Anouk smiled. “And how was your latest holiday in the mountains?”
“Unremarkable.”
Anouk leaned close. “We hear word of something being planned. The Germans are recruiting women for clerical work on Sunday night. Double pay. All very secretive.”
Isabelle slipped the envelope full of franc notes from her pocket and handed it to Anouk, who dropped it into her open handbag. “Night work? And clerical?”
“Paul has gotten you a position,” Anouk said. “You start at nine. When you are finished, go to your father’s apartment. He will be waiting for you.”
“Oui.”
“It might be dangerous.”
Isabelle shrugged. “What isn’t?”
* * *
That night, Isabelle walked across town to the prefecture of police. There was a hum in the pavement beneath her feet, the sound of vehicles moving somewhere close by. A lot of them.
“You, there!”
Isabelle stopped. Smiled.
A German walked up to her, his rifle at the ready. His gaze dropped to her chest, looking for a yellow star.
“I am to work tonight,” she said, indicating the prefecture of police building in front of her. Although the windows were blacked out, the place was busy. There were German Wehrmacht officers and French gendarmes milling about, going in and out of the building, which was an oddity at this late hour. In the courtyard was a long row of buses parked end to end. The drivers stood together in a huddle, smoking and talking.
The policeman cocked his head. “Go.”
Isabelle clutched the collar of her drab brown coat. Although it was warm out, she didn’t want to draw attention to herself tonight. One of the best ways to disappear in plain sight was to dress like a wren—brown, brown, and more brown. She had covered her blond hair with a black scarf, tied in a turban style with a big knot in front, and had used no cosmetics, not even lipstick.
She kept her head down as she walked through a throng of men in French police uniforms. Just inside the building, she stopped.
It was a huge space with staircases on either side and office doors spaced every few feet, but tonight it looked like a sweatshop, with hundreds of women seated at desks pressed close together. Telephones rang nonstop and French police officers moved in a rush.
“You are here to help with the sorting?” asked a bored French gendarme at the desk nearest the door.
“Oui.”
“I’ll find you a place to work. Come with me.” He led her around the perimeter of the room.
Desks were spaced so closely together that Isabelle had to turn sideways to make her way down the narrow aisle to the empty desk he’d indicated. When she sat down and scooted close, she was elbow-to-elbow with the women on either side of her. The surface of her desk was covered with card boxes.
She opened the first box and saw the stack of cards within. She pulled out the first one and stared at it.
STERNHOLZ, ISSAC
12 avenue Rast
4th arrondissement
Sabotier (clog maker)
It went on to list his wife and children.
“You are to separate the foreign-born Jews,” said the gendarme, who she hadn’t noticed had followed her.
“Pardon?” she said, taking out another card. This one was for “Berr, Simone.”
“That box there. The empty one. Separate the Jews born in France from those born elsewhere. We are only interested in foreign-born Jews. Men, women, and children.”
“Why?”
“They’re Jews. Who cares? Now get to work.”
Isabelle turned back around in her seat. She had hundreds of cards in front of her, and there were at least a hundred women in this room. The sheer scale of this operation was impossible to comprehend. What could it possibly mean?
“How long have you been here?” she asked the woman beside her.
“Days,” the woman said, opening another box. “My children weren’t hungry last night for the first time in months.”
“What are we doing?”
The woman shrugged. “I’ve heard them saying something about Operation Spring Wind.”
“What does it mean?”
“I don’t want to know.”
Isabelle flipped through the cards in the box. One near the end stopped her.
LÉVY, PAUL
61 rue Blandine, Apt. C
7th arrondissement
Professor of literature
She got to her feet so fast she bumped into the woman beside her, who cursed at the interruption. The cards on her desk slid to the floor in a cascade. Isabelle immediately knelt down and gathered them up, daring to stick Monsieur Lévy’s card up her sleeve.
The moment she stood, someone grabbed her by the arm and dragged her down the narrow aisle. She bumped into women all down the row.
In the empty space by the wall, she was twisted around and shoved back so hard she slammed into the wall.
“What is the meaning of this?” snarled the French policeman, his grip on her arm tight enough to leave a bruise.
Could he feel the index card beneath her sleeve?
“I’m sorry. So sorry. I need to work, but I’m sick, you see. The flu.” She coughed as loudly as she could.
Isabelle walked past him and left the building. Outside, she kept coughing until she got to the corner. There, she started to run.
* * *
“What could it mean?”
Isabelle peered past the blackout shade in the apartment, staring down at the avenue. Papa sat at the dining room table, nervously drumming his ink-stained fingers on the wood. It felt good to be here again—with him—after months away, but she was too agitated to relax and enjoy the homey feel of the place.
“You must be mistaken, Isabelle,” Papa said, on his second brandy since her return. “You said there had to be tens of thousands of cards. That would be all the Jewish people in Paris. Surely—”
“Question what it means, Papa, but not the facts,” she answered. “The Germans are collecting the names and addresses of every foreign-born Jewish person in Paris. Men, women, and children.”
“But why? Paul Lévy is of Polish descent, it’s true, but he has lived here for decades. He fought for France in the Great War—his brother died for France. The Vichy government has assured us that veterans are protected from the Nazis.”
“Vianne was asked for a list of names,” Isabelle said. “She was asked to write down every Jewish, communist, and Freemason teacher at her school. Afterward they were all fired.”
“They can hardly fire them twice.” He finished his drink and poured another. “And it is the French police gathering names. If it were the Germans, it would be different.”
Isabelle had no answer to that. They had been having this same conversation for at least three hours.
Now it was edging past two in the morning, and neither of them could come up with a credible reason why the Vichy government and the French police were collecting the names and addresses of every foreign-born Jewish person living in Paris.
She saw a flash of silver outside. Lifting the shade a little higher, she stared down at the dark street.
A row of buses rolled down the avenue, their painted headlamps off, looking like a slow-moving centipede that stretched for blocks.
She had seen buses outside of the prefecture of police, dozens of them parked in the courtyard. “Papa…” Before she could finish, she heard footsteps coming up the stairs outside of the apartment.
A pamphlet of some kind slid into the apartment through the slit beneath the door.
Papa left the table and bent to pick it up. He brought it to the table and set it down next to the candle.
Isabelle stood behind him.
Papa looked up at her.
“It’s a warning. It says the police are going to round up all foreign-born Jews and deport them to camps in Germany.”
“We are talking when we need to be acting,” Isabelle said. “We need to hide our friends in the building.”
“It’s so little,” Papa said. His hand was shaking. It made her wonder again—sharply—what he’d seen in the Great War, what he knew that she did not.