Margot: A Novel (33 page)

BOOK: Margot: A Novel
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his fingers through his curls. “I suppose I will, yes.” He
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pauses. “It’s what my father’s always wanted for me, anyway.
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And he would love nothing more now than to see us married.”
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“But do you love her?” I ask.
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He hesitates for a moment, and his eyes catch mine. “I
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could never be with someone who wasn’t a Jew, you know,” he
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says. “I just couldn’t.”
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I am confused for a moment, because he has not answered
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the question, because his words, they don’t make sense, and
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then it occurs to me, what it is he is saying.
You are you,
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Shelby said. I am the one who is not a Jew. Margie Franklin,
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she is not a Jew but the Gentile girl Peter was to find in the
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city of Philadelphia.
We will go to America,
Peter said.
We will
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be married. We will no longer be Jews.
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But it is not Peter talking to me about being Jews now, it
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is Joshua. And why, I wonder, is he telling me this? Does this
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mean he has thought about me the way I have thought about
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him, watched me through the glass, wondered what it might
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be like to run his fingers through my hair? That he has noticed
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me? That he has not been able to resist the impulse to reach
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his large hand toward my face, at least once?
I cannot work
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without you, Margie.
That our lunches and our talks, they
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have been about something more than a secret case? “Joshua,”
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I say softly. “I am not who you think I am.”
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He shakes his head and turns his eyes away again. “My
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father always said, Penny and I, we would make beautiful
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babies. He’s right about that, isn’t he?” Joshua has missed it,
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the first truthful thing I have said to him in three years. But
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maybe it does not even matter. Even if he knew the truth,
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Margie Franklin, the Jew, she still would not be wealthy and
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beautiful and charming the way Penny is. She still would not
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be the one Joshua’s father would want him to be with.
But
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what about what he wants?
I wonder.
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“But do you love her?” I ask. I want him to admit that he
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doesn’t. That he does not love her.
I do not love him,
my sister
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said. But I did. I do.
“It’s not always about love,” Joshua is saying now, again
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letting his fingers tread through his hair. “Life is more com
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plicated than that, Margie. You get to a point in your life
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where it’s time to stop playing around. And then you just need
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to bite the bullet and do the things you’re supposed to do.”
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I think of it, questioning character witnesses for murder
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ers, then sitting at my secretary’s desk, watching Penny
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Greenburg, no Penny Rosenstein, saunter in for lunch with
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her Josh. In no time she will sport a round belly, filled with
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life, with Joshua’s life.
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“I don’t think I can,” I whisper. And I stand and push my
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chair back.
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“Margie.” Joshua says my name. At first it rings with sur
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prise. Then he says it again. “Margie, where are you going?
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Margie, come on . . .”
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I hit Market Street, already sweating, and I turn the cor
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ner onto Sixteenth, then Ludlow, but I keep walking, past my
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apartment, past the bus stop even. Though I am warm, sweat
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ing, and tears build in my eyes, I keep on walking.
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I do not stop for a long while, until I hit Olney Avenue.
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Ch
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Forty-six
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My walk, it is a far one, especially now, in the heat
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and under the weight of my sweater. But I have walked
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through much worse, and after I am far enough away to put
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the sound of Joshua’s voice out of my head, I am not in a
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hurry. I want to arrive by the five o’clock hour so I can stand
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there, watch him pull up into the drive after work.
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His car—the black Volkswagen, the kind of car one would
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never imagine a Jew to drive. A nice and masculine comple
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ment to his wife’s powder-pink Cadillac.
His wife.
Is it possi
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ble still she is his nanny, his landlady, his friend, his
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housekeeper even? But her words from last time about the
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steps and the stroller—words that implied that she lived there
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and she had chosen that—swim carelessly in my brain.
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I approach 2217 cautiously. There are no cars out front.
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Not even the pink Cadillac, but I resign myself to sitting on
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the bottom step to wait.
I think about Peter’s eyes, blue as the sea. The way they
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lingered on my face even after the man in green pulled me up
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from my neck and started dragging my limp body out of his
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room.
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“Margot,” he called desperately after me, before one of the
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men clamped a large hand across his mouth, muffling the
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sound. I hear it now, my name in his voice, not the way it was
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that morning but the way he said it as we lay together on the
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divan. He whispered my name, into my hair, like the sound
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of wind chimes, blowing back and forth, their sound pleasant
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and high and sweet.
“Margot.”
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Margie,
Joshua said.
I could never be with someone who
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wasn’t a Jew.
His gray-green eyes flickered in the light shining
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in past the window of the delicatessen. How could he marry
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Penny? I wonder. How could he marry someone he didn’t
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even love? Maybe Joshua isn’t even the man I thought he was.
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I am pretending, pretending, always pretending. But so, it
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seems, is he.
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“Hello there.” I hear a woman’s voice, the redhead’s voice,
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and I look up and she is standing before me on the sidewalk.
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I have been lost in thought, not even noticing the pink Cadil
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lac, which now I see is parked in the drive. She holds Eleanor
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tight to her hip, and the baby makes a fist in the air, then
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examines it, and decides it looks ripe for chewing.
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I hold my eyes tightly to the baby’s face, her eyes. Her
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cheeks are round and fleshy, her tufts of hair the color of
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sunlight striking snow, and her eyes, they are a remarkably
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deep sea blue.
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“Do you live around here?” the woman asks, and I startle
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and look back to her face. Her eyes are green, darker than
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Joshua’s, lighter than Ilsa’s. And now they seem wary of me.
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I stand. “No,” I say. I clear my throat. “But when I
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was here a few weeks ago, I couldn’t help but notice your box.”
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I point to the mailbox by the crumbling green door. “I knew
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a Pelt once,” I say.
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“Oh,” she says, her eyes softening. “Well, maybe I could be
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related, then.” She smiles. “Would you like to come in? Elea
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nor needs a nap, and I need to get dinner ready,” she says.
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“But we could have a glass of lemonade, talk. You look like
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you could use a cool drink dressed the way you are.”
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I want to walk inside the duplex. I want to see them, the
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pictures she might hang above the mantel of the three of
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them: her, Eleanor, and Peter. I want to know that he is here,
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in the city of Brotherly Love, just the way he once promised.
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I want to watch his eyes light up, one more time, even if it is
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only in a photograph. “Okay,” I say. “Yes. Thank you.”
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And I follow her up the steps into the duplex.
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The inside of the duplex is dark at first, until the
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redhead switches on the light. “Excuse me for a moment,” she
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says. “Let me just run Eleanor back to her crib.” I nod, and in
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the new fresh light, I have a look around.
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The living area is spacious, deep rich hardwoods like Ilsa’s
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covered with an Oriental-style bright red rug and flanked
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with unmatching green chairs. I approach the mantel, and
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just as I imagined, it is covered in pictures. A few of baby
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Eleanor. One when she is very, very young, a newborn. One
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with the redhead, Eleanor, and an older gray-haired woman
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who I guess to be the redhead’s mother. Another one with the
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gray-haired woman and an older mustached gentleman who
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holds a protective arm around her shoulder.
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“Ignore the dust,” the redhead says, walking back in and
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running her finger across the glass of the picture of her and
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her daughter, leaving the impression of her fingertip. “I’m not
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a very good housekeeper, I’m afraid. And now that I’ve gone
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back to work, I’ve gotten even worse.”
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“What do you do?” I ask. I imagine Peter would’ve married
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someone like me or my sister, or the working women we
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might have become, anyway, had it not been for the war, or
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had we not been Jewish, or had we been born in America.
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“Oh.” She laughs. “My friend owns a restaurant, and I’ve
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been waitressing there. It’s only temporary,” she says, “until I
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find something better.” She walks into the kitchen and
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motions for me to follow her. There is a small square oak table
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that barely feels big enough to seat three, and I try to imagine
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Peter, his long legs spread out in front of him, cramped in a
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space like this. How tall was Peter? Now I am only seeing the
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movie Peter in my mind, and it is ruining everything.
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She pours the lemonade and hands me a glass. “I’m Petra,
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by the way,” she says. It is a nice name, Petra. I guess it to be
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Russian or Slovakian in origin, though Petra looks so clearly
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Irish with her thick red hair.
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“That’s pretty,” I tell her. “I’m Margie.”
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She smiles. And for a moment I think she might tell me
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that her name is short for Petronella. “Petronella van Daan,”
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