Authors: Carina Axelsson
Copyright © 2015 by Carina Axelsson
Cover and internal design © 2015 by Sourcebooks, Inc.
Cover design by Rose Audette
Cover illustration © Yasuko
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Originally published in 2014 in the United Kingdom by Usborne Publishing Ltd., an imprint of Usborne House.
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For Ellen, Marina, and Victoria
I'm on my way to
Chic: New York
, the fashion magazineâor more specifically, to their head office located just off Times Square in New York City. And before you start thinking this is another one of my mom's hard-core plans to get me modelingâ¦it's not.
You see, I'm not in New York City on my way to
Chic
as a model. I'm on my way to
Chic
as a
detective
.
Not that I know many details yet about the case I've been asked to solve.
The call from
Chic: New York
came two days ago, just as I wrapped up solving my first big mystery during Paris Fashion Week.
“Axelle, I thought you might be interested to hear about a call I've had from New York,” my modeling agent, Miriam, said on the phone Saturday afternoon, her breathless voice a conspiratorial whisper. I remember the exasperation I felt as I stood, ice cream in hand, on a bridge over the Seine, trying to formulate an excuse to get out of whatever modeling job this was surely about.
But the call wasn't about a modeling job, and my exasperation quickly turned to excitement when I heard her continue: “Have you ever heard of the Black Amelia? It's the most famous black diamond in the world.
Chic: New York
isâwasâusing it on a cover shoot, butâ¦it's missing. It hasn't been seen since yesterday.
Chic
would prefer not to involve the police just yet, so they are wondering if you'd be interested in accepting the case.”
Interested?
Are you kidding? Do fashionistas wear black? Do I like French fries?
The
Chic: New York
team must have heard about me solving the mystery of missing French fashion designer Belle La Luneâand that I'd managed to find her before the French police! I was thrilled that
Chic
had asked for my help and accepted the job right away. But before jetting off to the Big Apple, I went home to London with Mom to repack my suitcase, and to see my dad and Halley (my West Highland white terrier). And so this morning I caught a direct flight out of London.
Sitting in the back of the enormous black Cadillac Escalade SUV (sent by
Chic
) that had picked me up at John F. Kennedy International Airport, I stretched my legs and stifled a quick yawn before pressing my face against the window. I silently ogled the view as the driver, whose name I'd learned was Ira Perlman, deftly wove his way through the late-morning Manhattan traffic.
In case you've never been there, New York City looks like a film set. As we navigated our way out of the Queens-Midtown Tunnel, all around me I could see shiny skyscrapers, pavement crowded with a gazillion people, and honking yellow cabs. And even if it had been my first time in the Big Apple (I'd actually been with my parents a couple of times before), the grid-like street layout would still have felt familiar from various films and television shows (like
Law
& Order
âmy grandma loved the U.S. version and watched it for years, in between
Midsomer
Murders
and
Miss
Marple
). The city seemed to vibrate with a frenetic energy all its own.
I watched as plastic bags blew across the streets and leaves fluttered in the early spring wind. Cool, sharp gusts were blowing in off the New Jersey shore. I had to admit that my mom had been right to insist that I pack the new trench coat she'd bought me. (“Burberry!” she'd chirped. “And only half price!”)
Apparently my mom was psychic too, because at that moment my phone rang. Bracing myself for the onslaught of questions, I answered.
“Axelle, darling! How was the flight? How's New York City? Wonderful, isn't it? I wish I was with you! Your baggage didn't get lost, did it?” The questions came so thick and fast that I didn't even get a chance to respond. Finally I heard, “I have to go now, Axelle, I have to meet a client”âMom is an interior designerâ“but I'll call you later. Your father and I are so proud of you. Modeling in New York City!”
Modeling! Argh! My mom was
so
in denial!
When
, I asked myself,
will
she
finally
understand
that
all
I
want
to
do
is
solve
mysteries? And that modeling and high heels and hair spray mean nothing to me?
At least, nothing more than offering the perfect cover for figuring out fashion crimes, like tracking down a missing designer or a famous black diamond. My mom's big dream has always been for me to modelâlike,
real
modeling, not
undercover
modeling. And clearlyâannoyingly!âeven after I cracked last week's big, juicy case in Paris, modeling is
still
her dream for me.
Grrr!
I took a deep breath to control myself and said as lightly as I could, “Well, I have to go now too, Mum. I have an appointment at
Chic
â
about
the
case.
”
“Yes, well, have fun! Maybe you'll shoot a coverâI'll keep my fingers crossed! Bye for now, darling.”
As I slipped my phone back into my pocket, it vibrated. I pulled it back out and read my new messages. There was a cute one from my dad and another from my BFF at home in Notting Hill, Jenny. Ellie B (non-modeling name: Elizabeth Billingsley), the new friend I'd made last week in Paris, had also sent me a text welcoming me to the Big Apple and asking if we could have dinner together later. She'd just flown into town for New York Fashion Week, which was starting on Wednesday. The last message was from Miriam, my agent, checking that I'd arrived safely and that the car
Chic
had promised had picked me up from the airport as planned.
MiriamâMiriam Fontaine, Paris-based agent supremoâhad been super helpful and kind since the events of last week. I've known her my whole life because she was my fashion-editor aunt's oldest friend, and her agency had represented me when I modeled (undercover) at Paris Fashion Week. After the story of how I'd found Belle came out, Miriam made sure I was all right, fending off the press and keeping my mom calm. She alsoâtogether with
Chic
âorganized this trip to find the Black Amelia.
But in the aftermath of all that had happened, I'd occasionally caught her looking surreptitiously at me through slightly narrowed eyes. While she didn't say anything, I knew she'd been completely surprised by the fact that
I'd
solved the mystery of Belle's disappearanceâeven though Miriam knew I'd been obsessed with solving mysteries since, like, forever.
Fortunately for me, Miriam also had an agency in New York City and was happy to continue representing me as a fashion model here. Because, yes, I'd decided that the best course of action for solving this crime was once again to go undercover as a model. It was the easiest way for me to infiltrate the closed world of fashion, especially during Fashion Week when no one in the business would have time to spare for my questioning. But to work as a model, I needed the help of an agency. And who better than Miriam and her well-respected team? I knew I could trust her to be discreet, and I knew she'd help me keep up my modeling pretense.
Hervé (my booker at Miriam's agency in Paris) had also sent a message wishing me luck and saying something about an option for a magazine editorial in Paris.
I quickly looked through my messages again. No, there was definitely nothing from Sebastian.
But had I really expected there to be?
My throat tightened at the thought of his cool gray eyes and the warm smell of his leather jacketânot to mention our last conversation.
Argh!
I fiddled with the buckle of my La Lune shoulder bag for another moment. Then, pushing Sebastian out of my mind, I looked back out the window.
Once we turned north onto Third Avenue, I was fascinated by the speed at which we flew past the bisecting streets: Thirty-Eighth Street, Thirty-Ninth, Fortieth, and on and on. Ira, the driver, was seemingly unfazed by kamikaze bike messengers or the enormous potholes pitting the street like a bad case of acne. Even the yellow cabs coming at us out of intersections or from behind other cars didn't seem to concern him.
At that moment my phone rang again. It was a local number.
It
must
be
Miriam's New York office
, I thought as I answered.
“Hi, Axelle. This is Pat Washington, your booker here at Miriam's NY,” said a loud, energetic voice. “I can't wait to meet you. Miriam and Hervé have told me so much about you. I just wanted to be sure you've arrived safely and are on your way in⦔ I barely said I was before she kept talking. “Great, because you are going to be busyâvery busy. I'm just waiting for
Chic: New York
to confirm you for a shoot tomorrow, which is fabulous. You've also got several show castings lined up.”
Very busy? Fleetingly I wondered if she knew I was here to solve a crime orâ
“Jared Moor,” Pat continued, “should confirm for tomorrowâI'll let you know later todayâand I'm still waiting to hear back from DKNY, Jorge Cruz, Diane von Furstenberg, and The Isle. But don't worry, there'll be others.”
Great
, I thought.
And
when
am
I
supposed
to
solve
the
case?
“As for your
non-modeling
business,” she continued pointedly, as if reading my mind, “we can discuss that in more detail when you get here.”
Her brisk dismissal of my true reason for flying this far made me slightly nervous. Somehow I'd have to make it clear to her that I needed time to follow up on leads and cluesâbut surely Miriam had done that?
“Although,” Pat continued, “if you've looked at your printed scheduleâdid Ira give it to you? Yes? Good. Well, then you'll know that you are going straight to
Chic
for a go-see before coming here. You'll be seeing Cazzie Kinlan herself! She wants to meet you and maybe see you in some clothes before tomorrow's shoot.”
As Pat continued talking about the coming week, I looked into the folder Ira had pointed out when I'd climbed into the car. Pat was right. There was a printed scheduleâ¦but behind it was a slim envelope addressed to me. Inside was a letter from Miriam. And according to the letter, the go-see at
Chic
was actually a briefing from their editor-in-chief about the caseâ¦so either Pat had no idea why I was
really
going to
Chic
âdespite her earlier allusion to my “non-modeling business”âor she was being discreet. But before I could finish reading the letter, she cut through my jet lag with the following loud announcement:
“And, Axelle, I hope you look good, girl.
Chic
magazine is at the top of the fashion pyramidâyou have to look your best going in there. Clean hair, some cute little outfitâ”
“Yes, but I just got off an international flight! I hardlyâ”
“Girl, I don't care if you just came in from Mars. You better freshen up and get it together. A model has to look like a modelâgot it? I'll see you here after
Chic
. I'll introduce you to everyone and then we'll have lunch. Now look sharp, girl!”
Look
sharp?
I hung up and slumped back into the soft leather seat. Great. I'd just arrived, and already I had a fashionista breathing down my neck!
“Are we nearly there?” I asked Ira, picking up Miriam's letter again.
Ira nodded, his long, frizzy orange hair bobbing. He was wearing Ray-Ban aviator sunglasses and a gold-and-diamond pinky ring that glinted in the sunlight every time he moved his right hand. “Yup. Traffic hasn't been too bad this morning and I was able to avoid the construction work around the Chrysler Building, so I'd say we've made pretty good time.” As he turned left onto Seventh Avenue, he continued with a sideways nod of his head, “That's the famous Times Square. The
Chic
offices are a little farther down on the left. The tall silver building, you see it?”
I nodded, eyes glued to the window as I took it all in. So far on our drive through Manhattan, the loud, brash, and bold attitude of the city was exactly as I'd remembered it. But at Times Square that attitude was amplified by, like, tenâand those enormous billboards loomed over everything. I couldn't think of an equivalent at home in London. Trafalgar Square? No way. Too grand and Old World. Piccadilly Circus? Yes, that came much closerâbut without the darker Batman-Gotham vibe.
I caught Ira smiling at me in the mirror as he parked. “You know, Axelle⦔ (Unlike Pat, Ira pronounced my name like the car part, instead of the
correct
way, which is to rhyme it with the verb “excel.”) “I've been to Europe. I've seen a lot. London, Paris, Madrid. They got a lotta nice things, those cities, but not one of 'em has Times Square. You know what I'm saying?”
I sure did.
“Anyway, it's quarter after twelve, Axelle. I was told to be sure you weren't late,” he said with a nod toward the silver skyscraper. “Must be important.”
“It might be,” I answered, shrugging my shoulders as visions of the missing diamond sparkled in my mind. “Anyway, thank you, Ira, for getting me here on time.”
“No problem, kiddo. I'll be out here waiting for you. Good luck.”
“Thanks, Ira,” I said. I quickly ran my hands through my hair and popped a mint in my mouth.
So
much
for
looking
sharp,
I thought. Then I grabbed my shoulder bag and stepped out onto the sidewalk.