Paris Match (7 page)

Read Paris Match Online

Authors: Stuart Woods

Tags: #Thriller, #Mystery, #Suspense

She swore under her breath and got out of the van.

Stone grabbed his duffel and followed her. The van drove back down the lane. “What was the argument about?”

“He didn’t want to leave us alone. I told him we weren’t going back tonight, but it didn’t seem to matter to him.”

She opened the unlocked front door, and they walked into a cozy living room, where a small fire blazed in the hearth. There didn’t seem to be a right angle in the room, but somehow, it looked like home.

“Hallo!” a woman’s voice called from another room, then a plump, motherly woman came into the room and conducted a brief conversation with Mirabelle in their native tongue, and she left again.

“Was that your mother?” Stone asked.

“No, but she thinks she is. That was Marie, who has been the family cook for centuries.”

“So this is a family cottage?”

“It is
my
cottage, bought with
my
money. My family has never been here, just Marie, and she is sworn to secrecy. It is my hideaway.”

“Why do you need a hideaway?”

“My life is frenetic. Here is peace.” She went to a corner bar and came back with a martini and a glass of bourbon for Stone. They sipped.

“This is Knob Creek,” he said. “How did you know, and where did you get it?”

“I’ve seen you drink it, and I know a spirits shop that stocks it.”

“You are good to me,” he said, and kissed her.

“Tomorrow night I will take you to a grand restaurant.”

“Tomorrow night, I’m afraid, I have to have dinner at the residence of our ambassador, and I was asked to come alone.”

“Ah,” she said, “the odd man.”

“Exactly.”

“She wants you for herself.”

“No, she just wants an odd man. We met only today, in her office at the embassy.”

“You wait—you will find yourself seated next to her, and there will be hanky-panky.”

Stone laughed.

“This is an American expression, is it not?”

“It is a universal expression, I think.”

“You will see, the woman has a reputation. She consumes men.”

“I am shocked,
shocked
that you would speak of our top diplomat in France in such a way.”

“And you are easy,” she said. “Madame Flournoy will have her way with you.”

“You make me sound helpless.”

“She will render you helpless. She knows what she is doing.”

“Where do you hear these things?”

“I’ve told you—my clients tell me everything. The ambassador is my client. She has spent much money with me and had many fittings. Women need to talk when they are being fitted.”

“And it is men who have the reputation of talking about their affairs. Women are much worse.”

“I will give you that, because it has been my experience. She will have your virtue, you will see.”

Stone laughed loudly. “My virtue! Am I so maidenly?”

Mirabelle reached over and squeezed his crotch. “Before dessert, she will have this in her hand.”

“I tend to be a one-woman-at-a-time man,” he said.

“Why? You should have as many women as you want, who want you.”

“I tire easily.”

“Hah! You tire me, and that is not easy.”

Marie entered the room as Mirabelle withdrew her hand. “Dinner,” she said.

They got up and went into a kitchen, where a big La Cornue range rested against a wall. A table was set before another fireplace, and candles burned on the table.


Bon soir
,” Marie said, and left the room.

“Where is she going?” Stone asked.

“Home. She will come back tomorrow. I will serve us.” She pointed at a chair. “Sit.”

Stone sat. There was an open bottle of Château Palmer 1978, a favorite of Stone’s, on the table.

“Decant the wine, please.”

The cork had already been withdrawn. Stone stood, took the bottle and held it near one of the candles; as he poured, the neck of the bottle was backlit, and he could see when the dregs began to creep up the side of the bottle, so he could stop in time.

“Done,” he said.

She took their plates to the stove and served them from the pots, then sat down. “Did you taste the wine?”

Stone poured himself a little and tasted it.

“Yes? No?”

“We’ll drink it,” Stone said. He poured them both a glass and they tucked into a dinner of boeuf bourguignon.


AN HOUR LATER
they were upstairs in a feather bed, sated and a little drunk.

“I will wear you out,” she said, “so there will be nothing left for the ambassador.”

And she did.

  
  
14

S
tone was wakened by a puff of chilly air; he got up groggily and closed the bedroom window. He was halfway back to the bed before he realized that Mirabelle was not there. She was not in the bathroom, either. A weak light from below was showing on the stairs, so, curious, he walked to the top of the stairway and looked down. The light was coming from the kitchen, and he could hear Mirabelle’s voice, though he could not understand her French.

Still groggy from the dinner, the wine, and sleep, he tiptoed down the stairs and peeked into the kitchen. Mirabelle was standing there, naked, holding what appeared to be an antique shotgun, engraved, with exposed hammers. Both were cocked, and the shotgun was pointed at someone out of
his view. He approached the door and peeked around the jamb. A man wearing black clothes and a black mask pulled over his head stood, his arms raised from his sides. Mirabelle was speaking to him in French that sounded hostile.

“What is going on?” Stone asked, stepping into the kitchen, and as he spoke he remembered that he, too, was naked. A low chuckle came from behind the man’s mask.

Mirabelle took her eyes off her captured prey and looked at Stone. “I have him,” she said.

Stone’s eyes flicked toward the man, and he saw him reach behind his back for something. “No!” Stone said to him, holding up a hand. Everything then switched to slow motion. The man’s hand emerged from behind him holding a semiautomatic pistol; Mirabelle turned toward him and pulled the shotgun trigger. The man’s hand and his gun parted company; the gun was thrown toward the fireplace by the centrifugal force of his swinging arm; his chest exploded and his body flew backward and landed, flat, on the wooden kitchen floor with a loud thump. Only then did Stone hear the blast of the shotgun.


Merde!
” Mirabelle spat, at no one in particular.

“Well, yes,” Stone said, recovering himself. He knew that much French. He was aware of the ridiculous appearance of two naked people, a shotgun, and what was rapidly becoming a corpse on the kitchen floor. Stone walked to her, took the shotgun from her hands, lowered the remaining cocked hammer, and set it on the kitchen table. He walked over to the man on the floor, pulled the mask from his head, and checked his
pupils. Blown. He felt for a pulse at the carotid artery in the neck. None. “I think you’d better call the police,” he said. “Tell them to bring an ambulance and a medical examiner, as well as a crime-scene team.”

Mirabelle had begun to shake violently. Stone went to her and held her against him, and gradually she stopped trembling. She pulled away, then went and stood in front of the dying embers of the fire. “I can’t call the police,” she said.

Stone went and sat at the kitchen table. “You don’t really have a choice.”

“You don’t understand,” Mirabelle said. “If I call the police, my brother will be summoned as soon as they hear my name. He does not know about this cottage, and I don’t want him to.”

“The consequences of your brother’s knowing about this cottage are small compared to those of not summoning the police immediately,” Stone said. “Inevitably, your father will become involved, then someone at the police station or in his office will leak the story to someone in the press, and big headlines will be made. Very likely a criminal trial will result. Did you think we would just bury him in the Bois?”

She thought about it. “You are right,” she said finally.

“Go and look at him,” Stone said. “We have to know if you know him.”

She went and stood over the man, staring into his inert face. “No, I don’t know him.”

“Is there any reason why anyone might send an armed man to your house?”

She nodded. “For you.”

He nodded. “You have a point.” He walked out of the kitchen into the living room, checking everything. No ransacking. He found the front door open and scratches on the lock. Outside, on the doormat, was a canvas satchel. He returned to the kitchen. “Very likely he was a burglar—his tools are outside. But nothing has been disturbed. I had better make a phone call before you call the police.” He took her by the hand and led her upstairs. “Get dressed,” he said, then found his cell phone and called a number on his Favorites page.

One ring. “LaRose.”

“Rick, it’s Stone. I’m at the cottage of a woman named Mirabelle Chance.”

“The daughter of the prefect of police?”

“And the sister of his son, who is in charge of criminal investigations in Paris.”

“What’s happened?”

“She’s shot an apparent burglar, as he was preparing to shoot her. I’m a witness.”

“Where are you?”

“What is the address here?” he asked Mirabelle. She told him, and he told LaRose.

“Don’t call the police,” Rick said. “I’ll be there in half an hour.”

“Rick, we don’t want the corpse to get much colder, and it’s not a good idea to cover this up. We’ll call the police in fifteen minutes. You get here as fast as you can, and I’ll see what I can learn in the meantime.”

“I’m on my way.” He hung up.

“You stay here,” Stone said to Mirabelle, “while I go downstairs and do some things. In fifteen minutes call the police, not your brother. After the first call, then your brother. He’ll want everything to have been done by the book.”

She nodded, pulled a sweater over her head, then sat down on the bed.

“It might do you good to lie down until they get here, but don’t fall asleep. When they arrive, answer their questions truthfully.”

“All right.” She glanced at the bedside clock, then stretched out on the bed.

Stone pulled on some clothes and went downstairs. He turned on all the lights he could find in the room, including the one over the stove, then he looked under the kitchen sink and found some rubber dishwashing gloves and put them on. He walked over to the corpse and stood astride it, staring at the face. He hadn’t seen the man before. He appeared to be in his mid-to-late thirties. No scars. He pulled up the black sweatshirt and checked the abdomen. Flat, no scars or tattoos. He pushed back the lips and looked at the teeth. All of them were white, even, very handsome. He bent over and felt the pockets of his trousers: empty. He reached under the corpse and felt the hip pockets: still nothing. He found an empty holster on the belt in the small of the back. He looked at the man’s hands: no rings or tattoos. A cheap wristwatch on the right wrist. Nothing hanging around the neck. No ID of any kind. The
man was a pro; the question was: What kind of a pro? Burglar? Assassin?

Stone returned the gloves to the cabinet under the sink, then went back upstairs. Mirabelle seemed to be sleeping. He stroked her pale face, and she jerked awake. “Time to call the police,” he said.

  
  
15

R
ick LaRose, amazingly, got there first, wearing jeans and a sweater, looking interested, but unflustered. He took off his shoes and walked around the corpse in his stocking feet. “He’s a beauty, isn’t he? What have you learned?” he asked Stone.

“Caucasian male, mid-thirties, six feet, a hundred and eighty, very fit, either extensive and expensive dental work or the most perfect natural teeth you’ve ever seen. No identifying marks, tattoos, or scars. No ID, no indication of nationality, had a manicure recently, no possessions, except a pistol, a holster, an extra magazine, the tool bag on the doormat, and a cheap wristwatch. Wears the wristwatch on the right wrist but is right-handed.”

“Why do you think he’s right-handed?”

“Because that’s the hand that went for the gun.”

Rick took another good look at the corpse. “Well observed,” he said. “Part of you is still a cop.”

“Always will be.”

A claxon could be heard approaching from a distance, getting louder. Then it got softer.

“He’s missed the drive,” Stone said.

The claxon got louder again, then found the driveway and a car and an ambulance pulled into the forecourt, lights flashing.

“What an entrance!” Rick said, laughing. “It might be Inspector Clouseau!”

The gendarmes were quiet, quick, and all business.

Before they could speak Rick showed them an ID and jerked a thumb toward Stone and said something in French.

“And where, may I ask, is Mademoiselle Chance?” the officer asked in perfect English.

“Upstairs,” Stone replied. “I’ll get her.”

“If you please.”

Stone went upstairs; Mirabelle was asleep again. He woke her gently. “The police are here.” She sat up and rubbed her eyes. “
Merde
,” she said. That seemed to be her opinion of the whole business.

“Remember, tell them the truth.” He took her hand and led her down the stairs to the kitchen.

The officer switched to French, and Stone didn’t
understand anything for twenty minutes. He hoped she was telling the truth.

Then the room got very quiet, and everyone turned toward the door. Stone followed their gaze. A man stood in the kitchen doorway: he was tall, had a gray crew cut, and was wearing a black leather trench coat. He lacked only an eye patch and a dueling scar to be good casting for a B-movie Gestapo agent. “Allo, Rick,” he said. “How does it go?” His voice was calm and uninflected.

Rick shrugged. “It goes.”

He walked over and looked at the corpse. “And what guest do we have here?”

His officer responded with a stream of French. The man stuck to English, an apparent courtesy to Rick. “Do you believe this to be self-defense?” he asked his officer. “Or do we have murder?” The man shrugged, as if the decision were not his to make. The man walked over to the table and looked at the shotgun. “My grandfather’s,” he said. He walked over to Mirabelle, took her by the arms, and kissed her on the forehead. “Are you all right,
ma petite
?” She nodded. “Is what my officer said the true thing?” She nodded again.

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