On the Minitel she found two clubs with Senegalese music, one in Montmartre and the other, Club Exe, in the Sentier. The one in Montmartre had never heard of Idrissa.
“Idrissa Diaffa who sings with Ousmane?” asked a woman with high-pitched voice at Club Exe.
“Yes, where can I find her?”
“She quit.”
Perfect.
“Her boyfriend, Christian, is in jail,” Aimee said. “Please, I need to find her.”
“I’d like to help you,” the woman said, “but I’m just a part-time cashier. Sorry.”
Aimee was about to hang up. “What about her friends … who was she close to at the club?”
“
“Where can I find Mala?”
“Around the corner.”
“Where’s that?”
“Rue Jeuneurs. Number 7. And could you tell her she’s needed for a double shift today?”
Aimee thanked her. At least she had something to go on.
She took the Metro into the Sentier, climbing the stairs to emerge into the heat.
Dark windows, like dead eyes, stared from above the wide marble steps of 7, rue Jeuneurs. The ancient building, once a clothier’s, as evidenced by the faded
On the left was a faded concierge sign, lights glowing behind lace curtains covering the glass door.
Aimee knocked.
Few buildings in the Sentier would have concierges, she imagined. From inside the
“Monsieur, can you direct me to Mala’s apartment?”
The concierge scratched his neck. “She didn’t leave word to expect anyone,” he said, his syllables rolled in a Spanish accent.
“This concerns—”
“
He must be an unusual concierge.
“What floor, Monsieur?”
He shook his head.
“Who might you be, Mademoiselle?”
A brown baguette crumb had lodged in his mustache. Aimee wanted to brush it off.
“Aimee Leduc,” she said.
“Got an appointment?”
“Sorry to disturb your meal, Monsieur,” she said with a smile, “but they need Mala to work a double shift today at Club Exe. Her phone’s off the hook. I’d appreciate your help.”
The crumb rode up and down as the man chewed. He debated for a long moment.
“Left rear staircase, third floor, door on the left.”
She felt him watch her as she crossed the courtyard.
Seventeenth century, by the look of it. Like her building. However, much of the rear courtyard and first floor of this
After a steep climb, she reached the dark green door. One other massive door kept it company on the black- and-white-diamond-patterned landing. Dirt filmed the single small circular window.
She knocked several times. No answer. She tried the other door. A small bronze nameplate with
An Internet company here? Frustrated at finding neither Mala nor Idrissa, Aimee leaned against the wall and thought.
She looked up to see a lean, caramel-skinned young woman coming up the stairs. She was in her early twenties with a boyish figure, and she wore a red, yellow, and green Rasta cap from which an errant braid escaped, a tank top, and army fatigue pants.
“
The woman’s eyes narrowed. “But I don’t know you,” she said with a lilting West African accent.
“I’m Aimee Leduc,” she said. “Christian Figeac’s in jail. You were his girlfriend, right? Could we talk?”
Idrissa’s almond-shaped eyes darted around the landing. She shifted in her sandals.
“May I come in?”
Idrissa didn’t move. In the dark, cool hallway, she seemed ready to bolt down the stairs.
“I’m sorry, it’s not my place,” Idrissa said. “And I’m in a hurry.”
“Christian’s in trouble,” Aimee said.
Idrissa sighed. “Always him and his big ideas!”
“Last time I saw him he was being taken to the Commissariat for questioning.”
Idrissa waved her hand as if that were old news. Odd.
Jumbles of red and yellow beads clacked on her wrist. Aimee caught a whiff of coconut oil.
“Matter of fact, I’m trying to reach his financial advisor to spring him from the Commissariat,” Aimee said.
“Christian calls me his girlfriend but … it’s just the friend part now,” Idrissa said. “I won’t go to the apartment,
Idrissa’s speech didn’t match her looks. Most young women in the
“Christian can’t find some boxes of his father’s work,” Aimee said. “He thought you might know where they are.”
“Accusing me of stealing?”
Why hadn’t she worded it another way? She’d put Idrissa on the defensive! As Rene often told her, tact wasn’t her strongest suit. “Actually,” Aimee said, trying for an ingratiating smile, “Christian’s being generous, trying to help me find his father’s research on terrorism,” she said. “My mother was involved.”
Idrissa shrugged. “My music only earns half the rent,” she said, her accent thickened. “So I typed, transcribed for his father.”
Aimee took a step forward. “For Christian’s father’s book?”
Idrissa nodded.
“How interesting,” Aimee said. “Were they his memoirs or, perhaps, stories about people involved in the radical movements?”
“I didn’t pay attention,” Idrissa said. Her gaze didn’t meet Aimee’s.
“Did he mention the Haader-Rofmein gang?”
“Nothing made much sense to me,” Idrissa said. “It seemed jumbled.”
“Jumbled … how do you mean?”
Idrissa shrugged. “He rambled, talking about the past one minute, then he’d zoom to the present.”
“So would you take dictation, or did he give you tapes to transcribe?”
Idrissa shifted against the wall. “What does it matter?”
“Do you have any of those tapes?”
“Look, it was only a job. I gave them back,” she said. “The boxes, too!” Idrissa looked at her Swatch watch. “I’m late.”
“Christian is so upset. He doesn’t know why his father committed suicide,” Aimee said, edging toward