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Authors: Amy McAuley

Violins of Autumn

BOOK: Violins of Autumn
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VIOLINS of AUTUMN
 

Amy McAuley

 

 
CONTENTS
 

Prologue

One

Two

Three

Four

Five

Six

Seven

Eight

Nine

Ten

Eleven

Twelve

Thirteen

Fourteen

Fifteen

Sixteen

Seventeen

Eighteen

Nineteen

Twenty

Twenty-One

Twenty-Two

Twenty-Three

Twenty-Four

Twenty-Five

Twenty-Six

Twenty-Seven

Twenty-Eight

Twenty-Nine

Thirty

Thirty-One

Thirty-Two

Thirty-Three

Thirty-Four

Thirty-Five

Thirty-Six

Thirty-Seven

Thirty-Eight

Thirty-Nine

Forty

Forty-One

Forty-Two

Forty-Three

Epilogue

Acknowledgments

For the daring women of the Special Operations Executive.
May their heroism never be forgotten
.

 
PROLOGUE
 

June 20, 1944—Paris: Gestapo prison

The shackles binding my arms and legs to the chair scour my blistered skin to a bloody mash.

Firm hands clasp my hair and forcibly lower my head.

Ice water envelops my face, flowing up my nose, devouring my head whole. A thousand pinpricks of pain spark across my raw cheeks. Panic wrings the air from my lungs, and it climbs my throat, claws of desperation sinking deep.

Fingers wind tighter through my tangled hair, raising me to the surface.

Above me, my interrogator shouts in French, “You are a spy! You are an agent of the Special Operations Executive! You are the American, Betty Sweeney!”


Non
,” I gasp, catching my breath. “
Je m’appelle Adele Blanchard
.”

“You worked with the British agents Denise Langford and Timothy Bishop! Where are they?”


Je ne connais personne de ces noms
.” I know no one by those names.

“You do! Who is assisting them?”


Je ne sais pas
.” I do not know.

My head plunges, displacing jagged chunks of ice. The sting becomes excruciating, as if my face has been turned inside out.

“You do know them! You will give us their locations! You will tell us where the weapon drops take place!”

I spit a mouthful of water on the floor in the direction of the shiny pair of army boots I see there. I draw a long breath. Down I go again.

Garbled voices bounce back and forth above me.

I strain against the chains, screaming on the inside. Fear eats what little oxygen I have left.

I am about to drown. There is nothing I can do about it.

ONE
 

May 1944—Somewhere over France

I sit at the edge of the plane’s trapdoor, feet dangling into the abyss of the moonlit night. The plane wobbles, unstable at such a low altitude. My hands press to the metal on either side of me, gripping tighter. My parachute is too big for me, and with the added bulk of the million francs stashed in the back of my jump overalls, I have to sit closer to the edge than I would like. But I can’t fall. Not yet, anyway.

When the time comes, Denise and I will jump first. If we girls have the courage to jump, there will be no good excuse for Bishop and Shepherd to stay in the plane. They can’t be upstaged by “the weaker sex.”

From the day my training began it seems as if I’ve been carried along on a swiftly moving conveyer belt. I’ve reached the end with expectations of parachuting into Nazi-occupied France, and I’ll go through with it. I’ve come too far to turn back now.

I sneak a peek across from me at Bishop’s fearless demeanor. He’s already completed one mission in France and is about to drop back in for more. When we prepared to board the
Halifax
, the pilot took one look at the rest of us and jokingly referred to Bishop as Grandpa. What a mistake to be fooled by his silvery sideburns. If only boys my age had this same kind of rugged strength and maturity I secretly swoon over.

Shepherd, on the other hand, looks hardly old enough to shave, with his baby-smooth skin. I couldn’t believe my ears when he told me he was twenty-three. The great pains he takes to keep his boyish haircut neatly combed only makes me want to run my hands through and muss it all up.

Again the plane wobbles. My queasy stomach wobbles with it. Sandwiches and rum were supposed to have been served on the flight. We got nothing, which is okay with me. They might have ended up raining down on some Frenchman’s rooftop.

Next to me, Denise dreamily stares forward when I try to catch her attention, as if she doesn’t have a care in the world. If her hands weren’t covered by leather gloves, she’d probably be inspecting her polished nails, even as we wait to jump onto death’s doormat.

Denise and I met at the Special Operations Executive’s paramilitary school in Inverness-Shire, Scotland. I went to the school after the preliminary stage of having my character and potential assessed, without knowing much about what would go on there. They purposely kept us volunteers in the dark, in case we didn’t make the cut. The deeper we went in our training, the more secrets we learned.

Incompetent trainees were weeded out and sent to a detention center called “the cooler,” where they were encouraged to
forget about the cloak-and-dagger stuff going on in the English and Scottish hillsides before being dropped back into regular life. I wasn’t one of those incompetents sent off to the cooler. I passed and continued on. Just to be set apart like that, placed in the worthy group, was motivation enough for me to stick with the training. The funny thing is I don’t know what I said or did to impress them. I suppose it doesn’t really matter.

The lamp above our heads continues to glow scarlet, warning us to stay put. Waiting on pins and needles for the lamp to flash green, I press the silk lining of my gloves between fingers that tingle to the point of numbness.

At Ringway airport, near Manchester, they did their best to prepare us for this moment. On ropes and swings, we learned to coordinate our jumps and land properly without injuring ourselves. They had the old fuselage of a plane set up, where we practiced correct jump techniques. It took me a while to get the hang of it, but with so many of us looking gawky and ridiculous all at once, it wasn’t too embarrassing.

The instructor said my face looked white as a sheet before the two practice jumps from a real plane. The scariest part was that first step into thin air several hundred feet off the ground. I was convinced I wouldn’t survive. Once there was nowhere to go but down, the fear of dying was suddenly replaced by a new kind of fear that made me feel more alive. I imagined free fall felt like a roller-coaster drop, but instead it was like flying. I wished my instructor could have seen the smile I wore, lips and cheeks contorting like rubber in the wind, all the way to the landing.

Thanks to horrible weather my third required jump was called off. Would my confidence have been higher tonight with one more jump under my belt? Doubtful. German soldiers weren’t
waiting on the ground during the practice run. Botching tonight’s jump would have far more serious consequences.

After a few moments the red lamp switches to a jolly green, giving the go-ahead to plummet into danger.

“I don’t think I can go through with this. It’s madness,” Shepherd says.

No one else appears to have heard him above the roar of the engines. It’s the worst thing anyone could say before my jump.

Full-blown panic replaces the butterflies in my stomach. He’s right. Leaping into black nothingness is crazy. My heart races.

The dispatcher roars, “Go, go, go!” The words fire out of him like cannonballs.

Denise leans against me. A thin lock of auburn hair has escaped from under her helmet, and it lays coiled over her mouth like a dashing mustache. “Let’s give ’em hell, Adele!” she shouts. Then she’s gone, vanished through the hole in the
Halifax
’s floor.

Adele
.

When we jump we leave our real names behind. As a matter of security we’ll refer to each other only by our aliases. I have to be Adele, through and through. My name, Betty, never really suited me anyway.

“Go, go, go!” the dispatcher continues to roar.

It’s now or never. And never isn’t an option.

I swallow one last time to clear my ears, aching hard from the plane’s lack of pressurization. If I wait another second, whatever fumes of courage I have left might evaporate. I need to separate action from thought and just go.

I inch forward until I’m seated at the edge.

Go out straight to avoid the slipstream. Don’t bash your nose on the other side of the hole
.

I push myself up on my hands and drop through the hole in the plane’s fuselage. I fall through empty space. Alice through the rabbit hole. Above me, I hear my static line quickly unraveling, segment by segment—
pop, pop, pop
. Even though they showed us we were well hitched to a hook in the plane, a voice breezes through my mind saying, “I hope your line is really attached.” It comes to me with a flood of cold sweat that I might die in this position. Feet together, soaring through the silent night without another word to anyone. But then, after a few seconds of free fall, the static line yanks my parachute open. The shock jolts my entire body, as if I’ve jumped feet-first into a pool of cold water.

As I drift, claiming a piece of the sky all to myself, the overwhelming joy I remember from my practice jumps rushes through me.

I search the sky, unable to see Denise’s parachute anywhere. We’re to be met on the ground by members of a local Maquis—a cell of the French Resistance. They should be marking the landing area with red-capped flashlights. I see no lights. The full moon has slipped behind a cloud. Everything beneath me is black.

“Don’t panic,” I whisper to myself, as if that might help.

I realize just then that this mission won’t be “like dropping into an easy chair,” as I was told. Somehow I fell for that line at the time. Now it sounds like pure nonsense. All I have to do is drop into foreign country, aid and train members of the ever-growing Resistance movement, sabotage railways, travel the country on a bicycle while concealing top-secret information, blow things up, and try not to get killed. Sure, easy as pie. Things already seem to be going wrong, and I haven’t even reached the ground yet.

I continue to fall toward a wide-open field. And while I know logically that I’m soaring through the air at an insane speed with only a rubber helmet for protection, the descent somehow feels slow and peaceful. Like I’m a tuft of dandelion fluff. That all changes in a snap. I reach a certain height and suddenly the ground speeds up to greet me. It doesn’t seem possible that we can come together without one of us getting severely crushed, and I’m pretty sure the earth will hold up better than I will.

BOOK: Violins of Autumn
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