The Gilded Seal (42 page)

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Authors: James Twining

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BOOK: The Gilded Seal
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“It’s simple. You can never tell anyone this place,” Tom

instructed her.

“What place?”

“You’ll see.”

C H A P T E R S E V E N T Y- T W O

PALAIS GARNIER, 9TH ARRONDISSEMENT, PARIS

23rd April— 10:10 p.m.

They crossed the road, Jennifer noticing that Tom was

keeping his gaze lowered so as not to make eye contact

with anyone they crossed. She did the same, certain that by

now Ferrat would have released a photo and description of

her, turning the entire city into his eyes and ears. Only

Archie, who the police still knew nothing about, walked with

his head held high.

The Palais Garnier opera house loomed ahead of them at

the apex of the wide avenue, its ornate façade lavished with

statuary and opulently decorated with multicolored marble

friezes and columns. Far above, two gilded winged horses

framed a copper dome. Behind this, the sharp, angular sil-

houette of its main roof fell away toward the cobbled street

below.

Tom led them around to the left of the building, the posters

outside the main steps indicating that the eve ning’s perfor-

mance of
Il Trittico
was sold out. Stopping about halfway

down, he nodded toward a small metal door, perhaps fi ve feet

high and three across.

“In here?” Jennifer frowned. She didn’t like being kept in

the dark and Tom was being uncharacteristically cryptic.

3 1 6 j a m e s

t w i n i n g

“If he’ll see us,” said Tom, pointing at the video camera

pointing toward them.

“Who?”

“He’s called Ketter. Markus Ketter.”

“Just don’t make any sudden movements,” Archie warned

her. “He’s a nervous bastard at the best of times.”

Unprompted, the door suddenly swung open and they

stepped inside. As the door locked itself shut behind them an

overhead light automatically flickered on, revealing a small

chamber, empty apart from the narrow stone spiral staircase

that coiled steeply toward the shadowy heavens.

“I hope you’ve got your comfortable shoes on,” Tom warned

her with a smile.

The light from the chamber soon faded behind them, the

steps rising in a dark, dizzy corkscrew that left Jennifer feel-

ing increasingly disorientated and nervously pressing her

right hand to the rough stone walls to keep her balance and

guide her feet. The air felt thick and heavy too, the sound of

their footsteps and strained breathing echoing through its

dense, suffocating embrace as if it couldn’t escape. But then,

almost imperceptibly at first, a more gentle sound fi ltered

down to them. A woman’s voice.

“Listen,” Tom said, suddenly stopping. Jennifer could hear

the voice quite clearly now, a pure, crisp sound that rose and

fell like the swell of the sea. “We’re lucky, they don’t put
Il

Trittico
on very often. It’s made up of three one- act operas.

Sounds like they’ve just started
Gianni Schicchi
. Come on, I

want to show you something.”

A little further on the darkness suddenly lifted where one

of the stones in the wall had been replaced with a small metal

grille. The light from the massive central chandelier was leak-

ing through it.

“This staircase runs behind a false wall. We’re right up in

the gods here.” On the stage far below a young woman was

seemingly pleading with her father. Tom pointed up at the

ceiling. “Look, do you remember the Chagall painting I told

you about?”

She did remember his rather breathless description back at

the Louvre, though it seemed a lifetime ago now, rather than

t h e g i l d e d s e a l

3 1 7

just a few days. He’d portrayed the ceiling then as being

somehow slightly demonic. Now that she was able to see it

for herself, however, she wasn’t sure she agreed. The dizzy-

ing, intoxicating carousel of bright colors and wild shapes

seemed more like a dream to her; a warm, slightly drunken

dream that you might never want to wake up from. She gazed

at it longingly, sensing Tom smiling at her, sharing in her

wonder.

“It’s beautiful.”

Again they climbed, the music accompanying them all the

way, until a solid brick wall suddenly loomed ahead of them,

blocking the top of the stairs. Jennifer frowned, wondering

how they were going to get past, until she noticed a small

steel panel set into the bricks at about waist height. The panel

suddenly snapped open and a gun muzzle appeared through

the rectangle of light it had revealed, aimed straight at Tom’s

stomach.

“Who is it?” A muffled voice intoned in clipped, precise

En glish.

“You know who it is, Markus,” Tom chided him. “You’ve

got infrared cameras the whole way up that staircase.”

“Half the planet is looking for you, Felix. If you’ve led

them here . . .” The accent was hard and unfeeling. German

perhaps, or possibly Scandinavian.

“If I had, you wouldn’t be talking to us now,” Tom said

nonchalantly.

“Who’s she?” The gun swiveled to point at her.

“She’s with us.”

“She moves like a cop.”

“Old habits die hard. She’s running with us now.”

There was a pause.

“What do you want? You know I don’t like surprises.”

Tom held the book out. The gun was slowly retracted and

a white gloved hand reached out and grabbed it. There was a

long silence. Then the hiss and release of a hydraulic pump

as the entire wall slowly rose into the roof like a giant port-

cullis. They stepped inside and the wall immediately lowered

itself behind them.

Ketter emerged out of the darkness, shifting his weight

3 1 8 j a m e s

t w i n i n g

warily from foot to foot. Dressed entirely in white, from his

patent leather shoes to his tie and white cotton gloves, his

willowy figure stood out from the surrounding gloom like a

candle flame in the night.

“Come,” he ordered them, turning on his heel before she

could get a good look at his face.

“Shoes there. Lighters and matches

here. Wash there.”

Ketter pointed first at a low shelf, then at a large dish and fi -

nally at a white porcelain surgeon’s basin complete with elon-

gated tap handles to allow people to turn the water off with

their elbows rather than use their hands again.

“What’s with the outfit?” she whispered.

“So he can see the dirt,” Tom explained as he turned the

taps on and squeezed some soap on to his hands. “In fact the

only thing he hates more than dirt is fi re.”

“Why fire?” she asked.

“You’ll see,” Archie hissed, shaking his head as he dropped

his lighter into the dish, making it ping.

“Look,” Jennifer mouthed. Ketter was sealing a thin plas-

tic sheet over their shoes. Sensing their eyes on him, he stood

up and smoothed his suit down self-consciously.

She could see now that he was in his late fifties, with deep

vertical lines carved into his sunken cheeks and pink grooves

on the bridge of his nose from wearing glasses. He was also

tall, and would have seemed even taller if it wasn’t for the

way he pulled his shoulders up into his neck as if he was

flinching. In fact, there was something slightly elephantine

about him, his hands and feet almost comically oversized.

Satisfied that they were done, Ketter led them up a narrow

set of stairs to a steel trapdoor set into the low ceiling. Un-

locking it, he nodded at them to step through and then bolted

it shut behind them, muttering to himself as he opened and

shut the lock several times to check it was secure.

A cloying red tint from a couple of filtered overhead lights

gave the room an apocalyptic, almost satanic feel. Ketter’s

suit, for one, had been transformed into a blood-red velvet

and even his thinning brush of white hair had burst into a

crown of crimson fl ames.

He found the switch and flicked it on, a cool wash of light

t h e g i l d e d s e a l

3 1 9

revealing the dome’s graceful roof soaring high above them,

the walls covered in white rectangular tiles whose beveled

edges glinted in the light. But her eye was instinctively drawn

to the regimented lines of shelves that stretched the length of

the circular room as if on parade, their height rising and fall-

ing with the arch of the dome like a bulging muscle.

It was an impressive and unexpected sight and she breathed

in sharply, just catching Tom staring at her out of the corner

of his eye. It was strange, but he seemed to be taking a rather

perverse pleasure in bringing her here, in initiating her into

some of the secrets of his world. Perhaps this was his way of

opening up, of convincing her that she really could trust him

again.

“What is this place?” she whispered as Ketter led them

down one of the narrow corridors formed by the rows of

bookcases, suddenly understanding the reason for Ketter’s

dislike of fi re.

“A library.” Tom smiled. “A library of stolen books.”

In truth it seemed less of a library to Jennifer than a

morgue—the walls covered with white tiles, the books laid

out on the metal shelves towering on either side like corpses

on gurneys. And the whole time the opera’s distant echo rose

from the stage below, the words half-formed and indecipher-

able but strangely compelling.

“A fi rst edition
Don Quixote
.” Tom pointed at the gilded

spine of one of the books wrapped in a protective wrapper on

the felted shelves. “And here, a full set of the
Blaeu- Van der

Hem Atlas
.”

“Don’t touch,” Ketter warned them without looking around.

“All stolen?”

“Markus finds them a new home, gives them a new lease

on life.”

There was a break in the shelving to their right and Ketter

led them through it, crossing several aisles until he came to a

small clearing. To the left was a narrow bed, meticulously

made, and a spotless kitchen and eating area. To the right was

a workshop, complete with desk and an array of tools, magni-

fying glasses, scanners, glues and other binding materials.

Ketter sat down and placed the book in front of him on a

3 2 0 j a m e s

t w i n i n g

type of foam pillow that supported its spine. His hunched

shoulders seemed to relax as he arched forward over the book,

as if adopting a familiar and comforting position.

“What do you want?”

“An opinion,” Tom answered.

“On what?”

“We’re not sure,” Tom conceded. “Anything unusual.”

“The standard consultation fee is five thousand dollars.”

“Put it on our account,” Archie suggested.

Ketter glared at him unsmilingly.

“It’s a joke, Markus,” Archie reassured him, raising his

eyebrows at Tom and Jennifer. “I’ll make sure you have it in

the morning.”

“Good.” Apparently satisfied with this, Ketter took a fresh

tissue and opened the book to the title page. “Volume One of

the Imperial edition of the
Description de L’Egypte
,” he in-

toned. “Published 1809. Condition . . . acceptable. I’ve seen

better. It’s rare, yes, but without the rest of the set and in this

state . . . not particularly valuable. From the library of . . .”

He glanced down at the bookplate on the inside front cover

and then looked up with a toothy smile, the first he had

given. “Well, you certainly didn’t waste any time.”

“What do you mean?” Jennifer asked.

“This was in to night’s sale at Tajan, wasn’t it? I saw it in

the catalog a few weeks ago. What did it go for in the end?”

“Seventy thousand,” Archie volunteered.

“Too much.” Ketter shook his head. “Forty, forty-fi ve at

the most.”

“Ledoux bought it,” Tom informed him.

“Ledoux?” He seemed genuinely surprised. “That’s inter-

esting . . .” He looked down at the book again with a frown.

“I wonder why he . . . ?” His voice tailed off as he switched

on a desk light that had a magnifying glass built into it and

held it over the signed bookplate. “This has been tampered

with,” he said slowly, pointing at where one of the corners

had been lifted.

“Ledoux was prodding it with some sort of scalpel,” Tom

confirmed, thinking back to what he had seen through the

window in Fontainebleau.

t h e g i l d e d s e a l

3 2 1

Ketter reached for a bottle in front of him and moistened a

cotton wool bud. Then, gripping the raised corner with a large

pair of tweezers, he rubbed the bud against the underside of

the plate. Little by little it lifted, the chemical dissolving the

glue, Ketter proving himself to be surprisingly dextrous de-

spite his ungainly hands.

“There’s something there,” Jennifer exclaimed as a spi-

dery shape emerged from under it. “A word.”

“A name,” Tom corrected her as the scrawl became clearer,

underlined by a wild swish of black ink. “A signature. Napo-

leon.”

C H A P T E R S E V E N T Y- T H R E E

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