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Chapter no 13

The Nightingale

On a beautiful day in late April 1941, Isabelle lay stretched out on a woolen blanket in the field across from the house. The sweet smell of ripening hay filled her nostrils. When she closed her eyes, she could almost forget that the engines in the distance were German lorries taking soldiersโ€”and Franceโ€™s produceโ€”to the train station at Tours. After the disastrous winter, she appreciated how sunshine on her face lulled her into a drowsy state.

โ€œThere you are.โ€

Isabelle sighed and sat up.

Vianne wore a faded blue gingham day dress that had been grayed by harsh homemade soap. Hunger had whittled her down over the winter, sharpened her cheekbones and deepened the hollow at the base of her throat. An old scarf turbaned her head, hiding hair that had lost its shine and curl.

โ€œThis came for you.โ€ Vianne held out a piece of paper. โ€œIt was delivered.

By a man. For you,โ€ she said, as if that fact bore repeating.

Isabelle clambered awkwardly to her feet and snatched the paper from Vianneโ€™s grasp. On it, in scrawled handwriting, was:ย The curtains are open. She reached down for her blanket and began folding it up. What did it mean? Theyโ€™d never summoned her before. Something important must be happening.

โ€œIsabelle? Would you care to explain?โ€ โ€œNo.โ€

โ€œIt was Henri Navarre. The innkeeperโ€™s son. I didnโ€™t think you knew him.โ€ Isabelle ripped the note into tiny pieces and let it fall away.

โ€œHe is a communist, you know,โ€ Vianne said in a whisper.

โ€œI need to go.โ€

Vianne grabbed her wrist. โ€œYou cannot have been sneaking out all winter to see a communist. You know what the Nazis think of them. Itโ€™s dangerous to even be seen with this man.โ€

โ€œYou think I care what the Nazis think?โ€ Isabelle said, wrenching free. She ran barefooted across the field. At home, she grabbed some shoes and climbed aboard her bicycle. With anย au revoir!ย to a stunned-looking Vianne, Isabelle was off, pedaling down the dirt road.

In town, she coasted past the abandoned hat shopโ€”sure enough, the curtains were openโ€”and veered into the cobblestoned alley and came to a stop.

She leaned her bicycle against the rough limestone wall beside her and rapped four times. It didnโ€™t occur to her until the final knock that it might be a trap. The idea, when it came, made her draw in a sharp breath and glance left and right, but it was too late now.

Henri opened the door.

Isabelle ducked inside. The room was hazy with cigarette smoke and reeked of burned chicory coffee. There was about the place a lingering scent of bloodโ€”sausage making. The burly man who had first grabbed herโ€”Didier

โ€”was seated on an old hickory-backed chair. He was leaning back so far the two front chair legs were off the floor and his back grazed the wall behind him.

โ€œYou shouldnโ€™t have brought a notice to my house, Henri. My sister is asking questions.โ€

โ€œIt was important we talk to you immediately.โ€

Isabelle felt a little bump of excitement. Would they finally ask her to do something more than dropping papers in letter boxes? โ€œI am here.โ€

Henri lit up a cigarette. She could feel him watching her as he exhaled the gray smoke and put down his match. โ€œHave you heard of a prefect in Chartres who was arrested and tortured for being a communist?โ€

Isabelle frowned. โ€œNo.โ€

โ€œHe cut his own throat with a piece of glass rather than name anyone or confess.โ€ Henri snubbed his cigarette out on the bottom of his shoe and saved the rest for later in his coat pocket. โ€œHe is putting a group together, of people

like us who want to heed de Gaulleโ€™s call. Heโ€”the one who cut his own throatโ€”is trying to get to London to speak to de Gaulle himself. He seeks to organize a Free French movement.โ€

โ€œHe didnโ€™t die?โ€ Isabelle asked. โ€œOr cut his vocal cords?โ€ โ€œNo. Theyโ€™re calling it a miracle,โ€ Didier said.

Henri studied Isabelle. โ€œI have a letterโ€”very importantโ€”that needs to be delivered to our contact in Paris. Unfortunately, I am being watched closely these days. As is Didier.โ€

โ€œOh,โ€ Isabelle said.

โ€œI thought of you,โ€ Didier said. โ€œMe?โ€

Henri reached into his pocket and withdrew a crumpled envelope. โ€œWill you deliver this to our man in Paris? He is expecting it a week from today.โ€

โ€œBut โ€ฆ I donโ€™t have anย Ausweis.โ€

โ€œOui,โ€ย Henri said quietly. โ€œAnd if you were caughtโ€ฆโ€ He let that threat dangle. โ€œCertainly no one would think badly of you if you declined. This is dangerous.โ€

Dangerous was an understatement. There were signs posted throughout Carriveau about executions that were taking place all over the Occupied Zone. The Nazis were killing French citizens for the smallest of infractions. Aiding this Free French movement could get her imprisoned at the very least. Still, she believed in a free France the way her sister believed in God. โ€œSo you want me to get a pass, go to Paris, deliver a letter, and come home.โ€ It didnโ€™t sound so perilous when put that way.

โ€œNo,โ€ Henri said. โ€œWe need you to stay in Paris and be our โ€ฆ letter box, as it were. In the coming months there will be many such deliveries. Your father has an apartment there,ย oui?โ€

Paris.

It was what sheโ€™d longed for from the moment her father had exiled her. To leave Carriveau and return to Paris and be part of a network of people who resisted this war. โ€œMy father will not offer me a place to stay.โ€

โ€œConvince him otherwise,โ€ Didier said evenly, watching her. Judging her. โ€œHe is not a man who is easily convinced,โ€ she said.

โ€œSo you canโ€™t do it.ย Voilร .ย We have our answer.โ€

โ€œWait,โ€ Isabelle said.

Henri approached her. She saw reluctance in his eyes and knew that he wanted her to turn down this assignment. No doubt he was worried about her. She lifted her chin and looked him in the eyes. โ€œI will do this.โ€

โ€œYou will have to lie to everyone you love, and always be afraid. Can you live that way? Youโ€™ll not feel safe anywhere.โ€

Isabelle laughed grimly. It was not so different from the life sheโ€™d lived since she was a little girl. โ€œWill you watch over my sister?โ€ she asked Henri. โ€œMake sure sheโ€™s safe?โ€

โ€œThere is a price for all our work,โ€ Henri said. He gave her a sad look. In it was the truth they had all learned. There was no safety. โ€œI hope you see that.โ€

All Isabelle saw was her chance to do something that mattered. โ€œWhen do I leave?โ€

โ€œAs soon as you get anย Ausweis,ย which will not be easy.โ€

* * *

What in heavenโ€™s name is that girl thinking?

Really, a school-yard-style note from a man? A communist?

Vianne unwrapped the stringy piece of mutton that had been this weekโ€™s ration and set it on the kitchen counter.

Isabelle had always been impetuous, a force of nature, really, a girl who liked to break rules. Countless nuns and teachers had learned that she could be neither controlled nor contained.

But this. This was not kissing a boy on the dance floor or running away to see the circus or refusing to wear a girdle and stockings.

This was wartime in an occupied country. How could Isabelle still believe that her choices had no consequences?

Vianne began finely chopping the mutton. She added a precious egg to the mix, and stale bread, then seasoned it with salt and pepper. She was forming the mixture into patties when she heard a motorcycleย putt-putteringย toward the house. She went to the front door and opened it just enough to peer out.

Captain Beckโ€™s head and shoulders could be seen above the stone wall as he dismounted his motorcycle. Moments later, a green military lorry pulled up

behind him and parked. Three other German soldiers appeared in her yard. The men talked among themselves and then gathered at the rose-covered stone wall her great-great-grandfather had built. One of the soldiers lifted a sledgehammer and brought it down hard on the wall, which shattered. Stones broke into pieces, a skein of roses fell, their pink petals scattering across the grass.

Vianne rushed out into her yard. โ€œHerr Captain!โ€ The sledgehammer came down again.ย Craaaack.

โ€œMadame,โ€ Beck said, looking unhappy. It bothered Vianne that she knew him well enough to notice his state of mind. โ€œWe have orders to tear down all the walls along this road.โ€

As one soldier demolished the wall, two others came toward the front door, laughing at some joke between them. Without asking permission, they walked past her and went into her house.

โ€œMy condolences,โ€ Beck said, stepping over the rubble on his way to her. โ€œI know you love the roses. Andโ€”most sorrowfullyโ€”my men will be fulfilling a requisition order from your house.โ€

โ€œA requisition?โ€

The soldiers came out of the house; one carried the oil painting that had been over the mantel and the other had the overstuffed chair from the salon.

โ€œThat was my grandmรจreโ€™s favorite chair,โ€ Vianne said quietly. โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ Beck said. โ€œI was unable to stop this.โ€

โ€œWhat in the worldโ€ฆโ€

Vianne didnโ€™t know whether to be relieved or concerned when Isabelle yanked her bike over the pile of stone and leaned it against the tree. Already there was no barrier between her property and the road anymore.

Isabelle looked beautiful, even with her face pink from the exertion of riding her bicycle and shiny with perspiration. Glossy blond waves framed her face. Her faded red dress clung to her body in all the right places.

The soldiers stopped to stare at her, the rolled-up Aubusson rug from the living room slung between them.

Beck removed his military cap. He said something to the soldiers who were carrying the rolled-up carpet, and they hurried toward the lorry.

โ€œYouโ€™ve torn down our wall?โ€ Isabelle said.

โ€œThe Sturmbannfรผhrer wants to be able to see all houses from the road. Somebody is distributing anti-German propaganda. We will find and arrest him.โ€

โ€œYou think harmless pieces of paper are worth all of this?โ€ Isabelle asked. โ€œThey are far from harmless, Mademoiselle. They encourage terrorism.โ€ โ€œTerrorism must be avoided,โ€ Isabelle said, crossing her arms.

Vianne couldnโ€™t look away from Isabelle. There was something going on. Her sister seemed to be drawing her emotions back, going still, like a cat preparing to pounce. โ€œHerr Captain,โ€ Isabelle said after a while.

โ€œOui,ย Mโ€™mselle?โ€

Soldiers walked past them, carrying out the breakfast table.

Isabelle let them pass and then walked to the captain. โ€œMy papa is ill.โ€ โ€œHe is?โ€ Vianne said. โ€œWhy donโ€™t I know this? Whatโ€™s wrong with him?โ€ Isabelle ignored Vianne. โ€œHe has asked that I come to Paris to nurse him.

Butโ€ฆโ€

โ€œHe wantsย youย to nurse him?โ€ Vianne said, incredulous.

Beck said, โ€œYou need a travel pass to leave, Mโ€™mselle. You know this.โ€

โ€œI know this.โ€ Isabelle seemed to barely breathe. โ€œI โ€ฆ thought perhaps you would procure one for me. You are a family man. Certainly you understand how important it is to answer a fatherโ€™s call?โ€

Strangely, as Isabelle spoke, the captain turned slightly to look at Vianne, as if she were the one who mattered.

โ€œI could get you a pass,ย oui,โ€ the captain said. โ€œFor a family emergency such as this.โ€

โ€œI am grateful,โ€ Isabelle said.

Vianne was stunned. Did Beck not see how her sister was manipulating himโ€”and why had he looked at Vianne when making his decision?

As soon as Isabelle got what she wanted, she returned to her bicycle. She took hold of the handlebars and walked it toward the barn. The rubber wheels bumped and thumped on the uneven ground.

Vianne rushed after her. โ€œPapaโ€™s ill?โ€ she said when she caught up with her sister.

โ€œPapaโ€™s fine.โ€ โ€œYou lied? Why?โ€

Isabelleโ€™s pause was slight but perceptible. โ€œI suppose there is no reason to lie. Itโ€™s all out in the open now. I have been sneaking out on Friday mornings to meet Henri and now he has asked me to go to Paris with him. He has a lovely littleย pied-ร -terreย in the Montmarte, apparently.โ€

โ€œAre you mad?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m in love, I think. A little. Maybe.โ€

โ€œYou are going to cross Nazi-occupied France to spend a few nights in Paris in the bed of a man whom you might love. A little.โ€

โ€œI know,โ€ Isabelle said. โ€œItโ€™s so romantic.โ€

โ€œYou must be feverish. Perhaps you have a brain sickness of some kind.โ€ She put her hands on her hips and made a huff of disapproval.

โ€œIf love is a disease, I suppose Iโ€™m infected.โ€

โ€œGood God.โ€ Vianne crossed her arms. โ€œIs there anything I can say to stop this foolishness?โ€

Isabelle looked at her. โ€œYou believe me? You believe I would cross Nazi- occupied France on a lark?โ€

โ€œThis is not like running away to see the circus, Isabelle.โ€ โ€œBut โ€ฆ you believe this of me?โ€

โ€œOf course.โ€ Vianne shrugged. โ€œSo foolish.โ€

Isabelle looked oddly crestfallen. โ€œJust stay away from Beck while Iโ€™m gone. Donโ€™t trust him.โ€

โ€œIsnโ€™t that just like you? Youโ€™re worried enough to warn me, but not worried enough to stay with me. Whatย youย want is what really matters. Sophie and I can rot for all you care.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s not true.โ€

โ€œIsnโ€™t it? Go to Paris. Have your fun but donโ€™t for one minute forget that you are abandoning your niece and me.โ€ Vianne crossed her arms and glanced back at the man in her yard who was supervising the looting of her house. โ€œWith him.โ€

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