The Woman with the Blue Star by Pam Jenoff (read e books online free TXT) ๐
Read free book ยซThe Woman with the Blue Star by Pam Jenoff (read e books online free TXT) ๐ยป - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Pam Jenoff
Read book online ยซThe Woman with the Blue Star by Pam Jenoff (read e books online free TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Pam Jenoff
Still, part of me wanted to wait. Everything had happened so quickly. The sewer was nowhere to begin a life together. Yet this wretched place was all we had; there might never be anywhere else. It was now or never, perhaps our only chance to make our love for one another into something permanent and real. We could be together, not just in those stolen moments where we took more comfort in one anotherโs arms than we should, but as actual man and wife.
โYes,โ I said at last. He smiled, and it was the first real happiness I had seen in his eyes since Bubbe had died. Then he kissed me. โWhen?โ I asked, after we broke apart.
โNow!โ he exclaimed, and we both laughed. โThat is, not tonight, but tomorrow.โ I started to say that we should wait until my mother returned. But who knew when that would be? With every passing day and week, it seemed less a hope than a fantasy. โLetโs tell my father when he wakes up in the morning and he can help us get everything we need together straightaway.โ I nodded, wondering if Pan Rosenberg would be happy about the news. Once he would have minded that I was not observant, perhaps protested rituals that were less than in strict accordance. Still, we had all been forced to change down here, and I hoped he would welcome me warmly into his dwindling family. โWe can get married tomorrow,โ Saul repeated.
โI want to see Ella first, if I can manage it,โ I said. โI would like to get married under the grate so she can be there.โ With Mama still missing, my whole family was gone. I needed Ella to be by my sideโor at least as close as possible.
I expected Saul to protest, but he nodded. โI understand. We really shouldnโt wait long, though.โ
We sat in silence for several minutes. Saul rested his head on mine in the way that had become familiar to us in the nights we read by moonlight. Soon I recognized the slow, even sound of his breathing. We should go back to the chamber and Saulโs father, I thought, perhaps even check on the munitions on the way. But Saul needed his rest. I didnโt want to disturb him, at least not yet.
My eyes grew heavy, too. I blinked several times, willing myself to stay awake.
โSadie...โ I heard a voice call. I opened my eyes, startled. We were still in the annex. I had drifted off in spite of myself. I did not know how much time had passed. Saul slept beside me, mouth agape. โSadie!โ a voice called again, more sharply now. My eyes snapped open. Krys stood at the entrance to the annex, face panicked. For a second, I was confused. It was still the middle of the night.
โWhat are you doing back so soon?โ I asked Krys.
โI was able to arrange transit of the munitions sooner than I expected,โ he replied. โWhere are they?โ
I sat up, trying to get my bearings. โThe munitions,โ he pressed. โWhat did you do with them?โ
โWe left them right beneath the grate,โ I replied. โYou told us there was no need to move them any farther. So we didnโt.โ Beside me, Saul stirred.
Krysโ eyes widened. โTheyโre gone.โ I leapt up and followed him from the annex, Saul closely in tow. โYou must be mistaken.โ Krys was unfamiliar with the sewer, I told myself. He had simply looked in the wrong place.
But as we neared the spot beneath the grate where Krys had lowered the crates to us, my stomach clenched.
The munitions Krys had entrusted us to watch were gone.
โWe left them, just like you said,โ I offered.
โYou told us that there was no need to stand guard,โ Saul added, his voice defensive.
โPerhaps someone else moved them,โ Krys suggested desperately.
I shook my head. โIt is only us, and Saulโs father.โ
โHe would never have the strength,โ Saul added. โPerhaps one of your men came.โ
โNone were available. Thatโs why Iโm here myself.โ We looked at one another with a growing sense of dread. We didnโt have the munitions, nor did Krys. Which left us with only one terrifying possibility.
Someone else had come into the sewer and taken them.
โGo back to your hiding place,โ Krys ordered.
โWe have no hiding place.โ Only the chamber, just steps from where the munitions had been taken.
โGo back,โ Krys repeated, seeming not to hear me. โDonโt leave, no matter what, even to go to the grate. I will go find the munitions.โ He sprinted off, footsteps echoing off the tunnel walls as he ran.
After he disappeared, Saul and I stood in stunned silence for several seconds. โSomeone was here.โ
โThat doesnโt mean they know about the chamber or where it is,โ Saul offered. โThat doesnโt mean they know about us.โ The words were of little comfort. Someone else had been in the sewer. That alone was enough.
โKrys will take care of things,โ he said, surprising me. Saul did not trust non-Jews, and the fact that he was counting on Krys to protect us seemed the most ominous sign of all. โTry not to think about it anymore. Weโve got a wedding to plan,โ he joked, trying without success to chase the worry from his eyes.
โYou still want to get married, after everything that just happened?โ
โMore so than ever. Each day is a gift down here, tomorrow promised to no one.โ I nodded. I had not thought about it that way, but Saul was right. Even before Krys hid the munitions, our lives in the sewer were dangerous and uncertain. โWhy
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