Read The Marseille Caper Online

Authors: Peter Mayle

The Marseille Caper (23 page)

He was introduced to Daphne, Mimi, and Philippe, kissed Elena and Sam, and led them into a vast courtyard, easily
large enough for the two mature chestnut trees whose leaves provided shade for a long table. Sam noticed that it was laid for eight. “Don’t tell me you invited Patrimonio?”

Reboul grinned. “Certainly not. But Sam, I have a new friend—ah, there she is.” Sam followed Reboul as he went over to the doorway of the main restaurant. “My dear, this is Sam, who has been such a help to me. Sam, I’d like you to meet Monica Chung.” She was tiny, barely up to Sam’s shoulder, with glossy black hair and almond eyes, no longer young but still beautiful, and extremely elegant. Even Sam, no expert, could tell that her silk dress had come from Paris. He bowed over her hand, and Reboul nodded his approval. “You know, you’re beginning to act like a civilized Frenchman.”

As they crossed the courtyard to join the others, Reboul slipped his arm round Monica’s waist. “Monica and I have mutual interests in Hong Kong. She’s a ferocious businesswoman, and an excellent cook, but I must warn you, Sam, never play mah-jongg with her—she’ll murder you.” Monica laughed. “We’ve had two thousand years of training, Francis. Now, who are these nice people?”

While the introductions were being made, a couple came out to join them carrying trays with bottles and glasses and ice. “This is Mireille,” said Reboul, “who does wonderful things in the kitchen. And this is her husband, Bernard, who insists that we have an apéritif before we eat.” They were a cheerful couple, living testimonials to Mireille’s cooking, plump and jovial. They distributed pastis and glasses of
rosé
before Mireille made her excuses and disappeared to supervise
the preparations for lunch while Bernard fussed over the table settings.

The courtyard was an art director’s dream. The drystone walls, two feet thick and ten feet high, had turned a soft gray over several hundred years of weather, their color matched by the pockmarked flagstones of the floor. Massive Anduze pots of faded terra-cotta, planted with scarlet geraniums and white lobelia, lined the walls, and a selection of straw hats—in case any sun should penetrate the leaves—had been hung on the trunks of the chestnut trees.

The lunch lived up to the surroundings. It was a parade of Mireille’s favorite dishes, starting with an appetizer of
beignets de fleurs
, flash-fried zucchini flowers. These were followed by tarts of anchovies and olives on a bed of softened onions—the classic
pissaladière
of Nice. The main dish, Mireille’s favorite of favorites, was a
charlotte
of lamb and aubergines, served with potatoes roasted in goose fat. Then a little cheese, provided by an obliging local goat. And finally, a soup of peaches topped with sprigs of fresh verbena. A lunch, so Bernard told them, that would set a man up for a hard afternoon’s work in the fields.

Wine and conversation flowed, and nearly three hours passed before Reboul rose to his feet and tapped his glass with a spoon for attention.

“My friends,” he said, “this is a very happy day, and I don’t want to spoil it with a long speech. But I can’t let the occasion pass without offering my admiration and thanks to Sam, and I hope he will accept this token of my appreciation.” He walked
round the table to where Sam was sitting, and presented him with an envelope.

Sam opened it. Inside was a check for one million dollars. He blinked, then looked up at Reboul. Both men were smiling, but it was a few moments before Sam could speak.

“Lunch is on me,” he said.

About the Author
Peter Mayle is the author of twelve previous books, six of them novels. A recipient of the Légion d’Honneur from the French government for his cultural contributions, he has been living in Provence with his wife, Jennie, for twenty years.
Other titles available in eBook format by Peter Mayle:
Anything Considered
• 978-0-307-79193-1
Confessions of a French Baker
• 978-0-307-49456-6
French Lessons
• 978-1-4000-7772-4
A Good Year
• 978-1-4000-4268-5
Provence A–Z
• 978-0-307-48985-2
The Vintage Caper
• 978-0-307-27320-8
A Year in Provence
• 978-0-307-75549-0
For more information, please visit
www.aaknopf.com
ALSO BY PETER MAYLE
The Vintage Caper
Provence A–Z
Confessions of a French Baker
(with Gerard Auzet)
A Good Year
French Lessons
Encore Provence
Chasing Cézanne
Anything Considered
A Dog’s Life
Hotel Pastis
Toujours Provence
A Year in Provence
These are Borzoi Books
Published in New York by Alfred A. Knopf

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