Sacha stared at the little collection of shells on his plate and the array of forks of varying sizes. Nom de Dieu, he was living some kind of cliché. Heâd only eaten escargot once in his life and that was at a professional development seminar in an outdated conference centre in the Dordogne. He hadnât liked them. The snails were probably more tender at the Ritz, but just the thought made his stomach turn â especially as he was already on edge.
He had the feeling that something was going to happen to stuff Ren back into her box and he couldnât stand the thought. So much for his resolve not to cause trouble. The powerless feeling reminded him of the time after his father had died, which was⦠concerning.
First, he had to take a chance on a fork. He recognised the little set of tongs to hold the shell, but there was such an astonishing array of silver implements to his left that he could only assume the next courses would involve duelling with an assortment of other strange animals. Or perhaps the elaborate cutlery was just designed to make outsiders feel ignorant. Ren nudged him and gestured with the two-pronged fork sheâd selected from her arsenal.
âYou donât like escargot, Mr Mourad?â Ziggy asked. âIâm sure we could order you some fried chicken and fries â or would you prefer lamb kofta?â
âThank you for the offer, but Iâm fine.â
âWe ate fresh lobster last night,â Ren said. It wasnât the first time sheâd defended him in a roundabout way. It only reminded him of how much Ren disliked conflict. âIt was still crawling when it was delivered!â
âHow disgusting!â Charlotte piped up.
âIt wasnât crawling when we ate it,â Sacha muttered.
âIt was delicious, actually. We baked and played games and it was⦠a real Christmas,â Ren continued.
âYou could order lobster, if thatâs what youâd like to eat,â Livia spoke up, her tone full of concern. He had the impression that something had aged the matriarch since the weekend. Perhaps the theft had affected the company more than she wanted to let on. He hoped not.
âI had enough last night, thanks. Would Ziggy let me eat it, anyway?â Ren asked, her voice light.
âIâm sure when⦠when youâve got this out of your system, we can work something out with your diet. I only want you to come home and be happy,â Livia continued.
âWhatâs this, all of a sudden?â The table fell silent. Charlieâs parentsâ gazes were carefully averted, but Charlie himself watched with interest. Ren drew herself up. âWhy are you all tiptoeing around me?â
âWhatâs strange about your grandmother being concerned for your wellbeing?â Livia asked. âEspecially when youâve opened yourself up to all kinds of problems.â
ââProblemsâ?â Ren repeated. âEveryone knows youâre talking about Sacha, but you can leave him out of this. The only one who has a problem with Sacha is you, not me.â
âDarling, youâre confused and youâre hurt.â
âYes, by and by respectively,â she said, tossing her head in Charlieâs direction.
âI knew I gave you too long to indulge yourself. Heâs got to you, but youâll see clearly in time. Youâre vulnerable on your own.â
âIâm seeing clearly right now and Iâm always vulnerable. The more try to keep me safe, the more vulnerable I feel!â
Sachaâs nails dug into his palms. He had flashbacks to that Sunday night, when heâd stared at her in the dim light of a lamp as sheâd slept the hibernation of emotional exhaustion. He wanted to stand in front of her, Alexander with his sword, but he needed to let her wield her own sword.
âYou think youâre safe with him?â Ziggy asked pointedly. âHavenât you wondered what he wants from you?â
âNot everyone is like you, Ziggy. Some people value each other for themselves, because weâre people who exist on the same earth. Not everyone is out to get me. Iâve learned that.â
âBut youâre not like other people,â Livia interrupted before the stony-faced Ziggy could respond more harshly. âYour money makes youââ
âI just like other people. Itâs a good thing. I didnât know how to catch a train or peel a potato, but Iâm not so different that I canât have⦠friends. Iâm not an asset to write on your balance sheet â and write off when I screw up your plans!â
âYou know thatâs not what I meant.â
âNot consciously, but itâs the message youâre sending. Iâm a liability, a crack in your impregnable empire.â
âRen, stop this.â
âNo, Grandmama, listen to me. I am that crack and Iâm okay with that, whether you are or not. Iâm not going to shut out the world any more. I want to be strong enough to deal with it my way, instead. No matter what youâve done to protect me, you couldnât â not from the things I feared most.â Liviaâs face flushed red and her hands shook. Sacha wished he didnât know what she was talking about.
He clutched his hands into fists. âThe darkness is there â everywhere. I still have to find a way to breathe.â
âWhat nonsense is this? Has he been giving you hashish? I swear, I will have every policeman in Paris after youââ
âItâs not marijuana. Itâs poetry,â Ren explained.
âPoetry? Literature never fed anyone,â Livia said dismissively.
âAs if we ever had to worry about being ! This is exactly my point. Iâm sick of being afraid because you are. I value our heritage, but not enough to give up everything just so I can be dressed in bloody haute couture!â
âYou may wish youâd never opened yourself up to this, to ,â Livia continued, her tone oddly choked. âWhether you like it or not, money has always stood between the two of you.â
âIsnât that right, Sacha?â Ziggy began, much more controlled than her employer. He unfortunately couldnât argue with that.
âYou just bided your time, waiting for the opportunity and she handed it to you on a plate, gave you her misguided trust when she was most vulnerable.â The open hostility in Liviaâs voice made Sachaâs skin prickle with misgiving.
Heâd made everything worse for Ren. She was finally speaking her mind, paving the way for a more honest relationship with her only living family member, and his presence only weakened her position. âI have no idea what youâre talking about, but Iâm happy to leave, if thatâs what you would prefer.â
âStop it!â Ren cried. âIf he goes, Iâm going, too.â Sachaâs stomach dropped. He shouldnât have come. And he definitely shouldnât have been so close to losing control. The outcome of this many feelings could only be disaster.
Ziggy stood slowly, a sly smile on her face, and walked to the door of the room, gesturing to someone outside. âWhere heâs going, you might not want to follow, Ren.â
Three police officers stalked into the room and Sacha fought the irrational urge to flee. His vision blurred and all he could think about was the firearms on their hips and the distant memory of cowering in his bedroom and watching a different group of officers drag his father from their apartment. He should be wondering what was going on, but a sense of fatalism filled him instead.
Why had he ever thought this would end differently?
Ren groped for his arm, but he disentangled her fingers and stood. âQuâest-ce qui se passe?â he asked the officers what was wrong.
âSacha Mourad?â one officer asked. âNous avons quelques questions à vous demander concernant le vol dâun panneau de vitrail de la galerie Asquith-Lewis.â
âQuoi?â he huffed in disbelief. They thought heâd the stained glass?
âWhatâs going on? He hasnât done anything!â
Livia strode around the table to place a comforting hand on Renâs shoulder. âIt will be all right, darling. He stole the glass panel but please donât blame yourself. It isnât his first crime, and he must have targeted you and manipulated you to get into Asquith-Lewis. We all make mistakes. Iâm sorry this is such a shock and I wish I didnât have to deliver this news to you.â
Ren stood so quickly her elegant chair tipped over. âHe didnât steal anything!â She turned to Ziggy. âDid you convince her of this nonsense?â
âYou brought him to the gallery, Ren. He is a known thief, with contacts in the antiques market,â Ziggy said.
âHe was a kid who was grieving, who made a mistake, not a âknown thiefâ. And he has friends at the antiques market, not ! Did you have him investigated?â Sacha hated making Ren defend him, but if he defended himself, where would that leave her?
âOf course we had him investigated,â Livia said soothingly. âI only wished weâd discovered what he really wanted sooner.â
âYou have no idea what I really want,â he said, his voice wavering alarmingly. âAnd I have taken nothing from you or from Ren.â
âHe couldnât have stolen anything!â Ren insisted.
âIâm sorry I let him have such an influence on youââ
âItâs not a matter of trust. Itâs simple logic. The panel was stolen on Monday night.
was with him on Monday night â the whole night! He couldnât possibly have stolen it.â
âBut Charlie saidââ Liviaâs gaze darted between Ziggy and Charlie.
âJust what did Charlie say?â The steel in Renâs tone made Sacha unbearably proud of her, but she was still one person and she couldnât change the world.
âPoor Ren,â Charlie said, making Sachaâs stomach turn. âDid you pay him for the whole day, today? Iâm sure heâll issue a refund under the .â
âI was saddened to hear you had to resort to such desperate measures as paying someone to pose as your boyfriend,â Livia said. âI promise, I will look after you better. But, for now, you donât need to pretend any more.â
Silence rang out in the room and Charlieâs parents, at least, had the good grace to look shocked and dismayed, even if no one else did. Sachaâs ears rang as he watched Renâs face fall and there wasnât a thing he could do about it. She might not have paid him, but their relationship real â well, not the way theyâd presented it to Renâs family.
Ren looked at Sacha, biting her lip and he shook his head gently, willing her to understand that none of this was her fault. The officers wouldnât take anything from him but a few hours of his time, because they both knew he was innocent. If she kept fighting, he would be tempted to do the same and the outcome of that wouldnât be good for anyone.
But instead of keeping her mouth shut and untangling the mess later, she spoke. âI wasnât pretending â not at the end,â she insisted. âAnd I truly was with him all night on Monday night. He never accepted any money from me. This might have started as a ruse, but⦠itâs not, now.â
He stared at her, at the light in her eyes that made him want to whisper the words heâd almost said to her a dozen times, now.
âBut you â Ziggy saidââ Liviaâs words petered out.
âYou know he reported the panel to the French Ministry of Culture?â Ziggy said evenly.
Guilt pricked him, on top of everything else. âThatâs the only thing I have done,â he murmured. âIâm sorry. I should have told you. I tried, on Christmas Eve, butâ¦â
âYou see, darling? You canât go through life trusting people.â
âMais si, she fucking can!â Oh, no. Heâd started cracking. Every eye was on him, jaws hanging open. âShe can trust who she wants, who she decides deserves her trust. Ren has a soft heart but sheâs not stupid!â
âAnd you deserve her trust?â Livia choked. âAfter going behind her back to report us to the police? After stealing our property and undermining our business?â
The dismay on Renâs face struck him, but he couldnât stop now. âDo you think Ren should take your example and only trust in money? Or do you think she should trust Ziggy, the woman who destroys her confidence and wants to turn her into someone else?â
âZiggy this company!â Livia said.
âShe saved the company and made Renâs life miserable,â Sacha huffed. âAnd you made her lonely. Do you think she should trust ?â
He tried to stop himself, but his feelings would not be subdued. âSix days.
.
was too many.â
Livia went suddenly white. Her horrified look confirmed his worst suspicions, but heâd never been so sorry to be right. He couldnât fix this for Ren any more, not even by leaving.
He didnât have any control over his feelings. If she hated him for interfering, then so be it, but he couldnât roll over and die like a tragic romantic hero â not when she hadnât said goodbye, yet.