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Women Of Courage: Daisies Are Forever Part 36

Women Of Courage: Daisies Are Forever - LightNovelsOnl.com

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He followed.

She turned the k.n.o.b. Josep fell across the threshold. She caught him, her arms tight around him. "Thank G.o.d, thank G.o.d, you're back." She kissed his forehead.

He held out the bag of sugar and the stick of sausage. She smiled and laughed and tears trickled down her cheek.

Like a needle scratching a record, the music stopped.

Gisela sat beside Mitch on the green couch, holding a cool cloth to his eye, careful not to cause him more pain. He was home. Safe. Now, if only Mutti would come. And Vater, Opa, and Ella. "What happened?"



He looked up at Kurt with his one eye. Why? Kurt scowled. What were they hiding?

Mitch winced. She lightened her touch. "We had to fight for what we wanted."

"What were you doing out there? What took you so long to get home?"

"They shot at me." He held up his right arm. A red streak ran the length of it.

He'd been grazed by a bullet. "You never should have gone. I told you not to." She couldn't hide the tremor in her voice. She found an old roll of gauze in their first-aid kit, and after cleaning out his wound, she wrapped it around his arm.

She leaned over and whispered, "Now tell me what really happened. I haven't heard the truth."

He tipped his head, gave a wry smile, and exposed one dimple. "Why would you say that?"

She wasn't in the mood for his joking. "You didn't get separated from Kurt."

He sobered, his dark eyes clouding. "No, I didn't. But I don't want to get into the ghastly details now. Keep him away from me. If he gets close, I haven't a clue how I'll react. Or how he will."

"He gave you this black eye."

Mitch didn't answer. What had happened between the two of them?

A s.h.i.+ver ran down her spine.

April 25 The howling keen of the Stalinorgel-"Stalin's organ"-pierced Gisela's ears. The Holtzmann sisters covered theirs and whimpered. The multiple rockets from the launcher mounted on the backs of the Red Army's trucks found their targets not far from where ten frightened people cowered in the cellar.

Gisela's heart bounced around in her chest, no rhythm whatsoever to its beat.

The rising and falling wail from the powerful and deadly weapons continued around them. Like a baby crying but magnified ten-thousand-fold.

Annelies and Renate screamed at the sound. With shaking hands, Gisela sat beside them on the bed in the corner, gathered them close, and whispered to them. A loud whisper, to be heard over the screeching weapons. "This is the end, girls. Soon, one day very soon, it will be over. The air will be quiet again."

Another group of yowls rent the skies and sh.e.l.ls landed in the garden. The hair on her arms bristled. "Oh G.o.d, bitte, bitte. Don't let them set off that bomb."

They didn't. A few bricks fell from the little house, splintering as they hit the pockmarked street within a meter or two from the cellar window. Gla.s.s rained down from the panes above, shattering upon impact. Light reflected off of their ragged edges, a prism shooting rainbows over the pavement.

Stone by stone, their shelter was being reduced to rubble.

Jorgen slid across the bench on the wall, closer to her. Gisela motioned him over with a flick of her hand. He came to the bed and nestled against her. If she had left him standing on that street corner with the rifle in his hand . . .

Another loud explosion rocked the building. Gisela s.h.i.+elded the children with her body as limestone dust showered them from the arched ceiling above.

As the ground stilled, she looked Mitch's way. He sat on the second bed beside the Holtzmann sisters, holding their hands, rea.s.suring them that this was not the end of the world.

Or was it?

"Oh, dearie, dearie," Bettina chanted.

Katya gave her own plaintive wail. "Sister, my sister."

For a moment, the fighting subsided. Mitch slipped to Gisela's side. Kurt narrowed his eyes. He had been sullen and angry the past couple of days.

"How are you?"

"I'm fine." She nodded and smiled for the kinder's sake. They were frightened enough.

"You're as white as my mum's roses."

"That sound."

"The music of Stalin's army."

Exhausted after countless nights of little sleep, she rested her head on his shoulder. "What will happen to us when they arrive?"

"We won't worry about that now. G.o.d will take care of us."

"Shouldn't we be prepared? I heard some of the women in the bread queue talking the other day. If you are dirty and old, the Russians won't want you."

He gave a quiet little laugh. "You are neither dirty nor old."

"They said to put coal on your face and flour in your hair. Don't comb it or bathe."

"Not now. When the time comes."

His presence warmed her and the quiet lulled her to sleep.

She had just nodded off when the terrible screech of the Stalinorgel let loose once more.

Oh G.o.d, why not one quiet day? Why not one peaceful night?

Machine-gun fire punctuated the brief intermissions between the rounds of the rocket launchers.

She rose from among the kinder and peered through the narrow window above them. Wehrmacht boots and black SS boots dashed past. One s.h.i.+ny pair came to a sudden stop in front of the window, then lurched forward as a Soviet bullet met its mark.

Gisela turned away, unable to watch more. Kurt stood right behind her and she couldn't but help fall into his arms. "Come and sit. This is too much for you."

She trembled and allowed him to lead her to the cream-and-green davenport they had pushed against the far wall. He knelt in front of her. "There is nothing to worry about. I won't allow you to come to any harm."

"You can't say that. We're helpless against this a.s.sault."

"I won't leave your side."

She tried to take comfort in his words.

The gunfire ramped up once more, as did the howling squeal of the Stalinorgel, driving away the warmth in her limbs, chilling her all over.

Annelies covered her ears, missing most of the tale Mitch wove about princesses and castles, dragons and knights in s.h.i.+ning armor. Even the beauty of his words could not overcome the ugliness on their doorstep.

Day turned into night. Neither the gunfire nor the Stalinorgel music stopped for a breath. Those dragons breathed fire and ravaged the decimated city.

At last, Renate and Annelies and the Holtzmann sisters gave in to their exhaustion and fell asleep on the bed. Gisela knew she would never rest while those monsters stood on the doorstep.

The thought of a good cry held some appeal.

She needed a break-a break from the boredom, the antic.i.p.ation, the dread. She had to see something other than pa.s.sing shoes-the tall, black boots of German officers, the midcalf brown boots of the field soldiers, the serviceable brown-and-white pumps of women scurrying to stock up on the necessities before the Russians arrived. She slipped from the shelter on the pretense of using the restroom and climbed the steps to the almost-empty second-floor bedroom that faced east.

Rocket fire colored the horizon blood red. A cacophony of sh.e.l.ls and bombs and machine guns composed the strangest music. Explosions, like fireworks, lit up the heavens.

In a way, she believed this had to be a dream. Events like this didn't happen to average people. They lived happy lives with family around the table, plenty to eat, and the basics of existence. Not like clay pigeons, targets for whatever aircraft flew in the air. Not like sleepwalkers, pa.s.sing the dead and bloated bodies of their school pals, neighbors, and family. Not like hungry baby birds, waiting with mouths open for the next morsel that might drop their way.

She pressed her nose to the gla.s.s, surprised that it bore no cracks or bullet holes. She closed her eyes, blocking out the nightmare.

A tap on her shoulder and she jumped as high as the Eiffel Tower. Clutching her chest, she turned to find Mitch behind her.

"I'm sorry. I tried to make noise"-he studied his stockinged feet-"but you were in a far-off place."

She touched his face, his beard coa.r.s.e and bristly. "A place where this is nothing but a bad dream. A place where I will awake and find myself in my rose-papered bedroom in California, Margot asleep in the bed beside me."

"I have dreams too."

"Of flying?"

He nodded. He understood.

"Why did you come after me?" He should be with Audra, comforting her.

"You've been quiet."

"I don't want to talk."

"What did you mean when you spoke about Audra and me getting married?"

"Just what I said. It's a plan you two have, but one that may never be a reality."

"I haven't any desire to marry Audra."

She dared to look into his chocolate eyes. They were soft, kind. Perhaps loving. "Not now you don't want to marry her. When this tragedy finally ends."

"Never."

Could it be that the love she saw in his eyes was for her?

"I love another."

That, she couldn't bear. For half a second, she'd had hope. "Let's count to three and resolve to wake up." She closed her eyes. "One . . ."

"Wait."

"What?"

"In case this is a nightmare and we wake up an ocean and a continent apart from each other, I want you to know I love you. That has been the sweetest part of this dream. The part I don't want to wake from."

He loved her? "Do you mean that?"

"I do."

"I do too." Her heart dreamed along with his. "I'll be sorry to wake up and find you gone. Promise me you will try to locate me in California." Her heart pained her.

"I will. I promise. Will you slap me again if I kiss you?"

Part of her still didn't believe she had done such a thing. She shook her head. He leaned in for a kiss that she couldn't refuse. His lips came to rest on hers, the pressure gentle, soothing. Yet a fire raced through her and she pulled him closer. He held the back of her neck, his probing fingers pulling out her hairpins.

The pa.s.sion intensified and he pressed his lips tighter to hers. The breath she drew wasn't sufficient. His heart beat over hers, their tempos in unison.

Mitch took her head in his hands and pulled away, his eyes intent on her. "You are the most incredible, beautiful woman I have ever met."

"Why did you stop?"

"Because if the kiss had gone on longer, I'd not have been able to control it. You fill me, complete me. I want you to be mine. I fought for you."

This had to be real. "You fought Kurt."

"He swung at me. I defended myself. Fought for you. He wants you as much as I do."

"No one has ever fought for me." That only happened at the cinema. It made her dizzy to think about. At the same time, anger surged in her toward Kurt. Didn't he understand she wasn't going to be his? Ever? "No wonder you don't want to be near him. I'd throw him out on the street if it wouldn't be his death sentence. But he won't get me. I love another."

His smile, his dimples, his love left her woozy.

He brushed his hand over her lids and she closed her eyes. "You have been the most beautiful dream. One, two . . ."

THIRTY-THREE.

No. Wait." Gisela broke off counting, pink rising in her pale, sunken cheeks.

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About Women Of Courage: Daisies Are Forever Part 36 novel

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