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Authors: C. Marie Bowen

BOOK: Aubrielle's Call
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CHAPTER 23

 

 

 

 

“Nescato?” John’s gut tightened.

Impossible.

His vision blurred, and he struggled to take a breath. To hear the sorceress’s name after two millennium… He inhaled through his nose.

She had to be dead.

“Where did you hear that name?” he demanded.

“Where? From the baroness herself.” Karl sneered. “She gave instruction on how to identify you.”

“You lie.” His jaw clenched as blood pounded in his ears. “The witch, Nescato, is dead.”

“The baroness is indeed a witch, although a living one,” the valet whispered. “And as impossible to kill as you.” He spat another mouthful of blood between John’s feet. “
M
ein Führer
is fascinated with how her proximity bends—probability.”

Billy and Henri emerged from the back room supporting François between them.

The old smuggler attempted to regain his feet. His face was beaten and bloody. He blinked swollen, bloodstained eyes at the two men in the kitchen. “
Tuez-le, mon ami
. Kill that
salopard
.”

The clatter of boots on the metal stair and a woman’s shrill shout gave a small warning. Machine-gun fire erupted through the open door, and a man followed the barrage into the room.

John knocked Karl to the ground, pulled his revolver, and shot at the shadowed figure in the doorway.

Their attacker grunted and spun sideways, his back against the door frame. His cap fell to the ground as he lurched upright. He bared his teeth and raised the machine-gun at John.

Henri fired Karl’s weapon twice from behind the sofa. Both rounds pierced his target in the chest.

The armed man squeezed the trigger as he fell, firing a burst into the floor.

Cries of terror and running sounded from the hall, but for the moment, the exit stood clear.

John yanked Karl from the floor, wrapped his arm around the valet’s neck, and shoved him toward the door. “We need to get to the truck.” Near the room’s entrance, he nudged the Thompson with his toe. “Billy, take this.”


Non.
” François bent and grasped the strap. “
C’est pour moi.”

John eyed the Frenchman. “Suit yourself.” He tipped his head toward Karl. “But I still have questions for this one. I need him alive.”

A spray of bullets forestalled François’s reply and drove them from the opening.

Henri spun out of the line of fire and crouched beside the entrance. He stole a brief glance toward the staircase, looking both up and down. He rested his head against the wall and held up one finger and pointed up. Then wiggled his fingers like running legs and pointed down and out toward the stairs.

François lunged into the doorway with a raw scream. Bullets from his weapon pinged from the metal stairs as spent casings littered the floor. When he released the trigger, he swayed backward into the room.

Billy steadied him. “We need to get you to the hospital, mate.”

Blood dripped from the electrical wire hanging from François’s wrists. Although he'd been cut free, the remaining wire dug deep into his flesh. He peered at his friend through slits in his swollen eyes.

Oui, je sais
.”

“First, we have to get out of here.” John swung Karl forward, lifting the Nazi off his feet.

Karl held onto John’s forearm with both hands as he gasped for breath.

Henri eased into the hall. His gun trained on the stairs leading to the top floor. Satisfied, he glanced at John as he walked around the body. “Here’s another of your automatics.”

“Take it,” John responded.

Henri slipped Karl’s revolver beneath his belt and picked up the machine-gun. He headed down the stairs, the weapon snug against his shoulder.

“You’ve got François?” John asked Billy as he hauled Karl out the door. Without waiting for a reply, the big man stepped over the dead shooter and backed toward the stairs. His head swiveled back and forth as the building’s occupants sprang to life.

In the absence of gunfire, curious residents peeked from their doors. The terrified ones scurried through the hallway in their nightclothes seeking a safe exit. Doors were thrown open and slammed shut. The sharp sound ricocheted down the hall like gunfire. A shout of anger, followed by rushing footsteps, echoed down from the corridor above.

John hurried down the steps. Below him, he saw Henri make the turn on the second landing headed to the ground floor.

A man wearing a blue nightshirt yelled profanities in French as he shook his finger at the stairs.

At the bottom, Henri held the door. “Hurry.”

John pushed Karl through the doorway and put his back to the building. His arm tight around the German’s neck.

Billy pulled the keys from his pocket with one hand as he and François left the stairwell into the night air. His other arm supported François.

Above them, glass shattered.

John spun away from the falling shards, carrying Karl with him.

The r
at-tat-tat
of automatic fire punctuated sparks on the pavement and nipped at Henri’s heels. He dove into the street behind the line of parked vehicles.

Past the cars, Billy and François hurried toward the truck.

“Damn—” An elbow rammed into John’s stomach just as his shoulder exploded in pain, knocking him to his knees.

Karl spun from John’s grip and dashed away.

John picked up the gun with his off hand and stumbled between the cars to the relative safety of the street. He sat down hard on the pavement and looked over at Henri.

Henri shot a short burst toward the window then crouched down and glanced at John. “You’ve been shot.” He fired off another half-dozen rounds.

“I’ll live,” John replied.
I always do.
“Where did Karl go? Was he hit?”

“No. He made it back inside.” Henri ducked as muzzle flash sparked in the window. A spray of bullets punctured tires and shattered car windows.

John rotated his shoulder. The round had pierced the meat of his right deltoid. Blood flowed freely down his arm. He looked up the side street toward the truck. He expected to see Billy and François dead on the street, but both men were missing. “Billy has the keys,” he said to Henri.

“I don’t know how much ammunition is left,” Henri replied. “But I have Karl’s revolver. Go to the truck. I’ll cover you.

John waited until Henri fired at the window, then he staggered to his feet and ran up the street. He dodged onto the walkway, using the cars as a shield.

Ahead, beside the truck, lay François and Billy.

François cradled Billy in his arms. When he saw John, he raised his head. “Billy’s been shot. I pulled him out of the street, but—”

John touched Billy’s neck.
He has a pulse.
“He’s alive. Were you hit?”

“Yes.” François closed his eyes. “I’m too weak to get him in the truck.”

Behind them, the gunfire from the window increased, then discontinued. John looked back at the building and caught sight of Henri, dodging between parked cars. “They’re coming for us. We have to go.”

Henri ran up behind John and slung the Thompson into the truck bed. “Billy?”

“He’s alive. Help me get him in the bed.” John pulled the keys from Billy’s fist and shoved them in his pocket. He lifted Billy’s shoulders while Henri guided his feet.

“I’ll hold him.” Henri climbed in the back and sat beside Billy. “Let’s go.”

John rounded the truck and slid behind the wheel as François pulled the passenger door closed. The engine cranked twice then roared to life. John dropped it into first and pulled onto the street. “Where’s the nearest hospital?” he asked François.

“That would be the
H
ôpital de la Pitié
,
straight ahead. Head back to town. It’s not far.”

“Why did Karl take you?” John asked the smuggler. “What did he want?”

“Our German friend wanted the rest of the arms shipment.” François lifted his hand from his stomach and stared at it. “He wasn’t satisfied with only three weapons.” The fresh blood on his hand mixed with that from his wrist.

“How badly are you hurt?” John turned onto the main boulevard into Paris.

“Not as badly as Billy.” He exhaled a ragged breath. “But if I pass out, give the doctor my full name, François Belliard and tell them to contact the
S
ûreté nationale
.
” He grunted as the truck bounced over a bump in the road. “They’ll wonder where I’ve been.”

“I will,” John assured him.

Sûreté nationale? Why would the French Police be concerned about a smuggler?

He tapped the steering wheel and checked the review mirror.

Henri huddled behind the cab. His hair tossed by the wind.

Henri and Billy must be freezing.
Their coats remained at
La Fleur—
left behind when they chased the German valet. John blinked, then looked at the smuggler from the corner of his eye. “François, do you work for the French Internal Security?”


Oui. Contre-espionnage
.” François pressed his hand to his side. “Some of the weapons purchased from the
Giselle-Marie
were used to expose Nazi agents believed to be in Paris.” His forehead furrowed and he shook his head. “I thought Ken Rice would have told you.”

John rested his right hand in his lap to keep from moving his shoulder. “The first mate on the
Giselle-Marie
knows you’re an intelligence agent?”

“He knows.” François spat a piece of wire he had chewed from his wrist. “So was he, during the Great War, except on the side of the damned British.” He huffed a short chuckle. “His partner, Nigel Keats, gave me the first handgun I ever owned, then married my sister, Giselle.”

John watched the road for several moments in silence. Reality continued to fall in and out of place. Facts shifted like sand beneath his feet.

François is who Master Keats meant by family.

“Does Billy work for British Intelligence?”

François laughed then groaned. “
Non
. Billy offered me a way into the smuggling ring—and his friendship.” His swollen gaze met John’s. “The young man was blissfully unaware of such dangerous intrigue. Until he met me.”

“The German who held you—Karl—what do you know about him?”

“Karl Reimer is a Nazi agent and a heinous animal, eager to advance within the Third Reich.”

They had reached the city, and streetlights reflected on François’s swollen face.

“Turn left up ahead, then your first right. You will see the
Hôpital de la Pitié.”

“Those names Karl collected… How were they sent and to where?”

“He has a radio hidden somewhere in Paris. He sends encrypted intelligence into Germany.” François gnawed another bit of wire from his flesh. He grunted and spat as the truck stopped in front of the hospital. “The only thing their leader hates more than Frenchmen are Jews.” His voice dropped, and he leaned toward John. “Hitler prepares for an invasion. He and his generals are always three steps ahead.”

The vehicle rocked as Henri vaulted over the side of the bed and ran into the hospital.

“Billy—” François attempted to turn, but instead, he cringed in pain. Fresh blood oozed between his fingers.

“Sit still. Henri will bring help.” John turned off the ignition.

Henri hurried from the hospital entrance with two hospital workers in white. “— one is in the back, and the other is in the cab.” Henri pointed toward François as he moved to the back of the truck.

John hurried around and opened the passenger door. He put a hand on François’s shoulder. “Sit still until they tell you otherwise.”

“We need a stretcher,” the man in the truck bed called to the assistant by the door.

“Make that two,” the woman beside François called out. “And we’ll need a surgeon.”

They carried Billy in first, still unconscious, then came back for François.

“Keep the keys to the truck,” François ground out between his teeth as the medical staff transferred him from the truck to a stretcher. “Billy won’t need it for awhile.”

John leaned close as they lifted François. “
Karl mentioned a Baroness Nescato. What do you know about her?”

François shook his head. “I’ve never heard that name.”


Ça suffit, le temps presse.”
The orderly held his hand up to stop John, then followed François into the hospital.

 

 

 

CHAPTER 24

 

 

 

 

Aubrielle struck a match and lit the s
hamash
candle. She’d placed Papa’s bronzed Hanukkah candelabra on a little table, positioned to display through the front window of the living room. Outside, the sun had set, and the first stars had appeared in the clear winter sky. She blew out the match, caught the sharp scent of sulfur, then faced her audience.

John watched from the hallway. His suit creased at the shoulder where it pressed against the wall. Arms and legs both crossed, he rested one foot on the toe of his shoe. He wore a new brown suit that accentuated the gray circles beneath his eyes. His gaze caught hers and his lips turned up ever-so-slightly on each side.

He looks exhausted
.

She tore her attention from John and looked to Henri and Mae, seated beside her father on the couch. “For those of you who aren’t Jewish, which is everyone except Papa.” She swallowed as heat infused her face. “This candle, set apart from the rest, is called the s
hamash,
or servant candle. Only a
hanukiah
has the offset s
hamash
.”

“A what?” Henri asked. “John called your candle holder a
menorah
.”

“John’s right. A
menorah
is a Jewish candelabra.” Aubrielle opened the drawer on the table and withdrew another candle—a twin to the
shamash
taper. “But there are two types. The most common—the
hanukiah
—holds nine candles. It’s used to celebrate the Hanukkah festival.” She inserted the new candle into the empty socket on the far right. “The other
menorah
is employed in the Temple, and holds only seven candles.”

She removed the lighted s
hamash
candle from its raised stem and turned to her father. “I know there are prayers we should say before I light today’s candle, but I don’t remember them.”

Her father stared at the floor, as though he hadn’t heard. His skeletal, spotted hands trembled as they rested on his knees. The bones in his face stood in sharp contrast to his dark, depressed eyes.

“Papa, do you remember the Hanukkah prayers?”

“Maybe we could all say the Lord’s Prayer instead,” Mae offered. She rested her hand on Lou’s shoulder but received no response.

Aubrielle lowered her head. “No.” Blinking disappointment from her eyes, she turned toward the window, her voice just above a whisper. “I don’t think that would be appropriate.”

“Blessed are—blessed…” Lou’s voice, low and rough with phlegm, splintered into silence.

“That’s right, Papa,” Aubrielle said. “Do you remember more?”

Lou coughed, and air wheezed through his sunken chest. A drop of moisture beaded beneath the tip of his nose, and a single tear slid down his cheek. He never looked up or said another word.

Aubrielle held a hand to her chest as sadness tightened her throat. She turned back to the
hanukiah
and dashed a droplet from her eye. A breath of resignation filled her lungs as she lit the first night’s candle. Returning the s
hamash
taper to its holder, she stared at her somber reflection in the window. “Thank you, Papa. Amen.”

Mae put her arm around Lou’s shoulders. “It’s all right, Lou—shh.” Her sad eyes sought Aubrielle’s. “Now comes the fun part.”

“That’s right.” Aubrielle forced a smile for her father. “Until the candles burn down, we shall eat
latkes
and play
dreidel
here in the living room.”

“The potato bread and sour cream are in the kitchen.” Mae moved to stand.

Aubrielle held out her hand to Mae. “Stay with Papa. I’ll get them.” She glanced at John as she passed him in the hall. “I have the candy and
dreidel
in my room.”

“I’ll bring another chair,” John offered and followed her into the kitchen. “I want to apologize for not coming to see you yesterday.”

“There’s no need.” Aubrielle went into her room and reappeared with a brown bag. “Henri came by. He said you were tracking something down.” She set the package on a tray beside the
latkes
and sour cream. “Did you find it?”

“No.” He ran a hand across his eyes. “They’ve disappeared.”

“They?” She lifted the tray.
More troubled John than mere exhaustion.

John nodded and released a long exhale. “It’s something we need to discuss, but the explanations will take some time.” He rested both hands on the back of the kitchen chair and leaned forward. His shoulders slumped with fatigue. “For now, I’d like you to consider leaving France—with me.”

“What?” The weight of the platter was suddenly more than she could hold. It dropped back to the table with a clang.

“The sooner, the better,” John urged.

“Do you need my help in there?” Mae’s voice reached into the kitchen.

“No.” Both John and Aubrielle called out then stared at each other.

“Do you not see how sick my father is?” Aubrielle hissed. Surprise changed her tone into an angry accusation. She pointed toward the front room, then balled her hand into a fist and rested it on her hip.

John hadn’t shaved in a few days, and the short growth of dark hair along his cheekbone accentuated the angle of his jaw. He appeared drained as he blinked at her words and ran a hand through his hair. “Of course, I see.” He didn’t respond in kind to her anger. Instead, his tone held both resignation and urgency. “And I do understand, however—”

“There is no
however
. Not tonight.” She picked up the tray. “We can discuss your inappropriate invitation at a more suitable time.” With a warning glare, she carried her tray down the hall.

“Our discussion will require privacy,” he whispered at her back just before they entered the living room.

Aubrielle set the tray on the coffee table. John’s whispered comment sent her pulse racing, despite her annoyance.

My face must be on fire
.

“The potato bread looks delicious
Tante
Mae.” She took a seat in the cushioned green chair and held a chilled hand to her cheek.

John placed the kitchen chair across from the couch, unbuttoned his suit coat and sat, pulling the chair closer to the table.

“The bread turned out better than I’d hoped.” The scent of fresh baked bread drifted around the room. Mae put a slice on one of the small plates along with a scoop of sour cream. She looked sharply at both John and Aubrielle before holding the bread up for Lou to taste.

Aubrielle ignored Mae’s look. Instead, she opened the bag of candy and withdrew the
dreidel
, setting it on her lap. She handed Henri the bag of treats. “If you would divide the candy between us, we’ll play a game of
dreidel
.”

“Five players?” Henri looked over Lou’s head to Mae.

“Four,” Mae said. “Lou and I will be a team.”

“Four it is.” Henri separated the small wrapped candy pieces and nuts into piles then held up the netted bag of coin-shaped chocolate. “These too?”

“Yes.” Aubrielle picked up the
dreidel
and turned it in her hand. “I used to play this by myself for hours.” She scanned her father’s face. “Do you remember, Papa?”

Her father stared glassy-eyed at the pile of candy and nuts on the table before him.

“Of course, he does,” Mae said and took his hand. “But I’ll need a reminder on how to play this game.”

“It’s easy.” Aubrielle pushed one piece of candy from her pile to the center of the table. “Everyone puts in a nut or a bit of candy.”

“Ante up.” John nudged a nut from his pile into the middle.

“Gambling?” Henri picked up his golden chocolate coin. “With this?” He flipped the coin off his finger with his thumb. It spun into the air. He caught it before it touched the table.

“A game of chance,” John replied.

Aubrielle looked at John from the corner of her eye. “You’ve played before?”

“Only once,” he offered with hesitation. “A very long time ago.”

Aubrielle raised a brow at John’s cryptic answer, then lifted the Jewish toy to show Henri. “The spinner, or
dreidel
, has four sides. Each side is painted with a different symbol—each symbol tells you what move to make.” She turned the painted toy until a wiggly W was on top. “The symbol with three prongs tells you to put another piece of candy into the pot.” She turned to the next side. “This backward C means you get nothing, and the turn passes. The upside-down Y is the good one. When this side lands face up, you win all the candy in the pot.

“The last side has a broken symbol. With this one, you split the pot. Half is yours and the other half you leave on the table.” She spun the handle between her fingers, whirling the painted colors into streaks. “After each turn, everyone puts in another piece of candy. When you’re out of candy, you’re out of the game.” She snapped the fingers of her other hand and held out the
dreidel
. “It’s very simple.”

“So, besides all the candy, what does the winner get?” Henri took the spinner from Aubrielle and studied each painted symbol.

“The winner gets to eat a piece of candy.” Aubrielle laughed. “The rest we save for our game tomorrow.”

Mae put a chocolate coin in the middle of the table. “Lou and I are in.”

Henri spun the top and cheered when the broken symbol landed up. “Half a win. I’ll take it.” He pulled in two pieces and pushed one back into the pot. “Ante up.” He handed the toy to Aubrielle’s father.

Lou lifted the toy up and laughed.

Aubrielle bit her lip as she watched her father.
This is what I hoped for.

“Can you spin the top on the table, Lou?” Mae paid their ante.

He held the toy toward the table, but it slipped from his hand and clattered to the floor.

Mae snatched it up. “Do you want to try again?”

Lou shook his head and waved his trembling hand toward the table. “You. You do it.”

“If you’re sure.” Mae spun the top. The toy fell with the backward C facing up. They won nothing, and the turn passed.

Papa watched with interest as the top moved around the table. He laughed every time the
dreidel
spun.

The candle had become a wax puddle by the time Henri won all the candy.

Papa’s head dropped with weariness. The game and the company had been too tiring for him.

Mae helped Lou to his feet. “It’s time for bed, isn’t it Lou?”

Aubrielle’s father staggered past her chair—his fist wound tight into Mae’s sleeve for balance. His gaze skimmed over Aubrielle’s but held no recognition. Only confusion and exhaustion.

He won’t see the new year.
Why did that thought come? Aubrielle shut it away and stood to follow
Tante
Mae down the hall, but John touched her arm.

“Let me.” John stepped past Aubrielle just as Lou’s legs buckled. He caught her father and eased him to the floor. “I’ll carry you,
Monsieur
Cohen. If that’s all right?”

Her father stared at John, his rheumy, watering eyes wider than they’d been all evening. His mouth gaped, and he nodded his head.

John slipped his arms beneath Lou’s legs and lifted him to his chest with ease, all the while murmuring soft words. “I’ve got you,
Monsieur
Cohen. Let’s get you into bed.” He followed Mae into Lou’s room. “It’s been quite a night, hasn’t it?”

Aubrielle trailed them down the hall.

In her father’s room, John lowered Lou’s legs but kept his arm as support around Lou’s back.

“I’ve got him, John. Thanks for your help.” Mae eased Lou to his mattress, then knelt to untie his shoes.

“I’m sorry, sir,” Lou whispered, his focus locked on John’s face. “I can’t seem to find my strength today.”

Aubrielle held tight to John’s arm and stared at her father. “He’s gotten so much worse, in just a few days.”

“Tell John and Aubrielle good-night, Lou.” Mae pulled a nightshirt from his dresser. “Let’s get you to bed.”

“Do you want me to—” Aubrielle began.

Mae shook her head as she guided Lou’s arm into his nightshirt. “No. Lou and I have this dance down pat.” She smiled at Aubrielle. “And besides, you have guests.”

“Are we still going to
La Fleur
tonight?” Henri asked from the hall.

“Yes. I want to see if Bonet has heard anything new,” John replied. He accompanied Henri into the kitchen. “If you could give Aubrielle and me a moment. I’ll meet you outside, and we can go.”

Henri nodded to John and stepped around the corner into the cloakroom.

“I thought you said we would talk?” Aubrielle crossed her arms and looked up at John. “Now would be a good time.”

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