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What price would you pay
to keep your soul?
In 1939 the Germans invade Poland, setting off a rising storm of violence and destruction. For Anna and Jan Kopernik the loss is unimaginable. She is an assistant professor at a university in Krakow; he, an officer in the Polish cavalry. Separated by the war, they must find their own way in a world where everything they ever knew is gone.
Anna’s father, a prominent Polish intellectual, is deported to a death camp, and Anna must flee to Belgium where she joins the Resistance. Meanwhile, Jan escapes with the battered remnants of the Polish army to Britain. When British intelligence asks him to return to Poland in an undercover mission to contact the Resistance, he seizes the chance to search for his missing wife.
Through the long night of Nazi occupation, Anna, Jan, and ordinary people across Europe fight a covert war of sabotage and resistance against the overwhelming might of the German war machine. The struggle seems hopeless, but they are determined to take back what is theirs.
Cover photos courtesy of the Library of Congress.
Dust jacket and interior design by Panda Musgrove.
Extent of the German Occupation of Europe in 1942 — — —
Night of Flames
A NOVAL OF WORLD WAR II
Douglas W. Jacobson
McBooks Press, Inc.
www.mcbooks.com
ITHACA, NY
Published by McBooks Press, Inc. 2007
Copyright © 2007 Douglas W. Jacobson
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or any portion thereof in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without the written permission of the publisher. Requests for such permissions should be addressed to:
McBooks Press, Inc., ID Booth Building, 520 North Meadow St., Ithaca, NY 14850.
Dust jacket and book design by Panda Musgrove.
Cover Photo: Night view of part of Santa Fe R.R. yard, Kansas City, Kansas, 1943, by Jack Delano, courtesy of American Memory, The Library of Congress.
The hardcover edition of this book was cataloged by the Library of Congress as:
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Jacobson, Douglas W., 1945-
Night of flames : a novel of World War II / by Douglas W. Jacobson.
p. cm.
ISBN 978-1-59013-136-7 (hardcover : alk. paper)
1. World War, 1939-1945—Fiction. 2. Poland—History—Occupation, 1939-1945—Fiction. I. Title.
PS3610.A35675N54 2007
813′.6—dc22
2007014386
The e-book versions of this title have the following ISBNs:
Kindle 978-1-59013-201-2, ePub 978-1-59013-303-3 and PDF 978-1-59013-392-7
Visit the McBooks Press website at www.mcbooks.com.
For Margot, Allison, Christine,
Ainsley, Ella, Cully and Jessica
The most powerful weapon on earth is the human soul on fire.
Field Marshal Ferdinand Foch
PART ONE
Poland
1939
Chapter 1
ANNA KOPERNIK SLEPT on this hot, muggy night, but it was a restless sleep troubled by strange dreams. The sheets were clammy and her thin cotton nightgown clung to her back. A paltry breeze drifted in through the open window with little effect. The still, humid air on this September morning hung over Warsaw like a massive wet blanket.
It was five o’clock and Anna drifted back and forth between consciousness and sleep, the dream flitting in and out of her mind like an annoying gnat. The telephone rang. Then it stopped. She wanted to answer it but couldn’t find it. It rang again, but it wasn’t a telephone; it was something else…a bell, perhaps, or a horn. Anna kicked at the sticky, twisted sheet and rolled onto her back. She was almost awake but still just below the surface. The noise returned, louder now, a harsh clanging boring into her head. She kicked the sheet completely off, struggling to understand. What was it? A horn…or…a siren.
Anna’s eyes snapped open and she sat bolt upright. The shrill sound blasted into her brain, penetrating through the fog of sleep like an icy wind. She blinked and looked around the dark room, trying to focus on shadowy images as the sound wailed on and on.
She ran to the window. It was still dark but the night sky held a hint of gray. An early morning mist shrouded the streetlamps, casting a gloomy, almost spooky glow along the deserted sidewalk below. The grating noise of the air-raid siren raised the hair on the back of her neck and suddenly she was shivering. Anna crossed her arms over her chest and stared into the dull, charcoal sky. Then she heard another sound.
It came from the west: a deep angry drone like a swarm of giant bees, growing louder by the second. Anna tried to move but her feet didn’t respond. Immobilized, riveted in place, she stared out the open window as the pounding vibration of a hundred propellers enveloped her. The thunderous roar of the bombers drowned out the air-raid sirens, and the entire building seemed to sway in rhythm with the oscillations.
Anna snapped out of the spell and instinctively reached out to pull the window closed. A flash of light blinded her, and an eardrum-shattering blast threw her backward amid a shower of glass and falling plaster. She fell heavily against a small wooden night table and collapsed on the floor.
Another blast rocked the building. Frantic and disoriented, a searing pain in her head and a million lights dancing in her eyes, Anna tried to crawl under the bed, oblivious to the shards of glass that sliced through her hands and knees. Jarring detonations punctuated the deafening thunder of the airplanes.
Then, as abruptly as it started, it was over, the pulsating thump of propellers receding into the distance. Anna lay still, her head under the bed. Seconds passed, then a minute, and the only sound she heard through the ringing in her ears was the continued wailing of the air-raid sirens. She crawled backward and tried to stand, but her legs gave out. She fell against the bed and back onto the floor, this time wincing in pain from the glass and chunks of plaster that littered the floor. Holding the edge of the bed, she struggled to her feet and staggered across the room.
Through the ringing and the sirens Anna heard another sound: someone screaming in the hall. She lurched through the doorway and tripped over Irene, who was crawling on her hands and knees, covered with plaster dust. Anna reached down and helped her friend to her feet.
Irene stared at her with blank eyes then pushed past her. “Justyn!” she screamed. “Oh my God, Justyn!”
They stumbled down the dark hallway to the bedroom at the top of the stairs. The door was split down the middle, hanging from the top hinge. Anna pushed it open, and they stepped into the dust-filled room.
As her eyes began to clear, Anna squinted, trying to see through the haze. The small room was completely shattered with a gaping hole in the outside wall. On the left, where the bed had been, she spotted the ten-year-old boy lying still, face down under a pile of wood and plaster.
Irene shrieked and rushed to her son, clawing away at the rubble.
Anna knelt down beside her, and they turned the limp boy onto his back. His eyes were closed and his breathing was shallow; blood oozed from a ragged gash on his forehead. Anna spotted a pillow amid the rubble. She pulled off the pillowcase, shook out the dust and ripped it in half. As Irene held her son’s head, Anna wrapped the makeshift bandage around the wound, tying it tightly to stop the bleeding.
Justyn’s voice croaked, “Mama? What…?” The boy flinched in pain, tears welling up in his eyes, and Irene cradled him in her arms, rocking him back and forth.
Anna stood up and rubbed her eyes, which
were burning and irritated from the thick dust.
She smelled something.
It was more than dust.
Smoke.
She reached down and grabbed Irene by the arm, yelling over the wailing siren, “We’ve got to get out of here!”
Irene looked up at her, clutching her son, not comprehending.
“The building’s on fire!” Anna screamed, pulling her friend to her feet. She hoisted the boy into Irene’s arms and pushed her out of the room.
The hallway was quickly filling with smoke as they scrambled down the stairs. By the time they reached the ground floor Anna’s eyes were burning, and she could barely find her way through the foyer to the front door. She grabbed Irene’s arm, pulled open the heavy wooden door and they burst out, coughing and gagging into the humid predawn air.
In the street it was chaos. Dense, black smoke filled the air. People clad in nightclothes screamed and ran in every direction. The howling sound of the sirens echoed between the buildings, broken by deep, booming thumps from anti-aircraft batteries.
Anna rubbed her temples, trying to collect her thoughts, when she was jolted by a piercing, high-pitched screeching noise that shot through her like an electric shock. She spun around and stared, dumbstruck, at an airplane swooping in above the rooftops. Before she could react, the plane’s machine guns erupted in a hammering clatter, and a crowd of frantic people swarmed over her, crushing and jarring her, knocking her backward as a lightning trail of bullets ripped through the street in a shower of concrete and dirt.
An instant later the clattering stopped, the screeching noise fading into the distance. Anna tried to move, but a woman had collapsed on top of her. Struggling to her feet, Anna grasped the woman’s arm to help her up then recoiled in horror. The arm swung from her hand, severed from the woman’s limp, bloody body.
Anna went rigid as her brain struggled to comprehend the nightmare scene. She heard a scream and staggered backward, dropping the severed arm. A man crawled across the ground in front of her. Another man shoved Anna aside and dropped to his knees in front of the fallen woman.
Anna blinked and shook her head. Irene? Justyn? She spun around, searching the faces of the panic-stricken crowd. “Irene!”
Nothing.
Her heart was in her throat. “Irene!”
“Anna.” The voice was muffled.
Anna shoved her way through the throng of people and spotted Irene huddled against the building with Justyn in her arms. She knelt down beside them and looked her friend in the eye. “Irene, we’ve got to get off the street. Is there anywhere we can go?”
A blank stare.
Anna gripped her shoulders. “Irene, think! Do you know anyone?”
Nothing.
Anna stood up and looked around, fighting panic. Three men lifted the body of the fallen woman and started down the street, pushing others out of their way. One of them carried the arm. Anna looked back at Irene. “Irene, think! Do you know anyone in the neighborhood?”
No response.
“Irene!” she screamed at her friend.
“Mrs. Kopernik?”
The soft, tentative voice startled her. Anna turned to see a short, thin man with a black beard and wire-rimmed spectacles pushing through the crowd. He wore a skullcap and a blue suit coat over his pajamas.
“Come quickly,” he said, motioning with his hand.
Anna stared at him. He looked familiar.
“I’m Bernard…Bernard Simowitz,” the man said. “I was at the funeral. Come quickly. Get Irene and the boy and follow me. We’ve got to get off the street.”
Anna reached down and pulled Irene to her feet. She picked up Justyn and followed the man through the rubble to an undamaged building on the other side of the street.
Bernard Simowitz held the door open for them, then squeezed past and led the way to a staircase, beckoning them to follow. “Down here, in the cellar. Follow me.”
When they reached the bottom of the stairs, Anna set Justyn down and looked around in the dim light. They were in a damp earthen-floor room about ten meters square. The walls were made of stone, and a single bare light bulb hung from the rough, wooden ceiling. Across the room, a group of people sat on blankets.
One of them, a plump, blond woman, got to her feet and rushed across the dank room. “Irene! Mrs. Kopernik! Thank God, you’re safe.”
Anna stared at her, confused. Who was she?
The woman knelt in front of Justyn. “Come with me, sweetheart,” she said. “We’ll get you cleaned up.”
Then Anna remembered. It was Bernard Simowitz’s wife, Cynthia. Irene had introduced them at the funeral.
Cynthia took charge, leading Justyn by the hand and calling over her shoulder, “Bernard, get some water from the cistern and bring it over here—quickly now. Mrs. Kopernik, please come. Bring Irene over here and sit down.”
Three other women and two men who had been sitting on the floor moved over to make room. Another blanket appeared, and one of the men spread it on the floor. Bernard arrived with a clay pitcher filled with water, and Cynthia began undoing the crude bandage on Justyn’s head. “I spotted you from our window as we were running down to the cellar,” she said, glancing at Anna. “It’s a good thing you stand out in a crowd.”
Anna was used to hearing comments like that. She was an attractive woman, taller than most, and her long red hair did indeed make her stand out in a crowd. This morning it had saved their lives. “I’m very grateful,” she said. “I was frantic not knowing where to go.”
Cynthia smiled at her then motioned with her head toward Irene, who sat clutching her knees, staring straight ahead, her eyes wide and vacant. Anna nodded and leaned back against the cold stone wall, putting her arm around her friend.
• • •
An hour passed, perhaps more. It was difficult for Anna to tell. The sirens stopped and the anti-aircraft guns fell silent. The cellar was quiet. The building’s tenants huddled in corners, staring at each other, some of them glancing at the wooden ceiling as though it might collapse at any moment. Anna absently fingered the cuts on her knees, struggling to control her fear, the visions still vivid and raw: Justyn lying in a pile of rubble, the diving airplane, the severed arm. She glanced at Irene and Justyn. They were both asleep on the blanket.
Anna heard a shuffling sound and looked up to see Cynthia standing over her, holding a bundle of clothing and some shoes. “You must be getting cold,” Cynthia said. “It’s very damp down here.” The heavyset woman set the bundle on the blanket.
While Anna put on a dress, socks and a pair of brown leather shoes that fit reasonably well, Cynthia set the rest of the clothing and shoes next to Irene and Justyn. She covered them with a long woolen coat and looked back at Anna, shaking her head. “All this happening on the day after her mother’s funeral—it’s no wonder she’s in shock.”
Anna looked curiously at the woman. Her blond hair was neatly combed and she wore an elegant silk robe over her nightgown. Incredibly, she was also wearing a string of pearls. Had she worn them to bed? Anna pushed the foolish thought out of her mind and took Cynthia’s hand. “Thank you…for everything. I don’t know what we would’ve done if Bernard hadn’t appeared when he did.”
They sat down on the blanket. “We just thank the Lord that you’re safe,” Cynthia said. “Irene’s mother, dear Izabella, worried about her all the time, living so far away.”
“Did you know her a long time?” Anna asked.
“Ever since Bernard and I moved into this building, ten years ago. Her husband, Issac, ran the tailor shop in the back of their home across the street. Everyone in the neighborhood knew them. After he died, it was hard for Izabella with Irene living in Krakow and no other children. Usually, she would celebrate the Sabbath with us, but mostly she kept to herself.”
“I met her just once,” Anna said. “It was two years ago, when she came to Krakow for a visit.”
Cynthia smiled. “I remember. Izabella spoke very fondly of you: I
rene’s friend, the college professor. She was pleased that Irene had such a good friend—even if you weren’t Jewish. I believe you just got married, yes?”
Anna nodded.
“And your husband? He’s an officer in the military?”
Anna took a deep breath. For months she had tried to convince herself that this day would never come. That Hitler was bluffing. That Germany would never be foolish enough to attack Poland now that Britain and France had pledged their support. Wasn’t that what all the politicians had said? Then, when the officers were mobilized, they said it was just a precaution. She took another breath and wiped the tears from her eyes with the sleeve of her dress. “Jan is a major in the cavalry. It’s his career.”
“And Irene’s husband—Stefan?”
“Stefan was a reserve officer in the cavalry for years. When all the tension started with Germany the brigade called their reserve officers back to active duty. He’s been assigned to Jan’s regiment.”
Cynthia patted Anna’s hand. “May God protect them…and all of us.”
They sat in silence for a while. In the quiet, the horror of the early morning came back. Anna shivered. Maybe she and Irene had been foolish to travel to Warsaw two days ago. But this wasn’t supposed to happen, not now, not so soon. Irene’s mother died unexpectedly. What else could they do?
Anna closed her eyes. Talking about Jan left her feeling empty. It had taken her a long time to find love, a long time alone, focused on her career, looking after her father in the aftermath of her mother’s death. But from the moment she and Jan met, she knew. He was the one. She could see him now, just as plainly as if he were standing before her: tall, blond, broad-shouldered, his face more rugged than handsome, he looked younger than his thirty-eight years. A tear rolled down her cheek. She left it there. It felt better to cry.
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