Stevie smiled. âIt's been a long time . . .' she said softly.
âBut we have never forgotten her, or Lockie.' The baroness squeezed her hand. âThey were a handsome coupleâ
les plus beaux
du quartier
.' She turned as three girls approached. âMy daughters are around your age. Perhaps you remember them? Severine, Marie-Thérèse and little Nicolette.'
âWe used to play together on the beach when we were tiny,' said Marie-Thérèse as Severine handed Stevie a Bellini.
âDo you remember Palmiero?' her sister chimed in. âThe little boy who used to show off so much on the windsurfer?'
Stevie nodded. He had been a god to the little girls too young to lift a sail yet.
âThat's him over there.' Marie-Thérèse pointed to a tall man with shoulder-length dark hair and a beautiful smile. âI think I may have to flirt shamelessly with him tonight.' She laughed and looked over at Palmiero again. âI think I might have loved him since the windsurfer. His parents moved to South America after that. He only came back last year.' Palmiero glanced over at Marie-Thérèse and smiled. She blushed and looked away, then turned to Stevie. âDo you think it's possible to love someone and not realise it for so many years?'
Stevie thought it over a moment and decided that definitely it was. She said so.
âThen maybe tonight I will be brave enough to tell him,' said Marie-Thérèse, lifting her eyebrows in merriment.
Stevie smiled and felt as if she had come home.
As the daylight turned from soft gold to pink, Stevie reluctantly withdrew herself from an animated discussion on the best way to make osso bucco and made her way towards the back courtyard. She was due to phone Hazard and needed a moment of privacy. The roof was probably her best bet. Her feet dragged up the stairsâshe didn't want to talk to Rice, not with the way he was right now. She didn't want to come away from their phone call feeling deflated and cold, not now, not the night before she was leaving for some pleasure cruise of the Mediterranean on a ship full of villains. Still, work was work. She took her second deep and steadying breath of the afternoon and dialled.
Rice's direct line was answered by Josie: âRice's line. He isn't taking calls right now.'
Stevie was relieved. âIt's Stevie. How are you, Josie?' There was silence on the line. Josie hated small talk. âI'm supposed to report in on the Kroks,' Stevie went on, speaking as quietly as possible, and ducking down out of sight behind a low wall. âI never got the dossier Rice was supposed to send, so this is all just my observations.'
âOkay, shoot,' replied Josie.
Stevie filled her in on the situation at the Villa Goliath, and aboard the
Hercules.
âAnd Clémence Krok want me to go on a cruise with them, leaving tomorrow morning.'
Josie's response was swift. âThat sounds like a very foolish idea, Stevie. The man is the head of the world's largest private army; he is surrounded by bodyguards armed with ceramic guns; he is unstable, irritable, violent, unpredictable and deadly. What part of that doesn't put you off?' she asked drily.
âThe thing is, Josie, Krok is up to something. He's running some syndicate with Dado Falcone and Socrates Skorpios.'
âA weapons manufacturer, and a billionaire shipping tycoon of
very
dubious reputationâof course they are up to something. Men like that are always “up to something”. But what does it have to do with you? It is all the more reason to stay away.'
âJosie, I can't stay away. I'm doing a job for Rice. He asked me to do this as a favour.'
âI don't think he fully knew what he was getting you into, Stevie. I don't think he would have asked you if he had. I'm going to tell him as soon as he comes out of the crisis roomâwhich probably won't be for days,' she sighed exasperatedly.
Stevie's heart thudded. âIs it still terrible?' she asked quickly. âIs David alright?'
âDavid looks terrible,' said Josie, pulling no punches. âI wouldn't be surprised if he has a heart attack. The pirates are driving him to his death.'
Stevie swallowed the huge lump in her throat. âDon't tell him anything, Josie,' she whispered. âPlease. He doesn't need any more worries on his plate. I will quickly and quietly finish the job. It's the least I can do to help him.'
âIt sounds like you've seen enough. Pack it in.'
âThe threats to Emile Krok are becoming more specific. There's something not right going on. I can't get a good picture of who might be threatenening the child if I don't have some sense of what Krok is up to. In a way, the cruise is the perfect opportunity to watch and learn.'
âYou make it sound like a sewing circle,' Josie replied acidly, but Stevie could hear the concern in her voice as she said, âDon't do anything stupid, Stevie. David's not worth it.'
âHe is to me, Josie,' Stevie said softly, and ended the call.
It was then that she heard the first notes. The pink light was fading to pale blue as Stevie peeped over the low wall that hid her from view. Osip was sitting cross-legged on a reed mat and playing a flute. Stevie sat still and listened, enchanted by the music, as the sun sank slowly into the sea.
The last note of the flute died with the sun and Osip wrapped his flute in a cloth and stood. â
Ciao
,' he said; he must have caught sight of the top of her head, Steve realised.
âI'm sorry if I disturbed you, Osip,' she said quietly, straightening up from behind the wall. âI came away to make a phone call. You know, I hear that melody every evening and I've always wondered who was playing.'
Osip smiled. âI could sense someone listening.' It was almost dark now and the scent of sandalwood rose from the terrace below; a light breeze came up off the water and danced around their faces. Osip's eyes turned an impossible blue as he stared at her.
âDo you play for any special reason?' asked Stevie, looking for something to say to break the rather intense spell of the moment.
âNone,' he replied, gesturing with his free hand. âI play because it is charming to me, and because I know the music drifts around to the other houses in the bay. I know people wonder who is playing the strange melodies, but I think they like the mystery.'
âIt is a charming mystery,' Stevie agreed. âI won't tell anyone.'
âIt's okay.' Osip grinned. âI see it as my contribution to the universeâthat one tiny moment of beauty.' He took her hand. âDo you find that silly?'
Stevie shook her head. âNo. Not at all, actually. It makes perfect and wonderful sense. I think everyone should do that. Only I'm not sure what I could add . . .'
âThis is where I should say something like, “Your beauty is enough”, right?'
Stevie laughed. âNo! Definitely not.'
âI'm not good at seductions like that. I should be: I'm French. But the art seems to have eluded me. Perhaps something hidden deep in my background . . .'
âI'm sure you do just fine, Osip.' Stevie raised an eyebrow and gently removed her hand from his.
âThe moment of beauty can be as simple as giving an unexpected compliment, or putting a flower by the bed, or cooking something for a friend. The important thing is that you are giving back to the universeâcreating somethingâas well as taking from it. There is a balance to strike.'
Stevie thought of her afternoon on the yacht, the party at Dado Falcone's house, Simone. Everyone wanted something, everything. âMaybe you are right,' she said slowly. âMaybe it is that simple: the intention to give back is enough, however small. I think a lot of people only think about what they can take from the world and other people. Giving is seen as weak or as somehow harmful to their own interests.' She wondered if she was like that, taking too much, giving too little. Perhaps this favour for Rice was a way of giving. She would like to see it as that, to see it as something that would give him strength in some way, fix things. She wanted to think about David, but right now Osip was gesturing down the stairs where dinner awaited.
The glitter of the sunlight had been replaced with candles now, set the length of a long wooden table on the terrace, and dotted around the pool. The terracotta tiles were warm under Stevie's bare feet as she found a chair and satâprudently, she thoughtâa little way away from Osip. An enormous fish cooked in a heavy salt crust was served, with salad and grilled vegetables from the garden, and a local rosé. For dessert there was ice-cream made of white rice and covered with a mysteriously delicious reduction of grape must called
saba
. As the plates were cleared, three musicians appeared and the dancing began.
Stevie sat on a cane chair and watched the dancers, sipping on a small glass of pungent
mirto
, the local myrtle berry liqueur that was a dark shade of purple.
Osip came and sat beside her on the still-warm stones. âAre you worrying about your cousins?' he asked.
Stevie's mind had been on David, but she nodded. She was worried about them too. âThey had a real estate agent over this afternoon.'
âBut the house is not theirs to sell?'
Stevie shook her head emphatically.
No
.
âThen, really, there is no problem.'
Stevie looked at him in surprise. âBut they want my grandmother to die so they can sell the house.'
âWishing won't make it soâisn't that the saying?' Osip replied. âThey seem terribly unhappy, your cousins, because they are constantly looking to the future and fantasising and saying “when we have this much, we will be happy”âbut of course they won't. Because the worm is within.'
âSo I should do nothing?'
âI think you should let them torment themselves with visions of what could be, and ignore them. They will depart soon, and go back to their covetous little nest, and leave you and your grandmother in peace.'
âIt's that simple, is it?' Stevie asked sarcastically, but then she realised Osip was right. The worst Mark and Simone could do was to annoy her and offend her sense of what was right. And even that was only if she let them. She would take back that power and let them go.
âIt's that simple.' Stevie smiled at her new friend and touched her glass gently to his. âTo learning to let go.'
As the guests came aboard
the
Hercules
, the staff served warm lemon-butter croissants. A crowd had gathered behind the security cordons on the dock, eager to catch a glimpse of who was boarding, and to see the monstrous albatross of a boat under steam. Stevie had arrived early to avoid the circus and slipped aboard unnoticed. She had resisted the temptation to wear whiteânot wanting to be mistaken for one of the crewâand had instead chosen a silk dress printed with toucans and tigers on a background of emerald green. Sometimes standing out was even better camouflage than blending in. Stevie had long ago learnt that invisibility was becoming exactly what people expected to see.
Vaughan Krok was nowhere to be seen but the boat swarmed with his men in their white berets with their white ceramic guns. They glanced at Stevie but made no attempt to address her or check her identity. She assumed they had been shown photos of the invited guests and knew exactly who was expected aboard.
Stevie left her sandals in the raffia basket by the gangplank and went looking for Clémence.
She found her by the shaded centaur pool, long brown legs stretched out on a chaise longue, her face mostly hidden under a large red sunhat. She was reading a yachting magazine.
Stevie wandered over but Clémence did not notice her approach.
âHave you heard anything more?' she asked the reading figure.
Clémence looked up and Stevie jumped in fright.
Mrs Krok's face had changed. Overnight, it appeared to have sharpened; it was the same, yet somehow strangely altered. Perhaps it was the mouth . . .
The corners of it now twisted up in a strange smile. âWhat are you and my sister plotting, I wonder? Something's up, only she won't tell me what. I suddenly have a feeling it has something to do with you.'
As Stevie returned the gaze, she felt as if she were staring into a reptilian kaleidoscope, irises of fragmented colours, without any warmth in them at all. It took all her self-possession to flop down casually on the chaise next to the predator, put her feet up and wave a small hand in the air.
âYour sister was going to get me an appointment with one of her masseurs. Apparently the man works miracles with circulation and especially
cellulite
.' She hissed the dirty word under her breath. âIt takes months to get an appointment.'
Clémence's sister fixed her with her strange stare. âReally?' The word was laced with boredom and contempt. Another of her sister's spoilt, vacuous friends, she was obviously thinking.
Mission accomplished.
Stevie lay back, closed her eyes and nodded. âIt's the scourge of the twenty-first century.'
There was a faint jangling sound, followed by a whiff of gardenias as Clémence sat down on the third chaise. âHello, Stevie. I see you've met Marlena. Is she playing nice?'
âCharming, charming,' muttered Stevie.
âWe were born identical, Stevie,' continued Clémence, âonly life has shaped us differently. Now, I think, you could tell us apart.'
Stevie opened her eyes and studied the two sisters. Seen together, they were remarkable. Two jaguars swathed in designer silks. Only there was a slight difference between them: Marlena's eyes were narrower, her cheekbones more prominent; she was Clémence with a harder edge, and a slightly more muscular build.
âClémence is younger by almost a minute. It shows, don't you think? The younger twin is always a little frailer, a little weakerâ and of course her eyes are an uninterrupted blue . . .'
âThey're violet,' snapped Clémence.