Read When the Sky Fell Apart Online
Authors: Caroline Lea
Carter froze. âBut IâI can't. Theâ¦hospital needs me and Iâwellâ¦'
âAh, yes, the hospital. Do not fear. Other doctors work there, no? You will work for me, yes?
My
man to keep.'
Carter felt the blood seep from his face. Some primal instinct shrieked at him to run, to scream. But he sat, metal taste of adrenaline in his mouth, and forced himself to sip slowly on the last of his whisky while he searched for an escape.
âBut surely you must have a doctor of your own? Someone who isâ¦familiar with you. A German doctor. Someone you trust?'
âBut I
trust you
. I trust that you will never tell anything about my body. If I have a German doctor? He whispers to soldiers of mine. They drink together, talk too much. My German doctor, he tells stories, about me, my body, yes? They laugh, drink. He tells all. What now? My men know everything. It is true, I can punish this doctor. But every one of my men? Ha! There are limits to every man's power, is that not so?'
Stupefied, Carter could only nod. What on
earth
was the man hiding? What medical condition could he have that must be concealed from his men? Syphilis, perhaps? Gonorrhea?
The Commandant smiled and clapped his hands together.
âSo. We decide. You are my doctor. You must care for meâgive me medicines. And you will not tell anyone about my body. You understand?'
Carter did. Suddenly, he understood completely. The knowledge slid into him, clean, effortless and efficient as a surgeon's blade.
Weight gain. Bloated face and ruddy complexion. Thinning hair. Tired, bloodshot eyes. Shortness of breath.
Cushings.
Carter wondered if the German knew, or if he suspected some disease of sexual origin. If Cushings was left untreated, it was almost always fatal. High blood sugar, high cholesterol and high blood pressure: heart attack or stroke. Of course, a simple prescription of steroids and some minor dietary changes could render the condition perfectly manageable.
But does he know that?
Did he know what was making him suffer?
Carter examined those bloodshot eyes: ink from textbooks and scribbled pencil notes flashed through his mind: headaches and sleeplessness with accompanying chronic fatigue. If he suspected some sexual disease, then no wonder he felt shame and wanted to conceal it. Or perhaps he simply wanted to disguise any sign of weakness from his men.
The Commandant said, a little louder, âYou are
mine
now. Day, night.
Für mich
. All times. And you say nothing. Yes?'
Perhaps this knowledge was the shred of power Carter needed to keep himself alive. The German thought he was dyingâthat much was apparent. Carter had seen the haunted look in a thousand patients before. That mixture of anger and frustration, along with a pleading hope for the diagnosis to be incorrect or for the symptoms to instantly subside. And the consequences for Carter if the Commandant worsened were horrifying.
He shook his head. âThere are other doctors.'
âI have chosen you,
nichts?
'
âYes, butâ¦I wish to continue working in the hospital. I can do great good there.'
This drew a surprising and disturbing reaction: âIn hospital, yes? With the poor? The diseased? The rats and the lice? What have they done, these creatures, these
animals
, to have your time and care? You would rather treat men, I know, Doctor, than these stupid beasts. Is that not so?'
Carter's mouth dropped open.
The Commandant continued. âI remember you are English too, no? Many of your English friends are in Ravensbrük. You like to join them, yes? You will need warm clothes. It is very cold, I think. Many do not feel when their toes fall off.'
He chuckled. It echoed around the room. When Carter still didn't speak, the Commandant took his silence for an agreement.
âYou make the right choice, Doctor,' he said.
In the days after his meeting with the Commandant, Carter paced the landscape in directionless agitation. When he tried to recall it later, he found he had no memory of that chasm of time: whether he walked or ran, whom he might have seen or what he might have said. A blank vacuum in his memory, filled with the hiss of a glowing fuse.
He had a vague recollection of gazing out at the sea, but far clearer in his mind was the Commandant's sweating face. Those tiny, savage eyes. That harsh German voice as he called the populace
animals
and
filth.
His amusement at Carter's discomfort. The barely veiled threats.
Carter heard his blood hammering in his ears again. Sometimes that could be an indication of a brain tumour. He bent double, breathed into his cupped hands.
Pull yourself together, Tim.
He forced himself to straighten and to look at the view and to focus on the horizon. Gradually, the nausea subsided, his pulse dropped, and the black spots faded from his vision.
The landscape was a glazed expanse of sea, punctuated by rugged rocks and boulders. At high tide, these were almost completely covered, then exposed when the sea retreated. Jagged brown fangs rearing from clagged grey mud. Not a soul for miles. A world that had never been tamed and could not be civilised or inhabited. Barren, desolate, glaring.
He walked. Shingle crunched beneath his boots, which, he noted, needed repairing: a sole had started to peel away. Queasily, he remembered the Commandant's polished leather shoes, his pressed shirt, which showed no signs of wear.
I like a man to be neat.
The Commandant would not be refusedâthat much was clear. Were Carter fool enough to rebuff his âoffer', he had little doubt that he would find himself serving a lengthy sentence behind the walls of the local prison. If he were lucky. Given his illegal status in the island as an Englishman, however, it was more likely that he would be transported to mainland Europe. Of the Jèrriais who had been sent to Ravensbrük, none had returned.
But the Commandant repulsed Carter, not only for his bloated, wheezing body, but for that diseased mind. He could not imagine handling the man with care, with humanity, when his beliefs and values were so utterly repellent.
You do not want to work with the filth. The animals.
And how could Carter look any Jerseyman in the eye, knowing himself a traitor? How would he be able to treat his chosen countrymen when they knew him to be a coward? All the trust he had built up with the Jèrriais community would be obliterated once news of his service to the Commandant became common knowledge.
He turned and started to stride home. He would wash and refresh himself, sluice the salt from his skin and the shingle from his shoes. Make himself
neat
.
He was allowed to see the Commandant immediately.
The German greeted him with a broad smile and a moist handshake, which lasted too long.
âYou have good words for me, Doctor?'
âI'm sorry. But I mustâdecline. I am afraid. Most regrettably.'
He blinked. âDecline? This means no?'
âYes. IâI am afraid so. My presence at the hospital is really⦠it really is
most
vital. I cannot
abandon
my post.'
Chest tight, Carter waited for the rough hands of the guards. He half expected the Commandant to shoot him on the spot; even fearful, and desperate as he was, the comfort of his own integrity grounded and steadied him.
But he nearly collapsed when the Commandant smiled and said, âOf course. I understand. You are the hero, yes? A brave man, strong man. Big man, yes?'
He laughed and clapped Carter on the back, leaving his meaty hand to rest on his shoulderblade. Hot and heavy, the hand of fate.
Carter sweated all night over that laugh. What it meant. He didn't have to wait long to find out.
The next morning, he arrived at the hospital to find pandemonium. The corridors crammed with soldiers, some brandishing gunsâthe nurses in a hell of a state: running, shouting, waving their hands.
Sister Huelin found Carter immediately. Her face was pale.
âThey say the building is needed for official business. We have to be out by midday. On the street. Patients and all. We've nowhere to go. For heaven's sake, some of the patients are under aseptic care. And what about drips?'
Panic gripped Carter. She must be mistaken, surely?
âWhat do you mean, we've to be
out?
This is the
hospital
. They can't evict us.'
âThe soldiers say they need the building. They say we must leave.'
âThat's absurd! There must be some misunderstanding.'
âThat's what we thought. But they've a written order. From the Commandant. It's addressed to you.' Spots of colour burned in her cheeks and she gripped his arm. âYou must stop this, Doctor. It's madness.'
Carter recognised the soldier nearest to him as Hans Haas. He was ordering patients from their beds and herding them towards the door, waving his gun in their faces.
âNow look here,' Carter snapped. âWhat is the meaning of this? You cannot simply seize this building for your own purposes. It is the hospital, for God's sake. You must leave at once. At
once
! And put that damn gun away!'
But Hans didn't flinch.
âThe Commandant, he say,
Danke schön, Herr Doktor.'
Hans passed him a letter, the swastika emblazoned at the top, the Commandant's signature at the bottom.
This hospital is to be used as a military centre, effective immediately. The medical provision for Jersey residents must be completed in a different location. Failure to comply with this order will result in the imprisonment and deportation of hospital staff and patients to Germany.
The Field Commandant
Carter felt, with sudden horror, the petrifying sense of his own helplessness. He remembered vividly the ring of the Commandant's laughter.
âBut this isâ¦absurd. Where am I to take the patients?'
Hans smirked.
âThis is too bloody. The whole business. It's foul. It will amount to murder, do you hear me? Putting these patients on to the street. Might as well take
this
'âCarter jabbed his finger at Hans's gunââand shoot them in the head.'
Half an hour later, Carter burst into the Commandant's office.
The German was sitting in his armchair, puffing on one of those damn cigars. For a moment, Carter allowed himself to imagine knocking it from the man's mouth and grinding it under his heel, then striking the Commandant's smug face with the glass ashtray. He'd heard of a man murdered that way. It was all a matter of force, timing and positioning.
The Commandant gave a broad smile. âAh, Doctor. I was thinking of you.'
Carter clenched his fists. âWhat the devil do you think you're doing? Put a stop to it! I demand that you call off yourâ¦
dogs
this minute.'
The Commandant didn't move. âYour friend,' he said slowly. âThe woman with plants. I think perhaps she is a witch, yes? This is what people say. My guards will take her to the prison. She will go tomorrow to Germany. And the butcher. He is
deformierten.
He makes me disgust. He will go too.'
âNo! You can't!'
Rage. Pure, physical and visceral. Carter had never felt anything like it. He wanted to tear into the man's muscles with his bare hands. Sink his teeth into that smiling face. Slit his throat open and watch him bleed.
The Commandant's smile didn't falter. âYou will serve me, yes? This is the sensible thing. The
clever
thing. You are a
clever
man. You sit. A drink, yes. Cigar.'
Carter accepted the objects that were pressed into his hands. He drank. He smoked.
When he could gather breath to speak again, Carter made the Commandant promise not to touch the hospital patients or staff. Clement. Edith. And in returnâ¦
âIt is done,' the Commandant said. âWelcome, Doctor. No words for me now?' He patted Carter's cheek. âDo not be sad. You have your hospital.'
Carter looked straight ahead at the flag, the desk. Those photographs.
âThank you,' he rasped. âVery much.'
The Commandant leant in very close. His hot breath stank of sour whisky. âYou will see the animals at the hospital one time each day,' he whispered. âNo more. You understand? The rest of the day, you are mine. For me. Yes?'
Carter nodded.
The Commandant chuckled and clapped Carter on the back, then slid his hand up to squeeze the nape of his neck. As one might clasp an errant dog.
âYou are clever man. Do not do something foolish.'
Trapped, Carter unwillingly accepted a pair of new Italian leather shoes, which the Commandant ordered him to wear in place of his ruined pair.
When he hesitated, the Commandant said, âYou will be neat, yes? You obey me in all things now.'
WHEN Edith told Maurice that Dr Carter wouldn't be able to help him after all, she half expected him to lose his head over it.