349.jpg Instant
Julian went still. The "349" wasn't a room number or a date. It was a file, a single image captured on a disposable camera that had already changed hands three times in forty-eight hours. "How?"
He saw her from fifty yards away. She was a splash of crimson against the pale limestone of the balustrade. Clara always wore red when she wanted to be found, and never when she wanted to be caught. As he approached, the scent of her perfume—something heavy with jasmine and sea salt—hit him before she even turned around. 349.jpg
Clara looked back at the sea, the wind catching the stray strands of her hair. A photographer passed them, snapping a shot of the "lovely couple" by the water. They both smiled automatically—a practiced, hollow mask of vacationing bliss. "I’ll be right behind you," she lied. Julian went still
"You're late," she said, her voice barely a whisper over the rhythm of the tide. She didn't look at him. Her gaze was fixed on a yacht anchored far out in the bay, a white speck that looked like it might vanish into the horizon. As he approached, the scent of her perfume—something
She slipped a small, heavy envelope into the pocket of his linen jacket. Her touch was fleeting, a ghost of a movement. "Go to the station. Don't wait for the night train. Take the express to Marseille now." "And you?"