“There’s a lot of those. Which one?”
“Gold filigreed gates, by the museum.”
“Musee Cernuschi?”
Mado nodded.
“We’ll find it.” Aimee punched in the taxi request number on her speed dial. “First we’re taking you to a safe place. You can stay with my friend.”
“Not that old
“In the 16th near the Bois de Boulogne,” she said. “More your style. This time you’ll remain there for your own good.” Even if she had to chain her up.
MARTINE, AIMEE’S best friend since the
“We’re having a party for Gilles’s children,” she said, her voice husky as she looked them over. “I’ve got an extra costume.”
“Don’t worry,” Aimee said, “we’ll set her up in a back room and lock the door.”
“Don’t tell me.” Martine raised her hands. “I don’t want to know.”
In the gilt-edged white hallway, Aimee heard murmurs of conversation and laughter. Several dinosaur- costumed children ran into the dining room.
“
“Things going smoothly with Guy, Aimee?” Martine asked.
Aimee shook her head. She avoided Martine’s gaze.
“What did you do now?” Martine asked, lifting Aimee’s chin and looking in her eyes.
“Something stupid. Now he’s with a blonde.”
“And he seemed to be such a good catch! But I guess he’s not your bad boy type.” Martine exhaled a puff of smoke. “
Aimee grinned. “You seem happy now.”
“All men come with baggage.” Martine shrugged. “I like Gilles despite the nagging ex-wife and his kids every other week. I’m getting used to living in the eye of the storm.”
Aimee noticed the tired happiness in Martine’s eyes. And her pointed look at Aimee’s torn fishnet stockings. “How about another pair? I’ve got purple.”
“
AIMEE SAT Sophie down. Pinpricks of car lights snaked through the Bois de Boulogne outside the window.
“Please stay here. It’s not safe for you anywhere else right now.”
“Look, Aimee, forgive me for the way I’ve acted,” Sophie said, “but I can’t keep this check.”
“Thadee meant it for you.”
“I can’t help you much,” Sophie said, hesitating, “but maybe there’s something in the computer records.” She sank deeper on the low ottoman. “Instead of hindering you, I should try to help. My computer password’s 2297jil,” she said. “The safe’s behind a Jean Basquiat charcoal in the office.”
Of course. And the first place anyone would look.
“I’ll have to bury Thadee. Someone has to.”
Sophie still loved him, that much was obvious.
“Let me find out about the arrangements. But don’t move from here,” Aimee said, not wanting to add that she’d join him if the men who were after her found her this time.
AIMEE AND MADO PULLED up in the taxi outside Avenue Velasquez. The gilt-edged gates surrounding Parc Monceau’s exclusive enclave confronted them as the taxi stopped.
“You’re sure it’s this house, Mado?”
Mado nodded. “Nice to see how the other half lives,” she said.
Couples walked down the wide front stairs to waiting cars. Several security men spoke into headphones on the driveway. White catering vans lined the back drive.
”Looks like the party’s over.”
“It’s just beginning,” Aimee said, hiking her bag onto her shoulder. “I’ll call you later; go back to Timbuktu.”
Instead of using the main entrance, Aimee wound her way past the catering vans. In the third van she found what she needed. Black-and-white-checked chef’s trousers, clogs, a white shirt with side buttons, and a long white apron. She tucked her hair under a white cap, left her bag in the rhododendron bushes outside the service entrance, and joined the chaos in the hot, steaming kitchen.
She kept her head down and made a beeline for the pantry.
An army of caterers loaded huge roasting pans on trolleys, piled hot trays, scrubbed dishes in the stainless steel sink, and loaded glassware in cardboard cartons.
“The LEGUMES! The
Aimee nodded, picked up the heavy tray, and aimed for the dining room.
She turned and headed out the kitchen door. When his head was turned, she backed up right into the pantry lined with Sevres dishes and linens. She pulled the sliding pantry door shut, latched it, set the tray down, covered it with a tablecloth, then slipped off the shirt, trousers and apron, putting them into a drawer, and exited the other side of the pantry.
A few couples huddled under the chandeliers, standing on the Aubusson carpet, saying goodbye to the hostess, a young blonde woman.
“
The woman frowned.
Had she made a
“I see you’ve met Lena, Mademoiselle Leduc,” said Julien de Lussigny, wearing a tuxedo and looking ready to step onto a
“So, you feel better?”
Thank you for asking. Monsieur de Lussigny, I’m sorry to
She gave him a huge smile. And he returned it, eyeing her outfit, muttering “Too bad, you would have made this more interesting.”
Aimee wasn’t sure how to take that. When she looked around, Lena had disappeared.
“Let’s talk out there,” he said.
He escorted her to a glass-covered walkway looking over an interior garden. Small white lights and candles flickering in bubbled-glass holders lit the way.
“I was worried about you,” he said. “But you look much better. Have you come to tell me you’ve spoken with your partner and Verlet?”
“Right now what I’d like to know is how you’re related to Thadee Baret.”
Her heels echoed on the stone and a white moth beat its wings imprisoned in a candle-holder.
“Did you know Thadee?” de Lussigny asked.
“I asked first,” Aimee said.
