come on, you must have a room available now,’ I said.
He pointed to the sign again and said nothing.
‘Are you telling me there isn’t
‘I am telling you that check-in is at three p.m.’