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The Bookseller's Sonnets

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by Andi Rosenthal




  The Bookseller’s

  Sonnets

  The Bookseller’s

  Sonnets

  Andi Rosenthal

  Winchester, UK

  Washington, USA

  First published by O-Books, 2010

  O Books is an imprint of John Hunt Publishing Ltd., The Bothy, Deershot Lodge, Park Lane, Ropley,

  Hants, SO24 0BE, UK

  office1@o-books.net

  www.o-books.com

  O Books operates a distinctive and ethical publishing philosophy in

  all areas of its business, from its global network of authors to

  production and worldwide distribution.

  This book is dedicated

  to my family, and to my teachers.

  And to my father, Leo C. Rosenthal (z”l)

  who was both.

  In the things of the soul, remembrance without knowledge

  profits little.

  — St. Thomas More, 1522

  Time trieth truth.

  — St. Thomas More, 1529

  Prologue

  Dust filled her throat as the shovel pierced the dry earth. The bones of her hands ached as she awkwardly lifted another load of crumbling dirt. She looked over her shoulder, making sure no one saw or heard her. As the dirt slid unsteadily from the shovel to the ground, it made a sound like rain. She held her breath. Even that was too loud.

  Aware of her solitude, she listened. These sounds were not new to her; the ringing of metal against the ground, the ragged descending clatter of earth in motion, the echoing-after silence. But then she had been surrounded by others; those whom she loved, those who also mourned. Now she was alone, attending this burial without witnesses. Perhaps, she thought, this is the sound of my own funeral.

  She pressed the shovel close to her body and listened. A hot, unexpected breeze suddenly emerged from the grove of trees behind her. She felt it roam over her face, her arms, the cool cotton of the skirt that clung to her hips.

  Her limbs tightened against the wind’s appraisal of her body; the dead, dry grasses waved, whispered, and were stilled again. Her eyes followed the line of dark trees to the horizon. There was silence and there was sunlight. And yet, she felt a tiny sensation of movement beneath her feet, something coming from the earth itself, a tremor of something about to be born.

  Looking around again, she felt every nerve in her body intent upon the sounds as they vibrated up from the earth. The smooth metal handle of the shovel felt as heavy and solid as bone in her hands. Her eyes flickered from one end of the field to another and back again, a blur of golden wheat, red poppies and cerulean sky. The palms of her hands gripped the metal shaft, poised to dig. The soles of her feet gripped the earth, poised to flee.

  She heard the trucks before she saw them. The sound came out of the distance, muffled by the trees. There was a distant squeal of brakes, a rumble of tires. She silently laid the shovel on the ground and picked up the box, holding it in her arms. For a brief moment she thought about running, but it was already too late. She crouched on the ground, surrounded by the thick stalks, and forced herself to quiet her breathing. The trucks, roaring, came closer; the sounds grew louder, then stopped.

  “Aus! Aus!”

  There was a babble of voices, and then the clipped German orders ringing out above them. She tried to judge how far away they were - A hundred meters? Two hundred? But she knew there was no way of knowing unless she looked, and she knew she could not.

  “Jetzt! Aus! Jetzt!”

  The babble dissipated into a murmur as she listened, feeling the sharp angles of metal digging into her arms, the clasp of the box smooth as silver beneath her fingertips. There was the sound of feet on gravel, punctuated every few seconds by a cry of pain.

  “Anordnung! Jetzt!”

  She closed her eyes and opened them again, but all she could see around her was the golden grass, the earth below, the soft warm blue above. Her mouth was dry, the edges of her lips caked with dust.

  “Anordnung!”

  She heard the feet begin to move, shuffling over the dry ground. A child’s quiet voice, pleading Wo sind wir, Papa? fluttered toward her through the air like birdsong.

  “Nehmen Sie dieses. Grabung.” A single voice, knifelike, repeated the command, over and over like a chant. The only other sound was the sharp bite of metal in the earth, first one and then others, and more shovels joining in like a chorus. She looked over at her own shovel lying on the ground, useless.

  The sound of digging continued for another eternity. Sunlight slanted against the horizon. The metal grew cold in her aching arms. She longed to put the box on the ground. But she did not move.

  “Entfernen sie ihre Kleidung!” The digging stopped, and she heard the murmur of voices rise again. The German voices rang out in the gathering dusk. “Ruhe! Ruhe!” And then a lower, insidious growl.

  “Verachter Juden! ”

  So it is true, she thought. Everything that he said, everything he told me before they took him away. She heard the sound of women crying, the sound of German jeers and laughter. Another thought flashed into her mind: Is he there with them? What if this is his transport? Is he with those people, naked and waiting to die?

  The sun slipped from her line of vision. Her skin grew colder; the box lay like a small dead thing in her arms. She knew there was not much time left.

  Everything inside her told her to look, to raise her dark head above the golden wheat, to search the faceless forms until she saw his lean, familiar body, to listen among the incoherent cries and pleas for the sweetness of his voice.

  I cannot, she told herself. I have to think of my daughter. I cannot risk —

  The shots echoed through the still air. Screams rose into the sky like fire; voices merged into one cry so she could not separate them from one another; and all through the chaos the gunshots, as calm and orderly as marching feet.

  She flinched over and over with the fiery burst of each volley; there was the sudden metallic taste of blood in her mouth where she had bitten her tongue to keep from crying out.

  The sounds continued and then, without warning, grew quieter; now there were fewer voices; now even fewer. She could distinguish them now, one from another. The quiet drone of men’s praying voices was drowned in a storm of bullets. A child, boy or girl, impossible to know, crying for its mother. A young man cursing the Fürher, cursing them all, whose false bravery ended with his crying “Nein, bitte, nein.” Until finally, a singular voice, female, pleading, weeping, was silenced with a blast of gunfire.

  Now she heard the soldiers’ voices, talking quietly at first, then more boisterously. She heard the ringing iron sound of shovels, the soft raining sound of the earth being resettled, and then a quiet hissing sound that she could not identify. After a few moments, a carbolic smell of acid drifted through the grass and into her nostrils. She tasted a burning at the back of her throat; and silently bit down on her fingertips, trying to stop the lurching of her stomach as she fought down the urge to vomit.

  The voices talked easily as they completed their task. Soon she heard the sound of their boots as they walked briskly back to their trucks, and the grind and shift of gears as they drove away into the dusk.

  Light seeped from the sky as she moved, gingerly, her cramped and aching arms finally placing the weight of the box on the cold ground. For a moment she wrapped her arms around her body, holding herself tightly. Her hands gripped her shoulders; she tried to rock herself slightly as if she were a child who had awakened from a nightmare.

  She listened to the sounds of the night. Suddenly out of the silence and distance she thought she could hear a tiny cry, barely audible. With her body she listened for the sound of a human voice, but there
was silence.

  Alone in the field of wheat, with the sounds of the summer evening beginning to whisper through the grass, she pushed herself up, feeling the burning ache in her cold legs and the dank souvenir of sweat sticking to her back. She picked up the shovel and started to dig again, quickly and carelessly, her eyes barely able to see in the gathering darkness.

  Finally, the hole was large enough. She fell to her knees, scrabbling for the box with her hands, feeling around in the dirt and darkness. She placed it into the hole, into the moist dirt that lay below the dry surface of the summer field. The deep, wet earth clung to her hands; in the rising moonlight it looked like blood.

  She stood, picked up the shovel and began to fill in the hole, working as quickly as she could. The moon rose white and cold in the sky. The birds were gone. The wheat stalks scratched at her bare arms and legs.

  When she was finished, she walked back toward the road, the shovel heavy and dull in her tired hands. Just as she reached the edge of the field, she thought she heard the sound again, the barely human cry from the bottom of the pit.

  She told herself was hearing things, that it might even be one of her own cries trapped inside her. The sounds had formed a stone of silence in her mouth. She wondered where he was….if he was; but she could not think of him, she would not let herself think of him. She hurried back toward home, letting herself think of nothing but the sound of the living earth falling quietly upon the gray metal box.

  1

  The apartment was just like dozens, perhaps a hundred other apartments I had visited before, and it was what I had come to expect from the home of a ninety-year-old Holocaust survivor.

  We sat, perched on the rose-patterned linen cushions of an aging sofa, and sipped tea from cups so delicate that I was afraid that mine would disintegrate in my fingertips. Across from me, Mrs. Esther Feinberg, her white curls perfectly set and waved, her blue eyes sparkling with the delight of entertaining a visitor - clutched the small silver spoon in her arthritic fingers.

  “My mother was a strong woman. She had endless energy, even after giving birth to six children. My father was a lawyer, and my mother was what you would refer to in America as a housewife, even though we always had a girl helping us in the house. But my mother was never idle. She was raised to be a good wife, and she always treasured all of the beautiful things in our home.”

  “And this little baby spoon,” she said, the words curling lovingly around the vowels of her slight German accent, “is all that is left. It was the only thing she brought with her into the camps. When we got there the guards took our suitcases, and put them off to the side of the train yard. Then they told us to get in line. My three brothers and two sisters went in one line, my mother and I went in the other. My youngest brother, Motti, he was only three years old. He went holding the hand of my sister Gretel, who was seven. They were so brave. They never even cried. I was fourteen, the oldest. They knew that my mother and I were strong enough to work. And we had worked very hard in those three months since my father had been taken away in a convoy. Because we knew after they came for the men that we didn’t have much time.”

  The pleasantries were over, I thought. It was time to listen to the story that I had come prepared to hear. I placed my teacup in the center of the tiny saucer and rested them on her coffee table, and reached for my notebook, prepared to ask the questions that all of our museum’s curators were trained to ask.

  “Mrs. Feinberg, would you mind terribly if I took some notes on your story? It’s very important to us to know where your artifact comes from and its history.”

  “Of course not.” She smiled warmly.

  I adjusted my glasses, removed the cap from my pen, opened to the next blank page in my notebook. “What was your mother’s name?” I asked, trying to make my voice sound as calming and professional as I could.

  “Miriam,” she replied. “And my father was Chaim, but everyone called him Henry. You see, after a certain time, in the thirties, it was dangerous to be called by a Jewish name. My father wanted my mother to shorten her name to Mary, but of course she refused.”

  I wrote the names in my book. This was something of a slightly unusual story. I had interviewed many survivors who came from Jewish families that had changed their names, either by choice or by force. I loved hearing stories where people had refused to give in.

  “Where in Germany did you live?”

  “We lived in Nuremberg,” she sighed. “We couldn’t have been in a worse place. They made an example of our city. Everything they could do to maintain their laws, their idea of Judenraus –a city that was free of Jews - they did.

  “In the early thirties my mother used to take us to the park, wheeling the youngest baby in the carriage. It was a beautiful English carriage that her parents had given her when I was born.” As she spoke, her eyes seemed to look at something in the distance, far beyond the dining room.

  “There was a day in 1934. It was May, a beautiful spring day. An officer in uniform, wearing the swastika armband, arrested us in the park. He said that my sister Ruthie had stepped on the grass. We were brought to the city jail and held there. I can still remember how the cherry blossoms fluttered from the trees, as my mother was led away in handcuffs, with us children following behind her like ducklings.

  “The magistrate knew us – I told you already that my father was a lawyer, and at that time such things still mattered – so we were allowed to leave after a few hours. But I still remember my mother sitting in the cell, holding the baby, while my sisters and my brother and I sat on benches with real criminals looking at us, watching us. We were so glad to leave. But they never gave back the baby carriage.

  “One day, we were riding in the city trolley – one of the last times we were allowed to do so, before Jews were forbidden to use public transportation. We looked out of the window and saw one of the officers’ wives wheeling her baby in the carriage. It was one of the only times I ever saw my mother cry.”

  She fell silent for a long moment. I cleared my throat a little bit, hating myself for interrupting her memory. “Your spoon,” I said, gesturing to the little piece of silver in her hands. “Your mother was able to smuggle it into the camps?”

  “Yes,” she said, looking down at it. “When we arrived at Dachau, after five days on the train without food, without water, without air or light or space, it became clear that the people who had gotten off the train first were being ordered to leave their suitcases in the trainyard. She took the spoon out of her suitcase pocket and slipped it into the ripped seam of her skirt.

  “It was a miracle that she managed to hold on to it. She told me that it was small enough to hide in her clothes, that she had torn the hem at the bottom of her uniform shirt and hidden it there. She said that during more than one inspection, she would tuck it right under her arm and hold it to her side, praying that she would not be ordered to move and that it would drop to the ground. She saved it because she had fed each of us, for the first time, with this spoon. Each of us had touched it with our lips. She said it was the only thing left of her children’s kisses.”

  I scrawled furiously in my notebook, wishing I had taken my tiny cassette recorder with me instead. “Did your mother survive the war?”

  “For a little while,” she answered. “After the war we went back to Nuremberg, to our old house, which, we realized soon enough, wasn’t our house anymore. We lived in a shelter for a while with twenty or thirty other people who had also returned from the camps. Eventually we got some help from an American organization that was helping survivors to relocate. They said that we could go to Israel or to America. Those same people helped us to find the records of my father, my sisters and brothers.

  “It was two years later when we found out that they were gone. My mother always knew that they were dead. But when we got the letter saying how and when and where they died, something in her seemed to die as well. A few months later, she went to sleep one night and never woke up. She was only forty
-eight years old.”

  I continued writing without looking up. “And you came to America after that,” I concluded, filling the silence. I didn’t want to rush her, but in the tiny, claustrophobic space of that apartment, I suddenly became aware of the sun sinking low in the sky, of the long subway trip back to the museum, of the pain in Esther Feinberg’s voice. I needed only a little more information and hoped that somehow I could get it without launching her into another story. “What year did you arrive?”

  “I came in 1946. Some friends and I made the journey together. We all settled in this neighborhood. I met my husband at the congregation around the corner. He had come from Germany as well, had lost his wife and two sisters and his parents. Only he and his brother survived.”

  She surveyed the room, nodding towards the cabinet in the dining room. “After the war I tried to find what I remembered of our lives in Germany. We traveled all over the world, to auction houses, sale rooms, antique stores, looking for things that I remembered, or thought that I remembered, from our home. The silver, the porcelain, the dishes. All of the things that we were taught to treasure, we taught our children and grandchildren to treasure. I don’t know if any of these things belonged to us, or even if I remember, really, what my mother’s and father’s and grandparents’ beautiful things looked like.

  “But I pretend that they are our family heirlooms, because I am sure that they belonged to someone. Maybe even someone like us, who wasn’t fortunate enough to survive. But for me, I have this spoon,” her voice softened. “Only this spoon.” She smiled, her eyes tired with emotion. “And now it will belong to the museum.”

  I made some final notes, smiled and patted her hand reassuringly. “I promise you, we will take very good care of it. And generations of children will learn from your story. Sometimes children learn more when we let them see, or hold, or touch an object that tells a story, instead of just hearing it by itself.”

 

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