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Authors: Sarah McCoy

BOOK: The Baker's Daughter
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Elsie nodded. Her eyes welled.

“Tomorrow at dawn,” he told Papa.

“Ja, dawn.”

The woman at the counter clucked her tongue. “I'm ready.”

“Elsie, go,” said Papa.

Though she loathed leaving the conversation, this was not the time for disobedience. So she rose and went to the baskets of bread.

“What would you like?”

“The bauernbrot.” The woman pointed to the farmer's bread.

Reaching for the loaf, Elsie strained to hear what Papa and Josef were discussing at the table—something to do with their departure route. She was glad she hadn't refused Josef's proposal yet. She would use whatever she could to help Hazel. Whatever the cost.

The woman paid with ration coupons and left. Papa called Mutti from the kitchen.

“Ja, ja, what is it now?” she asked, her hands powdery with the SS flour that mixed like concrete and hardened just as fast.

“Luana.” Papa sighed. “We must go to Steinhöring.”

Mutti brought her fists to her chest. Silty flecks of gray dough fell to the floor. “What's happened? Is it Hazel? Julius?”

Papa took her by the shoulders. “Wash up and pack our bags. Hazel is …”

Mutti's lower lip trembled.

“She's ill,” he said.

“Ill?” asked Mutti. Her floured fists left balled imprints on her dirndl. “Is there a fever epidemic?” she asked Josef. He looked away. “The bleigiessen cow,” she murmured. “Dover's powder and tea is the cure.” She blinked back tears. “What about the bäckerei?”

“Elsie will have to run things while we are gone,” explained Papa.

“But the roads aren't safe. The reports say—”

Papa put a hand on Mutti's cheek. “Hazel needs us.”

“I'll be escorting you, Frau Schmidt,” said Josef. “You'll be safe with me.”

ST. SEBASTIAN CHAPEL

CEMETERY

GARMISCH, GERMANY

MAY 23, 1942

J
osef had come to the cemetery late in the day. Wild poppies sprung up between slate and granite crosses. The setting sun cast long shadows, giving the flowers height and life. They moved with each passing breeze, reaching their rainbow of petals to some unseen spirit high above.

He was on his way back from an afternoon of Watten cards and raisin kuchen with Herr Schmidt when he saw the sign for St. Sebastian Chapel. Peter's death still haunted his waking and dreaming, but he'd grown accustomed to the ghostly presence, an aching in his vision that rarely abated. The methamphetamines and weekend holidays to Garmisch helped. The town had become as familiar as his own, but he'd never ventured here before. It seemed illogical when he knew Peter's ashes had been swept up by the western wind and probably settled in Munich's
Hofgarten
's hemlock and clover. He imagined park visitors walking through the grassy topsoil not knowing their toes gripped the mud of men, not knowing Peter Abend.

That afternoon, he wasn't sure what drew him to the church. Nonetheless, there he stood above the small marker:
PETER KLAUS ABEND, BELOVED
.
1919–1938
.

A dried daisy chain encircled the dates, and Josef wondered who placed it there—Peter's sister, Trudi, perhaps. Josef hadn't any siblings. His father had been hit by an automobile when Josef was too young to remember.
Embittered by her loss, his mother had been a strict disciplinarian who believed hard work and diligence might help them find happiness again. She encouraged his participation in the Memmingen branch of the Greater German Youth Movement and lived long enough to see him join the official military ranks. Two years after he moved east to Munich, she passed away in her sleep. A neighbor friend found her, stiff as a log, and stained from neck to navel in blood. The doctors diagnosed it as acute tuberculosis. It'd been so long since he'd returned home, and so infrequently did they speak that he couldn't recall if she'd even had a cough. Since his mother was a needlewoman known for her meticulous floral embroidery, he'd paid handsomely that her casket be sheathed with every bloom imaginable. That would've pleased her, he thought.

A scarlet poppy fluttered against Peter's slate. Josef wondered who would mourn when he died. He hadn't sisters to make daisy chain remembrances, nor brothers to carry on the family name. He was well liked by many friends, but his absence would not touch any of them so deeply. Standing in the waning light over Peter's grave, he tried to imagine his own funeral assembly. The landlady in Munich would surely come out of respect and duty. Perhaps a girl or two he once courted. Frau Baumann would cry for him but not dare show her face—a renowned prostitute at any man's funeral was inappropriate. It comforted him, however, to know she'd feel loss, probably more than any other. And then the Schmidts, he hoped. He'd become close to Herr and Frau Schmidt and watched as Elsie blossomed from a gangly girl to a young woman. They were genuine people. True to each other and those around. Yes, they'd be there too. He pictured Elsie clutching a bouquet of cornflowers and drying her eyes with a handkerchief. Lovely, even in sorrow.

“You were smarter than I gave you credit for,” he said aloud, then shook his head and laughed, embarrassed to be talking to a dead man—and worse, a dead man who wasn't even there. But he meant it.

From all he heard, Hazel Schmidt was even more charming than her sister, her beauty only matched by her reputation as a generous lover. He attempted to visit the Lebensborn Program at Steinhöring, not as a companion but with the hope of helping Hazel and Peter's son in some capacity. His application was rejected on the grounds of inferior health records. The names of the Lebensborn women were so greatly protected that not even a hundred kreppels could convince his archive secretary to pull Hazel's file. So he stopped trying to reach her directly. His migraines continued, and his shots increased.

He stayed up nights tallying all the pain he'd caused: a widow before a wife, two families' heartache, a daughter's banishment, a fatherless son; and he continued to struggle with the part of him that remembered the Hochschilds fondly. However, this in no way interfered with his staunch commitment to the Reich. He turned the Kristallnacht scene over and over in his mind, rationalizing every action, and concluding that while the Hochschilds were Jews, Peter acted recklessly. Josef did not regret his anger, but rather his lack of control. The one thing he couldn't excuse or deny was that Peter's death was wrong. “Good care should be taken not to deny things that just happen to be true”—so it was written in
Mein Kampf
.

But even after visiting Frau Abend two years prior, Josef was unable to shake the heavy guilt he carried. He tried to call on the Abends once again, but Trudi claimed no one home and ignored her mother's calls from the parlor. He took it as a not-so-subtle indication that his presence caused more grief than consolation. But from whom could he request atonement? On that second visit, he went again to the bäckerei, distressed by the Abends' rebuff. The Schmidts greeted him as a son returned. They were his only connection to Peter's life, and through them, he wanted to make right.

He bent down to the headstone and picked the flower. The smell reminded him of poppy seed rolls.

ELSIE'S GERMAN BAKERY

2032 TRAWOOD DRIVE

EL PASO, TEXAS

NOVEMBER 16, 2007

R
eba entered the bakery at quarter till closing. Overhead, the tinny doorbell jingled, familiar and welcoming. Hearing it, Jane peeked through the kitchen curtains.

“Well, hello there, gal.” She greeted Reba with another hug.

Reba's muscles tensed only slightly. She even hugged back a little and was pleased by how pleasant the reciprocation felt.

“How are you?” asked Jane.

“Living,” said Reba.

“Oh now, that's no kind of answer. Mold on bread is
living
. I hope you're doing more than that,” she teased. “If you need Mom, she's gone this afternoon—had a doctor's appointment. A slap-n-pap.”

“A what?” asked Reba.

Jane laughed. “It's our nickname for gynecological exams. We treat dough better than they do our lady parts. They slap your boob on the machine like it don't feel nothing, then add insult to injury with the stirrups and paper nightie. I've been on Mom for nearly four years to get a checkup. She hates the docs—even though my daddy was one.” She scratched her head. “Well, maybe it's only the gyn-ohs. But I finally convinced her to go. You wouldn't know yet, but when you hit a certain age, lumps and bumps and all kinds of things grow everywhere. You go to sleep and wake up with
a grapefruit attached to your derriere. It's scary.” She threw a dishtowel over her shoulder. “Never mind all that. What can I do you for?”

Reba didn't know exactly why she'd come. She left the condo convinced she needed to get more information on German Christmas traditions, but she could've looked that up on the Internet just as easily. On the drive, she told herself she wanted to take a few more snapshots of the bakery in case the assigned photographer didn't get enough, but then she'd forgotten her camera. In the parking lot, she realized she'd only eaten a couple microwaved Jimmy Dean patties for breakfast, so maybe her stomach led her, subconsciously. But now, with the question posed, she wasn't quite sure at all.

“I—I …” Reba pinched the bridge of her nose and took a deep breath.

Riki had officially moved out the week prior. He said he was giving her space to decide what she really wanted. For a couple days, she was relieved, even grateful for the freedom, but all too soon the old sadness moved into Riki's vacant closet and drawers.

She rang her editor to talk word counts, headlines, and layouts; it made things better for an hour, but afterward the emptiness seemed larger than before. Riki called late Sunday while she was at the grocery store picking up a deli-made dinner. He left a message saying he was checking in. Children laughed in the background, and she wondered where he was. She played the message ten times over while scraping creamy chicken salad from its plastic container, still hungry when it was all gone.

Maybe he was staying with Bert, she thought. Riki hadn't any family left in the city. His parents were dead, both buried back across the border in Juárez. He'd asked her to come with him to their graves during the Día de Los Muertos celebrations, but she'd said she was working a story and hid in the magazine's editorial room while everyone else paraded about with sugar skulls and masks. She feared a day dedicated to the dead. It seemed ghoulish, unnatural, and far too intimate to hover over the bones of loved ones. Reba had never returned to her own daddy's grave, and she didn't want to. Riki said the dead came back to visit the living on Día de los Muertos, a religious superstition she prayed was
entirely
mythical. Because if she ever saw her daddy again, she knew she wouldn't be able to contain the simmering grief within. She'd tell him he was a damn coward for leaving them the way he did, for not loving them enough to fight for himself and their family; for not being a better man. She'd tell him she'd never let anybody hurt her the way he had, never let anybody get close enough to try.

Jane watched her. “Are you here about the article or …”

Reba bit the inside of her cheek. It was exhausting to be on guard every minute. Maybe Riki was right. Maybe she did need someone to help share her burden a little.

“I'm.” Reba sighed. “Hungry.”

“Wunderbar!” Jane went behind the display. “Let's see what we got. Mom just finished making
schaumkussen
earlier.” She pulled out a tray of neatly lined chocolate balls.

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