It wasn’t a perfect plan, but it had been good enough. Ben had let himself get picked up like an apple off a tree, and only Roberta’s chance intervention had saved him from being smeared over a hundred metres of railway line. Without her, they’d still be spooning him out of the cracks in the sleepers.
Was he slipping? This couldn’t happen again.
It also meant that the same people who were after Roberta Ryder were after him too. They meant business, and that, like it or not, drew Ben and her together.
He’d been awake since dawn and had been pondering all morning what to do with her. The day before, he’d been thinking that he’d have to ditch her, pay her off, force her to return to the States. But maybe he’d been wrong. She might be able to help him. She wanted to find out what was going on, and so did he. And he sensed that for the moment she wanted to stick by him, partly out of fear, partly out of fierce curiosity. But that wouldn’t last if he went on keeping her in the dark, freezing her out, not trusting her.
He sat on his bed and thought about it until he heard her moving about in the next room. He stood up and pushed open the door. She was stretching and yawning, the rumpled bedclothes heaped up on the floor at her feet. Her hair was tousled.
‘I’m making coffee, and then I’m getting out of here,’ he said. ‘The door’s open. You’re free to go.’
She looked at him, said nothing.
‘Time to decide,’ he said. ‘Are you staying or leaving?’
‘If I stay, I have to stay with you.’
He nodded. ‘We have a lot of figuring out to do. And we need to do this my way.’
Are we trusting one another now?’
‘I suppose we are,’ he said.
‘I’m staying.’
He walked along the row of used cars, casting his eye over each one in turn. Something quick and practical. Not too ostentatious, not too distinctive. ‘What about this one?’ he asked, pointing.
The mechanic wiped his hands on his overall, leaving parallel oil smears down the blue cloth. ‘She is one year old, perfect condition. How you paying?’
Ben patted his pocket. ‘Cash all right?’
Ten minutes later Ben was gunning the silver Peugeot 206 Sport along Avenue de Gravelle towards the main Paris ring-road.
‘Well, for a journalist you sure seem to throw a lot of money around, Ben,’ Roberta said next to him.
‘OK, time for the truth. I’m not a journalist,’ he confessed, slowing down for the heavy traffic on the approach to the Périphérique.
‘Ha. Knew it.’ She clapped her hands. ‘Am I allowed to know what you do do, Mr. Benedict Hope? That your real name, by the way?’
‘It’s my real name.’
‘It’s a nice name.’
‘Too nice for a guy like me?’
She smiled. ‘I didn’t say that.’ ‘As for what I do,’ he said, ‘I suppose you could say I’m a seeker.’ He filtered through the traffic, waited for a gap, and the acceleration of the sporty little car pressed them back in their seats as its fruity engine note rose to a pleasing pitch.
‘A seeker of what? Trouble?’
‘Well, yes, sometimes I’m a seeker of trouble,’ he said, allowing a dry smile. ‘But I wasn’t expecting as much trouble this time.’
‘So what are you seeking? And why come to me?’
‘You really want to know?’
‘I really want to know.’
‘I’m trying to find the alchemist Fulcanelli.’
She arched an eyebrow. ‘Riiight… Uh-huh. Go on.’
‘Well, what I’m really looking for is a manuscript he was supposed to have had, or written–I don’t know much about it.’
‘The Fulcanelli manuscript–that old myth.’
‘You’ve heard of it?’
‘Sure, I’ve heard of it. But you hear a lot of things in this business.’
‘You don’t think it exists.’
She shrugged. ‘Who knows? It’s like the holy grail of alchemy. Some say it does, some say it doesn’t, nobody knows what it is or what’s in it, or even if it really exists. What do you want with it, anyway? You don’t seem to me like the sort who goes for all this stuff.’
‘What sort’s that?’
She snorted. ‘You know what one of the biggest problems with alchemy is? The people who are drawn to it. I never met one yet who wasn’t some kind of fruitcake.’
‘That’s the first compliment you’ve paid me.’
‘Don’t take it to heart. Anyway, you didn’t answer the question.’
He paused. ‘It’s not for me. I’m working for a client.’
‘And this client believes the manuscript can help with some kind of illness, right? That’s why you were so interested in my research. You’re looking for some kind of medicinal cure for someone. The client’s sick?’
‘Let’s just say he’s pretty desperate for it.’
‘Boy, he must be.’
‘I was wondering if your fly elixir could be of any use to him.’
‘I’ve told you. It’s not ready yet. And I wouldn’t even try it on a human being. It would be totally unethical. Not to mention practising medicine without a licence. I’m in enough shit as it is, apparently.’
He shrugged.
‘So, Ben, are you going to tell me where we’re going in this fancy new toy of yours?’
‘Does the name Jacques Clément mean anything to you?’ he asked.