The Paris Apartment: A Novel
By Lucy Foley
3.5/5
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About this ebook
Don't miss Lucy Foley's new book, The Midnight Feast, coming June 18th!
THE #1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
“Told in rotating points of view, this Tilt-A-Whirl of a novel brims with jangly tension – an undeniably engrossing guessing game.” — Vogue
"[A] clever, cliff-hanger-filled thriller." — People
From the New York Times bestselling author of The Guest List comes a new locked room mystery, set in a Paris apartment building in which every resident has something to hide…
Jess needs a fresh start. She’s broke and alone, and she’s just left her job under less than ideal circumstances. Her half-brother Ben didn’t sound thrilled when she asked if she could crash with him for a bit, but he didn’t say no, and surely everything will look better from Paris. Only when she shows up – to find a very nice apartment, could Ben really have afforded this? – he’s not there.
The longer Ben stays missing, the more Jess starts to dig into her brother’s situation, and the more questions she has. Ben’s neighbors are an eclectic bunch, and not particularly friendly. Jess may have come to Paris to escape her past, but it’s starting to look like it’s Ben’s future that’s in question.
The socialite – The nice guy – The alcoholic – The girl on the verge – The concierge
Everyone's a neighbor. Everyone's a suspect. And everyone knows something they’re not telling.
Lucy Foley
Lucy Foley studied English Literature at Durham and UCL universities. She then worked for several years as a fiction editor in the publishing industry – during which time she also wrote her debut, The Book of Lost and Found. Lucy now writes full-time, and is busy travelling (for research, naturally!) and working on her next novel. Visit her Facebook page at www.facebook.com/LucyFoleyAuthor and follow her on Twitter @lucyfoleytweets
Read more from Lucy Foley
The Hunting Party: A Novel Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Paris Apartment Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Marple: Twelve New Stories Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Invitation Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
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Reviews for The Paris Apartment
729 ratings49 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Brilliant plot… though the ending is a bit rushed and not fully satisfying. The characters are well developed and contribute to the tense atmosphere of the narrative.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The multiple narratives is well paced. I enjoyed reading the characters motives and the mystery unfolding. The suspense in this book is charming. Good read!
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Omggg! Definitely a page turner, this one. Had me in a chokehold till the very end
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Unputdownable unputdownable ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I was hooked from the very beginning!!! Each chapter left me with wanting to read more.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Creepy and disturbing page-turner with a too-quick, too-convenient, disappointingly written ending. The tension builds and builds, and then…pbbbbbpppptttt. But entertaining enough.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Right from the beginning you know as a reader that something bad has happened. Jess is hunting for her brother in a foreign land and doesn't know who to trust but she is dogged and determined to figure out what is going on in the apartment building her brother was living in. The ending was a surprise and wrapped everything up nicely.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5I found this book too dark for my taste. The family was so dysfunctional. Sorry.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Digital audiobook performed by Clare Corbett, Daphne Kouma, Julia Winwood, Sope Dirisu, Sofia Zervudachi, and Charlie Anson.
Jess is broke and alone and calls her brother, Ben, to ask if she can crash with him for a spell. He reluctantly agrees. When she shows up she’s surprised by what a nice building and apartment this is, and even more surprised that Ben isn’t in the apartment. Where is he? The other residents of the building seem unconcerned and certainly unwilling to help Jess discover the truth of what has happened to her brother.
Foley has crafted a mystery / thriller with more twists and turns than the most treacherous mountain road. Not a single character – including Jess – is to be trusted. Everyone has a hidden agenda, a secret they wish to keep hidden. Most are master manipulators and accomplished prevaricators. I was engaged and enthralled throughout and could not put it down.
The audiobook is masterfully performed by a full cast of talented voice artists, each taking on one of the narrators. This is very helpful in keeping this large cast of characters straight. - Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5This is probably the worst book I have read in the last 15 years during which I have read over 700 books. Hard to believe that this author has a great reputation for this genre. A mystery should be a mystery with somewhat believable plot twists. The writing style should be pleasant and keep your interest. This book was set in Paris and Foley kept using French phrases and then translating them immediately afterword. 368 pages of this!! Jess the main character had no back story to support her ability to search for his missing half brother. How anyone could think that this was a thriller. Also the portrayal of Paris as this dark place with danger behind every corner was totally not the Paris I know. I finished it trying to see if it could be saved but the ending was ridiculous. DON'T READ THIS BOOK!!!!
1 person found this helpful
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5After three books, I am very familiar with Lucy Foley's story line and it all kind of tied up nicely at the end. Very interesting twist and turns. Good suspend thriller.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Excellent book on CD with several narrators covering their characters well! From the start you're engaged and trying to figure out "who done it". The Author makes the characters rich in character and the interfaces between them complex and interesting. The plot and story are very creative and constantly unexpected things emerge.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This is a pretty good thriller. I do get a bit tired of weak lead female characters and some of the twists were predictable, but all in all it held my attention well and the ending was unexpected.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The Paris Apartment isn’t fine literature -- but it certainly hit the spot for a quick and twisty mystery. Down-and-out Jess is visiting her brother Ben in Paris, but on her arrival, Ben is missing. What happened to him? The secret lurks in Ben’s lux apartment building and its strange assortment of residents. Lucy Foley captures the ambiance of Paris well and crafts some memorable characters, such as Sophie. Recommended.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/52.5 rounded up. Another mystery novel down for 2022, but this one was kind of a disappointment. I almost didn't finish it. It took me two months to finally drudge through it because it could not ever seem to hold my attention.
The premise of the story is that Jess, fleeing from her life in London, comes to Paris to stay with her brother. While she’s traveling to him he goes missing, only leaving behind a very vague clue hidden in a voice message that quite literally takes her two days to listen to.
Jess doesn’t ever seem to be actually worried about actually finding her brother with how often she gets distracted by other things in the apartment. None of her clues lead her to why her brother might be missing except about maybe 65% into the book. The other half of the book just goes into how mysterious (snooty) the other tenants are and how Jess doesn’t fit in. Also goes into detail about their sex lives for I guess reasons? (shrug)
I’m disappointed, because I LOVED The Guest List , and I wanted this book to be just as good. But the mystery of this novel seems to just get lost in the exposition of backstory and no forward progress is made for the majority of the book. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Jess is headed to Paris to visit her half-brother Ben in his new apartment. When he isn’t there to pick her up, she makes her way to his place, but he’s not there. He knew she was coming and when and said he’d be there. What’s going on? Once she finally manages to get into the apartment, no one is around, but something feels “off”.
Wealthy Sophie and Jacques live in the penthouse; introverted 19-year old Mimi and her outgoing roommate Camille are on the 4th floor; Ben’s apartment is on the 3rd; Ben’s friend Nick lives on the 2nd floor, and alcoholic Antoine and his wife, Dominique are on the 1st floor. An older woman, the concierge, lives in a shack on the property.
POV switches between many of the different characters. The book “grabbed” me from the start. It was hard to tell who was telling the truth and who wasn’t, as well as who might be an unreliable narrator. Everyone had a secret. Had a twist at the end, as well as one about half-way through. As with Foley’s other books that I’ve read, I really liked this. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Intriguing, multiple narrators, tense & foreboding. Readers not really given enough to know who MIGHT have killed her brother, and then there's a surprise reveal at the end that completely changes the "find the murderer" trajectory. A bit contrived for my taste and a bit superficial, esp for the serious criminal enterprise the "family" has built their fortune upon... but a fast read.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Best for:
I’m not totally sure if I’m honest. It’s similar to her other books, but also not.
In a nutshell:
Jess is visiting her half brother Ben in Paris, but when she arrives, he’s nowhere to be found, and his cat has some blood on it.
Worth quoting:
N/A
Why I chose it:
Thought I’d round out the Lucy Foley catalog.
Review:
Hmmm. I nearly gave up on this book because it wasn’t holding my attention, but there is a twist that comes about 1/3 of the way through that brought me back in.
Like her other books, this one is told from the point of view of a few different characters, nearly all of whom live in the same apartment building in Paris, plus Jess, who is visiting her brother Ben. There is Sophie, who lives in the penthouse with her husband Jack, and who is quite the snob. There is Mimi, who is very young and a bit shy, and lives with a flatmate. Then there is Nick, who knew Ben from their university days, and got Ben the apartment. Finally the concierge, an older woman who lives on the ground flour and takes care of the building.
Jess sort of flees London, and tells Ben she’s going to crash with him for a bit. His last message to her before she arrives is a voice note giving her instructions for how to find the flat. But when she arrives a few hours later, there is no trace of him, but his keys and wallet are still in the flat.
The book jumps back and forth in time, following different perspectives wit the goal of figuring out what the hell happened to Ben. I’ll admit that the resolution was somewhat surprising and fairly satisfying, but overall the book just wasn’t that interesting to me.
What’s next for this book:
I will probably eventually listen to Foley’s books if another one is released, as it’s decent to listen to while on a run. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Loved this. (Enhanced by a fantastic audio cast)
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Lucy Foley continues her reliance on classic mystery scaffolding with her latest, The Paris Apartment. As usual, the cast of characters are familiar tropes that fulfill their roles in their typical ways. This time, Foley’s “locked room” is a Paris apartment building, and its obtuse inhabitants provide the necessary drama and challenges for the prickly narrator. Jess is supposed to be visiting her journalist brother, but when she arrives, she finds that he has vanished—leaving behind only a cryptic voicemail. Jess searches the building and attempts to interview the tenants, but she is met with suspicion and hostility from almost all. Only one young man shows her any consideration, even though he says he has no useful information for her. When Jess probes a bit too deeply and reveals the building’s secrets, she finds herself isolated and in danger. The current trend of “eat the rich” fiction is in play here, with some variation, but the plot is not particularly suspenseful or urgent. This novel, like others that Foley has released recently are like a comfortable sweater that you find yourself putting on over and over, despite its well-worn condition. It fits perfectly fine and serves its purpose, but has nothing to either offend or astound.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Fresh off the The Guest List which i really enjoyed, i dove into The Paris Apartment. It was really gripping and interesting for the first half or so then things just seemed really implausible. I finished it but it seemed so rushed at the end with so much information packed into those last pages but just couldn't get my head around how Jess was able to do so much with so little. It's a story, it's fiction - i get it but it just seemed to get really silly and unbelievable. I wasn't even cheering for Jess which is sad. :(
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This book grabbed me ad wouldn't let go. It was very well written, but you have to pay attention to which narrator you're reading. I thought knew what was going on, but I was really wrong on so many fronts. A terrific book.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Synopsis: Jess goes to her brother's apartment and finds him missing. Various clues indicate that foul play may be involved so she starts snooping around to try to solve the mystery of his disappearance.
My Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
I loved the initial premise of this book but it was such a slow start! We spend a lot of the first part of this book being introduced to the neighbors and they are people who aren't very moral people. We get to see most of their perspectives and learn their stories but I had a hard time enjoying them as they seemed like they were distracting from the main plot of the mystery which is what I was most invested in.
I did like Mimi's back story the most and I love her relationship with her mom even though it is complicated.
Because of all the side tracking of these character stories I struggled to follow the timeline of the novel and how much time had passed from the disappearance to the resolution of the mystery.
The characters were interesting and their stories are important at the end when we find out what happened but it just felt like a really long road to answer what happened to Jess's brother.
Once we do find out where Jess's brother is and what happened to him I didn't particularly like the reveal. I didn't feel as though I had been given enough information to solve the mystery on my own which is something I really like from a mystery.
I did consume this as an audio book and I think that is a great way to experience this book as the one I listened to had an ensemble cast. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I was not impressed by this novel at first, but s the story progressed things became more and more twisted and surprising. Jess goes to stay with her brother in Paris, but finds he has disappeared. Everyone in his upscale apartment house seems suspect. The deeper she digs, the stranger they seem to be.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Lucy Foley writes outstanding mystery thrillers and she’s back with one that meets the expectations set by the previous books. Jess arrives in Paris to find her brother missing. He’s offered her a place to live while she gets her life together. She can get into her brother's apartment and finds there’s a creepy secret hidden by the family who lives there. The more she looks for the answer to her missing brother the more she finds herself in danger with no idea who to believe. And when she discovers the secret the wealthy family who lives in the apartment building is hiding, it becomes front page news in the Paris papers.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5OTT; my disbelief could not remain suspended.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Well, I was on board with the sort of spooky theme of the book until it all unraveled at the end. Not the way I thought it would go. Melodramatic.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This book has one hell of a hook and will keep you guessing. Even when I correctly guessed some of the parts there were twists on top of that so I was constantly surprised. Not quite as strong as her first thriller, The Guest List, but still a solid read that will keep readers engaged. When Jess needs to get away from her life for a bit she calls up her brother and asks to crash at his Paris apartment. He reluctantly agrees to allow her to stay, but when she arrives at his apartment building he is not there to let her in. Where has he gone? She finagles her way into the apartment eventually, and is shocked to see the cat covered in blood and a strong smell of bleach in the apartment. Whatever happened to her brother probably isn't good. She decides to start asking the people in the surrounding apartments if they know anything, but things keep taking weirder turns. What is going on? Twisty and dark. Some elements are easy to suss out and others are completely surprising.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A good vacation read, but I didn’t like it as much as The Guest List. A twisty thriller with some good surprises, but it was missing a character to root for. They were all so self-absorbed and broken it was hard to care about what happened to them. It was a quick read though and kept me interested.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The Paris Apartment by Lucy Foley
Jess travels from to Paris to stay with her Brother Ben. When she gets there he is missing. She decides to confront some residents of the building, inguiring about Ben.
No one wants to talk, and they are far from friendly. Her suspicions loom the more she investigaes. Nothing is as it seem and everyone holds a secret.
The story moves at a fast pace, a compelling plot, with well develpoed (complex) characters. Some are likable, others are not.
Told from alternating points of view had me feelings as if I was part of this story. As time goes by slowly secrets are revealed until the (shocking) conclusion.
Overall I found The Paris Apartment quite enjoyable. I highly recommend to those who enjoy a great locked-room mystery. Fans of Lucy Foley will not be disappointed in this good read.
Book preview
The Paris Apartment - Lucy Foley
Prologue
Friday
Ben
His fingers hover over the keyboard. Got to get it all down. This: this is the story that’s going to make his name. Ben lights another cigarette, a Gitane. Bit of a cliché to smoke them here but he does actually like the taste. And fine, yeah, likes the way he looks smoking them too.
He’s sitting in front of the apartment’s long windows, which look onto the central courtyard. Everything out there is steeped in darkness, save for the weak greenish glow thrown by a single lamp. It’s a beautiful building, but there’s something rotten at its heart. Now he’s discovered it he can smell the stench of it everywhere.
He should be clearing out of here soon. He’s outstayed his welcome in this place. Jess could hardly have chosen a worse time to decide to come and stay. She barely gave him any notice. And she didn’t give much detail on the phone but clearly something’s up; something wrong with whatever crappy bar job she’s working now. His half sister has a knack for turning up when she’s not wanted. She’s like a homing beacon for trouble: it seems to follow her around. She’s never been good at just playing the game. Never understood how much easier it makes life if you just give people what they want, tell them what they want to hear. Admittedly, he did tell her to come and stay whenever you like,
but he didn’t really mean it. Trust Jess to take him at his word.
When was the last time he saw her? Thinking about her always makes him feel guilty. Should he have been there for her more, looked out for her … ? She’s fragile, Jess. Or—not fragile exactly, but vulnerable in a way people probably don’t see at first. An armadillo
: softness beneath that tough exterior.
Anyway. He should call her, give her some directions. When her phone rings out he leaves a voicenote: Hey Jess, so it’s number twelve, Rue des Amants. Got that? Third floor.
His eye’s drawn to a flash of movement in the courtyard beneath the windows. Someone’s passing through it quickly. Almost running. He can only make out a shadowy figure, can’t see who it is. But something about the speed seems odd. He’s hit with a little animal spike of adrenaline.
He remembers he’s still recording the voicenote, drags his gaze from the window. Just ring the buzzer. I’ll be up waiting for you—
He stops speaking. Hesitates, listens.
A noise.
The sound of footsteps out on the landing … approaching the apartment door.
The footsteps stop. Someone is there, just outside. He waits for a knock. None comes. Silence. But a weighted silence, like a held breath.
Odd.
And then another sound. He stands still, ears pricked, listening intently. There it is again. It’s metal on metal, the scrape of a key. Then the clunk of it entering the mechanism. He watches the lock turn. Someone is unlocking his door from the outside. Someone who has a key, but no business coming in here uninvited.
The handle begins to move downward. The door begins to open, with that familiar drawn-out groan.
He puts his phone down on the kitchen counter, voicenote forgotten. Waits and watches dumbly as the door swings forward. As the figure steps into the room.
What are you doing here?
he asks. Calm, reasonable. Nothing to hide. Not afraid. Or not yet. And why—
Then he sees what his intruder holds.
Now. Now the fear comes.
Three Hours Later
Jess
For Christ’S Sake, Ben. Answer your phone. I’m freezing my tits off out here. My Eurostar was two hours late leaving London; I should have arrived at ten-thirty but it’s just gone midnight. And it’s cold tonight, even colder here in Paris than it was in London. It’s only the end of October but my breath smokes in the air and my toes are numb in my boots. Crazy to think there was a heatwave only a few weeks ago. I need a proper coat. But there’s always been a lot of things I need that I’m never going to get.
I’ve probably called Ben ten times now: as my Eurostar pulled in, on the half hour walk here from Gare du Nord. No answer. And he hasn’t replied to any of my texts. Thanks for nothing, big bro.
He said he’d be here to let me in. Just ring the buzzer. I’ll be up waiting for you—
Well, I’m here. Here being a dimly lit, cobblestoned cul-de-sac in what appears to be a seriously posh neighborhood. The apartment building in front of me closes off this end, standing all on its own.
I glance back down the empty street. Beside a parked car, about twenty feet away, I think I see the shadows shift. I step to the side, to try and get a better look. There’s … I squint, trying to make out the shape. I could swear there’s someone there, crouched behind the car.
I jump as a siren blares a few streets away, loud in the silence. Listen as the sound fades away into the night. It’s different from the ones at home—nee-naw, nee-naw,
like a child’s impression—but it still makes my heart beat a little faster.
I glance back at the shadowy area behind the parked car. Now I can’t make out any movement, can’t even see the shape I thought I glimpsed before. Maybe it was just a trick of the light, after all.
I look back up at the building. The others on this street are beautiful, but this one knocks spots off them all. It’s set back from the road behind a big gate with a high wall on either side, concealing what must be some sort of garden or courtyard. Five or six stories, huge windows, all with wrought-iron balconies. A big sprawl of ivy growing all over the front of it which looks like a creeping dark stain. If I crane my neck I can see what might be a roof garden on the top, the spiky shapes of the trees and shrubs black cut-outs against the night sky.
I double-check the address. Number twelve, rue des Amants. I’ve definitely got it right. I still can’t quite believe this swanky apartment building is where Ben’s been living. He said a mate helped sort him out with it, someone he knew from his student days. But then Ben’s always managed to fall on his feet. I suppose it only makes sense that he’s charmed his way into a place like this. And charm must have done it. I know journalists probably earn more than bartenders, but not by this much.
The metal gate in front of me has a brass lion’s head knocker: the fat metal ring held between snarling teeth. Along the top of the gate, I notice, is a bristle of anti-climb spikes. And all along the high wall either side of the gate are embedded shards of glass. These security measures feel kind of at odds with the elegance of the building.
I lift up the knocker, cold and heavy in my hand, let it drop. The clang of it bounces off the cobblestones, so much louder than expected in the silence. In fact, it’s so quiet and dark here that it’s hard to imagine it’s part of the same city I’ve trundled across this evening from Gare du Nord: all the bright lights and crowds, people spilling in and out of restaurants and bars. I think of the area around that huge cathedral lit up on the hill, the Sacré-Coeur, which I passed beneath only twenty minutes ago: throngs of tourists out taking selfies and dodgy-looking guys in puffer jackets sharking between them, ready to nick a wallet or two. And the streets that I walked through with the neon signs, the blaring music, the all-night food, the crowds spilling out of bars, the queues for clubs. This is a different universe. I look back down the street behind me: not another person in sight. The only real sound comes from a scurry of dead ivy across the cobblestones. I can hear the roar of traffic at a distance, the honking of car horns—but even that seems muffled, like it wouldn’t dare intrude on this elegant, hushed world.
I didn’t stop to think much, pulling my case across town from the station. I was mainly concentrating on not getting mugged, or letting the broken wheel of my suitcase stick and throw me off balance. But now, for the first time, it sinks in: I’m here, in Paris. A different city, a different country. I’ve made it. I’ve left my old life behind.
A Light Snaps on in one of the windows up above. I glance up and there’s a dark figure standing there, head and shoulders in silhouette. Ben? If it were him, though, he’d wave down at me, surely. I know I must be lit up by the nearby streetlamp. But the figure at the window is as still as a statue. I can’t make out any features or even whether they’re male or female. But they’re watching me. They must be. I suppose I must look pretty shabby and out of place with my broken old suitcase trying to bust open despite the bungee cord wrapped around it. A strange feeling, knowing they can see me but I can’t see them properly. I drop my eyes.
Aha. To the right of the gate I spot a little panel of buttons for the different apartments with a lens set into it. The big lion’s head knocker must just be for show. I step forward and press the one for the third floor, for Ben’s place. I wait for his voice to crackle through the intercom.
No answer.
Sophie
Penthouse
Someone is knocking on the front door to the building. Loud enough for Benoit, my silver whippet, to leap to his feet and let out a volley of barks.
"Arrête ça! I shout.
Stop that."
Benoit whimpers, then goes quiet. He looks up at me, confusion in his dark eyes. I can hear the change in my voice as well—too shrill, too loud. And I can hear my own breathing in the silence that follows, rough and shallow.
No one ever uses the door knocker. Certainly, no one familiar with this building. I go to the windows on this side of the apartment, which look down into the courtyard. I can’t see onto the street from here, but the front door from the street leads into the courtyard, so if anyone had come in I would see them there. But no one has entered and it must have been a few minutes since the knocking. Clearly it’s not someone the concierge thinks should be admitted. Fine. Good. I haven’t always liked that woman, but I know I can trust her in this at least.
In Paris you can live in the most luxurious apartment and the scum of the city will still wash up at your door on occasion. The drug addicts, the vagrants. The whores. Pigalle, the red-light district, lies just a little way away, clinging to the coattails of Montmartre. Up here, in this multi-million-euro fortress with its views out over the city’s rooftops, all the way to the Tour Eiffel, I have always felt comparatively safe. I can ignore the grime beneath the gilt. I am good at turning a blind eye. Usually. But tonight is … different.
I go to check my reflection in the mirror that hangs in the hallway. I pay close attention to what I see in the glass. Not so bad for fifty. It is partly due to the fact that I have adopted the French way when it comes to maintaining my forme. Which essentially means always being hungry. I know that even at this hour I will be looking immaculate. My lipstick is flawless. I never leave the apartment without it. Chanel, La Somptueuse
: my signature color. A bluish, regal color that says: stand back,
not come hither.
My hair is a shining black bob cut every six weeks by David Mallet at Notre Dame des Victoires. The shape perfected, any silver painstakingly concealed. Jacques, my husband, made it quite clear once that he abhors women who allow themselves to go gray. Even if he hasn’t always been here to admire it.
I am wearing what I consider my uniform. My armor. Silk Equipment shirt, exquisitely-cut dark slim trousers. A scarf—brightly patterned Hermès silk—around my neck, which is excellent for concealing the ravages of time to the delicate skin there. A recent gift from Jacques, with his love of beautiful things. Like this apartment. Like me, as I was before I had the bad grace to age.
Perfect. As ever. As expected. But I feel dirty. Sullied by what I have had to do this evening. In the glass my eyes glitter. The only sign. Though my face is a little gaunt, too—if you were to look closely. I am even thinner than usual. Recently I have not had to watch my diet, to carefully mark each glass of wine or morsel of croissant. I couldn’t tell you what I ate for breakfast this morning; whether I remembered to eat at all. Each day my waistband hangs looser, the bones of my sternum protrude more sharply.
I undo the knot of my scarf. I can tie a scarf as well as any born and bred Parisian. By it you know me for one of them, those chic moneyed women with their small dogs and their excellent breeding.
I look at the text message I sent to Jacques last night. Bonne nuit, mon amour. Tout va bien ici. Good night, my love. Everything is fine here.
Everything is fine here. HA.
I don’t know how it has come to this. But I do know that it started with him coming here. Moving into the third floor. Benjamin Daniels. He destroyed everything.
Jess
I pull out my phone. Last time I checked Ben hadn’t replied to any of my messages. One on the Eurostar: On my way! And then: At Gare du Nord! Do you have an Uber account?!!! Just in case, you know, he suddenly felt generous enough to send a cab to collect me. Seemed worth a shot.
There is a new message on my phone. Only it’s not from Ben.
You stupid little bitch. Think you can get away with what you’ve done?
Shit. I swallow past the sudden dryness in my throat. Then I delete it. Block the number.
As I say, it was all a bit last minute, coming here. Ben didn’t sound that thrilled when I called him earlier and told him I was on my way. True, I didn’t give him much time to get used to the idea. But then it’s always felt like the bond between us is more important to me than it is to my half brother. I suggested we hang out last Christmas, but he said he was busy. Skiing,
he said. Didn’t even know he could ski. Sometimes it even feels like I’m an embarrassment to him. I represent the past, and he’d rather be cut loose from all that.
I had to explain I was desperate. Hopefully it’ll only be for a month or two, and I’ll pay my way,
I said. Just as soon as I get on my feet. I’ll get a job.
Yeah. One where they don’t ask too many questions. That’s how you end up in the places I’ve worked at—there aren’t that many that will take you when your references are such a shitshow.
Up until this afternoon I was gainfully employed at the Copacabana bar in Brighton. The odd massive tip made up for it. A load of wanker bankers, say, down from London celebrating some Dick or Harry or Tobias’ upcoming nuptials and too pissed to count the notes out right—or maybe to guys like that it’s just so much loose change anyway. But, as of today, I’m unemployed. Again.
I press the buzzer a second time. No answer. All the building’s windows are dark again—even the one that lit up before. Christ’s sake. He couldn’t have turned in for the night and totally forgotten about me … could he?
Below all the other buzzers there’s a separate one: Concierge, it reads in curly script. Like something in a hotel: further proof that this place is seriously upmarket. I press the button, wait. No answer. But I can’t help imagining someone looking at the little video image of me, assessing, then deciding not to open up.
I lift up the heavy knocker again and slam it several times against the wood. The sound echoes down the street: someone must hear it. I can just make out a dog barking, from somewhere deep inside the building.
I wait five minutes. No one comes.
Shit.
I can’t afford a hotel. I don’t have enough for a return journey to London—and even if I did there’s no way I’m going back. I consider my options. Go to a bar … wait it out?
I hear footsteps behind me, ringing out on the cobblestones. Ben? I spin round, ready for him to apologize, tell me he just popped out to get some ciggies or something. But the figure walking toward me isn’t my brother. He’s too tall, too broad, a parka hood with a fur rim up over his head. He’s moving quickly and there’s something purposeful about his walk. I grip the handle of my suitcase a little tighter. Literally everything I own is in here.
He’s only a few meters away now, close enough that by the light of the streetlamp I can make out the gleam of his eyes under the hood. He’s reaching into his pocket, pulling his hand back out. Something makes me take a step backward. And now I see it. Something sharp and metallic, gleaming in his hand.
Concierge
The Loge
I watch her on the intercom screen, the stranger at the gate. What can she be doing here? She rings the buzzer again. She must be lost. I know, just from looking at her, that she has no business being here. Except she seems certain that this is the place she wants, so determined. Now she looks into the lens. I will not let her in. I cannot.
I am the gatekeeper of this building. Sitting here in my loge: a tiny cabin in the corner of the courtyard, which would fit maybe twenty times into the apartments above me. But it is mine, at least. My private space. My home. Most people wouldn’t consider it worthy of the name. If I sit on the pull-down bed, I can touch nearly all the corners of the room at once. There is damp spreading from the ground and down from the roof and the windows don’t keep out the cold. But there are four walls. There is a place for me to put my photographs with their echoes of a life once lived, the little relics I have collected and which I hold onto when I feel most alone; the flowers I pick from the courtyard garden every other morning so there is something fresh and alive in here. This place, for all its shortcomings, represents security. Without it I have nothing.
I look again at the face on the intercom screen. As the light catches her just so I see a familiarity: the sharp line of the nose and jaw. But more than her appearance it is something about the way she moves, looks around her. A hungry, vulpine quality that reminds me of another. All the more reason not to let her in. I don’t like strangers. I don’t like change. Change has always been dangerous for me. He proved that: coming here with his questions, his charm. The man who came to live in the third-floor apartment: Benjamin Daniels. After he came here, everything changed.
Jess
He’s coming straight for me, the guy in the parka. He’s lifting his arm. The metal of the blade gleams again. Shit. I’m about to turn and run—get a few yards on him at least—
But wait, no, no … I can see now that the thing in his hand isn’t a blade. It’s an iPhone, in a metallic case. I let out the breath I’ve been holding and lean against my bag, hit by a sudden wave of tiredness. I’ve been wired all day, no wonder I’m spooking at shadows.
I watch as the guy makes a call. I can make out a tinny little voice at the other end; a woman’s voice, I think. Then he begins to talk, over her, louder and louder, until he’s shouting into his handset. I have no idea what the words mean exactly but I don’t need to know much French to understand this isn’t a polite or friendly chat.
After he’s got his long, angry speech off his chest he hangs up and shoves the phone back in his pocket. Then he spits out a single word: "Putain."
I know that one. I got a D in my French GCSE but I did look up all the swear words once and I’m good at remembering the stuff that interests me. Whore: that’s what it means.
Now he turns and starts walking in my direction again. And I see, quite clearly, that he just wants to use the gate to this building. I step aside, feeling a total idiot for having got so keyed up over nothing. But it makes sense; I spent the whole Eurostar journey looking over my shoulder. You know, just in case.
"Bonsoir," I say in my best accent, flashing my most winning smile. Maybe this guy will let me in and I can go up to the third floor and hammer on Ben’s apartment door. Maybe his buzzer’s simply not working or something.
The guy doesn’t reply. He just turns to the keypad next to the gate and punches in a series of numbers. Finally he gives me a quick glance over his shoulder. It’s not the most friendly glance. I catch a waft of booze, stale and sour. Same breath as most of the punters in the Copacabana.
I smile again. "Er … excuse moi? Please, ah—I need some help, I’m looking for my brother, Ben. Benjamin Daniels—"
I wish I had a bit more of Ben’s flair, his charm. Benjamin Silver-Tongue,
Mum called him. He’s always had this way of getting anyone to do what he wants. Maybe that’s why he ended up a journalist in Paris while I’ve been working for a bloke affectionately known as The Pervert in a shithole bar in Brighton serving stag dos at the weekends and local lowlifes in the week.
The guy turns back to face me, slowly. Benjamin Daniels,
he says. Not a question: just the name, repeated. I see something: anger, or maybe fear. He knows who I’m talking about. Benjamin Daniels is not here.
What do you mean, he’s not here?
I ask. This is the address he gave me. He’s up on the third floor. I can’t get hold of him.
The man turns his back on me. I watch as he pulls open the gate. Finally he turns round to face me a third time and I think: maybe he is going to help me, after all. Then, in accented English, very slowly and loudly, he says: "Fuck off, little girl."
Before I even have time to reply there’s a clang of metal and I jump backward. He’s slammed the gate shut, right in my face. As the ringing fades from my ears I’m left with just the sound of my breathing, fast and loud.
But he’s helped me, even though he doesn’t know it. I wait a moment, take a quick look back down the street. Then I lift my hand to the keypad and punch in the same numbers I watched him use only a few seconds ago: 7561. Bingo: the little light flickers green and I hear the mechanism of the gate click open. Dragging my case after me, I slip inside.
Mimi
Fourth Floor
Merde.
I just heard his name, out there in the night. I lift my head, listening. For some reason I’m on top of the covers, not under them. My hair feels damp, the pillow cold and soggy. I shiver.
Am I hearing things? Did I imagine it? His name … following me everywhere?
No: I’m sure it was real. A woman’s voice, drifting up through the open window of my bedroom. Somehow I heard it four stories up. Somehow I heard it through the roar of white noise inside my head.
Who is she? Why is she asking about him?
I sit up, pulling my bony knees tight against my chest, and reach for my childhood doudou, Monsieur Gus, a scraggy old penguin stuffed animal toy I still keep beside my pillow. I press him against my face, try to comfort myself with the feel of his hard little head, the soft, shifting scrunch of the beans inside his body, the musty smell of him. Just like I did as a little girl when I’d had a bad dream. You’re not a little girl any longer, Mimi. He said that. Ben.
The moon is so bright that my whole room is filled with a cold blue light. Nearly a full moon. In the corner I can make out my record player, the case of vinyls next to it. I painted the walls in here such a dark blackish-blue that they don’t reflect any light at all but the poster hanging opposite me seems to glow. It’s a Cindy Sherman; I went to her show at the Pompidou last year. I got completely obsessed with how raw and freaky and intense her work is: the kind of thing I try to do with my painting. In the poster, one of the Untitled Film Stills, she’s wearing a short black wig and she stares out at you like she’s possessed, or like she might be about to eat your soul. "Putain! my flatmate Camille laughed, when she saw it.
What happens if you bring some guy back? He’s gonna have to look at that angry bitch while you’re screwing? That’ll put him off his rhythm." As if, I thought at the time. Nineteen years old and still a virgin. Worse. A convent-school-educated virgin.
I stare at Cindy, the black bruise-like shadows around her eyes, the jagged line of her hair which is kind of like my own, since I took a pair of scissors to it. It feels like looking in a mirror.
I turn to the window, look down into the courtyard. The lights are on in the concierge’s cabin. Of course: that nosy old bitch never misses a trick. Creeping out from shadowy corners. Always watching, always there. Looking at you like she knows all your secrets.
This building is a U-shape around the courtyard. My bedroom is at one end of the U, so if I peer diagonally downward I can see into his apartment. Nearly every evening for the last two months he sat there at his desk working late into the night, the lights on. For just a moment I let myself look. The shutters are open but the lights are off and the space behind the desk looks more than empty, or like the emptiness itself has a kind of depth and weight. I glance away.
I slide down from my bed and tiptoe out into the main part of the apartment, trying not to trip over all the stuff Camille leaves scattered around like it’s an extension of her bedroom: magazines and dropped sweaters, dirty coffee cups, nail varnish pots, lacy bras. From the big windows in here I’ve got a direct view of the front entrance. As I watch, the gate opens. A shadowy figure slips through the gap. As she comes forward into the light I can make her out: a woman I have never seen before. No, I say silently. No no no no no. Go away. The roar in my head grows louder.
Did you hear that knocking?
I spin around. Putain. Camille’s lounging there on the couch, cigarette glowing in her hand, boots up on the armrest: faux-snakeskin with five-inch heels. When did she get in? How long has she been lurking there in the dark?
I thought you were out,
I say. Normally, if she goes clubbing, she stays till dawn.
"Oui. She shrugs, takes a drag on her cigarette.
I’ve only been back twenty minutes. Even in the gloom I see how her eyes slide away from mine. Normally she’d be straight into some story about the crazy new club she’s been at, or the guy whose bed she’s just left, including an overly detailed description of his dick or exactly how skilled he was at using it. I’ve often felt like I’m living vicariously through Camille. Grateful someone like her would choose to hang out with me. When we met at the Sorbonne she told me she likes collecting people, that I interested her because I have this
intense energy." But when I’ve felt worse about myself I’ve suspected this apartment probably has more to do with it.
Where have you been?
I ask, trying to sound halfway normal.
She shrugs. Just around.
I feel like there’s something going on with her, something she’s not telling me. But right now I can’t think about Camille. The roaring in my head suddenly feels like it’s drowning out all my thoughts.
There’s just one thing I know. Everything that has happened here happened because of him: Benjamin Daniels.
Jess
I’m standing in a small, dark courtyard. The apartment building proper wraps around it on three sides. The ivy has gone crazy here, winding up almost to the fourth floor, surrounding all the windows, swallowing drainpipes, a couple of satellite dishes. Ahead a short path winds between flowerbeds planted with dark shrubs and trees. I can smell the sweetish scent of dead leaves, fresh-turned earth. To my right there’s a sort of cabin structure, only a bit bigger than a garden shed. The two windows seem to be shuttered. On one side a tiny chink of light shows through a crack.
In the opposite corner I make out a door, which seems to lead into the main part of the building. I head that way along the path. As I do a pale face looms suddenly out of the darkness on my right. I stop short. But it’s the statue of a nude woman, life-size, her body wound about with more black ivy, her eyes staring and blank.
The door in the corner of the courtyard has another passcode, but it clicks open with the same set of numbers, thank God. I step through it into a dark, echoing space. A stairwell winds upward into deeper darkness. I find the little orange glow of a light switch on the wall, flick it. The lights hum on, dimly. A ticking sound: some sort of energy-saving timer maybe. I can see now that there’s a dark reddish carpet beneath my feet, covering a stone floor then climbing up the polished wooden staircase. Above me the bannister coils around on itself and inside the staircase there’s a lift shaft—a tiny, ancient, rickety-looking capsule that might be as old as the apartment itself, so ancient-looking I wonder if it’s actually still in use. There’s a trace of stale cigarette smoke on the air. Still, all pretty posh, all a long, long way from the place I’ve been crashing at in Brighton.
There’s a door to the left of me: Cave, it says. I’ve never let a closed door stay