She watched Philippe. He blinked and rubbed his thumbs together.
“What proof do you have?”
“Hear me out, Philippe,” she said. “Hamid followed Islam his own way. I’m sure you admired his peaceful means and how he embraced a broader humanity. You contributed discreetly to the AFL as you rose in the ministry.”
She paused: now the ugly part.
“Kaseem had returned to Algeria. Made money supplying the military, somehow. But you didn’t know that. Six years ago Syl-vie came back into your life.”
Philippe shook his head. “She wasn’t my mistress.”
“I know. She talked you into funding this humanitarian mission while sweetening your bank account. The project revitalized the 196 sector, a land ravaged and barren since the Algerian war in the sixties. Provided irrigation, remapping the area, building roads, a power station, and housing. After all, it helped those most affected, you thought. You believed in the mission, wanted it to succeed. This was for the disenfranchised tribes in the bled, not the politicians or the military. You believed Kaseem. So did Sylvie and Hamid. He was your friend. Your old friend.”
She had Philippe’s attention, she was reaching him.
“But the reality hit when the photos of ‘ST 196’appeared. No new settlements, roads, or irrigated fields. Just death-squad executions and weapons for the military. Sylvie grew a conscience quickly. You did, too, Philippe. But Dédé, one of the generals’ hired mecs, blew her up when she threatened to expose the truth.”
His shook his head.
“You stopped funding the project. That’s why you’re hiding Anaïs,” she said. “They planned to kidnap her, use her as bait to force you to fund the project. But I got in the way.”
Anger blazed in Philippe’s eyes. “You’re always in the way!”
The door opened, and the light from the hallway streamed in.
“Philippe, we’re waiting,” said Guittard, the blond man she recognized from Philippe’s kitchen. He ignored Aimée, tapping his designer loafers, and faced Philippe. “They’ve tabled the resolution. Get up, man! Unless you propose a new initiative, the mission goes down the pissoir.”
“Why shouldn’t it, Monsieur?” she said.
But she spoke to their backs.
Two women had been murdered but that didn’t seem to grease the wheels of the government. Money did. At least the mission wouldn’t be funded. But someone had to pay, Aimée told herself.
BERNARD STOOD INSIDE THE gate of the Vincennes detention center, where a busload of men awaited forced repatriation. Other buses had taken those without any papers to chartered planes at Creil, a military air base. Bernard stamped his feet on the frigid packed earth. Cold—he always felt cold. His body never warmed up until July. Then there were one or two fitful months of what they called “heat” until the cold resumed again.
The barred media waited outside like hungry carrion to fill their newsfeeds. Inside Bernard was numb. These men had come to France years ago, seeking asylum from repression, and stayed on illegally after their applications were rejected. What could he do?
“Directeur Berge, please sign the transport receipt,” said the hawk-faced detention official.
Bernard hesitated. He wished he could disappear.
“Just a formality, Directeur Berge,” the official put the pen in his hand. “But we’ve got regulations.”
Bernard could have sworn the man guided his hand, forcing his signature.
Then it was over. Officials marched him through the receiving yard, past the buses disgorging the eighty or so sans’papiers. They formed into lines waiting to be processed. Bernard felt like a war criminal, like a Nazi who’d been released because he’d agreed to talk. Hadn’t he acted, as his mother had pointed out, like the Gestapo?
And then above him he heard the sound of helicopter blades. Grit and sand shot over the yard, spraying everyone as it landed. A RAID officer jumped out and ran toward them.
“Directeur Berge,” he shouted, making himself heard over the rotor blades. “Ministre Guittard needs you.”
Bernard stumbled.
The officer caught him.
“But why?” Could things get worse?
“Hostage situation, Directeur Berge. Orders are to proceed immediately.”
Bernard began to shake his head but the officer held his arm, propelling him to the waiting helicopter.
Monday Noon
AIMéU WALKED FROM PHILIPPE’S office all the way to her own. She kept alert down the narrow streets. No one followed her. The biting wind had risen from the Seine. She pulled her coat closer.
The scent of flowering lily of the valley reached her from a walled garden nearby. For a moment her mother’s blurred face floated before her. All her mother’s clothes had been scented with lily of the valley, the room full of it long after she’d left. And then the image was gone. The gusty wind snatched the scent and her memories away.
Aimée’s cell phone rang in her pocket.
“Allô,” she said, her frozen fingers fumbling with the keypad.
“Everything’s my fault, Aimée,” Anaïs sobbed.
“What do you mean?” Aimée was surprised. “I thought you were in the hospital?”
“Hostage situation … Simone,” Anaïs’s voice faded, then came back, “École maternelle … in the Twentieth Arrondisse-ment. I need you.”
Aimée’s blood ran cold.
“Rue l’Ermitage, up from Place du Guignier.” Anaïs’s voice broke. Aimée heard the unmistakable rat-a-tat-tat of a semiautomatic, people screaming, and then the shattering of glass.
“Anaïs!” she shouted.
Her phone went dead.
AIMÉE RUSHED to the tree-lined nineteenth-century street, buzzing with La Police and the elite paramilitary group RAID.
To her left the école matemelle, a building with iron-railed balconies bordered the north side. The adjoining ecole elementaire held the entrance for both schools on rue Olivier Metra.
Nervous and scared, she wondered where Anaïs and Simone were. What could she do?
An old man, his winter coat thrown over a bathrobe, clutched a parrot cage and complained loudly at being evacuated from his apartment across the street. Paris in April still hadn’t shaken off winter’s cold cloak, she thought. Frost dusted the cobblestones and wedged in the cracks of the pavement.
“I must speak with the commissaire in charge,” she began.
The businesslike plainclothes flic listened to Aimée’s story, checking her PI credentials. He spoke into a microphone clipped to his collar, then finally directed her past a police barricade. Somewhat relieved, she ran ahead. She knew she had to persuade the officer in charge that she could help.
Inside a Belle-Epoque building housing the temporary com-missariat command post, she waited for the inspector in charge. Glad of her wool sweater and parka, she rubbed her hands together in the mirrored building’s foyer, the hallway echoing with the tramp of boots and radio static.
She felt another presence and looked up. From the spiraling marble staircase expanding like a nautilus shell, Yves stared down at her.