It was all over, Flick realized in despair. They were outnumbered and they had failed. The sour taste of defeat rose in her throat.
Michel had been shooting at the machine-gun position. “We can’t take out that machine gunner from the ground!” he said. He looked around the square, his gaze flying to the tops of the buildings, the bell tower of the church, and the upper floor of the town hall. “If I could get into the mayor’s office, I’d have a clear shot.”
“Wait.” Flick’s mouth was dry. She could not stop him risking his life, much as she wanted to. But she could improve the odds. She yelled at the top of her voice, “Genevieve!”
Genevieve turned to look at her.
“Cover Michel!”
Genevieve nodded vigorously, then dashed out from behind the sports car, spraying bullets at the chƒteau windows.
“Thanks,” Michel said to Flick. Then he broke cover and sprinted across the square, heading for the town hall.
Genevieve ran on, heading for the church porch. Her fire distracted the men in the chƒteau, giving Michel a chance of crossing the square unscathed. But then there was a flash on Flick’s left. She glanced that way and saw the Gestapo major, flattened against the wall of the town hail, aiming his pistol at Michel.
It was hard to hit a moving target with a handgun at anything but close range-but the major might be lucky, Flick thought fearfully. She was under orders to observe and report back, and not to join the fighting under any circumstances, but now she thought: To hell with that. In her shoulder bag she carried her personal weapon, a Browning nine-millimeter automatic, which she preferred to the SOE standard Colt because it had thirteen rounds in the clip instead of seven, and because she could load it with the same nine-millimeter Parabellum rounds used in the Sten submachine gun. She snatched it out of the bag. She released the safety catch, cocked the hammer, extended her arm, and fired two hasty shots at the major.
She missed him, but her bullets chipped fragments of stone from the wall near his face, and he ducked.
Michel ran on.
The major recovered quickly and raised his weapon again.
As Michel approached his destination, he also came closer to the major, shortening the range. Michel fired his rifle in the major’s direction, but the shot went wild, and the major kept his head and fired back. This time, Michel went down, and Flick let out a yell of fear.
Michel hit the ground, tried to get up, and collapsed. Flick calmed herself and thought fast. Michel was still alive. Genevieve had reached the church porch, and her submachine gun fire continued to draw the attention of the enemy inside the chƒteau. Flick had a chance of rescuing Michel. lt was against her orders, but no orders could make her leave her husband bleeding on the ground. Besides, if she left him there, he would be captured and interrogated. As leader of the Bollinger circuit, Michel knew every name, every address, every code word. His capture would be a catastrophe.
There was no choice.
She shot at the major again. Again she missed, but she pulled the trigger repeatedly, and the steady fire forced the man to retreat along the wall, looking for cover.
She ran out of the bar into the square. From the corner of her eye she saw the owner of the sports car, still protecting his mistress from gunfire by lying on top of her. Flick had forgotten him, she realized with sudden fear. Was he armed? If so, he could shoot her easily. But no bullets came.
She reached the supine Michel and went down on one knee. She turned toward the town hall and fired two wild shots to keep the major busy. Then she looked at her husband.
To her relief she saw that his eyes were open and he was breathing. He seemed to be bleeding from his left buttock. Her fear receded a little. “You got a bullet in your bum,” she said in English.
He replied in French, “It hurts like hell.”
She turned again to the town hail. The major had retreated twenty meters and crossed the narrow street to a shop doorway. This time Flick took a few seconds to aim carefully. She squeezed off four shots. The shop window exploded in a storm of glass, and the major staggered back and fell to the ground.