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The Librarian Spy(151)

Author:Madeline Martin

“Sounds pretty quixotic.” He winked at her.

She laughed. “Yeah, it is.”

“So, where are you going to go?”

Ava didn’t even have to think. “To England, to see about a position at the London Library.”

“I’ve always wanted to see London.” Daniel nodded in approval. “I’ll have to plan a visit.”

Ava beamed at him. “I’d love that.”

Daniel studied the letters in front of him and turned them toward her. “All right, Ava, what can you do with this jumble of madness?”

She studied the small blocks, then referred to the board for other words she could play off. Using the first I of QUIXOTIC and an E from SEEN, she spelled out the word FULFILLED.

An appropriate and perfect word to describe what they had both realized and where they were both going to be.

EPILOGUE

Elaine

The day after Etienne killed Werner, the Nazis fled. Explosions filled all of Lyon as they blew up the bridges behind them to keep the Allies from giving chase. The cowards.

General de Gaulle himself arrived two weeks later and honored Lyon by declaring it the capital of the Resistance. The day was one of great victory that seeded itself in Elaine’s soul, for in that veneration was the appreciation for brutal sacrifices. For those who had been strong enough to endure torture. For those who had paid with their lives. For those whose hearts had been gouged from people they’d lost.

At last, she had heard from her parents. As she had hoped, they fared better than most through the occupation. Their time in the small rural town whose doldrum existence she had resented in her youth had been their salvation, providing them with enough produce to make it through the leaner years.

Prisoners did not return from the camps until the beginning of 1945, and when they did, France was horrified at the zombie-like people who arrived, bone-thin with large haunted eyes set in skulls with only taut skin stretched over them. The ration was still enforced, though not to the strict standards of when Lyon was under German occupation. But when the people from the camps returned, there was not a soul in France who did not offer their own share to help feed them.

Denise returned a month into the prisoners’ liberation, skeletal like all the others, and missing several teeth, but with that familiar fire still bright in her gaze.

It was with their arrival that Elaine found new purpose. So vast was the number of people seeking family members, that she printed lists of survivors to reunite them with who had been lost. She relocated the heavy printing press once more, this time to a room with a wide window facing the street to let in sunshine and make her efforts known. It was from there the Minerva put forth the power of words, no longer enlisting an army to fight hate but reuniting friends and family and restoring love.

It was through those lists that she found Nicole’s father, Olivier, who towered well over six feet and bore the same heart-shaped mole on his emaciated arm. He listened to the tales of Nicole’s bravery with tears in his eyes and confirmed that it was through her packages that he and his son had managed to survive. Nicole’s sister and brother-in-law both made it through their ordeal in Germany as well, and every night the four of them said a prayer for the empty seat at the table that lay between them.

Josette never fully recovered from her precarious state, her nature too delicate to endure the prolonged stress. Elaine had visited once under the disapproving glare of Josette’s mother, who blamed Elaine and the rest of the Resistance for what happened to Josette. Though Elaine wanted to return, her mother barred any future visits.

Lucie did not come back to France. Nor did her husband, both having perished in a camp in Poland called Auschwitz. Every image of the terrible place made Elaine recall her friend who had always been so beautifully optimistic and ache for what she must have endured.