When I told them of the rest of the cache, Nicki said, ‘Burn the papers. Don’t keep them around. Bury the wallet where they’ll never find it. Don’t trust the stove with leather. He can always get himself another set of papers after we’ve checked him out. After, Lily.’
It made me wonder what Dmitry would have to say about things.
Tommy walked me across the fields and into the woods until we came to the road I was to take. We had said so little to each other, we still seemed at a loss for words. I knew I dreaded their linking up with Marcel’s contacts. Tommy also knew how I’d be feeling about meeting them where I’d been attacked. ‘Be careful,’ he said. ‘I’d hate to lose you.’
‘Hey, listen, I’ll be seeing you in two nights. Marie’s safe!’
‘And I’m glad for all of us. Your sister’s quite a girl, Lily, but is she too impulsive?’
He’d seen this, hence his silence. ‘Nini will be okay. That one will grow up fast because she has to.’
I didn’t ask what he and Nicki were planning. Very quickly, we dropped into this way of working. What one didn’t know the Nazis couldn’t pry out. Later, of course, I absolutely had to know.
‘What will you do if Schiller’s there in the house?’ he asked.
‘I’ll stay right there and keep him busy.’
Tommy’s kiss was hesitant. I think some snowflakes were falling, the first light dusting of the 1940–1941 winter that was to be so harsh.
The dawn hasn’t broken yet. It’s still pitch-dark, but how many times was I to drag myself home like this, dead beat only to appear as if refreshed by a night’s sleep? The note is still nailed up there by that fork. I run my fingers over it, feel the jamb of the door, a touch … just a touch. Have they come as requested?
The door is no longer the way I left it. There is something-a feeling, a sixth sense, call it what you will, but you either have it or you don’t. They’ve come.
Cautiously my fingers move down the jamb and across the stone sill until I find the length of thin wire. So it’s to be this way, is it? No confrontation. No, ‘Lily, let’s talk things over.’
Just as I’ve suspected, there’s a car parked down the road. I give it a careful circuit, run my fingers lightly over its dented wings. A Citroën-prewar, real vintage, a 1937, I think. Black, with lovely flowing lines. One of the Sûreté’s, ah, oui. Dupuis at last.
With my SS knife, I let the air out of every one of the tyres and fade fast into the trees, for that hunting ground of kings is to be hunted over again, and I must remember everything I will need, only this time it’s me who’s the hunter.
Tommy waited beside me in the forest, just near the turn-off to Arbonne. Nicki had gone to watch the road. It was two days since I met them at the farmhouse, and Marcel’s contacts hadn’t shown up. It was almost dawn.
We didn’t know what to think. For them, for me, the waiting had become an agony. Should they return to the farmhouse? Should they hide out in the forest and try to make a run for the zone libre?
There had been no opportunity for love, none in which to lie in his arms. Again, I asked him, ‘Are you sure of the address? Simone will hide you, but you must get a message to her first. She’ll know what to do about their concierge.’
Faintly on the cold night air the sound of a gazogène lorry finally came. Since it had a firebox that produced wood gas to power its engine, there was a certain misfiring of the engine, the grinding of ancient gears, a hunkering down before each gentle rise. Those things, they didn’t have any more than sixty percent of the power of a gasoline engine.
Soon there were voices, the pungent aroma of wood smoke, and the squeal of ancient brakes. ‘Sacré nom de nom, is this the fucking place? Hey, mais amis, are you the ones we’re suppose to collect?’
There were pigs in the back of the lorry, which the smoke and the banging of the engine had frightened. The poor things squealed, making a racket of their own. Thirty or so were haunch-to-haunch and terrified as light from a torch briefly passed over them before coming to rest on the money in my hands.
‘Ten thousand francs, madame.’
‘Ten? But …’
Nicki says, ‘Give it to him.’
There were no names and I didn’t see their faces, but knew Marcel had done me in again.
‘Vite, vite,’ said someone. ‘Get in the back.’
They were gone and I had to return to the house alone.
The axe fell once, the axe fell twice. Blood splashed over the chopping block. A head rolled away, but it was not a human head. No young girl vents her bowels at the moment of her death. The eyes of Michèle Chevalier didn’t stare up at me, not yet.
I was down the road from the house. Georges was butchering rabbits. I held the children by the hand. There was snow, and all around the woodpile it had been trampled.
Another rabbit was seized by the hind legs and ears. It jerked as it was taken from the cage, tried desperately to get away, but he swung it up high in the air. Marie’s eyes follow it. She was very silent, very intent. Her lips were parted in a gasp as the rabbit came down hard in a rush of brown fur, Jean-Guy watching it hit the block as its eyes burst.
Up came the axe. The black beret, stained by the grey of snotty forefingers and thumbs, was pulled down, for we’d come at his summons. ‘Madame, your husband wishes me to tell you that your friends are not wanted.’
Georges had been to Fontainebleau again to talk to his wife’s relatives. ‘Which friends?’
‘The two who came three nights ago, late and well after curfew. I saw them, madame. There’s no sense in your lying.’
Fortunately, I had an answer for him. ‘That was Michèle Chevalier and her boyfriend, Henri-Philippe Beauclair. They’re on their way back to Paris from the south, and the colonel has said they might stay for a few days.’
The stained butt of his Gauloise bleue was pinched out and budgeted in a small, flat tin as he clucked his tongue, ground his false teeth, and began to skin the rabbits. ‘It’s not the colonel’s house, madame. Monsieur Jules has asked that they leave.’
The skin was pulled off as he continued. ‘We have only the interests of our employer at heart. If there are goings on at the house, they must be reported to Monsieur Jules.’
‘Who is paying you again, but how much, please?’
Bundled in an old coat, boots, scarf, and crocheted hat, Tante Marie appeared with the iron casserole. ‘That is no business of yours. Be thankful you’ve been left alone.’
One by one, the little corpses were laid side by side and the skins collected. ‘They’ll be gone in two days,’ I told them. ‘The Lieutenant Schiller wishes to interrogate the two here, so there’s nothing you or I can do about it.’
They didn’t look at one another, only at the rabbits, Georges wiping his hands on the skins. ‘You’ll be the death of us all, madame.’
‘Then you’ll only get what you deserve!’
I dragged the children after me, those two watching, one on either side of that chopping block with the wood piled up under the roof of their shed-oak, beech, and pine. New wood. Seasoned wood. Lovely stuff!
‘There was a third visitor, madame,’ he called out ‘This is the one who must definitely leave.’
The pilot Michèle and Henri-Philippe have brought me. ‘There is no third person!’
It’s Tante Marie who says, ‘Would you like the Germans to look for him? Be sensible. Don’t bring trouble down on all of us. Just let him leave. It’s not your affair. It certainly isn’t ours.’
He was badly burned about the hands, but would they have me turn him out in this weather, 22 January 1941? I remember the date because, late the previous night, we had listened to the BBC London and had learned of the British and Australian breakthrough at Tobruk.