going?”
“I don’t know. Can you shut up about it?”
“Sorry.”
I shoved my math books into my schoolbag. “She says she hates Germany and she hates Bad Munstereifel.”
“
“Well, she
“It’s
I shook my head. “He probably knows.” Resentfully, I added, “Everybody in the entire town seems to.” It was true. Even though the adults were not quite as shameless as my schoolmates in approaching me with questions, I could tell that they were thinking about it when they looked at me. The attention was almost unbearable. When Frau Nett in the bakery gave me a free ice cream, an unprecedented piece of kindness, I knew it was just because she was thinking
Walking up the Orchheimer Strasse, Stefan said, “We have to do something about… you know.” He threw a significant glance toward Herr Duster’s house.
“Stefan.” I felt exhausted. “I’m going. Don’t you understand? I’m going to stupid
“That’s exactly why we have to do something.” Stefan sounded excited.
Without even looking at him, I knew he would have that eager expression that I found exciting and infuriating by turns, his eyes alight with enthusiasm. “We have to do something
“I am never going to know,” I said bitterly.
“We have to find out before you go,” said Stefan.
“Oh, what does it matter?”
I looked up at the leaden skies, rolling my eyes in frustration. Our futile investigation, which now seemed like a child’s game in comparison to the fresh woes descending upon me, was just one more item on the long list of things I was never going to finish in the town where I had always lived. I was never going to sing at the school concert in the spring, I was never going to start a new school year at the
All the things that seemed so reassuringly solid around me were going to vanish like a dream, be rolled up like a map and stuffed into the storage space of my mind. When I was far away and in my unimaginable new life I could take the map out and unroll it and pore over the marks on it, the shapes, the figures, the landmarks, but they would all be theoretical, like something in a book about dead cultures. I would come back at some time in the future and visit the town, but my friends would be grown up, and I-I would be like Dornroschen, the sleeping beauty, who had slumbered for a hundred years while everyone outside the castle grew old and died, and the hedge of thorns grew higher and thicker until there was no way through it anymore. When at last I came back to the world I had known before there would be nothing to recognize.
“Pia?”
I realized I was crying and hurriedly began to search through my pockets for a tissue.
“I’m all right,” I said crossly. I blew my nose and we resumed walking.
For a while Stefan said nothing, then: “Pia, if you don’t want to come, I’m going on my own.”
I did not reply.
“We have to do
“Why is it always
“They aren’t getting anywhere with it,” Stefan pointed out.
“And what makes you think we’re going to get anywhere with it?” I realized I had said
“We have to try.”
“We don’t have to try,” I snapped. I rounded on him. “The whole idea is
“Not if you come with me. The kids who’ve disappeared, they were all on their own.”
“Look,” I said irritably, “it’s absolutely crazy to even think about it. He’s put a new lock on the cellar door, anyway. So what are we going to do-walk up to his door, knock on it, and ask if we can come in?”
“Of course not.” Stefan sounded offended.
“Well, what?”
“We wait until after dark when everyone’s gone to sleep, and then we-”
“No,” I said emphatically, shaking my head. “No way.” I glared at him. “You really are stupid. I can see why-”
I was going to say
I saw a shadow cross Stefan’s face and realized that I had hit a nerve with my gibe about his mother’s lack of interest, but I was feeling too raw myself to apologize.
Stefan looked at me for a long moment. When at last he spoke, his voice was low and urgent and not angry at all.
“Why do you care what your mother thinks anymore?” he said.
Chapter Forty-two

The plan was simple: we would wait until it was late in the evening and the white Christmas lights that were strung across the Orchheimer Strasse had been switched off. At a prearranged time we would slip out of our houses and meet in the narrow alleyway that ran between two of the old buildings on the east side of the street. If either of us arrived much earlier than the other, the alleyway would provide cover from any prying eyes, and we could also hide our bicycles in it.
“Bicycles? What do we need bicycles for?” I asked.
“In case we need to get away in a hurry,” said Stefan. “Like a getaway car.”
I felt a familiar twinge of disquiet; Stefan always seemed to talk about the venture as though it were a scene in an action movie.
“Are we going to have walkie-talkies too?”
He gave me a look of disdain. “Don’t be silly.”
I was going to bring a flashlight, and Stefan was going to raid his father’s toolbox to get a hammer and chisel to open the cellar doors.
“How do you know what to do?” I asked dubiously. “You haven’t ever done that before, have you?”
“No, but…” Stefan’s voice trailed off. I was relieved; I really did not want to hear him say
Once Stefan had opened the doors we would climb inside and pull them shut behind us, in case anyone should pass by or look out of their window; it was unlikely, since Bad Munstereifel was generally pretty dead by nightfall, but you could never tell. It would be just our luck if Hilde Koch were to get out of bed at midnight to ease her ancient bladder and couldn’t resist a peep out her front window.