Isabelle tried to crawl away from โฆ what? Had she just been kicked or burned? Or locked in the refrigerator? She couldnโt remember. She dragged her aching, bloody feet backward across the floor, one pain-filled inch at a time. Everything hurt. Her head, her cheek, her jaw, her wrists and ankles.
Someone grabbed her by the hair, yanked her head back. Blunt, dirty fingers forced her mouth open; brandy splashed into her open mouth, gagging her. She spit it back up.
Her hair was thawing. Ice water streamed down her face. She opened her eyes slowly.
A man stood in front of her, smoking a cigarette. The smell made her sick to her stomach.
How long had she been here?
Think, Isabelle.
She had been moved to this dank, airless cell. Two mornings had dawned with her able to see the sun, right?
Two? Or just one?
Had she given the network enough time to get people hidden? She couldnโt think.
The man was talking, asking her questions. His mouth opened, closed, spewed smoke.
She flinched instinctively, curled into a crouch, squatted back. The man behind her kicked her in her spine, hard, and she stilled.
So. Two men. One in front of her and one behind.ย Pay attention to the one
who is speaking.
What was he saying? โSit.โ
She wanted to defy him but didnโt have the strength. She climbed up onto the chair. The skin around her wrists was torn and bloody, oozing pus. She used her hands to cover her nakedness, but it was useless, she knew. He would pull her legs apart to bind her ankles to the chair legs.
When she was seated, something soft hit her in the face and fell into her lap. Dully, she looked down.
A dress. Not hers.
She clutched it to her bare breasts and looked up. โPut it on,โ he said.
Her hands were shaking as she stood and stepped awkwardly into the wrinkled, shapeless blue linen dress that was at least three sizes too large. It took forever to button the sagging bodice.
โThe Nightingale,โ he said, taking a long drag on his cigarette. The tip glowed red-orange and Isabelle instinctively shrank into the chair.
Schmidt. That was his name. โI donโt know anything about birds,โ she said.
โYou are Juliette Gervaise,โ he said.
โI have told you that a hundred times.โ
โAnd you know nothing about the Nightingale.โ โThis is what Iโve told you.โ
He nodded sharply and Isabelle immediately heard footsteps, and then the door behind her creaked open.
She thought:ย It doesnโt hurt, itโs just my body. They canโt touch my soul.ย It had become her mantra.
โWe are done with you.โ
He was smiling at her in a way that made her skin crawl. โBring him in.โ
A man stumbled forward in shackles.
Papa.
She saw horror in his eyes and knew how she looked: split lip and blackened eyes and torn cheek โฆ cigarette burns on her forearms, blood
matted in her hair. She should stay still, stand where she was, but she couldnโt. She limped forward, gritting her teeth at the pain.
There were no bruises on his face, no cuts on his lip, no arm held close to his body in pain.
They hadnโt beaten or tortured him, which meant they hadnโt interrogated him. โI am the Nightingale,โ her father said to the man whoโd tortured her. โIs that what you need to hear?โ
She shook her head, saidย noย in a voice so soft no one heard.
โIย am the Nightingale,โ she said, standing on burned, bloody feet. She turned to the German who had tortured her.
Schmidt laughed. โYou, a girl? The infamous Nightingale?โ
Her father said something in English to the German, who clearly didnโt understand.
Isabelle understood: They could speak in English.
Isabelle was close enough to her father to touch him, but she didnโt. โDonโt do this,โ she begged.
โItโs done,โ he said. The smile he gave her was slow in forming, and when it came, she felt pain constrict her chest. Memories came at her in waves, surging over the breakwater sheโd built in the isolated years. Him sweeping her into his arms, twirling her around; picking her up from a fall, dusting her off, whispering,ย Not so loud, my little terror, youโll wake your maman โฆ
She drew in short, shallow breaths and wiped her eyes. He was trying to make it up to her, asking for forgiveness and seeking redemption all at once, sacrificing himself for her. It was a glimpse of who heโd once been, the poet her maman had fallen in love with. That man, the one before the war, might have known another way, might have found the perfect words to heal their fractured past. But he wasnโt that man anymore. He had lost too much, and in his loss, heโd thrown more away. This was the only way he knew to tell her he loved her. โNot this way,โ she whispered.
โThere is no other. Forgive me,โ he said softly.
The Gestapo stepped between them. He grabbed her father by the arm and pulled him toward the door.
Isabelle limped after them. โI am the Nightingale!โ she called out.
The door slammed in her face. She hobbled to the cellโs window,
clutching the rough, rusty bars. โI am the Nightingale!โ she screamed.
Outside, beneath a yellow morning sun, her father was dragged into the square, where a firing squad stood at the ready, rifles raised.
Her father stumbled forward, lurched across the cobblestoned square, past a fountain. Morning sunlight gave everything a golden, beautiful glow.
โWe were supposed to have time,โ she whispered, feeling tears start. How often had she imagined a new beginning for her and Papa, for all of them? They would come together after the war, Isabelle and Vianne and Papa, learn to laugh and talk and be a family again.
Now it would never happen; she would never get to know her father, never feel the warmth of his hand in hers, never fall asleep on the divan beside him, never be able to say all that needed to be said between them. Those words were lost, turned into ghosts that would drift away, unsaid. They would never be the family maman had promised. โPapa,โ she said; it was such a big word suddenly, a dream in its entirety.
He turned and faced the firing squad. She watched him stand taller and square his shoulders. He pushed the white strands of hair from his dry eyes. Across the square, their gazes met. She clutched the bars harder, clinging to them for support.
โI love you,โ he mouthed. Shots rang out.
* * *
Vianne hurt all over.
She lay in bed, bracketed by her sleeping children, trying not to remember last nightโs rape in excruciating detail.
Moving slowly, she went to the pump and washed up in cold water, wincing every time she touched an area that was bruised.
She dressed in what was easyโa wrinkled linen button-up dress with a fitted bodice and flared skirt.
All night, sheโd lain awake in bed, holding her children close, alternately weeping for what heโd done to herโwhat heโd taken from herโand fuming that she couldnโt stop it.
She wanted to kill him.
She wanted to kill herself.
What would Antoine think of her now?
Truthfully, the biggest part of her wanted to curl up in a ball in some dark corner and never show her face again.
But even thatโshameโwas a luxury these days. How could she worry about herself when Isabelle was in prison and their father was going to try to save her?
โSophie,โ she said when theyโd finished their breakfast of dry toast and a poached egg. โI have an errand to run today. You will stay home with Daniel. Lock the door.โ
โVon Richterโโ
โIs gone until tomorrow.โ She felt her face grow hot. This was the kind of intimacy she shouldnโt know. โHe told me so last โฆ night.โ Her voice broke on the last word.
Sophie rose. โMaman?โ
Vianne dashed tears away. โIโm fine. But I must go. Be good.โ She kissed both of them good-bye and rushed out before she could start thinking of reasons to stay.
Like Sophie and Daniel.
And Von Richter. Heย saidย he was leaving for the night, but who knew? He could always have her followed. But if she worried too much about โwhat ifsโ she would never get anything done. In the time sheโd been hiding Jewish children, she had learned to go on despite her fear.
She had to help Isabelleโ (Donโt come back.)
(Iโll turn you in myself.)
โand Papa if she could.
She boarded the train and sat on a wooden bench in the third-class carriage. Several of the other passengersโmostly womenโsat with their heads down, hands clasped in their laps. A tall Hauptsturmfรผhrer stood guard by the door, his gun at the ready. A squad of narrow-eyed Miliceโthe brutal Vichy policeโsat in another part of the carriage.
Vianne didnโt look at either of the women in the compartment with her. One of them stank of garlic and onions. The smell made Vianne faintly sick in
the hot, airless compartment. Fortunately, her destination was not far away, and just after ten oโclock in the morning, she disembarked at the small train station on the outskirts of Girot.
Now what?
The sun rode high overhead, baking the small town into a stupor. Vianne clutched her handbag close, felt perspiration crawl down her back and drip from her temples. Many of the sand-colored buildings had been bombed; piles of rubble were everywhere. A blue Cross of Lorraine had been painted onto the stone sides of an abandoned school.
She encountered few people on the crooked, cobblestoned streets. Now and then a girl on a bicycle or a boy with a wheelbarrow would thump and rattle past her, but for the most part, what she noticed was the silence, an air of desertion.
Then a woman screamed.
Vianne came around the last crooked corner and saw the town square. A dead body was lashed to the fountain in the square. Blood reddened the water that lapped around his ankles. His head had been strapped back with an army belt so that he seemed almost relaxed there, with his mouth slack, his eyes open, sightless. Bullet holes chewed up his chest, left his sweater in tatters; blood darkened his chest and pant legs.
Her father.
* * *
Isabelle had spent last night huddled in the damp, black corner of her cell. The horror of her fatherโs death replayed itself over and over.
She would be killed soon. Of that she had no doubt.
As the hours passedโtime measured in breaths taken and released, in heartbeatsโshe wrote imaginary letters of good-bye to her father, to Gaรซtan, to Vianne. She strung her memories into sentences that she memorized, or tried to, but they all ended with โIโm sorry.โ When the soldiers came for her, iron keys rattling in ancient locks, worm-eaten doors scraping open across the uneven floor, she wanted to scream and protest, yellย NO, but she had no voice left.
She was yanked to her feet. A woman built like a panzer tank thrust shoes
and socks at her and said something in German. Obviously she didnโt speak French.
She gave Isabelle back her Juliette identity papers. They were stained now, and crumpled.
The shoes were too small and pinched her toes but Isabelle was grateful for them. The woman hauled her out of the cell and up the uneven stone steps and out into the blinding sunlight of the square. Several soldiers stood by the opposite buildings, their rifles strapped to their backs, going about their business. She saw her fatherโs bullet-ridden dead body lashed to the fountain and screamed.
Everyone in the square looked up. The soldiers laughed at her, pointed. โQuiet,โ the German tank woman hissed.
Isabelle was about to say something when she saw Vianne moving toward her.
Her sister moved forward awkwardly, as if she wasnโt quite in control of her body. She wore a tattered dress that Isabelle remembered as once being pretty. Her red-gold hair was dull and lank, tucked behind her ears. Her face was as thin and hollow as a bone china teacup. โIโve come to help you,โ Vianne said quietly.
Isabelle could have cried. More than anything in the world, she wanted to run to her big sister, to drop to her knees and beg for forgiveness and then to hold her in gratitude. To say โIโm sorryโ and โI love youโ and all the words in between. But she couldnโt do any of that. She had to protect Vianne.
โSo did he,โ she said, cocking her head toward her father. โGo away.
Please.ย Forget me.โ
The German woman yanked Isabelle forward. She stumbled along, her feet screaming in pain, not allowing herself to look back. She thought she was being led to a firing squad, but she went past her fatherโs slumped body and out of the square and onto a side street, where a lorry was waiting.
The woman shoved Isabelle into the back of the lorry. She scrambled back to the corner and squatted down, alone. The canvas flaps unfurled, bringing darkness. As the engine roared to life, she rested her chin in the hard and empty valley between her bony knees and closed her eyes.
When she woke, it was to stillness. The truck had stopped moving.
Somewhere, a whistle blared.
The flaps of the truck were whisked sideways and light flooded into the back of the truck, so bright Isabelle couldnโt see anything but shadow men coming toward her, yelling, โSchnell, schnell!โ
She was pulled out of the truck and tossed to the cobblestoned street like a sack of trash. There were four empty cattle cars lined up along the platform. The first three were shut tightly. The fourth was openโand crammed with women and children. The noise was overwhelmingโscreaming, crying, dogs barking, soldiers shouting, whistles blaring, the chugging hum of the waiting train.
The Nazi shoved Isabelle into the crowd, pushing her forward every time she stopped, until the last carriage appeared in front of her.
He picked her up and threw her inside; she stumbled into the crowd, almost fell. Only the other bodies kept her on her feet. They were still coming in, stumbling forward, crying, clutching their childrenโs hands, trying to find a six-inch opening between bodies in which to stand.
Iron bars covered the windows. In the corner, Isabelle saw a single barrel. Their toilet.
Suitcases were piled in the corner on a stack of hay bales.
Limping on feet that ached with every step, Isabelle pushed through the crowd of whimpering, crying women, past their screaming children, to the back of the train carriage. In the corner, she saw a woman standing alone, her arms crossed defiantly across her chest, her coarse gray hair covered by a black scarf.
Madame Babineauโs bruised face broke into a brown-toothed smile.
Isabelle was so relieved by the sight of her friend that she almost cried. โMadame Babineau,โ Isabelle whispered, hugging her friend tightly.
โI think itโs time you called me Micheline,โ her friend said. She was dressed in menโs pants that were too long for her and a flannel work shirt. She touched Isabelleโs cracked, bruised, bloodied face. โWhat have they done to you?โ
โTheir worst,โ she said, trying to sound like herself.
โI think not.โ Micheline let that sink in a moment and then cocked her head toward a bucket near her booted feet. This one was filled with a gray
water that sloshed over the edges as the wooden floor rattled beneath so many moving bodies. A split wooden ladle lay to one side. โDrink. While itโs there,โ she said.
Isabelle filled the ladle with the fetid-smelling water. Gagging at the taste, she forced herself to swallow. She stood, offered a ladleful to Micheline, who drank it all and wiped her wet lips with the back of her sleeve.
โThis is going to be bad,โ Micheline said. โIโm sorry I got you into this,โ Isabelle said.
โYou did not get me into anything, Juliette,โ Micheline said. โI wanted to be a part of it.โ
The whistle sounded again and the car doors banged shut, plunging them all into darkness. Bolts clanged into place, locking them in. The train lurched forward. People fell into one another, fell down. Babies screamed and children whined. Someone was peeing in the bucket and the smell overlaid the stench of the sweat and fear.
Micheline put an arm around Isabelle and the two women climbed to the top of the hay bales and sat together.
โI am Isabelle Rossignol,โ she said quietly, hearing her name swallowed by the darkness. If she was going to die on this train, she wanted someone to know who she was.
Micheline sighed. โYou are Julien and Madeleineโs daughter.โ โDid you know from the start?โ
โOui.ย You have your motherโs eyes and your fatherโs temperament.โ โHe was executed,โ she said. โHe admitted to being the Nightingale.โ
Micheline held her hand. โOf course he did. Someday, when you are a mother, you will understand. I remember thinking your parents were unmatchedโquiet, intellectual Julien and your vivacious, steel-spined maman. I thought they had nothing in common, but now I know how often love is like that. It was the war, you know; it broke him like a cigarette. Irreparable. She tried to save him. So hard.โ
โWhen she diedโฆโ
โOui.ย Instead of fixing himself, he drank and made himself worse, but the man he became was not the man he was,โ Micheline said. โSome stories donโt have happy endings. Even love stories. Maybe especially love stories.โ
The hours rolled by slowly. Often, the train stopped to take on more women and children or to avoid bombing. The women took turns sitting down and standing up, each helping the others when they could. The water disappeared and the urine barrel overfilled, sloshing over. Whenever the train slowed, Isabelle pushed to the sides of the carriage, peering through the slats, trying to see where they were, but all she saw were more soldiers and dogs and whips โฆ more women being herded like cattle into more train cars. Women wrote their names on scraps of paper or cloth and shoved them through cracks in the carriage walls, hoping against hope to be remembered.
By the second day, they were all exhausted and hungry and so thirsty they remained quiet, saving their saliva. The heat and stench in the carriage was unbearable.
Be afraid.
Wasnโt that what Gaรซtan had said to her? He said the warning had come from Vianne that night in the barn.
Isabelle hadnโt fully understood it then. She understood it now. She had thought herself indestructible.
But what would she have done differently? โNothing,โ she whispered into the darkness. She would do it all again.
And this wasnโt the end. She had to remember that. Each day she lived there was a chance for salvation. She couldnโt give up. She couldย neverย give up.
* * *
The train stopped. Isabelle sat up, bleary-eyed, her body aching and in pain from the beatings of her interrogation. She heard harsh voices, dogs barking. A whistle blared.
โWake up, Micheline,โ Isabelle said, gently jostling the woman beside her. Micheline edged upright.
The seventy other people in the carโwomen and childrenโslowly roused themselves from the stupor of the journey. Those who were seated rose. The women came together instinctively, packed in closer.
Isabelle winced in pain as she stood on torn feet in shoes too small. She
held Michelineโs cold hand.
The giant carriage doors rumbled open. Sunlight poured in, blinding them all. Isabelle saw SS officers dressed in black, with their snarling, barking dogs. They were shouting orders at the women and children, incomprehensible words with obvious meaning.ย Climb down, move on, get into line.
The women helped one another down. Isabelle held on to Michelineโs hand and stepped down onto the platform.
A truncheon hit her in the head so hard she stumbled sideways and dropped to her knees.
โGet up,โ a woman said. โYou must.โ
Isabelle let herself be helped to her feet. Dizzy, she leaned into the woman. Micheline came up on her other side, put an arm around her waist to steady her.
To Isabelleโs left, a whip snaked through the air, hissing, and cracked into the fleshy pink of a womanโs cheek. The woman screamed and held the torn skin of her cheek together. Blood poured between her fingers, but she kept moving.
The women formed ragged lines and marched across uneven ground through an open gate that was surrounded by barbed wire. A watchtower loomed above them.
Inside the gates, Isabelle saw hundredsโthousandsโof women who looked like ghosts moving through a surreal landscape of gray, their bodies emaciated, their eyes sunken and dead looking in gray faces, their hair shorn. They wore baggy, dirty striped dresses; some were barefooted. Only women and children. No men.
Behind the gates and beneath the watchtower, she saw barracks stretching out in lines.
A corpse of a woman lay in the mud in front of them. Isabelle stepped over the dead woman, too numb to think anything butย keep moving. The last woman whoโd stopped had been hit so hard she didnโt get up again.
Soldiers yanked the suitcases from their hands, snatched necklaces, pulled earrings and wedding rings off. When their valuables were all gone, they were led into a room, where they stood crowded together, sweating from the heat,
dizzy from thirst. A woman grabbed Isabelleโs arms, pulled her aside. Before she could even think, she was being stripped nakedโthey all were. Rough hands scratched her skin with dirty fingernails. She was shaved everywhereโ under her arms, her head, and her pubic hairโwith a viciousness that left her bleeding.
โSchnell!โ
Isabelle stood with the other shaved, freezing, naked women, her feet aching, her head still ringing from the blows. And then they were being moved again, herded forward toward another building.
She remembered suddenly the stories sheโd heard at MI9 and on the BBC, news stories about Jewish people being gassed to death at the concentration camps.
She felt a feeble sense of panic as she shuffled forward with the herd, into a giant room full of showerheads.
Isabelle stood beneath one of the showerheads, naked and trembling. Over the noise of the guards and the prisoners and the dogs, she heard the rattling of an old ventilation system. Something was coming on, clattering through the pipes.
This is it.
The doors of the building banged shut.
Ice-cold water gushed from the showerheads, shocking Isabelle, chilling her to the bone. In no time it was over and they were being herded again. Shivering, trying futilely to cover her nakedness with her trembling hands, she moved into the crowd and stumbled forward with the other women. One by one they were deloused. Then Isabelle was handed a shapeless striped dress and a dirty pair of menโs underwear and two left shoes without laces.
Clutching her new possessions to her clammy breasts, she was shoved into a barn-like building with stacks of wooden bunks. She climbed into one of the bunks and lay there with nine other women. Moving slowly, she dressed and then lay back, staring up at the gray wooden underside of the bunk above her. โMicheline?โ she whispered.
โIโm here, Isabelle,โ her friend said from the bunk above.
Isabelle was too tired to say more. Outside, she heard the smacking of leather belts, the hissing of whips, and the screams of women who moved too
slowly.
โWelcome to Ravensbrรผck,โ said the woman beside her. Isabelle felt the womanโs skeletal hip against her leg.
She closed her eyes, trying to block out the sounds, the smell, the fear, the pain.
Stay alive,ย she thought.
Stay. Alive.