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The next scene caught by the photographer preserved the ugly truth forever. A swastika had been tarred into her forehead. The young mother had sagged to the ground in pain, still holding the baby and keeping it away from the crowd. Could that be Thierry in the young woman's arms? Was this the Jewess who'd slept with a Nazi?

In the crowd she noticed a leering adolescent girl. Around the girl's neck hung a gold chain with odd symbols. Peering closer through the lens she remembered seeing those same distinctive symbols before, twisted into the ligature marks. She recognized that face. A young Lili Stein stood in the crowd.

"I LIKE your theory," Rene said. His fingers raced over his laptop. "Les Blancs Nationaux works as a front, financing Aryan hit squads, operating from DFU money via the Rambuteaus' joint bank account."

"Makes sense," Aimee said. "The German funds provide perfect cover for the final solution Thierry earnestly believes in. Now we just have to prove it."

Rene had already started accessing the Rambuteau's bank account on his computer. "For Thierry to murder Soli Hecht because he was an interfering Nazi hunter and Lili Stein for an initiation rite would fit," he said.

Aimee opened the oval window facing rue du Louvre. The November chill did nothing to disguise the four coats of paint needed to cover the swastika. Maybe it was her imagination, but she could still make out the curved edges.

"Look at this," she said, handing the blue envelope to Rene. "I stole it off Nathalie Rambuteau's will. Here's confirmation from his real mother."

"His real mother?" Rene said. He hit "save" on his laptop. "Who's that?"

"A woman named Sarah. The irony is, he's part Jew," she said. "Like they say Hitler was."

She would leverage the truth out of Thierry. Not only would she display his incriminating bank account, she would show him the contents of the envelope.

"Then who is his father?" Rene said after he read the letter. "Or do you have ideas about that?"

"A Si-Po officer who deported Jews from the Marais," she said. "But there's only one way to find out for sure. And Thierry will help me do that."

Wednesday Evening

AIMÉE WRAPPED HER FINGERS around the cold plastic of her 9-mm Glock and knocked on the door with her gloved hand. A white-faced Thierry Rambuteau appeared. He stared at her. A glimmer of recognition passed over his face.

"You! What do you want?" he said.

"We need to talk," she said.

"Who are you, anyway?" He didn't seem to want to know the answer because he started to close the door.

She stuck her boot in the door, still keeping her hand balanced on the gun handle in her pocket. "I have something you should see."

He shook his head.

"And I'm not going away."

He stood aside. "Since you insist."

She strode down the hallway. The breakfast room, formerly so bright and meticulous, appeared dull and gloomy. Papers were scattered over the sofa. Nathalie Rambuteau's framed photo watched her from the mantel.

"Tell me why you tried to kill me," Aimee said evenly, her finger poised on the trigger in her pocket.

"Me? Not me," he said. His wild bloodshot eyes darted around the room. Abruptly he shook his head, then ran his hands across his stubble.

"Who else would?" she said, still not relaxing her grip.

"I thought you were a flic but I certainly wouldn't pull a knife. Leif's the vicious one. I tried to stop him, but you got away."

"Leif, the one in lederhosen, chased me?" she said.

"Leif was right about you." He stood up and began mumbling to himself, pacing distractedly back and forth.

"They are all amateurs! I must work harder so they understand." He ignored her and shuffled old newspaper clippings together. His blue eyes shone fiercely. "My obligation, my commitment is to the white race. I work for Les Blancs Nationaux out of love and sacrifice. Who else will keep the world pure if we don't?"

She was appalled. "Was Lili Stein killed to keep the world pure?" she said. "Did you engineer both Lili Stein's and Soli Hecht's murders, then have your minions execute them? Tell me the truth."

"The truth?" He laughed. "My father warned me. You're searching for who cut the old lady, eh? That's LBN turf. But murder is not our style."

"Why should I believe that? You have a motive," Aimee said. "And no real alibi."

"Motive? The flics questioned me," he interrupted, irritated. "I was in Istanbul, flew into Antwerp, picked up new videotapes, then drove back. It's stamped on my passport."

She'd seen his credit-card activity on the A2 highway from Belgium the day of Lili's death. "Show me."

"The flics kept it. Go ask them. If something juicy comes up, they plan to pin it on me." Thierry's eyes glittered.

"New members of Les Blancs Nationaux kill as part of their initiation rites," she said. "To prove their commitment!"

Thierry shook his head. Wonder shone in his eyes. "Aryan supremacy is real," he said. "No one has to kill for it."

The irritating thing was she believed that he was being honest. It bothered her. Made it difficult to advance her theory of him as the killer.

The harder part followed. He was a human being who had lost both parents. She'd have to push him to the edge, make him reveal the truth, prove or disprove her theory. She began reluctantly, "There's no easy way to do this." She stood in front of Nathalie Rambuteau's photo.

"To tell me I'm adopted?" he said.

She was surprised; how would he know?

"My father told me you would come," he said. "Spin me a pack of lies. Now, get out. Play girl detective somewhere else. I know the truth!"

Of course, Claude Rambuteau would try to discredit her. He'd promised as much.

"My father died in my arms," Thierry said. His voice cracked. "Leave me alone. I didn't kill anyone!"

"You better read this," she said. She tightened her hold on the pistol in her pocket as she withdrew the envelope with spidery writing. "This is for you. Your father planned on blocking the will, but he died and threw everything into probate."

Thierry looked unsure.

"Of course"—she opened it slowly—"I helped matters along at the lawyer's office. I think your real mother is alive, Thierry."

"He said you'd try. . .," Thierry sputtered.

"And you are a Jew."

Thierry stopped dead. "What are you talking about?"

"Technically," Aimee continued, "since you were born of a Jewish mother. Judaism follows matriarchal lines. But you're German too since your father was an occupying soldier. Probably Si-Po, responsible for the Gestapo who pursued enemies of the Reich."

He shook his head. "Why are you doing this?"

"Read it," she said.

Doubt flickered in his eyes.

"Nathalie wanted you to know your real parentage, Thierry," Aimee said. "Her soul couldn't rest after her promise. Secretly, it hurt her to see you hate the Jews. Especially. . ."

Thierry grabbed the letter out of her hands. He went to the window and read it. For what seemed an eternity, she heard the monotonous tick of the kitchen clock.

"How could this be true?" His eyes flashed at Aimee. He sat down and reread the letter. "All these years? Lies, a pack of lies! Is this why she drank?"

"I can't answer that," she said. She caught his wild gaze and held it. "How does this involve Lili?"

"How would I know?" Thierry's voice dropped. "Nothing makes sense. It's like I've been hit by a wave in the ocean and my feet can't touch the sand. I don't know which way is up for air." Then he asked simply, "Why didn't they ever tell me I wasn't theirs?"