Authors: Steve Sem-Sandberg
Aufstehen, heraus aus den Betten!
Bettnässer vortreten!
(Get up, out of your beds!
Bed-wetters, step forward!)
This was worst for the newcomers, who had not yet realised what shame can mean, and very bad also for those who were still naïve enough to imagine that resistance might not be entirely futile and in vain flapped about trying to grab what little there was to hold on to: bed-ends, door frames, basin edges. Your grip was of course removed sooner or later, one way or another. The day nurses used to work in the lunatic asylum and were as strong as bears. In the washroom, apart from the ordinary shower cubicles, there was also an
old-fashioned, high-sided tub of cast-iron. A shower head at one end sprayed ice-cold water into the tub that was already full of wet linen towels. One of the nurses would drag the troublesome bed-wetter to the tub and the other one would stand guard at the head end. As soon as the child had been thrown in and tried to crawl out of the mass of wet towels, one of them would grab an arm or a leg, raising the limb for long enough to force the culprit’s head and shoulders under the freezing water again, and possibly get him entangled in the towels, which would soon block both his mouth and his nose. The term for this practice was ‘dunking’. As soon as a boy had been dunked, he was hauled up again and made to stand on the cold tiled floor, shivering, barely able to stay upright, as moist and shiny as an eel and with a face as blue as a plum. Jockerl was one of the boys who got dunked quite often. Jockerl’s bed was close enough for Adrian to pick up the sweetish, ammoniacal pong of urine, often before he had woken up properly, as if that smell could penetrate his sleep and reach into the place in his mind where fear had rooted itself. Soon he would hear Mrs Rohrbach hitting the bed with her clapper and next the screaming as Jockerl was pulled off his peed-on sheet and dragged into the washroom, and the slapping of the shower water against the side of the tub followed, and the boy’s desperate calls for help that ended in helpless gurgling as the water rushed in and choked him. But Jockerl was tough. Despite the beatings and clips round the ears that threw his little body like a wet rag from one tiled wall to another, he always managed to get through and find a place at the long row of wash-hand basins where the other boys were already getting on with brushing their teeth. Jockerl was a head shorter than the rest of them but always carried himself as straight as a spear and was often first back in the dormitory for the next stage, which was bed-making. At this point, Mrs Rohrbach positioned herself at the
far end of the room with her back to the window and started clapping her hands to match her counting aloud …
one two three four five six
… and for Jockerl it was important to keep ahead of her every command. When Mrs Rohrbach called out
twenty
he had already stretched the sheet over the edge of the mattress, when she reached
forty
he had folded the blanket over the sheet and at
sixty
he had put his toothbrush in the glass exactly where it should be, the glass lined up edge to edge with the right corner of the bedside table, and folded his towel, placed it on the middle of the three shelves, and put his indoor and outdoor shoes, laces untied, on the floor below. Julius Becker was useless when it came to practical things like these and Mrs Rohrbach had noticed that soon enough. Time after time, she would do rounds to check Julius’s bed. She wouldn’t say anything, only start, almost thoughtfully, to count again, just for Julius …
one two three four five
… and then she went on counting more loudly …
six seven eight nine
… and at
ten
she gave up and tore blanket and sheets from Julius’s hands and shouted:
that’s not the right way
don’t you know how to do it
and he still couldn’t do anything right with his listless hands, even less keep his eyes and lips under control,
you’re to begin again and get it right this time
and Mrs Rohrbach started counting again …
one two three four
… but now she had the clapper ready and Julius knew what to expect. He faced up to his failure and before he had even lifted the sheet, fell crying to the floor in front of Mrs Rohrbach’s feet. So, with one firm grip under his chin, their tutor in good manners would pull him upright, then hit him with the clapper, one blow for each correct bed-making action he had failed to complete:
… one two three four …
And so it went on. Day after day after day. Always the same ritual, Adrian said.
Those who had got away without punishments
that day
were made to stand and wait until everyone else had been dealt with and one of their guards came along to order them to line up for the march to the school pavilion. Sometimes Julius would join the rest of us, sometimes not, Adrian explained. If not, it was because they had made him scrub the dormitory floor or clean the toilets or sentenced him to four or six hours standing punishment. There was no loyalty among the boys. Each one of us had his own confusions to deal with. We kept getting punished for being careless but were actually as guarded and distrustful as old men. Alliances were formed though, some of them baffling. Like the one between Hannes and Jockerl. On their way to the school pavilion the boys passed the institution’s kitchen and, next to it, the central-heating boiler that spewed out disgustingly thick, black smoke from its chimney. One day, Jockerl asked what they might be burning in there and Hannes turned to him and said:
They burn bed-wetters like you, didn’t you know?
Even though he was in their section, Jockerl behaved in many ways like a small child. When he was told something, his face softened, melted somehow, and his eyes had an inward look, as if trying to visualise in his head what he had just heard. Miseryguts gave him a shove and said,
hang on, it’s not your turn yet
, and suddenly everyone laughed and formed a cluster around the little one, the most gullible of them all, and Jockerl blanched and became as pale as when they hauled him out of the bath in the mornings or when they gave him a
Wickelkur
, a wrap-up cure, and watching that is something I’ll never forget, Adrian said: they wrapped him in wet towels and made him stand in the bitterly cold corridor until all the towels had dried. It
took fourteen hours. To cure him of his bed-wetting once and for all, they told everyone. That’s what they wanted us to believe. That what they persecuted us for was something that was already part of us.
*
The Führer’s Signature on a Piece of White Card
A framed portrait of the Führer hung on the corridor wall. In those days, identical portraits were hung on the walls of all official places; the Führer, who gazed into the distance but had a steadfast look on his face, was seen a little from the side. His facsimile signature was placed below the image. Every single corridor in Spiegelgrund was graced by a portrait just like that, or at at least a similar one. If you were given a ‘standing-still’ punishment for six or fourteen or however many hours, you had to stand in front of the Führer picture and if you failed for just one second to stay straight as a post with your eyes fixed on the great leader, you were ordered to keep standing for double the number of hours. This was how the Führer came to form part of the jumble of stories that Hannes Neubauer wandered around and mumbled about to himself. The stories were all about heroes and their brave deeds. It could be about von Humboldt, who discovered the source of the River Amazon and fought battles with the Indians, or about wartime heroics, the kind of stories you read about in the copies of
Der Stürmer
that were lying around everywhere. The tabloid was packed with pictures of steel-helmeted soldiers who were always portrayed sideways on, like the Führer, but unlike him were toting automatic pistols. In Hannes’s versions, the hero was his father, who (or so Hannes would claim) kept being dispatched on secret missions to different places. What about your mum then? Adrian couldn’t resist asking (he had after all a special bond with his mother) and Hannes said that soon after he was born, his father had
shown that shameless slut the door
. You can’t trust women, Hannes Neubauer told them,
all women are false and treacherous and greedy and only out for your money. So said the boy with the round head without as much as a flicker of his blue eyes, although this shocked even hardened types like Zavlacky and Miseryguts. Big words from such a little lad. Hey, is that true of Mrs Rohrbach, too? Zavlacky hazarded with an ironic smile. Satan’s handmaidens, the lot of them, Hannes replied promptly and added that they mustn’t worry. His father, an army officer of the highest rank, had already sent a message with a devoted courier to reassure his son he was on his way and Hannes must prepare to decamp. As time passed and his father failed to turn up, the preparations to leave changed more and more into priming everyone for a collective rescue action. His father would come not only for Hannes himself but also for his friends, whom he had trusted and confided in, and his father had therefore secretly selected to be set free as well. Meanwhile, they must all be ready to obey Neubauer’s commands. The order to make a break for it might come at any time and then they would move into a
safe place
which had been set up for them inside the mountain. What mountain is that? Zavlacky asked dubiously. What kind of warrior are you? Hannes replied, sounding just as dubious, and his little smile, playing in the ever-upturned corners of his mouth, hinted at the ongoing planning for the top-secret rescue action but also that it was all kept inside the ball of Hannes’s head, which was sealed like a bank vault, and that he would give nothing away unless he had decided in good time that the person he told was worthy. Though not even the normally self-contained Neubauer could always manage to keep himself under control. One day, when their teacher, Mr Hackl, had spoken with his usual engagement about all the sacrifices that their proud soldiery made while on the front, Hannes gathered some of his most trusted companions around him in the furthest corner of the area fenced in with
steel netting that passed for their ‘schoolyard’, and showed them his scars. Most of them had already noticed the marks on his body and wondered. From a distance, they looked a little like rough skin or spots of dirt. But now they were allowed to observe him close up and realised that the blemishes were clearly the kind of scars that only a real fighter would sustain. Hannes showed off a deep gash left in one of his armpits once the doctors had cut out what he described as a
lump
. What such a
lump
could be no one quite knew, but Miseryguts actually probed the hollow with his finger and could confirm that there would have been room for an egg inside it. And everywhere on Hannes’s body, on his shins, under one elbow and across both his thighs, long scars ran like narrow winding ribbons or blood vessels. On his back and the back of his head, the healed patches looked more like the pits after chickenpox but Hannes insisted that these were burns from the time he had almost fallen backwards into a cauldron full of boiling tar. The top of his head was marked by scars from long slashes and there was a skin ridge down the side of his neck which he told them was due to a sliver of glass that his father had surgically removed using a kitchen knife and a cloth soaked in alcohol as the only anaesthetic, a necessary operation because if the piece of glass had been left it might have started to move around inside his body, maybe get all the way to the heart;
and Hannes
… so that one just had to be cut out! … you see, if the black blood seeps through, you go septic and that’s the end …
and if Adrian had leaned forward just then, he too could have let his fingers slide along the strangely twisting skin ridges or pushed a finger inside the temptingly smooth, shiny hollow in Hannes’s armpit, but at that point Hannes turned and started to button up again
… though some people have black blood already so there’s no point
.
… but I’m not a Jew
, was all Adrian could think of saying.
… you’re a tinker, and that’s the same thing
, Hannes replied.
Adrian had been called
tinker
before and now it had happened again, with the same unquestionable authority and correctness as when Zavlacky was named the Escape-artist or Jockerl the Punch-bag, and then Hannes walked away, old wounds and all, his back as straight and his manner as untroubled as always, looking ahead with his usual innocent blue eyes that seemed to see nothing other than the convictions that filled his head, although on the outside so peaceful and childlike and blond that even Nurse Mutsch, who would not otherwise open her hands for anyone, now and then couldn’t resist stroking it with her fingertips. The fact was that Neubauer the Warrior’s heartless contempt for the opposite sex was in no way returned by the despised females. Or at least not by Mutsch, who liked having a little helper:
There’s a supper portion missing. Neubauer,
you run along to the kitchen and fetch it.
And soon Hannes Neubauer became the only one of the boys in his section to be trusted with keys. It might well have been why Miseryguts started paying court to Hannes, who had obviously become liked by the staff. They were as tight as thieves for a while, Adrian recalled: the large Walter Schiebeler (that was Miseryguts’s real name) with his big clumsy feet, whose body twitched involuntarily, and the always restrained, introverted Neubauer with his weird ideas and bursts of almost incomprehensible talking. At one point, Neubauer informed Schiebeler that at night, when they were all asleep, the Führer in the corridor picture would transform into a fighter pilot. His perfectly combed hair turned into an aviator’s helmet and his eyes were protected with special goggles that allowed him to see
in the dark and fog and enabled him to complete his raids at all times of day and night and –
just now!
– he was piloting his plane in a death-defying dive straight down towards the hospital site and …