The Last Green Valley by Mark Sullivan (best manga ereader txt) ๐
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- Author: Mark Sullivan
Read book online ยซThe Last Green Valley by Mark Sullivan (best manga ereader txt) ๐ยป. Author - Mark Sullivan
โA perfect, perfect place,โ the Russian said. โIโm surprised none of us thought of it when we tried to figure out what became of all the good women of Gutengermendorf on Saturday nights. But your tracks in the snow did not lie, and here we are.โ
โNo,โ Adeline said. โNot with me.โ
Kharkov smiled and kept coming. โOh yes, with you. This I am allowed. You, fair Adeline, are a spoil of war, an older, more experienced spoil of war. And one I will enjoy greatly, because even if it is as cold as a witchโs tit in here, I know it will be so deliciously warm beneath your skirt. A treat for both of us on Christmas Eve.โ
She said nothing but felt the fear and the shame already bubbling in her. Heโd come to the end of the pew where she slept and saw the bedding laid out.
โYou thought ahead,โ he said, drinking the last of his vodka. โHow lovely.โ
The Soviet officer tossed the bottle into the next pew and started toward her, unbuckling his belt, long coat open.
โDonโt, orโโ
โOr what?โ he said, only to come up short, a meter from her, staring at the carving knife she held in her hand.
โOr Iโll cut you into pieces,โ she said. โIโm good with a knife.โ
Kharkov smiled. His eyes went half-lidded as he took a step back. โIโm sure you are. I saw you take care of that chicken. But Iโm not a chicken, Adeline, and your knife doesnโt scare me.โ
He reached inside his coat and came up with a pistol that he pointed at her. โSo drop it, and letโs get down to pleasure, shall we?โ
โI have a husband,โ she said, not lowering the knife.
โI donโt care.โ
โYou have a wife, a baby.โ
โNot tonight,โ he said, smiling.
Adeline swallowed and said, โIf you come any closer, I will kill you. So shoot me. Get it over with. Iโd rather be dead than let you on top of me.โ
That enraged Kharkov, who thumbed off the pistolโs safety. โYou think I wonโt?โ
โGo ahead and shoot me,โ she said again. โThe town will hear the shot. They will investigate you for murder. Youโll be sent to the gallows, and your young wife will know you not only as a rapist, but a cold-blooded killer on Christmas Eve. And when youโre in your cell, waiting to die, youโll be like Raskolnikov in Crime and Punishment. You read it. Of course you did. And you remember how the murder ate up his mind. Like a cancer before the gallows. Is that what you really want, Captain Kharkov?โ
The Soviet officer glared at her, the pistol trembling in his hand, before aiming past her and shooting. She jerked, startled at the gunshot, and slashed the knife in front of her, sure that he was coming for her now.
But Kharkov had already left the pew and was storming away. Wrenching open the rear door, he snarled, โGerman bitch,โ before slamming it behind him.
Adeline stared after him for a second before running to the door with the knife still in her hand and throwing the bar. Then she began to shake so hard, she had to stumble back to her pew and sit for fear sheโd collapse. Tears came and the loneliness, followed by the certainty that a man like Kharkov would not let this stand. He would find a way to attack her or punish her.
It took a long time, until the candle was nearly spent, before she truly believed he would not return, and she was able to calm herself down enough to take the carving knife and slip it under her pillow. Then she took off her boots and put on her extra wool socks and her knit hat before blowing out the candle and snuggling into the blankets.
To get her mind off Kharkov, she tried to summon Emilโs image. Instead, she asked herself who she would be if another year passed and she was lying in this pew next Christmas Eve with no word from him. The lonely world that question suggested frightened her so much, she curled into a ball, and fell asleep praying that a year from now she would be in his arms.
Poltava, Ukraine
In the basement of city hall, Emil gulped down his soup and tore into the extra bread and boiled brisket, onions, beets, and cabbage they were given in a nod to the holiday. Every few moments, heโd lift his head to reassure himself that Corporal Gheorghe really was there, across the table, and eating just as voraciously.
Emil felt better than he had in weeks, and he realized it was just because the mad Romanian soldier was with him, not a friend really, not even an acquaintance, just a familiar face and odd voice in a cold, distant place on Christmas Eve.
When heโd slurped the hot soup and eaten half of his double rations, Emil said, โHow did you get here?โ
โThe sun, the stars, the moonโโ
โRight,โ Emil said, cutting him off. โJust give me what happened here on earth.โ
โBut it always begins up there.โ
โIโm sure it does, but start when we left you a hard dayโs ride from the Romanian border.โ
Corporal Gheorghe thought about that and then smiled. โYou have a sister-in-law, I remember. Still sweet as honey?โ
โMalia, thatโs right. Tell me from there.โ
โShe married?โ
โNot the last time I saw her.โ
The corporal smiled, tapped his lips, and then explained that shortly after the Martels rode on to Romania, the Red armies that had pursued them suddenly halted to resupply just shy of the border. Romaniaโs leaders saw the writing on the wall and decided they were better off flipping their allegiance from Hitler to Stalin.
โI got orders to surrender to the Soviets and tell them we fight for Moscow now, not Berlin,โ he said. โBut when I walked up with a white flag on my gun, they arrested me, sent me to prison camp in Ukraine, but not this
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