Margot: A Novel (35 page)

BOOK: Margot: A Novel
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suddenly sad for her, that she could never have a baby,
01
because she would’ve have been the best kind of mother,
02
fierce and smart and beautiful and protective, and always,
03
always with a plan. Not so dissimilar from my own mother.
04
“So are you going to tell me what happened?” Ilsa asks as
05
our heels click in step against the sidewalk.
06
“I don’t know,” I say.
07
“Margie.” Her voice is kind and stern all at once.
08
“My boss,” I finally say, because there is no way I can tell
09
her about P. Pelt. And now I am beginning to understand,
10
that maybe this is really what it has been about these past few
11
months. Not Peter, but Joshua. Who have I really been think
12
ing about as Shelby’s love songs have played on her Friday
13
afternoon radio? Who have I been watching through the
14
glass, waiting for the moments when he says my name?
15
“Yes,” Ilsa says. “What about him?”
16
“He wants me to do things I cannot,” I tell her.
17
She stops walking, turns to me and frowns. “What kind of
18
things?” she asks.
19
“Help him defend murderers,” I say, but what I am really
20
thinking is,
Watch him marry a woman he doesn’t love
. Watch
21
her walk in every afternoon gloating that she is his wife.
22
She tsks and shakes her head, and we start walking again.
23
“I am surprised he cannot be more sensitive, after all you
24
have been through.”
25
“He doesn’t know,” I say softly. “He doesn’t even know I’m
26
Jewish.”
27
“Oh, my dear,” she says, shaking her head again.
S28
N29

01
We turn the corner, and we are up the street now from
02
the cinema. The red letters are still there, blinding me, on the
03
marquee, and I wonder how long they will remain. Is this the
04
longest-playing movie ever in the city of Philadelphia? Surely,
05
it only feels that way to me. I look away, not wanting to see
06
them again. My sister’s name against the bright white light of
07
late morning, the way the letters appear in red, in the movie’s
08
title, they are nothing at all like my sister, the way she was as
09
a person, not some silly, nearly invented icon.
10
“Have you seen it?” Ilsa asks as we pass by.
11
“What?” I ask, playing dumb. Only this never works with
12
Ilsa. She nods her head in the direction of the marquee. “Oh,
13
that,” I say. “Yes, of course. Hasn’t everybody?” I cannot keep
14
the bitterness from my voice. It is so sharp, so biting that it
15
almost surprises me.
Oh, the lies.
16
“I wasn’t sure if you would have,” she says slowly, as if she
17
is treading water with her voice. “Did you like it?”
18
I remember what Joshua said, sitting there, so very close
19
to me on the stool in O’Malley’s bar.
It’s not something you can
20
like, is it?
Like school. Or the doctor’s. I sigh. “I don’t know,
21
Ilsa,” I say. “Let’s not talk about this now.”
22
Ilsa shrugs, but in true Ilsa fashion, continues to talk
23
about it. “I saw it,” she says. I nod. Of course she did. Every
24
one has. The entire world. “It was beautiful, in a way. Only
25
very sad. I kept thinking of you.”
26
She stops walking, and she turns and takes my hands in
27
her own. She rubs my fingers between hers, as if she is warm
28S
ing them. “That was you, wasn’t it, my dear?” she asks me. I
29N
am so surprised by her words, by the easy way she says them,
that all I can do is shake my head, back and forth and back
01
and forth. My brain feels numb, and yet my head aches. How
02
could Ilsa say this? Just like that. How could she know?
03
My heart pounds in my chest, and I am sweating, pools of
04
water building down my arms, swallowing my ink. “No,” I
05
whisper. “No.”
06
“Eduard told me, when he first wrote me about you, that
07
your name was Margot Frank.”
08
“No,” I whisper again, but it is so strange to hear it, some
09
one say it aloud.
Margot Frank.
Someone whom I know and
10
whom I even love saying those words. I have not heard them
11
spoken out loud in so long that they cannot be real. It feels
12
like a stranger’s name, or the name of someone I once knew,
13
long ago, but whom I can barely remember.
14
“But then you arrived and said, your name was Margie
15
Franklin,” she is saying now. “And I thought you were Amer
16
icanizing yourself, the way we all have when we have come to
17
this country. I thought nothing more of it. I never got a chance
18
to read the book. But recently, after Bertie and I saw the
19
movie . . . And then lately, the way you have seemed so on
20
edge, the way you just reacted when you saw the marquee.
21
My dear . . .” She puts her hand to my cheek and turns my
22
face toward her. Her green eyes are filled with kindness and
23
sadness.
24
“Ilsa,” I whisper. “I am not the person you think I am.”
25
“I understand that,” she says. She reaches for my cheek
26
again and strokes my hair back gently, the way a mother might
27
do to a very small child.
S28
“No,” I say. “You don’t. I am not her.” Because this is the
N29
01
truth, I am nothing like the girl she saw in the movie. She is
02
only a character, the boring fictional sister of an icon. Noth
03
ing about it seems real to me, except that we were Jews, and
04
we were hiding.
05
“Okay, my dear.” She pauses for a moment. “I do not know
06
what happened to you then. But I love you now. In my heart
07
you are the child that I never had. I worry about you.” She
08
pauses again. “I want to help you,” she says. “And if you are
09
her, well, then your father is still alive, isn’t he? He is living in
10
Switzerland, yes?” It occurs to me that this was maybe the
11
real reason for the invitation to join her and Bertram on their
12
trip.
You can go home again,
she’d said
. I’ve always wanted to
13
see the Alps.
14
No. No. No.
15
“You don’t understand,” I whisper.
16
“You are afraid,” Ilsa says.
17
“I’m the reason she’s not here,” I whisper.
18
Ilsa frowns, confused. “Who?” she asks.
19
“My sister,” I say. “I killed her.”
20
And now that I have said it out loud, finally, at last, the
21
truth, I feel my hands shaking against the weight of Ilsa’s, and
22
then I am not sure I can stand any longer.
23
Ilsa leads me to a bench, on the sidewalk by South Seven
24
teenth Street. We are not too far from Casteel’s, and I cannot
25
help but think of that other morning, when Joshua found
26
me and led me gently inside. Where we shared a meal
27
together. And where Joshua pretended that he was mine and
28S
I was his.
29N
“Tell me everything,” Ilsa says now, when we are both
sitting. Her voice is calm but stern, and her green eyes, they
01
pierce me, until the whole story comes out of me, all of it. I
02
tell her about Peter, and about the way my sister said his
03
name, just before the Green Police stormed the annex. I tell
04
her about the line at the camp, how I cannot remember now
05
my sister’s number. And then I tell her about my mother’s
06
plan, the train taking us from Auschwitz to Bergen-Belsen,
07
when I escaped the Nazis.
08
“We were lumped in a cattle car,” I tell Ilsa, and the
09
words tumble from me now as if I am in a trance, describing
10
a nightmare I have relived over and over and over again, and
11
yet have never spoken of before this moment. “With so
12
many women. Every one of us was just a heap of bone and
13
loose flesh. It was hard to tell whether anyone was dead or
14
alive, unless they happened to move a limb or twitch an
15
eyelid.”
16
Ilsa shudders, but then motions for me to keep on talking.
17
“The train started moving slowly, and we were by the door.
18
I was holding on tightly to my sister’s hand, and I saw our old
19
neighbor, Schmidt, guarding our car. My mother had prom
20
ised he wouldn’t shoot me. And then I knew I had to jump, or
21
the train would be moving too fast, and then it would be too
22
late. I couldn’t stay on the train any longer.”
23
“And then what happened?” Ilsa asks, her eyes the size of
24
silver dollars.
25
“I jumped,” I say. “I let go of my sister’s hand, and I jumped.
26
There were gunshots. And screaming . . . And that is all I
27
remember until the next morning, when I woke up on the
S28
ground not too far from the train tracks.”
N29
I close my eyes, and I am imagining that morning again,
the feel of Brigitta’s hand on my shoulder, her German whisper in my ear. I could not hear her at first because the sound
of gunshots and my sister’s screams, they were ringing so
loudly in my ears. But I had not been shot. And I had not
taken her with me. I’d let go of her hand; I’d left her there to
die, to take Schmidt’s bullets for me.
“Oh, my dear.” Ilsa wipes at the tears on my face with her
thumbs, then wipes at tears on her own face. “It is so heavy
to be you, to carry all of this around, for so long.” She pauses.
“I do not believe you killed your sister,” she says. “I do not
believe that even for a moment.”
“That’s because you are you,” I tell her. “And you believe
the best in people.” In this way Ilsa, she is not so dissimilar
from my sister. But Ilsa was not there. During the war. Then,
anyone was capable of anything.
She is shaking her head now. “You are telling me that
maybe your sister was telling stories about her and Peter. But
what of herself? Was she strong and full of life and courageous as the movie suggests?”
I nod. “Yes,” I say.
You are such a paragon of virtue,
I hear
her saying in my head, laughing, chewing on the end of her
fountain pen.
“And you say you cannot actually remember those last few
moments on the train?” Ilsa asks.
I shake my head.
She thinks about it for a moment, and then she takes her
hand in mine. “My dear,” she says, “I want to tell you a
story . . .”
* * *
01
02
In 1944, the train started.
03
It was taking them from one camp to another, from Aus
04
chwitz to Bergen-Belsen. Margot and Anne were lumped in
05
a cattle car, with so many other women, heaps of bones
06
and loose flesh. It was hard to tell whether they were dead
07
or alive, unless they happened to move a limb or twitch an
08
eyelid.
09
The train moved slowly, at first, and Margot was by the
10
door.
He won’t shoot you,
Mother had promised, and Margot
11
saw him there, Schmidt, guarding their car.
12
I will run, and he will shoot me,
Margot thought. Oh, the
13
idea of running, out in the fresh air, though. It felt glorious
14
and unbearable, after so very long.
15
Margot held on tightly to her sister’s hand. They had to
16
jump, or the train would be moving too fast, and maybe they
17
would die as they hit the ground, from the impact alone. A
18
heap of bones and flesh: they might snap. But it was then, or
19
it was never. And Margot promised Mother.
20
“Run,” Margot said to her sister, pulling as hard as she
21
could on Anne’s arm. But Anne was too sick, too weak. She
22
couldn’t run. Her almond eyes were saucers.
23
“No,” she whispered back. “I can’t make it. Run. With
24
out me.”
25
“I won’t leave you,” Margot cried. “You’re my sister. I won’t
26
leave you.”
27
“Yes,” Anne said. “You must.”
S28
Schmidt turned his head, and he stared directly at them.
N29
01
His hand moved to his belt to grasp the handle of his gun,
02
and that’s when Anne pulled all the strength she had to reach
03
her hand up, put it tightly on Margot’s shoulder, and push her
04
hard enough so that her body found the door and it fell, crum
05
bling into one with the parched earth.
06
07
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