The Last Flight of Poxl West (16 page)

They were stars.

Now you live in the city. War has driven you there, war and your own capriciousness. Every night you go about your business: drink, succeed, fail; take in live music—save lives volunteering in a war effort. You do everything that might fulfill one with even the noblest ambitions. But you never again leave the city. Overhead is an eternal pink glow, light that never dims past a point, a phenomenon some might call light pollution but which is the only thing that sustains you. At four in the morning, you have left a pub. You are, quite frankly, drunk. Have been for days. To placate you, above: pink sky, never not pink.

Then one day, rather than taking some leisure in the woods to the east, rather than the ease of a woman's bed, you take to the sky in an aeroplane. You are airborne, it is night, below you the glowing white clouds—and above, where once there were stars all across the firmament, now there is only blackness. That void carries a memory of stars, of the way you once felt them guide you … perhaps you even remember, before it has happened, a time when, lost in the night's sky on a training run, you feared you would not survive your flight, and only upon finding the Dipper, its pointing you to the North Star, were you able to make it back to base. Only now the night is black, and all along, that pink urban shelter you were confined to kept you from knowing that for all those years, the stars were fading from the sky. And you remember a time when you dropped bombs on cities, destroying them beyond resurrection, and all you could see below you were clouds. While you might have known but not understood that you were destroying what lay below you, now there aren't even stars above.

14.

Here's one thing I learned from reading with Mrs. Goldring before I took my leave of her daughter: When Hamlet asks Yorick how long a body lies in the ground before it rots, the first clown replies, “… eight year or nine year. A tanner will last you nine year.” When Hamlet asks, “Why he more than another?” the response comes this way: “Why, sir, his hide is so tanned with his trade that it will keep out water a great while, and your water is a sore decayer of your whoreson dead body.”

Was my father a difficult Jew to kill, to bury, to cremate? Had his skin so toughened that even once the life was snuffed from him, he wouldn't cede his toehold on this craggy wall, his thick, tanned hide failing to succumb to the flames of the crematorium where he was kilned? Was his death different if he proved a tough Jew to burn?

After the war I read many of the books that were written during those times. I was later to gain mastery over the Shakespeare plays I had only begun to read with Mrs. Goldring in those days before I left for flight training, enough to teach those plays to interested students. Before that I read the histories of our times, the modernist literature produced during my youth. T. S. Eliot, as I say, had himself been a fire watcher during those days of the Blitz, and I read every word of his “Little Gidding,” which will always evoke those days for me.

After the war ended—long after I'd decided to drop bombs of my own on Germany, to fight a war thrust upon me that the side I was on was now winning—I learned that John Milton's bones were vaporized on the last major Luftwaffe offensive of 1940, the night Clive Pillsbury and I met Glynnis Goldring. We never saw those bones, just as I never saw my parents' remains or the obsequies for them. I didn't even know what had become of Françoise. But that very same night Milton's bones were done away with, before that final pub where Clive and I went with Glynnis, we had just passed a cemetery when I felt compelled to return to it. I wanted to make sure I'd seen what I thought I'd seen. I got down on one knee and picked it up. Shaken loose of its rest, and lying upon the grass, was a dirt-encrusted bone. A femur. A human femur.

If you wrong us, shall we not revenge?

The Germans were going to kill even our dead unless we were to do something about it.

15.

Those late days of the Blitz, my hunger to engage German soldiers gained full purchase over my mind. Glynnis and I would meet in the evenings and engage in a particular kind of intimacy—and even for the pleasure she brought me, even knowing I was in love with her, it was as if that love appeared to me through a newfound scrim. I longed to join up more than before.

“What is it, Poxl?” Glynnis would say as we lay in the half-light of her kerosene lamp.

“What is it?”

“Yes! Yes. You aren't looking at me. You don't look at me.”

I stared at the ceiling. Then I did look at her.

“It's what I've said before,” I said. “It's fine being a squaddie. But they need to put me to use. If I could just get in a plane, I could be of use.”

Glynnis lay back and she did not say aloud that my joining up, should it happen, would mean we would see each other less—and who knew the consequence beyond that. If ever there was a moment to tell her about Françoise, about my parents, this was it, and looking back now I can see it might have changed things, might at least have given her a sense of what was on my mind. I cannot say exactly why I did not tell her. I can only say that I didn't. No matter what had changed in me, when I looked at her, in that moment, I couldn't deny she was wonderful to look at. The way her plump cheeks pressed up against mine was almost enough to draw from me a confession of my letter from that Czech foreman. An explanation of my keeping from taking trips to the cave. A confession of nights out alone drinking. A divulgence of my time in Rotterdam that could have helped me see what I'd done in leaving.

Almost.

Regardless, when Glynnis asked me to go to the cave with her I now refused—for reasons that actually had nothing to do with her and everything to do with her mother, I did not make another trip east with her. I did not talk to her about my parents, and I would not. At Corbett's Passage, my bunk was too hard. Back in Bermondsey the ceiling was too low, too close to us. The tiptoe of shadow touched and lifted up there.

“It's nothing,” I said when she asked, over and over again, what was wrong, and I made her believe me.

16.

Every day I went to Southwark to attempt to enlist in the RAF.

Luftwaffe bomb on Rotterdam; I was gone.

Luftwaffe bomb in the East End; cousin Johana's Briton had been done in.

What was there to do?

What there was for me to do was to fly a plane and take out the Luftwaffe myself.

I tried to impress upon the recruiters at RAF reception that even given the faults they perceived in my English, I had experience flying planes with my father at his aero club outside of Prague. I was twenty-one and desperate; I was a Jew looking to kill Nazis. I would be most effective killing Nazis in an aeroplane fitted with Browning guns and blockbuster bombs. Early on, I received only a strong endorsement of my work in the rescue squad (more pat on the head than pat on the back) and a nebulous invitation to try back sometime later.

Then Clive was inducted into the RAF. It was early fall, fully a year since the Blitz had begun. By this time he was seeing my cousin Niny only once every couple weeks. Although Clive wasn't deemed fit to have joined early on in the war, we began to hear on the radio that Bomber Harris was ramping up a full-scale retaliation for the Blitz, that Bomber Command was building bombers and fighters faster than they could sign up young men to crash them. Clive arrived at Niny's flat to say he was to enter pilot training the following day. He and Niny hadn't consummated their relationship, hadn't brought it past a flirtation, the early stages of courtship.

Now it was a courtship ended.

He didn't even look at her as he left the flat—his obsessive personality was focused on his new path. This was how relationships might begin and end at that point in our lives: One kind of man might, in the moment before he was to leave for assignment, motor around the countryside with his woman, and though they'd only known each other for a matter of months, ask her to marry him.

Clive was very much not that kind of man.

Two months later, a change at 10 Downing in the laws pertaining to the employment of nonnaturalized citizens flying for the Royal Air Force made it so I was accepted as well. Should I be shot down over the Reich, I wouldn't be long for the world. I wouldn't be protected by any POW laws, a Czechoslovak Jew flying for the RAF.

“So, young chap, keeping this name Leopold Weisberg on your passport won't do,” the inception officer told me. What name should I take instead? “Peter West is more appropriately a British name for a pilot in the RAF, don't you guess?”

So though I would never in my life have anyone call me Peter, I took West as my new surname. If they had to call me Poxl West—if this would allow me to pilot Spitfires and engage in battle with Luftwaffe Junkers and Messerschmitts—then this is what they would call me.

With a new name and my knowledge of planes from my time with my father in an airstrip outside of Prague, I enlisted. I went down to Guy's Hospital to tell Glynnis of the news. I found her at her bed checks.

“What is it, Poxl?” Glynnis said.

“I've finally gotten it,” I said.

She tapped at a saline drip attached to a man's arm. On the windowsill behind that bed was a single hollyhock stalk, with three carmine blossoms pointing in three different directions. Hollyhocks do not give off an aroma. Glynnis did not hold my eyes with hers. The only smell in the room was the smell of iodine.

I was so elated in that moment of being accepted to flight training I'd not given real thought to how Glynnis would take it. She looked up from the serum dripping through the line she was fixing and I saw that tears wet her face. A black ant was crawling around the green stalk behind that hollyhock bloom.

“Careful to fly well up there,” Glynnis said. The ant crawled around that hollyhock stalk. I couldn't bear to look at it. I raised my eyes to the red blossom. “What will become of me down here? You in the air. Me underground with Mother.”

“You'll go about your nursing,” I said. “London is safer now. Perhaps Mrs. Goldring will even come home.”

“That's not what I mean,” she said.

I would be back on weekend leave when I could. I would write letters. For so long I'd known only that I longed to leave. That old muscle memory. Now in the moment of leaving it felt as if some space had opened up beneath my feet. I must plant them more firmly on the ground. With the carmine of that hollyhock and my elation I felt the immediacy of a desire for Glynnis I'd not felt in months.

“When I return,” I said, “we'll talk of marriage.”

For the first time Glynnis's eyes caught mine. Saline dripped in the intravenous line behind her. In my peripheral vision I saw the black ant crawl up until it achieved the very inside of that hollyhock blossom.

“I don't know if I need that much,” Glynnis said. “Just.”

Then she reached up and pressed those kiln-hot cheeks against mine until they baked into kisses.

 

Acknowledgment: Second Interlude

After years of my peace-loving life, now I was fifteen years old and interested only in war. It was the spring of 1986, barely a decade since the end of Vietnam. That one—and Korea, too—were between us and what we understood to be the morally unambiguous days of World War II. Dovish was really the only mode for us then, Bostonian or otherwise. Teenage or otherwise.

I spent hours in the library at our public school looking for books about the British military and Eastern Europe during the war—books I read, books I thumbed through, all to fill the void Poxl West had now left in my life. Military histories by John Keegan that were too dry and martial to keep my teenage interest. Narratives by Elie Wiesel and Primo Levi that elicited only bile from me at the time. These books contained stories, but not the stories my uncle Poxl had to tell. Somehow even they, in their dour precision and moribund facts, couldn't touch the tales of sexual impropriety and reckless aviation Poxl told. He hadn't been forced into victimhood, didn't need to be called survivor—he had flown his way right into the attack against that awful German force. More often than not I found myself flipping to the back to look at lists of names in their end pages: acknowledgments of relatives long dead, lists of names whose thick Ashkenazi sounds carried no meaning to me.

During that same time I found that the things that had once floated me on the weekdays between my outings with Poxl were somehow lacking in buoyancy in comparison with what little I could dredge up on his time at war. Now for the first time I had Poxl's book—but not Poxl. The absence was almost tangible. As I sat and watched the best team the Bruins had fielded in years win game after game, even on the most perfect full-ice pass from Ray Bourque to Cam Neely, I could hardly get excited. My team appeared good enough to head for the Stanley Cup for the second year in a row, but my uncle Poxl wasn't there to take me to the MFA or the opera, to distract me from the things I felt I loved more—so he distracted me from afar. He stole my concentration from anything that didn't pertain to him with his absence and his successes. He'd promised to send me a copy of his book, signed, and I still didn't have a copy personalized by him. He'd promised to take me down to New York City and show me something more, and I hadn't yet seen it. For years he'd had me, but he hadn't published the book he always longed to publish; now he'd published a book, and it was as if he'd flown from me, too. My football team had been to the Super Bowl, and even the prospect of a second championship for one of our town's teams that year didn't carry the same weight it once had. The Celtics, too, had fielded their strongest team in years, and the Red Sox, with Roger Clemens and Wade Boggs, seemed as if they might be bound for a World Series themselves. Never before were our teams so stacked with players: McHale and Parish, Rice and Evans, Fryar and Marion.

All I wanted was my uncle Poxl back.

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