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Underground Fugue

Page 7

by Margot Singer


  She opens her eyes, hardly aware of the church or how she got here. The pianist’s fingers are flying across the keys. The music explodes in climax, draws back to a ripple, whispers, sings. The theme and countertheme return again and again. They are the same each time and yet completely different, just as she is always both herself and not herself in each successive instant, no longer a small girl living in England, no longer a wife or mother, no longer even the same woman she was fifty-seven minutes earlier that very afternoon. She too has circled through the variations and returned to where she started to find that it has changed.

  The music stops. The pianist’s hands hover above the keys. The strings resound and ring, their vibration rising toward the vaulted ceiling of the church. Everybody holds their breath.

  Bach’s final, unfinished quadruple fugue breaks off without resolution, without a cadence. There is only silence. A drift.

  LONIA

  She wakes in darkness, thrashing, her nightdress twisted, the damp sheets sticking to her skin. Pain radiates through her body like a high-pitched drone. She struggles to sit but finds that she cannot. She is dying. She lies back and tries to slow her breath, panic cinching tight across her chest. She is dying. Where is Esther? She is afraid to go back to sleep. A handful of patience is worth a bushel of brains, her father used to say. Patience has never been her strength.

  Shh, schatzie, her father always said, brushing the hair back from her forehead.

  Then the story would begin. Es war einmal. Once there was a girl and a boy and their father who lived on Nádražni Street. Then the world collapsed into a heap of bones.

  Oh, this worn-out story, unraveling, moth eaten, full of holes.

  —

  She sees him now, her brother Hugo, as clearly as if he were standing before her. He is leaning over the table, his jaw shaded with pale stubble, his eyes hard and bright. Light fractures off the chandelier. Their father sighs blue smoke. In Austria the situation is very bad. Jews have been arrested, beaten, fired from their jobs, their property seized. Even here in Moravská Ostrava, the SdP have been demonstrating in the streets. Black- and red-striped party flags fly from all the windows on the Marktplatz. Her father has been writing to business acquaintances and distant relatives in Antwerp, Trondheim, Chicago, Leeds. His middle finger is stained blue with ink.

  Hugo talks of olive trees, orange groves, Zionist pioneers. Their father grinds the stub of his cigarette onto his plate.

  “And you would do what in Palestine, exactly?”

  “Live on a kibbutz,” Hugo says. “Work the land.”

  “You, a farmer? Don’t be a fool.”

  Lonia doesn’t want to go anywhere. She likes her room, her school, her friends. The windows of the flat have been thrown open to the sooty August heat. The air that enters is hot as exhaust. Beyond the Vítkovice smokestacks, the sun is red. She has seen photographs of Palestine: dusty streets and Arabs, donkeys, sand, old stones. She doesn’t want to leave. She doesn’t want to leave her grandparents, her mother’s gravesite, her friends. She can’t imagine being anywhere but here. She leans her head against her father’s shoulder. He lights another cigarette.

  “Beneš will not give in to the Reich,” he says.

  Across the table, Hugo’s jaw is set. Lonia knows that look. The door to his bedroom slams.

  —

  Hugo and her father argue. The wireless sits between them on the table, a constant drone. Her father expects to be called up. There is talk of evacuating her and Hugo to the countryside. Lonia wonders why men have to fight. Without men there would be no war, her best friend Eva says. Lonia has read about the Amazons, so she knows this isn’t true. Still, she is certain women would do things differently. In any case, politics bore her. She is more interested in Hugo’s friend Ĵiri, who loans her books of poetry and brings her wildflowers stuffed in pickle jars.

  “The way he looks at you,” Eva says. “Watch out!”

  “Shut up!”

  “I guess he can’t get any girls his own age.”

  In the other room, her father is shouting into the telephone. Her Opa’s heart is weak and he has been confined to bed for weeks. She hears the words doctors, money, blow over, leave.

  Someday, she decides, she will live in a villa like her grandparents’, surrounded by climbing roses and lilacs and apricot trees snowing blossoms in the spring. She will have two tall wolfhounds, loads of children, a bright red motorcar. She will wear a hat tipped to a fashionable angle on her head, a fox stole, a diamond ring. In her imagination, the future is like the dioramas in the natural history museum: tiny, perfect, fake.

  Hugo brings home copies of Der Judenstaat and Alteneuland, pamphlets, Hebrew primers. He leaves them strewn about the flat. Lonia and her father step over them, like muddy puddles in the street.

  —

  By the time the first snow falls in late December, the borders have snapped shut like traps. The Sudetenland is lost; Beneš has been betrayed. When her grandfather dies, they are not permitted to cross the border to Opava to attend the funeral. Her father finally manages to bring his mother out to live with them, against her will. She spends her days sitting at the window, her eyes watery and unfocused, her speech confused. Barred from practicing law, her father spends the days at home closed in his study, listening to the radio, writing letter after letter to bank officials and immigration authorities. He is growing thinner, brittle, pale as the parchment on which he writes.

  Hugo’s place at university has been revoked. He manages to find a job in the accounting office at the steelworks in Vítkovice. He rides his bicycle to work, hunched inside his overcoat, zigzagging through the snow. He leaves early in the morning, comes home late. Lonia misses him, as if he has already gone for good.

  Lonia walks toward the river through the park where she and Hugo used to play when they were kids. Dirty sludge laps the curbs and seeps through the soles of her boots. Even before the snow stops falling, it is scabbed with soot. A grid of trolley lines scrapes the sky, gray with ash from the coking plants and the steel mills and the deep mines burning coal. Across the river rises the Ema mine dump: a huge, hot heap of slag. The homeless huddle there for warmth.

  Everyone is talking about leaving. Somehow Ĵiri has managed to obtain an immigration permit for Palestine. There is wild speculation about the possibility of waiting things out in places Lonia has never heard of: Sumatra, the Dominican Republic, Uganda, Borneo.

  No one asks Lonia where she wants to go.

  She feels the great wheels grinding all around her, their heavy iron spokes.

  —

  It is Hugo’s voice she hears now, calling to her from down the street. He is cycling toward her up Nádražni, the tails of his overcoat flapping out behind him like wings. Light snow floats in the nimbus of the streetlamps. He catches up to her at the bottom of the steps, swinging his leg over the seat. He is all angles, her brother, pale skin stretched over long bones. He pulls an aerogram from his pocket.

  “Look, a letter came from Ĵiri.”

  “Are you still going to those meetings?”

  “He’s living on a kibbutz in the Galilee. He’s changing his name to Yigal!”

  “It’s freezing, Hugo. I’m going in.”

  His hand is on her arm. This is how it always is between them, this push and pull: his stubborn tug, her giving in.

  “I’m going, Lonia. I don’t care what Papa says.”

  She twists her arm away. “And you’ll get there how?”

  “There are ways.”

  “You’ll just get yourself killed.”

  The tram comes screeching around the curve, the faces inside blurry at windows fogged with breath. She is seventeen years old; she cannot imagine another life.

  She pulls the heavy front door open and holds it as Hugo hauls his bike over the threshold steps and in. Her toes have gone numb with cold. Her father will not let Hugo go, she thinks. Now that her grandmother has come to live with them, her father has let his le
tter-writing campaign lapse. The doctors have made it clear that her Oma, already vague with grief, will not survive another move. Her father paces back and forth across his study like a big cat in a cage. He sighs blue swirls of smoke. He says, This too shall pass, but he doesn’t sound convinced.

  Lonia trudges up the steep flights of stairs. From the drawer of her dressing table, she takes out the book of Rilke’s poems Ĵiri loaned her, a lovely edition bound in green morocco, stamped with gold. Now she knows she’ll never give it back.

  —

  The Wehrmacht rolls into Ostrava at dusk on March 13, 1939, a motorcycle cavalcade followed by a rumbling procession of armored cars and tanks and antiaircraft guns. Lonia’s father stands over the radio, desperately twisting the dial between snatches of shortwave static from Radio Moscow and the BBC. Out of the windows of the flat, the sun flares red.

  Lonia goes into her room and lies down on the bed without bothering to remove her shoes. What would happen now? Would the Germans make a pogrom here as well? Would they smash the windows and beat men in the streets? It was hard to fathom, but of course so many unthinkable things had already come to pass. She does not understand the politics of men, their deals and hand-shakes and pronouncements. She does not understand why they have to fight.

  The cracks in the plaster ceiling look like the boot of Italy. She traces the coastline south from Trieste to Venice, Bologna, Bari, Brindisi. She pictures pastel houses nestled into hillsides, fishing skiffs pulled up on beaches, café tables by the sea. The Graphic Atlas, too, is washed in pastel colors: chalky green for Germany, pale yellow for Czechoslovakia, pink for Palestine. Drawn in cross section, scored with lines of longitude, planet Earth is a ball of blue. Now Czechoslovakia was no more. Green over yellow left no trace.

  From the other room comes the radio’s dull drone, her father’s low tones, and Hugo’s louder protests. Someone is shouting drunkenly down on the street. Her grandmother is wailing. Ich will nach Hause! As if she could just throw wide the windows and fly back home again. If Lonia could, she would sail into the night, out over the red roofs and church steeples, the railway yards and steel mills and mine tailings, the heaps of coke and slag, the telegraph poles and tramways and washing fluttering on backyard lines, out over the border guards and barricades, the soldiers cradling their rifles, over the invisible wall of the frontier.

  Lonia blinks and the ceiling cracks morph into the outline of a castle, a tunnel, an underground lake. Where would she go, what would she do, if she had a magic wish?

  —

  “Make a wish,” Lonia’s husband Isaac used to like to say to Esther when she was little. “Close your eyes and wish.”

  Esther—solid, serious little thing that she was at five or six—would hold her breath and screw her eyes shut tight.

  “Stop it, Isaac,” Lonia said.

  “Are you wishing very hard?” Isaac asked Esther.

  She nodded vigorously. Yes, yes, yes.

  “Hocus, pocus, fillipus!” said Isaac, tapping Esther with a pencil on the head. “Open your eyes!”

  Esther opened her eyes and hopped up and down on one foot.

  “Let us see if the magic worked,” Isaac said. “What did you wish for, then?”

  Lonia wanted to kick him. “That’s cheating,” she hissed.

  “A sweet,” said Esther, beaming up at him. “A toffee, please.”

  “Which hand?” Isaac held out his fists.

  It was always there, without fail, in whichever hand she picked—a toffee or some wine gums or a Polo mint. Did he carry candy about loose like that, in his pockets, just in case? Lonia could never tell.

  He had other tricks as well. He could make a coin go through a solid table. He could levitate, both feet rising a few centimeters off the ground. He could poke a pencil up one nostril and pull it out his ear. Hocus, pocus, fillipus, he said. It wasn’t terribly hard to fool a child, but still.

  She never stopped missing him, all these years. But one had to move on. Memory could hold you back. It wasn’t necessarily the case, she always felt, that any trauma in your past that you did not expose and come to terms with would fester and haunt you until you did. The pop psychologists didn’t necessarily have it right. Memory was no automatic cure. In fact, memory could be a terrible burden—even a kind of disease. Perhaps that’s what she is suffering from now, she thinks.

  —

  What remains of those shadowed months and weeks leading up to war? Not memories so much as an ostinato, bits of phrases, riffs.

  Her grandmother folded in her chair beside the window, high-necked in black, her hair pinned up in tarnished rings.

  The noontime whistle from the coking plant splitting the sooty air.

  The scratching of her father’s pen.

  Wurst, kartoffelsalad, schnitzel, sauerbraten, wurst again: what she’s learned to make since the cook had to be dismissed. Her father’s nightly cognac in a pear-shaped glass. The good Demel chocolates from Vienna now impossible to get.

  Phrases from her primer, Basic English for Czechoslovak Students: “I am sure to leave to-morrow. We happened to meet in the park. He is likely to arrive by the evening train.”

  At night, the freight trains’ clack and howl.

  Rumors like the twilight twittering of birds: that the Rothschilds were negotiating to sell Vítkovice to the Czechs, that troops were massing along the Hungarian frontier, that the chemistry teacher Herr Levinsky was a Soviet spy.

  Swastikas cartwheeling from the windows of the buildings around the Central Square, unfurling from the wing mirrors of passing cars.

  In the wooden box atop her chest of drawers: A leaf-shaped brooch inlaid with mother-of-pearl. A wafer of mica. An enamel locket containing a photograph of the mother she never knew. A four-leaf clover, pressed. A doll’s ceramic head.

  Her father, her father: rough-cheeks, smoke breath, the gold rims of his glasses glinting, bending to kiss her goodnight.

  —

  Her father is touching her shoulder. “Are you in pain?”

  She tries to focus. No, it’s not her father. It’s her daughter Esther, leaning over her, her dark hair loose, her pale face pinched. The darkness surges and recedes.

  “You were crying out. How long have you been awake?”

  Lonia struggles to sit up but finds that she cannot.

  “You don’t have to be a martyr, for god’s sake, Mum.” A finger slides a tablet between her upper gum and cheek. “Can I get you anything else? Water? Are you hot?”

  Lonia manages to shake her head.

  Esther sighs and shifts. “I’ll sit here with you for a bit. Now that I’m awake.”

  She is as distant as another planet in the dark. Lonia’s eyes drift closed. Behind her eyelids, galaxies swirl blue in space.

  THREE

  ESTHER

  Her mother’s friends—the few who remain—come round on Wednesday afternoons to tea. In the old days, they played bridge. Now the old women sit beside her mother on the sofa, stroking her hands, casting sidelong, sagging glances Esther’s way. It’s the end, their looks say. First her, then us.

  Esther sets out a plate of coffee cake and scones, a pot of tea. Her mother sits erect, dressed in her usual cardigan and knit trousers, her pearls around her neck. She has grown visibly thinner in the weeks since Esther arrived in London, as if she is not exactly dying but dematerializing, the atoms of her flesh dissolving into air. She looks like a Hindu ascetic next to Vivian and Myrna and Ruth, with their paunchy arms and floral Marks & Spencer house-dresses, their ankles stuffed like bratwurst into rubber-soled orthopedic shoes. Her mother nods, her eyes focused on some distant point, as the other women natter on about their children’s and grandchildren’s accomplishments, so-and-so’s dementia and so-and-so’s most recent stroke, the status of their eyesight, their diabetes, their indigestion, the grinding agony of their worn-out knees and hips.

  “It’s good of you to come over to stay with your Mum,” Vivian says, nibbling on a scone
. Crumbs gather on the plateau of her ample chest. The other women nod and cluck, sizing up Esther with their puffy, cataract-clouded eyes. They speak about her mother rather than to her, as if she were a child, or already gone.

  “She’s very fortunate to have you.”

  “Oh, yes, indeed.”

  “How long will you be staying, then?” asks Myrna, always the pushy one.

  “As long as I’m needed, I guess,” Esther says.

  Myrna gives her an appraising look. Myrna’s daughter Claudia, Esther knows, has recently ditched her husband for an investment banker and snagged herself a four-bedroom flat overlooking Regent’s Park and a villa in the south of France. No doubt Myrna is also plotting to fix Esther up with some unappealing, wealthy British Jew.

  To change the subject, Esther brings up the matter of the possible leaky pipe. She heard it again, the other night, and it definitely wasn’t rain. The old women frown and cock their heads. None of them can hear the sound of dripping, but like her mother, they are in agreement that it must be coming from next door.

  Vivian finally notices the crumbs and swipes her hand across her chest. “Who lives there? A doctor, you said?”

  “Yes, a neurologist. He’s Persian—from Iran.”

  “Iran,” says Myna. “Since the time of Haman, the Persians have been trying to annihilate the Jews. You know the Purim story, don’t you, Esther? Of course you do.”

  “London’s overrun with Arabs, isn’t it?” Ruth says, scrunching up her lips.

  Aryan, not Arab, Esther doesn’t say but thinks.

  “What’s it they’re calling it, these days?” says Myrna. “Londonistan?”

  “Anti-Semitic incidents are at a record high, my Gerry says,” adds Ruth.

  Vivian sighs. “There’s only ever bad news, it seems.”

  “Gerry’s addicted to the news on that computer,” Ruth says. “He sits there all day long, glued to the screen, mumbling about the horrid things people write. Switch that bloody thing off, I say. It just fills your brain with hate.”

 

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