“Do you think we could sneak out?” Lia asked.
Patch thought about it for a moment. They had already said hello to Claire and to Mr. and Mrs. Chilton. “I think so. You’re going to have to grab our coats, though. If they see me out there, they’ll notice and ask if we’re leaving.”
“No problem.”
Lia went to find their coats. Patch waited for her in the dining room, and then motioned for her to follow him when she returned. The two of them discreetly slipped out of the dining room and across the hall into the kitchen. A team of caterers was busy putting canapes on trays and barely noticed them.
Patch opened the back service entrance next to the pantry. The service area was a gray-painted stairwell with a garbage chute and recycling bins.
“Had you been to this apartment before?” Lia asked.
“Nope. But most apartments like this have a back staircase that goes off the kitchen.” He looked down. “We’re only on the sixth floor. I think it’s worth it to walk.”
They put their coats on and walked down the six flights to the lobby, where they were able to escape undetected. Ten minutes later, they were sitting in a booth at Genie’s favorite coffee shop on Second Avenue.
They ordered two cheeseburgers, plus a coffee for Lia and a hot chocolate for Patch. After they were alone again, he explained about the trove of stolen art they had found. “You can’t tell anyone about this, you understand?” he said. “It’s up to Nick what happens with this information. We all promised him we wouldn’t say anything.”
“But I thought you were upset that he wasn’t able to get you guys out of the… you know.”
“I am. But this information is the last card we hold. And I think I have a plan for how we can use it.”
Lia rolled her eyes. “You never stop, do you?”
He ignored her jab. He had some ideas, but his scheme wasn’t fully developed yet.
“The story gets weirder,” he said. “Have you ever heard of a caul bearer?”
Lia shook her head.
Patch explained what it was. “It’s supposed to bring luck to the child who’s born with it.”
“You just said you inherited thirty million dollars. I’d say that’s pretty lucky.”
The waitress arrived with their drinks, and they lowered their voices.
“Parker gave me this big lecture about how I had disappointed him, how I was meant for greatness, but I hadn’t exhibited it yet.”
“How is he so sure that he’s going to be the one who sees the greatness in you?” Lia asked. “Maybe your greatness isn’t meant to emerge yet.”
She was right. What did he care about Parker’s opinion of him? Parker had little conscience about his own actions, so how was he fit to judge Patch?
“You’ll do your own thing,” Lia said. “But I have a feeling it’s not going to happen with these idiots.”
“I guess you’re right. I think what would make it all more clear for me would be if I could really understand what went on between him and my mother. Why would she get involved with him? Did my father not know about it? My grandmother won’t tell me-and I’m not even sure if she knows exactly what happened herself.”
Lia took a sip of her coffee. “I think there’s only one way you’re going to solve all this,” she said. “I know you don’t want to do it, and I know it’s not going to be pleasant.”
“What’s that?”
“You need to go and see your mother.”
Chapter Fifty-Four
The Chilton party was exactly as Nick had expected: bad food and even worse company. Letty Chilton, in her attempt to save a penny, had hired a third-rate caterer, and it was evident in the dried-out hors d’oeuvres that were coming from the kitchen. The rock music was obnoxious and too loud. It wasn’t even that Nick didn’t like the selections; it was more that it seemed out of place in this environment. Nick ordered a martini at the bar and drank half of it in one gulp.
He was still upset about the fight in Southampton with Phoebe. The entire drive back, everyone had been silent in the car, save for the occasional comment or attempt at conversation from Genie. Phoebe had decided to go home and change, and would be arriving at the party separately. Nick looked out for Patch at the party, but couldn’t find him.
A few minutes later, Claire walked by and greeted Nick with a kiss on the cheek, which was unusual.
“Hello, Nick,” Claire said, and he nodded in return. “Come have a cigarette with me?”
This was odd. Nick didn’t even know that Claire smoked.
“Uh, sure,” he said.
She motioned for him to follow her down the hallway. “Let’s go to the library. My dad smokes cigars in there.”
Nick nodded and followed her into the library. He didn’t smoke himself anymore, but he wondered what she had to tell him. There wasn’t any reason for her to pull him aside. Maybe she knew something about what they had discovered in Southampton.
She shut the door behind them. The room was decorated in classic dark oak bookshelves and hunter green, though everything looked a bit shabby. Nick had heard that Lauren’s mom had been hired to give the apartment a facelift, but clearly it hadn’t happened yet.
Claire cracked open one of the windows and sat down on a leather sofa, placing a large crystal ashtray on the seat next to her.
“My parents don’t know that I smoke,” she said. “Obviously.”
She lit up and then exhaled in the general direction of the window. Nick sat down in a leather club chair and she handed him her pack of cigarettes.
“I quit last year,” he said, declining it. “So, what’s up?”
“I wanted to talk to you about something,” she said. “Nick, you know the Society is very important to me. Of all the people in our class, I would say I take it more seriously than anyone. But I haven’t gotten a single advantage or privilege because of it. You have everything-you’re Nick Bell. Lauren has a jewelry line. Phoebe gets a gallery show. Patch can do whatever he damn well pleases. Of all of you, all fourteen of you, I’m the only one who really cares about the group.”
“Claire, I’m not really sure why you’re telling me this.”
“I know you’re going to be offered a leadership position in our class very soon,” she said.
“What do you mean?”
“You’re the obvious choice. Your father is the Chairman. Your grandfather was Chairman Emeritus. You’re the next in line.”
“That’s not technically true. What about Henry and Benjamin?”
“I think that your father is more interested in grooming you,” she said. “Henry and Benjamin are easy. They’ve already fallen in with the group’s rules, and besides, they’re not Conscripts anymore. Your father wants to give you a leadership position so that you’ll stay loyal, so you’ll stop being the leader of the Infidels.”
Nick looked at her incredulously. “You think I’m the leader? And that name-someone else came up with that name, not us! Besides, how do you know any of this?”
She exhaled another stream of smoke. “My parents tell me everything. I’m not like the rest of you-I don’t see my parents as enemies. I trust them, and they trust me.”
“I don’t think they’d be too happy about you talking to me this way.”
“Hear me out. I think you’ll find that what I want makes sense. It’s pretty simple: I want your position in the Society. I want you to cede it to me.”
“Claire, I don’t have any position. Honestly, you’ve taken more of a leadership role than I have, by heading up the Junior Committee for the ball.”
Claire waved her hand at the suggestion, dispersing the smoke into the air. “That’s such typical sexism. Women get to run things like party committees while men get to head up task forces, get to make decisions that affect the world? I want more than the Junior Committee. Stuffing envelopes won’t exactly give me lessons in leadership.”