Grace surveyed the symmetrically arranged park with its formal fountains, rows of thick, boxy yew trees and neat gravel paths. ‘This is very posh.’
‘Very posh indeed. It was first built in the early 1600s.’
‘I had no idea it would be so grand. It must be expensive.’
‘I believe the apartment was a gift.’
‘From whom?’
‘I understand that it’s been in the Hiver family for years.’
‘Is that usual?’ It struck Grace as particularly brazen to have the two worlds so closely intertwined. ‘I mean, to give a mistress a family property?’
‘The rich make their own rules.’
‘It isn’t at all what I was expecting.’ She bit her lower lip uncertainly.
Monsieur Tissot looked across at her. ‘Were you hoping for a garret?’
‘I don’t know… I suppose so.’
‘We don’t have to go in, if you’d rather not.’
‘I know.’ Pushing her hands deeper into her coat pockets, Grace slipped her fingers round her father’s old lighter for comfort. ‘But I want to.’
Monsieur Tissot led her through the galleries and into a narrow passageway with a wrought-iron gate. Pushing it open, they walked into a courtyard beyond, a kind of rectangular-shaped, cobblestone space with a small fountain in the middle. Ivy wound, reaching its long tendrils, thick and deep green, up the side of the building, which was classical in proportions, the red brick augmented by ivory stone. Large French windows, leading to balconies, looked out on to the courtyard from the first and second floors. Above, shutters covered the windows on the higher floors. The flagstone steps, with their curving wrought-iron handrail, were worn away in the centre from centuries of use. And the front door was stripped oak, two massive arched panels with gleaming brass knobs.
‘I’ll talk to the concierge. She has a set of keys.’ Monsieur Tissot walked round to a side passage and knocked on the concierge’s door. Grace waited, standing a little apart, out of sight. After a few minutes, he returned.
‘We’re in luck. The apartment is empty. It was cleared a few days ago. I explained that you were Madame d’Orsey’s heir and she was very obliging.’
He unlocked the outer door and Grace followed him in through the front entrance. A high spiral staircase wound above them.
A gust of wind sent a few dry leaves spinning round their feet. Grace pulled her coat around her. She had the uncomfortable feeling of trespassing. But it was too late now; her feet were already in motion, following Monsieur Tissot up to the first floor. He unlocked the door, swung it open.
‘After you.’
‘Thank you.’ Grace pulled her shoulders back, trying to appear more confident than she felt. ‘But I think I’d like to go in alone, if that’s all right with you.’
‘Certainly. I’ll be downstairs if you need me.’
Grace waited until he’d gone. Then, taking a deep breath, she walked inside.
Her heels clicked on the smooth surface of the parquet floor in the entranceway, echoing throughout the empty flat. It led into a large, formal drawing room, with three sets of French windows opening on to a balcony overlooking the square below. It was an enormous room, easily thirty-five feet in length, with high ceilings and detailed moulding. The sheer scale of it was breathtaking. An imposing black marble mantelpiece dominated; above, a glass chandelier sparkled. Grace could make out, from the faded markings on the toile wallpaper, the outlines where clusters of paintings had hung; the shadows where chair backs and tables had once stood against the walls.
No, this wasn’t what she’d imagined at all. Perhaps not a garret but something much more modest in size, discreet. But this was a vast reception room, capable of entertaining on a grand scale. It seemed not just extravagant but somehow audacious to keep a mistress in such opulent style.
She moved into the room beyond.
Here was the bedroom, smaller, yet still luxurious in its proportions. As soon as she entered, the smell of perfume hit her. Not flowery or whimsical but sophisticated, strong. Like a hand reaching out across the impossible distance to pierce the veil that separated them, it pressed hard against her solar plexus, stopping her in her tracks. It had a metallic sharpness, almost intrusive in its originality.
The hairs on the back of Grace’s neck rose. This woman was real, not some soft, benevolent, fairy godmother from a children’s story. Grace was on her territory now.
A carved double wooden bed frame stood in the centre of the room. It was a lit bateau style frame, with an intricate inlaid-wood design on the headboard, the only piece of furniture left in the whole apartment.
Grace looked up.
The ceiling was painted a very pale blue, illuminated with an inner golden light. It mimicked, very cleverly, the delicate shades of a summer’s sky.
This is where Madame d’Orsey entertained her lover, practised her art.
The thought sent a chill through Grace’s spine. She couldn’t help but think of Vanessa; her ghost seemed to drift soundlessly through these rooms, self-possessed, unapologetic, padding across the wooden floor in bare feet and pearls.
Love was an art, a game teased out and manipulated by skilled players.
A game Grace didn’t know how to play.
Turning away, she peered into the bathroom, with its roll-top bath and mysterious, low bidet. The cabinets were open and empty; the plumbing reassuringly noisy, the cistern tank of the toilet filling and refilling again and again.
She went through to the kitchen.
It was tiny. The smallest, most ordinary room in the whole apartment, with a green Formica counter top and a deep, square butler’s sink. There was a simple built-in table with benches against one wall, with an ashtray and a morning paper on it.
Grace sat down. This room was dark, warm and womb-like, the ceiling low. A cheap plastic clock ticked above the oven. The newspaper, Le Figaro, had been refolded after it had been read. She turned it over, looking at the date. It was more than a month old. Along the bottom of the page was a series of even circles, drawn in pen – the idle doodles of an otherwise engaged mind.
She traced her finger lightly across the rim of the ashtray. It was an inexpensive design, reminiscent of the styles of the 1920s; a simple square in heavy pottery china. It had been broken and then glued back together. But it wasn’t the kind of object that seemed worth saving. She turned it over. Just visible in the lower right-hand corner was the faded inscription, Riker’s Drug Store, New York City.
The other rooms felt unreal, like part of a stage set. But this room was intimate, quiet. The mysterious Madame d’Orsey had sat here, listening to the ticking clock, the dull hum of the refrigerator; smoking, reading the paper. A middle-aged woman, a woman whose face, as Monsieur Tissot had put it, was changed by pain.
Grace stared at the broken ashtray.
Le droit de choisir.
The phrase repeated itself again and again in her mind.
No one had ever advocated her independence before. The entire success of her marriage, her whole career as a woman, depended largely upon her cheerful, uncomplicated dependence, first on her family and then on her husband. But now this stranger was challenging her; asking her to make choices, take responsibility.
Why?
It supposed an intimacy; expectations. But Grace didn’t even know her, let alone approve of Eva d’Orsey.
Opening her handbag she took out a crumpled pack of Chesterfields and lit one.
Pretty girls didn’t lead independent lives; didn’t Eva d’Orsey know that? Their triumphs were measured in the swiftness with which they moved from one pair of waiting arms to another. It was the less fortunate girls – the ‘sensible’ and ‘clever’ ones – who had to face the world on their own. (When she was young, if the word ‘intelligent’ was used when describing a girl, it was always a criticism; nothing signalled more completely the hopelessness of their future situation than the label of ‘clever.’)
Exhaling sl
owly, Grace watched the smoke gather just above her head.
And yet their handicap bought them freedom – just the sort of liberty and responsibility this unknown woman was demanding of her now.
Leaning her chin in her palm, Grace opened the newspaper.
If she were truly the beneficiary, why did it feel as if Madame d’Orsey were taking something away from her rather than giving it?
Turning the pages, she tried to string together the few words she recognized. There was a sale at the Galeries Lafayette, with the promise of a new season of architecturally engineered girdles and brassieres outlined in bold drawings… a photograph of some sort of sporting disaster involving a young man and a racing car… obituaries… classified ads… here was something circled in black pen…
Avis de saisie vente de boutique, 23 Rue Christine, Saint-Germain, Paris.
Boutique… that meant shop, didn’t it? Avais de saisie vente… Her French wasn’t good enough to make out the rest.
Grace stared out of the window above the sink, at the shadow of the sun creeping across the wall opposite.
The little kitchen was soothing, familiar in its domesticity. The clock ticked; here the city felt removed.
I don’t know what I’m doing, she thought, pulling the cracked ashtray closer, taking another drag. I’m completely out of my depth.
Le droit de choisir.
But the right to choose what?
Grace wasn’t used to making choices on her own; wasn’t certain she liked it. How would she know if she’d made the right ones?
Sighing, she flicked a bit of ash off the end of her cigarette.
There was a knock at the door.
Grace started, hurrying to stub out her cigarette in the ashtray.
‘Monsieur Tissot? Monsieur Tissot, is that you?’ She stood up.
There was no reply. ‘Hello?’
Again, another knock.
Grace went into the front hallway. Listened. If she did nothing, maybe they’d go away.
But they didn’t; the knocking continued.
Grace opened the door. ‘Oh, hello!’ she smiled in relief.
A young girl was standing on the landing, holding a cardboard box. She was maybe thirteen or fourteen, with even brown plaits and a serious face.
‘May I help you?’
‘Bonjour, madame. Parlez-vous français?’ she asked, pronouncing each word with exaggerated clarity.
‘Ah, well, oui… un peu… mais je ne parle pas très bien…’
‘I speak some English.’ (Obviously the answer to the girl’s question was ‘no’.) ‘The man downstairs said you were, ah, the heir? Is this true?’
‘Ah, yes. I suppose I am.’
‘Yes, um, my mother, she wanted you to have this.’ The girl handed her the box.
‘I’m sorry, who is your mother?’
‘Pardon.’ The girl was looking down at her shoes. ‘She is the concierge, Madame Assange. She says this is for you.’
‘Really?’
‘You’re English, yes?’
‘Yes.’
‘And this is you, yes?’ She pointed to the top of the box.
Scrawled across one corner was her name: Grace Munroe.
Grace felt her skin go cold. It was written in the same, strong slanted hand she’d seen on the paper in Monsieur Tissot’s office. ‘Yes’ she nodded, ‘that’s me.’
Grace opened the lid.
Inside was a collection of half a dozen small china figurines, wrapped in newspaper; delicate frolicking shepherdesses with white faces and flowered gowns, the kind of inexpensive, sentimental bric-a-brac she abhorred.
‘Madame d’Orsey gave them to Maman for you, to keep safe. She didn’t want Monsieur Migret to have them.’
‘Who is Monsieur Migret?’
‘Monsieur Migret owns… ah… l’antiquaire… Il vend… he sells les bibelots… um… les deuxième main…’ the girl pointed to her hand.
‘A second-hand shop?’ Grace guessed. (She’d always been good at charades.)
‘Yes,’ the girl nodded. ‘Second-hand. He clears the house when someone dies.’
‘And he cleared this apartment?’
‘Yes.’ The girl turned to go.
‘Wait,’ Grace stopped her. ‘This Monsieur Migret, do you know where his business is?’
‘He has a shop… um… on Rue Saint-Claude.’
‘Rue Saint-Claude,’ Grace repeated, committing it to memory. ‘Is that close?’
‘A few streets away.’
‘Thank you.’ Grace another took a step forward. ‘Do you think, perhaps, I could meet your mother? I would like to thank her and to speak to her, about Madame d’Orsey.’
The girl hesitated, her face suddenly guarded. ‘My mother does not speak English, madame.’
‘Yes, but maybe you could help me,’ Grace suggested, with a smile. ‘You could sit between us. Or Monsieur Tissot, the man you met downstairs, he would help.’
The girl’s brow furrowed. ‘She does not like gossip.’
‘But this wouldn’t be gossip. I just have a few questions about what Madame d’Orsey was like.’
‘Yes, well…’ The girl inched away from the door. ‘I will let her know. She is very busy though.’
She started back down the steps.
‘Did you know her?’ Grace called after her.
The girl turned. ‘Madame d’Orsey?’
‘Yes.’
She thought a moment. ‘She gave me once a doll for my birthday. I was five. It was very pretty – with blonde curls made from real hair and a china face. The nicest one I have ever owned.’
‘So she was a friend of the family?’
The girl looked at her blankly. ‘Oh no, madame. My mother would not let me keep it.’
‘Why not?’
The girl shifted. ‘You will have to ask her, madame.’
Grace watched as she slipped into the shadows of the hallway and down the stairs. Far below, she heard urgent, muted voices, speaking in French. Then a door closed and there was silence.
New York, 1927
The proper way to enter a guest’s room is to knock, three times. First, you knock. Next, you knock again, loudly, calling out, ‘Maid service.’ Last, you unlock the door and pause. ‘Maid service,’ you say, knocking one more time. And still, you are likely to walk in on quite a few situations, the least disturbing of which is a guest emerging from the bath.
It was amazing how many people did hear you call out but didn’t seem to mind. Eva had noticed that as soon as she put on her uniform, she became invisible. And in situations which would have been considered improper if she were wearing normal clothes, she suddenly disappeared.
This was the procedure Eva followed when delivering extra towels to room 313.
There was no reply.
The bathroom door was slightly ajar and she could hear the taps running.
‘Maid service,’ she called out again. ‘I’ll leave your extra towels on the bed, sir.’
‘Thank you.’
She put them down.
There were some cards spread out on the table; in several rows, stacked in groups. Eva had seen plenty of people playing solitaire but she’d never seen a game like this one. But already, she thought she recognized some sort of pattern.
She moved closer.
It wasn’t obvious.
It was more than just suits…
‘So.’ Mr Lambert was standing in the bathroom doorway, wearing nothing but a bath towel, dabbing shaving foam from his jaw. ‘What would you do next?’
Startled, Eva grabbed the towels. ‘Sorry, sir.’ She headed for the door.
He leaned against the bathroom door frame. ‘Aren’t you forgetting something?’
She stared at him. The towel was wrapped round his waist; he was well built, dark curls against the tawny skin of his chest.
He smiled.
‘Oh!’ She felt herself blushing and handed him the towels. ‘Pardon me, sir.’
�
�You’re the girl who said hello to me in the hallway, aren’t you?’
‘I… yes.’
He nodded to the card game. ‘The way you were looking at that, I thought maybe you were trying to figure it out. Not many people can, you know.’
It sounded like a challenge.
‘Go on,’ he grinned, ‘tell me what you see.’
She looked again at the cards. ‘They’re prime numbers, aren’t they? Or superior suits, whichever comes first.’
‘That’s right,’ he nodded. ‘Don’t tell me you’ve played it before.’
‘No, sir. Cards are a bad idea.’
‘Most things are. But if you don’t play, then how did you figure it out?’
‘I’m pretty good with numbers.’
‘Really?’ His eyes narrowed. ‘How do you know you’re good at numbers?’
She felt suddenly defensive, out of her depth. ‘I’m sorry. I was mistaken.’
Mr Lambert went to the dresser, lit a cigarette. ‘Do you think I’m going to hurt you or get you into trouble?’
‘You’re asking a lot of questions.’
Mr Lambert smiled. ‘I’m bored. That’s hardly a crime, is it?’
She shook her head.
‘So,’ he sat on the edge of the bed, ‘are you going to answer me or not?’
‘I used to work for a family in Brooklyn. The man, he was a professor. He used to work on problems all day long in his study and sometimes, well, he’d leave puzzles on the blackboard.’
‘What kind of puzzles?’
‘I’m not certain what you’d call them. Number problems. They had patterns and sequences. Some of the numbers were already there and I would try to fill in the blanks.’
‘What made him think that a maid could do that? I used to live with household servants and I tell you, most of them could barely make change.’
‘Oh no, sir! I didn’t fill them in on the blackboard,’ she corrected him. ‘I did it in my head. You see, one day I accidentally erased something when I was cleaning. I wiped away a problem that he was working on. Except I didn’t know it at the time. His wife became furious. Only, I was able to copy it out again, the same way. So I got to keep my job. But he never knew about it. It was between her and me.’
The Perfume Collector Page 8