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Working beneath old copper pots that hang from the vaulted ceiling, the three women greet me as a heroine for finding even a little sugar. But I don't stay to bask in their praise, because the last thing I want is to be pressed into making wild strawberry preserves.
I'm in such a hurry to escape canning duty that I nearly plow over poor Dr. Anglade, who is coming down the castle's winding main staircase with a tray of syringes. When he sees what I've got for him, though, his stern expression melts. "Sulfonamide," he whispers reverently. "Dr. Boulagnon said he didn't expect a shipment in Paulhaguet for a week. Where did you get it?"
"It's better you don't ask too many questions." Or at least, that's what Madame Simon told me when emptying the preventorium's discretionary cashbox to send me on this mission. She also said, When there's a war on, it's best not to tell anyone anything they don't need to know.
Now Dr. Anglade eyes me warily through his round, wire-rimmed spectacles. "Can you get more?"
I shake my head. It's somebody else's turn to risk trading on the black market. Doing it once was impulsive. Twice would be stupid. I've always believed that you shouldn't put your neck out for others unless you want it chopped. So, having done my good deed, I trudge to my classroom, a plain chamber featuring rows of wooden desks for little girls and one for me. Over the door hangs a new portrait of the Marshal, white-haired, white-whiskered, and in uniform. Every teacher in France is supposed to enlist children to send drawings and letters and stories to the new head of state as a so-called Christmas Surprise for the Marshal.
I resent this. Our sick kids are with us at the preventorium only between six months and two years, until they're cured. My job is to see they don't fall so far behind in schooling that they can't pass the examinations for their certificate of primary studies. I teach them reading, writing, and basic mathematics. I don't have time to teach them about the Marshal or his so-called new National Revolution. Or maybe I just don't want to, because my feelings about both are mixed. Not that I have the right to judge. I'm no war hero, and everyone says the Marshal is doing the best he can. After all, with half the country occupied by the Nazis, we're all held at gunpoint, and it's impossible to know which of the new laws the Marshal is forcing down our throats and which Hitler is forcing down his.
Brooding about this, I make fifteen copies of tomorrow's spelling test, spreading the master copy out onto the hectograph tablet until the ink is ready. Then I carefully press paper to the gel and smooth it until it's a perfect mimic. I'm always particular about making worksheets, because it's about as close to a creative art as I get now that we're short on pens, paper, charcoal, and paint. And while the copies dry, I look over the Christmas Surprise assignments.
One of my students has drawn the Marshal as a lion wearing a French military cap, because I told her he was called the Lion of Verdun-and I laugh because she's given her lion a mustache. I'm less amused by the sycophantic essays written by the older girls about how the Marshal has given France the gift of his person. Maybe I'd be feeling more charitable if Henri weren't in a prison camp under the terms of surrender the Marshal negotiated.
I'm still hungry after a few slices of dried sausage at my desk. Here in the countryside we still have eggs and fruit and even butter-but it never seems like enough. Cigarettes take the edge off, so I'll have to find a secret spot in the castle to smoke where I can't be caught by our household management teacher, Faustine Xavier, a prissy little tattletale, who always wears her starched collars too high and her hair pinned too tight. Fortunately, I know all the secret spots. The old hidden feudal passages are too cold this time of year and I'm too claustrophobic to spend much time there anyway, but the attic has sunny windows, which makes it a favorite haunt of the castle cats-and I like it too.
Excerpted from The Women of Chateau Lafayette by Stephanie Dray. Copyright © 2021 by Stephanie Dray. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Finishing second in the Olympics gets you silver. Finishing second in politics gets you oblivion.
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