ghosts, finishing their tasks, one by one withdrawing through a far doorway.
Bright sunshine flooded in from a wall of windows and bathed the red carpet and plush surroundings in a mellow glow.
Larocque encouraged everyone to find a seat.
Ashby walked off.
Thorvaldsen made his way to the nearest of the two tables, but not before he caught sight of a young man, one of the servers, storing away extra chairs behind the stage to his right. He'd thought at first he was mistaken, but when the worker returned for one more load he was certain.
Sam Collins.
Here.
MALONE AND STEPHANIE CLIMBED A COLD METAL LADDER THAT led up into a space between the interior and exterior walls. The dome itself was not a single piece. Instead, only one of the two stories of windows visible on the drum's exterior could be seen from inside. A second cupola, completely enclosed by the first, visible through the open top of the lower cupola, captured daylight through a second level of windows and illuminated the inside. It was an ingenious nesting design, only evident once high above everything.
They found a platform that abutted the upper cupola, among the building's crisscrossing exoskeleton of wooden timbers and more recent steel beams. Another metal ladder angled toward the center, between the supports, to a second platform that anchored one last ladder leading up into the lantern. They were near the church's summit, nearly three hundred feet high. On the second platform, below the lantern, stood one of the French security personnel who'd slipped into the Invalides several hours ago.
He was pointing upward.
"There."
ELIZA WAS PLEASED. ALL SEVEN MEMBERS, ALONG WITH HENRIK Thorvaldsen, had come. Everyone was finding a seat. She'd insisted on two tables so that no one would feel crowded. She hated to be crowded. Perhaps it came from living alone her entire adult life. Not that a man couldn't occasionally provide a delightful distraction. But the thought of a close personal relationship, someone who'd want to share her thoughts and feelings, and would want her to share his? That repulsed her.
She'd watched carefully as Thorvaldsen met Graham Ashby. Neither man showed any reaction. Clearly, two strangers meeting for the first time.
She checked her watch.
Time to begin.
Before she could attract everyone's attention, Thorvaldsen approached and quietly said, "Did you read this morning's Le Parisien?"
"It's waiting for me later today. The morning was busy."
She watched as he reached into his suit pocket and removed a newspaper clipping. "Then you should see this. From page 12A. Top right column."
She quickly scanned the piece, which reported a theft yesterday at the Hôtel des Invalides and its Musee de l'Armee. In one of the galleries being renovated, thieves had taken an item from the Napoleon exhibit.
A book.
The Merovingian Kingdoms 450-751 A.D.
Significant only since it was specifically mentioned in the emperor's will, but otherwise not all that valuable, which was one reason it had been left in the gallery. The museum staff was in the process of inventorying the remaining artifacts to ascertain if anything else had been stolen.
She stared at Thorvaldsen. "How could you possibly know that this may be relevant to me?"
"As I made clear at your chateau, I've studied you, and him, in great detail."
Thorvaldsen's warning from yesterday rang in her ears.
If I'm right about him, he's going to tell you that he wasn't able to retrieve whatever it is, that it wasn't there, or some other such excuse.
And that's exactly what Graham Ashby had told her.
Chapter Nineteen
FIFTY
MALONE CLIMBED THROUGH AN OPENING IN THE FLOOR INTO the lantern. Frigid air and sunshine greeted him as he stood out in the bright midday, at the top of the church. The view in all directions was stunning. The Seine wound a path through the city to his north, the Louvre rose toward the northeast, the Eiffel Tower less than two miles to the west.
Stephanie followed him up. The security man climbed up last, but remained on the ladder, only his head and shoulders visible.
"I decided to examine the cupola myself," the man said. "Nothing was there, but I wanted a cigarette, so I climbed up here and saw that."
Malone followed the man's pointing finger and spotted a blue box, maybe four inches square, affixed to the lantern's ceiling. A decorative brass railing guarded each of the cupola's four archways. Carefully, he hoisted himself onto one of the railings and stood within a few inches of the box. He spotted a thin wire, perhaps a foot long, extending from one side, dangling in the