Tzili felt as if her eyes had been opened. She heard words which she had not heard for years, and they lapped against her ears with their whispers. “If I meet my mother, what will I say to her?” She did not know what everyone else already knew: apart from this handful of survivors, there were no Jews left.
The sun opened out. The people unbuttoned their damp clothes and sprawled on the riverbank and slept. The long, damp years of the war steamed out of their moldy bodies. Even at night the smell did not disappear. Only Tzili did not sleep. The way the people slept filled her with wonder. A warm breeze touched them gently in their deep sleep. Are they happy? Tzili asked herself. They slept in a heap, defenseless bodies suddenly abandoned by danger.
The next day too no one woke up. “What do they do in their sleep?” she asked without knowing what she was asking. “I’ll go on,” she said. “No one will notice my absence. I’ll work for the peasants like I did before. If I work hard they’ll give me bread. What more do I need?” Her thoughts flowed as of their own accord. All the years of the war, in the forest and on the roads, even when she and Mark were together, she had not thought. Now the thoughts seemed to come floating up to the surface of her mind.
For a moment she thought of getting up and leaving the sleeping people and returning to the mountain where she had first met Mark. The mountain itself had disappeared from view, but she could still see the swamps below it. They shone like two polished mirrors. Her longings were deep and charged with heavy feelings. They drew her like a magnet, but as soon as she rose to her feet she felt that her body had lost its lightness. Not only her belly was swollen but also her legs. The light, strong columns which had borne her like the wind were no longer what they had been.
Now she knew that she would never go back to that enchanted mountain; everything that had happened there would remain buried inside her. She would wander far and wide, but she would never see the mountain again. Her fate would be the fate of these refugees sleeping beside her.
She wanted to weep but the tears remained locked inside her. She sat without moving and felt the sleep of the refugees invading her body. And soon she too was deep in sleep.
26
THEIR SLEEP LASTED a number of days. From time to time one of them opened his eyes and stretched his arms as if he were trying to wake up. All in vain. He too, like everyone else, was stuck to the ground.
Tzili opened the haversack and spread the clothes out to dry. Two long dresses, a petticoat, children’s trousers, the kitchen knife which Mark had used to make the bunker, and two books—this is what was left.
From the size of the garments Tzili understood that Mark’s wife was a tall, slender woman and the children were about five years old, thin like their mother. And she noticed too that the dresses buttoned up to the neck, which meant that Mark’s wife was from a traditional family. The petticoat was plain, without any flowers. There were two yellow stains on it, apparently from the damp.
She sat looking at the inanimate objects as if she were trying to make them speak. From time to time she stroked them. The silence all around, as in the wake of every war, was profound.
Whenever she felt hunger gnawing at her stomach she would take a garment from the haversack and offer it in exchange for food. At first she had asked Mark to forgive her, although then too, she had not given the matter too much thought. Later she had stopped asking. She was often hungry and she bartered one garment after the other. The haversack had emptied fast, and now this was all that was left.
These things I won’t sell, she said to herself, although she knew that the first time she felt hungry she would have to sell them. She would often feel a voracious greed for food, a greed she could not overcome. Mark will understand, she said to herself, it’s not my fault.
She sat and listened to the pulsing of the embryo inside her. It floated quietly in her womb, and from time to time it kicked. It’s alive, she told herself, and she was glad.
The next day spring burst forth in a profusion of flowers. And the sleepers awoke. It was not an easy awakening. For hours they went on lying, stuck to the ground. Not as many as they had seemed at first—about thirty people all told.
In the afternoon, as the heat of the sun increased, a few of them rose to their feet. In the light of the sun they looked thin and somewhat transparent. Someone approached her and said: “Where are you from?” He spoke in German Jewish. He looked like Mark, only taller and younger.
“From here,” said Tzili.
“I don’t understand,” said the man. “You weren’t born here, were you?”
“Yes,” said Tzili.
“And what did you speak at home?”
“We tried to speak German.”
“That’s funny, so did we,” said the stranger, opening his eyes wide. “My grandmother and grandfather still spoke Yiddish. I liked the way they talked.”
Tzili had never seen her grandfather. This grandfather, her father’s father, a rabbi in a remote village in the Carpathian mountains, had lived to a ripe old age and had never forgiven his son for abandoning the faith of his fathers. His name was never mentioned at home. Her mother’s parents had died young.
“Where are we going?” the man asked.
“I don’t know.”
“I have to get there soon. My engineering studies were interrupted in the middle. I’ve missed enough already. If I don’t arrive in time I may be too late to register. A person starts a course of study and all of a sudden a war comes and messes everything up.”
“Where were you during the war?” asked Tzili.
“Why do you ask? With everyone else, of course. Can’t you see?” he said and stretched out his arm. There was a number there, tattooed in dark blue on his skin. “But I don’t want to talk about it. If I start talking about it, I’ll never stop. I’ve made up my mind that from now on I’m starting my life again. And for me that means studying. Completing my studies, to be precise.”
This logic astounded Tzili. Now she saw: the man spoke quietly enough, but his right hand waved jerkily as he spoke and fell abruptly to his side, as if it had been cut off in midair.
He added: “I’ve always been an outstanding student. My average was ninety. And that’s no joke. Of course, it made the others jealous. But what of it? I was only doing what I was supposed to do. I like engineering. I’ve always liked it.”
Tzili was enchanted by his eloquence. It was a long time since she had heard such an uninterrupted flow of words. It was the way Blanca and Yetty and her brothers used to talk. Exams, exams always around the corner. Now the words momentarily warmed her frozen memory.
After a pause he said: “There were two exams I didn’t take, through no fault of my own. I won’t let them get away with it. It wasn’t my fault.”
“Never mind,” said Tzili, for some reason.
“I won’t let them get away with it. It wasn’t my fault.”
And for a moment it seemed that they were sitting, not in an open field in the spring after the war, but in a salon where coffee and cheesecake were being served. The hostess asks: “Who else wants coffee?” A student on vacation speaks of his achievements. Tzili now remembered her own home, her sister Blanca, sulkily hunching her shoulder, her books piled on the table.
The man rose to his feet and said: “I’m not hanging around here. I haven’t got any time to waste. These people are sleeping as if time lasts forever.”
“They’re tired,” said Tzili.
“I don’t accept that,” said the man, with a peculiar gravity. “There’s a limit to what a person can afford to miss. I’ve made up my mind to finish. I’m not going to leave my studies broken off in the middle. I have to get there in time. If I arrive in time I’ll be able to register for the second semester.”
Tzili asked no more. His eloquence stunned her. And as he spoke, scene after scene of a drama not unfamiliar to her unfolded before her eyes: a race whose demanding pace had not been softened even by the years of war.
He looked a
round him and said: “I’m going. There’s nothing for me to do here.”
Tzili remembered that Mark too had stood on the mountainside and announced firmly that he was going. If she had said to him then, “Don’t go,” perhaps he would not have gone.
“Mark,” she said.
The man turned his head and said, “My name isn’t Mark. My name’s Max, Max Engelbaum. Remember it.”
“Don’t go,” said Tzili.
“Thank you,” said the man, “but I haven’t any time to waste. I have no intention of spending my time sleeping. And in general, if you understand me, I don’t want to spend any more time in the company of these people.” He made a funny little half bow, like a clerk rising from his desk, and abruptly said: “Adieu.”
Tzili noticed that he walked away the way people had walked toward the railway station in former days, with brisk, purposeful steps which from a distance looked slightly ridiculous.
“Adieu,” he called again, as if he were about to step onto the carriage stair.
The awakening lasted a number of days. It was a slow, wordless awakening. The refugees sat on the banks of the river and gazed at the water. The water was very clear now and a kind of radiance shone on its surface. No one went down to bathe. From time to time a word or phrase rose into the air. They were struggling with the coils of their sleep, which were still lying on the ground.
Tzili felt that she had come a very long way. And if she stayed with these people she would go even farther away. Where was Mark? Was he too following her, or was he perhaps still waiting, imprisoned in the same place? Perhaps he did not know that the war was over.
And while she was sitting and staring, a woman came up to her and said: “You need milk.”
“I have none,” said Tzili apologetically.
“You need milk, I said.” The woman was no longer young. Her face was haggard and there was a kind of fury in the set of her mouth.
“I’ll see to it,” said Tzili, in order to appease the woman’s wrath.
“Do it straightaway. A pregnant woman needs milk. It’s as necessary to her as the air she breathes, and you sit here doing nothing.”
Tzili said no more. When she did not respond, the woman grew angry and said: “A woman should look after her body. A woman is not an insect. And by the way, where’s the bastard who did this to you?”
“His name is Mark,” said Tzili softly.
“In that case, let him take care of it.”
“He’s not here.”
“Where is he?”
Tzili sat looking at her without resentment. No one interfered. They were sitting sunk into themselves. The woman turned away and went to sit on the riverbank.
That night cool spring winds blew, bringing with them shadows from the mountains. Quiet shadows that clung soundlessly to the trees but that nevertheless caused a commotion. At first people tried to chase them away as if they were birds, but for some reason the shadows clung to the trees and refused to go.
And as if to spite them, the night was very bright, and they could see the shadows clearly, breathing fearfully.
“Go away, leave us alone!” The shouts arose from every side. And when the shadows refused to go, people began to beat them.
The shadows did not react. Their stubborn resistance infuriated the people and they cast off all restraint.
All night long the battle lasted. Bodies and shadows fought each other in silence, violently. The only sound was the thud of their blows.
When day broke the shadows fled.
The survivors were not happy. A kind of sadness darkened their daylight hours. Tzili did not stir from her corner. She too was affected by the sadness. Now she understood what she had not understood before: everything was gone, gone forever. She would remain alone, alone forever. Even the fetus inside her, because it was inside her, would be as lonely as she. No one would ever ask again: “Where were you and what happened to you?” And if someone did ask, she would not reply. She loved Mark now more than ever, but she loved his wife and children too.
The woman who had grown angry with her before on account of the milk now sat wrapped up in herself. A kind of tenderness shone from her eyes, as if she were, not a woman who had lost herself and all she possessed, but a woman with children, whose love for her children was too much for her to bear.
27
SPRING WAS NOW at its height, its light was everywhere. Some of the people could not bear the silence and left. The rest sat on the ground and played cards. The old madness, buried for years, broke out: cards and gambling. All at once they shook off their damp, rotting rags and put on carefree expressions, laughing and teasing each other. Tzili did not yet know that a new way of life was unconsciously coming into being here.
The holiday atmosphere reminded Tzili of her parents. When she was still small they had spent their summer vacations in a pension on the banks of the Danube. Her parents were short of money, but they had spared no effort in order to be in the company, if only for two weeks, of speakers of correct German. As if to spite them, however, most of the people there spoke Yiddish. This annoyed her father greatly, and he said: “You can’t get away from them. They creep in everywhere.” Afterward he fell ill, and they stayed at home and spent their money on doctors and medicine.
No one spoke of the war anymore. The card games devoured their time. A few of them went to buy supplies, but as soon as they got back they joined enthusiastically in the game. Every now and then someone would remember to say: “What will become of us?” But the question was not serious. It was only part of the game. “What’s wrong with staying right here? We’ve got plenty of coffee, cigarettes—we can stay here for the rest of our lives”—someone would nevertheless take the trouble to reply.
Not far from where they sat the troops passed by, a vigorous army liberated from the siege, invading the countryside on fresh young horses. They all admired the Russians, the volunteers and the partisans, but it was not an admiration which entailed a desire for action. “Let the soldiers fight, let them avenge us.”
Tzili was with herself and the tiny fetus in her womb. Words which Mark had spoken to her on the mountain rang in her ears. Scenes from the mountain days passed before her eyes like vivid, ritual tableaus. Mark no longer appeared to her. For hours she sat and waited for him to reveal himself. He’s dead—the thought flashed through her mind and immediately disappeared.
One evening a few more Jewish survivors appeared, bringing a new commotion. And one of them, a youthful-looking man, spoke of the coming salvation. He spoke of the cleansing of sins, the purification of the soul. He spoke eloquently, in a pleasant voice. His appearance was not ravaged. Thin, but not horrifyingly thin. Some of them recognized him and remembered him from the camp as a quiet young man, working and suffering in silence. They had never imagined that he had so much to say.
Tzili liked the look of him and she drew near to hear him speak. He spoke patiently, imploringly, without raising his voice. As if he were speaking of things that were self-evident. And for a moment it seemed that he was not speaking, but singing.
The people were absorbed in their card game, and the young man’s eloquence disturbed them. At first they asked him to leave them alone and go somewhere else. The young man begged their pardon and said that he had only come to tell them what he himself had been told. And if what he had been told was true, he could not be silent.
It was obvious that he was a well-brought-up young man. He spoke politely in a correct German Jewish, and wished no one any harm. But his apologies were to no avail. They ordered him to leave, or at any rate to shut up. The young man seemed about to depart, but something inside him, something compulsive, stopped him, and he stood his ground and went on talking. One of the card players, who had been losing and was in a bad mood, stood up and hit him.
To everyone’s surprise, the young man burst out crying.
It was more like wailing than crying. The whole night long he sat and wailed. Through his wailing the history of
his life emerged. He was an architect. Like his father and forefathers, he was remote from Jewish affairs, busy trying to set up an independent studio. The war took him completely by surprise. In the camp something had happened to him. His workmate in the forced labor gang, something of a Jewish scholar although not a believer, had taught him a little Bible, Mishna, and the Sayings of the Fathers. After the war he had begun to hear voices, clear, unconfused voices, and one evening the cry had burst from his throat: “Jews repent, return to your Father in Heaven.”
From then on he never stopped talking, explaining, and calling on the Jews to repent. And when people refused to listen or hit him, he fell to the ground and wept.
The next day one of the card players found a way to get rid of him. He approached the young man and said to him in his own language, in a whisper: “Why waste your time on these stubborn Jews? Down below, not far from here, there are plenty of survivors, gentle people like you. They’re waiting for someone to come and show them the way. You’ll do it. You’re just the right person. Believe me.”
Strange, these words had an immediate effect. He rose to his feet and asked the way, and without another word he set out.
Tzili felt sorry for the young man who had been led astray. She covered her face with her hands. The others too seemed unhappy. They returned to their card playing as if it were not a game, but an urgent duty.
28
AFTER THIS the weather was fine and mild, without wind or rain. The grass grew thick and wild and the people sat about drinking coffee and playing cards. There were no quarrels, and for a while it seemed as if things would go on like this forever.
From time to time peasant women would appear, spread out their wares on flowered cloths, and offer the survivors apples, smoked meat, and black bread. The survivors bartered clothes for food. Some of them had gold coins too, old watches, and all kinds of trinkets they had kept with them through the years of the war. They gave these things away for food without haggling about their worth.
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