and she brought her hands to her mouth.
‘He’s dead, isn’t he?’ she whispered timidly.
‘Let’s talk,’ I said, rubbing her feet through the covers. ‘You’ll tell me whatever you want, and I’ll make no judgements. I promise.’
I made that vow because I couldn’t bear the thought of being remembered as an unfair uncle after I was gone.
‘No,’ she told me firmly. ‘There’s nothing to talk about.’
I stood up and retreated to the kitchen. There was a knock on the door while I was staring mindlessly into my coffee. I found Wolfi, Feivel and Sarah looking up at me from the landing. Their little faces were fearful; I suppose they thought that Adam’s death might have turned me against them.
‘Hello, Dr Cohen, we… we came to see Gloria,’ Feivel told me hesitantly.
‘She’s not doing so good,’ I replied. ‘But you can come in and feed her if you like.’
While Feivel and Wolfi spilled seeds into her dish, Sarah carried the budgie’s water cup back from the sink in both her hands, determined not to spill a drop. Her clenched determination gave me an idea.
‘Maybe one of you could adopt Gloria,’ I suggested. ‘Adam would want that.’
Wolfi said, ‘My dad hates pets. And he says birds shit all the time.’
Feivel gazed down, swirling his foot. Sarah bit her lip, looking as if she wanted to dash away.
‘Forget what I said,’ I told them. ‘I was being thoughtless.’
‘No, I’ll take her!’ Feivel announced, and he nodded hard when I looked at him, as if to convince us both.
As the two boys carried the cage downstairs, Sarah looked back at me for a moment, as though to fix me and the apartment in her memory, and I realized – with despair clutching at me – that I’d never see her or any of Adam’s other friends ever again.
At 9.15, I left Stefa alone to visit Mrs Rackemann. She let me into her shop and locked the door with a firm twist of her hand.
The forger she’d hired – who went by the name of Otto – had typed me a document on Nazi stationery identifying Erik Honec as Sub-Director for the Warsaw District of the
She grinned cagily on telling me that – she plainly adored trying to outwit the Nazis.
I tilted the stationery towards the light from her desk lamp. At the top of the sheet of off-white paper, the Nazi emblem – an eagle perched on a wreath centred by a swastika – looked sinisterly impressive. And the embossed stamp at the bottom seemed to be the real thing. As I ran my finger over its surface, Mrs Rackemann said, ‘Otto’s pretty damn good, isn’t he?’
‘A real pro,’ I agreed.
‘He produced papers for the Polish Interior Ministry for several years. He knows what he’s doing – though he wished you’d supplied him with a photograph.’
‘I might have lost my nerve if I’d gone home to get one. Besides, a Pole won’t know what to expect, and I’m not planning on identifying myself to any German officials.’
After I promised her the rest of her payment the next day, Mrs Rackemann handed me a pen for the last detail. I signed my new name with the decisive flourishes I’d practised – a vow of revenge turned to ink.
Having had hundreds of Christian acquaintances before being forced into the ghetto, I’d decided that a change of appearance was in order before I ventured into the Other Side; after all, if someone recognized me and denounced me, I’d be executed on the spot. So before going home, I bought hair dye at a beauty parlour on Nalewki Street.
The homemade concoction turned into a frothy, milky-brown cream when I mixed it with water, and it tickled my scalp. I had my doubts about its effectiveness, but when I washed it off, my hair was black and shiny. The contrast with my ghostly skin and deep wrinkles made me look like an aged flamenco dancer clinging desperately to youth. My eyes seemed smaller, too, as if the
Taking off my clothes and sitting close to my heater, I sponged off weeks of grime as best I could with our mushy ghetto soap. Then I shaved carefully, and dabbed my chin and cheeks with Stefa’s rosewater perfume.
I dressed in my chestnut-brown woollen suit, which I hadn’t worn since the day I’d moved into Stefa’s apartment, but the heavy fabric sagged clownishly off my shrunken shoulders, so I put on a jumper underneath. I didn’t wear my overcoat because it looked like a rag. Better to freeze than risk ruining my disguise.
As a last touch, I went to see Izzy to borrow his Borsalino. He’d recently moved his old army cot into his workshop because three newly arrived cousins of his were living in his apartment and he was feeling cornered.
On opening his door to me, he grimaced. ‘
‘I needed a new identity,’ I explained, stepping inside.
‘And it involves putting a dead crow on your head?’
‘I’m a zookeeper in a Yiddish farce,’ I quipped.
‘They keep typecasting you!’ he observed gleefully; even in grief – especially then – Izzy thrived on repartee.
‘Tell me the truth – could I pass for the
He sized me up, having to choose between humour and honesty. ‘That depends on which
‘Never mind that. I’ll need your Borsalino. Where is it?’
‘So you’re trying for the romantic lead, after all?’ A lecherous spark went off in his eyes.
‘Listen, if I don’t come back, take any clothing of mine you want. And take my books.’
‘If you’re up to something dangerous, I want to know what it is.’
‘It’s a long story.’
‘Tell me the condensed version or you can forget my help.’
After I told him about Anna, and showed him my Interior Ministry papers, he made clicking noises with his tongue – Izzy’s code for a risky adventure – then slipped into the stationery warehouse behind his workshop to fetch his Borsalino. I needed to pee and went to the lavatory, which was a tin bucket hidden behind a folding screen. Hanging from the ceiling were paper arrows pointing towards Moscow, New York, Rio de Janeiro and the North Pole. A bigger one, facing southwest, read:
Back in his workroom, he handed me his hat. He already had his muffler on and was buttoning his coat.
‘So, what’s your problem, Dr Freud?’ he asked when he was done, lifting those furry eyebrows of his; I must have been showing him a puzzled look.
‘Nothing,’ I replied; by then, I’d realized that having him join me was the real reason I’d come over.
‘Watch this!’ he said, and he pulled a white silk handkerchief from out of nowhere – a trick from his days of performing magic shows aboard the
‘What’s that for?’ I asked.
Folding it in a square, he put it in my breast pocket. ‘Now you look a man not to be taken lightly!’ he observed triumphantly.
‘Or maybe just a well-dressed zookeeper,’ I retorted.
Rabe hadn’t yet arrived at 1 Leszno Street. We paid our ten zloty to a teenage guard wearing diving goggles; the cellar had recently become a rickshaw assembly plant and he doubled as a welder. About twenty men and boys – bare-chested and dripping with sweat – were hammering bicycle wheels, filing fenders, patching tyres… Izzy and I headed past them to the back, as we’d been instructed. The smell of burnt rubber and axel grease packed my nose. We climbed up a set of stairs to a scarred wooden door.
‘Could it be this simple?’ he asked.