Windflower Wedding. Elizabeth Elgin

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hair and eyes as his. Funny, that, when you thought about it.

      ‘Pass them to me. I’ll pile them up. I’m good at it. When I was sixteen, I always chopped the logs at home. But tell me,’ he felt safer talking to her within the confines of the shed, ‘you said “every foreign-born Jew”. Where were your parents born?’

      ‘My adoptive parents? In Russia. In Moscow. They got out before the Czar was shot and came to Paris to live. I think my natural mother was Russian, too, her name being Natasha, I mean. She went to the nuns to have me but that’s all I know, except that I was born in Paris.’

      ‘I know someone who had to leave Russia,’ Keth offered. ‘Were your parents rich, then?’

      ‘No, though I suppose you might have called them middle class. My Jewish mother was a milliner – had her own shop she told me – and my father was a musician. Most of what they had was taken. What they could carry away helped them bribe their way out of Russia. They never had children so they adopted me,’ she said softly, sadly. ‘I can tell you no more. I would like to know about you, Gaston Martin, but I won’t ask, though I think you were born in the country, the way you can use an axe,’ she smiled as Keth began splitting logs again.

      ‘The country,’ he nodded.

      ‘And your French? Where did you learn that?’

      ‘In school, and then by speaking it to a governess. Not my governess,’ he added hastily. ‘I have no father, and my mother isn’t well off. If I see this war through, though, I’ll make sure she never wants.’

      He turned sharply as the dogs began their barking and Natasha ran to the gate, smiling. ‘It’s Tante Clara!’

      ‘So! You have got yourself out of bed,’ Madame Piccard admonished. ‘Here – take my shopping into the house and be careful of the eggs!’ Then turning to Keth she said, ‘You, too, M’sieur. The kitchen, if you please.’

      She clattered down the path, then closed the door behind them, taking off her hat.

      ‘They know you are here – or they will before so very much longer.’

      ‘They?

      ‘The people who are expecting you. I mentioned in the boulangerie that my gardener had arrived. That was all I needed to do. Now it will go down the line and you will be contacted.’

      ‘How, Madame?’ Excitement beat in Keth’s throat.

      ‘How do I know? You must learn not to ask questions. You will not be given what you came for until your way out has been planned. It takes time. Be patient – and meantime do what you came to do – tidy my garden and dig over the vegetable plot! I hope you can use a spade, too?’

      ‘I can. But how will I recognize my contact?’

      ‘I don’t know yet. Perhaps tomorrow, when I go to buy more bread, someone there will tell me. You must learn to wait for things to happen.’

      ‘Patience,’ Keth smiled, because he liked Clara Piccard in spite of her brusque way of speaking; appreciated, too, the risk she ran taking him in. ‘I’ll chop the wood first, then get on with the digging. And, Madame,’ he said as he opened the door, ‘thank you.’

      ‘Ha!’ The elderly woman made a dismissive gesture with her hand. ‘Your thanks are not needed – and anyway, I do it because I hate Germans. They killed the man I married in the last war. Just a few weeks a wife – I didn’t even have the joy of a child. What little I do is for my Henri. He would want me to.’

      Keth closed the door gently. Tomorrow, they might know more. Things were moving and of course, he conceded, plans took time. Messages to be passed, London to be contacted. Here, in occupied France, a wireless operator must always be on the move; must never transmit twice from the same place. He, who knew more than most about the interception of signals, knew that detector vans were always vigilant, hoping to home in on an operator.

      He wondered if the valves he had carried were now in use, and, more soberly, if some secret armourer had been able to repair the firing mechanism of two pistols.

      Keth looked down at his right hand and the blister already forming there. A long time since he chopped logs, he smiled wryly, wrapping his handkerchief around his hand.

      He took up the axe again, thinking that the first day was almost over – day one to be crossed off his mental calendar, his first day as Gaston Martin. To forget that identity, even for one unguarded moment, could cost him his life. And the lives of others.

      He raised the axe then swung it with such force that the log splintered into two at the first stroke and flew in opposite directions.

      It made him think of the morning the letter came telling him he was not to be given a free place at university. That day he had chopped wood; slammed the anger out of himself.

      Yet that was in another life, another country. Now, Gaston Martin chopped wood in a French cottage garden. And waited.

      ‘Mrs A. A. Sutton?’ called the clerk at the Ministry of Labour office in Creesby.

      ‘Aleksandrina Anastasia,’ Anna smiled as she walked to the desk. ‘Quite a mouthful, isn’t it?’

      ‘But lovely names. Unusual.’ The clerk returned the smile.

      ‘Russian.’ Anna sat opposite at the desk, pulling off her gloves.

      It’s Mrs Sutton of Denniston House, near Holdenby? You’ll forgive me for interviewing you immediately you registered, but I have a job I think might suit you; one which wouldn’t entail too much travelling. Do you know a Dr Pryce?’

      ‘Ewart? But of course! He’s our family doctor.’

      ‘He’s desperate for help.’

      ‘B-but I’m not – well, medically minded. I wouldn’t be very good with sick people, I’m afraid.’

      ‘It’s a clerk and general factotum he needs. He told me he’s given up all hope of ever getting a partner, the way things are, and he does have the district nurse to help ease things. It’s more someone to organize appointments he needs, send out the accounts, and most important, he said, be there when the phone rings. The work would be confidential, but I don’t have to tell you that, do I?’

      ‘N-no. But do you think I’ll suit? I’m afraid I don’t know a lot about anything.’

      ‘Whatever work you take – and the Government expects you to take work – might be a little strange, at first. Your details say you have no children.’

      ‘Not small children. Just Tatiana, and she’s in London.’

      ‘Then won’t you at least think about working for Dr Pryce? I’m sure you would fit in well.’

      ‘All right! If he’s willing to give me a try – I’ll do my best.’

      ‘Then better than that you can’t do.’ The clerk was already filling in a green card. ‘If Dr Pryce decides to take you on, will you ask him to complete this card, and return it to us?’

      ‘And if I don’t suit?’

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