“Is it one of those days?” she asked quietly.
Vianne gave an unsteady smile. Rachel knew how much Vianne sometimes mourned her lost babies and how deeply she'd prayed for more children. It had been difficult between themânot a lot, but a littleâwhen Rachel had gotten pregnant with Ari. There was joy for Rachel ⦠and a thread of envy. “No,” she said. She lifted her chin slowly, looked her best friend in the eyes. “I have something to tell you.”
“What?”
Vianne drew in a breath. “Do you remember the day we wrote the postcards? And Captain Beck was waiting for me when we got home?”
“
Oui.
I offered to come in with you.”
“I wish you had, although I don't suppose it would have made a difference. He just would have waited until you left.”
Rachel started to rise. “Did heâ”
“No, no,” she said quickly. “Not that. He was working at the dining room table that day, writing something when I returned. He ⦠asked me for a list of names. He wanted to know which of the teachers at the school were Jewish or communists.” She paused. “He asked about homosexuals and Freemasons, too, as if people talk about such things.”
“You told him you didn't know.”
Shame made Vianne look away, but only for a second. She forced herself to say, “I gave him your name, Rachel. Along with the others.”
Rachel went very still; the color drained from her face, making her dark eyes stand out. “And they fired us.”
Vianne swallowed hard, nodded.
Rachel got to her feet and walked past Vianne without stopping, ignoring her pleading
please, Rachel,
pulling away so she couldn't be touched. She went into her bedroom and slammed the door shut.
Time passed slowly, in indrawn breaths and captured prayers and creaks of the chair. Vianne watched the tiny black hands on the mantel clock click forward. She patted the baby's back in rhythm with the passing minutes.
Finally, the door opened. Rachel walked back into the room. Her hair was a mess, as if she'd been shoving her hands through it; her cheeks were blotchy, from either anxiety or anger. Maybe both. Her eyes were red from crying.
“I'm so sorry,” Vianne said, rising. “Forgive me.”
Rachel came to a stop in front of her, looking down at her. Anger flashed in her eyes, then faded and was replaced by resignation. “Everyone in town knows I'm a Jew, Vianne. I've always been proud of it.”
“I know that. It's what I told myself. Still, I shouldn't have helped him. I am sorry. I wouldn't hurt you for the world. I hope you know that.”
“Of course I know it,” Rachel said quietly. “But V, you need to be more careful. I know Beck is young and handsome and friendly and polite, but he's a Nazi, and they are dangerous.”
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
The winter of 1940 was the coldest anyone could remember. Snow fell day after day, blanketing the trees and fields; icicles glittered on drooping tree branches.
And still, Isabelle woke every Friday morning, hours before dawn, and distributed her “terrorist papers,” as the Nazis now called them. Last week's tract followed the military operations in North Africa and alerted the French people to the fact that the winter's food shortages were not a result of the British blockadesâas Nazi propaganda insistedâbut rather were caused by the Germans looting everything France produced.
Isabelle had been distributing these tracts for months now, and truthfully, she couldn't see that they were having much impact on the people of Carriveau. Many of the villagers still supported Pétain. Even more didn't care. A disturbing number of her neighbors looked upon the Germans and thought
so young, just boys,
and went on trudging through life with their heads down, just trying to stay out of danger.
The Nazis had noticed the flyers, of course. Some French men and women would use any excuse to curry favorâand giving the Nazis the flyers they found in their letter boxes was a start.
Isabelle knew that the Germans were looking for whoever printed and distributed the tracts, but they weren't looking too hard. Especially not on these snowy days when the Blitz of London was all anyone could talk about. Perhaps the Germans knew that words on a piece of paper were not enough to turn the tide of a war.
Today, Isabelle lay in bed, with Sophie curled like a tiny sword fern beside her, and Vianne sleeping heavily on the girl's other side. The three of them now slept together in Vianne's bed. Over the past month they'd added every quilt and blanket they could find to the bed. Isabelle lay watching her breath gather and disappear in thin white clouds.
She knew how cold the floor would be even through the woolen stockings she wore to bed. She knew this was the last time all day she would be warm. She steeled herself and eased out from underneath the pile of quilts. Beside her, Sophie made a moaning sound and rolled over to her mother's body for heat.
When Isabelle's feet hit the floor, pain shot into her shins. She winced and hobbled out of the room.
The stairs took forever; her feet hurt so badly. The damn chilblains. Everyone was suffering from them this winter. Supposedly it was from a lack of butter and fat, but Isabelle knew it was caused by cold weather and socks full of holes and shoes that were coming apart at the seams.
She wanted to start a fireâached for even a moment's warmth, reallyâbut they were on their last bit of wood. In late January they'd started ripping out barn wood and burning it, along with tool boxes and old chairs and whatever else they could find. She made herself a cup of boiling water and drank it down, letting the heat and weight trick her stomach into thinking it wasn't empty. She ate a small bit of stale bread, wrapped her body in a layer of newsprint, and then put on Antoine's coat and her own mittens and boots. A woolen scarf she wrapped around her head and neck, and even so, when she stepped outside the cold took her breath away. She closed the door behind her and trudged out into the snow, her chilblained toes throbbing with every step, her fingers going cold instantly, even inside the mittens.
It was eerily quiet out here. She hiked through the knee-deep snow and opened the broken gate and stepped out onto the white-packed road.
Because of the cold and snow, it took her three hours to deliver her papers (this week's content was about the Blitzâthe Boches had dropped 32,000 bombs on London in one night alone). Dawn, when it came, was as weak as meatless broth. She was the first in line at the butcher's shop, but others soon followed. At seven
A.M.
, the butcher's wife rolled open the window gate and unlocked the door.
“Octopus,” the woman said.
Isabelle felt a pang of disappointment. “No meat?”
“Not for the French, M'mselle.”
She heard grumbling behind her from the women who wanted meat, and farther back, from the women who knew they wouldn't even be lucky enough to get octopus.
Isabelle took the paper-wrapped octopus and left the shop. At least she'd gotten something. There was no tinned milk to be had anymore, not with ration cards or even on the black market. She was fortunate enough to get a little Camembert after two more hours in line. She covered her precious items with the heavy towel in her basket and hobbled down rue Victor Hugo.
As she passed a café filled with German soldiers and French policemen, she smelled brewed coffee and freshly baked croissants and her stomach grumbled.
“M'mselle.”
A French policeman nodded crisply and indicated a need to step around her. She moved aside and watched him put up a poster in an abandoned storefront's window. The first poster read:
NOTICE
SHOT FOR SPYING. THE JEW JAKOB MANSARD, THE COMMUNIST VIKTOR YABLONSKY, AND THE JEW LOUIS DEVRY.
And the second:
NOTICE
HENCEFORTH, ALL FRENCH PEOPLE ARRESTED FOR ANY CRIME OR INFRACTION WILL BE CONSIDERED HOSTAGES. WHEN A HOSTILE ACT AGAINST GERMANY OCCURS IN FRANCE, HOSTAGES WILL BE SHOT.
“They're shooting ordinary French people for nothing?” she said.
“Don't look so pale, Mademoiselle. These warnings are not for beautiful women such as yourself.”
Isabelle glared at the man. He was worse than the Germans, a Frenchman doing this to his own people. This was why she hated the Vichy government. What good was self-rule for half of France if it turned them into Nazi puppets?
“Are you unwell, Mademoiselle?”
So solicitous. So caring. What would he do if she called him a traitor and spat in his face? “I am fine,
merci
.”
She watched him cross the street confidently, his back straight, his hat positioned just so on his cropped brown hair. The German soldiers in the café welcomed him warmly, clapped him on the back and pulled him into their midst.
Isabelle turned away in disgust.
That was when she saw it: a bright silver bicycle leaning against the side wall of the café. At the sight of it, she thought how much it would change her life, ease her pain, to ride to town and back each day.
Normally a bicycle would be guarded by the soldiers in the café, but on this snow-dusted morning, no one was outside at a table.
Don't do it.
Her heart started beating quickly, her palms turned damp and hot within her mittens. She glanced around. The women queued up at the butcher's made it a point to see nothing and make eye contact with no one. The windows of the café across the street were fogged; inside, the men were olive-hued silhouettes.
So certain of themselves.
Of us,
she thought bitterly.
At that, whatever sliver of restraint she possessed disappeared. She held the basket close to her side and limped out onto the ice-slicked cobblestoned street. From that second, that one step forward, the world seemed to blur around her and time slowed down. She heard her breath, saw the plumes of it in front of her face. The buildings blurred or faded into white hulks, the snow dazzled, until all she could see was the glint of the silver handlebars and the two black tires.
She knew there was only one way to do this. Fast. Without a glance sideways or a pause in her step.
Somewhere a dog barked. A door banged shut.
Isabelle kept walking; five steps separated her from the bicycle.
Four.
Three.
Two.
She stepped up onto the sidewalk and took hold of the bicycle and jumped onto it. She rode down the cobblestoned street, the chassis clanging at bumps in the road. She skidded around the corner, almost fell, and righted herself, pedaling hard toward rue La Grande.
There, she turned into the alley and jumped off the bicycle to knock on the door. Four hard clacks.
The door opened slowly. Henri saw her and frowned.
She pushed her way inside.
The small meeting room was barely lit. A single oil lamp sat on a scarred wooden table. Henri was the only one here. He was making sausage from a tray of meat and fat. Skeins of it hung from hooks on the wall. The room smelled of meat and blood and cigarette smoke. She yanked the bicycle in with her and slammed the door shut.
“Well, hello,” he said, wiping his hands on a towel. “Have we called a meeting I don't know about?”
“No.”
He glanced at her side. “That's not your bicycle.”
“I stole it,” she said. “From right under their noses.”
“It isâor wasâAlain Deschamp's bicycle. He left everything and fled to Lyon with his family when the occupation began.” Henri moved toward her. “Lately, I have been seeing an SS soldier riding it around town.”
“SS?” Isabelle's elation faded. There were ugly rumors swirling about the SS and their cruelty. Perhaps she should have thought this through â¦
He moved closer, so close she could feel the warmth of his body.
She had never been alone with him before, nor so near him. She saw for the first time that his eyes were neither brown nor green but rather a hazel gray that made her think of fog in a deep forest. She saw a small scar at his brow that had either been a terrible gash at one time or poorly stitched and it made her wonder all at once what kind of life he'd led that had brought him here, and to communism. He was older than she by at least a decade, although to be honest, he seemed even older sometimes, as if perhaps he'd suffered a great loss.
“You'll need to paint it,” he said.
“I don't have any paint.”
“I do.”
“Would youâ”
“A kiss,” he said.
“A kiss?” She repeated it to stall for time. This was the sort of thing that she'd taken for granted before the war. Men desired her; they always had. She wanted that back, wanted to flirt with Henri and be flirted with, and yet the very idea of it felt sad and a little lost, as if perhaps kisses didn't mean much anymore and flirtation even less.
“One kiss and I'll paint your bicycle tonight and you can pick it up tomorrow.”
She stepped toward him and tilted her face up to his.
They came together easily, even with all the coats and layers of newsprint and wool between them. He took her in his arms and kissed her. For a beautiful second, she was Isabelle Rossignol again, the passionate girl whom men desired.
When it ended and he drew back, she felt ⦠deflated. Sad.
She should say something, make a joke, or perhaps pretend that she felt more than she did. That's what she would have done before, when kisses had meant more, or maybe less.
“There's someone else,” Henri said, studying her intently.
“No there isn't.”
Henri touched her cheek gently. “You're lying.”
Isabelle thought of all that Henri had given her. He was the one who'd brought her into the Free French network and given her a chance; he was the one who believed in her. And yet when he kissed her, she thought of Gaëtan. “He didn't want me,” she said. It was the first time she'd told anyone the truth. The admission surprised her.