‘Hello, stranger.’ She pulled over and they pretended to share a cigarette.
He’d been hiding, he told her. Fortitude had been infiltrated by Gestapo informants in January, twelve members arrested. He’d been tipped off by a friendly French policeman before they nabbed him.
‘Who was caught?’ Not Mademoiselle Deveau, she hoped.
‘I can’t tell you.’
‘Can’t or won’t?’
‘Will it make you sleep better to know, Cosette? Anyway, I only get code names.’ He dragged on his cigarette, then held it out to her and, as she took a half-hearted puff, said, ‘The fat old bird on the canal? She never used a code name, always Francine. They got her. So, are you ready for a new parcel?’
‘Oh dear – I mean, yes, of course.’
‘Still at the place on rue de Seine? You haven’t gone back to that alley by Saint-Lazare . . . What was it?’
‘Impasse de Cordoba. I have the key to it, for emergencies.’
‘Bien. Get supplies in. Still got that ration book?’
‘Of course.’
She tried not to think of Fortitude’s twelve doomed operatives. Instead she worried about Una, who hadn’t answered any letters since September ’43. She took to wearing her choker again. She wasn’t sure she would actually prefer cyanide to the Gestapo, but she liked having the choice.
*
On the last day of February, Moineau delivered a twenty-three-year-old forward gunner who had bailed out over occupied Luxembourg after bombing targets in Germany’s industrial Ruhr. Crawford Lesoeur, an officer of the Royal Canadian Air Force flying for the RAF, had broken his leg when his parachute came down in trees. After eight months in hiding, he was only now fit enough to make his way to England.
He was scheduled to stay at rue de Seine for three days, and because he couldn’t climb up into the roof space, Coralie donated her bed, taking the box-room that had been Noëlle’s. Not that she slept much. Every creak, every night sound was a black Citroën pulling up in the street below. It was the slam of a car door, the approach of booted feet. On what was supposed to be Lesoeur’s last day with her, Moineau called to report a problem with the next safe house. She’d have to keep her airman hidden a bit longer, and take him to the next location herself – the usual courier was dead.
Coralie went out and queued for food, eyes skinned for possible danger. She bought small amounts at a time so that nobody would see her enter her flat with provisions for two.
When her guest asked if she was married, she spoke of Ramon, and risked saying, ‘He’s with the Maquis, in central France.’ It made her proud and shone a light on her feelings because, though she missed Dietrich brutally, she was choosing sides again. When Crawford Lesoeur gave his opinion that Germany had to be pummelled to defeat, she nodded agreement. When he said that a well-prepared French Resistance would play its part when the Allies invaded, she took it as the compliment it was meant to be.
‘When will the invasion come?’
‘It already has, from the air, anyhow. Our bombers are preparing the way for ground troops. I’ll think of you, Madame, and when I’m home, I’ll tell the boys where to come if they have to bail out.’
Ten days after he’d arrived, she escorted Lesoeur by train to Narbonne where she bought him a ticket for Perpignan. As a Canadian, he spoke French but his accent would give him away. Coralie gave him cotton wadding dipped in clove oil.
‘Stick it under your gums, pretend you have toothache.’ She gave him a supply of grimy hundred-franc notes to supplement the overly crisp emergency currency the RAF supplied to all its crew. ‘Come back to Paris with your fiancée when all this is over.’
‘I don’t have a fiancée.’
‘What do those English girls think they’re up to? Tell them to buck up from me.’
*
There came another evader, and another. They kept coming. British and American bombers were attacking Germany round the clock, and attacking French targets too. The toll among airmen was high. For every pilot, navigator or gunner she helped, there must be ten who crashed to their deaths or were taken prisoner. She’d lie in bed thinking of Dietrich in Germany, at risk from bombs being dropped by Donal. She’d think of Donal, in deadly danger from anti-aircraft guns and Luftwaffe fighters. Trust her to care for men on both sides. Every day, she read German and French newspapers, longing for the headline ‘Adolf Hitler Dead!’
*
One lunchtime in early April, her assistant said, ‘Why aren’t we doing a spring collection?’
‘We’ve missed the boat, Georges.’
‘There isn’t a boat. We are free spirits in a land of headless chickens.’
‘I’d sell my soul for a roast headless chicken.’ Coralie swallowed a spoonful of turnip soup. It was lunchtime, and they were at a Champs-Élysées café that had once guaranteed a decent meal because of its German clientele. Now, to paraphrase Arkady, everything was running out, except turnips.
‘I mean it,’ Georges persisted. ‘We could create a collection in a month, if we really put our minds to it.’ His voice dropped coaxingly; ‘What about that bet you told me about, the one with Lorienne Royer? Which of you would bring out the best spring collection?’
‘That bet was with Henriette Junot, five years ago. I don’t recall mentioning it.’
‘Bets never die, and now that Lorienne has taken over the Junot salon, she’s the one to beat.’
‘She stole my medieval idea last summer. Her autumn–winter show was all horns and veils. Some of her models looked like reindeer caught in net curtains. I haven’t bothered to check on her this time round.’
‘You see? She’s beating you. Why don’t you want to play the game?’
‘Let’s just say there are things between Lorienne and me that are more profound than whose collection gets the best write-up in the fashion columns.’
Georges let the matter drop, but on 1 May he came into work and said, ‘Sad news yesterday. Paul Poiret has died.’
‘The couturier?’
‘I worked for him, long, long ago. A fiery character, but if I were a woman, I’d strew flowers in front of his funeral cortège, for he was a pioneer of the natural shape.’
‘Then he probably died of shock.’ Coralie demonstrated her waistline, cinched to a breathless twenty-three inches. ‘I’m afraid we’ve gone back to being artificially cut in two.’
‘If we did a collection, we could pay tribute to him. That way, its late delivery would seem appropriate.’
‘Paul Poiret . . .’ Coralie envisaged the Oriental-style robes that had shocked and entranced society in 1911. Not that she’d been around, of course, but she’d read the great man’s autobiography. Thanks to Poiret, ankles had been uncovered for the first time in three generations. ‘That silhouette was long and slim. The style is so different now.’
‘Turbans,’ Georges prompted.
‘Oh, no, I did turbans in ’thirty-nine–forty.’
‘Lorienne is giving us big round heads. Again.’ Georges mimed a yawn. ‘And you know, turbans are so “now”. They can be made of almost anything and they lend themselves to every mood. Sharp, simple . . . ’ Georges leaned closer to her, ‘even subversive. Ah, a reaction!’
‘Subversive? How, exactly?’
‘We could decorate them with secret motifs, seen only from above. A message to the brave boys of the Allied air forces.’
Did he mean something RAF crew could see as they flew over France? ‘Arrows saying, “This way to the Normandy coast,” embroidered in English? You’re a man after my own heart, Georges, but I don’t see it working.’
‘You’re the boss.’ Georges made her a cup of coffee, just as she liked it, with powdered milk and a spoonful of honey. The only man in her life ever to make her a hot drink – until she remembered Donal making tea for her once and a witch-hazel compr
ess for her black eye.
‘No. No, you’re right, Georges. Let’s do it,’ she said. ‘We’ll have to be subtle, but it’ll be fun.’
Georges rubbed his hands. ‘And not all our German ladies have gone home. We could have them promoting a coded message, all unsuspecting. The game, you know?’
She didn’t think she’d told him about the game – Bait the Occupier – but then again, she did mutter to herself as she worked, often forgetting he was there.
‘How about this?’ He took out a notebook and scribbled something. ‘A turban, sporting a radio mast with antennae and ‘Vive la France” embroidered under the band, so nobody ever sees it.’
She couldn’t explain her sudden rash of irritation. A sense that Georges was encroaching on her territory? ‘A design like that could get us a one-way ticket to Drancy!’ She flipped his notebook closed.
Georges was quiet for the rest of the morning, and when, later, she invited him to discuss ideas, he said curtly, ‘Me? I’m the man who holds the scissors. It is Coralie de Lirac who spins the fantasies.’
She’d hurt him. Her big mouth again. ‘Georges, I’m sorry. We’ll produce a line of turbans. They can be made from silk and cotton waste and I will always say that you originated the idea.’
‘Whatever you wish. You’re the boss.’
*
Coralie de Lirac à La Passerinette invites you to
the first showing of her spring–summer collection
on Saturday, 27 May 1944, at 11.30 a.m.,
boulevard de la Madeleine
It felt like a good crowd though many of her German ladies had gone home. They seemed all to leave at once, as if summoned by a call from the Fatherland. Those who remained were either Hilferin – servicewomen – tethered by their work – or those made homeless by Allied bombing. Coralie was amazed that stranded women still wanted Paris hats but she wasn’t going to argue. She’d been indiscreet in the past, not just in playing ‘the game’ but in laughing about it with French customers, assuming it would go no further. She, who had worked in a laundry and a factory, should have known that juicy gossip is as uncontainable as a tray of eels. This collection had to repair the damage she’d done to her own reputation: not only did she still have to feed herself and her ‘parcels’, she was sending money for Noëlle’s keep and saving for her daughter’s ongoing education. Ottilia, however loving and well-meaning, should not assume all of Coralie’s maternal responsibilities. The war could not go on for ever and Coralie was beginning to see beyond the daily grind to a time of reunion. Digging between the lines of censored news reports, she detected a tilting of the balance in favour of the Allies. When the time came to collect her child, she wanted to go to Geneva as a successful woman.
As before at La Passerinette, there would be two parades but Coralie had reversed the running order. French first today. Instead of the usual mid-week event, she had chosen the last Saturday in May. Nobody left Paris for country weekends any more.
A few minutes, then they’d start. She’d hired Félix Peyron to act as wine waiter. As hostess, she would deliver the commentary once the parade started. Once again, she had asked Solange Antonin to be her mannequin, and Solange had agreed readily, admitting that her pampered life as the trophy of high-ranking SS officers was, in its way, as limiting as life at home with her parents. Within that gilded incarceration, old insecurities – and her old rages – had returned. With a vengeance . . .
No sign of rage today, thank goodness. Solange was in that semi-trance she always adopted before a show. Georges was in the corridor with her, arms crossed, lips clamped. ‘I’m supposed to dress her, but she won’t let me touch her head.’
Coralie said, ‘Just hand her the hats and let her put them on.’
‘What – any old how?’
‘You can give directions but don’t touch her.’ Coralie penetrated Solange’s trance by telling her that she looked breathtaking.
Solange smiled slowly. She was wearing a turban of cream silk jersey swathed around a narrow fez, its folds obscuring her ‘forbidden ear’. Two plain goose feathers reared up at the front, forming a V.
Coralie had dressed her in a Grecian-style black tunic that was at odds with current fashion but would allow the hats to shine. She said again, ‘Thank you for coming. Your being here assures me an audience. You’re so famous these days.’
Actually, the word was ‘notorious’. On 13 April last year, Solange had shot Serge Martel.
Unfortunately, in Coralie’s view at least, not fatally. But she had done it publicly, using a side-arm borrowed from an SS lover. As a result, Solange had gained that special fame reserved for beautiful women driven to a crime passionel.
‘Bend your knees as you exit or you’ll leave those feathers in the door frame,’ Coralie warned, before returning to the salon to start the show. She wished Georges would cheer up. He’d worked hard on this collection, his craftsmanship impeccable, but no amount of cajoling had persuaded him to add ideas of his own. To all her suggestions, he’d replied, ‘If that is what Madame wants . . .’
He’d not forgiven her, evidently. Still, he looked smart today in his tailed suit and starched collar. And they’d been working together for just a bare three months. Get this collection out of the way, then she’d take him out to dinner and let him lead the conversation. It couldn’t be easy for a man of his vintage to deal with a young female employer.
She checked her own appearance. She’d chosen a turban of cherry-red jersey, intricate as a nautilus shell, with twin feathers pointing to the left. Red-dyed goose. Every hat in the collection featured a V-shape, made of feathers, wired fabric or starched linen. The shape was the message.
For many months, the Allies had been landing troops in southern Italy, and an armistice had been signed with the Italians back in September 1943. The country that had been Germany’s main ally was now a battleground, casualties on both sides atrocious but the Germans in retreat. Every café-chair general agreed that Hitler could not win a war in the east and in the west. On one side or other, he would be overrun. Victory!
The collection showed in just over an hour and applause greeted its end. As Solange posed one final time, Georges joined them and Coralie held her hand out. ‘Thank you,’ she said. ‘Well done.’
‘Some credit at last? A bit late, but I’m honoured.’
‘I admit, I am the proud owner of a big, stupid gob—’
He walked on, saying, ‘I shall take my break now. I’ll be back in time for the second show.’
*
He cut it fine. At two fifteen, she saw him hurrying in, limping hard. He must have gone further afield than usual. Why, on such an important day? The afternoon audience was ready, the German language filling the salon. Old Félix was serving champagne, complimenting every woman present on her beauty – even the cross old dragons. There should be a medal struck for Félix, Coralie thought.
She tried to catch Georges’s eye, but he ignored her. All his attention was on the street door. Who was he looking for? A moment later, the answer walked in.
No. Georges Blanchard and Lorienne Royer could not know each other.
Dashing into the corridor, Coralie tried to master her panic. Any suggestion that the Allies were winning the war was treasonable. Even being caught painting Victory signs on buildings was punishable by imprisonment. Coralie had once caused Lorienne to be put in jail, and here she was, sharing a Judas glance with Georges, making a V sign with her fingers. Had the woman recruited Georges to settle the score?
‘Are you sick?’ Solange came up to her.
‘I’m thinking of cutting all these hats to pieces.’
Solange nodded dreamily. ‘Monsieur Javier used to be the same. Each collection, he would lose confidence and threaten to rip everything to shreds.’
Coralie bit her thumbnail, almost to the quick. Solange didn’t understand: th
is was no creative crisis. She had to decide what to do, now.
‘Fight.’ The word rang out in the empty stairwell above. Last time she’d heard a discarnate voice, in her father’s tin shack, she’d run for her life. Nowhere to run this time – but she could stand her ground. ‘Solange, can you speed up this next show? Don’t stand and pose, keep moving.’
‘Surely you wish for people to take notes.’
‘Flick your hem, look angry. It’s about you this time, not the hats.’
‘All right.’ An incurious nature was one of Solange’s virtues. Coralie thought, If we’re both arrested, she’ll wake up fast enough. Oh, God, what am I doing?
*
Reticent applause lapped over the end of the second show but Coralie was attuned to the nuances of clapping. They liked what they saw, this audience, but their confidence had deserted them. No more finger clicking. No more ‘Fräulein, here, quick.’ These women had come to Paris in triumph and Paris had curled its lip. In their homeland, unthinkable carnage was taking place. In desiring glamour still, they were hanging on to an illusion.
Félix Peyron tapped her. ‘Over there.’
Across the salon, beside Lorienne Royer, Major Reiniger.
Félix heard her murmur of horror. ‘What have you done, Mademoiselle?’
‘Didn’t you see my hats?’
Félix nodded. ‘Vive la Victoire! But V can stand for other things. Du vin, for instance.’ He put a glass in her hand. She downed it in one, scooped a breath and tinkled a bell. Chatter died down. ‘Gnädige Damen und Herren, I will be delighted to discuss this collection with you and make appointments in the diary. Meanwhile, allow us to serve you another glass of wine.’
Lorienne launched her attack at once. ‘Perhaps Mademoiselle de Lirac will explain the significance of the letter V, which is a feature of every hat shown.’ Lorienne’s German came with a strong French accent, but it brought the room to absolute silence. People stared at Coralie, wanting the answer.
Coralie put down her bell because it was tinkling her fear. ‘I’m glad you asked that, Lorienne.’ Not ‘Madame Royer’ or even ‘Madame’. Lorienne’s air of patrician superiority was as fake as her hair colour. ‘What if I wove a V into all my designs as a tribute to a friend?’ Fight.
The Girl Who Dreamed of Paris Page 42