Ursula Hegi The Burgdorf Cycle Boxed Set: Floating in My Mother's Palm, Stones from the River, The Vision of Emma Blau. Children and Fire (60 page)

“Let her go. Please,” Trudi pleaded.

The arrest was crisp, efficient, and Frau Simon vanished into the dark car as if swallowed by it. “Lock the store, Trudi,” she screamed as they drove off with her. “And make sure to—”

Noon light blinded Trudi as she stood on the sidewalk, alone. She was overcome by a sense of having to be careful. Extremely careful. Only by chance had she been allowed to stay behind. She felt relieved and, instantly, guilty because of that relief. From a house across the street drifted the smell of boiling turnips; she couldn’t understand how anyone could possibly bear to eat.

Inside Frau Simon’s shop, dazzling, colorful hats were displayed on curved stands, always at angles that showed off their most intriguing features; yet, now their feather and lace decorations seemed frivolous. Trudi didn’t know why she took off her new hat and reached into the display window for the red hat she’d admired earlier. As if watching herself from a place far away, she set it on her head and—ever so
slowly—walked to the pyramid-shaped mirror that was set up on a table in the center of the long shop. But what her reflection gave her was the shame in her eyes. The roots of her hair began to ache, and she yanked off the red hat and replaced it on its stand, glancing around to make sure no one had watched her. But only the hats surrounded her, gaudy like carousel horses after the last ride of the summer, and she wouldn’t have been surprised at all if, suddenly, they’d begun to swirl around her, propelled by the tinny wail of a barrel organ.

“You were foolish, Trudi,” Frau Abramowitz scolded her that evening when a small group of neighbors gathered in the Abramowitz living room with the drapes closed.

Four standing lamps, their shades covered with flowered fabric that matched the sofa, cast amber rings of light against the wallpaper. The table was covered with a lace cloth, and Frau Abramowitz had made black tea and baked
Streuselkuchen.

“So foolish … They could have taken you, too.” The fine creases in her face had not deepened with the years—her skin still looked like expensive crushed silk, as though she’d barely aged after those early wrinkles had taken their tender hold.

“We can’t just let them take Frau Simon like that,” Trudi protested.

“There are other ways,” her father said.

“They don’t work, those other ways,” Frau Weiler said. “You know they don’t work, Leo.”

“Hedwig is right.” Herr Abramowitz picked up the cake knife, and his diamond cufflinks flashed in the light. “I’ve been saying this for years. And I’m prepared to tell this to our beloved Führer—that is, if he ever lets me get close enough to him.”

Frau Weiler nodded excitedly, splotches of red blooming on her cheeks.

“We shouldn’t be here,” Herr Blau told his wife, who sat next to him on the deep sofa, hands folded on her starched apron.

“Michel,” Frau Abramowitz pleaded. “You don’t know what you are saying.” Her fingers busied themselves, rearranging the bouquet of pussy willows on the table.

“I am not saying anything, Ilse. I am cutting the cake. Watch me.”

“You’re always doing it—discussing for the sake of discussion, shining with words, outdazzling.”

Leo Montag limped to the drapes and made sure the windows were
closed. He had brought Emil Hesping, who’d arrived at the pay-library soon after Trudi had rushed home with news of Frau Simon’s arrest, and the three of them had returned to the milliner’s building. With Emil’s key, they’d opened her apartment and packed her jewelry, silver wine cups, and most of her clothes into boxes, which were now stored at the pay-library.

Except for greetings, Herr Hesping hadn’t spoken since they’d arrived at the Abramowitzs’ house. His lips set in a half-smile, he’d been leaning against the door frame, but now he loosened himself from the smooth wood and stepped next to Michel Abramowitz.

“If you manage to get close to our Führer, a cake knife won’t do.”

“It is not safe listening to this. Not safe.” Herr Blau tried to raise himself from the sofa, his veined hands clawing the air as if reaching for some invisible hold. “For any of us. We better get home.”

“Have some
Streuselkuchen
, Herr Blau.” Emil Hesping pressed a flowered plate with a piece of cake into the old man’s hands.

But the tailor shook his head and managed to stand up. “I did not hear a thing.” His false teeth were clicking. “Don’t worry. Good-bye Herr Abramowitz. Good-bye Frau Abramowitz. Thank you for a lovely—”

“Oh, sit down, Martin.” His wife grasped the back of his suspenders and pulled him back.

He sank into the soft cushions, muttering to himself.

“That is a lovely necklace,” Emil Hesping said to Frau Blau.

She smiled like a young girl as she touched the drop of amber that trapped a pale, tiny crab. “It’s from the North Sea … nearly a century old.”

“Remember, we’re here to talk about Frau Simon,” Leo said.

The others turned toward his calm voice. One hand on the damask drapes, he scanned the sidewalk through the gap. His curly hair was completely silver-white now, giving him the same coloring as Trudi. Her mother’s hair had been black, and sometimes, when she searched in one of her mirrors for a trace of her mother in herself, she couldn’t locate any evidence—as if her mother had vanished and Trudi had become entirely her father’s daughter. It usually made her buy yet another mirror with a gold frame, the kind her mother would have chosen.

“We need to agree,” her father said, “that whatever we talk about in here—even if it happens to be rash or thoughtless—” He raised one
eyebrow and glanced at Herr Abramowitz, then at his friend, Emil, “—won’t leave this room.”

“Agreed,” Michel Abramowitz said quickly.

Emil Hesping nodded.

Herr Blau adjusted his glasses and peered at the faces around him as if to make sure no one had taken offense and would turn all of them in. “As long as I don’t have to listen to any inappropriate comments about Herr Hitler.”

“You don’t like him either,” his wife reminded him.

“Flora!” He glared at her. “First of all that was a joke, and second it was told in the privacy of our—” he stammered, “—just before we went to sleep.”

“You said the man isn’t fit to hang wallpaper in this country and—”

“I did not.”

“—and that the articles in the
Stürmer
are getting crazier. All that hate …”

“I don’t even look at that paper.”

She turned her eyes toward the ceiling as if to call upon the saints to witness his lies.

“The only comment I made about Herr Hitler referred to his—his background as—as an Austrian paperhanger.… It is a very respectable trade.”

“That is one of the kindest things anyone could say about our Führer.” Emil Hesping gave a funny little bow in Herr Blau’s direction. “I am overwhelmed by your generosity.”

Trudi remembered the last time Emil Hesping had talked with her and her father about the Führer. A devious man, he had called him. An evil man. A sentimental man.

Hitler ist ein Schwein
—Hitler is a pig—someone had painted on the brick wall of the school, and the police had ordered two nuns to wash it off. “So they want to be heroes,” one of the nuns had grumbled, “but what they forget is that someone has to clean up after them—usually the women.”

Herr Hesping cleared his throat. “I heard that Frau Simon was taken to Düsseldorf. For questioning.”

“Who told you?” Frau Weiler wanted to know.

“Someone in the SS who knows.”

“And you won’t tell us?”

“I can’t, Hedwig.”

“How can you have SS friends and be loyal to Frau Simon?”

“Some people don’t understand the complexity of loyalty.”

“The price of loyalty,” she snapped. “When they held me in jail four years ago, I did not compromise one single belief.”

“Times have changed since then.”

“I refused to lie. Of course there were things I didn’t volunteer. If they didn’t ask me the right questions, that certainly was their problem.”

“Wouldn’t you lie to save someone’s life?” Trudi asked.

“How could I?”

“How could you not?”

“Trudi.” Herr Hesping touched her arm. “We’re not even talking about a situation where that’s needed.”

“But we must know that about each other.”

“It may never be necessary.”

“I won’t let anyone force me into lying.” Frau Weiler’s eyes glistened the way Ingrid’s eyes did when she talked about martyrs. Ingrid was nearly finished with her studies to become a teacher, and during the past year Trudi had seen less of her.

“Let it rest, Hedwig—please,” Leo Montag said.

“It seems Herr Heidenreich has been doing some quiet damage,” Emil Hesping said. “Informing.”

“Kurt Heidenreich?” Herr Blau shook his head. “But we always talk, and he never—” He clasped one veined hand across his mouth. “I hope I can remember everything I’ve told him.”

“Let’s rather hope that he forgot,” Michel Abramowitz said.

“I heard that he refused to stuff Frau Kaminsky’s parrot,” Trudi said, “but he didn’t tell her until she came to pick it up. It was rotting, too late to take to the taxidermist in Krefeld. She had to bury it.”

“Let’s talk about what we can do to to help Frau Simon,” Leo Montag said.

“Any suggestions?” Frau Blau asked.

Michel Abramowitz hesitated. “I’ll make some inquiries.”

“That may not be good for her or for you.” Leo Montag spoke slowly. “You know me, Michel, and this is hard to say, but—”

“She needs a good lawyer who’s not a Jew, right?”

Leo flinched. “In this country—now … Yes. Unfortunately.”

“Or a Communist,” Herr Blau reminded him.

“That was so long ago,” Frau Blau said.

Herr Abramowitz raised his chin and stared at the piano with the silver-framed photos of his children, dating from infancy to three years earlier when his son, Albert, had left for Argentina after many attempts to persuade his parents and sister to join him. We weren’t ready then, Herr Abramowitz thought. We waited too long. And Ruth still wasn’t ready to go without her husband. But he and Ilse had finally agreed to let Albert help. How he hated the waiting, the uncertainty. Nearly half of the Jewish community in Germany, which had numbered five hundred thousand in 1933, had already left the country. But for those who hadn’t, it was becoming harder and harder to find a place that would take them. Even Palestine was no longer an option. Because of Arab objections, the British had restricted immigration into Palestine, hindering what had once looked like a workable agreement between the Palestinian Zionist Organization and the Nazis: to keep Jewish wealth in a fund in Germany, which was to be used for buying German exports to Palestine, while the Zionists were to take care of Jewish immigrants.

And other nations, including the United States, severely restricted Jewish immigration. Nobody wants impoverished Jews, Herr Abramowitz thought bitterly. There’d be no problem for us if we could take our money out of Germany. The real irony is that we’re still here—not because the Nazis prevent us from leaving—but because we have no place to go.

“At least we have Albert,” he said heavily.

“Michel—” Leo started.

Herr Abramowitz raised one hand to stop him. “I want all of you to know that our families—Ilse’s and mine—have lived in
your
country for many generations. My great-grandfather built this house.… And about finding the right kind of lawyer—I agree with you. I have a colleague, Aryan head to toe, but human inside. He’ll check into what’s happening with Frau Simon.”

“For now, just watch out, all of you,” Emil Hesping warned. “You know how easy it is to get arrested.”

Herr Blau nodded. “I know parents who won’t discuss politics in front of their children. They’re afraid they’ll tell their teachers or Hitler-Jugend leaders—even if they don’t mean to turn their parents in.”

“Some of them mean to,” Leo said.

Emil Hesping nodded. “That’s what the pure German family is all about.”

Suddenly, they all were very quiet. They knew only too well that those who were brave or foolish enough to speak out against the government were made examples of: they were beaten, had their belongings seized, or were sent away. To come to their defense was dangerous. You knew it was safer to pretend not to notice when the police came to your neighbor’s house late at night, to keep your lights off even if you wanted to help, to walk away if one of your friends was pulled aside to be questioned.

“Last week they stuck a priest from Krefeld into the KZ,” Emil Hesping said.

Trudi felt chilled at the mention of
Konzentrationslager
, those camps that were correction centers for so-called “asocials,” for Communists and other political prisoners who didn’t fit in.

She and her father were the last to leave the Abramowitzs’ house, and as they stepped into the night, the stench that the flood had left seemed even harsher than during the day. The clouds—though it was too dark to see them—felt dense and close to the earth as if sheltering the town, infusing it with the deceptive promise of peace.

“If all the people who thought like us …,” Trudi said, “if we all got together—maybe we could stop this.”

“Those points of connection—they’re the weak spots. As soon as we build bridges to others, we’re in danger. That’s when they catch us.”

“I don’t think Herr Blau would tell.”

“He’s a good man, but he’s frightened. You know that people only hear that part of a story they can handle.”

What he said felt true because she’d seen it happen when she’d carried her stories around town. Some people didn’t want to hear all the details. They would ask, but they’d distract themselves with interpretations that had little to do with her stories, yet gave her new material. Some would walk away or change her endings. But that was all right: a story stayed alive that way, shaped and reshaped in each telling, signifying something different to everyone who was affected by it.

“Most of what’s happening we don’t even know.” Her father stopped in front of their door and fidgeted with his keys.

Trudi touched the bark of the chestnut tree. Above her, she felt the
span of its branches, still bare. Soon, buds would burst into leaves and wobbly candle blossoms.

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