is the Café de la Régence.”
“In the Palais Royal. We could throw a stone from this shop and hit it.” He blazed satisfaction. “It makes sense. Chess. Damn, but I’m good.”
“You are more than adequate.” He was her Hawker, and he was brilliant. “We will meet there tonight. You may walk in the door and play chess, but I must coerce the owner into giving me some plausible role. That is a café for men only.”
He was already pacing back and forth across the rugs. Thinking. Plotting. Muttering to himself. Had she not seen this a hundred times? She had never wanted him more.
She said, “I must leave. This will require preparation.” And because there was no one else to tell him this, “You have been clever. You are very, very clever.”
Thirty
THE CAFÉ DE LA RÉGENCE WAS FULL OF CHESS PLAYERS and spies. Hawker had put himself with his back to the wall, near the door, where he could keep an eye on both.
It was well past midnight. Outside, under the huge lamps in the arches of the arcade, the nightly promenade of the Palais Royale had slowed to a trickle. Patrons of the opera strolled past, headed home. Even this late, a few English tourists wandered about, absorbing Paris sophistication, helping pickpockets earn a living. A trio of Napoleon’s garde rattled by in dress uniform, come from the gambling dens upstairs. The women who sauntered by in twos and threes were harlots.
In the café, a dozen men were still playing. Another thirty-odd watched or sat at tables, the way he did, reading the paper and drinking.
Pax was two tables away, twenty moves into a game. He’d dressed like a university student—untidy, with a loose, open collar. His hair was its natural color, loose down his neck, spilling along cheekbones when he leaned to the board. You’d swear he wasn’t thinking about anything but chess.
Owl walked the room, carrying a tray and wiping down tables, representing the French side of the spying fraternity.
For Hawker, it was the end of a long evening of wandering from table to table, brushing shoulders, listening. Nobody mentioned killing Bonaparte. They talked about chess. Spying was more of a challenge than stealing, overall, but there were times it’d bore a corpse.
Owl came up behind him. “I have brought more brandy, even though you have not finished what you have.” She leaned over him to set a tiny glass on the table. She was entirely plausible as a Parisian serving maid—deft, impudent, graceful.
“Did you have trouble,” he looked her over, “slipping in here?”
“None. When an agent of the Police Secrète indicates she wishes to become a serving maid, the owner of a café does not ask questions. They think I am here to listen for sedition. They are all afraid of the Police Secrète, here in Paris, which is wise of them.”
“My own service can’t throw men in prison, just on our say-so. One of those disadvantages I labor under.” He took a sip of brandy. He drank aquavit in the German states, grappa in Italy, brandy in Paris. In London, mostly gin. None of it had much effect on him.
“You will be pleased to know you present the most realistic appearance of a young man of fashion. One is convinced you have plucked the very pomegranate of life and sucked it dry and tossed the husk away.”
“That presents a picture.”
“
“It’s a sad and dishonest world.”
“When I say this, few people contradict me. I have decided he is a poor artist, starving in a garret in the Latin Quarter.”
“Practicing a little larceny on the side . . .”
“You, of all people, should not condemn that.”
He shook his head. “Owl . . . Owl . . . I have dabbled in depraved and iniquitous business, but I have never been an artist. Any luck tonight?”
“For me it has been an evening of no fish whatsoever. And you?”
“Empty nets.”
“We will meet tomorrow and plan new strategies. What happens in the great world?”
He’d folded the newspaper,
“The arts are the soul of the nation,” Owl said primly. “Of course the First Consul will attend the opera. It is the French way.”
“I’d invade Poland, myself, if it was a choice between that and opera.”
“It is as well you do not rule France. I spoke to the captain of his Household Guard myself. They will be alert going to and from the opera. But . . .” Owl shook her head, as if arguing with herself. “I do not wish the First Consul to cower in the Tuileries to keep himself safe, but he is hard to protect.”
A professional would finish him off within the week. Thank God this lot seemed to be amateurs. He smoothed the newspaper flat on the table. “Here’s his schedule for tomorrow, just in case somebody murderous has trouble locating him. First thing, some English collectors are presenting France with an Egyptian relic—one of the ones the French dug up when they were conquering Egypt. This requires Napoleon’s presence. That’s eight in the morning. He’s reviewing troops at ten. Lunch with a couple generals. Meeting the ambassador of Portugal at three. Music again tomorrow night in some private house. Hell of a life, if you ask me.”
Across the room, outlined by the big front window, Pax slid a piece across the board.
Pax held his own in the finest chess club of Europe, even if he did wear damn boring waistcoats.
Owl breathed down over his shoulder. This close, her body was a clamor in the air, tugging at his attention. “Shouldn’t you be wiping tables or paying some attention to that nice old fellow—that one—who’s been waving at you awhile? Or something?”
“I am tired of serving drinks. It palls quickly. And it is entirely unrealistic that I would pay attention to an old man while there is a handsome young one to flirt with.”
Owl, at work, was bright as the edge of a diamond, hot as fire sparks. Tonight heat glowed out of her, from wanting him. He glowed right back, wanting her. They were both trying to ignore that.
She slipped the tray to the table and picked up the glass he hadn’t finished. Her fichu was one of those pro forma garments that didn’t stop him enjoying a sweet view of her breasts. The way she was leaning over . . .
He said, “You’re going to have every man in the room looking this way.”
“Not everyone. Some are obsessed with chess, and some are very, very old. But the others—yes. They envy you,
She was watching the room. Owl didn’t do anything by accident. “You’re looking for men who have too much on their mind to stare at a woman’s tits.”
“Conspirators. That. Exactly. Men who do not watch the chess and do not watch me. So far, I have distracted everyone nicely. It is most discouraging.”
“Too much to hope it’d be easy.” In another hour, he’d go back to British Service headquarters. Maybe Carruthers had uncovered something. He wished he was going home with Owl, though. They could—
He pulled his mind away from the things he wasn’t going to do tonight.
The door opened. They had a late visitor to the Café de la Régence. This was a man with chestnut-brown hair, worn in a Brutus. Brown eyes, medium skin, about twenty-five. Estimating by the doorframe . .