Aline, the countess, was enjoying her life as a Spanish socialite, wife, and mother when in 1971, she accompanies her husband, Luis, to Morocco. Luis was attending an annual board meeting in Rabat of Riff Mines, an iron ore company founded by his grandfather 60 years earlier. At the same time her long-time Moroccan friend, Fatima, invited Aline to attend an exhibit of Fatima’s jewelry line in Casablanca followed by a stay for a few days in her home to help Fatima’s rebellious and modern sister, Salima, out of her depression. When Luis returns from the board meeting, he told her that his old friend, Abdul Nabil, was frightened that there was a plot to kill King Hassan. The king had rebuffed Abdul when he informed him. Abdul wanted Aline as an American to contact the U.S. ambassador for his assistance. He believed only the Americans could investigate the rumor as he feared repercussions if he disclosed his suspicions to anyone else and that the Libyans and Soviets are involved. Aline meets Salima at the exhibit. At a dinner party, Aline encounters Michel de Bonville, a French representative manufacturing leather goods. She introduces Michel to Salima, who to her delight he later offers her a job in the company’s public relations. Aline is able to communicate Abdul’s concerns to the local CIA agent as the ambassador was unavailable requesting that Abdul remain anonymous. Three weeks later she learns that Abdul is murdered after his name had been leaked. Once again, at the request of her former employer, the CIA, she is recruited to investigate the plot to assassinate the king of Morocco. She had a perfect excuse to return to Morocco and try to warn the king. She and her husband had been invited to King Hassan’s shooting trip for almost two weeks in April less than a month away. They were accompanying friends, Carmen Franco (General Franco’s daughter) and her husband, whom Morocco was honoring. After clandestinely meeting with the king’s brother, she is told to contact one of the king’s trusted advisors, Rachid Salloum, the king’s former tutor, who could more delicately determine if the plot is a vicious rumor for the king to lose confidence in his aides or if there is a genuine threat. Accompanying her on the tour are General Medbouh (head of the King’s Guard and childhood friend of the sisters), Michel de Bonville, Russian Serge Lebedev, American William Casey (a former OSS agent) and his wife, journalist Moustapha Benayad, and Captain Omar Khalil (their guide). She witnesses the clashes of the king’s two closest advisors, Rachid and national military hero General Mohammed Oufkir. She is running out of time as the days toward the plot count down as she tries to untangle the plot while encountering attempts on her life, Soviet agents, love affairs, and later a fatality. Can she discover the perpetrators? Is the threat real? Will the king take the threat to his life seriously? Will she survive?
The third book in the series, which I truly enjoyed as I read one after the other, of the true adventures of Aline. I was fascinated to hear about what transpired during this time and how the rich and powerful of Morocco lived. As an admirer of Stolen Lives: Twenty Years in a Desert Jail by Malika Oufkir, I had read of the general’s daughter’s perspective many years ago.