Mischling
Page 28
We had a hatchet, three knives, two pistols, one poison pill meant for Mengele. We had a crust of bread, a bit of sausage, a bouquet of rags to bind our wounds. We had Pearl’s piano key in a bag full of stones. I couldn’t imagine they would be interested in any of this. He looked at the weapons in amusement. I worried not for myself but for Feliks. Run! I mouthed. He did not.
“You two are well armed,” the man observed. “Have you come to kill me?”
“Another,” I declared. “A real Nazi. You are all turning on each other now, yes? We can give you information about his whereabouts. You can make a deal with the Russians, with the Americans. Can’t you? And maybe, in exchange, you will let us go and give us back our weapons? This person—he would be a fine capture for you. He’s better than Himmler. Bigger than Goebbels. Greater than Hitler himself—”
“Josef Mengele,” Feliks interrupted, breathless. “She is talking about Josef Mengele.”
Not a single reverberation attached itself to his voice. Even echoes, it seemed, were not on our side that day, though they lent themselves freely to the soldier, who was inspecting our weapons, turning them over with metallic clinks that repeated themselves through the salty halls.
“We can tell you where he is—just let us go,” I pleaded. “Anyone who captures him—they will be heroes. He is a prize—after what he has done, the whole world will want him.”
But the soldier was unimpressed with this little speech. He was more interested in pointing one of our pistols at us. We watched the eye of the pistol waver in its focus. He shifted it back and forth. First Feliks. Then me. As if the pistol alone could decide. And then it chose Feliks—he leveled the muzzle at my friend.
My friend, with all his many vulnerabilities and braveries, the one who was now the root of my many dreams, the one who could tame a winter and lessen hundreds of miles and make sorrow eat from the palm of his hand. My brother. My twin. I knew I’d need Feliks all my life. I wanted to watch him grow and be a boy for all time, even as he shifted into an adult. I wanted to see the hair drift from his head as my own turned gray, I wanted to get him a new set of teeth so he could chew someday, and if he still couldn’t chew, then I guess I’d continue to chew for him. When I looked at Feliks, my vision was only good.
I stepped in front of Feliks in hopes of absorbing this bullet. A bullet couldn’t hurt me. But Feliks didn’t know this. He pushed me aside. The soldier nodded the barrel of our pistol at us.
“The two of you—strip.”
So it was that we shed the skins of Bear and Jackal, the outer layers that had protected us from night and winter and any misgivings about the nature of our true strengths. The bravado on loan from these predators—now it was gone. What an ache it was to watch the plush warmth of our borrowed skins fall into enemy hands! My dress followed, and then my two sweaters. I stood, feebly covering myself once again, and my body, it remembered everything for me, it took on Pearl’s duty of the past, and it pointed out the march of needle pricks down my arms. I looked up at the ceiling of the salt mine because I could not look at myself or at Feliks. I knew that he was likely overcome by gooseflesh, that perhaps he’d wet himself in fear, and I heard him sniffle. When Feliks slipped off his pants, the soldier laughed at his tail and teased its tip with the butt of his rifle.
I wondered if this soldier knew Taube, if he had heard of the guard’s merciful act and was determined to correct the situation. Because he did not show any sign of sparing us. Taube, he had done so in a moment of insanity and confusion; he had taken his boot from my back. But this soldier was not confused as to what to do with us.
“Who said you could keep your shoes?” he barked at me. “Socks too,” he added.
My poison pill was in my left sock. I thought of what the avengers would have done, and so as I bent to unroll the woolen sock, I extracted that ampule and slipped it into my mouth. I carried it neatly in the pocket between jaw and cheek.
And as we stood so bare, in the distance, I could see pieces of Horse’s pelt, scattered like a torn blanket. How had I let Horse carry me for so long without noticing that he was piano-white, like the piano in Pearl’s film? My good eye reported this fact, and curiously, for the first time since Mengele’s drop entered my vision, my bad eye agreed. Its traditional veil of blackness had lifted. Both eyes were able to see the same white. There was no variation in it, no shades of gray, not a single suggestion of ambiguity. All was too clear.
This is what I saw: The soldier was touching all that I had left of my sister. Pearl’s key. He’d taken it up from the sack, regarded it without interest, and then allowed it to slip from his fingers.
I could not let that piano key fall; I could not let it meet this dust. Pearl was dead, and that was my fault. But this—if I could not catch a key, I thought, I deserved all I’d been dealt. So I made a naked dash to catch it and threw myself at the soldier’s feet, and it was such a glory having it in my hands, I wept with happiness even as he gave me a kick in the ribs. And then another. And another. I felt the little poison pill stammer between my teeth, the ampule’s walls threatening to cave at the point of my canine. In my hand, there was my sister’s life, and in my mouth, there was Mengele’s death.
Even in that moment, I knew which one meant more.
I heard a shot ring out, and I presumed myself wounded. But it was not me; it would never be me who was truly at risk. I watched Feliks stumble back, watched him forget to hide his nakedness through the pain. I saw him clutch his shoulder, clapping tight a brimming wound.
I looked at Feliks and I looked at the soldier, and I’ll confess to this madness—for a minute I thought I saw not the deserter but the doctor, the Angel of Death, standing there, the evils of his experiments so great that he could no longer live on the surface of the earth.
I wish I could blame this on the depths of the salt mine, whose dimensions were known to make people see ghosts and specters and illusions of all kinds. But the fault was with me. I wish, too, that I alone were visited by such a delusion, but so many, year after year, decade after decade, would find themselves followed by this same face. They wouldn’t be children anymore and they wouldn’t be prisoners either, but always, there would be the sense of his gaze, the prospect of his inspection. How many ways might he disguise himself? we’d wonder. And the world would look at us as if we were mad.
There in the salt mine, I was so sure that I saw him.
And the illusion shattered only when I took in the circularity of Feliks’s injury. Mengele would not hurt us like that; he had more profitable and efficient ways to damage us. His brutality was too studious and elegant to leave Feliks bleeding from the shoulder, such a coarse and ineffective wound that contributed nothing to the advancement of his science.
The soldier took aim once more, but already we were fleeing; we tripped up the stairs, our speed quickened by the fact that the soldier who was following us appeared to be nearly blind with spite as he stumbled upon the stairs. I saw his boot slip and his face strike the wooden slats, and I paused too long to study his stupor and his tumble, his body thudding like a toy as it fell. It was as if I believed that in watching the descent of our enemy, all could be reversed—the trains would change direction on their tracks, the numbers would erase themselves, the point of the needle would never know my vein.
Even with a flesh wound, my friend was faster than I; he knew enough to lean his stunned body into mine as we fled up the stairs, he knew that I needed more to urge me on from the death of Horse. Yet again, they had killed a loved one, they had robbed us, left us defenseless. I felt no victory in evading that grasp. I could hardly see the point in continuing. If that poison pill would have ended me, I would have swallowed it with joy.
“Look,” Feliks said with a gasp, and he lifted a tremulous finger to the sky. A dozen people were falling from it. We didn’t know if they were friend or foe, but they had the clouds of a waning winter at their backs. My friend had the gleam of a bullet burrow at his shoulder, and yet this
is what he saw. I watched his pained face marvel at their flight—the drifting freedom of it—and long for the same.
But what we had, it was only on this troubled and accursed soil. I had the poison pill in the pocket between my teeth and jaw, still intact and full of promise. The rest that we’d collected in our quest—gone.
Farewell, Horse. Our beloved. You were more innocent than Pearl on the day we were born. You were better than the best parts of us. You were who I wished the world could be.
Farewell, hatchet and pistol and three precious knives. You were fiercer and deadlier and sharper than I could ever be.
So long, fur coats. Farewell, Bear. Farewell, Jackal. You made us fearsome and possible, you vaunted us into the Classification of Living Things in a performance that I could not execute alone. In you, we became predatory in the way a survivor sometimes needs to be.
So stripped, I pressed forward in the snow, my friend draped across my side, and I dragged him toward the mercy of a row of cottages in the distance; we stumbled forth, hoping for relief, for someone to dress our nakedness and heal our wounds, while men parachuted above, so light and free. I shook my fist at them in envy. I gave them a reckless cry, not caring who might hear me and repossess my body once more. It had been taken from Pearl and me so many times already, I could not care anymore.
“Stasha,” Feliks begged, “I see that you will die soon if you continue this way.”
It was prophecy, warning, love.
Oh, that I could be a girl who needed to heed it!
Pearl
Chapter Twenty
The Flights
From our window at the hospital, I saw them, adrift in the sky like the spores of a dandelion. Parachutists—I counted twelve in number, afloat through our evening, on the edge of Krakow.
“Do you know who they are?” I asked Miri. I turned from the window and maneuvered my crutches so I could face her. I asked her who the parachutists were coming for, why they used that method. Miri said it was hard enough to tell, even up close, if someone had good intentions, but she’d been told that many in the Jewish underground used this method of travel in the transport of goods and secrets and weapons.
I did not get to watch the parachutists land—they floated down to a location beyond my eye’s reach—but three days later, I would see a reconfiguration of the white silks that had bloomed above them, their soft lengths having fallen into the hands of a seamstress. Now, a bride glided down the streets; she drifted across the cobblestones toward the chuppah in this ruched wartime splendor, the parachute silks draped into a filmy bodice, the train wisping behind her like mist. The two mothers joined her; they led her beneath the lace. If you put your head out the window, you could hear the celebration. The bride circling the groom. The seven blessings. A shatter of glass sang out.
“There are weddings still?” I said in awe.
Miri rose from her bed and came to the open window to watch with me, to cock her ear and listen. She put her arm around me.
“There are weddings still,” she said, a catch in her voice. “And I don’t know why I am so surprised.”
One ceremony, and then another.
In the abandoned house, when I had thought Miri was leaving the world, I’d felt as if I were in a different kind of cage. My hands didn’t work and my vision blurred. All became distant and impossible. I didn’t even consider my crutches as I stumbled out to the street in search of help. My voice moved far better than I could, and my cries drew the neighbors from their homes. Jakub, the giver of onions, our Krakow host, was among them. His was the only face I knew and trusted. I pointed to the open door and watched as he dashed inside.
I knew he would carry her out. But I didn’t want to see her state. I didn’t look. Not even as Jakub put Miri in an ambulance and placed me beside her. I did not open my eyes until we came to the hospital. I saw her look away from the nurses and the patients both—though they’d seen many with her affliction, she remained ashamed of it, and her shame did not lift as she was tended to and her vitals were taken and she was given a bed. She refused to lie in that bed; she just perched on the edge and studied the curtain that divided the room, and there she remained until a nurse showed Jakub inside.
His entrance was unusually formal; he gave a little bow at the door—it was as if he thought an extreme politesse might conceal his worry, though from my perspective, it only announced an attachment to the doctor. He looked about the room as if he’d never seen the inside of a hospital before, and then he asked me to give them some privacy. I did, in a way. I ducked behind the curtain that divided the room, and there, behind its cover, I still heard everything.
Jakub drew a chair next to the hospital bed and sat beside Miri’s hunched form. He did not sigh or speak; he didn’t even whisper. In his silence, there was a loss, a too-bright and borderless thing, a loss that understood: the survivor’s hour is different from any other; its every minute answers to a history that won’t be changed or restored or made bearable. Recognizing Jakub’s loss, Miri spoke of her own.
“My husband,” she murmured. “He didn’t survive three days in the ghetto. Shot in the street.”
I peered around the curtain’s edge. The room was dim, but Miri’s face was half bathed in lamplight.
“My sisters, both lost to me. Orli, dead, months after our arrival. Ibi, dispatched to the Puff. But before they were lost—he made me take their wombs myself.”
She looked to Jakub, as if awaiting a response. None came. Jakub bowed his head.
“Of course, mine was not spared either. But I could not mourn it. I was too busy mourning my children. My Noemi, my Daniel. How many times have I wished that they were closer in years so that I might have told Mengele they were twins? In my dreams, I close that gap of time between them, I make them passable as twins. But when I wake, I know this was impossible, and I console myself with this: at least my children will never know what their mother did in Auschwitz.” And here her voice began to slip away from her, as if it had become untethered from her thoughts.
Jakub tried to tell her that in a place where good wasn’t permitted to exist, she had nonetheless enabled it. In a place that asked her to be brutal, she brought only kindness, a comfort to the dying, a defiant hope that crept—
But she would not hear it. The mothers, she said—she’d tried to keep the mothers alive, that was the logic of her acts.
So many more would have died without you, Jakub insisted, but my guardian drew only bitterness from this, a bitterness that plunged her into the unspeakable.
“A pregnant Jewess,” she said. “Little offended him more. I told the mothers, ‘If you and your baby are discovered, you will not be shot; no, you will not go to the gas. Such ends are considered too gentle for you. If your pregnancy is known to Mengele, you will become research and entertainment both, he will take you to his table, and, with his instruments, he will dissect, bit by bit, he will push you toward death. And as he kills you, he will force you to watch your baby become his experiment. For Mengele, such savagery is a treasured opportunity—as soon as he learns of a pregnancy, he places bets with the guards about the gender of the child, and they plot its death accordingly. If it is a girl, they’ll say, we will throw her to the dogs. But if it is a boy, we will crush his skull beneath the wheels of a car. These are only some of the brutalities I can speak of. They are too innumerable and varied, so grotesque—I do not have the words. What I know for certain: the only true delivery he knows is that of misery. For every mother and child, he invents a new murder—in Auschwitz, one need not even be born to experience torture.’”
She closed her eyes as if to shroud the memory. But it would not be shrouded. Opening her eyes, she looked squarely at Jakub with the air of one who can only confess.
“So many times, to save a mother’s life—I had to act swiftly, on the floors of filthy barracks, with dull, rusty instruments, and nothing to ease her pain. Alone, I pulled the life from her—my hands bare, bloodied—and I told myself
, through the mother’s screams, and my own, stifled tears, You are sparing this soul, this baby, the greatest of tortures. And when it was over—oh, it was never over!—but I would speak to the mother, I’d say, ‘Your child is dead, but look, you are strong, you still live, and now there will be a chance, someday, when the world welcomes us back into its wonder, you will have another.’ Each time I said this, it was not just for them—it was for me too. The grief was not mine, and yet all I knew was grief! So many little futures—I ended them before he could torment and end them, to enable other futures. And still, myself I cannot forgive.”
Miri’s hands fluttered to her face—she did not permit us to see her expression. But we knew she did not want her own future at all.
Jakub looked as if he had witnessed the events she’d described. His face grayed, as if struck by illness, and he struggled to compose himself. He tried to tell her that he knew what it could mean to save a life. That cost, he said, was unending, because in choosing who could be saved, he had also chosen who could not be saved. In failing these lives, he’d selected the color of these deaths, their scents, their violences. Every day, he murmured, he had to save his own life, even as he’d failed the most vibrant, dearest one, the one he’d wanted to save most.
And then he must have found himself unable to say anything at all, because he pulled the curtain back and led me to my guardian’s side. She would not look at me, but she drew me close, she held me tight, and as she wept, I wondered if anyone else, the whole world over, could boast a stronger embrace.