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A Troubled Peace

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by L. M. Elliott




  A Troubled Peace

  L. M. Elliott

  To the memory of my father, who started me on this journey;

  And to my guides—my husband, John,

  and our children, Megan and Peter—who have walked it with me.

  Contents

  Chapter One

  “Pull her up, Henry! Pull her up!”

  Chapter Two

  Outside the air felt like ice water in his chest.

  Chapter Three

  Old Man Newcomb’s place.

  Chapter Four

  Henry floated in darkness. His head throbbed with a percussive…

  Chapter Five

  Henry walked off the ship’s gangplank in clownish high steps,…

  Chapter Six

  The owner invited Henry back to the small kitchen and…

  Chapter Seven

  Henry flattened himself against a windowpane, trying to create space…

  Chapter Eight

  “Marchez!”

  Chapter Nine

  Seven white crosses.

  Chapter Ten

  “You must forgive le patron. Since July, his grief haunts…

  Chapter Eleven

  Henry sat dazed, horrified, incapable of absorbing it all, because…

  Chapter Twelve

  Henry sat on smooth gray leather in the backseat of…

  Chapter Thirteen

  In the heart of Annecy, Henry stood by a canal…

  Chapter Fourteen

  “Elle n’a aucune nouvelle de ta soeur?”

  Chapter Fifteen

  That evening, the son found Henry in the garden. Henry…

  Chapter Sixteen

  On the train to Paris, Henry ached. The hurt spread…

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chink-chink. Chink-chink.

  Chapter Eighteen

  The military police headquarters was busy—lots of people in and…

  Chapter Nineteen

  “Ever been to Paris?”

  Chapter Twenty

  Around two A.M., Henry stumbled through the revolving door of…

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Outside, Henry headed for Gare de l’Est, the train station…

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Henry followed them, remembering that Madame Gaulloise said children looked…

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  The next morning, Madame Zlatin put Henry to work disinfecting…

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Henry had forgotten how insistent, how fiery, Claudette was. But…

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  “No, monsieur, I did not take down the note.” Madame…

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Henry bolted out of the Lutetia, into the park, looking…

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Two pairs of feet in shoes cut open so that…

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  A sea of people followed them on the boulevard Saint…

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  “Henri, wake up. Please, open your eyes.”

  Chapter Thirty

  “Good thing I spotted you, sir. You’d have had trouble…

  Afterword

  About the Author

  Praise

  Other Books by L. M. Elliott

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  High Flight

  Oh! I have slipped the surly bonds of Earth

  And danced the skies on laughter-silvered wings;

  Sunward I’ve climbed, and joined the tumbling mirth

  Of sun-split clouds—and done a hundred things

  You have not dreamed of—wheeled and soared and swung

  High in the sunlit silence. Hov’ring there,

  I’ve chased the shouting wind along, and flung

  My eager craft through footless halls of air….

  Up, up the long, delirious, burning blue

  I’ve topped the wind-swept heights with easy grace

  Where never lark nor ever eagle flew—

  And, while with silent lifting mind I’ve trod

  The high untrespassed sanctity of space,

  Put out my hand, and touched the face of God.

  —John Gillespie Magee, Jr.

  CHAPTER ONE

  MARCH 1945

  “Pull her up, Henry! Pull her up!”

  Henry gripped the plane’s steering wheel as it crashed through sun-split clouds toward earth.

  He gritted his teeth and waited. Henry had cheated death a dozen times like this during bombing missions over France and Germany. Hurling a plane into a dive to put out an engine fire was the first survival trick pilots learned. They’d earned their manhood during flight training by yanking a plane up just before it smashed into trees or barracks, bragging on how long they’d waited, how close they’d come, how boys who flinched and pulled up early were chicken. Whoever stayed cool longest won bets for three-day passes away from base through such dares. Stupid stuff.

  Henry couldn’t believe he was using the bullyboy tactic, and on Patsy, the person he loved most. But forcing a situation was the only battle strategy Henry knew since going to war. Never second-guess; force a shot-up plane to fly even though ditching was a better idea; charge in with guns blaring; do or die.

  “Henry, please. Pull the plane up.”

  “Not until you say yes. Come on, Pats. Yes.”

  Henry glanced over at Patsy’s heart-shaped face. It had that stubborn, I’ll-never-admit-to-being-scared look he’d seen countless times on their school playground. He’d always loved what a spitfire she was. But it sure wasn’t helping him now.

  He calculated the distance to the horizon rushing toward him. He still had a good sixty seconds. He held to his bluff. “I’ll pull up when you agree to marry me.”

  The plane started to buck.

  Patsy braced herself. “No, Henry. I love you. But I can’t.”

  “Why not, Pats?”

  “I don’t think you’re ready, Henry.”

  “Not ready? I spent all my Air Force back pay for the ring. I had a heck of a fight with my dad about buying it. I’d say I’m ready.” His voice rattled like the plane. “Please, Pats. Thinking about you, about coming home, is what kept me walking across France, what kept me alive when the Gestapo near drowned me during interrogation. You’re my copilot, my navigator. I can’t fly straight without you.”

  For a moment, Patsy wavered. Then she screamed: “Henry—look out!”

  Out of the lowering sun swarmed Nazi fighters—Junkers, Messerschmitts.

  Twelve-o’clock high—bogeys coming in, fast! Henry heard the voices of his crew shouting, calling out the flight path of the Luftwaffe killers streaking toward them.

  Someone radioed American fighters for help: Little friends, little friends, we’ve got a hornet’s nest here. They’re everywhere!

  Do something, Hank. I don’t want to die!

  BANG-BANG-BANG.

  A gray-green Messerschmitt roared past the cockpit, its bullets ripping into Henry’s plane, the German pilot’s mocking face close enough to see. Did you really think I would allow you to escape?

  KA-BOOM!

  Engines exploded. The plane erupted in a ripple of orange flames. Billowing smoke choked the cockpit. Henry couldn’t see anything, couldn’t find Patsy anywhere. All he could hear was: We’re cooked, Hank. We’re cooked.

  Henry lurched up, crab-backing into the bed’s headboard and banging his skull against his high school diploma hanging above it. He counted the windows—one, two, three. He saw the whitewashed bureau by the door, looked up to see the airplane model he’d made when he was twelve hanging from the ceiling.

  Check. Check. Check.

  He was in his own bed, in Virginia. Just another nightmare
. Another flight into the hell of his own mind.

  Kicking back the tangle of covers, Henry fell out of bed and stumbled to his bureau. He picked up a small box and yanked open the starched cotton curtains. Moonlight fell onto his hands as he opened the case. There was the diamond ring Patsy hadn’t wanted.

  Henry rubbed his face against the ice-cold windowpane to wake himself up completely. He was so sick of his crazy, mixed-up thoughts; these nightmares; the flashbacks to air battles and his struggles on the escape lines of France; the bizarre overlap of his life in Virginia with the memories he was trying to dodge. He was ashamed of knee-jerk reactions like the time Henry’s dad, Clayton, shot at a fox in one of the henhouses and the sound of the blast sent Henry bolting across half the county before he recognized he wasn’t being hunted himself. It was so hard to know sometimes what was really happening and what was simply his mind playing with him, torturing him just as the Gestapo had set up a fake escape to break his spirit.

  He wanted the war in his soul to be over. He was home. Why couldn’t he get back to normal? And why wouldn’t Patsy marry him?

  Henry had set up a perfect proposal, taking Patsy to a dance at Richmond’s swank John Marshall Hotel. She’d piled her hair in soft curls and wore a dress she’d borrowed from a society friend she’d met through the Red Cross. It was deep blue velvet with swirls of small beads on its padded shoulders. Very fancy. Very Ginger Rogers. As she held his hand and guided Henry to the dance floor through the mob of returned servicemen and their dates, he knew marrying Patsy was the way back, back to the life he’d planned before the war, before the missions, before all the killing.

  As the band played “Till Then,” the heart-wrenching song asking the hometown girl to stay true until her soldier returned, Henry held Patsy close and whispered: “Marry me, Patsy.” The moment felt like something out of the song, the line he’d hummed over and over to himself in France, “Till then, let’s dream of what there will be.”

  But Patsy had said no. Not yet. “You seem so angry,” she said, “so haunted. I worry that you think getting married will stop all that somehow. But what if I’m not enough? I don’t think I can fix all that. It scares me, Henry.” She’d paused, then murmured, “You scare me.”

  Remembering, Henry butted his head against the glass. Girl, you don’t know scared. He hadn’t told Patsy half of what he’d seen. Boys shredded and blown out of bomb bays to splatter on the glass cockpits of planes following behind in formation. French children so hungry they fought over scraps dropped on the ground by picnicking Nazis. Women dragged out of their homes by neighbors to shave their heads as payback for teenage flirtations with the enemy.

  Was he haunted? For sure. Every day in his mind, he walked the hills and streets of France, imagining the fate of those who’d saved him. He reflew his last bombing raid so that Captain Dan lived. He reclimbed the Pyrenees to save his friend, Billy. If only he had been stronger, smarter, done things differently, maybe they’d still be alive. Henry was not quite twenty and already he carried an old man’s worth of regret and mourning.

  He knew he was jumpy, that his temper had become quick-flint like that of his father, Clayton. He’d tried to explain to Patsy what it had been like—living as a hunted animal behind enemy lines. He had entrusted his life to strangers he couldn’t understand, and lived off of adrenaline and suspicion, scrounging for food, scrounging for safety, rarely finding either, day after day, week after week, for months. He couldn’t figure out how to shed that kind of battle-ready wariness, that kind of split-second instinct to fight, to run. Half the time, he felt like a lunatic racehorse stuck in a start box. Nobody had said anything in debriefing about how to shrug that off.

  Henry covered his face and realized with disgust that his hands were trembling. You’re flak-happy, boy. After all you survived? Now, you start sniveling? Henry kicked at the heap of blankets, bashed his foot against the bed, and swore loudly.

  “Henry, honey? You all right?”

  Ma. Henry clapped his hand to his mouth. Poor Lilly had enough to deal with, married to Clayton. She didn’t need a basket-case son. Did she know that he got up night after night and walked the lane of their farm to keep from waking her with nightmare screams?

  Pulling on forced calm like a flight suit, Henry opened his bedroom door. There stood Lilly, small, sweet-tempered, worried, smelling of talcum powder and the biscuits she’d made for morning. “I’m okay, Ma. Stupid me. Got all tangled up in my covers and fell out of bed just like I used to when I was a kid.” He’d gotten so good at faking. Henry tugged the long braid of her graying hair. “Go back to bed, Ma.”

  Lilly peeped past him to the mess of covers on the floor. “Want me to fix you some hot milk, honey?”

  If only warm milk and Lilly’s lullabies could settle him the way they had when he was little. Henry took her gently by the shoulders and walked her back to her bedroom, where Clayton snored. “I’ll see you in the morning, Ma.”

  Henry lingered in the hallway after she closed the door. He didn’t want to go back to bed and another nightmare. Instead he dressed and tiptoed downstairs.

  Whistling to his dog, Speed, Henry stepped out into the frigid night. He’d walk himself into a dead fatigue. That was the only way he slept sane and quiet.

  CHAPTER TWO

  Outside the air felt like ice water in his chest. Henry sucked it in, little needles of pain jabbing him awake and clearing his storm-swept mind. He exhaled a thick mist of breath, haloing himself in the moonlight. Behind him his shadow stretched along the frost-slicked grass. Henry smiled. Over in France, on the run with the Resistance, he had hated such clear, starry nights. Back then, his shadow had been a traitorous enemy in bright moonlight, betraying his presence to German sentries. He’d darted from tree to tree to mask his telltale companion, each dash a heart-pounding risk.

  But this night on his Tidewater farm, Henry beckoned his shadow as a friend to accompany him and Speed. Once past the chicken houses and into the back fields, he even dared to whistle. Speed trotted along beside him, making all sorts of happy dog noises, snorting and sneezing as he sniffed along the shimmering, crackly ground.

  Henry laughed. See, fool. No Nazis here. Stop being such a birdbrain.

  His whistling turned to humming and then to singing, almost shouting: “You’ve got to aaaac-cent-tchu-ate the positive, eeeeee-liminate the negative, latch on to the affirmative, don’t mess with Mister In-between…”

  Henry tried a few swing shuffles as he sang, imagining the jazzed-up big band sounds of Johnny Mercer’s anthem of positive thinking. Speed barked and hopped up and down, nipping at Henry’s pants. The two skipped and played, until they tripped over each other and fell into a heap of puppy and boy. Speed slobbered kisses on Henry’s face. Henry halfheartedly pushed him away. “Aw, come on, pal, I’m not a kid anymore.”

  But it was the cold—not decorum—that made Henry jump to his feet. He popped up the fleecy collar of his new flight jacket, to cover his ears. “Darn, Speed. I didn’t realize it was this cold again.” It’d been wildly warm the week before, hitting ninety degrees one day. While Lilly and Henry happily stood in the sunshine in short sleeves, Clayton had flown into a streak of curses about the fruit trees blooming when it was sure to frost again, killing off their apples.

  Clayton was even more cantankerous these days. Despite the economic boom that had come to Richmond because of war ammunition production and new army facilities, times remained tough for farmers. With gas rationed to just three gallons a week, Clayton couldn’t run his tractor and had hitched mules to his plow and wagons. A pair of the obstinate creatures cost him $800—a fortune—and one of them had kicked him good in the leg. Henry figured the only reason Clayton hadn’t shot the mule on the spot was the fact that shotgun shells were nearly impossible to buy, rationed along with shoes, tires, butter, and meat.

  Using mules had slowed Clayton’s work. So had Henry’s absence. But Clayton had refused to use German POWs that Camp Peary hired out t
o local farms and pulp mills. Several Richmond farmers had had most of their peaches ruined when the prisoners picked them well enough but then scratched swastikas into the skin as they packed them for shipping.

  Henry had laughed when Clayton had told him that story. He couldn’t help it—the gesture of carving swastikas into peaches was so ridiculous. Was that what the war would come to—blind, numb loyalty? In Europe such unquestioning obedience to Hitler would mean a lot more than ruined peaches. It would cost thousands of lives—like the huge casualties in the Battle of the Bulge when the Nazis had stubbornly regrouped in the Ardennes Forest, after being chased across France by Eisenhower’s D-day army.

  Now Allied leaders were responding to Hitler’s unyielding stance with their own brutality, desperate to hasten the war’s end. To cripple Hitler’s railways and ability to transport supplies and troops, British and American planes bombed cities like Dresden, not just military targets near it. The newspapers weren’t real forthcoming about it, but reading in the Richmond Times-Dispatch that they’d dropped incendiary bombs filled with phosphorous, Henry knew what “Operation Thunderclap” meant for the civilians down below, the children playing under a war-torn sky.

  The firestorm sparked by the phosphorous raged for days across miles of city blocks and created temperatures hot enough to suck people into the flames. The thought of it made Henry want to vomit. God help the crews who had dropped those bombs. Yes, their mission had saved countless American foot soldiers battling their way toward Berlin. But following orders only went so far against the morality of an airman’s nightmares once he returned to base and had time to reflect on what he had done.

 

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