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All the Ways We Said Goodbye(77)

Author:Beatriz Williams

“Your grief will end, I promise you. And then you will have room for joy again. I know this to be true. Just because your life will be different, that doesn’t mean it can’t still be beautiful.”

I wanted to ask her how she knew this, but the words were stuck in my traitorous throat.

A soft smile lit her face, showing me a hint of the beauty she had once been. “I find I am getting tired, and I’m sure you are exhausted from being my nursemaid. I think I shall read for a bit. Would you mind bringing my book to me before you leave? I left it by the chair in front of the window.”

I swallowed, happy for the reprieve. “Of course.” I walked across the room to fetch her book, glancing at the title as I picked it up. Les Misérables. There was something comforting in the thickness of the volume, as if its very length showed an optimism I suspected very few battling cancer might have.

“I have found a delightful bookshop if you find yourself in need of another book when you’re done with this one.” I handed the book to her and she placed it on her lap. “I’m afraid we spoke mostly about me,” I said. “But if you’d like company while I’m here at the Ritz, I’d enjoy coming back and you can tell me all about your beautiful children and Canada. I’ve never been.”

She reached for my hand. “I would like that very much.”

I squeezed her hand before letting go, alarmed at how brittle her bones felt, how papery her skin. “Goodbye, then. Until next time.”

I started to leave but turned back, a question pecking at my head like a blackbird.

“If you don’t mind me asking, Margot, what happened to your husband?”

“Gone. Like so many people during the war.”

“I’m so very sorry.”

“Don’t be. I, too, managed to have a happy life. You see? We are both strong women because we know how to survive the worst that life can throw at us.”

I smiled. “I’ll let you read. I look forward to seeing you again.”

I let myself out, closing the door behind me. I stood there for a long moment, feeling as exhausted as if I’d just completed a gymkhana and not completely convinced that a strong woman would feel the compelling need to run to her room and bury her face in a pillow and cry.

Chapter Fourteen

Aurélie

The Chateau de Courcelles

Picardy, France

December 1914

One shouldn’t feel so much like crying at Christmas.

It was bitter cold in the chapel, the moonlight falling jaggedly through the high old windows. Aurélie fisted her frozen fingers for warmth and tried to concentrate on the familiar ritual as the priest, in his white vestments, rustled about at the altar. But he was cold, too, cold and nervous. As the censer slipped through his fingers, clattering to the floor, everyone in the small congregation froze, looking over their shoulders.

“Go on,” Aurélie’s father commanded, and everyone exhaled again, their breath showing in the frosty air.

The Germans had contrived to rob them even of Christmas. Hoffmeister had plastered his posters on the wall of the mairie and the doors of the cafés: there would be no midnight mass on Christmas Eve. Everyone was to be in their homes by six o’clock. For safety’s sake.

But it wasn’t safety, it was pure meanness. They had so little left, so precious little, couldn’t he at least have left them this? There would be no réveillon, the traditional midnight feast, no b?che de No?l. Not that the Germans were stinting themselves. The orders had gone out weeks ago, every available duck, goose, or chicken was to be sent to the chateau, to be boiled, roasted, and stuffed for the Germans’ own feast. Every remaining bottle of wine, every hidden stock of brandy, had been ferreted out and claimed. But it wasn’t enough for them, was it? It wasn’t enough that they had the villagers’ feast. They had to take their devotions from them as well.

Aurélie’s father had gathered together the castle servants and bidden Monsieur le Curé to say midnight mass anyway, here, in the old chapel.

“They ordered us to keep to our homes by six?” her father had said, with a glimpse of his old arrogance. “This is my home, all of it, every hectare. Let them turn me out of my own chapel.”

Yes, but it wasn’t only his pride at issue. There was Monsieur le Curé, who might be punished, or Suzanne or Victor for attending. Aurélie knew her father was relishing his small rebellion, but she found herself wishing he had chosen to express his discontent in some other way. He thought he was pulling the wool over Hoffmeister’s eyes, chalking up a point in their grudge match. He seemed not to realize there was no game. There was only the business of survival. That Hoffmeister knew of this and was choosing, for his own purpose, to ignore it, Aurélie had no doubt.

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