T
he tide was low off the coast of Monaco that Friday evening when the
W. W. Hale
pulled away from the long row of yachts that were an almost permanent part of the shore. The moon was only a tiny sliver as it rose in the distance over Italy. Everything, it seemed, was at its lowest as Kat stood in the doorway of the ship’s galley kitchen and said, “It’s over.”
The big door on the Sub-Zero refrigerator slammed closed, and Hale turned to Kat, a look on his face that was somewhere between rage and relief. Gabrielle had a new scrape on the side of her face and ice on her knee. The Bagshaws stood together beside Simon, who was still slowly sorting through Interpol’s files—face by face, job by job.
Kat smiled despite herself at the sight of them. “So…the gang’s all here.”
“Hey, Kitty,” Angus said.
“Sorry for getting in the way, Kat.” Hamish eased closer. He seemed even taller and significantly wider. She wondered for a second what he’d been eating to grow so big. “If we’d known you guys were pulling a job, we never would have blown into town unannounced and—”
“It’s okay, guys. Really.” Kat climbed onto one of the stools that lined the granite-covered bar. It felt harder than it should have to pull herself up. “It’s over. It’s fine. I’m assuming they filled you in?”
The Bagshaws had never been ones for overthinking, and Kat highly doubted they were going to start then.
“Sure did, Kitty!” Hamish threw his arm around her. Angus joined from the other side, squeezing until she hurt.
“We heard you were in Edinburgh in January,” Angus said. “But you didn’t call.”
“You didn’t write,” his brother added.
“Don’t feel bad, boys,” Hale said from across the galley. “She doesn’t call anyone anymore.”
Part of being a great thief means seeing what isn’t there—the hidden sensor or invisible grid, the lie a guard really, really wants to believe. So Kat knew what Hale was saying; she’d heard it on an escalator and in the backseat of a chauffeured car, on the brownstone stairs, and now, half a world away.
“Don’t be mad, Hale.”
“You went off script today,” he snapped.
“We were blown.”
“And you got in an elevator with that woman. Alone.”
“I’m a big girl, Hale,” Kat said. “Besides, she’s not going to hurt me.”
“We don’t know that,” Hale shot back. “We don’t know anything about her.”
“Yes.” Kat had to laugh. “We do. I’ve known her my whole life. Sure”—she added before he could cut her off—“I
met
her two weeks ago, but I know her.” Kat thought about Maggie at the age of nine, pulling a diamond heist at Harrods. “I know her very, very well.”
Angus looked at Hamish. “I hate it when Mom and Dad fight.”
Hamish smoothed his brother’s messy hair. “Me too.”
It was then that Marcus appeared in the room. His dark suit coat was gone, and he wore the sleeves of his white shirt rolled up to just below his elbows. Kat might have joked about the display of skin were it not for the neat apron he wore and the sense of purpose he exuded as he walked to the wide stove top and took the cover from a large Dutch oven. Steam billowed from the pot, and Kat closed her eyes. Instead of the smooth cool granite, her fingers felt rough old wood. They were at sea on the other side of the world, but with one deep breath, Kat was sitting at her uncle’s table.
The child who had never had a house felt homesick. The thief who had robbed the Henley wanted help. And the girl who’d walked away from her family business came to realize that, no matter what she did, she never could leave the kitchen.
“So…someone stole the Cleopatra,” Hamish said, as if he couldn’t take the silence one minute more.
His brother gave a low whistle and shook his head. “Wish we’d been around for that.”
“No.” Gabrielle repositioned her ice pack. “You don’t.”
“Angus,” Kat said, turning to the brothers. “Hamish, her real accent is British. Do you know her?”
The two brothers stared, each daring the other to speak.
“No,” Amish said softly.
“How bad is it?” Hale asked her.
“Bad,” Kat said. She stared down at the granite, trying to find a pattern in the specks of light and dark, but there was no sense to be found in it. “We’re blown. She knows both of you.” She pointed between Hale and Gabrielle.
“She doesn’t know me,” Simon said.
Kat laughed. “I think we should assume she knows everyone. It would be like…” She shook her head, tried to bring her mind back into focus.
“Uncle Eddie,” Gabrielle finally finished for her. “It would be like trying to con Uncle Eddie.”
“Yeah,” Kat said. “She knows…everything.”
“Like what?” Gabrielle asked.
“Like who we are…Like why we’re here…Like every con we could possibly run to get the emerald back…”
“So?” Hale asked.
“So she’s better than I am!”
Part of Kat hoped that at least one member of her crew would exclaim,
Of course not
! Another part of her presumed that someone might say,
Don’t be ridiculous
. But no one quoted her résumé. Not a soul mentioned the Henley.
“We can’t do it,” Kat admitted slowly. “We just can’t…win.”
Hamish smiled and rubbed his hands together. “Sure we can. What do you say? Pigs in a Blanket?” He leaned over the cool counter and raised his eyebrows at Gabrielle.
“The only way I’ll get under a blanket with you is if both of us are on fire,” she told him.
“You guys don’t get it,” Kat snapped. “We can’t con her.
She
knows
all the old cons. She probably invented half of them.”
“So we think of some new ones.” Gabrielle rose.
“She knows
us
.” Kat looked at Hale.
“So we don’t rely on us,” Hale countered.
“She knows Uncle Eddie. I’d bet money she knows everyone we know.”
Hale moved closer. “So we find someone she doesn’t know.”
The ship was moving, slipping farther and farther from the shore, and yet it felt as if the whole world was watching. The kitchen was too crowded. Kat’s stomach turned, and so she kept her gaze on Hale, as if he were a solid point on the horizon that she was going to focus on until she could no longer feel the yacht rock or sway.
“We’re going to find someone she doesn’t know,” Hale said again.
Right then, Kat swore she wouldn’t look away for anything, but that was before she heard the footsteps, saw the shadow in the doorway, and heard the voice that asked, “You mean someone like me?”
T
he first time Kat had seen the boy who stood framed in the doorway, they’d both been standing on a street corner in Paris. Their first conversation had been over a picked lock and a picked pocket, and Kat had had a sneaking suspicion that she was in the room with someone with a great deal of natural talent and the subsequent disrespect for laws and truth. But those weren’t the moments that came to Kat’s mind as the whole room stood staring, waiting to see what other surprises might be lurking on the other side of that door.
“What?” Nick asked, looking at the awestruck teens. “You can’t recognize me when you aren’t leaving me in a locked gallery for the police to find?”
“Oh, don’t be silly, Nicholas,” Gabrielle said, casually inspecting her nails. “We knew museum security would find you long before the cops did.”
“Sweet as always, Gabrielle.” Nick nodded at the girl, then turned to Simon and the Bagshaws. “Fellas…sorry to barge in.”
“I think the technical term is
stow away
,” Hale said.
Nick snapped his fingers. “I think you’re right.”
“What?” Hale looked him up and down. “No wet suit?”
“Didn’t want to mess up my hair,” Nick said with a smile.
And through it all, Kat sat speechless.
“Boys, boys,” Gabrielle said, leaning against the counter like a jazz singer from the thirties. “Play nice.”
“I am nice,” Hale said, but his voice was made of glass. “I was just about to ask our old friend Nick how Paris is these days.”
“Lyon,” Nick corrected. “My mom’s at Interpol headquarters now.” His gaze slid sideways to Kat. “Or didn’t you know?”
He sounded perfectly straight when he said it, and that was when Kat realized two very important things: the first was that Nick was going to keep her secret. The second was that Nick…was good. She wasn’t sure which she wanted to think about, so instead she just said, “How long have you been here?”
“Long enough.”
“And exactly
why
are you here?” Kat asked. “The last time you offered your services, I seem to remember you secretly planning to catch us all red-handed and turn us over to Interpol. Or are you out of your family business?”
Kat saw her reflection in the windows. There was nothing beyond the glass but an empty expanse of black.
“Maybe I switched sides.” Nick ran a hand along the granite island. “Maybe I came all this way to help you steal the Antony Emerald.”
“It’s not the Antony,” Hale corrected.
“Interpol sent a team to help authenticate it,” Nick told them. “It’s real, Kat.”
“Oh, it’s a real emerald, all right,” Gabrielle said, then smiled smugly. “It’s just not the Antony.”
“No,” Nick said. “Can’t be. The only other emerald that size is…”
“Oh yeah. It’s the Cleopatra,” Gabrielle told him.
“How do you know?” Nick asked.
“We know,” Kat said slowly, “because we’re the ones who stole it.”
Lying awake in the king-size bed she shared with Gabrielle, Kat stared up at the chandelier that hung overhead, watched it sway like a pendulum with the waves.
When she tossed and turned, she tried to blame the sea. When sleep didn’t come, she wanted to think it was because of Gabrielle’s snoring. But when Gabrielle began to kick, Kat knew there was no use in fighting. A fully conscious Gabrielle was a force to be reckoned with. A sleeping (and possibly cursed) Gabrielle was a whole other level of dangerous, so Kat slipped from the bed and quietly toward the door.
The phone was right where she’d left it. The number was one she knew by heart. And as she stepped out onto the deck, she realized it was early evening in Paraguay. Or was it Uruguay? It didn’t really matter, Kat thought as she stood, waiting to be able to say, “Hi, Daddy.”
“What’s wrong?” he asked, and Kat laughed.
“Nothing. I just—”
“Kat, what is wrong?”
“I missed you. Is missing you not allowed?”
“No, it is allowed. In fact, it’s my preference. But you don’t exactly have a track record of preferential behavior.”
Kat leaned against the railing and whispered, “I miss you.”
“You said that already,” her father told her from the other side of the world.
“Yeah, but this time I really mean it.”
“So, word on the street is that your cousin has conned you into something with a count.”
“A duke,” Kat corrected. “We’re—”
“So what are you
really
doing?”
“Scoping the caves around Zurich, looking for a Degas no one’s seen in sixty years.”
She could almost imagine the smile on her father’s face when he said, “That’s my girl.”
It was too cold on the deck, and Kat wished she’d brought a jacket, wished she’d waited for the sun. She imagined her father, tanned and tired and happy. She thought of Maggie, and for a second, considered begging for forgiveness or pleading for help, but Kat couldn’t do either. She had too much of her uncle’s pride, too little of her father’s charm. Kat was just…Kat—chasing after the past, and doing it, for better or worse, all on her own.
After she had said good-bye to her father, Kat stayed outside for a long time, staring at the water.
“Don’t fall in.”
Kat jumped at the sound of Hale’s voice, then slowly turned to face him.
“Don’t say that. With the way our luck is going, at least one of us is bound to end up overboard before this thing is through.”
She felt him come to stand beside her, taking his place at the rail.
“So what are you doing out here in the middle of the night?”
“Thinking.”
“See.” Hale pointed at her. “Right there. That is your problem.”
It was long past midnight, and the Mediterranean waters looked like ink as they lapped against the
W. W. Hale
’s white hull. The lights of places like Saint-Tropez and Nice were tiny diamonds in the distance, and it felt to Kat as if she and Hale were closer to the moon than any other living soul or thing.
“You didn’t hear her today, Hale. She’s so…good.”
“You said that.”
“She’s seen everything. She’s done everything. Hey”—she pointed at him—“maybe a Catherine the Great? You know, Uncle Felix posed as a curator at the Cairo Museum one year, and—”
“For a while there, it looked like you were giving up on this,” he whispered.
“I know, but I thought that if we—”
“Kat…”
“Yes?”
“Stop thinking.”
Of all the things that had been asked of Kat in her fifteen years, that was perhaps the hardest. But she tried—she really did. To forget about the lapping waves and deep blue water. To ignore the ticking clock, the mounting odds, and the tiny voice in the back of her mind saying,
I kissed you. I kissed you. I kissed you
.
And you left.
“You’re the only friend I’ve ever had, Hale. You know that, right?”
“Don’t lie—”
Kat shook her head. “If I were lying, it would sound a lot better than that.” She saw Hale draw a breath and ease toward her, but Kat talked on. “In my family, we take our cons seriously, you know? Like Grandmother’s pearls, or the good china. They’ve been handed down for years. Centuries. Someone taught Uncle Eddie, and Uncle Eddie taught my mom. And Mom taught Dad, and Dad taught—”
“You.”
“Yeah,” Kat admitted while Hale inched closer.
“And you taught me.”
Kat laughed and turned back to the water. “Sorry about that.”
But Hale wasn’t laughing when he said, “I’m not.”
Standing there in the moonlight, Kat saw him set his jaw and turn toward her.
“Someone did them first, Kat. Don’t forget that. Someone, somewhere did them first.” He shrugged. “So we’ll do something first. Who knows? Maybe a hundred years from now, two crazy kids will be debating the merits of the Kat in the Hat.”
“Really? That’s the name you’re going with?”
He laughed and gripped the rail. “It’s a work in progress.”
Out on the water, without the heat of the sun, Kat’s breath fogged in the chilly air.
“Do you think it’s real?” he asked.
“I know it’s real. I’m the one who carried it out of the heating duct, remember?”
She shivered, and Hale placed his arms around her, gripping the rail on either side, pressing her tight between the cool rail and the warmth of his chest. “Not the Cleopatra—the Antony. Do you think it’s out there somewhere?”
“Do you think that two thousand years ago there was an emerald so big you could cut it in half and get two stones that size?”
“Do you think there was a love so big it could curse anyone who went against it?”
“It’s just a story, Hale.”
“Yeah, but it’s a
good
story. Isn’t it?”
He squeezed her as if forcing out an answer.
“I don’t know. I mean, it’s kind of silly.”
“Silly? Not the word I usually associate with the power couple of the Roman Empire, but whatever.”
“I mean, she was Cleopatra.…Shouldn’t she and Antony have known better? They were so different.…”
“Variety is the spice of life.”
“And from a thousand miles apart.”
“Absence makes the heart grow fonder.”
“And doomed.”
She strongly suspected his mind was on anything but Cleopatra when he let her go and asked, “Don’t you mean scared?”
Kat felt her heart beat faster, adrenaline pumping through her veins, and she knew he was right. She studied him for a long time. “Do you believe in curses, Hale?”
He looked at her. “I believe in you.”