The Adventures of Mademoiselle Mac 2-Book Bundle (23 page)

BOOK: The Adventures of Mademoiselle Mac 2-Book Bundle
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“Sadly, it may shorten his time in the position he coveted so nakedly and assumed so undeservedly by poisoning the minister of culture with lies about my work.”

I felt like I could read Leo's mind. If we could play for time, maybe Defaux would slip up somehow, get distracted by his own genius, and we could escape.

“But how did you manage to create these ...” I had to choose my words carefully so as not to inflame the former director. I was going to say “fakes” but thought better of it. “... these replicas?”

He still winced at the term, but chose to indulge me. “I know everything about art,” he said modestly, “not just who and when and where and whether they died penniless, or lived off of their mistresses, or whose faces they included in the background in exchange for financial considerations and protection from persecution ... I also know ... how.” He paused briefly as if waiting like an impatient teacher for someone, anyone, to raise their hand. “I studied the classical techniques in school, but my work went unappreciated, so I grabbed the reins of power in the art world, all the while returning to my workshop at home, honing my skills, until now.”

“But how did you do it, Monsieur DeFaux?” Leo's curiosity sounded so genuine, I think DeFaux was moved.

“Come here, young man, and learn.” Leo approached DeFaux cautiously as he gestured at Mona Lisa. “My most challenging work, not because of the genius of da Vinci — that's easily replicated by a true craftsman — but because of age. I had to bake her many times in this oven,” he gestured across his studio, “to achieve the exact
craquelure
that would have occurred naturally over five hundred years of heat and cold, expansion and contraction, leading to all the fine cracks you see in the older work.” DeFaux suddenly swung around and glared at me. “Is this boring you, mademoiselle? I'm glad to have one young mind who doesn't spend his life with his eyes closed and his headphones on.”

I told the truth. “No, it's fascinating. Weird, but fascinating.” I was playing for time before DeFaux went all Hansel and Gretel on us with that oversized oven.

“Who could have foreseen,” he thundered, “that it would be months before someone discovered the alteration to the world's best-known and best-loved work of art?” He allowed himself a small smile and, almost under his breath, added, “Of course, it could be attributed to the pure talent of the creator.” I rolled my eyes, which did not escape the madman's attention. “And who would have imagined a child would be the one to see it?”

He suddenly sounded weary and defeated and sat down heavily on a stool in front of Mona. He took the remote lock from his pocket and mimed painting as if in a trance. Leo and I exchanged a look.

“Sad,” said DeFaux in a hushed voice, “but it confirmed my hypothesis. We see not what we see, but what we expect to see, what we are told is in front of our eyes. People seek out the so-called ‘important' works of art, the must-sees, and check them off like a grocery list that they can brag about at their coffee chain stores, their nail salons, and their self-important book clubs.”

His voice sounded far away. Leo whispered to me, “What's this all about?”

“It goes with the territory. He's mad. He has to make speeches,” I whispered back.

“Oh. You sound like you've had some experience with this sort of thing.”

“Well, actually ...” But I thought a long explanation would have to wait.

DeFaux finally looked up. “So I raised the stakes. Van Gogh, Magritte, and now my boldest move: to transform an entire collection of work without anyone noticing. Until I am gone, that is. Look. Appreciate.”

He yanked away the cloths covering easel after easel of newly converted work. The prizes of the Colombe d'Or collection by Picabia, Matisse, Picasso, and Léger were all on display, or their close relatives were. Matisse's
Portrait of a Woman
with a tiny butterfly tattoo on her neck, Léger's vase with the tip of a cellphone behind the flowers, Picasso's round-faced man with a wisp of gelled hair poking out of his crown. DeFaux seemed to snap back to life as he gathered up his canvases.

“And I think I'll be needing my Italian friend as well,” he said, while delicately rolling up Mona Lisa and easing her into the hollow of his cane.

“Is that how you managed to remove her from the Louvre?” I asked.

He responded with a superior smile.

“And as the museum director, you would have had unique access,” said Leo, almost admiringly.

“Some diversions were required, but yes, I am probably the only person in the world who could have pulled this off. I know some things about the art of disguise as well.” Here he pretended to be a much older man, giving me a chill as I recalled my experience with the gatekeeper at Père Lachaise.

“Where will you go?” I asked innocently.

DeFaux eyed me with suspicion, then shrugged. “I suppose there's no harm in telling you, is there? I have friends; more people than you might imagine are quite sympathetic to my work and have gladly offered their assistance. One of your rally taxi drivers, in fact, is taking me to Marseille, and from there I have secured a hideaway for the evening before an unscheduled night flight to Tahiti. Gaugin documented it beautifully, and I've always wanted to see it firsthand. As it happens, the extradition agreements with France are shaky at best, so I should be able to remain in this island paradise as a guest for some time. And besides, who will come after me, knowing that Mona could disappear forever should my safety be threatened in any way?”

“You would really destroy the most famous painting in the world to get what you want?” Leo sounded incredulous.

“I think he would,” I said, disgusted. DeFaux offered only a reptilian smile in response.

“Ah, but I have a party awaiting me and I'm guessing that you two haven't heard. There's talk of cancelling the last day of the
rally de taxi
, or at least shortening it, due to the big storm. But you will be safe and far from all that here in my apartment. Feel free to use the TV and the fridge, but I would appreciate it if you would leave my Armagnac untouched. Sadly, I have no Orangina.”

He didn't look sad as he made a swift exit, leaving Leo and I staring at each other, wondering
What now?

Twenty-Three

Tireless rain flung itself on tiny Saint-Paul de Vence, along with the rest of Provence, turning roads into rivers, washing wildly over windows, and soaking every living thing that ventured out underneath the sky. Shopping, visiting, and games of
boules
were left for another day. Steady streams ran off the colourful tile roof of La Colombe d'Or and into the empty courtyard onto tables and between cracks in the concrete, sending wayward leaves rushing over soaked walkways, past bowing bushes in drenched winter gardens. Rain rolled into doorways, seeking any tiny opening. It dripped from trees and lampposts, drummed on car roofs, and danced in fountains.

Blag came into the bar of La Colombe d'Or and shook himself off like a bull terrier with a bad attitude. He looked at Dizzy and shook his head. Dizzy peered out of a drenched window and heaved a mighty sigh.

“But where would she go?” he said. Around the table his fellow Partypoppers sat subdued and silent. Across the room the Marauders chewed on their coffee, playing a half-hearted game of Belotte. Margot looked up when Blag entered, a stormy expression on her face. Behind the bar, DeFaux fired up the espresso machine once more and turned to the grumpy patrons.

“Do you mean the American girl with the ponytail?” he asked innocently.

All eyes from the Partypoppers table swung towards him. “Mac,” said Blag, “her name is Mac. What about her?”

DeFaux swallowed audibly and worked up a feeble smile. “
Oui
, Mac, of course. She was with the young man with the curly hair; I believe he was carrying a guitar.”

Margot pushed her table aside, sending croissants airborne. “Leo. His name is Leo. What about him?”

She approached the bar alongside Blag, and DeFaux visibly trembled. With good reason. It was like having an angry brick wall walking toward you.

“Leo,
bien sûr
, Leo. Well, I saw them this morning, earlier, while I was setting up.”

Margot and Blag, shoulder to shoulder, pressed against the bar as DeFaux shrank.

“They took one of the hotel umbrellas and headed into the street. Perhaps they were going up the hill to the magnificent Maeght gallery to view the splendid outdoor Miro sculpture garden.” He shrugged.

Blag's eyes bore into DeFaux. “Are you sure?” he growled.

DeFaux's upper lip revealed a fine layer of sweat and quivered slightly.

“Sculpture?” spat Margot. “In a rainstorm?” Her eyes widened and her brow developed a furrow you could hide a roast chicken in. “With a rally to win?”

DeFaux's mouth smacked drily as he cleared his throat. “They were ... holding hands.”

Blag's eyes closed momentarily and he shook his head slowly before turning back to the Partypoppers with an expression of bemused disgust. Margot snorted and shook.

“I'm going to turn my little Casanova's guitar into toothpicks for this.”

A much-relieved DeFaux, with the focus off of him, let out a long breath and shrugged modestly.

At this moment, two local taxi rally officials entered the bar, drenched and shivering. DeFaux slithered over with a pair of espressos, which were gratefully accepted. Drivers on both teams eagerly awaited a rally update. A tall, pompous judge removed his raincoat and hat, downed his coffee, and cleared his throat.

“With all due respect for the time-honoured traditions of the taxi rally, it has been concluded by the local members of the Federation, after considerable deliberation …” he paused dramatically, allowing time for the second official, a sharp-nosed young woman with a permanently arched brow, to interject.

“We decided over coffee.”

A miffed expression accompanied the first judge's next pronouncement. “That this year's rally must, in light of the unforeseen, and may I stress, unfortunate meteorological conditions and their impact on the planned route …” He paused again.

“It's raining,” his partner interjected, and when he showed his displeasure, added, “a lot.”

“That the rally should be adjusted to embody but a single leg, reducing the final portion of this legendary event to its most practical configuration.” He paused to allow time for full appreciation of his vocabulary, mistakenly, since the drivers seemed perplexed.

“You're going straight to Marseille, dudes,” his partner jumped in.

The room exploded with questions, complaints, outrage, and confusion.

In the tiny apartment below the hotel, there was no evidence of rain, no talk of rallies or splendid outdoor sculpture.

“How long have we been here?” I yawned as I adjusted my position on DeFaux's tiny, perfect sofa one more time and looked over at Leo, who was strumming his guitar quietly with his hair hanging over the strings.
He really is very cute
, I thought as he looked up sleepily.

“No idea, Mac,” he said. “Did you sleep at all?”

“Not really, you?”

“Not much. I guess we should reconsider the idea that we're going to be rescued from here.”

“What's the alternative?” I asked, wandering over to look again in wonder at Van Gogh's
Bedroom in Arles
. “Do you think those are family members on the wall in his room?” Leo seemed to be deep in thought. “I wonder what he saw when he looked out the window.” Still no response. “I wonder if
he
wore a watch.” He looked like he was far away. I couldn't blame him; that was where I would have liked to be. “Hard to imagine Van Gogh with jewellery, even if they had invented ...”

Leo stood up suddenly. “What's that on your wrist?”

“Penelope, my best friend, thinks I'm stylistically challenged —”

“Yes, of course, but what is it?”

I ignored the “yes, of course” but might have replied a little sarcastically when I said, “In America we call it a bracelet, why?”

“Does it come apart?”

“Not if I want to still have a best friend when I get home, assuming we're not spending the rest of our natural lives in an apartment in a wine cellar.”

“Let me see.” He practically wrenched it off my wrist. “Sorry, I have an inspiration,” he said. I figured it wasn't a new song idea. To my horror he rapidly undid the elaborate pattern of safety pins and began to straighten them out and bind them together into something weird ... that almost resembled ... a key!

“Nice work, Leo!” I said minutes later, so happy to be feeling my way in the darkness of the wine cellar once again. “Any chance you could put that back together once we take care of solving France's greatest art theft?”

“I don't think so.” He smiled as we emerged blinking into the grey Provence morning.

It took me a minute to realize that it was far too quiet. There was no one around, no one in the hotel bar, no one in the street outside La Colombe d'Or. The rain had washed away everything in its path and the whole town looked soggy. Just outside the gate to the town, we saw one person, a mailman with an umbrella and huge rubber boots.

“They all went to the start of the rally in the square but probably ducked into the bars and cafés when it started pouring again.”

“But what about the people from the hotel?” I asked.

He looked at his watch. “Siesta time, I think.” He gave a small-town shrug. “Oh, except for the new man, the bartender who looks after the art.” Leo and I were about to continue on into town but paused. “I saw him getting into a silver car with bubbles painted on the side. You don't see that every day in Saint-Paul.”

We both must have looked mystified. “What direction did he go, did you notice?” I asked, trying to conceal the urgency in my voice.

“I'm a mailman, of course I noticed. They took the road toward Nice, not twenty minutes ago. Of course, you'd take the same route if you were going to Antibes or Juan-les-Pins, for that matter, or even Marseille, eventually. Now, there are alternatives where Marseille —”

“Thanks.” Leo and I looked at each other and started back toward La Colombe d'Or.

“What are you two doing outside anyway? You'll catch your death.” I guess every adult in the world is required at some point to say that to a kid who is willingly walking in the rain.

As we passed the Café de la Place, Leo spotted an ancient motorcycle with a sidecar parked outside. It was rusted and looked like it was held together with Scotch tape. Inside, the town gendarme sat at the bar with his head resting on his hands, snoring so loudly we could hear him in the square. The other patrons ignored him. Leo smiled devilishly at me and began to quietly roll the motorcycle away from the café. I looked back nervously as he said, “I think I've just figured out how we're going to track down DeFaux.”

“Can you drive this thing?” I asked, not unreasonably.

“Maybe. But you're definitely the superior navigator,” he said, handing me an equally ancient helmet from inside the sidecar that reminded me of my grandpa's football team pictures.

“This is going to play havoc with my hair,” I said jokingly, putting on the bulky helmet.


Pas de problème
, Mac. You look
merveilleuse
!”

I like the sound of merveilleuse
, I thought.

He kicked it into gear and the old bucket of bolts responded admirably. I looked back at the gendarme sleeping at the bar. He raised his head briefly but then went back to sleep as if this happened every day.

“I think we better head straight for Marseille,” I shouted over the engine noise. “And I'm going to text Rudee so he can alert Inspector Magritte about DeFaux's plan.” Leo nodded and we shot out of Saint-Paul de Vence toward Nice.

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