The German Girl (18 page)

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Authors: Armando Lucas Correa

BOOK: The German Girl
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“He agreed to come only because I insisted. Ever since we left home he has been repeating that this trip makes no sense and that he doesn’t have the strength to begin again.”

Mrs. Adler looked as if she were straight out of some old-fashioned book. She had her hair piled high on her head and wore a petticoat under her long dress as well as a corset like a woman from the last century. Every time we visited, she gave me a gift, which Mama allowed me to keep. Sometimes it was a lace handkerchief; at others, a small gilt brooch, or some sugar-coated biscuits that were my favorites. Who knew where she got them, because they had disappeared from market shelves long ago.

We listened closely as Mrs. Adler told their story. In a way, it was the story of all of us.

“We’ve all lost something,” Mrs. Adler said, and paused with a sorrowful smile. “Nearly everything.”

The Adlers had lived to be eighty-seven, and so to me they had no reason to complain. Eight decades and seven years. We children, the ones who had our lives in front of us, were the ones who would be suffering.

The couple’s physical decline became increasingly obvious with each passing hour. The old man, immobile in bed; Mrs. Adler, all alone, watching as the love of her life—her great support—slipped away slowly as this ship sailed to the island that was to be our salvation. This was the only answer they could find at an age when all you could hope for was the peace to be able to say good-bye.

“We lived on illusions and woke up far too late,” said Mama, without expecting any comment from Mrs. Adler, who by now listened only to herself. “We should have seen what was going to hit us and left a long time ago.”

I didn’t want Mama to be sad. On board the
St. Louis
, she had become her old self again, while Papa sought refuge in music—the only true escape route that kept him sane. The old lady should have kept her sorrow to herself.

“Left for where, Alma?” Mrs. Adler replied firmly. “We can’t spend our lives constantly starting over. A generation goes by, they destroy us. We start over, and they destroy us again. Is that our fate?”

Both of them looked at me, realizing suddenly that I was in the room and listening closely. They needn’t have worried, though: I wasn’t scared by their pessimism. They had lived their lives. I was just starting out, and I had Leo. The nightmare was behind us.

Mr. Adler began to tremble, and a racking cough made his heavy but weak body quiver. He was going to die. It was as if he couldn’t breathe. We needed to call a doctor. They all looked nervous.

“He has these crises,” said Mrs. Adler, who was evidently used to them. “You go along now and look at the sea.”

She and Mama embraced without kissing. Their sorrow passed between them; their mutual compassion was evident.

I ran toward the corridor but heard Mama shouting my name, as if I were a little girl again. She knew very well that in a few days I would be twelve.

“Aren’t you going to say good-bye?”

I smiled from a distance—that was enough—at poor Mrs. Adler, who had not been able to enjoy a single day of our journey.

Every day, the sun beat down more strongly on deck and poured fiercely through our cabin portholes. We must have been drawing closer to the tropics. What a shame the Adlers were living in darkness. They had converted their stateroom into a funeral parlor: curtains drawn, everything gloomy, the atmosphere filled with the mentholated oil and alcohol used to bring down his fever, and the labored breathing of that feeble old man who had boarded the ship only to let himself die.

A gaggle of children ran behind a man on roller skates. As he swooped round like somebody on an ice rink rather than on the slippery promenade deck, it looked as if he were about to fall at any second. He was traveling at great speed, and we were worried he might crash into the rail, but at the last moment, he always braked with the tip of his feet
and came to a halt, as if waiting for applause. Then he raised his arms and made an exaggerated bow.

The children rushed to try to knock him over. Leo laughed. The man danced like a circus clown. The swarm of boys and girls followed him everywhere, and he was obviously very proud of this great feat of his in a place where nothing ever happened.

“We have to learn to roller-skate!” Leo announced. I recognized the urgency in his tone of voice: I had to take note of this new project for our life in Havana.

“Mr. Rosenthal and my father are talking to the captain. Do you think there are problems with the ship? Will it sink like the
Titanic
?” he asked, as though telling a horror story not even he believed.

“Leo, it’s May. We’re in the mid-Atlantic, a long way from any icebergs.”

He took me to a corner of the deck far from the passengers in their deck chairs. Everything I touched on the ship was sticky with sea salt. We sat behind some lifeboats bearing the insignia HAPAG, the shipping company that owned the
St. Louis
. I was convinced there would not be enough of them for a thousand passengers if there were a shipwreck.

“I’m going to get something for you,” Leo blurted.

He was always changing topics like that. I couldn’t take my eyes off him when he was talking to me. I concentrated on his eyes, trying to work out what he was thinking. I felt happy he was devoting himself entirely to me, just like our days together in Berlin. But I couldn’t guess what project he was dreaming up now or what it was he wanted. He must have a plan.

“Papa promised me he’ll give me Mama’s wedding ring. With what it’s worth, we would be able to survive in Cuba, but I want the ring for you, Hannah. I have to convince him to give it to me as soon as possible. If anything happens to us, you should have it with you. We can adjust it to fit you.”

He said all this without looking at me. Lowering his head shyly, he began playing with his hands, pulling on his knuckles as if he wanted to tear them off.

Did that mean we were engaged? I didn’t dare ask him, but at the same time I couldn’t hide my delight. He must have seen how my eyes were shining.


Danke,
” I said as he placed his hands on my shoulders.

“From now on, you have to forget
danke
. It’s
gracias
, okay?” Sometimes Leo insisted on talking to me like a father giving advice to his little daughter.


Gracias. ¿Comenzarás a hablar español?
” I asked him in Spanish, knowing he would not understand a thing if I put on the accent I had polished after hours of practice.

He repeated
gracias
, stressing the
g
and the
s
in a very comical way. I burst out laughing: Leo was the only person on board who could make me forget the past, because he was so very present.

A gentle tune started to play over the loudspeakers. At first, I could make out only a few bars and didn’t recognize the music.

Our brief, happy interlude ended quickly, as Leo was worried about something. His father and mine were still on the bridge with the captain, and they would not let him near. They even avoided talking in front of him. They must have realized he had his ears pricked for any little detail; he was always on alert, and then came to me with his theories and half-truths.

While Leo paused, I could study him without upsetting him. He was taller now, with a more pronounced jaw, his eyes even bigger. The music became louder: it was “Moonlight Serenade,” by Glenn Miller and His Orchestra, which was all the rage in Berlin.

“It’s American music, Leo!” I shouted, shaking him by the shoulders because I could see he was sad. Perhaps he was feeling nostalgic about everything we had left behind. Or possibly he was missing his mother.

“They’re welcoming us, Leo! America is receiving us with open arms!”

I could hear the trombones, then the string section entering. I stood up and started humming the tune.

“Let’s write some words to that music,” I suggested, but he still did not react.

A serenade in the silvery moonlight, which, out there on deck, was just for the two of us.
Let’s invent the words
. I started spinning around with my eyes closed, letting myself be carried away by the notes that drifted out over the ocean.

Leo took me by the hand. I opened my eyes and saw him smiling, spinning around very slowly with me. Our movements followed the rolling of the ship. I let myself go again, and the breeze ruffled my hair. So what? We were dancing. I followed the rhythm. I had no idea which of us was leading. The tune was about to come to an end. The notes lengthened. Yes, it was the end.

Now all we could hear was the ship’s signal telling us it was time to go have dinner.

Entry to Cuba restricted for all foreign nationals.

To enter the country, a bond of 500 pesos is required, together with a visa granted by a Cuban consulate abroad and authorized by the Ministry of State and Labor, not merely by the Immigration Service. All previously issued documents are hereby declared invalid.

As stipulated by Decree 937, signed by the president of the Republic of Cuba,

Federico Laredo Brú.

Gaceta de Cuba

May 1939

Friday, 19 May

T
he previous night had been difficult. We almost lost Mama. I knew I had to be prepared for that. I could lose my mother at any moment and become an orphan suddenly, before I was even twelve years old. That was impossible. Mama couldn’t do something like that to me, much less near my birthday, because whenever I celebrated it, I would remember her and be overcome with sadness.

Papa was shut until late with the captain in his cabin, and those mysterious meetings worried her. He always came back looking hunched, with drooping shoulders; the person who had once been the most elegant man in Berlin was now weighed down like a weary hunchback.

Mama was sick all night. I had to leave her on her own in the bathroom; I couldn’t bear to see her falling to pieces like that.

“It’s nothing. Go and sleep. I’ll explain in the morning.”

She obviously knew something she didn’t dare tell me. That we had lost all our money? That the Ogres were preparing to invade America and would soon cross the Atlantic? That there was no way out for us, and they would be waiting for us in the port of Havana?

I could hear her vomiting even through the closed door. Bent over the toilet bowl, shaken by sudden spasms, she looked so frail it frightened me.

An unbearable stench began to filter out of the bathroom, through her cabin, and into mine. I pulled the pillow over my head to shut out the retching and the smell. Eventually I fell asleep.

The next morning, it was as if nothing had happened. She looked pale, with perhaps more elaborate makeup than usual. Her hair was freshly washed, and she was wearing a subtle perfume I did not recognize. This new fragrance, mixed with the smell of sea salt, confused me as much as her miraculous recovery. Mama realized this, and asked me and Papa to sit near her. Neither the perfume, nor the smell of her soap, nor whatever she had used on her hair, were enough to erase the smell of the previous night’s stench from my memory.

“I have some news for you,” she said, her voice dropping.

It was good news. It had to be. And at that moment, I recalled that, just before we’d boarded, she had promised me a surprise. Meeting up with Leo again had made me forget what she had promised to tell me.

She looked at Papa and then fixed her eyes on me.
Just tell us your news, Mama!

“I waited until today because I wanted to be really sure.”

She paused again. Then she looked at us with a mischievous glint in her eye, as if challenging us to guess.

“Hannah,” she said, looking at me and ignoring Papa, “you won’t be an only child anymore!”

It took me several seconds to take in what she was trying to tell me.

Mama is pregnant! That’s why she’s been so sick! She wasn’t worried
about Papa’s meetings with the captain—that was men’s business. I was going to have a baby brother—or sister!

“Where is it going to be born?” was the only thing I could think of to ask.

How silly of me. I ought to have said something far more suited to a girl my age. I should have become all emotional, leapt toward her, hugged her. Shouted to the four winds, “I won’t be an only child anymore! How wonderful!”

The spell of only children in the Strauss family had been broken. A new Rosenthal was joining the community of the impure. Papa bent over to kiss her gently but also without any show of emotion.

“We don’t know yet how long we’ll be in Havana. The baby will be born at the end of autumn.”

She was happy that her child was not going to be born a German. She was going to get rid of that fateful weight her family had been bearing for generations, which had now disappeared as if by magic.

“Tonight we’ll pass close by some islands in the Atlantic. We’ll be able to see the coastline,” I said, to break the silence created by this unexpected piece of news. They both looked at me is if they hadn’t understood. Or as if they were thinking,
Can she be a child of ours?

Papa went up behind Mama and pulled her toward him in a half embrace. They ignored my comment. They already knew what to expect from me: I was a silly child. But they didn’t have to be too upset; now there was a new Rosenthal on the way who would live up to their expectations. Sometimes
I
thought I was a mistake.

They did not need me. This new problem Mama had brought up was something for the two of them to sort out, so it was better for me to leave them alone with their new baby. I picked my camera up and went out on deck.

“Mr. Adler is still sick,” Mama reminded me, even though she didn’t expect me to go and greet them on my own.

I tried to photograph the passengers in second class, but I could see
it disturbed them. Some looked scared; others struck a pose when they saw me focusing on them, and that spoiled the effect I was trying to achieve. It was even worse in first class: the families there had a tendency to adjust their clothes, and some women even asked me to wait a few seconds so they could fix their makeup. The only person who didn’t pose was Leo. If he saw I was interested in a shot, he would stop so that it wouldn’t come out blurred.

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