Marbode, Bishop of Rennes (1061–1081), wrote “De gemmarum,” on the spiritual and medicinal attributes of gems. In a book lacking in the expected Christian symbolism, Marbode describes diamond: “This stone has aptitude for magical arts, indomitable virtues it provides the bearer, nocturnal spirits and bad dreams it repels, black poisons flee, disputes and screams are changed. Cures insanity, strikes hard against enemies. For these purposes the stone should be set in silver, armored in gold, and fastened to the left arm.”
The weather settled a bit into a normal sort of rain. I thought of my father and wondered again where he might be staying. I could use a little advice. Not that he’d ever been particularly wise, you understand, but I could be fairly sure he had no hidden agenda. That was a lot more than could be said of anyone else in this little drama.
I thought of Luca and I wondered if he was still alive.
I thought of the Katerina, tucked into my bra, and all the trouble she’d gotten me into.
I thought of Paul and the summer I was fifteen and about the awful school year in Brazil when I learned to fight.
At the end of that academic year, Paul arrived to whisk me away to his apartment in Paris. I was exhausted and withdrawn, tense as a street cat. Which I suppose, in some ways, I’d become.
Paul was furious with my father for neglecting me so, but in his defense, my father was in terrible condition himself, swirling downward in a spiral of self-destruction. I don’t remember if he raced—he must not have, since I was staying with him in Rio. There was a woman at the start, then quite a lot of them, all lush, ethnic beauties who were nothing like my slim, pale Scottish mother.
It’s hard to remember, too, how Paul discovered my plight. Perhaps my grandmother was worried about me—she repeatedly asked my father to let me come live with her, go to school in Ayr, have regular meals and a regular life, but he wouldn’t hear of it—and sent Paul to investigate the situation. Perhaps he only visited and made sense of it himself. I have no memory of it. The year is a blur of survival challenges.
It would make a good television show—Reality: Rio Girl Gangs.
Ha.
Somehow, anyway, Paul discovered the miserable truth of my situation. That we were living in a hovel, and I was virtually on my own in a city of millions, attending a school at which I did not know the language and the girls beat me up on a regular basis, with the meanest of girls right in my own building.
I still want to kill them, those girls, though perhaps I owe them a great debt. They made me tough.
Paul sent me an airline ticket to Paris at the end of the term and I flew in on a Tuesday in May. He picked me up at the gray airport on a soft sunny morning. I had brought little with me—most of it shoved from my drawers into an oversized rucksack—and I was jetlagged, heart-sore, soul-ragged. I felt like an orphan.
He stood there waiting in the gray, grim, cigarette-stained airport with its Jetson styling, tall and loose-limbed in a pale green cambric shirt that showed off the warmth of his olive-toned skin. His hair was a little long, wavy in the back, the dark, dark ends just touching his collar. To me, he looked like everything good and safe and real in the world.
My defenses dissolved as I moved toward him, and like a very small girl, I flung myself into his arms and wept. He held me. “Oh, my little Sylvie,” he murmured, petting my hair, holding me. “I am so sorry, ma petite puce, my little flea, so sorry we did not see sooner.”
Embarrassed suddenly at this show of emotion, which was very unlike me in those days, I tried to pull away. “I’m all right.”
Putting his big, raw-boned hands on my face, Paul said, “You do not have to pretend now, Sylvie,” he said. “Not with me.” He frowned. “Oui?”
I nodded. “Oui.”
He kissed my brow, took out a white handkerchief and wiped my tears. “Come,” he said, “you will eat and sleep and not worry about a thing.”
“All right.” I kept my head down as he took my bag and we headed out into the brilliance of a French spring. The sunlight felt as delicate as butterfly wings, and there was a scent of grass in the air. I stopped, let the sun touch my face, let the scents of diesel and roses and Paul himself fill me up.
“I love France,” I said. “I never want to live anywhere else again.”
He touched my arm. “Come. You are worn out.” He settled me in his Jaguar, a low black bullet of a car. In every detail, it was built for speed and control, one of the only possible cars for a man who once had raced at extremely high speeds on dangerous courses and nearly killed himself doing it.
By then, I’d learned to love things about cars. This one had a wooden dash. I ran three fingers over the silky smoothness of it. “Sweet.”
He gave me a sideways grin. “Indeed…”
By the time I got to Troon, I was cold, wet, grouchy and not in the mood for any bullshit from anyone, an attitude that no doubt cloaked me as I entered the pub. Certainly no one bothered me. It was old and agreeably dim, with a heavy wooden bar and a few businessman-golfer sorts telling tales of their games.
I took a table well away from the bar, and shrugged out of my wet coat. A girl with her hair dyed an unrelenting shade of black came over to take my order. Her skin was the color of a carp.
I ordered tea. “And would you happen to have a pen and a piece of paper I could use?”
Her pencil hovered over a tiny tablet. “Noffin to eat?”
My whole body felt chilled. “Have you got a bowl of soup?”
“We do.” Happy to have something to put on her tablet, she laboriously—tongue involved—wrote it down. “Be right back.”
Which she was, bearing a welcome steel pot and cup, and a yellow legal pad with two pens. “Will that work?”
“Yes, thank you.”
“Are you American?” she said.
It was never a question I quite knew how to answer. “My father is,” I said. “And I live there now.” Sometimes people are still charmed. “San Francisco.”
“Oh, I’d love to go there.” It sounded more like ach, eye’d luve to goooo th’r. “It looks beautiful.”
“It is. You should go someday.” I could see she would stand and talk all day, but there was a lot I needed to sort out. “Thanks,” I said, and smiled.
She took the hint. “I’ll bring your soup out when it’s done.”
On the paper I drew three columns, one for Paul, one for Luca, one for me. Paul’s story was that Luca was a dangerous criminal who would kill for what he wanted. Luca’s story was that Paul was a dangerous criminal who would kill to get what he wanted. I didn’t think either of them would kill me, and I was fairly certain Paul was not a killer of anyone.
What was bothering me was whether Paul had had anything to do with the first thug in my hotel room. Had he sent someone there to find the diamond, so he could sidestep me in the process?
It illuminated certain questions I’d always avoided asking myself. Paul had always been rich, but I had no idea how he earned that money. It had not been inherited, that much I did know—he’d had a very tough childhood in the industrial city of Lyons. Some of it had likely come from the purses he’d won racing, but it had gone long beyond that now.
So, how did he earn his living? Why had he been mixed up with a notorious drug lord at any point? I wondered if my father would tell me, if he even knew. In another hour or two, I would be able to call him.
One thing that was not in dispute was the fact that Paul had engaged Luca’s services to steal the jewel from Gunnarsson. What was less clear was whether Luca had always intended to steal it for himself, or had indeed planned to take it to Paul.
It also seemed plain that Luca had chosen me at some point early in the process, maybe even before he’d stolen the jewel. If he’d known ahead of time that he was going to double-cross Paul, I would be an obvious choice to pull into the situation—not only a jewel expert, but also someone Paul would be reluctant to endanger.
The one element I still didn’t understand was the thugs. Who had hired them? The clearly visible answer seemed to be someone connected to Gunnarsson, someone who would know about the jewel.
Or perhaps I didn’t want to think about it being Paul.
I poured tea and stirred in milk, rubbing my forehead. What difference did it make in the end? I couldn’t trust either one of them, and my obligation lay to the police here in Scotland. They’d hired me to assess the rest of the collection. My integrity was on the line.
The same thing had happened in Egypt last summer. Not the exact scenario, but one where I’d found myself in possession of a great jewel. That one I’d tracked down and managed to return to its rightful place, but I’d encountered some…er…resistance along the way. As with all such jewels, there were those who wanted it for themselves.
I sipped the hot, strong tea. Sylvie Montague, Liberator of Jewels. It had a nice ring to it.
Discreetly, I touched the Katerina below my blouse. Maybe she was simply being liberated here. Maybe the horrific history attached to her needed to somehow be put to rest. On some level, I believed Luca’s story about taking the jewel home. It was his very real dread that gave me insight, that and the sense that a jewel thief might feel a lot of respect for a jewel of this much magnificence.
Okay, so: Luca wanted to take Katerina to Romania, where she would end up in a celebrated spot safely behind glass. Luca would be a hero, like his martyred father.
Paul wanted the jewel because he was a collector of beautiful things—paintings, jewels, women. Because he’d heard the story as a boy and yearned to see it, and then his father—not a martyr by any stretch of the imagination, but a petty thief with few graces—had died after taking possession of it.
In a way, I suppose Paul wanted redemption, too. He’d wanted to own the Katerina as long as I could remember. He’d told me stories about it from the time I was small. “Sylvie,” he would say, “imagine…a diamond with a ruby inclusion! The ruby is said to be a full carat.”
I had a reputation to uphold, but I was also neatly torn. I would not mind helping Luca take the jewel to Romania. I also wanted to deliver it to Paul—to see his face when he held the Katerina. I was not immune to the beauty and lure of the gem.
But if I wished to continue to work in assessment, there was only one right answer. I had to follow the law. I had an obligation to the Scottish police.
Besides, if I morally rearranged facts to suit what I wanted, rather than to do what was right, I’d be just like my father, like Paul and Luca and the rest of the world. Maybe it was just the Catholic in me, but I hated that whole idea of relative morality—it gave people too many excuses to do the wrong thing and call it right.
In this case, it was possible there was a higher moral ground here—that this particular jewel did belong to Romania and should, thus, be delivered there—but that wasn’t my decision to make.
From my wallet, I took a card. It was late, but not so late I’d feel bad calling a police inspector’s work line. Surely I’d be able to leave a message. On my cell phone I dialed the number.
Voice mail picked up. In a heavy Glasgow accent, a burly male voice said, “You’ve reached Inspector Barlow. Please leave your message at the beep.”
“Hello, Inspector,” I said, “this is Sylvie Montague, and I’ve come into possession of a jewel that is part of the collection you want me to assess. I’ve had a little trouble tonight, but I’m safe now and should be able to bring it in tomorrow afternoon.” I left my cell number and hung up.
The girl was coming to the table with my soup. With a flourish, she put it in front of me, a steaming broth with a hearty scent of beef. Bits of onion floated in it, and she’d brought a good piece of bread and some butter to go with it. “Anythin’ else?” she asked.
“No, thanks.”
“Ye look so familiar to me,” the girl said. “You’re not an actress or somethin’ are you?”
Ah. “Not exactly,” I said with a chuckle. “My father is a Formula One driver. Sometimes, when he’s winning, photographers sort of follow me around.”
The girl raised her brows. “Well, now, that’s something. Do they bother you?”
“Yes. Often.” I buttered my bread, picked up my spoon.
The cell phone rang. Thinking it was probably Paul again, I snatched it up. “Excuse me,” I said to the waitress. I flipped open the phone. “Hello?”
“Is this Sylvie Montague?” said a male voice with a heavy Scottish accent.
“Speaking.”
“This is Inspector Barlow, Glasgow. I just received your message.”
“Hello, Inspector. I’m glad you called. I—”
“You’re in a bad spot, girl. Is it Katerina’s Blood you’ve got? Half the world is going insane looking for it.”
“I’m not surprised. I’ll bring it in tomorrow morning.”
“You should come tonight.”
I shook my head, stirred the soup around. “That’s not possible, I’m sorry.”
“Where are you, Sylvie? Let me send some protection at least.”
Jeez. It seemed like everyone and their brother got weird when it came to this diamond. “No, thank you. I can handle myself, trust me.”
“You don’t know the kind of people I’m speaking of, young lady.”
“I do, sir, and I’ll be all right. Thank you for your concern. I’ll see you tomorrow, and we can get started.” Before he could protest again, I hung up.
Maybe it was just the phone call making me paranoid, but I suddenly realized that if Luca had managed to get away from the guys back at the caravan, he would be meeting me here. We’d agreed to meet here, but I didn’t know if I could deal with him again.
When in doubt, run.