Chapters

Chapter 11: Tuesday Afternoon, Paris, 1938

Riot45 Historical 14 Feb 2026

It was a Tuesday, the sort that left no mark on a calendar.

Mado stood at the narrow counter with her sleeves rolled to the elbow, a bowl of potatoes between her hands. The skins came away in long curling strips, falling into the basin with soft, damp sounds. Outside, the street carried the ordinary noises of late afternoon—children shouting, a cart rattling past, someone arguing about the price of coal.

The radio on the shelf crackled faintly, tuned low enough to be ignored unless she chose to listen. She did not. The announcer’s voice rose and fell in a distant, impersonal rhythm that belonged to another room, another life.

She rinsed the peeled potatoes under the tap, water running cloudy, then clear. The motion was practiced, economical. She worked the way she always had since the war—one task fully, then the next, no wasted gestures. The cane leaned against the table within reach, not as a reminder, just as fact.

On the windowsill, a row of geraniums leaned toward the light. She had bought them from a market stall two weeks earlier after hesitating too long, then choosing the most stubborn-looking plants. They were already adjusting to the room, leaves firm, red blooms slightly uneven but determined.

“Don’t die,” she muttered to them as she passed, not unkindly.

The chair at the table was pushed out at an angle from where she’d left it that morning. She straightened it with her foot, then paused, hand resting on the back. The apartment smelled faintly of soap and starch and something metallic she could never quite place—polish, perhaps, or just the old pipes in the walls.

She set the pot on the stove, added water, salt, and watched the flame catch. It hissed for a second, then settled into a steady blue. The sound was reassuring in its predictability. Fire, water, time. Things that behaved if you treated them correctly.

A knock came from the wall—two short raps, then one longer. The neighbor. Mado wiped her hands on a cloth and tapped back in the same rhythm. Not a conversation, just proof of existence on both sides of the plaster.

She moved to the small wardrobe in the corner and opened it carefully. Inside hung two jackets, one darker, one patched at the elbow, and a dress she wore only on Sundays. Beneath them, folded with deliberate precision, lay a shirt she did not wear anymore but did not discard. The fabric had gone thin at the cuffs.

She closed the wardrobe again without touching it.

The potatoes began to boil, lid rattling faintly. She lowered the flame and leaned her hip against the counter, letting her weight settle where it hurt least. The room filled slowly with steam, fogging the window until the street outside blurred into shapes and movement without detail.

For a moment, she allowed herself to do nothing.

No ledger. No forms. No careful attention to names and numbers and signatures that needed to look right. Just the small domestic sequence: peel, boil, salt, eat. It was almost luxurious, the simplicity of it.

On the table lay an envelope she had not yet opened. Official paper, thin and gray. It had arrived that morning with the post, placed precisely in the center of the table as if the position might change its contents.

She looked at it now, then looked away again.

“Later,” she said aloud, to no one.

The radio crackled again, a burst of static resolving into music this time. Something light, a dance tune slightly out of fashion. She let it play, tapping her finger once against the counter in time without realizing it.

When the potatoes were done, she drained them, the steam rising hot against her face. She mashed them with butter, working the fork through the bowl until the texture was smooth enough to satisfy her. No lumps. Lumps meant inattention.

She set a single place at the table. Plate, fork, knife, glass. Everything aligned with quiet care. The chair creaked when she lowered herself into it, adjusting the angle until her leg rested comfortably.

The first bite was too hot. She blew on the forkful, then tasted it anyway, the salt just enough, the butter catching at the back of her throat. Simple, filling, sufficient.

Outside, someone laughed loudly. A door slammed. A bicycle bell rang twice in quick succession.

Life, going on in all directions at once.

Mado ate slowly, listening without appearing to listen, cataloguing sounds out of habit she did not question. When she finished, she wiped the plate clean with a small piece of bread, then sat a moment longer with her hands folded on the table.

Only then did she reach for the envelope.

She turned it over once, twice, thumb tracing the edge where it had been sealed. The paper made a faint, dry sound under her nail. She did not open it yet. Instead, she stood, carried her plate to the sink, and washed it immediately, as if finishing the meal properly might steady whatever waited inside the letter.

Water ran. Porcelain clicked softly against the basin. She dried the plate and returned it to the cupboard.

The envelope remained where she had left it, perfectly still.

“Fine,” she said finally, almost amused with herself.

She sat again, picked it up, and slid a finger under the flap. The paper tore cleanly. She unfolded the sheet and read, her expression unchanged, only the small tightening at the corner of her mouth giving anything away.

When she finished, she refolded it along the original crease and set it back on the table.

The radio music ended. Static filled the room for a moment before the announcer’s voice returned, calm and distant, speaking about things that felt both important and entirely removed from the small, orderly apartment.

Mado reached out and switched the radio off.

The silence that followed was not empty. It was contained, deliberate, like a breath held just long enough before the next movement began.

Chapter 22: Tuesday Evening, Paris, 1938

ThemeAddict Historical 19 Feb 2026

The silence settled over the room. Whether it comforted or suffocated, she could not yet tell.

Mado remained sitting at the kitchen table, her finger tracing the envelope. To her, the paper felt thinner, as if reading those words had worn something away that she could never get back. The kitchen clock ticked like a metronome, a lifeless heartbeat giving a steady rhythm.

She unfolded the letter again. Not to read it, but to study the handwriting. She had known it as well as her own. The firmness of the downstrokes, the slant, the drops of ink where he got too passionate.

She traced the date with her thumb.

October 15, 1918.

So long ago it felt indecent to disturb it.

She could see him writing those words in her mind's eye. Mud on his boots. Tongue slipping out in concentration. That small crease in his forehead when he was thinking too hard. She imagined his pen pausing as he gazed out to the horizon, looking for the perfect words. Looking for something he could not see.

The letter ran through her head once more.

I face the final battle.

I know it now, as I write these words, that this will be my last letter to you. It breaks my heart to know that I will never see your beautiful smile again, never hear your laugh, never see the child we had in our hearts, but I know it's true.

I know it, for I saw it in a dream. I was standing in the doorway of our home, with you at the stove. I tried to move forward, but no effort would change my position. I saw you fetch the morning paper. I saw you fall. I understood then that there was no return.

As I face this looming fate, all I can think of is you. I might have once hoped for a future in which we are together, but now I only pray that you will meet a more peaceful end than myself, that you will see your future filled with kindness, love, peace, and that you pass surrounded by loved ones and the memories you've made.

In my heart, I wonder why God has given me this fate. Have I forsaken him? Have I committed some unforgivable sin? I comfort myself only with the knowledge that I will follow his great plan for me, and I hope and pray that I will not waver from him even in these dark, dark hours. That, even when I am faced down by my faithless enemies, that I can find courage within myself, and meet him with all my heart.

It's in these final hours that I can appreciate the beauty which God has given us. I find that even the smallest flower, or the buzz of a bumblebee, paints a vivid picture of his canvas. You've always joked I got too philosophical for my own good, but now I see what all those poets and writers were talking about when they mentioned the beauty of the earth.

It's in these final hours that I find my peace. In my heart there is no longer any fear, nor worry, nor sinful idea that passes through, but only quiet remembrance of a life that I will nevermore call my own.

Despite my somber tone, do not read this with sorrow in your heart. Imagine my hand wiping your tears away, or my words there to comfort you, for I wish you to appreciate joy in your life still. Find comfort in my words knowing that not once have I ever given up my love for you, but instead it has grown to encompass my entire heart. That I wish you experience all the joy I can no longer have, and that you may know peace in your heart once more.

Love, know that no matter how many times I've said these words, that this time I have poured every ounce of feeling into this last time: I love you.

Yours through thick and thin, through life and death, through every triumph and every breath,

Henri

The apartment felt smaller now, as if the blanket of silence had chosen suffocation. She stood carefully, reached for the cane, and crossed to the window. The glass had cleared. The street below glowed with the last of the afternoon light. A boy darted between two women arguing over a basket of carrots. Someone shook a rug from a balcony across the way.

Everything ordinary. Everything unaltered.

She folded the letter once more, and slipped it into her coat pocket.

The rhythmic clicking of her cane marked her descent into the streets, as she exited the dusty, cabbage-smelling apartment complex. The cooling air met her face but found no hesitation as she strolled towards the park, walking the same path she had a thousand times before.

She avoided the uneven steps, the little patches where leaves and water would collect. The tall, wrought-iron fence marked the entrance, and she stepped through the rusting gates.

The trees rustled with a faint breeze, their leaves already turning in preparation for autumn. The grass glistened with undisturbed dew, reflecting the dying light. She chose the third bench from the fountain, the paint peeling slightly.

They had once argued about that fountain, whether the cherub was smiling or grimacing. He insisted it was smiling. She told him he should see a doctor.

She lowered herself onto the bench slowly, setting the cane beside her. The air carried the faint scent of damp leaves and distant smoke.

Children still played at the far edge of the park, their voices rising and falling without consequence.

She took the letter from her pocket once more, carefully unfolding the thinning paper.

She read the last line once more.

Yours through thick and thin, through life and death, through every triumph and every breath.

As she let her eyes wander the page, a single tear dripped down her cheek. Not sad, but simply the body acknowledging what the mind had already made peace with.

She didn't feel it necessary to wipe it away, so it traveled slowly down until it dripped onto the page. The ink did not run.

The sky dimmed further, turning the fountain into a silhouette.

For the first time in years, the space inside her chest did not feel hollow.

She folded the letter carefully and held it against her palm as if testing its weight.

After a moment, she rose.

The park did not look different.

But the path home did.

What happens in the next chapter?

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Riot45
Historical
19 Feb 2026
A woman in 1938 Paris receives a mysterious letter, leading her to question her past and the files of a man who died years ago.
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