“Napoleon was clearly a polarizing figure,” Thorvaldsen said. “But his will is most instructive, written three weeks before he died. There’s a provision, to his valet, Saint-Denis, where he left a hundred thousand francs and then directed him to take his copy of
Anger crept into his voice. For all his faults, every account ever written acknowledged how much Napoleon loved his son. He’d divorced his beloved Josephine and married Marie Louise of Austria simply because he needed a legitimate male heir, one that Josephine could not supply. The boy was but four when Napoleon had been exiled to St. Helena.
“It is said that within those books was the key to finding Napoleon’s cache-what the emperor skimmed for himself. He supposedly secreted that wealth away, in a place only he knew. The amount was enormous.”
He paused again.
“Napoleon possessed a plan, Cotton. Something he was counting on. You’re right, he played a game of wills with Lowe on St. Helena, but nothing was ever resolved. Saint-Denis was his most loyal servant, and I’m betting Napoleon trusted him with the most important bequest of all.”
“What does this have to do with Graham Ashby?”
“He’s after that lost cache.”
“How do you know that?”
“Suffice it to say that I do. In fact, Ashby desperately needs it. Or, more accurately, this Paris Club needs it. Its founder is a woman named Eliza Larocque, and she holds information that may lead to its discovery.”
He glanced away from the dresser, toward the bed where Cai had slept all his life.
“Is all this necessary?” Malone asked. “Can’t you let it go?”
“Was finding your father necessary?”
“I didn’t do it to kill anyone.”
“But you had to find him.”
“It’s been a long time, Henrik. Things have to end.” The words carried a somber tone.
“Since the day I buried Cai, I swore that I would discover the truth about what happened that day.”
A feeling of remorse filled him.
He faced Malone.
“Cotton, Amando Cabral killed my only child. He’s now dead. Graham Ashby likewise will be held accountable.”
“So kill him and be done with it.”
“Not good enough. First I want to take from him all that is precious. I want him humiliated and disgraced. I want him to feel the pain I feel every day.” He paused. “But I need your help.”
“You’ve got it.”
He reached out and clasped his friend’s shoulder.
“What about Sam and his Paris Club?” Malone asked.
“We’re going to deal with that, too. It can’t be ignored. We have to see what’s there. Sam derived much of his information from a friend in Paris. I’d like for you two to pay that man a visit. Learn what you can.”
“And when we do, are you going to kill all of them, too?”
“No. I’m going to join them.”
Part Two
EIGHTEEN
PARIS, FRANCE
1:23 PM
MALONE LOVED PARIS. HE REGARDED IT AS A DELIGHTFUL CONJUNCTION of old and new, every corner volatile and alive. He’d visited the city many times when he worked with the Magellan Billet, and knew his way around its medieval hovels. He wasn’t happy, though, with this assignment.
“How did you get to know this guy?” he asked Sam.
They’d flown from Copenhagen on a midmorning flight directly to Charles de Gaulle Airport and taken a taxi downtown into the boisterous Latin Quarter, named long ago for the only language then permitted within the university precinct. Like almost everything else, Napoleon abolished the use of Latin, but the name stuck. Officially known as the fifth
“We met online,” Sam said.
He listened as Sam told him about Jimmy Foddrell, an American expatriate who’d come to Paris to study economics and decided to stay. Foddrell had started a website three years ago-GreedWatch.net-that became popular among the New Age/world conspiratorialist crowd. The Paris Club was one of its more recent obsessions.
Since Malone couldn’t argue with that logic, he’d agreed to come.
“Foddrell has a master’s in global economics from the Sorbonne,” Sam told him.
“And what has he done with it?”
They stood before a squatty-looking church labeled ST.-JULIENLE-PAUVRE, supposedly the oldest in Paris. Down Rue Galande, off to their right, Malone recognized the line of old houses and steeples as one of the most