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Chapter 4: The First Time I Saw Her

Author: Clare
last update publish date: 2026-05-13 18:54:33

The gala is the kind of event where the centerpieces cost more than cars.

I know this because I looked up the florist — a name I recognized from a previous operation in Monaco, where a single arrangement for a wedding had cost upwards of forty thousand euros. These arrangements are smaller but more numerous, and I calculate roughly a quarter of a million dollars in flowers alone, all of which will be thrown away tomorrow morning.

I arrive at the precise sweet spot — twenty minutes after the official start time. Early enough to be serious, to signal that I take this event seriously and I'm not the kind of person who makes an entrance. Late enough to signal that I'm not desperate, that I had somewhere else to be first, that my presence here is a choice rather than a need. The calculus of arrival times is something I've studied extensively — there's an entire literature on it in certain intelligence circles, the way that different arrival times communicate different social positions.

The venue is a renovated Haussmann building in the 8th arrondissement, the kind of place that's been hosting elite gatherings since Napoleon was a reasonable reference point. The architecture is Second Empire — ornate, imposing, designed to communicate wealth and permanence. Crystal chandeliers hang from ceilings painted with scenes from French history. Champagne flows from bottles that don't announce themselves as expensive because they don't need to — the label is discreet, almost humble, the kind of branding that signals to people who know that you don't need to show off when you've already arrived.

The quiet is the thing you notice first. The kind of quiet that only money can buy — not silence, exactly, but a hush, a sense that everyone here is speaking at a volume calibrated to be heard by the person they're addressing and no one else. No one is shouting to be heard over background noise. No one is performing enthusiasm or aggression or any of the other social signals that mark less rarefied gatherings.

I take a glass from a passing tray — a gesture, mostly, I won't drink much of it — and do what I always do first: map the room.

Exits: four. Main entrance, service entrance to the kitchen, emergency exit at the rear, and a door to the left that probably leads to offices or storage. I note them, note the sightlines, note how quickly I could reach each one if necessary.

Security: visible at two points — one by the main entrance, one near the bar. Plainclothes at the perimeter — I count six, possibly seven, all with the particular posture of people who are trying to look casual and not quite succeeding. Their eyes move too much, scanning rather than looking. Their hands rest in positions that allow quick access to whatever they're carrying.

Guest composition: finance, tech, a sprinkling of old European wealth, a few political adjacents — people who work in ministries or serve on commissions or advise people who advise people. The kind of crowd where everyone is important enough to be here and no one is quite important enough to relax.

Conversation clusters that signal pre-existing relationships. The solo wanderers who are here to make new ones. The people who've been assigned to attend and are clearly counting the minutes until they can leave.

Celeste Laurent is not here yet.

I know this because the room still has a normal center of gravity. People are distributed naturally — clustered in conversational groups, drifting between them, nobody holding still in that particular way that happens when a significant presence walks into a room. The air is still ordinary, uncharged.

I work the room as Isabelle Renaud. I made three useful contacts in twenty minutes — a venture capitalist who's been looking to expand into Seoul, a government affairs director who might be useful for future operations, a journalist who covers the tech beat and clearly knows things she's not publishing. I'm mid-conversation with a Singaporean fund manager who is telling me something about infrastructure investment that I am mostly pretending to find fascinating when I feel it —

The room changes.

It's subtle. A slight reorientation of bodies — people not quite turning, but tilting, angling themselves toward something they haven't fully registered yet. A dimming of sound as conversations stutter for half a beat before resuming, the way a recording might skip. The way air moves differently when something significant walks into it — not a breeze, exactly, but a shift, a pressure change, a sense that the atmosphere has been displaced.

I turn.

Celeste Laurent enters alone.

She's wearing black — something structural and spare that probably has a designer name I'd recognize and a price point I'd be impressed by regardless. The dress is architectural — sharp lines, unexpected angles, fabric that catches the light in ways that suggest it cost more than my entire wardrobe. Her dark hair is up, held by something I can't see, exposing the line of her neck and the sharp angles of her jaw. Her posture is the posture of someone who has never needed the room to adjust itself around her and is completely unsurprised when it does.

She doesn't scan the room the way a networker does — eagerly, hunting for familiar faces, calculating who to approach and who to avoid. She surveys it. Quietly, precisely, like she's confirming what she already knew she'd find. Her gaze moves across the crowd with the unhurried attention of someone who has already accounted for every variable and is simply verifying her calculations.

And then her eyes move, and for one fraction of one second, they land on me.

I'm across the room. The space is large — fifty feet at least — and the lighting is dim enough that she cannot possibly be registering anything specific in that half-second glance. She's looking at the general space, not me specifically. She's not making eye contact. She's not singling me out.

But something in my chest does a thing I do not have adequate language for.

It's not fear. I know fear — I've felt it in dark alleys and tense negotiations and moments when a plan went wrong and I had to improvise my way out. This is not that.

It's not an attraction. I know that too — I've felt it, I've used it, I've weaponized it and been surprised by it and learned to set it aside when it wasn't useful. This is different.

It's recognition, maybe. The sense of seeing someone you've studied for so long that they've become almost abstract, and then suddenly encountering them in three dimensions — the reality of them, the presence of them, the irreducible fact of their existence.

I look away first.

"Do you know her?" The fund manager beside me has followed my gaze. His voice carries a note of something — respect, maybe, or the particular wariness that powerful women inspire in men who aren't used to being in their presence.

"No," I say. "Not yet."

I say it exactly the way Isabelle Renaud would say it — breezy, confident, the throwaway certainty of someone used to getting introductions, used to being welcomed into rooms, used to having access.

But my champagne glass is cold and solid in my hand and I am abruptly, acutely aware of every detail of this room in a way I haven't been all evening. The weight of the glass. The temperature of the air. The exact distance to the nearest exit. The sound of her heels on the marble floor as she moves deeper into the room.

I am not a woman who gets rattled.

I take a sip of my champagne and remind myself of this very firmly. I am not rattled. I am alert. There's a difference. Alertness is professional. Alertness is what keeps you alive in this line of work. I am simply being professionally alert.

Across the room, Celeste accepts a drink from a server without looking at them — her attention is already elsewhere, already moving to the next thing — and begins speaking to a silver-haired man in a suit that costs approximately the same as a semester of college tuition. Her expression is attentive and completely unreadable. She could be discussing business or philosophy or the weather and her face would give nothing away.

She does not look at me again.

I tell myself this is ideal. This is exactly what I wanted. She noticed me — fleetingly, probably not even consciously — and then moved on. I'm on her mental map now, somewhere in the background, a face she might recognize if she saw it again. That's perfect. That's the goal.

I go back to the fund manager and his infrastructure opinions.

I am not rattled.

I am not.

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