world. Iâd like to show it to you, Mata Hari.â
âOf course,â Clunet says. âWe can go now if youâd like. Iâve been curious to see what youâve accomplished.â
Guimet looks at him and I wonder if Clunet realizes he hasnât been invited.
The three of us walk across the Place dâIena and Guimet produces a key from his suit pocket. Before us is a two-storied building that stands opposite a life-size statue of George Washington on his horse.
âThey installed that five years ago,â Guimet says with distaste.
I read the statueâs inscription. â A GIFT OF THE WOMEN OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA IN MEMORY OF THE BROTHERLY HELP GIVEN BY FRANCE TO THEIR FATHERS IN THE FIGHT FOR INDEPENDENCE .â
âHave you visited America?â I look at Washingtonâs raised sword. He never visited Paris in his lifetime.
âNew York.â He smiles at a pleasurable memory. âThereâs no finer city in the world.â
Iâm surprised by his answer. âYou found New York more appealing than Paris?â I can still remember my first glimpse of Paris, her wide boulevards, her sparkling lights. Everywhere I went there was something new to see. And the women . . . they were all dressed like starlets in lacy Callot Soeurs gowns and Paul Poiret dresses.
âAbsolutely,â Guimet says. âThere are buildings so tall in New York that some people are afraid to ride the elevators to the top. The entire city is magic.â
Perhaps someday I will visit New York. A city of magic.
He pushes open a pair of double doors and we step into a round library so beautifully designed that I hold my breath just entering. Itâs a domed cathedral of light and space. The patterned wooden floors are polished to a sheen, and eight graceful columns rise toward the second floor. Everywhere you turn there are books, leather-bound and encased in glass.
âMy God, this must have cost a fortune,â Clunet says, stepping into the center of the room, marveling at the spectacular glass skylight in the ceiling.
âA small one,â Guimet concedes.
â Indah, â I say for Guimetâs benefit. In Malay it means, âbeautiful.â
Guimet leads us to the stairs and motions for us to follow behind him. Viewed from the second story, the entryway floor becomes a starburst of mahogany and pearl. I look at the priceless works of art assembled in this building and I imagine all the countries Guimet must have visited to create such a dreamlike, enchanting spaceâIndia, Java, China, Japan. His library is breathtaking. I study him in the soft light with new appreciation. A man capable of executing so many fine details to fulfill his own desire to create a cathedral to Asian art must be a gentle, tasteful lover. Clunet said Guimet was married once. I wonder what became of his wife, whether she died or ran away like I did.
We stand at the wooden balustrade and Guimet clears his throat. âEdouard, do you still have my lapis necklace in your office?â
âOf course.â
âWill you retrieve it for me?â
âCertainly. Tomorrowââ
âActually, I would like to have it now.â
Clunet frowns. âVery well. Mata Hari, shall weââ
âI believe that Mata Hari is quite comfortable here. No need for her to join you.â
Both men look in my direction and I weigh the choice in front of me. Clunet holds my gaze for several moments and I wonder if heâs instructing me to say no. Or is he willing me to stay?
âIâm sure there are many treasures in this enchanting library that Monsieur Guimet would like to share with me,â I tell him. âI see many intriguing books that I would like to know more about. You take care of business, Monsieur Clunet. Iâll find my way home.â
I look at Guimet and he smiles.
*Â Â Â Â *Â Â Â Â *
When weâre finished, Guimet