A bombing at a police lab has all Paris on edge.
Birthdays should be happy. But the third birthday of private investigator Aimée Leduc’s daughter, Chloé, brings as much anxiety as joy. First, Chloé’s father, Melac, has become more of a presence in their lives since his recent divorce. His pleas that Aimée and Chloé would be much safer living at his farm in Brittany sends Aimée down a rabbit hole of second-guessing: She wants her daughter to be safe, but she wants to support her child financially, and that means staying in Paris, where she and her business partner, René Friant, run a successful investigation agency. Then disaster strikes at Chloé’s party. Aimeé’s good friend Boris realizes that he’s left the toddler’s gift on his desk at the police crime lab at Porte de Versailles. While he’s retrieving the gift, the lab is bombed. Leaving Chloé with Melac, Aimée rushes to the lab only to find Boris has been taken to the hospital, unconscious. A note she finds shoved in her pocket claims, “WE HAVE STRUCK AGAIN.” But who? Detective Loïc Bellan of the Groupe d’Intervention La Gendarmerie Nationale has his sights on Action Directe, a radical group from the 1960s. The police suspect Boris, who has Semtex explosive under his nails. But a teenage voyeur has a videotape of a shadowy figure leaving the lab just before the explosion. As days pass without an arrest, Aimée moves into action. Will she find the bombers before the police arrest Boris and before Melac decides that Paris is just too dangerous a place for his child?
Black delivers again with a combination of political intrigue and tight detective thrills.