Margot: A Novel (28 page)

BOOK: Margot: A Novel
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25
ach turns, and I look back, to focus on Peg, who is tall and
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serious and confident in her starched white nurse’s uniform
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and pointed hat, and who walks quickly in circles behind the
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station, grabbing charts from a large white filing cabinet.
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Shelby lets go of my arm and runs to her sister, and Peg
turns, reaches across the desk, and wraps Shelby in a hug. I
01
struggle to breathe for a moment as I am standing there by
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myself, watching them.
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Peg points to the elevator, Shelby nods, and then she is
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back at my side. “Come on,” she says.
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“What did Peggy say?” I ask.
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“He’s up in critical care. They think it was a massive heart
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attack.”
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I think of Joshua, and I am overcome by sadness.
Is that all
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you are,
he’d yelled at his father this morning,
my boss?
Of
10
course, that wasn’t all he was. Joshua knew it then, and even
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more, I am sure, he knows it now.
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“But he’s still alive,” Shelby is saying now as the elevator
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rises, her voice hopeful.
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The elevator doors open, and I see, right away, a small
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crowd of them, huddled together in the blue waiting area. My
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eyes falls immediately on Mrs. Greenberg, Penny’s mother,
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whom I have seen from time to time around the office. She is
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a large woman, tall and big-boned, and has never struck me
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as the least bit graceful, as her daughter is, though now her
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spine is hunched, her expression pale blank. She wears a
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green hat and clutches a pile of tissues in her hands, and she
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holds on to her husband with one arm, Joshua with the other.
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My heart bursts to look at Joshua, and I hold tightly to
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Shelby’s hand, holding myself back. After a moment he looks
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up, and he catches my eyes. His gray-green eyes are red
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rimmed with sorrow, and they are lacking their usual light. I
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let go of Shelby’s hand to wave, and he waves back and shoots
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me a meager smile.
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Joshua turns, whispers something to Penny’s mother,
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stands up, and then he is walking toward me. His smile is
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even and somber and strong, and his eyes they are speaking
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to me, as if suddenly I am the only one. I am the only one who
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can understand him. And I can. I can.
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“Josh, honey.” I hear her voice from somewhere not too far
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behind me, and I startle. It is shrill and wily and I have the
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urge to cover my ears, to keep it from hurting me. “I brought
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back coffee for everyone.”
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I turn, and Penny stands there, pure as snow in a white
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tapered dress cinched at the waist with a snakelike navy-blue
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belt. Our eyes meet for a second, and then Penny looks away
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quickly. “How sweet,” she murmurs, walking past me and
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handing the coffee tray to Joshua. “The girls from the office
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came down.” She leans up and kisses him purposefully on the
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cheek, her pink lips, as if she is marking him, right there, like
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that.
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“Thanks for the coffee, Pen,” I hear Joshua say, and I can
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not look anymore. I cannot stand there and watch while he
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kisses her back.
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“I have to go,’ I whisper to Shelby.
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“Margie,” she says. “Wait, don’t leave me here all alone.”
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But she is not all alone. Her sister is just downstairs.
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I let go of Shelby’s hand, and I do not wait for the elevator.
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I pull open the door to the stairwell and run, quickly, down
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the three flights.
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C
hapter
Fort
y-one
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The early May sunshine hits my face, warm, nearly
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too warm for springtime. It is almost summer now, my favor
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ite season once, when I was not afraid to bare my skin and
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jump into the Baltic Sea or the IJsselmeer, where the water
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was crisp and blue. We missed experiencing one full summer
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while stuck in the annex and two halves. Also, two springs
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gone, just like that. As a girl, I used to love all the things
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spring and summer: the feel of water and sunshine against my
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skin. But I do not like the summertime in Philadelphia, the
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way the heat makes lying even more oppressive, makes my
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secret an even bigger burden to bear.
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May used to be a month of promise: the end of school was
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so near, the sweetness of summer and all the freedom that
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came with it. May is also Pim’s birthday month, and even
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now, every year as the date approaches, May 12, I still think
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of him, getting one year older. This year, he will be turning
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seventy.
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In May of 1944, Pim was turning fifty-five. He was still
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young enough to be our Pim, but almost old enough to be
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something else. He was graying then, but just around the
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temples. Now I wonder if he is completely gray, looking more
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like a grandfather than a father, though he cannot be a grand
08
father without me and my sister, a thought which makes me
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desperately sad.
10
“I know!” my sister said in 1944, the week before his birth
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day, as we lay one midafternoon in her room. Her voice was
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just a little too loud. I shushed her, and she rolled her eyes at
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me. She was next to me on the bed, her hip folded easily
14
against my own. “We should write Pim a poem for his birth
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day this year.” She spoke a bit softer.
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I looked up from my diary and nodded in agreement. Yes,
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that was just the kind of thing Pim would love. Maybe it
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would even cheer him up, make his birthday something spe
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cial despite our being trapped. We were rats, and we were
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Jews. But we still celebrated things. Miep brought flowers
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and cake and we lit the menorah for Hanukkah. “We should
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write it in English,” I told her. “Show him how far we’ve come
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in our studies.”
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“How far you’ve come, you mean,” she said.
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“You know some English now too,” I told her, and she
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rolled her eyes again. “And Pim will be so happy to see we
27
have learned something while we’ve been here. Like two pres
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ents in one.”
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Margot
“Fine,” she agreed. “An English poem, for Pim’s birthday.”
01
02
03
To Pim on His 55th Birthday
04

Pim, Pim, you do not dim
05
Even sometimes when things look grim
06
Your smile is wide and your hair is trim
07
And we think we are not on a whim
08
Or even out there on a limb
09
To say we love you, our darling Pim!
10
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We chanted it to him, like a song, on the night of his
12
birthday. May of 1944, and so many Allied bombings in
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Europe that surely, the war was almost over. Pim would not
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spend another birthday in the annex. None of us would.
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Mother smiled wide that night, and Pim laughed and
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hugged us both close to his chest. “My girls.” He shook his
17
head. “What good English.” He kissed each of us on the top
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of our heads, twice. “I will cherish this,” he said. “Forever.”
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Even now, the words, t
, ,t
hey play in my head from time to
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time. A silly, stupid child’s rhyme. The paper we wrote them
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on, I’m sure it was destroyed so very long ago. But I wonder if
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sometimes the words, they still play themselves in my father’s
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mind too.
24
25
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After I leave the hospital, I take the bus back to Market Street
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and then I find myself wandering, almost aimlessly, on the
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01
street, hearing the words from Pim’s birthday song in my
02
head. I am not lost, but I am without direction, and even
03
though they sound the same, they are not. It’s just that now
04
I’m not sure exactly where I’m headed. Not back to work. Not
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now, because what is there, waiting for me? Not home, not in
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the middle of the day, when all I have there is Katze.
07
I cross the street, and then I see it there, the way I have
08
before. I wonder if my feet took me here on purpose, over
09
taken by homesickness that I can never get through no matter
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how much I think I can, or might want to. It is always lurking
11
there, just beyond the surface. Even in the Jewish law firm.
12
Especially in the Jewish law firm.
13
The letters up in front of me, they gleam a putrid red on
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the marquee, the color once, of the swastikas defiling the
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broken wall of Judischausen. They assault me, but still I stop
16
there, and I stare at them. Bright red letters:
The Diary of
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Anne Frank. Introducing: Millie Perkins. Starring: Shelley
18
Winters.
19
I buy a ticket, and I walk inside the theater.
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C
hapt
er
Fort
y-two
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It is cold inside the theater, and suddenly I am
14
hungry. So hungry that my stomach hurts and rumbles, and
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I cannot remember exactly the last time I have eaten some
16
thing whole. I buy some popcorn at the concession stand in
17
the lobby and find myself a seat inside the wide empty the
18
ater. It is empty, of course, because it is the middle of the day,
19
and people are working, and so many people have already
20
seen this movie. And I imagine it is not the kind of movie you
21
would come back to see twice.
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I take a seat in the last row, quite close to the exit, and
23
where I can see everyone else who might come into the theater.
24
It is cold, and I pull my black sweater tight across my
25
chest, hanging on to my arms to warm up before digging my
26
hand into the carton of popcorn. The corn is warm and salty
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and buttery, and I chew it, and I chew it. My chewing is loud,
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though, of course, there is no one else here to complain.
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01
The lights dim, and the curtain falls. The screen is black
02
at first, and there is an overture, the heavy sound of trumpets,
03
then strings, that I imagine the director felt was both serious
04
and emotional all at once. Oh, the drama—the overture seems
05
to go on forever. I wish the movie would just start already.
06
Finally, there is picture. A sea of clouds, awash with
07
seagulls as the actors’ names play across the screen, the
i
in
08
Millie’s name dotted with an upside-down teardrop. I roll my
09
eyes, just the way my sister always did. There is a note that
10
scenes were filmed in the annex thanks to the city of Amster
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dam, and something clenches in my chest so hard I cannot
12
breathe. I am not prepared for this part, to see it again. I did
13
not know they filmed there, at the actual spot where we once
14
lived.
15
The movie begins: a man is standing there on the Prinsen
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gracht. Oh, the Prinsengracht. Just the way it was, just the
17
way I remember. The canal, then the street right beside it
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with the beautiful, old, linked, brick, multistoried buildings.
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I reach my hand out, as if the Prinsengracht is close enough
20
for me to touch it.
Home.
21
Up on the big screen, the man turns, and I realize he is
22
supposed to be Pim, returned from the war. He bears a like
23
ness to Pim, but only distantly, some long-lost cousin we
24
never even knew. The man enters the office, then climbs the
25
steps to the annex, and he wraps himself in a scarf he finds—
26
whose it is supposed to be I am not sure. Mother’s, maybe?
27
Though she had nothing of the sort. Then the woman who is
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supposed to be Miep enters, reaches for a book on some sort
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BOOK: Margot: A Novel
3.02Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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