Clash by Night

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Authors: Doreen Owens Malek

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CLASH BY NIGHT
 

Doreen Owens Malek


Published by

Gypsy Autumn Publications

PO Box 383 • Yardley, PA 19067


Copyright 1988 and 2013
 

by Doreen Owens Malek

www.doreenowensmalek.com

 

The Author asserts the moral right to be

identified as author of this work

 

All rights reserved. No part of this book, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews, may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, scanning or any information storage retrieval system, without explicit permission in writing from the Author or Publisher.

 

First USA printing: February 1988

 

All of the characters in this book are fictitious. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

Table of Contents

Dedication

Part One

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Part Two

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Part Three

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Epilogue

About the Author

See all of Doreen Owens Malek’s books

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Titles for Future Release

 

Dedication

 

For all those who died serving in the Résistance, with a note of thanks to my editor, Patricia Smith, and to my mother-in-law, Constance Malek, whose vivid recollection of her youth in occupied France formed the cornerstone of this book.

 

 

Ah, love, let us be true

To one another! for the world, which seems

To lie before us like a land of dreams,

So various, so beautiful, so new,

Hath really neither joy, nor love, nor light,

Nor certitude, nor peace, nor help for pain;

And we are here as on a darkling plain

Swept with confused alarms of struggle and flight,

Where ignorant armies clash by night.

 

from “DOVER BEACH”

Matthew Arnold

 

 

Part One:

 

OCCUPATION

Summer, 1940

 

Chapter 1

 

“They’ve taken Paris,” Laura said.

Everyone stared at her. She was interpreting for the family the excited German issuing from the radio in staccato bursts.

“Are you sure?” Alain demanded.

“He says the troops are marching down the Champs Elysees,” Laura answered.

“Oh, my God,” Brigitte moaned, turning away and putting her hands to her face. Henri, white and shaken, gazed into space. Alain cursed and stood abruptly, pacing the small front room.

“It will be just like Belgium and Holland,” Brigitte whispered. “I saw it in the newsreels at the cinema. Rationing, labor camps, curfews, forcing Jews to register...”

“We have to get out,” Alain said decisively.

“And go where?” Laura asked incredulously. “You know what’s happened before: the Germans block the roads. There’s no escape.”

“So we just sit here and do nothing?” Alain demanded angrily.

He fell silent as the announcer changed and the new voice, panicked and breathless, began to speak in French. They all looked at the radio, a mahogany console, as if its dusty mesh screen and glowing semicircular dial contained the answers they sought. The news was all bad, and they listened fearfully until Alain cut off the flow of information by giving the dial a violent twist.

“They’re hanging the Nazi flag in the Place de la Concorde,” he sneered, referring to the report they’d just heard. “Do you really think we’re going to stick around for more of this? Let’s pack.”

His sister and his father stood immediately, glad of direction. Laura stared at her brother-in-law, shaking her head.

“Are you coming with us?” he demanded impatiently.

Laura sighed and rose also, because she didn’t know what else to do.

* * *

Laura glanced up at the cloudless sky. They had been on the road for two days now, camping out at night and eating what they’d brought along, huddling together in the face of impending disaster. Her father-in-law Henri trudged at her side, head down, leading his horse piled with personal effects. His daughter Brigitte, still wearing her student nurse’s uniform, marched dutifully, patient and obedient as always. And young Alain, headstrong, defiant, so like Laura’s husband, his brother, kept his hand on the knife secreted in the waistband of his pants, alert to any sign of the
boche
.

Laura sighed and looked away, shifting the pack in her arms to a more comfortable position. She knew it was futile to run away, there was no place where the invaders could be escaped. But she didn’t want to be separated from her husband’s family. Ever since Thierry had been killed in the nine months of fighting which ended with France’s surrender, his people had become hers, the only remaining connection to the man she had loved and married. And just as she’d adopted his country, she adopted his relatives, feeling closer to them at this moment than she felt to the Randalls back in Boston.

The sun was hot, and she wiped her brow with the back of her arm, wondering where they were going, if any of them knew. The urge was simply to
move
, to be gone, evacuate the area as the Germans spread like a stain, inching closer from all sides to overtake them. When Laura had seen that reason would not prevail she’d packed up like the rest, acceding, with atypical resignation, to the herding instinct which drove the terrified villagers out of their homes and onto the road.

She heard a distant drone, and glanced over her shoulder in alarm, catching a glimpse of sunstruck wings and the dark bulk of aircraft moving overhead.

“Get down!” she screamed, pulling Brigitte by the arm and tumbling them both into the ditch that bordered the dusty, unpaved lane. The Italian planes plunged lower, strafing the roadway, pelting the open field with a hail of bullets. Parents flung themselves on top of their children, men and women dove for what cover they could find as, prone and cowering, deafened by the crescendo of noise, they waited an eternity for the planes to pass. When it was finally over they straightened slowly and looked around dazedly, grateful to find themselves still alive.

“Are you all right?” Laura asked Brigitte, who was pale and trembling, but seemingly unhurt.

Brigitte nodded, struggling to her feet and moving through the crowd, remembering her training. Alain helped his father to stand and then shook a fist at the sky.

“Bastards!” he spat, tears of rage standing in his eyes. “Cowards! I wish they’d come down out of those planes and fight me like men.”

“You’ll get your chance, Alain,” Laura said sadly. “There are more than enough enemies to go around. This is only the beginning.” She followed Brigitte looking for the wounded, and discovered with relief that this time the injuries were only minor. The day before they had buried a two-year-old girl by the side of the road. The child’s little dog now trotted beside the numb and uncomprehending mother, looking for its mistress where she would never be found again.
 

“How far have we come?” Laura asked Alain, joining him when the group was ready to go on again. He handed her the heel of a baguette, indicating that it was the last of their bread. The food was running out fast; they would be chasing chickens in the fields before sunset.

“About forty kilometers,” he answered.

“Is that all?”

He nodded. “And that was the easy part. The road gets rougher after this, it’ll slow us down.” Laura wanted to ask why they were hurrying but swallowed the question. She could understand that it was a capitulation, an admission of impotence, to sit in the house and wait for what would come. At least this way they could deceive themselves that they were doing something.
 

A shout went up at the front of the column and for a moment Laura thought that the planes were returning. Then a more ominous stillness fell, and Alain, who was taller than most, shaded his eyes and looked into the distance, identifying the reason.

“It’s the Germans,” he said tightly. “They’re here.”

Then Laura could see them too, in a string of armored cars moving toward the massed villagers at a steady, measured pace. The townspeople, transfixed, watched helplessly as the vehicles advanced and finally parted in silence to admit the jeep carrying the commander.

Alain’s hand went to his middle and Laura rounded on him.

“Don’t be an idiot,” she hissed furiously. “This is no time for a show of heroism; accept it now and live to fight another day.”

Alain subsided reluctantly, not even turning to look at her, his gaze fixed on the guns mounted at the back of the lead car. They were trained on the crowd, manned by foot soldiers in rounded pith helmets. An officer stood at the rear of the jeep, and all knew that he had only to give the order and the cannon would fire.

But he said nothing for several long moments, scanning the assemblage with dark, hooded eyes. Laura was close enough to observe him critically. His hands were clasped behind his back and he surveyed the ragtag band of villagers with aloof, almost scholarly, interest, as if inspecting his battalion for a dress parade. He was perfectly erect, his peaked officer’s cap set at a precise angle, the metal appointments of his immaculate gray tunic glinting in the sun. Despite the heat his uniform greatcoat was thrown over his shoulders, and Laura could see the double bars on his stiff black collar, set against a teal green field. A colonel, then; this was no minor functionary who had stumbled onto their escaping caravan. But Laura would have known him for a ranking officer at a glance; he had an unmistakable air of authority about him that defied definition even as it commanded attention. He was an intimidating sight, for many of the onlookers the first German soldier they had ever seen.

The colonel held out his hand, and a corporal at his side gave him a bullhorn. His gaze still raking the crowd, the colonel raised it to his lips.

“I am Colonel Becker,” he announced in accented but correct French, “Commandant of the Reich installation for the Meuse. Go back to your homes. You will not be harmed.”

The Frenchmen looked around warily. They hadn’t known exactly what to expect, but surely this wasn’t it. Go back to their homes? They weren’t going to be arrested, incarcerated, hauled off to a labor camp?

Seeing their obvious confusion, Becker went on, “My men have food which they will distribute to you. When you have finished eating return in orderly fashion to your town.”

Laura and Alain exchanged glances. They sensed a stirring in the crowd; quite a few of the people were hungry, none knew what to do.

Aware of their uncertainty, Becker made a subtle gesture and two soldiers from the third car leapt to the ground. They removed large duffel bags from the back of their transport and began handing loaves of bread and wheels of cheese to the villagers. After a few moments’ hesitation the bolder souls among them grabbed the food and began to eat. Alain’s mouth tightened but Laura placed a restraining hand on his arm. The German’s eyes flickered over them, then moved on without changing expression. But he had seen; Laura felt the touch of that gaze like an icy finger against the nape of her neck.

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