“The
Autel des Obelisques
,” Tom read the words under-
neath it. “The Altar of Obelisks. It certainly fi ts.”
“It can’t be Paris,” Ketter said with a firm shake of his
head. “None of these roads exist.”
They gazed at the map uncertainly, the steadily increasing
3 3 0 j a m e s
t w i n i n g
pace and volume of the echoing music suggesting that, far
below, the opera was reaching its climax.
“You’re right,” Tom said with a frown. “Either we’ve got
the wrong city or . . .” He paused, struck by a sudden
thought.
“Or what?”
“Or we’re looking in the wrong place.”
“Where else is there to look?” Archie frowned.
“Underground,” Tom suggested excitedly. “This is a map
of the Paris catacombs.”
“If it is, I can introduce you to a guide,” Ketter offered.
“Lives down there now, as far as I can tell.”
“I don’t want to get lost,” Tom agreed. “Can you try and
set something up?”
“When for?”
“Now.”
As Tom and the others pored over the map, trying to work
out exactly how it related to the streets above, Ketter dialed
his contact and made some brief arrangements.
“Somebody called Franzy will meet you over at the Place
du Trocadéro at eleven,” Ketter announced. “Apparently there’s
an entrance near there. He’ll find you. But she can’t go.” He
pointed at Jennifer accusingly.
“What do you mean?” Tom sounded annoyed.
“No cops, no weapons. Those are the rules,” Ketter in-
sisted.
“There’s no way . . .”
“That’s fine,” Jennifer nodded. “You two go.”
“I thought we’d agreed to stick together?” Tom reminded
her. He’d made a deal and wanted to stick to it.
“We need to know what’s down there. This is the only
way,” she explained.
Tom shook his head but said nothing, knowing that she
was probably right. He felt for her though. Ketter was cutting
her no slack, despite the risk she had taken by coming with
them.
“That’s decided,” Ketter nodded. “Good. I will see you
out. You haven’t got much time.”
Covering his desk with a white cloth, Ketter led them back
t h e g i l d e d s e a l
3 3 1
through the bookshelves, down through the trapdoor, past
the washbasins where they recovered their shoes and Archie
his lighter, to the false wall. He paused to check the video
monitors positioned to the left of the door and then pressed a
switch. With a hiss, the wall lifted into the roof and Tom,
Jennifer and Archie stepped out into the staircase.
Ketter watched as the wall clunked shut, then retraced his
steps to his office. He sat at his desk, gazing at the dismem-
bered book lying in front of him. A dark shape emerged from
the shadows.
“You see? I told you they would come.” Eva smiled, tying
her hair back. “I’m glad I stayed.”
“You need to leave if you don’t want to lose them,” Ketter
said sullenly.
“Why bother, when you’re going to tell me exactly where
they’re going?”
“That wasn’t what we agreed,” he insisted angrily.
“The deal’s changed.” She shrugged, flicking her Zippo
open and striking a light.
Ketter gazed fearfully at the guttering flame, then at the
books slumbering obliviously on the shelves behind her, and
nodded.
C H A P T E R S E V E N T Y- F I V E
23rd April— 10:49 p.m.
By the time they made it down on to the street the curtain
had come down and a few members of the audience were
already being chased down the front steps by the sound of
muffled applause. Several were humming snatched fragments
of the closing aria.
“We need to shift if we’re going to meet this bloke by
eleven,” Archie pointed out.
“I’ll head over to Henri’s,” Jennifer suggested. “Bring him
up to speed.”
“You okay with that?” Tom asked, his tone making it clear
that he suspected she wasn’t.
He was right. She was annoyed with Ketter’s instinctive
distrust of her, of being excluded. But then it was a feeling
she knew only too well. She’d always had to walk an uneasy
line between her white mother’s South Carolina farming
background and her city-dwelling father’s Haitian heritage.
Caught between two colors, two cultures, immigrant and set-
tler, city and country, North and South, she’d never been
fully accepted by either. It was the same now, the police pur-
suing her as a criminal, the criminals treating her with the
distrust and contempt they reserved for the cops. She was
trapped in a strange twilight world where she belonged ev-
t h e g i l d e d s e a l
3 3 3
erywhere and yet nowhere at once. Only Tom, it seemed, was
making an effort to bridge the gap, to give her a sense of be-
longing, however temporary.
“It’s not like we have much choice,” she said with a re-
signed shrug. “Why don’t we meet at, say, one?”
“The Place St. Michel,” Tom agreed, flagging down a
passing taxi for her. “And you’d better take this—” He slipped
her his gun.
“Shouldn’t you . . . ?”
“You heard Ketter. No cops, no weapons. You’ll need this,
too. It’s the entrance code to the door downstairs.” He jotted
down a four-digit number on a piece of paper and handed it
to her. “Henri said he was finishing my painting tonight, so
he should be in.”
“Be careful,” she warned them, stuffing the paper into her
pocket.
“Aren’t we always?” Tom grinned.
The taxi’s radio was tuned to a lively phone-in debating
how good a painting the
Mona Lisa
actually was and whether
its theft wasn’t actually a blessing in disguise. The driver
made a half-hearted attempt to draw Jennifer into a similar
conversation, but with her hat pulled down low and her face
buried in her collar so she couldn’t be recognized, she pre-
tended to have fallen asleep. He gave up, leaving her to re-
flect on the day’s events.
It was hard to believe only fourteen hours had passed since
Ferrat had snapped a pair of cuffs on her wrists over break-
fast. So much had changed in that short period. Not only in
her mounting excitement at the discovery of clues that might
lead them to the real
Mona Lisa
, but also in what she felt
about Tom. She believed him when he said he was sorry and
that he hadn’t known she would be implicated in all this. She
believed him when he said he was trying to help her. That
didn’t mean she could entirely trust him, of course, but then
did she entirely trust anyone?
The traffic was light and it took them less than fi fteen min-
utes to make their way south through the Place de la Bastille
and over the river to Besson’s apartment. She punched in the
entry code and the front door clicked open, giving her access
3 3 4 j a m e s
t w i n i n g
to a vaulted passageway and a second, glass door. She lo-
cated Besson’s buzzer on the wall to her left and pressed it. A
few moments later the door buzzed open. She frowned. Last
time he’d checked who it was. Maybe he’d guessed that, at
this hour, it could only have been her or Tom.
A few minutes later, the elevator jerked to an unsteady halt
on the fi fth floor. She got out, half expecting Besson to be
there to greet her. But the hall was empty and the front door
ajar, a faint glow running the length of the narrow gap where
the streetlights were shining through the apartment’s uncov-
ered windows. She knew instinctively that something wasn’t
right.
She took out the gun Tom had given her and cocked it, not-
ing the splintered lock as she stepped warily inside. Someone
had forced their way in.
“Henri?” she called. There was no answer.
Carefully checking behind her every few steps, she slowly
made her way through the offi ce to the lab, its sealed plastic
chamber glowing like a Chinese lantern. With a growing
sense of dread, she saw that one of its walls had been slashed
open.
She carefully stepped through the opening and then
stopped, her gun dropping. Besson had been strapped to the
inspection table by his wrists and ankles, a single light illu-
minating him as if he were a painting on a gallery wall. She
ran to him, but there was no mistaking the unexpected sym-
metry of his face, the right-hand side now mirroring in death
the flaccid, hollow-eyed, slack-cheeked paralysis of the left,
blood trickling from his nose and the corners of his mouth.
Except, she suddenly realized as she leaned closer and placed
her gun down next to him, it wasn’t blood at all but paint,
congealed into thick red clots and veins like candle wax.
She stepped back as a sudden, terrible question fl ashed
into her head. If Besson was dead, who had buzzed her in?
Instinctively, she reached for the gun, but a cloth was pressed
to her face before she could even consider an answer.
C H A P T E R S E V E N T Y- S I X
PLACE DU TROCADÉRO, 16TH ARRONDISSEMENT, PARIS
23rd April— 11:03 p.m.
The two squat wings of the Palais de Chaillot loomed like
sullen guard dogs on either side of them, each protec-
tively framing the sparkling thrust of the Eiffel Tower on the
other side of the river.
“Do you think we missed him?” Archie asked.
“I hope not,” Tom sighed, gazing out on the series of
stepped terraces and cascading fountains that led to the bridge
at the base of the hill below them. “I don’t want to have to fi nd
this place on my own.”
“Why not?”
“Sudden cave-ins, flooding, hidden drops into natural
wells, exposed electricity cables. Not to mention the risk of
getting lost.”
“We’ve got a map,” Archie reminded him. “It can’t be that
hard.”
“They’re over three hundred kilometers long,” a voice an-
swered. “I’m Franzy. You’re late.”
Franzy’s head looked too small for the rest of him, his eyes
so close together that the resulting permanent squint dis-
guised which direction he was looking in. He had long dark
hair that he’d bleached blond at the tips, and piercings through
3 3 6 j a m e s
t w i n i n g
his nose, tongue and left eyebrow. And although it was hard
to tell in the dark, it seemed he was wearing eyeliner to
match his black jeans and Ramones T-shirt. The tell- tale
white headphones of his mp3 player were wound around his
thin neck, one bud still lodged in his ear, the other dangling
free and broadcasting a tinny hiss of drum beats and shrieked
vocals.
“We got here as fast as we could,” Tom apologized. “Did
Ketter tell you what we needed?”
“You need Blanco.” Franzy nodded, spitting his gum into
the air and deftly volleying it over the parapet with his right
foot. “You got nothing else to wear?” He nodded skeptically
at Archie’s mustard-colored suspenders and pinstripe suit.
“Problem?”
“Not if you don’t mind fucking your clothes up.”
He led them down the hill away from the esplanade and
then paused. Glancing to make sure no one was looking, he
crouched and hauled the manhole cover at his feet open with
a small metal implement.
“Get in,” he urged them.
Tom climbed down the ladder fixed to the wall of the ver-
tical shaft. Archie followed right behind him with Franzy
dragging the cover back into place as soon as he too was
inside. It settled with a solid thump that echoed around
them.
“This way.” A flashlight materialized in Franzy’s hands as
he led them off down a narrow passage. “And watch your
heads,” he added as a large pipe suddenly crossed the void at
about chest height, forcing them to scramble underneath it.
They continued in silence, the ground dry and uneven, the
temperature dropping, until a few minutes later they came to
a large blue tarpaulin that had been stretched drum- tight be-
tween the tunnel walls. Tom translated the large sign fi xed to
it for Archie’s benefi t.
“Building site. No access.”
Franzy lifted one corner of the tarpaulin and indicated
that they should crawl through the small gap. On the other
side a video camera mounted on a small desk bleeped into
life as soon as Tom stood up.
t h e g i l d e d s e a l
3 3 7
“Motion sensitive, so we can keep track of who’s been
through here,” Franzy explained. From behind him the sound
of angry barking echoed up a tunnel lit with what looked like
a salvaged set of Christmas tree lights.
“Ignore the dogs,” he sniffed, brushing away the long hair
that was constantly falling across his eyes. “It’s a recording.
To scare the tourists away.”
“Tourists?” Tom queried.
“Kids mainly. Looking for a place to get high or fuck. This
is our world. We try and keep our distance.”
“Who’s ‘we?’ ”
“Up there they call us
cataphiles
. But we don’t like to
label ourselves. It’s too limiting. We want to be free.”
They arrived at a large door which opened as they ap-