Margot: A Novel (36 page)

BOOK: Margot: A Novel
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Ilsa’s story, it is a nice one. It is a story of bravery and selfless
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ness and redemption. It is a story that makes Margot nothing
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more than one of the millions of other Jews who suffered, the
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ones now whose dead sisters are not icons. It is a story that
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makes me nothing more than a victim of the Nazis and then,
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somehow, like Bryda Korzynski, a survivor of them too.
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It could be the truth. It might not be. When I close my
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eyes and envision the scene, I can see it happening that way,
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just as Ilsa described. My sister insisting that I go, pushing
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me from the train. I imagine it the same way I can imagine
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my sister stepping in front of me in line, getting tattooed first.
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I cannot tell you if this is the way it happened. I wish I could.
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But I cannot.
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“You have suffered so much,” Ilsa is saying now. She
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reaches up and strokes my hair with her hand, and I lay my
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head down on her fragile bony shoulder. “Oh, my dear,” she
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whispers into my hair. “It is time for you to become whole
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again.”
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27
28S
29N
01
02
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Chapter Fifty
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05
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Eventually, Ilsa and I stand up from the bench and
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continue walking down the street. It feels strange, that noth
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ing around us looks different, that not even the air has
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changed after I have told Ilsa so much, and Ilsa has given me
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a story that I may be able to cling to.
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As we walk, I think about her words, that it is time for me
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to become whole again. What does that even mean? I wonder,
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until we hit the front entrance to John Wanamaker’s, and
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then her words begin to make sense.
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Ilsa pulls open the heavy door, but I stop, let go of her
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hand, and give her a hug. “I have to go,” I tell her.
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“Where?” Ilsa asks me.
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“There is someone I need to see,” I tell her. I think about
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that last moment in the annex with Peter, my sister, and me.
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What might have happened, had the Green Police not
S28
stormed in? I would’ve asked my sister what she meant, why
N29
01
she was saying his name that way. And Peter would’ve
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stood. He would’ve looked me in the eyes with confusion
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or he would’ve gone to my sister. Either way, I would’ve
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fought for him. I would not have run away—I did not run
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away; I was ripped away. And that is entirely different. I
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wouldn’t have let Peter go, just like that. I would’ve at least
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tried. The way we were together the night before, that last
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night in the annex. That meant something. I know it did. The
09
way Joshua had looked at me, put his hand on my face.
I
10
cannot work with you, Margie
. He was saying more than that.
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He was.
12
“Someone?” Ilsa is saying now, arching her eyebrows.
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“My boss,” I say. Ilsa said it was time for me to become
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whole. And now I cannot imagine myself as someone whole,
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someone real, without Joshua.
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“Your boss?” Ilsa raises her tiny eyebrows, and her voice
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now reveals that she has also long suspected there is more
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between me and Joshua than my inability to work with mur
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derers. But I do not clarify any further.
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“I’ll call you later,” I promise her again.
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“Margie,” she says.
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“I will call you. I promise.” I hesitate for a moment. And
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then I add, “And please, don’t tell anyone the things I have
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told you.”
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“Of course,” she says. If it were anyone but Ilsa, I might
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worry, but I trust Ilsa more than I have trusted anyone since
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my blood family, and I know she will keep my secret.
28S
“Margie,” she says my name again. “Wait—I could come
29N
with you.”
“Thank you,” I tell her. “But this is something I need to do
01
alone.”
02
She hesitates for a moment before leaning in to give me
03
another quick hug. And then she stands back and watches
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me go.
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06
07
It is nearly lunchtime by the time I arrive at the lobby of the
08
office building, and as a result I have to wait a while for the
09
elevator. I pace the marble-tiled floor in front of it, Ilsa’s words
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echoing in my brain.
You have suffered so much. It is time for
11
you to be whole again
.
12
I have been hiding for so long that it has become all I am.
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And I realize I am not even truly certain why I am still hiding,
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except now it is all I know. A promise I made so long ago that
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has no meaning anymore.
Ilsa knew. She has known for a
16
while.
And yet she has said nothing until now. She has cooked
17
me dinner and worried about my weight, and called me “my
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dear” as if I were her flesh and blood. Is it possible that no
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matter who a person once was, what your past is, how terrible
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that past is, that you can somehow transcend it? I thought I
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could, that I would, when I first moved to America. I thought
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my life would be free and open, and I would find Peter and
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we would marry. I did not imagine the way my father would
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put my sister’s book into the world filled with such a different
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version of life in the annex than the one I remember, the way
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that would change everything. The way everyone would know
27
my story but me. But I hope that Ilsa is right, that it is not too
S28
late. Even now.
N29
01
Finally the elevator doors ding and slide open. A group of
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men in suits, not lawyers from the firm, but men or clients
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from one of the other companies in the building, step out,
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past me. Henry holds on to the button to keep the doors open
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for me, and I am the only one going in, the only one going up,
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at this hour of the day.
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“Miss Franklin,” Henry says, shooting me a kind smile.
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His warm brown eyes melt against my face. “I thought maybe
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you was sick today when you didn’t ride up first thing this
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morning.”
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“No,” I say. “Just a little sidetracked, that’s all, Henry.”
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Maybe I have been sidetracked for years now, I think. But I
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don’t share this thought with Henry.
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The doors open onto the seventh floor and Henry tells me
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to have a good afternoon. I smile at him and walk quickly
16
toward my desk. It is empty, I see, which means Joshua hasn’t
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replaced me yet, even temporarily. Not that I would’ve
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expected him to, this fast, but still I also cannot imagine
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Joshua working efficiently without a secretary.
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Shelby is at her desk, but she does not appear to be work
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ing. She is staring at something—maybe the window by Josh
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ua’s office?—and she lets her cigarette dangle loosely in her
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right hand.
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“Shelby.” I say her name, and she jumps a little.
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Her chocolate eyes turn, then fall. I wonder if something
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has happened with her and Ron, but before I have a chance
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to ask, she is saying, “Oh, Margie, where have you been?” I
28S
look past her to Joshua’s glass window, trying to get the tiniest
29N
of glimpses of him. But I quickly see the light in his office is
off, the office dark, and that Joshua is not inside.
He’s at
01
lunch, with Penny. Of course.
02
Still I ask Shelby now, “Where’s Joshua?”
03
“Oh,” she says. “You don’t know, do you?”
04
I expect her to say it, that over the weekend, Penny and
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Joshua got engaged, that of course he could not be expected
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to work on the cusp of such a happy and exciting occasion.
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Her eyes, when she saw me, it had nothing at all to do with
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Ron. “Know what?” I ask, my voice breaking.
09
“Ezra,” she says, her voice thick with a sadness that I am
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not used to from her. I turn and look at her, and there are
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tears in her eyes. One escapes and runs down her cheek. She
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quickly wipes it away.
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“No,” I whisper, not wanting to believe what she is telling
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me. If this is true, then why has no one called to tell me? But
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then I think guiltily of the way I walked out of Isaac’s on Fri
16
day as Joshua called after me.
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Shelby nods. “He passed away on Saturday.”
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My fingers feel numb, the air suddenly too thick. “Where
19
is he?” I whisper.
20
“Ezra?”
21
“Joshua?”
22
“Oh.” She grabs a tissue from inside her satchel and blows
23
her nose. “Margate,” she says. “He called in this morning.”
24
She pauses. “He asked for you.”
25
“He did?”
26
She nods. “I tried to cover for you, Margie. I lied and told
27
him you were in the bathroom, but he said he knew I was lying,
S28
that you weren’t in. Where in God’s name were you, anyway?”
N29
01
“I have to go,” I tell her. And I turn and walk back toward
02
the elevator.
03
“Margie,” she calls after me. “Margie.”
04
I press the button for the elevator, but it is still lunchtime,
05
still slow. Shelby stands up from her desk and runs over to
06
where I’m standing. She puts her hand on my shoulder, and I
07
turn to look at her face. Her brown eyes well up with confu
08
sion and sadness. “What is going on with you?” she asks. I
09
don’t answer, and the elevator doors open. Henry raises his
10
eyebrows at me, in surprise, but he does not say a word.
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“Joshua really asked for me?” I say. She nods, and I step
12
inside the elevator.
13
“Margie,” Shelby calls after me. “Where are you going?”
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“Margate,” I say, and there is just enough time before the
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elevator doors shut for me to watch Shelby’s lips fall open in
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surprise.
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28S
29N
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Ch
apter
Fif
ty-on
e
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When I reach my apartment building, I find Ilsa sit

BOOK: Margot: A Novel
3.62Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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