Margot: A Novel (34 page)

BOOK: Margot: A Novel
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the pen name my sister used for Peter’s mother in her diary.
23
The name the entire world knows as that of Peter’s
24
mother. Oh, the irony. For Peter to have found his fake-named
25
mother, here in America. But Petra does not say her name is
26
short for anything.
27
“So who is this Pelt you know?” she asks me. “There aren’t
28S
too many of our family in Philadelphia, I’m afraid.”
29N
Of course not.

Margot

I take a sip of my lemonade. It is tart and sweet and curls
01
against my tongue, which is parched from my walk in the
02
early summer afternoon. “Peter,” I say, and my voice comes
03
out in barely a whisper. “Peter Pelt.”
04
I expect her face to turn, for her to smile, then laugh, and
05
say,
Well, Margie, you have come to the right place.
I sit at the
06
edge of my chair, half expecting him to walk in, home from
07
work, any moment.
I’m home, darling,
he might call. And
08
then, how will he react as he walks in, attaché tucked under
09
his arm, pulling his hat from his curls, and seeing me, sitting
10
there, in his kitchen?
11
“Payter,” she says. “I don’t think I know of a Payter?”
12
At first her words don’t register, because I am still imagin
13
ing him, standing there at the cusp of the doorway. Tall and
14
strong
and
handsome.
His
American-ness,
his
Gentile-ness,
15
they will have aged him gracefully and perfectly. He will
16
smile at me. He will forget all about his wife. He will turn
17
and his eyes, blue as the sea, they will capture mine.
Margot.
18
He will whisper my name, and it will become a summer
19
breeze that dances so gently against my neck that my brain
20
begins to tilt and whirl the way it once did in his room in the
21
annex.
22
“Pete?” I ask, clinging to the smallest iota of hope.
23
“Nope,” she says. “It must be another Pelt clan entirely.”
24
“P. Pelt,” I whisper.
25
“Oh.” She looks at me funny, as if I have given away too
26
much, because I remember my lie, that I noticed the word
27
“Pelt” on the mailbox. “I’m P. Pelt,” she says. “Petra Pelt.”
S28
“And your husband?” I ask.
N29
01
She frowns. “We’re getting a divorce,” she says. “Pelt is my
02
maiden name. I’ve gone back to it now. My husband is a Bell
03
wether, nosebleed that he is.” She pauses and shakes her
04
head. “Anyway, I’ve just moved in a few months ago, and I’ve
05
listed the house and the phone with just my first initial
06
because I don’t want the whole world to know I’m a woman
07
living here, all alone with her baby.” She laughs nervously.
08
“You won’t go and advertise this now, will you, Margie? My
09
mother is convinced I’m practically inviting Jack the Ripper
10
to come on in.” Petra’s green eyes are sad and tired, and I
11
understand now that she is hiding too.
12
“I just thought Peter would be here,” I whisper.
13
She shakes her head. “I’m sorry,” she says. “What you see
14
is what you get. It’s only me and Eleanor.”
15
16
17
18
19
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23
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25
26
27
28S
29N
01
02
03
C
hapter
Fort
y-eight
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
Back in my apartment, I take my sweater off. It is too
14
hot for a sweater, and anyway, there is no one to see me now
15
other than Katze.
16
I lie on my blue couch, and Katze tumbles himself in my
17
lap, kneading and kneading, unable to settle himself in one
18
place. I think about Petra and Eleanor, about their lonely
19
secret life on Olney Avenue. I promised Petra I would stop by
20
soon, as she said she was in need of some girlfriends who did
21
not know her in her life as Mrs. Bellwether. And though I can
22
entirely understand the sentiment, I also know that I will not
23
be finding myself at 2217 Olney Avenue anytime soon.
24
Peter is dead. Like my sister is dead. I know it so solidly in
25
my heart that it aches and falls and burns in my chest. Per
26
haps I have always known it. But I hate to think that hope,
27
which has for so long been the only thing I have had left, that
S28
it is also nothing but my enemy.
N29
01
Peter is dead, and I wonder even if he isn’t, if he is some
02
where else, unlisted, or living under a different name, or still
03
somewhere in Europe, or even if he had been there, Petra’s
04
husband, would it be too late now? Whatever we had, we were
05
teenagers then. Maybe we had nothing. Maybe we had every
06
thing, but we were only teenagers. Before the war, I never
07
even considered love, marriage. I was too busy with my stud
08
ies. I was a child and I felt I had so much time for all that
09
other stuff.
10
I sigh and lean back against the couch, and run my hands
11
across Katze’s warm orange fur. I want to know everything. I
12
want to be able to understand everything, to decipher what is
13
real and what is not. That is what I hate most about the after
14
math of Hitler’s terrible regime, that everything that I have
15
done and that has been done to me, I cannot recall it with the
16
clarity in which I used to be able to recall school lessons. I
17
had a photographic memory for trigonometry and Latin
18
words, and yet there is a whole two-year period of my teenage
19
life—maybe more—in which I find myself at a loss.
20
The bare flesh of my arm burns into my blue velour couch,
21
and I find myself turning my head to look at it now: my fore
22
arm.
This is real,
I think, the way I so often have. This is the
23
only thing I have left from that time that is completely real. It
24
is undisputable evidence of what was done to me, how much
25
was taken, who and what I used to be, where I came from.
26
I think about what Bryda said earlier, that she knew of a
27
doctor who could remove my tattoo. But even if it would
28S
mean no more sweaters, no more hiding, I know I would
29N

never have it erased. It is really the only thing that remains of
01
Margot. The only thing I know to be true.
02
I stare at the numbers now, and it surprises me the way
03
they are still so bold, the way they are still right there, thick
04
dark ink.
Nothing can’t mean something,
Mother said.
05
I think about that morning in the camp. September 1944.
06
A month from the annex, from Peter, from the way my sister
07
said his name as the men in green carried us out. What had
08
she been saying then, really? Had it been an accusation or a
09
fantasy? Had seeing us there ruined her story or her reality?
10
Peter. Peter van Pels. Peter Pelt.
11
I do not love him,
my sister said.
It is not love.
12
She was angry with me that morning, when the Green
13
Police came. She did not talk to me in the truck. Our parents
14
thought her silence was born from fear. I knew better.
Peter?
15
The way she’d said his name, it was as if he’d betrayed her.
16
We both had.
17
But by the time we were dropped off the train in Aus
18
chwitz, nearly a month later, her anger had passed. We clung
19
to each other that morning, waiting, waiting, waiting in line,
20
as the Polish woman screamed over and over again, so loud I
21
thought her voice might break me.
Jestes diablem. Jestes dia-
22
blem.
23
“No,” I whispered to my sister then. “No, no, no.”
24
“Shhh.” She clung to my hand. “Don’t listen to her, Mar
25
got. Sing something happy in your head. Imagine a beautiful
26
place, the sea. Swimming in the North Sea with Mother and
27
Father and you and me.” She did not mention Peter, not ever
S28
N29

01
again, after the annex. At the camp, she was my sister, my
02
protector, my savior, and I was hers. Everything else fell away.
03
My hands trembled against hers as we watched the Polish
04
woman, as they held her down, tattooed her. “She’s so brave,”
05
my sister said.
06
And now I can envision this moment a different way than
07
I so often have envisioned it. In my head, this way feels just
08
as true.
09
Is it possible I did not push my sister behind me, to protect
10
her, to have her watch that it was not so bad? Is it possible I
11
trembled, like the coward I always was and most certainly
12
always have been?
13
“I cannot be brave,” I whispered to her. “I am not brave.”
14
“Yes,” she told me. “You are.”
15
She stepped in front of me in line, and held out her arm
16
to the officer, and she did not scream or even flinch as the
17
tattoo singed her flesh.
18
19
20
I see it there now, on my forearm: thick dark ink. And I
21
squeeze my eyes shut tightly, trying to picture it there on my
22
sister’s arm. She was one number higher than me. She stood
23
right behind me.
24
Or was she one number lower than me? Had she stood
25
right in front of me?
26
I push my brain to remember, the way the ink looked on
27
her forearm as she lay there on the dirty ground in the camp,
28S
as she clung to my arm on the train. What was her number?
29N
It has been so long, I cannot see it. All I can see are her
almond eyes, the way they held me at the end on the train,
01
begging me.
02
Nothing can’t mean something,
Mother said.
03
But if she is right, then what I am left with now, it is noth
04
ing. It means nothing. It is almost as if Margot, she never
05
even existed at all.
06
07
08
Suddenly I notice the brewing darkness, and I push Katze
09
from my lap and pull the Shabbat candle from beneath my
10
kitchen sink. I set it on the counter, force the flame to rise
11
and fall, and say my silent prayer.
12
It’s not religion. It’s ritual.
13
I could never be with someone who wasn’t Jewish,
Joshua
14
said.
15
I stare at my candle, watch it burn and flicker brightly, as
16
if it is taunting the gloaming.
17
“But it
is
religion,” I say to myself, out loud, my words
18
hanging there in the air.
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21
22
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25
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27
S28
N29
01
02
03
04
C
hapter
Fort
y-nine
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
Monday morning I sleep late, and it is a surprise to
15
awake to a gentle summer breeze coming in through the
16
slightly open window, blowing past the pale blue curtains Ilsa
17
sewed for me just after I moved in here. The numbers on the
18
clock read 9:17, but I have not slept well, my body, my brain
19
restless and tumbling. In my dreams, baby Eleanor was cry
20
ing for her father. Though not Peter, I thought as I awoke.
21
Bellwether.
22
I wonder what has transpired during Joshua’s weekend in
23
Margate. Perhaps he has even asked Penny to marry him, and
24
she will parade into the office this morning wanting to shove
25
her diamond in my face. She and Shelby, they may even share
26
a laugh and some bride’s notes, should Penny deem it accept
27
able to behave in such a way with the girls in the office.
28S
Though I venture to say she will. That nothing will dampen
29N
the good mood that a diamond from Joshua will put her in.
I groan and pull the pillow over my head, willing sleep to
01
find me again. But I know it will not. And though I have not
02
decided, consciously, not to go to work today, I do not move
03
to dress and get ready, and I know that I cannot go in. That I
04
cannot face even the possibility of Penny and her diamond.
05
Instead I get out of bed, pick up the phone, and dial Ilsa’s
06
number.
07
“My dear,” she says, upon hearing my voice. “What is it?
08
What’s the matter?”
09
It’s possible she can hear the way I’m breaking, just from
10
my tone as I have said her name. Or it could be because she
11
always seems to be so worried about me.
12
“I think I quit my job,” I say.
And Peter’s dead,
I add to
13
myself, in my head.
And I have nothing, no hope, left anymore.
14
Not even Joshua.
15
“Oh,” she says, and the word is weighted, as if she under
16
stands there is more there than just a job. I wonder if she was
17
able to intuit this much from our recent dinner, or if it is just
18
a guess on her part, right now. “Well,” she says, “I’m coming
19
into the city, then. We’ll have a girls’ day today.”
20
“I don’t know if I’m up for it,” I say.
21
“I’ll be there in an hour, my dear. Bertie is off today, and
22
I’ll have him drop me at your place.”
23
Then she hangs up, before I have any time to convince her
24
otherwise.
25
26
27
I sit there for a few moments, still holding the phone in my
S28
hand, wondering if Joshua might call to ask me when I will
N29
01
be in and why I am not at my desk. But then I suspect he
02
won’t.
I could never be with someone who wasn’t a Jew,
he said.
03
And didn’t that change everything? That he said it, what
04
everyone else had already seen, that there was something else
05
between us, more than just boss and secretary, but that what
06
ever that something was, it was never going to turn into more.
07
I think about Mother and Eduard, and I wonder what
08
their life might have been like together once. If they shared a
09
passion or if they held themselves back. But that was differ
10
ent, anyway. Eduard really truly was not a Jew. Margie Frank
11
lin, though, she is just a lie.
12
I look at the number on my arm again, trace the digits
13
with my finger. And then I go and dress in my green dress and
14
pink sweater.
15
16
17
Bertram honks the horn once as he pulls his Fairlane up by
18
the sidewalk on Ludlow Street, and I watch out the window
19
as Ilsa climbs out of the car. Her petite frame is wrapped in
20
a deep green sundress, which I know will bring out the color
21
of her eyes, when I am standing closer.
22
I lock my apartment and walk outside to meet her, and as
23
Bertram honks again, waves in my direction, and drives away,
24
Ilsa wraps her tiny arms around me. “Oh, my dear,” she says.
25
“Let’s walk to Wanamaker’s and look for some nice summer
26
dresses, shall we?”
27
I nod, and let her cling to my arm, the way Shelby always
28S
does. But in a way, I feel safer holding on to Ilsa. I am
29N

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