For Jessica Granville, it meant that she could finally begin the work for which she’d volunteered-reuniting refugee families. She and a score of other Red Cross workers from England and France, as well as the U.S. had set up shop in a warehouse near the center of town. At first people who saw the Red Cross flag thought they’d receive handouts of food and clothing and were disappointed to find that the intense and eager young men and women were simply gathering information on missing people.

But they soon caught on and now Jessica and the others were inundated with French men and women looking for family members who’d disappeared into the bloody maw of Hitler’s Germany. Not only were many hundreds of thousands of French male POWs from the 1940 German assault somewhere in the Third Reich, but so too were many others who’d been swept up by the Nazis to work as slaves on various projects or in German controlled factories. Saddest were those who were looking for loved ones arrested by the Gestapo. Even they knew it was likely a futile search.

To her surprise, a number of Jews had escaped Himmler’s dragnets and emerged from hiding, and they too desperately wanted information on loved ones who’d disappeared. The Jews were fatalistic. They did not think they’d ever see their loved ones alive. They only wanted confirmation of death.

This was information she could not yet give them.

Data gathering was only in its formative stage. Jessica interviewed them and would take down all the pertinent information she could gather on handwritten forms. These would then be sent to people who used data gathering and retrieval machines like those used in the U.S. Census. Information would be punched into heavy paper forms by IBM. She didn’t quite understand it, but, apparently, it would enable someone to locate a name.

Assuming, of course, that the person’s name was spelled correctly. For many of the undereducated French, spelling was an art rather than a science. When she’d mentioned it, one of her co-workers laughed and said it was how names of immigrants to America were recorded at Ellis Island, phonetically and not accurately.

Nor was her French up to the task. Three years of high school classes and two of college did not prepare her for the job. Her teachers had told her that French was the language of the world and diplomacy. The people she dealt with were not diplomats and spoke in often confusing local idiom along with heavy regional accents.

Nor were many of them very patient. With the arrogance of some French people, more than a few expected her to do something about their missing loved ones immediately and became irate when she told them it could take months, if ever.

At least she had her uncle to talk to. Tom Granville had arrived and was on Ike’s staff. One afternoon, he showed up at the warehouse and took her by the arm. “Come on, Jessica, I’ll treat you to some bad wine and stale bread.”

They sat on the grass by the river. The wine was bad, vinegary, but the bread was delicious, particularly when slathered with local butter.

“Uncle, are there any good Nazis?”

“In a word, no. There are a few devout and fanatic believers, and a very large number who are just along for the ride, but they are all guilty to some degree, which is going to cause a mess when this war is over and we try to find some Germans we can work with. Along with the invasions and the slavery, I’m sure you’ve heard about the death camps.”

She took a sip of her wine and tried not to grimace. It was described as a table wine and she wondered which table it’d been made from. “Death camps? Murder factories? It’s just too fantastic. I find the stories about them just too hard to believe.”

“Believe. And we are finding more and more about places like Auschwitz. They are nothing more than assembly line mass murder on an incomprehensible scale. We may find out that millions have been murdered.”

The numbers were too much for Jessica to contemplate. “Is that why we can never negotiate with Nazis and why there must be unconditional surrender no matter how long and how many lives it takes? If so, the world truly has gone mad.”

“That’s the current plan, Jessica, and yes, the world truly has gone mad thanks to Hitler and the Nazis. Of course, the politicians who plan the wars but never have to fight them can always change our minds for us. But tell me, which would you prefer to deal with-Hitler who ordered the atrocities committed, or Himmler who enforced them?”

“Neither.”

“Then let me ask you another question. What will you do when you have to coordinate the refugee efforts of Germans?”

Jessica paused and thought. “I hope I will do the best I can for them.”

Tom stood and brushed crumbs off his uniform. “And that’s all I or anyone else can do. I have to go back to my duties, but let’s end on a happy note. Your cousin Jeb is with the 74th Armored Regiment and not all that far from here. If something works our right, maybe I can get you to see him.”

“That would be wonderful.”

Jeb was a couple of years older, and had always been the big brother she never had. Distant cousins, they had spent numerous summers together when her family vacationed in the south and his in the north. She even forgave him those few times when he’d gotten just a little horny and rambunctious. She would indeed like to see Jeb. Along with her uncle, he would bring a level of sanity into her new life.

***

“Welcome to Festung Seine, Colonel Varner,” Colonel Hans Schurmer said with a wry smile.

Ernst Varner laughed and they shook hands warmly. They’d been friends for many years, starting with their early days as eager young officers in the army. Schurmer was short and plump, a no-nonsense engineer who was in charge of developing the defenses north of Paris along the Seine. He was also an intelligent and sophisticated man with a wicked sense of humor.

All around there was evidence of hurried activity. Hurried, not yet frantic, as the Americans were still more than a hundred miles away. German guards armed with submachine guns oversaw gaunt and half-starved French prisoners of war and freshly drafted civilians who worked with shovels, while German and French engineers worked with heavy machinery. The prisoners were unenthusiastic, to put it mildly, and had to be prodded by guards and prisoner overseers whose efforts often constituted beatings. The newly drafted French civilians looked in horror at the human wrecks who once had been French soldiers and then with hatred at their Nazi captors.

Varner looked on the scars the construction work had made in the earth. The bunkers and trenches would be visible to Allied planes as well as eyes on the ground once the Americans and British got close enough. Camouflage would be too little too late.

The work being done was impressive, but Varner still had his doubts. He took a puff of his cigar. It was a Cuban and thoughtfully provided by Schurmer who had gotten it and others from a Spanish diplomat in Paris. “Hans, do you really think this will stop them?”

“Of course not. The Seine is a miserable place to plan a defensive line. It twists and turns all over France and the embankments are no threat whatsoever. We will, however, attempt to correct nature’s deficiencies.”

“What I see is impressive,” Varner said. “But you will be attacked from the air as well as by artillery.”

As if to punctuate the statement, sirens began to wail. Workers laid down their tools and moved quickly to the shelters. Bombs did not discriminate between prisoners and guards.

Schurmer steered Varner to a slit trench as antiaircraft batteries opened up, attempting to set up a wall of flak. “We’ll be safe enough here. I have this deathly fear of being buried alive; ergo, I will take my chances on being obliterated by a lucky bomb. If that kind of death was good enough for Hitler, it’s good enough for me.”

“Why do the workers leave their tools behind?”

“So my soldiers don’t get their heads split open by a French prisoner’s shovel while they’re in the shelter. They don’t like us.” He grinned wickedly. “Surely even those in Berlin understand how unloved we are.”

Bombers were now clearly visible overhead, B17’s by their silhouette. Varner saw something flickering in the air and realized bombs were dropping.

Schurmer laughed harshly. “Don’t worry, Ernst, we are safe here. As usual the Yanks dropped their bombs too late when coming in from the west, which means they will pass over us. And if they fly north to south, their

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