babysitting Hope. She had no reason to suspect I knew anything about who she really was, and I sure as hell didn’t want to alarm her or tip my hand. But right now she was the last person I wanted to be looking after my three- year-old niece.
Eli’s phone went to voice mail and I left a terse message to call me. I thought about calling Dominique, but she was probably with Jasmine and Hope. What could I say that wouldn’t raise a red flag, especially if Jasmine was standing right there next to her?
I drove back to Atoka as fast as I dared, but it was Friday and the summer rush-hour exodus from the steamy city had started early. The first thing I intended to do was to find Hope and bring her home, if Eli hadn’t already picked her up.
After that, I didn’t have a plan. Especially since I still had no proof of anything, just a lot of speculation based on what Elinor had said. Jasmine had flown to Paris and, if I guessed correctly, she’d probably managed to track down Vivian Kalman. Within the next nine months, Vivian, Mel, and Paul all died. Vivian and Mel of heart attacks; Paul, an apparent suicide.
Maybe Vivian had given up the names of the other members of the Mandrake Society and Jasmine had visited the rest of her aunt’s former colleagues. At a minimum, she might have gotten that compromising photo of Maggie and Charles from Vivian, who had taken it. Plus she found Stephen’s yearbook photo in Maggie’s diary. Jasmine could have mailed the pictures to the others as the warning shot across the bow that the secrets and lies surrounding those two deaths had returned to haunt them all, and Charles had automatically assumed Theo was the one who had sent them.
But why would Jasmine do it? Why would she want revenge for the death of an aunt she never knew? Could she have committed murder that was passed off as a natural death—more than once— and gotten away with it? And how did Theo fit in? He was dead now, too, though his death seemed unrelated to any of this—a drug deal gone bad in San Francisco.
It was just before four when I turned off Atoka Road and flew past the stone pillars at the vineyard entrance on Sycamore Lane. My head throbbed with a tension headache and my jaw ached from clenching it. I drove straight to the Ruins.
Dominique was there, giving orders to half a dozen people setting up folding chairs, laying out tablecloths and place settings, and generally getting ready for tonight’s sell-out event. Jasmine and Hope were nowhere in sight.
My cousin saw me heading toward her. “Thank God you’re here. I could use a hand. We haven’t given ourselves enough rope and I’m about to hang myself.”
“Where’s Hope?” I asked.
“Pardon?”
“Hope. Where is she? Is she still with Jasmine?”
Dominique waved a distracted hand. “I don’t know. I think so.”
“Where’s Jasmine?”
“She might have gone back to the house to look for Eli. Juliette called and said she’d finished the floral centerpieces so Jasmine was going to head over to the Thiessmans’ to pick them up.”
Charles. The only remaining member of the Mandrake Society. Jasmine had ingratiated herself with Juliette, gaining easy and unquestioned access to their home and grounds. She’d done it in spite of Charles’s famously reclusive reputation—how clever. No one would ever suspect her if he were to have, say, an unexpected heart attack like a couple of his ex-colleagues had done. Who would possibly connect the dots between Charles, Vivian, Paul, and Mel— since Charles himself had done such a stellar job of erasing any information that could link them all to one another?
And what about Theo?
“Can you cover for me?” I said. “I’ll be back.”
She looked puzzled. “Where are you going?”
“To the house,” I said. “Then to the Thiessmans’, if that’s where Hope is.”
“Lucie, what’s going on?”
“Nothing. I just, um, would feel better if Hope was with Eli or me. I’d never forgive myself if something happened to her because Jasmine got distracted or too busy.”
“She’s very capable,” Dominique said. “Or I wouldn’t have hired her.”
“Oh, I know that,” I said. “Believe me, I know. I’ll be back.”
She pulled her phone out of her pocket and waved it. “Why don’t I just call her? Find out what she’s doing, where they are.”
“No, that’s okay. I don’t want to make a big deal out of it. You know, make it seem like I don’t trust her.”
“You don’t trust her,” she said. “That’s obvious. She happens to be really good with kids. Actually, she’s good with everyone. I don’t understand why you’re acting so negative about her.”
“I guess I’m just an overly protective aunt. Humor me this time, okay? I’ll find them myself.”
Dominique shrugged, annoyance flashing across her face. “I could use a little help here, you know. It is your vineyard.”
“I know that. I’ll be back as soon as I can. And there’s nobody more capable in the world than you are. I’ve seen you handle bigger events with your eyes closed.”
I started toward my car.
“You’re just saying that because you know you’re leaving me between a rock and the deep blue sea,” she called after me.
“I would never do that and I promise not to be gone long,” I yelled back. “See you soon.”
I got in the Mini and earned another disgusted look as I drove by. As long as Dominique didn’t call Jasmine and warn her I was planning to show up, I could still get Hope away from her before she realized I knew anything. Then I’d go to Bobby Noland.
But Jasmine hadn’t dropped Hope off at the house, because Eli was nowhere to be found. I shouted his name up the spiral staircase and listened to my voice echo back.
“Lucie?” Pépé called. It sounded like he was in his bedroom. “
He came to the railing in the upstairs hall and looked down.
“What happened?” he asked. “You look dreadful.”
If I was going to tell anyone, my grandfather was the only one I trusted right now. I waited until he came down the stairs.
“Jasmine Nouri is Maggie Hilliard’s niece,” I said. “She tracked down Stephen Falcone’s sister, Elinor.”
He went pale. “How do you know that?”
“Because I just visited Elinor Falcone in Washington and she told me. Jasmine was on her way to Paris to look up Vivian Kalman when she stopped in Washington. Maggie left a diary and Jasmine found it.”
“
“In the last six months since Jasmine visited Elinor,” I said, “everyone in the Mandrake Society has died. Except Charles. And Jasmine is over at the Thiessmans’ right now. With Hope.”
“Let’s go,” he said. “I’ll call Juliette.”
“No. Don’t do that. First we have to get Hope out of there. There’ll still be time.”
“How can you be so sure?” he said.
“I’m not,” I said. “I’m just praying there is. Come on, let’s go.”
“Wait a minute.”
My grandfather crossed the foyer to the library, which had once been Leland’s office. He reached up and slid his hand along the top of the doorjamb. My heart started pounding in my chest. The key to my father’s gun cabinet was up there; I’d never moved it from where he always kept it.
“My God, Pépé, you can’t bring a gun. What are you thinking?”
Despite my father’s legendary prowess as a hunter and a collection that could outfit a small militia, I avoided guns at all costs. Leland taught me to shoot when I was a teenager—he insisted since he kept weapons in the house—but I was way out of practice.
Pépé found the key and turned to face me. “If what you say is true, this young woman is capable