He looked uncomfortable. “This, I'm afraid, is the situation. Many of your fellow villagers are facing the same dilemma, I fear.”
“If we leave, will we get our home back?” Isabelle asked.
“I would not think so, Madame.”
Vianne dared to take a step toward him. Perhaps she could reason with him. “My husband will be home any day now, I imagine. Perhaps you could wait until he is here?”
“I am not the general, alas. I am simply a captain in the Wehrmacht. I follow orders, Madame, I do not give them. And I am ordered to billet here. But I assure you that I am a gentleman.”
“We will leave,” Isabelle said.
“Leave?” Vianne said to her sister in disbelief. “This is my home.” To the captain she said, “I can count on you to be a gentleman?”
“Of course.”
Vianne looked at Isabelle, who shook her head slowly.
Vianne knew there was no real choice. She had to keep Sophie safe until Antoine came home, and then he would handle this unpleasantness. Surely he would be home soon, now that the armistice had been signed. “There is a small bedroom downstairs. You'll be comfortable there.”
The captain nodded. “
Merci,
Madame. I will get my things.”
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
As soon as the door closed behind the captain, Isabelle said, “Are you mad? We can't live with a Nazi.”
“He said he's in the Wehrmacht. Is that the same thing?”
“I'm hardly interested in their chain of command. You haven't seen what they're willing to do to us, Vianne. I have. We'll leave. Go next door, to Rachel's. We could live with her.”
“Rachel's house is too small for all of us, and I am not going to abandon my home to the Germans.”
To that, Isabelle had no answer.
Vianne felt anxiety turn to an itch along her throat. An old nervous habit returned. “You go if you must, but I am waiting for Antoine. We have surrendered, so he'll be home soon.”
“Vianne, pleaseâ”
The front door rattled hard. Another knock.
Vianne walked dully forward. With a shaking hand, she reached for the knob and opened the door.
Captain Beck stood there, holding his military hat in one hand and a small leather valise in the other. He said, “Hello again, Madame,” as if he'd been gone for some time.
Vianne scratched at her neck, feeling acutely vulnerable beneath this man's gaze. She backed away quickly, saying, “This way, Herr Captain.”
As she turned, she saw the living room that had been decorated by three generations of her family's women. Golden stucco walls, the color of freshly baked brioche, gray stone floors covered by ancient Aubusson rugs, heavily carved wooden furniture upholstered in mohair and tapestry fabric, lamps made of porcelain, curtains of gold and red toile, antiques and treasures left over from the years when the Rossignols had been wealthy tradesmen. Until recently there had been artwork on the walls. Now only the unimportant pieces remained. Isabelle had hidden the good ones.
Vianne walked past all of it to the small guest bedroom tucked beneath the stairs. At the closed door, to the left of the bathroom that had been added in the early twenties, she paused. She could hear him breathing behind her.
She opened the door to reveal a narrow room with a large window, bracketed by blue-gray curtains that pooled on the wooden floor. A painted chest of drawers supported a blue pitcher and ewer. In the corner was an aged oak armoire with mirrored doors. By the double bed sat a nightstand; on it, an antique ormolu clock. Isabelle's clothes lay everywhere, as if she were packing for an extended holiday. Vianne picked them up quickly, and the valise, too. When she finished, she turned.
His suitcase plunked to the floor. She looked at him, compelled by simple politeness to offer a tense smile.
“You needn't worry, Madame,” he said. “We have been admonished to act as gentlemen. My mother would demand the same, and, in truth, she scares me more than my general.” It was such an ordinary remark that Vianne was taken aback.
She had no idea how to respond to this stranger who dressed like the enemy and looked like a young man she might have met at church. And what was the price for saying the wrong thing?
He remained where he was, a respectful distance from her. “I apologize for any inconvenience, Madame.”
“My husband will be home soon.”
“We all hope to be home soon.”
Another unnerving comment. Vianne nodded politely and left him alone in the room, closing the door behind her.
“Tell me he's not staying,” Isabelle said, rushing at her.
“He says he is,” Vianne said tiredly, pushing back the hair from her eyes. She realized just now that she was trembling. “I know how you feel about these Nazis. Just make sure he doesn't know it. I won't let you put Sophie at risk with your childish rebellion.”
“Childish rebellion! Are youâ”
The guest room door opened, silencing Isabelle.
Captain Beck strode confidently toward them, smiling broadly. Then he saw the radio in the room and he paused. “Do not worry, ladies. I am most pleased to deliver your radio to the Kommandant.”
“Really?” Isabelle said. “You consider this a kindness?”
Vianne felt a tightening in her chest. There was a storm brewing in Isabelle. Her sister's cheeks had gone pale, her lips were drawn in a thin, colorless line, her eyes were narrowed. She was glaring at the German as if she could kill him with a look.
“Of course.” He smiled, looking a little confused. The sudden silence seemed to unnerve him. Suddenly he said, “You have beautiful hair, M'mselle.” At Isabelle's frown, he said, “This is an appropriate compliment, yes?”
“Do you think so?” Isabelle said, her voice low.
“Quite lovely.” Beck smiled.
Isabelle walked into the kitchen and came back with a pair of boning shears.
His smile faded. “Am I misunderstood?”
Vianne said, “Isabelle, don't,” just as Isabelle gathered up her thick blond hair and fisted it. Staring grimly at Captain Beck's handsome face, she hacked off her hair and handed the long blond tail to him. “It must be
verboten
for us to have anything beautiful, is it not, Captain Beck?”
Vianne gasped. “Please, sir. Ignore her. Isabelle is a silly, prideful girl.”
“No,” Beck said. “She is angry. And angry people make mistakes in war and die.”
“So do conquering soldiers,” Isabelle snapped.
Beck laughed at her.
Isabelle made a sound that was practically a snarl and pivoted on her heel. She marched up the stairs and slammed the door shut so hard the house shook.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
“You will want to speak to her now, I warrant,” Beck said. He looked at Vianne in a way that made it seem as if they understood each other. “Such ⦠theatrics in the wrong place could be most dangerous.”
Vianne left him standing in her living room and went upstairs. She found Isabelle sitting on Sophie's bed, so angry she was shaking.
Scratches marred her cheeks and throat; a reminder of what she'd seen and survived. And now her hair was hacked off, the ends uneven.
Vianne tossed Isabelle's belongings onto the unmade bed and closed the door behind her. “What in the name of all that's holy were you thinking?”
“I could kill him in his sleep, just slit his throat.”
“And do you think they would not come looking for a captain who had orders to billet here?
Mon Dieu,
Isabelle.” She took a deep breath to calm her racing nerves. “I know there are problems between us, Isabelle. I know I treated you badly as a childâI was too young and scared to help youâand Papa treated you worse. But this is not about us now, and you can't be the girl who acts impetuously anymore. It is about my daughter now. Your niece. We must protect her.”
“Butâ”
“France has surrendered, Isabelle. Certainly this fact has not escaped you.”
“Didn't you hear Général de Gaulle? He saidâ”
“And who is this Général de Gaulle? Why should we listen to him? Maréchal Pétain is a war hero and our leader. We have to trust our government.”
“Are you joking, Vianne? The government in Vichy is collaborating with Hitler. How can you not understand this danger? Pétain is wrong. Does one follow a leader blindly?”
Vianne moved toward Isabelle slowly, half afraid of her now. “You don't remember the last war,” she said, clasping her hands to still them. “I do. I remember the fathers and brothers and uncles who didn't come home. I remember hearing children in my class cry quietly when bad news came by telegram. I remember the men who came home on crutches, their pant legs empty and flapping, or an arm gone, or a face ruined. I remember how Papa was before the warâand how different he was when he came home, how he drank and slammed doors and screamed at us, and then when he stopped. I remember the stories about Verdun and Somme and a million Frenchmen dying in trenches that ran red with blood. And the German atrocities, don't forget that part of it. They were
cruel,
Isabelle.”
“That's my point exactly. We mustâ”
“They were cruel because we were at war with them, Isabelle. Pétain has saved us from going through that again. He has kept us safe. He has stopped the war. Now Antoine and all our men will come home.”
“To a
Heil Hitler
world?” Isabelle said with a sneer. “âThe flame of French resistance must not and shall not die.' That's what de Gaulle said. We have to fight however we can. For France, V. So it stays France.”
“Enough,” Vianne said. She moved close enough that she could have whispered to Isabelle, or kissed her, but Vianne did neither. In a steady, even voice, she said, “You will take Sophie's room upstairs and she will move in with me. And remember this, Isabelle, he could shoot us.
Shoot us
, and no one would care. You will not provoke this soldier in my home.”
She saw the words hit home. Isabelle stiffened. “I will try to hold my tongue.”
“Do more than try.”
Â
Vianne closed the bedroom door and leaned against it, trying to calm her nerves. She could hear Isabelle pacing in the room behind her, moving with an anger that made the floorboards tremble. How long did Vianne stand there alone, trembling, trying to get her nerves under control? It felt like hours passed while she struggled with her fear.
In ordinary times, she would have found the strength to talk rationally with her sister, to say some of the things that had long been unspoken. Vianne would have told Isabelle how sorry she was for the way she'd treated her as a little girl. Maybe she could have made Isabelle understand.
Vianne had been so helpless after Maman's death. When Papa had sent them away, to live in this small town, beneath the cold, stern eyes of a woman who had shown the girls no love, Vianne had ⦠wilted.
In another time, she might have shared with Isabelle what they had in common, how undone she'd been by Maman's death, how Papa's rejection had broken her heart. Or how he treated her at sixteen when she'd come to him, pregnant and in love ⦠and been slapped across the face and called a disgrace. How Antoine had pushed Papa back, hard, and said,
I'm going to marry her.
And Papa's answer:
Fine, she's all yours. You can have the house. But you'll take her squalling sister, too.
Vianne closed her eyes. She hated to think about all of that; for years, she'd practically forgotten it. Now, how could she push it aside? She had done to Isabelle exactly what their father had done to them. It was the greatest regret of Vianne's life.
But this was not the time to repair that damage.
Now she had to do everything in her power to keep Sophie safe until Antoine came home. Isabelle would simply have to be made to understand that.
With a sigh, she went downstairs to check on supper.
In the kitchen, she found her potato soup simmering a bit too briskly, so she uncovered it and lowered the heat.
“Madame? Are you sanguine?”
She flinched at the sound of his voice. When had he come in here? She took a deep breath and patted her hair. It was not the word he meant. Really, his French was terrible.
“That smells delicious,” he said, coming up behind her.
She set the wooden spoon down on the rest beside the stove.
“May I see what you are making?”
“Of course,” she said, both of them pretending her wishes mattered. “It's just potato soup.”
“My wife, alas, is not much of a cook.”
He was right beside her now, taking Antoine's place, a hungry man peering down at a cooking dinner.
“You are married,” she said, reassured by it, although she couldn't say why.
“And a baby soon to be born. We are planning to call him Wilhelm, although I will not be there when he is born, and of course, such decisions must inevitably be his mother's.”
It was such a ⦠human thing to say. She found herself turning slightly to look at him. He was her height, almost exactly, and it unnerved her; looking directly into his eyes made her feel vulnerable.
“God willing, we will all be home soon,” he said.
He wants this over, too,
she thought with relief.
“It's suppertime, Herr Captain. Will you be joining us?”
“It would be an honor, Madame. Although you will be pleased to hear that most evenings I will be working late and enjoying my supper with the officers. I shall also often be out on campaigns. You shall sometimes hardly notice my presence.”
Vianne left him in the kitchen and carried silverware into the dining room, where she almost ran into Isabelle.
“You shouldn't be alone with him,” Isabelle hissed.
The captain came into the room. “You cannot think I would accept your hospitality and then do harm? Consider this night. I have brought you wine. A lovely Sancerre.”