Serendipity's Footsteps
Page 1
THIS IS A BORZOI BOOK PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF
This is a work of fiction. All incidents and dialogue, and all characters with the exception of some well-known historical and public figures, are products of the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Where real-life historical or public figures appear, the situations, incidents, and dialogues concerning those persons are fictional and are not intended to depict actual events or to change the fictional nature of the work. In all other respects, any resemblance to persons living or dead is entirely coincidental.
Text copyright © 2015 by Suzanne Nelson
Cover photographs: (boots) copyright © 2015 by CollaborationJS/Arcangel Images; (sneakers) copyright © 2015 by Gary Isaacs/Trevillion Images; (girl) copyright © 2015 by Lee Avison/Trevillion Images
“A Load of Shoes” reproduced from The Literature of Destruction: Jewish Responses to Catastrophe, edited by David G. Roskies, by permission of the University of Nebraska Press. English translation copyright © 1989 by the Jewish Publication Society.
Permission to reprint the excerpt was also granted by David G. Roskies.
All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.
Knopf, Borzoi Books, and the colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Nelson, Suzanne.
Serendipity’s footsteps / Suzanne Nelson. — First edition.
p. cm.
Summary: “One special pair of shoes, crafted in Germany just before the Nazis came to power, makes its way through time and around the world to connect a string of owners.”—Provided by publisher. Includes historical notes about Nazi Germany, Down Syndrome, and shoes.
ISBN 978-0-385-39212-9 (trade) — ISBN 978-0-385-39213-6 (lib. bdg.) — ISBN 978-0-385-39214-3 (ebook)
1. Shoes—Fiction. 2. Interpersonal relations—Fiction. 3. Runaways—Fiction. 4. Down syndrome–Fiction. 5. People with mental disabilities—Fiction. 6. Orphans—Fiction. 7. Jews—Germany—History—1933–1945—Fiction. 8. Concentration camps—Fiction. 9. Germany—History—1933–1945—Fiction. 10. New York (N.Y.)—Fiction.
I. Title.
PZ7.N43765 Ser 2015
[Fic]—dc23
2014032551
eBook ISBN 9780385392143
November 2015
Random House Children’s Books supports the First Amendment and celebrates the right to read.
v4.1
ep
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Prologue
Part I
November 9, 1938: Berlin, Germany
October 1990: New York, New York
March 1939: Sachsenhausen Work Camp, Oranienburg, Germany
January 1996: Irving, Texas
Spring 1940: Sachsenhausen Work Camp, Oranienburg, Germany
June 2013: Smokebush Children’s Home, Jaynis, Texas
Spring 1940: Sachsenhausen Work Camp, Oranienburg, Germany
Part II
June 1945: Berlin, Germany
June 2013: Smokebush Children’s Homejaynis, Texas
June 1940: New York, New York
Part III
August 1951: Dawson, Ohio
June 2013: Jaynis, Texas, to Nashville, Tennessee
September 1940: New York, New York
Part IV
1956: Greenwich, Connecticut
June 2013: Nashville, Tennessee
November 1940: New York, New York
Part V
May 1968: Greenwich, Connecticut
June 2013: Nashville, Tennessee
December 8, 1941: New York, New York
Part VI
June 2013: Nashville, Tennessee
December 1941: New York, New York
Part VII
May 1968: El Paso, Texas
June 2013: Nashville, Tennessee
January 1942: New York, New York
Part VIII
1980: El Paso, Texas
June 2013: Nashville, Tennessee
Spring 1944: New York, New York
June 2013: Nashville, Tennessee, to New York, New York
October 1967: New York, New York
June 2013: New York, New York
June 2013: New York, New York
June 2013: New York, New York
June 2013: New York, New York
June 2013: New York, New York
June 2013: New York, New York
June 2013: New York, New York
Part IX
September 2013: New York, New York
Author’s Note
Acknowledgments
PROLOGUE
Shoes are the keepers of secrets. They hold pieces of history captive in their soles. A single sliver of glass from a night of terror long ago, buried in the worn heel of an oxford. A grain of sand from Coney Island beach, trapped under the insole of a silver stiletto, an accidental souvenir from an enchanted moonlit tryst. Bits of Houston Black soil beaten into the trenches of a pink sneaker from a frantic run for survival. A priceless heirloom locked away in the hollow heel of a delicate dress shoe, marking a quiet act of bravery one chilly November night.
A tattered shoe that’s been well worn and loved is a much happier sight than the unworn, forgotten shoes swallowed up in the black throat of a closet. That shoe has been places, has been tickled by someone’s wiggling toes and warmed by their skin. But what about the shoes left in the street? The sneakers hanging dejected from a telephone wire in the sluicing rain, the red peep-toes lying topsy-turvy on the shoulder of the Palisades Parkway. Do they have a story to tell? A story as complex as the people who, however briefly, owned them?
If you stopped and took the time to look closely, a shoe might give up its secrets. It might tell you how it made one young girl feel beautiful on a lonely night, or how it gave another an extra inch of height for her breathtaking first kiss. If Cinderella’s slippers could change her from peasant to princess, and Dorothy’s could transport her home, surely ordinary shoes can have power, too. The magic is there, deep within the sole. A pair of shoes can enchant an onlooker, transform a wearer, cradle tiny toes, or sustain an aching arch for one last mile. Yes, a shoe can even save a life. And sometimes, when fate and magic mingle, an extraordinary shoe can walk into many lives and change them all.
DALYA
“It’s time.”
In a hushed tone, gentle but panicked, those were the words her mother spoke as the first tinkling of shattered glass came in the distance. She’d been looking out the window of their upstairs apartment, keeping watch, as she’d done each night for weeks now. Most nights, nothing of much importance happened. But today, Dalya had been sent home from school early. There were whispered rumors of something awful coming, though no one knew exactly what or when. As Dalya biked home that afternoon, dread crept through the streets of the West End, forcing her schoolmates inside long before dusk.
Now her mother turned from the window, her face waxen.
“They’re coming,” she said. “I’ll stay with your brother and sister. You go get your father from the shop.” She grabbed Dalya’s coat, mittens, and scarf from the coatrack. Quickly, she tucked several rolls of bread and a hunk of cheese into a hole she’d made days before in the lining of Dalya’s coat.
Dalya slid on the coat, the lumps of bread pressing awkwardly against her s
ide. She nearly argued that it was a ridiculous precaution. The Gestapo had made their searches for weapons and contraband a dozen times before. Yes, they’d arrested Herr Rozen, the neighborhood butcher, after he was caught selling kosher meat. But after they closed his shop, they released him. What was so different about tonight? Still, the fear in her mother’s eyes kept her silent.
Her mother slipped her rings from her hand, then set them in Dalya’s palm. “Remember what we talked about.”
“But I’m sure it’s nothing—”
Her mother raised a finger to Dalya’s lips, stopping her. “They set fire to the Schellers’ shop!” she whispered, making sure only Dalya would hear. “They’re destroying everything!”
“What?” Terror flared inside her. This was different from the boycotting of their store, from the ugly vandalism happening more and more often. It had never been like this.
“Tonight, liebchen, everything begins.” Her mother hugged her fiercely. “Beeil dich!” she whispered. “Hurry now! There isn’t much time.”
Dalya glanced at David and Inge, who were sitting at the table eating their abendbrot. Her mother was ushering them into their coats between mouthfuls, filling their pockets and liners with rolls, too.
“Where are we going?” David protested, shoveling in one last bite. “I’m not finished yet!”
Dalya swallowed thickly, her blood humming in her ears. Poor Inge and David. At five and seven, the most frightening thing they’d known so far was the prospect of losing their suppers.
“And Dalya promised me and Dolly a story,” Inge said, pouting as she hugged her doll. With chubby cheeks and tiny features, she still looked babyish, and she was doted on because of it. Her mother coddled Inge more than she ever had Dalya, letting her throw tantrums without punishment and escape household chores. Nearly every night, while her mother helped her father clean the store after closing, Dalya put Inge to bed with a story. At times, she resented being pulled away from the store, especially when Inge was difficult. To ease her own impatience, she wove shoes into every story she told so they’d never be far from her thoughts. When Inge’s eyes finally fluttered closed, though, Dalya loved the sweetness of that small hand resting in hers.
David was Inge’s playmate, but also her nemesis, and now he smiled mischievously at her. “I’m going to give your dolly a trim,” he said, making his fingers look like scissors. Inge shrieked and leapt behind their mother, cuddling her doll protectively.
“I’m sure we’ll be right back,” Dalya said. “And then, Inge,” she added, grinning, “maybe we’ll give David a trim of his own.”
David’s eyes widened as Dalya lunged to tickle them both, but then her mother snapped, “This is no time for teasing.”
Dalya straightened at her harsh tone. “I was trying to help,” she said, but her mother hustled her to the door with a stern “Go.”
With Inge and David looking after her in surprise, she ran downstairs and into the back of their shop. As soon as she stepped through the door, the musky scent of leather engulfed her. It was the smell that had encompassed her whole existence as a young child, when she’d sat behind the shop counter eating potato knishes and watching her mother and father work. It was the scent of the familiar, of the loved—a scent she hoped would be with her for life. Because just as her mother and father made shoes, so, she hoped, would she. Someday, she and her husband would run this store together, like her parents did now.
Her father sat on his stool, his lapstone perched across his thighs, hammering a sole. He glanced up absently with a half smile, an expression that he wore when he was thoroughly absorbed in his task.
“Vati,” she croaked. “Vati, they’re coming. Muti says they’re burning shops.”
His smile collapsed, his ruddy cheeks sallowing. He stood, and the sole he’d been holding fluttered to the floor. Peering out the large front window, he gasped. “But this…this is madness….They can’t!” Sharp cracks split the air, making them both jump. “Gunshots,” he whispered. He rushed to the cash drawer and emptied it.
She ran to her father’s side, and together, they pushed the wooden display shelf across the floor, exposing an almost imperceptible panel cut out of the wallpaper. Her father slid a pocketknife into the seam and lifted the panel out from the wall, revealing a safe.
“I’ll take care of this,” he said. “You do as your mother wanted.”
Dalya nodded, then grabbed the tin box from its place at the back of the supply closet. She raised the lid, and there inside, exactly as she’d left them last night, were the shoes…her shoes. Even with her growing panic, she thrilled to look at them. The first pair of shoes her mother had let her make on her own, start to finish. She’d sketched them out in her notebook last spring. Normally, she hoarded her drawings, guarding them from her mother. Her mother doled out more criticism than compliments, constantly correcting Dalya’s handiwork, making her redo the stitching on an outsole or reconstruct a vamp that wasn’t absolutely perfect.
“The shoe,” her mother always said, “must be a second skin. It’s a resting ground for the foot, something that beautifies and cushions. A person must never feel they’re wearing the shoe. If it rubs, scrapes, or pinches the toes, then it is not well made.”
But when Dalya had first pictured these shoes in her mind, she’d sensed the inspiration was rare and should be put down on paper before it flittered away. She’d felt such intense affection for these shoes that she hadn’t wanted her mother niggling over them, picking them apart. One day, though, she’d left her notebook open at the kitchen table, and she’d come home from school to find her mother bent over the sketch of the shoes, studying it intently.
Dalya waited, holding her breath.
“This shoe…” Her mother traced the silhouette with a finger. “This shoe is fine. You may make this one.”
Her father made a new last for the shoe, one carved from oak and shaped from Dalya’s own foot. Dalya chose a champagne satin with a rosy sheen for the upper and spent hours embroidering it with a delicate floral design. Her mother rarely consented to such extravagance, but surprisingly, she had let Dalya choose the finest fabrics and materials for her shoes. A Louis heel paired with a rounded toe box gave the shoe a soft femininity, and a border of tiny pearl beading embellished its throat. Finally, the satin laces added above the vamp tied across the slight arch at the top of the foot like a silken bridge. Once, Frau Kaufmann had stopped by and seen Dalya working on the shoes. She’d wanted to buy them on the spot. Dalya had blushed with pride, but her mother said simply, “These shoes are for my Dalya. Someday, she will be married in them.”
Just like that, the fate of Dalya’s shoes was decided. Her mother had made the statement as if it were fact, and Dalya hadn’t even minded. As soon as she heard the words, Dalya knew they were true. She had no prospects for a husband and, at fifteen, no wish for one for years to come. Still, she knew that someday, when she found a young man worthy of the shoes, she would wear them for him on their wedding day.
Now, with the sound of shouts and shattering glass from the street outside growing louder, more insistent, Dalya lifted the right shoe from the metal box. She turned it over, then carefully tilted the heel back from the outer sole. A hidden hinge her mother had designed allowed the seat of the heel to pull away from the sole to reveal the tiny compartment hollowed out of its top.
The hiding place had been her mother’s idea.
“A place the Nazis will never look,” her mother had said. “We hope for the best but must plan for the worst.”
Dalya took her mother’s rings from her pocket. The wedding band was a muted gold, and the engagement ring had a center stone with six smaller diamonds surrounding it. The diamonds often threw rainbows around the shop while her mother worked. Dalya had never seen her take off her rings before, and she shuddered to think what would let her mother bear being separated from them. She tucked the rings carefully into the heel next to the thin piece of paper she’d slipped inside wee
ks ago, then sealed the heel with glue.
The shouts in the street had become deafening, and Dalya’s father was hurrying through the store toward her.
“You must finish!” His voice was stiff with urgency. “They’re next door already.”
She laid the shoes back in the tin box. Her quivering fingers struggled to latch the lid. When it was fastened, she bent over the floorboards behind the counter, scrambling for the right one. She edged her fingernail into a crease and eased the board up, then tucked the box underneath. The second the floorboard slapped back into its slot, her father was there with his hammer, nailing it into place. It was on this very board, over the shoes she’d lovingly handcrafted, that Dalya stood when the two soldiers burst into the store.
The first thing she noticed was the red band with its black swastika on their gray uniforms. The sight of it withered her insides. The second was their boots. Polished to a glossy black, they were meant to impress, or intimidate. When Dalya looked at them, she saw a garish, skeletonized reflection of her face in the gleaming toes. And she suddenly hated the boots—hated them for bringing terror into this place she loved.
“We are looking for Herr Amschel,” the taller soldier said.
Her father nodded. “You’ve found him.”
The soldier stepped forward. “You are charged with being an enemy of the state. You and your family must come with us.”
“An enemy of the state?” Dalya locked eyes with the soldier, her heart striking against her ribs. “That is ridiculous.” His mouth thinned into a line. “My father has done nothing—”