Authors: Margaret Pemberton
Henri had found the incident interesting. The soldiers'misdeamour had been trivial but it had earned them Meyer's contempt and it was his contempt that had filled their eyes with misery as they had backed from the room. Meyer had not apologised to him for his men's conduct. He had not needed to. He had shown quite clearly that no liberties of any sort would be taken whilst he and his men occupied Valmy and Henri had been grateful.
âThe major has asked me to join him for a cognac after dinner this evening,' he said as they walked down one narrow pathway and up another.
Lisette stopped short, horrified. âYou promised me that you would not be taken in by glib good manners, Papa! Have you forgotten who he is. He's a
German!
He's no
right
to be at Valmy! To ask you to share a cognac with him in your own house is an insult! Surely even you must see that?'
âAnd if being insulted means I enter his rooms?' her father said, quirking a silvered eyebrow.
Lisette regarded him doubtfully. âWill he? Is that why you accepted his invitation?'
âHe very well might and whether he does or not, the more I time I spend with him, the more likelihood there is of my obtaining information for Paul.'
Lisette slipped her arm through his and began once more to walk at his side. âHe'll never tell you anything,' she said with certainty. âHe isn't the type, no matter how much cognac he drinks. The information we need is behind the locked doors of the grand dining-room.'
âYes,' her father said thoughtfully. âOne set of keys and one guard ⦠Not impossible odds, surely.'
Lisette smiled at him affectionately. âNot if we are determined, Papa,' she said, and as they continued to walk the deserted rose gardens her head was high, her eyes bright with the light of battle.
The next morning she cycled down through the beech woods to Sainte-Marie-des-Ponts, looking on the flowers with kindlier eyes than she had a week ago. Major Dieter Meyer was directly responsible to Rommel for the strengthening of the coastal defences. That much she now knew for certain. She skimmed over the bridge, past sharply yellow daffodils and deep-drowned purple crocus, with a zing of elation. From now on she would be more than just a courier. She would be an informer. And with luck her information would be important.
Pollarded trees lined Sainte-Marie's streets, linking pleached branches, their buds already bursting into green. She cycled over the cobbles and into the square, leaning her bicycle against the side of the café. It was spring. Probably the last spring they would spend under German occupation. It was a heady thought and she hurried into the café, her spirits rising even higher as she heard the familiar tone of Paul's voice.
He was leaning against the zinc-topped bar, talking to André, his shabby corduroy trousers still discoloured by the dust of Vierville. He was bespectacled, tall and thin, his shirt and jacket sleeves never quite reaching to his angular wrists. He had been born and bred in Sainte-Marie and was a popular though unconventional schoolmaster. The children were at lunch now, and Paul was in the village café, as always. It was the one place all gossip reached, sooner or later.
Their eyes met briefly, he smiled an acknowledgement and continued with his conversation. Lisette looked around the café's interior. Madame Chamot and Madame Bridet were sitting at a corner table, their shopping bags at their feet, half drunk cups of chicory in front of them. Old Bleriot was sitting alone, wheezing over a baguette, and a soldier stood near the doorway, munching a croissant, his eyes on the square outside.
âAn anisette, André, please,' she said, sitting with the two women.
âGood morning, Lisette,' said Madame Chamot, her black serge coat buttoned up to the throat, her steel-grey hair pulled tightly into a bun. âHow is the Comtesse, your mother?'
âVery well,' Lisette replied, wishing that the soldier would go so that she could talk to Paul.
âI am glad,' said Madame Chamot, but her voice expressed disbelief. How could the fastidious and refined Comtesse de Valmy be well when her home was overrun with pigs? She glared venomously in the soldier's direction as he wiped the crumbs from his mouth with the back of his hand, and sauntered back out into the street.
âSalauds,'
she said expressively. âDid you see that, Madame Bridet? He never even offered to pay for this drink or his croissant. I wish I were a man! I'd show them!'
âIf you could terrorise the Boche the way you terrorise your husband, the war would be over by Easter,' André said, leaning his muscular arms on the bar, his grin wide.
âBah,' Madam Chamot said disgustedly, rising to her feet and picking up her bags. âI've more fighting spirit in me than you have, André Caldron! You should be ashamed of yourself, feeding the Boche free of charge! Goodbye Mademoiselle Lisette. Come along, Madame Bridet, there is work for us to do. We cannot be idle all day like some I could mention.' Weighed down by their shopping, the two elderly housewives struggled out into the street and Paul crossed quickly to Lisette's table, sitting opposite her, his thin-boned face grim.
âI've heard about your guests. What is it like? Is it very bad?'
Lisette pushed a dark tendril of hair away from her face. âIt's bearable,' she said, her eyes dark with distaste. âMayor Meyer has commandeered the chateau and his men are quartered in the servants' rooms around the courtyard.'
âYou'll be under much greater surveillance. It could make things difficult,' Paul said, thinking of her vital runs to Bayeux and Trevieres.
âI don't think so. No one takes any notice of me. Why should they?' Her eyes met his urgently. âThe Major does not take orders from the GHQ at Vierville, Paul. He is responsible directly to Field Marshal Rommel.'
Paul sat very still, his eyes sharp. André had turned his back and was whistling to himself as he restocked his bar. The old man was dozing. âHis task is to strengthen the coastal defences. Rommel himself came to Valmy three days ago. He and the Major spent nearly an hour together in the grand dining-room. There are maps in there, Paul, I'm sure of it. Maps and plans.'
Paul felt in his pocket for a cigarette and matches.
Her voice held conviction. âThe Major has had locks put on the doors and a sentry is on duty outside them twenty-four hours a day. The information
must
be vital, Paul. Rommel was not paying a social call.'
Paul regarded her thoughtfully. He knew very well what she was suggesting, but she was inexperienced and if she were caught ⦠He thrust away the memory of the entire Argent cell being lined up and shot at Gestapo headquarters in Caen because of a weak link in their chain.
âIt's too dangerous,' he repeated, holding his cigarette inward between his thumb and forefinger, inhaling nicotine in short, sharp puffs, his mind working furiously. If what she said was true, the information Major Meyer had access to was of incalculable importance. Obtaining it and transmitting it to the Allies could mean the difference between success and failure for the long awaited invasion forces. And defeat would ensure that the Nazi dream of a thousand-year Reich would become grim reality. His skin turned cold. Lisette was too young, too inexperienced to be entrusted with a mission of such enormity.
âA skilled operator must be infiltrated into Valmy as a maid or a cook,' he said tensely.
âIt won't work, Paul. It would arouse too much suspicion.'
âIt
must
work,' he said fiercely. âWe have to know what those devils are planning. How much they know of the Allies'intentions.'
A small frown puckered her brow. âBut if Rommel is focusing his attention on Normandy, surely that is to our advantage? Everyone knows that when the attack comes, it will be at the Pas de Calais.'
Paul Gilles'eyes met hers, the pupils mere pinpricks. âNo one,' he said steadily, âknows when the invasion will take place, or where. But if, just if, the Desert Fox has guessed correctly, then the results could be catastrophic.'
Despite the warmth of her coat she shivered. It was as if the whole future of France had suddenly been placed on their shoulders.
âThe Major is too sharp, too intuitive to accept a new maid or cook at face value,' she said, her knuckles clenching as she remembered the agonising moment in her father's bedroom when his hard grey eyes had stripped her naked, knowing instantly the reason for her being there, disbelieving with contempt her futile lie. âHis suspicions would be immediately aroused and security would be tightened to such an extent that not even a mouse would be able to gain entry to the grand dining-room.' She leaned towards him, her eyes urgent. âPapa is already beginning to gain his confidence. The Major has invited him to share a cognac with him after dinner this evening. If Papa can help us, Paul, he will. He has given me his promise.'
Paul stirred uneasily on his metal chair. As far as he was concerned, the Comte could have done much more far sooner. Sharing an after dinner cognac with the Boche smacked of collaboration, not espionage.
âIf your Major is one of Rommel's golden boys, the information he has access to will be vitally important. We can't risk the chance of not obtaining it. Your father is not a member of the Resistance. He has no experience of Resistance work. The task must be entrusted to one of our own, Lisette.'
Her eyes sparked angrily. âMajor Meyer is
not
my major, Paul Gilles! And my father is utterly trustworthy. I would stake my life on him!'
A wry smile touched Paul's thin lips. âBy taking him into our confidence we will
all
be staking our lives on him,' he said drily.
Her flare of fury subsided. What he said was true. She was reacting with her heart again, and not her head. She pushed her hands deep into the pockets of her coat and stared out of the open door of the café. On the far side of the tree-lined square a German soldier lounged arrogantly astride his motorcycle. The two elderly women had parted company and were carrying their shopping home. Madame Pichon was hurrying off in the direction of the Telliers where young Madame Tellier was about to give birth yet again.
She had waited for over a week to see Paul, confident that when she did so he would tell her what must be done. And now that he had, she was rejecting his advice, confident that she knew best. That she and her father did not need his help. That all they needed was for any information they obtained to be ferried to the Allies through safe channels. She sighed and pushed a silk-dark strand of hair away from her face. Paul was right. Neither she nor her father were experts at espionage. Her one attempt had been shamefully bungled and she had no way of knowing if any attempt her father made would meet with any greater success. An expert
was
needed, and it was up to her to give Paul all the support he needed.
She drew her eyes away from the distant German and the sunlit square and back once more to Paul. âWhat is it that you want me to do, Paul?' she asked, gracefully conceding defeat.
Paul grinned. His sexuality was so low key that it scarcely ever troubled him. Yet he had long ago fallen under Lisette's spell. Her directness and honesty beguiled him, as did the long sweep of her lashes against the pale perfection of her skin. If he thought for one moment that she regarded him as anything but an older brother, he would have had no hesitation in putting his bachelor days behind him.
His grin faded. It was fortunate that Lisette regarded him with only sisterly affection. Comte Henri de Valmy would not regard a village schoolmaster as a suitable choice of a husband for his only daughter. He shrugged the dream aside and said in a practical vein, âIs Marie the only help you have at Valmy?'
She nodded.
âWho does the cooking?'
âMaman.'
Paul tried not to show his surprise. It had not occurred to him that the ice-cool, elegant Comtesse was familiar with her own kitchen.
âThen tonight when your father joins the Major for a cognac, he must say that your mother's health is not robust and that the occupation of her home has taken its toll. That with the Major's permission he would like to employ a niece of Marie's as a temporary cook.'
âHas Marie any nieces?' she asked, raising a sleek eyebrow quizzically.
Paul laughed. âShe has now. Don't worry about questions being asked of Marie, or of anyone else. That is my concern. Just make sure that your father lays the groundwork well.'
âAnd when Marie's “niece” arrives?' Lisette asked, rising to her feet.
âSay nothing to her. She has come from Caen to cook. Treat her as a cook.'
Lisette hesitated, a slight frown still puckering her brows, her hair falling forward in two glossy wings at either side of her face as she looked down at him. âAnd if an opportunity should present itself that only I or my father can take advantage of?'
His thin, bony face looked suddenly old for his years. âTake it,' he said briefly. âGoodbye, Lisette, and good luck.'
She walked outside into the chill sunlight, wheeling her bicycle on to the cobbled road, her earlier optimism dissipated. The moment Marie's so-called niece entered Valmy, all their lives would be at risk. Not only hers and her father's, but mother's as well. If only, she thought, pushing down on the pedals, bicycling away from the square and through the narrow streets towards the bridge, if only there was an easier way. But try as she might she could not think of one.
The soldier lounging astride his motorcycle watched her leave the café and then settled back to wait a little longer. Not until Paul left did he kick the machine into life and before Lisette had reached the beech woods he had roared out of the village in the opposite direction, circling round until he reached the road, barred to civilians, that snaked along the cliff tops to Valmy.
âYou're quite sure he was the purpose of her visit?' Dieter asked sharply as the private stood to attention in the study that had previously been Henri de. Valmy's private retreat from the world.