“I set a trap for him,” she said. “I told him that your sniper unit is in Bienville. Here in this town. I told him that Cole is the best sniper in the American Army, and that Cole is here.”
“You did
“Lieutenant, if you saw this man you would know he is not the second best at anything. He considers himself to be
The lieutenant shook his head. “What you have done is stupid and dangerous, mademoiselle. I don’t see how luring Von Stenger here is a good idea.”
“He will be here,” Jolie said. “Von Stenger verified that the Germans will be making a push in the morning to take back the town. Von Stenger will come with them when they show up. You see, we have to stop him. You saw how many men he killed by himself. One man with a rifle. It is your duty to stop him.”
“My duty, huh?” The lieutenant nodded. “You may be right about that, mademoiselle, but I don’t agree with your methods. And tomorrow, when the shooting starts, I want you inside the church. You are not to fight. We need you as a guide. You have risked enough. Understand me?”
“I am not one of your soldiers to be ordered about,” she said.
“You’re right that you are not a soldier,” the lieutenant said. “Like I said, you stay in the church, out of harm’s way.”
Jolie nodded, though she had no intention of obeying. “Of course,” she said.
Later that night, Cole was cleaning his rifle when Jolie found him in the kitchen of an abandoned house on the main street. Wisely, most of the town’s residents had fled for the countryside. He had disassembled the Springfield and had the parts spread across a blanket on the kitchen table. She watched him rub down the bolt action with solvent. Then he began running a cleaning rod through the barrel.
“I could not do it,” she said. “I could not kill him.”
“Don’t fret on it,” he told her without looking up, still busy cleaning the rifle. “Killing someone is an ugly business. Sounds a whole lot easier to do than it is, no matter how much you might want to do it.”
“He had a pistol, like he suspected something. If I had tried to stab him he would have shot me.”
“Then this Ghost Sniper ain’t a fool. Give him that much. And he didn’t shoot you when he could have, just to be ornery, so I reckon that’s something in your favor.”
“He was playing with me, like a cat with a mouse.” She shook her head angrily. She took out the knife Cole had given her and tossed in on the table, where it landed with a clunk. “I should have taken that out and stuck it straight into his heart!
“You not being able to kill him just means you ain’t a monster like he is.”
“What about you? You have killed other men.”
“In case you ain’t noticed, Jolie, there’s a war on. Pretty much anyone who ain’t dead by now has killed someone here in Normandy.”
“You killed men before the war.”
He looked at her sharply with those cut glass eyes. “How would you know that?”
“It is a way you have about you. You are afraid of nothing. When you look at someone, it is like you see right through them.”
Cole didn’t answer for a long time. “You ain’t like me, Jolie. You ever seen a wolf or a panther? No, ain’t likely here in France now, but maybe back in the old days your grandpa saw one. Well, I’ve seen them back in the mountains. They are pure wildness. Ain’t many of them left, and some people say they’re all gone, but I seen ’em. They are hunters, Jolie. They hunt down other animals and kill them. Ain’t nothin’ cruel in a wolf or panther when it kills, no right or wrong, good or bad.
Jolie was a little surprised by the speech—it was certainly the most words she had heard Cole speak at one time. She had the disconcerting realization that she had felt the same presence when talking with the German sniper. So he was a wolf or a panther too. A hunter. “Von Stenger will be here in the morning,” she said. “He will try to kill you.”
“Then he won’t be the first to try it,” Cole said. “And don’t forget that we’ll be trying to kill