The Chrysalis

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Authors: Heather Terrell

BOOK: The Chrysalis
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CONTENTS

TITLE PAGE

DEDICATION

Chapter
one
BERLIN, 1943

Chapter
two
NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
three
LEIDEN, 1644

Chapter
four
NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
five
NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
six
AMSTERDAM, 1940

Chapter
seven
NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
eight
NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
nine
LEIDEN, 1646

Chapter
ten
NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
eleven
NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
twelve
HAARLEM, 1652

Chapter
thirteen
NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
fourteen
AMSTERDAM, 1942

Chapter
fifteen
NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
sixteen
NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
seventeen
HAARLEM, 1658

Chapter
eighteen
NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
nineteen
NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
twenty
NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
twenty-one
NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
twenty-two
HAARLEM, 1661

Chapter
twenty-three
NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
twenty-four
NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
twenty-five
AMSTERDAM, 1943

Chapter
twenty-six
LONDON, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
twenty-seven
HAARLEM, 1661

Chapter
twenty-eight
NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
twenty-nine
AMSTERDAM, 1943

Chapter
thirty
NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
thirty-one
NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
thirty-two
HAARLEM, 1662

Chapter
thirty-three
NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
thirty-four
NORTH OF MUNICH, 1943

Chapter
thirty-five
NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

Chapter
thirty-six
HAARLEM, 1662

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

AUTHOR'S NOTE

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

COPYRIGHT

For my boys

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The Chrysalis
could never have emerged from its prolonged pupal stage without the assistance of many people. First, I must thank Laura Dail, my wonderful agent who took the book on, in so many ways. Next, I want to express my gratitude to the incredible people at Ballantine Books, beginning with Paul Taunton, my extraordinary editor, who gave
The Chrysalis
a chance. I am so very fortunate to have the backing of the amazing Ballantine team: Libby McGuire, Kim Hovey, Brian McLendon, Jane von Mehren, Rachel Kind, Cindy Murray, the art department, the promotion and sales departments, and the managing editorial and production departments.

Countless friends and family members helped along the way: some with the manuscript itself, and some in other fashions. Among the many are Illana Raia; Ponny Conomos Jahn; Jennifer Kasmin Miller; Laura McKenna; Elisabeth Dyssegaard; Maureen Brady; my parents, Jeanne and Coleman Benedict; my siblings, Coley, Lauren, Courtney, Christopher, and Meredith, and their families; my grandmothers; my aunt Terry; and my in-laws.

Yet, without my husband, Jim,
The Chrysalis
would still be in its cocoon. His love and support encouraged its metamorphosis. And, our little son, Jack, gave it the final inspiration to take flight.

one

BERLIN, 1943

T
HE TRAIN BOUND FOR MILAN SNAKES INTO THE BERLIN STATION
, sending billows of steam high into the station's skeletal rafters. Its whistle pierces the night once and then recedes. Silence reclaims the cavernous space, broken now and then only by the slow, steady scraping of a sweeper's broom.

The sweeper has learned not to stare openly at the horrors that pass through the station. He knows to keep his own counsel and inhabit the shadows. Yet he watches, head bowed, from beneath the brim of his cap.

Track by track, click by click, the train comes to a stop. In the last car, a couple sits facing each other. They wait without moving, framed like portraits by the window's ruby curtains. Their incandescence defies the heavy, quiet darkness, and the sweeper slows his pace.

He considers the woman first. A station lamppost throws her proud profile into bold relief against the dark cabin corners. The low light catches the folds of her silk persimmon dress and the ermine trim of her traveling jacket and cloche hat. He shakes his head at the decadence of her clothes and calculates the loaves of bread her ensemble could fetch on the black market. Then the sweeper shifts his attention to the man, whose overall deportment seems more respectful of a wartime journey than the woman's. He has a naturally engaging round face, but he is dressed somberly in a charcoal suit, simple black overcoat, and fedora. His right hand clutches a worn brown envelope so tightly his knuckles shine white, and the jagged points of a yellow star peer out from his coat. The sweeper supposes that both must understand the precariousness of their travel.

Suddenly, the door to the compartment swings open with a jolt, and the man and the woman spring to their feet. The sweeper steps back into the safety of the shadows.

Flaxen boy-soldiers swarm around the couple. Their black uniforms gleam with gold buttons, and every jacket boasts the slash of red swastikas. The sweeper knows that these are not the usual station militia, and he jumps when their gloved hands cut across the compartment to take the man's tickets.

Then the boy-soldiers part to let a decorated officer come forward. The official leans closer to address the couple. He hands over a document with a fountain pen and demands the man's signature; the officer wants the man to surrender something. Lowering his eyes, the traveler shakes his head. Instead, the man relinquishes his precious envelope, his hand trembling as he presents it to the officer.

The officer holds the envelope up to the cabin light, then slashes it open and scrutinizes the letter within. He stuffs the letter back into its envelope and returns it to the man. The officer and his soldiers pivot and depart, shutting the cabin door sharply behind them.

The train whistle cries out again, and the couple returns to their seats. A cautious smile curls on the corner of the man's mouth, but the sweeper turns away in despair. He has seen the boy-soldiers hard at work. He knows that when the train pulls away from the station, the last car will remain.

two

NEW YORK CITY, PRESENT DAY

M
ARA TAPPED HER FINGERS ON THE BAR AND CHECKED
her watch again. Her new client was nearly an hour late, and the butterflies in her stomach danced ever more restlessly.

To calm her nerves, she took another sip of her tonic and lime, wished again that it were a chardonnay, and looked around Maggie's. The restaurant was once a speakeasy and rumored to connect to a maze of underground tunnels that ferried booze during Prohibition. Although the alcohol now flowed freely, the smoky jazz-era décor hadn't changed. The embossed tin ceiling and burnished plank wood floors reflected the crackling fire. Couples nestled into chocolate-brown leather banquettes that were lit by low votive candles. Strains of Ella and Louis rose over the hubbub of the bar; surely no music born later than the fifties ever played here. It felt safe, anchored in a simpler time Mara felt sure must once have existed.

As she turned back toward the entrance, Mara caught a glimpse of herself in the mirror over the lively bar. She smoothed the skirt of her fitted suit and looked down at her high heels, feeling, not for the first time, as though she had squeezed herself into someone else's skin, a bit like a duck wedged into the glossy-feathered costume of a swan. She wished she were roaming the aisles of her neighborhood bookstore in her favorite broken-in jeans and turtleneck sweater instead of waiting for Michael Roarke—the in-house counsel of her law firm's intimidating new client, the venerable art auction house Beazley's.

When Mara glanced again at the door, she was just in time to watch a cab pull up.

The outline of a tall, broad-shouldered figure emerged, his face in shadow. He crouched down to the passenger-side window and handed the cabbie some money. The glimmer of a street lamp illuminated a smile and the crinkle of laugh lines around his eyes. A joke passed between the two men. He tapped the top of the cab twice in a friendly farewell and turned. Although the man was neither paunchy nor slightly balding, as most in-house lawyers she'd worked with were, Mara somehow knew he was her client.

He crossed the threshold of the bar, but the street lamp behind him kept his features obscured. All that Mara made out were the tweed of his blazer and the knife-edge crease of his charcoal pants.

When his face finally did come into focus, she saw that a dimple on his chin softened his square jaw; his sandy brown hair was cut close except for the longer, cowlicky front; he had celadon eyes, like a cat, and sinewy muscles on his hands. She hadn't expected him to be so handsome or to elicit a nagging sense of familiarity.

Then the din muted. The bustle slowed. She tried to stifle her reaction, but a blush spread across her cheeks, and she gazed down in embarrassment.

He slowed his step as he approached. “I know you,” he said as she looked up. “Georgetown.”

“The Art of Byzantium,” she answered.

Michael Roarke had once sat next to her in the Byzantine art history class, by chance at first, and then later by choice. They used to have long conversations about iconography and the fall of Constantinople as they walked to the library across campus. She remembered his effortless courtliness: how he always walked on the street side, how he always stood when she sat. But there was Sam then. So when the class ended, their time together had ended as well. Now here he was, her new client from Beazley's.

As he apologized for his tardiness, a hostess took them over to a corner booth that seemed better suited for a date than a business dinner. At first, she liked the twist, perhaps because their meeting conjured up her original attraction toward Michael, and because she found him just as appealing as she remembered. Then she chided herself for the unbidden thoughts, so improper for an attorney toward a client—especially one she needed to secure in order to have any shot at partnership later that year.

Still, Mara wondered how he now saw her. Did he see what she had been told others see: a tall, slim force, with dainty features, neat auburn hair, and professional poise? Or did he see the person she used to be before she had fashioned herself into a self-possessed city lawyer: the gangly bookworm of their college years, the young woman harboring aspirations of the scholarly life with an angular jaw and an uneven sprinkle of freckles?

They started with a bottle of Cloudy Bay, a practice she usually avoided with a client, and talked haltingly, uncertain at first how to navigate the surprise of their acquaintance. The script she'd prepared to discuss with and impress her new client—based on Beazley's research she'd undertaken earlier that day—suddenly seemed silly and false, too obvious and pushy to trot out. Robbed of her dialogue, she was unable to perform with her normal self-confident flourish and instead felt like a stage actor who had forgotten her lines.

After an awkward silence, Michael took the lead and began asking gentle questions about Mara's life since college. He asked her about her decision to settle in New York when her prominent political family lived in Boston, about finding her way alone through the minefield of big New York law firms, and finally about Sam, the question to which Mara felt sure Michael had been building all along. The wine helped loosen her tongue, as did his mild yet pleasantly teasing manner, and she answered most of his personal questions without hesitation, quite against the grain of her typically guarded self. But when he touched on Sam, her boyfriend of nearly six years, who had broken up with her a few years ago, the catlike hairs on Mara's self-protective back stood up, and Mara turned the questions onto him. There'd been no one serious in her life since Sam, and despite the time, the wound was still fresh.

“What about your move back to New York after law school?” she asked. “Your family must've been thrilled with your return.” She recalled that he was from the area—Queens, she thought.

“Sure, they were happy—at first. But my return to New York was also the beginning of my tour of duty as an associate at Ellis & Broadhurst. After I'd spent six years slaving away there, my friends had drifted away, and my family had learned not to count on me. They're all regular people with normal work schedules; they couldn't understand my long hours and unpredictability.” He paused and then rotated the conversation back to her. “I'm guessing you know what that's like from working at Severin. Am I right?”

Mara nodded. Minus the references to Sam, she enjoyed this conversation; she rarely had the chance to talk with someone who understood the thrills and the sacrifices of being a young lawyer who was in a large firm but wasn't currently in the firm's throes. But she was also conscious of the reason for their meeting: the plum
Baum v. Beazley's
case, which her boss, head of Severin, Oliver & Means's litigation department, Harlan Bruckner, had just conferred upon her as a final test of her suitability for partnership.

Before she could force the conversation back on track, Michael continued. “That's part of why I left Ellis. I looked out from the pile of work I'd been buried under for years, and I didn't like what I saw, what I'd been forfeiting friends and family for. I didn't like the people who'd be my partners, mostly men and women who'd been kicked around in the sandbox as kids and couldn't wait to wreak their revenge on the incoming class of first-year associates. I didn't want to play with such a vicious lot.” Mara smiled; he could be describing her boss, whom she long suspected had been an ostracized youth who rose to success by sacrificing any and all relationships and who now demanded the same surrender from his associates. And usually got it.

Michael interrupted her thoughts again. “Do you remember those talks we used to have about what we were going to do with our lives?”

“Yes,” she answered. As soon as she had recognized him, their conversations came back to her in a rush. They used to talk naïvely about becoming archaeologists or art historians, uncovering some long-hidden secret or artifact critical to unlocking the past. Mara and Michael had shared a passion for discovery and a kinship she hadn't experienced with anyone since her late grandmother, her father's mother, who passed her own Irish love of legend and lore and mystery on to Mara. They used to spend countless evenings before the fire in her grandmother's little sitting room in the rectory where she lived and worked, a warm sanctuary away from Mara's chilly home, reading faerie tales, Agatha Christie, classic mythology, Irish fables, saints' lives, Arthurian legend,
The Chronicles of Narnia,
always seeking the “aha” moment of clarity, as they called it. After Nana died in Mara's junior year of high school, Mara carried on the search for “aha” moments with her college major in medieval history, archetypes, and symbols. After her walks with Michael stopped, Mara's fantasies continued. She applied to Columbia's medieval studies graduate program during her senior year at Georgetown, but her father had vetoed it: too impractical, too frivolous, too unlikely to yield material success, and not the stellar trajectory he'd charted for his only child. She had let the veto stand, and here she was, ten years later, all but convinced that her father's dreams were her own.

“Well, over the years, I've thought about those talks. I still think about them,” Michael continued, “and they began to make me think that the firm's goals—papering the latest, greatest takeover—didn't have enough worth, at least for me. I started to think back on what I wanted to be before the law locked onto me,
who
I wanted to be.”

His statements mirrored Mara's unvoiced doubts, the secret uncertainties that she kept even from Sophia. Mara didn't allow herself the time to second-guess the choices she made. It was not part of the plan, and it certainly wouldn't help her make partner. Yet, almost unconsciously, she whispered, “I know exactly what you mean.” As soon as the words escaped from her lips, she wished she could swallow them back into the abyss where they normally resided. They might be perfectly acceptable sentiments coming from a friend, but from the lawyer you've hired to champion your cause? They couldn't be more inappropriate. She stammered, trying to regain what she perceived to be lost ground. “I-I didn't mean that. I meant—”

Michael interrupted her backtracking with a laugh. “Mara, it's okay. I know what you meant. I still think you're a bloodthirsty New York litigator fully geared up for winning us the
Baum
case.”

She was relieved and thought they might segue into the case, but he seemed determined to continue with his confessions.

“I guess the thing I didn't like most about my years at Ellis was who I became personally.” He paused to take a sip of his wine.

“I'd spent six years at Ellis not doing some very important things,” he said. “Not developing new friendships, not pursuing any outside interests, and not forming any relationships. So I decided to get out—of the firm, at least, if not the law. I thought that working for a company connected with history and art might help rekindle some passion for my job and maybe free up more time to work on the other stuff. Like a girlfriend.” He paused then asked again, casually, “Is that what happened to your relationship with Sam?”

Mara was increasingly nervous about the intimacy of their conversation. She felt curiously close to him, almost as though they'd fast-forwarded past the small-talk stage of a relationship to comfortable familiarity. Whether this stemmed from their past connection, his natural ability to draw her out, or the wine, she didn't know. But this rapport, so unusual for the seemingly open and self-assured yet actually private Mara, was not at all the one she had planned for her new client.

Despite her hesitations, she felt compelled to respond. So she took a bolstering sip of her wine and answered the persistent question. “Well, Sam and I stayed together through law school and even into my first couple of years in New York. I'd pack up a pile of cases and take the train down to D.C. where he worked, nearly every weekend. Then the State Department offered him a job in China, and he took it. His true passion always was politics.”

“I see,” Michael said, with a note of sympathy in his voice. She glanced down suddenly, uncharacteristically shy, and saw the manila folder on the
Baum
case sticking out of her bag.

Mara counted to ten and looked back up. Her poised, professional demeanor was in place, and she asked about
Baum v. Beazley's.
This new conversation did not go as smoothly as the more personal one, almost as though Michael resented her return to the topic that had brought them to Maggie's in the first place. He withdrew into the banquette and spoke in a much more clipped tone. He even pushed away his wineglass and folded his napkin on top of the table. Mara ignored his tinge of disappointment and listened intently.

Michael explained that a former client, who wished to remain anonymous, had hired Beazley's to sell a painting—
The Chrysalis
by Johannes Miereveld—as part of a prestigious Dutch art auction timed to coincide with the Metropolitan Museum of Art's much-anticipated Dutch exhibit. Once Beazley's circulated the auction catalog with its photograph of
The Chrysalis,
it received a barrage of calls and letters from the self-styled true owner, Hilda Baum, who claimed she had been searching for the painting for decades. She asserted that the Nazis had taken both
The Chrysalis
and her parents' lives. Specifically, they had labeled her Catholic parents Jewish, shipped them off to a concentration camp, and then stolen their art collection. Beazley's explained its practice of investigating a painting's lineage and shared
The Chrysalis
's crystal clear provenance with Hilda Baum, but she was not appeased. She wanted
The Chrysalis
back. The suit soon followed, and Beazley's was forced to pull the painting from the auction pending the outcome of the case. Mara's job was to keep
The Chrysalis
from her.

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