she’d adopted a maternal attitude toward me, as if I were a
fledgling that had to be protected and nursed to strength. It
was only to satisfy Hanna that I ate hasty mouthfuls of what
she’d prepared—crusty bread, some kind of chunky stew,
and a fruit tart. Afterward she didn’t leave right away but
lingered and I sensed she had something on her mind.
“Miss,” she said eventual y. “What was your life like
before you came here?”
“I was in my senior year of high school and living in a
smal town where everybody knew one another.”
“But that wasn’t where you came from.”
It surprised me that Hanna should make reference to my
former home. I was so used to protecting our secret on
earth, I kept forgetting that here my true identity was
common knowledge.
“I may not have come from Venus Cove,” I admitted. “But
it became my home. I went to a school cal ed Bryce
Hamilton and I had a best friend cal ed Mol y.”
“My parents were workers in a factory,” Hanna said
suddenly. “We were too poor for me to go to school.”
“Did you have books at home?”
“I never learned to read.”
“It’s not too late,” I said encouragingly. “I’l teach you, if
you like.”
Instead of reassuring her, as I’d hoped, my words
seemed to have the opposite effect on Hanna. She
dropped her gaze and her smile vanished.
“There’s not much point now, miss,” she said.
“Hanna,” I began, choosing my words careful y. “Can I
ask you a question?”
She shot me a frightened look and then nodded.
“How long have you been here?”
“Over seventy years,” she replied in a resigned tone.
“And how is it that someone as gentle and kind as you
ended up here?” I asked.
“It’s a long story.”
“I’d like to hear it,” I said and Hanna shrugged.
“There’s not much to tel . I was young. I wanted to save
someone more than I wanted my own soul. I made a pact,
sold myself into this life, and when I realized my mistake, it
was too late.”
“Would you choose differently if you could have your time
over?”
“I suppose I would try to achieve the same outcome but in
a different way.” Hanna’s eyes seemed to mist over, and
she stared wistful y ahead, lost in her own memories.
“That means you’re sorry. You were too young to know
what you were doing. When my family comes for me, we’l
take you with us. I won’t leave you behind.”
“Don’t waste your time worrying about me, miss. I made
the decision to come freely and there’s no backing out of a
deal like that.”
“Oh, I don’t know,” I said breezily. “Al deals are open to
renegotiation.”
Hanna smiled, her wariness slipping for a moment. “I
would like forgiveness,” she said in a smal voice, “but
there’s no one here to offer it.”
“Maybe if you tel me about it you’l feel better.” Anxious
as I was to return to Xavier’s side, I couldn’t ignore Hanna’s
cry for help. She had cared for me and nursed me through
some dark hours and I was indebted to her. Besides, I’d
only been in Hades a few weeks. Whatever burden Hanna
was carrying, she’d carried for decades. The least I could
do was set her mind at ease if it was within my power. I
shifted my position to make room for her and patted the
bedspread beside me. To an ignorant onlooker we might
have looked like two girls sharing teenage confidences.
Hanna hesitated and glanced at the door before sitting
down beside me. I knew she felt uncomfortable because
she kept her eyes lowered and her fingers, red from
washing, nervously twisted the buttons on her uniform. She
was weighing up in her mind whether she could trust me.
Who could blame her? She was alone in Jake’s
underworld. There was no one for her to turn to for a kind
word or advice. She had come to feel grateful for every
meal and every night she slept through unharmed. I had the
feeling that if anyone were to try to hurt Hanna, she would
endure it like a martyr because she didn’t believe she
deserved any better.
Hanna leaned back and sighed. “I hardly know where to
begin. I haven’t spoken about my old life in such a long
time.”
“Start wherever you like,” I prompted.
“I’l begin then with Buchenwald,” she said softly. She
spoke with detachment; her youthful face devoid of feeling,
as if she were a storytel er narrating a fable rather than
giving a firsthand account.
“The concentration camp?” I asked incredulously. “You
were there? I had no idea!” I instantly regretted my
interruption as I could see my reaction had halted Hanna’s
train of thought. “Please, go on.”
“In life my name was Hanna Schwartz. In 1933, I had my
sixteenth birthday. The Depression hit workers the hardest.
We had little money and I had no skil s so I joined the Hitler
Youth, and when Buchenwald was opened, I was sent to
work there.” She paused and drew a deep breath. “I knew
that everything happening there was wrong. Not just wrong,
I knew I was surrounded by evil, but I felt powerless to do
anything about it and I did not want to let my family down. Al
around me people were asking: Where is God in this? How
could he let this happen? I tried not to think about it, but
deep down I was angry with God—I blamed him. I was
planning to apply for a transfer and leave the camp to go
home to my parents, when a girl arrived who I recognized. I
knew her from home. We had played together as children.
She lived in my street and went to the local school. Her
father was a doctor. He treated my brother once when he
had measles and didn’t even ask for payment. Esther was
her name. She shared her books from school with me
because she knew how badly I wanted to learn. I was too
young to understand the difference between us. I knew her
life was like mine only she was wealthier, she went to
school, and she was a Jew. I knew the SS had evicted and
relocated her family, but I didn’t see her again until she
turned up that day at Buchenwald. She was with her mother
and I tried to stay out of sight. I didn’t want them to see me
there. Esther wasn’t wel when they brought her in and she
seemed only to get worse. There was something wrong
with her lungs and she couldn’t breathe properly. She was
too weak to work and I knew what her fate would be. It was
only a matter of time. Somehow, I knew I couldn’t let it
happen.
“That was when I met Jake. He was one of the young
officers overseeing the camp, but he looked different from
how he does now. His hair was lighter and in his uniform he
was not so conspicuous. I knew he liked me. He smiled at
me and tried to make conversation whenever I served food
to the officers. One day I was saddened thinking of Esther
and he stopped me to ask what was wrong. I made the
mistake of trusting him and took the opportunity to tel him
about my fears for my childhood friend. When he told me he
might be able to help, I couldn’t believe my luck. I thought if I
could do one good thing I might be able to respect myself
again. Karl, that was what Jake cal ed himself then, was so
beautiful and so mesmerizing. The fact that someone like
him would acknowledge my existence, let alone show
interest in my problems, was flattering. He asked me
whether I believed in God and I told him that the way my life
had played out so far, if there was ever a God, he must
have deserted us. Karl told me he had a secret he wanted
to share, because he felt he could trust me. He told me he
served a higher master, one who repaid loyalty. He said I
could help Esther if I swore undying loyalty to him. He told
me not to be afraid and that I would be rewarded for my
sacrifice with eternal life. When I think back on it, I don’t
know why he bothered to single me out. I think he must have
been bored and looking for someone to play with.” Hanna
paused as her mind traveled back to her dark past. “It
sounded so simple at the time.”
“What happened?” I asked even though the answer was
obvious.
“Esther was healed. Jake restored her to health so the
guards would have no reason to harm her and I came into
the darkness. But I wasn’t sure Jake had kept his end of the
bargain … .”
“Did he?” I asked breathlessly.
“He made her wel again.” Hanna’s sad brown eyes
flickered up to meet mine. “But that did not keep her from
the gas chambers two weeks later.”
“He betrayed you!” I couldn’t believe what I was hearing.
“He tricked you into bargaining away your life. That’s
despicable, even for Jake.”
“It could have been worse,” Hanna said. “When I was
thrown into Hades, I somehow avoided the pit. I was
assigned duties at the hotel and I’ve been here ever since.
So you see, miss, I brought this fate upon myself. I cannot
complain.”
“But your intentions were good, Hanna. I think there’s
hope for everyone.”
“There is while you are walking the earth. This is a final
destination. I don’t hope for anything now and I do not
believe in miracles.”
“You have seen the devil at work,” I said. “Why can’t you
believe in the power of Heaven as wel ?”
“Heaven has no mercy for the likes of me. I made a pact
and belong to Hel now. Not even angels can dissolve those
ties.”
I frowned and sat on the edge of my bed. Could Hanna
be right? Would the laws of Heaven and Hel bind her to this
prison? Surely her sacrifice had to count for something.
She had wel and truly served her sentence. But maybe it
didn’t work that way. I hoped I hadn’t made a promise to her
I wouldn’t be able to keep. Hanna busied herself tidying the
items on my dressing table. They were mainly French
perfumes, lotions, and powders—the sort of things Jake
thought would make me happy. He real y didn’t have a clue.
I looked at Hanna, who was now shuffling around the
room and avoiding making eye contact.
“You don’t believe they’l find me, do you?” I asked softly.
She didn’t answer but only tidied more energetical y. I felt
an overwhelming urge to grab her forcibly by the shoulders
and shake her into understanding. Because if I succeeded
in convincing Hanna then I might convince myself that I
wasn’t going to be a prisoner for eternity. “You don’t get it!” I
yel ed to my own surprise. “You don’t get what I am. Right
now I have a whole covenant of archangels plus a seraphim
looking for me. They’l find a way to get me out of here.”
“If you say so, miss.” Hanna gave a perfunctory reply.
“Don’t say it like that.” I glowered at her. “What are you
real y thinking?”
“Al right, I’l tel you what I’m thinking.” Hanna put down
her dust cloth and faced me. “If it was so easy for angels to
storm this prison, don’t you think they would have by now?”
Hanna’s tone became more tender. “If they could just free
the souls in torment, wouldn’t they have done so? Wouldn’t
God have intervened? You see, miss, Heaven and Hel are
bound by rules as old as time itself. No angel can enter
here uninvited. Think of it this way, could a demon just walk
into Heaven?”
“Not a chance,” I said as I reluctantly tried to fol ow her
train of thought. “Not in a mil ion years. But this is different.
Isn’t it?”
“The only thing that works in your favor is that Jake
tricked you into trusting him. Your angels wil have to find a
loophole, just like he did. It is not impossible, but it is very
difficult. The entries to Hel are wel guarded.”
“I don’t believe you,” I proclaimed as loudly as if I were
addressing an audience. “Where there’s a wil , there’s a
way, and Xavier has a wil stronger than anyone I know.”
“Ah, yes, the human boy from your hometown,” said
Hanna rueful y. “I have heard some talk about him.”
“What have you heard?” I asked, fired up by her mention
of Xavier.
“The prince is very envious of him,” said Hanna. “He has
every blessing a human could ask for—beauty, strength,
and courage. He is unafraid of death and he is aligned with
angels. Plus, he possesses the one thing Jake wants more
than anything.”
“And what’s that?”
“The key to your heart. That makes him quite a threat.”
“See, Hanna?” I said. “If Jake feels threatened that
means there’s hope, after al . Xavier wil come for us.”