Murder on the Champ de Mars (2 page)

“On it.”

Plenty of time to make it home, dress Chloé and get to the church for the christening.

As she passed Maxence, she took some francs from her clutch and handed them to him—a tip to keep his cover. She winked at her employer, the
comte
, and headed into the candle-lit museum foyer, where she was taken aback by a giant taxidermied polar bear, one of the
comte
’s donations to the wildlife collection. Men and their trophies! She presented her scooter’s keys to the real
voiturier
. In exchange he handed her an envelope containing the
comte
’s embossed card and a check.

She slid up the kickstand with her Louboutin heel and
revved her loaner Vespa—a bright turquoise model with more oomph than her own pink one, which was in the shop—while she navigated the cobbled courtyard. Too bad the damned A-line Courrèges rode up her thighs.

She could get used to this scooter’s power. She gunned it down rue Beaubourg, weaving between a bus and a taxi in the street, wove around the Hôtel de Ville, then turned left along the quai, past the budding green branches of the plane trees. But a roadblock stopped traffic before she could cross Pont Marie to the Île Saint-Louis. What now? A strike, an accident, police checking for drunk drivers? Her scooter stalled.

Tension knotted her shoulders. She couldn’t make Chloé late for her own christening. She dreaded the look on the priest’s face after he’d done a favor fitting them in; she’d never live it down. As the traffic cleared, she kick-started the Vespa. Finally she pulled into her courtyard on Île Saint-Louis, jumped off the scooter, and ran up her apartment building’s worn marble staircase.

Aimée could handle it.
Vraiment
, she could: telecommuting part-time from her home office, she could still manage computer security virus scans and lucrative industrial surveillance. If only she could buy eight hours of sleep over the counter.

“She’s got an appetite, your Chloé,” said Madame Cachou as she handed Aimée a teaspoon. The sixty-something concierge had a stylish new blunt-cut grey bob. “I changed her diaper two minutes ago, then laid out the gown.”

“Ma puce,”
Aimée said, leaning down to kiss those cheeks, and thinking again how painfully like Melac’s eyes Chloé’s grey-blue ones were. Those eyes reminded Aimée of her baby’s father every day. As for his total lack of interest in paternity—Aimée hadn’t seen that coming.

That wasn’t the only thing she didn’t see coming. Chloé coughed and puréed carrot hit Aimée in the eye. Just one more of the daily surprises of motherhood, like the overwhelming
protectiveness she felt toward her baby. Or how sleep deprived she could be. Aimée wiped off the carrot and hoped to God they wouldn’t be too late.

By the time she’d cleaned her daughter’s smiling, rose-shaped mouth and her perfect chubby fists, Miles Davis, her bichon frisé, had licked up every trace of orange from the kitchen tiles under the high chair. He’d gained weight from all the cleaning up since Chloé was born.

Her life had changed. Instead of working long hours at the office before heading out for nights on the town, now she spent her afternoons taking Chloé to the park in the stroller. There she joined the other children’s mothers, who were laughing, commiserating and sharing apple juice and tips. She couldn’t imagine not being a
maman, simplement
. She found herself trying to remember her own mother more and more often, the mother who’d disappeared so long ago, now nothing but a footprint on the wave-washed shore of Aimée’s childhood. She missed her more than ever now that she was a mother herself.

Today, Chloé would wear the gown Aimée’s mother had baptized Aimée in.

Her phone trilled somewhere on the counter behind the baby bottles. By the time she found it, Chloé had spit up all over her shoulder. Thankfully the burp cloth had caught it all. She hoped.

“We’re waiting at the church, Aimée.”

“Five minutes, René.”

“You know the priest did us a special favor,” said René, his voice rising. “Wedging us in this late on Sunday with the Easter rush.”

“Five minutes,” she said again, clicking off.

Aimée deftly laid Chloé on the changing table and pulled off the soiled onesie. She nuzzled her pink tummy with kisses, and Chloé cooed with delight. Chloé’s sweet baby smell engulfed her as she slipped her into the lace christening gown.

She scooped up her secondhand Birkin bag, loaded it with some diapers and wipes, slipped into her cheetah-print heels and headed down the wide, worn marble stairs with Chloé on her hip.

In the early evening, the quai-side lamps’ yellow-gold glow filtered through the plane trees. Below her flowed the khaki-colored Seine. With any luck, Chloé wouldn’t need a diaper change before the priest started.

Around the corner, Martine, her best friend since the
lycée
, was pacing on the church steps. Martine wore a chic navy blue suit with a matching straw hat, both Italian. She pulled Aimée’s arm.


Mon Dieu
, Aimée, everyone’s waiting,” said Martine. “Love your dress.”

“My surveillance uniform.” She hoped she hadn’t missed any of Chloé’s spit up.

“Only you would call a vintage Courrèges a uniform.”

“Got an upscale gig,” she said under her breath. “I’ll need to borrow your Versace.”

They entered the church and found flickering votive candles, incense and a waiting crowd near the baptismal font in a side chapel.

“You’ll be late to your own funeral, Leduc.” Morbier, Aimée’s godfather, bent down to kiss Chloé.

“Bonsoir
to you, too,
mon parrain,”
she said, using the term for godfather. A term she hadn’t used since she wore knee socks.

Morbier, a
commissaire
and an old colleague of Aimée’s late father, looked rested for once, despite the drooping bags under his basset-hound eyes. He was wearing a three-piece suit—a first. He stood arm in arm with a beaming Jeanne, his companion, all in yellow flounces. “I can’t believe I held you like that once,” said Morbier. He reached out and touched her hair. Her throat caught.

She was surprised to see her father’s old police comrades since he’d left the force under a cloud of allegations—allegations that had taken her years to disprove. Lefèvre, an old Friday-night card-playing crony of her father’s from the
commissariat
, along with Thomas Dussollier, another card player who’d attended the police academy with her father and was about to retire. Both wore police uniforms. Lefèvre leaned on a cane; Thomas’s dark hair was speckled grey. Dussollier held a photo out to her: her own christening, here at this same font, Dussollier, Morbier and her papa all young men. “Jean-Claude would be so proud, Aimée.” His eyes brimmed. Hers, too.

René Friant, godfather-to-be and her partner at Leduc Detective, looked relieved to see her. He wore a dark blue suit, matching cravat and cuff links. A dwarf at four feet tall, he stood on a stool by the baptismal font.


La voilà
. Good of you to join us finally, Aimée,” said her old catechism teacher, Père Michel, beckoning them closer.

Chloé Jeanne Renée—named for her great-grandmother, her grandfather Jean-Claude and her godfather-to-be, René—yawned. Aimée’s cousin Sebastian and his wife, Regula, beamed. Regula, six months along herself, was showing her bump.

The incense tickled Aimée’s nose, and the splash of holy water brought back memories. Memories of coming here with her parents, and later, after her American mother had abandoned them, Morbier taking her small hand in his and bringing her to catechism classes. As she stood under the soaring seventeenth-century domed roof, it all passed before her like old photos in a slideshow. She grabbed at tradition in whatever family memories she could find.

Just as the priest was about to begin, Martine tugged on Aimée’s sleeve and pointed to a man in a black jacket striding down the aisle. His magnetic grey-blue eyes caught Aimée’s. Still a hunk. A chord vibrated in her stomach.

Melac, her baby’s father.

Six long months without a word, and he could still make her heart pound. He’d never even seen his daughter. Nor had he replied to the christening invitation, or called once. She noted his leanness, a deeper line added to the crinkle on his brow.

She felt conflicted: both furious with him and glad that he had come. Maybe this was an olive branch that might lead to some involvement in her baby’s life? But why hadn’t he called, even once? Aimée pulled Chloé close, nuzzled her rose-pink cheek. “
Ma puce
, he’s your father, so let’s be nice.”

Père Michel gave the blessing in his white cassock. She felt Melac’s presence at her side as he bowed his head during the prayers. That same remembered lime scent clung to him. The ice block inside her thawed a little at the look of joy spreading over his face. He ran his finger under Chloé’s chin. She cooed and broke into a smile.

“Before us, Chloé Jeanne Renée’s father and mother …” intoned the priest. The rest of the litany was lost to her. For a moment, for this sliver of time, they were a family. Together. Aimée choked back a sob.

“Now, witnessed by her godparents, Martine and René …”

René nodded, his big green eyes serious. He took Chloé in his arms, a bundle of white organdy in her flowing christening dress. Then he handed her to a smiling Martine. Morbier blew his nose with a handkerchief.

Chloé emitted a startled cry at the cold holy water pouring over her head. “Brave girl, it’s almost over,” Aimée whispered.

And then it was. There were smiles all round and wiping of the eyes by these people who she’d grown to realize were her family.

“Being a
maman
suits you, Aimée, couture and all.” Melac pecked both her cheeks. “May I, René?” he said, opening his arms. “
Enchanté
to meet you, Chloé, my little trouper.”

René, ever the diplomat—or most of the time, anyway—shot Aimée a look.
About time he showed up
, she thought, but bit the words back and nodded instead.

Melac’s wrists were tanned, and she did a double take when she noticed he was wearing a rose-gold serpent ring on his fourth finger. That hadn’t been there before. Her insides knotted.

Back with his ex-wife?

What happened to his offer to “do the right thing”? He’d dropped off the radar almost the moment he’d made it. Not that she’d have married him, although her pride still smarted. She’d crossed him off the list, realizing there was no room for her and Chloé in Melac’s life. His attentions were spread too thin elsewhere, with his injured daughter, still comatose after a school bus crash, and his high-maintenance, suicidal ex-wife. Aimée and Chloé weren’t going to play second fiddle to anyone’s other family.

She’d moved on. Hadn’t she? Aimée’s fists clenched.

“C’est incroyable,”
said new godmother Martine, whispering in her ear. “He’s brought a woman.”

Not the ex-wife, whose picture Aimée had seen. This woman was a smiling redhead, with freckles dusted over her nose. A big-boned athletic type, she wore a hand-knitted wool sweater, a woven rust-colored skirt and short boots. Not an outfit for a christening, the Parisienne in Aimée noted. Provincial, all right. The woman’s gaze was fixed on Chloé.

“Meet Donatine, my wife,” Melac said, his voice low. “She’s helped me through a rough time. She nursed Sandrine until life support failed.”

“Je suis désolée,”
said Aimée, realizing why he’d gone off the radar. His daughter had died. She felt terrible. “I am truly sorry for your loss. I know how much you loved Sandrine.”

This Donatine woman, she now saw, was wearing a matching rose-gold serpent ring.

“Chloé’s
un ange.”
The redhead gazed at the proud father holding Chloé, drinking the sight in.

The hair bristled on the back of Aimée’s neck.


Regarde ça,
Chloé loves her papa,” said Donatine.

Melac smiled from ear to ear, rewarded by Chloé’s cooing.

“Vous me permettez?”
said Donatine. Before Aimée could prevent it, she had Chloé cuddled in her arms.

Aimée’s internal alarms screeched on high alert. Danger. She wanted this woman away, far away.

“Donatine’s a natural,” grinned Melac. “She loves children,” he added.

“Oh, I’m glad, Melac,” she said, relief filling her. “You’ll have a new family, move on with your life.” She reached for his hand.

He pulled back. “I want to register as Chloé’s father, go to the
mairie
and recognize her officially.” He shifted on his boots. “Forgive me, Aimée. I meant to do this before.”

“Six months too late, Melac,” she said. No way was he getting on Chloé’s birth certificate.

Aimée watched Donatine coo and bounce Chloé. It made her skin itch to watch Chloé babble and drool and smile.

“Donatine can’t have children,” Melac said. He paused. “We’re interested in figuring out an arrangement. Sharing care. Custody.”

Aimée’s jaw dropped. Custody? Just like that?

“And where have you been in Chloé’s life so far, Melac?” she said, blood rising to her face.

Melac held out his hand. “Be
juste
, Aimée.”

“You think you can just waltz in like you have some right?” she said. “I’ve raised her without a father, without even a phone call, for six months.” She wanted to grab her baby out of Donatine’s arms.

Near the nave of the church, René was asking for everyone’s attention. “As the proud godparents, Martine and I invite you
to join us for a champagne toast at Aimée’s,” said René. “We’ve prepared a little celebration.”

Melac winked at Donatine. Besotted, that was the only way she could describe that look of his. He caught Aimée’s furious glare, and his intent grey-blue eyes narrowed, dispelling that gaze she’d once gotten lost in. “
Désolé
. This isn’t the place to bring things up. Let’s catch up at your place. Donatine’s brought Chloé a present.”

He’d crossed the line. The gall!

“Melac, I invited you as a courtesy. But you never replied.”

A pall of silence fell over the church vestibule.

“You’ve got some nerve,” she said, her voice rising. “Chloé’s six months old, and you’ve just seen her for the first time.”

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