come back?’
I lay there in the darkness.
‘No,’ I lied. ‘Because I
know they will come back. And I do not want the Germans to have gleaned even one more
minute of fear from me.’
‘I do,’ she said.
‘Sometimes I forget what he looks like. I gaze at his photograph, and I
can’t remember anything.’
‘It’s because you look at it so
often. Sometimes I think we wear our photographs out by looking at them.’
‘But I can’t remember anything –
how he smells, how his voice sounds. I can’t remember how he feels beside me.
It’s as if he never existed. And then I think, What if this is it? What if he
never comes back? What if we are to spend the rest of our lives like this, our every
move determined by men who hate us? And I’m not sure … I’m not
sure I can …’
I propped myself up on one elbow and reached
over Mimi and Jean to take my sister’s hand. ‘Yes, you can,’ I said.
‘Of course you can. Jean-Michel will come home,and your life
will be good. France will be free, and life will be as it was. Better than it
was.’
She lay there in silence. I was shivering
now, out from under the blankets, but I dared not move. My sister frightened me when she
spoke like this. It was as if there was a whole world of terrors inside her head that
she had to battle against twice as hard as the rest of us.
Her voice was small, tremulous, as if she
were fighting back tears. ‘Do you know, after I married Jean-Michel, I was so
happy. I was free for the first time in my life.’
I knew what she meant: our father had been
quick with his belt and sharp with his fists. The town believed him to be the most
benign of landlords, a pillar of the community,
good old François Bessette
,
always ready with a joke and a glass. But we knew the ferocity of his temper. Our only
regret was that our mother had gone before him, so that she could have enjoyed a few
years out of its shadow.
‘It feels … it feels like we
have exchanged one bully for another. Sometimes I suspect I will spend my whole life
bent to somebody else’s will. You, Sophie, I see you laughing. I see you
determined, so brave, putting up paintings, shouting at Germans, and I don’t
understand where it comes from. I can’t remember what it was like not to be
afraid.’
We lay there in silence. I could hear my
heart thumping. She believed me fearless. But nothing frightened me as much as my
sister’s fears. There was a new fragility about her, these last months, a new
strain around her eyes. I squeezed her hand. She did not squeeze back.
Between us, Mimi stirred, throwing an arm
over her head. Hélène relinquished my hand, and I could just make out her
shape as she moved on to her side, and gentlytucked her
daughter’s arm back under the covers. Oddly reassured by this gesture, I lay down
again, pulling the blankets up to my chin to stop myself shivering.
‘Pork,’ I said, into the
silence.
‘What?’
‘Just think about it. Roast pork, the
skin rubbed with salt and oil, cooked until it snaps between your teeth. Think of the
soft folds of warm white fat, the pink meat shredding softly between your fingers,
perhaps with
compôte
of apple. That is what we will eat in a matter of weeks,
Hélène. Think of how good it will taste.’
‘Pork?’
‘Yes. Pork. When I feel myself waver,
I think of that pig, and its big fat belly. I think of its crisp little ears, its moist
haunches.’ I almost heard her smile.
‘Sophie, you’re mad.’
‘But think of it, Hélène.
Won’t it be good? Can you imagine Mimi’s face, with pork fat dribbling down
her chin? How it will feel in her little tummy? Can you imagine her pleasure as she
tries to remove bits of crackling from between her teeth?’
She laughed, despite herself.
‘I’m not sure she remembers how pork tastes.’
‘It won’t take much to remind
her,’ I said. ‘Just like it won’t