Margot: A Novel (37 page)

BOOK: Margot: A Novel
8.79Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

14
ting outside on the bench where Joshua once waited for me.
15
She is holding a tiny John Wanamaker’s bag and glancing
16
nervously at her slender gold watch. “Margie.” Her eyes break
17
into a smile when she sees me.
18
“You didn’t have to wait,” I say.
19
“Bertie is picking me up here, remember?” She pauses. “I
20
thought you would still be talking to your boss, for a while.”
21
I had been thinking I would go to my apartment, take
22
some money from my stash underneath the mattress, and
23
then make my way toward the Greyhound station, where
24
surely there must be a bus that could take me to Margate. But
25
now I have a different idea.
26
“Have you ever been to Margate?” I ask Ilsa.
27
“Margate, New Jersey?” I nod. “I’ve been to Cape May,”
S28
she says. “Bertie’s cousin Alice has a house there. I think
N29
01
Margate is nearby.” She pauses and looks me up and down.
02
“My dear,” she says. “What’s in Margate?”
03
“Joshua,” I say.
04
“Joshua?” She pats the space on the bench next to her, and
05
I sit down. “This Joshua, he is your boss?” I nod. “And you are
06
in love with him?” I meet her green eyes, wondering how they
07
are so wise, how she knows so much. And really, that I am
08
not as good as hiding things as I think. At least, not from Ilsa.
09
I nod again, and then she reaches for my hand and clasps it
10
tightly. “Bertie should be here in ten minutes. And then he
11
will drive you to Margate,” she says. “We both will.”
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28S
29N
02
03
Ch
apter
Fift
y-t
wo
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
In the back of Bertram’s Fairlane, I cling to the
14
brown leather seat and look out the window, waiting anx
15
iously for a glimpse of the sea. I can smell it faintly as we grow
16
closer, the salt air curling in my nose, a smell so foreign now
17
yet also so familiar. Once you have smelled the sea, I don’t
18
believe you ever forget its particular scent.
19
Bertram hasn’t talked much, but in true Bertram fashion,
20
he did not argue or even seem upset that his afternoon off
21
was being detoured by an hour-long drive to New Jersey.
22
“Margate?” he’d said, raising his copper eyebrows at Ilsa as
23
we both got into the car and Ilsa instructed him to drive
24
there. Ilsa nodded, and Bertram said only, “Illie, pull the map
25
out of the glove box, will you?”
26
“Are you sure you don’t mind?” I said to Bertram. “I could
27
find the bus.”
S28
“Nonsense.” Ilsa’s green eyes lit up as she found the atlas,
N29
01
and I could feel her excitement bursting through her skin.
02
“We don’t mind at all.”
03
And then all Bertram said was, “Check the map, Illie. the
04
White Horse or the Black Horse Pike looks better for
05
Margate?”
06
Bertram held one hand on the steering wheel and slid the
07
other across the seat to rest gently on Ilsa’s knee as Ilsa stud
08
ied the map and then declared the Black Horse Pike to be our
09
route.
10
“Black Horse it is, then,” Bertram said, pulling away from
11
the sidewalk, but keeping his hand on Ilsa’s knee.
12
I watch her as she still holds the atlas on her lap now, and
13
I cannot help but think of Peter. Of the way his finger traced
14
the name of the city of Philadelphia.
City of Brotherly Love.
15
Certainly Jews cannot be in hiding there.
And yet what have I
16
been doing, all this time? Peter had brought me here. But no,
17
I think now. I have brought myself. Peter and I were supposed
18
to be together. Or maybe we weren’t. Maybe nothing in the
19
annex was meant to be any more than a story, a fantasy, a way
20
to survive the horribleness of having our childhoods ripped
21
away, our lives ripped away.
We will go to Philadelphia,
Peter
22
said.
Be married.
23
I do not love him,
my sister said.
24
Was she the only one of the three of us who was really,
25
truly being honest? Understanding that the life in the annex,
26
it was a pretend life. It was no life at all.
27
“Where in Margate are we going?” Bertram asks as we are
28S
getting closer and closer to the sea. The smell of salt grows
29N
stronger, and I close my eyes and inhale, letting the salt tingle
in my nose as I try to remember the address of the house. I
01
sent things there on behalf of Ezra and Joshua in the past few
02
weeks. “Knight,” I whisper, recalling it. The house is on
03
Knight.
04
Ilsa finds the street on the map and gives Bertram direc
05
tions. Their voices rise and fall in the background as I look
06
out the window, at the houses. As we get closer to the sea, it
07
seems they get bigger, grander, more beautiful. They are del
08
icate and regal all at once, on stilts and swathed in windows.
09
Any one of these could be the Rosensteins’.
10
But the one that actually is the Rosensteins’ soon becomes
11
obvious. It is at the end of the drive, the house closest to the
12
sea. Their name is splashed across the black mailbox in white
13
letters. It is not the biggest house on the street, but it seems
14
fashioned of glass, and close enough to the sea that you might
15
almost be able to taste the salt on your tongue from the back
16
deck, which hangs close to the sand.
17
“This is it,” I say.
18
Bertram stops the car. Ilsa turns around and smiles at me.
19
“Shall I come in with you, my dear?” I shake my head. “Bertie
20
and I will go get a late lunch, then, and come back in an hour.
21
Should that be enough time?”
22
“I don’t know,” I say, because I have no idea how Joshua
23
will react when he sees me. Maybe five minutes will be
24
enough, or maybe, hopefully, it will not. “I can take the bus
25
back,” I tell her. “You don’t have to wait.”
26
“Nonsense,” Ilsa says. “Of course we’ll wait.” She leans in
27
to the backseat to hug me. “Good luck, my dear,” she whis
S28
pers in my ear.
N29
01
* * *
02
03
As Bertram’s Fairlane drives away, I stand in Knight Street for
04
a moment, across from the Rosensteins’ house. In a way, it is
05
not so dissimilar to our home on the Merwedeplein, in that it
06
is grand and tall and lofty, and the place where a well-off
07
family very obviously lives. We had nice things, before the
08
war, before we were hiding. I should not be so intimidated by
09
the big, big house by the ocean. And yet, still I am.
10
After a few minutes a powder-blue Chevelle pulls up, and
11
nearly immediately, I realize it is driven by Penny. She rides
12
with the top down, a white scarf wrapped around her petite
13
head. She is dressed in a slender black dress and wears big
14
Marilyn sunglasses. My heart falls as she parks the car in the
15
street next to the house, then turns my way and immediately
16
locks her eyes on me.
17
She pulls her scarf off her head, gets out of the car, and
18
runs across the street. “Margie, is that you?” she says. She
19
pulls her sunglasses down the bridge of her nose and gives me
20
a once-over. “If you’re here for the funeral, you’re too late. It
21
was this morning.” She frowns, and I realize I am completely
22
inappropriately dressed for a funeral, should that have been
23
my reason for coming here. I am wearing my pale green dress
24
with my pink sweater.
25
I try to glance at Penny’s left hand, nonchalantly, but she
26
clings tightly to her black leather clutch, and I cannot tell
27
whether there is a diamond there or not.
28S
“No,” I finally say. “I’m looking for Joshua.”
29N

“You came all the way here for Josh?” She raises her eye
01
brows, and looks at me in a way that says,
Silly, silly girl. Josh
02
would never want to see you.
I think about what Shelby said
03
once about wanting to punch Penny in her smug little face,
04
and I clench my hands uneasily at my sides. “Well,” she says,
05
pulling her sunglasses back up over her eyes. “This really isn’t
06
the best time. We’re preparing the house for the first night of
07
shiva tonight. That’s when—”
08
“I know what shiva is,” I say. Though there were many shi
09
vas I did not get to sit, for my mother, for my sister, we sat one
10
on the Merwedeplein after Gram Hollander died in January
11
1942. It was only a pretend shiva, though, as my sister said,
12
since we did not want to attract attention then from the Green
13
Police for having a large gathering of Jews. That was the first
14
time I’d seen Mother upset, really truly upset, by the war.
15
“You cannot even die with dignity anymore,” Mother had
16
complained to Father.
17
Penny stares at me hard, and then she says, “Josh is really
18
in no state to be discussing work right now.”
19
“This is not about work,” I tell her.
20
“Well, whatever it is you came for, it’s going to have to
21
wait. This is just the worst possible time.” She puts her hand,
22
her right hand, on my shoulder. “You go back to work, and I’ll
23
tell Josh you’ve sent your condolences, all right?”
24
No, it is not all right. I am not okay with allowing Penny
25
to be my gatekeeper, telling me where I can and cannot be,
26
what I can and cannot say, and most especially how and when
27
and why I am allowed to talk to Joshua.
S28
N29

01
“I am going to walk down to the beach,” I tell her. “Can
02
you ask Joshua to come down there to talk to me?”
03
“Oh, Margie.” She sighs. “I am sure you are a lovely secre
04
tary. But that is all you are. All you’ll ever be.”
05
Penny’s words rush in my ears, making me suddenly dizzy,
06
because it is possible, more than possible, that there is truth
07
in them.
You’re you
. Shelby’s voice echoes in my head.
08
I am me,
I think
.
And not the Gentile, Polish American
09
secretary. I have spent so many years hiding, and as Ilsa said,
10
it is time for me to become whole again.
11
“I will be waiting on the beach,” I tell Penny. “And then,
12
in a little while, if Joshua does not come down, I will knock
13
on the door, and come inside the house.”
14
I can feel the weight of her frown on my back as I turn and
15
walk down the staircase that leads me to the sand and the sea
16
below.
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28S
29N
01
02
03
Ch
apter
Fif
ty-t
hree
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
I take off my pumps before I step into the sand, and
14
then I dig my toes in. The beach is warm, and the grains of
15
sand cling between my toes. The sea swells before me, giant
16
and unyielding, even to the snow-white gulls who swoop
17
down and then back up against the pale blue sky.
18
The New Jersey sea, it is not at all like Peter’s eyes. It is
19
greener and blacker, murkier. It reminds me more of the color
20
of the canal running alongside the Prinsengracht, the water
21
we could stare at for so long, but could not touch.
22
The sea I always imagine in my head is the North Sea,
23
which truly was as blue as Peter’s eyes. We vacationed there,
24
the four of us, before the war got so bad that we could not. I
25
can still picture my sister and me, digging our small hands
26
into the sand while Mother and Father sunned themselves on
27
long chairs. My sister and I dug a moat in a circle around
S28
them, pulling at the sand until it coated our arms and dusted
N29
01
under our fingernails. And then we filled the moat with buck
02
ets of water, so anyone who would try to get to our parents, as
03
they lay there with their eyes closed, could not.
04
“Let’s do a castle,” I said to my sister, after the moat was
05
finished.
06
She shook her head. “Let’s keep digging,” she said. “I’ve
07
heard if you dig deep enough you can dig straight through to
08
the other end of the earth.”
09
We did not need to dig that far then, though still we tried,
10
until our arms grew tired, our fingers parched and ready to
11
bleed. “Girls,” Mother said when she awoke. “Fill that hole
12
back in. Someone might fall inside and kill themselves.”
13
My sister smiled at me and whispered, “We were so close,
14
I think. Maybe next time we’ll get there.”
15
There never was a next time, of course. By the next sum
16
mer, there were no vacations left for Jews. There were not
17
even movies or bus rides or bicycles.
18
“Margie?” I hear Joshua’s voice, and I turn away from the
19
sea. He runs down from the house, in his black suit, a yar
20
mulke crushing his curls. He has taken off his shoes and
21
cuffed up the bottom of his pants, and he has removed his tie
22
and unbuttoned the top two buttons of his white collared
23
shirt.
24
“Penny told you,” I say, nearly in disbelief. Even though
25
she had told him my message once before, this time it had felt
26
different.
27
“Penny?” He shakes his head. “I saw you out the window.
28S
I thought it looked like you and then I saw the sweater, so I
29N
figured . . .”
He stops running now, and his breath is hard and heavy
01
in his chest. He is close enough to me that I could reach out
02
and touch his arm or run my finger around one of his chest
03
nut curls, but I do not.
04
“What are you doing here?” he asks, still breathing hard.
05
He does not sound angry or annoyed, as Penny would’ve had
06
me believe, but confused.
07
“I went into the office to talk to you, and Shelby told me
08
about your father,” I say. “I’m so sorry.”
09
He nods, and he gently takes my arm and leads me to the
10
edge of the sea. “Do you want to sit?” he asks. I nod, and he
11
pulls his suit jacket off and lays it on the ground for us. I sit
12
down first, and then he sits next to me, close enough so our
13
shoulders touch as we both hang our feet out and dangle
14
them in the edge of the water. It is warmer than I expected it
15
would be.
16
“I wanted to talk to you this morning,” Joshua says. “You
17
know, before all this happened.” He waves his arms around
18
in the air, pointing back toward the house. “I wanted to apol
19
ogize for Friday, at lunch. I felt I offended you somehow, and
20
that wasn’t my intention.”
21
“I know,” I say. “And I’m sorry too. I shouldn’t have said
22
those things about Penny and then just run out.”
23
“You’re right, though,” he says. “I don’t love her.” My heart
24
swells when he says it, not because I hate Penny so, but
25
because I know it is the truth, and he is admitting it to me,
26
and also to himself. “I love her as a friend, of course. I always
27
have, and I always will, but . . .”
S28
He sighs and props himself back against his elbows,
N29
01
extending his face up toward the sun. And I do the same. Our
02
shoulders are still touching, our faces beaming in the sun, our
03
toes dancing against the water. If there has ever been a per
04
fect moment since that last one, in the annex, lying in Peter’s
05
arms before my sister walked in, this is the one: sunlight, the
06
sea, the warmth of Joshua’s body next to me.
07
“How did you do it?” Joshua asks, after a little while.
08
“When your father died?”
09
“Do what?” I ask.
10
“I am not even sure what to feel. My father is gone. And
11
I’m numb. Completely and totally numb.” He sighs. “You said
12
you didn’t get along with your father. How did you mourn him
13
and hate him all at once?”
14
I think about Pim: Pim standing there, as surely he did, at
15
the doorway to 263 Prinsengracht, just after the war. Pim
16
holding on tightly to our diaries, thinking to himself that
17
something, it couldn’t mean nothing. Pim now, in Switzer
18
land, seventy years old. Seventy! I try to imagine him with
19
snow-white hair, a slightly shrunken spine, but that same look
20
of brightness in his eyes.
Lay your head here
,
Bubbelah
.
I will
21
protect you.
22
“My father isn’t dead,” I say softly. It is the first time I have
23
said the words out loud, to anyone. And now they sound so
24
real that they startle me all over again, the way my father’s
25
name shocked me when I first saw it written there as editor
26
on my sister’s book. Otto, Father, Pim—for certain alive and
27
breathing in Switzerland.
28S
Joshua shakes his head, confused. “I thought you said both
29N
your parents were dead.”
“My mother is dead,” I say. “And my sister.”
01
“You had a sister?” he asks, sitting back up.
02
“Yes,” I tell him. I sit up too, and I look at him. His gray
03
green eyes are purely green in the sunlight, and they hold
04
my face in a certain way that tells me he is listening
05
intently, more intently than anyone has ever listened. The sun
06
is warm, and my skin aches and sweats underneath my pink
07
sweater. “I loved her,” I say. “I really did.” Joshua covers my
08
hand with his. “Sometimes we fought. But I always loved her.
09
She was beautiful, and she was brave. She was smart and
10
loud and pure and brilliant. I still miss her,” I tell him. He
11
squeezes my hand and his eyes reach out to me in a smile.
12
“You know her,” I tell him.
13
“Me?” he asks, his eyes turning now in confusion.
14
“Or you think you do,” I tell him. “Everyone thinks they
15
do. But no one really knows her, not the way I did.” My face
16
is turning wet, but it is not until Joshua reaches his thumbs
17
up to wipe the tears away that I realize I am crying.
18
“Margie?” he says, wanting me to tell him more, wanting
19
maybe to understand it. The sun beats down upon us, burn
20
ing on my back, my shoulders.
21
I want to tell him everything, but my words, they are sud
22
denly choking me, and there are so many tears that it is hard
23
to keep on speaking.
24
Instead, I pull at my pink sweater, tugging it gently off. I
25
free my right arm, revealing my pale and unmarked skin, and
26
then I take a deep breath, and I free my left arm, the arm by
27
which Joshua sits. I fold the sweater in my lap, and I close my
S28
eyes, listening to the sounds of the sea whispering in front of
N29
01
me. If I hold out my tongue, I think, I might be able to taste
02
the salt.
03
Joshua’s finger dances gently against my left forearm, trac
04
ing the
A,
then the numbers that follow, each one slowly and
05
I can hear the echo of them in my head.
06
“Margie.” Joshua whispers my name.
07
After a while I open my eyes. I turn and I look at Joshua.
08
I catch his gray-green eyes, and I hold on to them. “My name
09
isn’t Margie,” I finally say. “It’s Margot.”
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28S
29N
01
02
03
Epilogue
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
Sometimes now I still think about that Friday
14
afternoon in April when I first learned about your movie. In my
15
mind, that afternoon marks the beginning of the end of my hid-
16

BOOK: Margot: A Novel
8.79Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Reign of Coins by Aiden James
Crysis: Legion by Watts, Peter
Heart & Seoul by Victoria Smith
Dark Sunshine by Terri Farley
Stripped by Brian Freeman