And then I sank my knife in the way the woman wanted, the way my memory told me to, the way that Mengele never would have — I did it with care and the remnants of my love, and as she stopped crying, a new cry began.
For all my vengeful ambition, this was the first time I had had blood on my hands. We watched the woman’s eyes dim, her posture slacken.
I think she saw the squirmer before she left. Its face was so humorous, shrimp pink and ancient. Why else would she have died smiling?
I passed my knife to Feliks and told him how to cut the cord. Let him, I thought, be responsible for this final severance.
“What do we do with it?” he asked.
I wiped the membrane of the floating world from the baby’s skin.
This baby was so different than the camp babies. Its problem was not that someone was trying to kill it, but that no one in this house knew how to make it live.
In the morning, Baby wailed in my arms as I walked. I was on my way to the orphanage, crossing this street and that in my quest to put Baby where it belonged. Baby needed to be in hands that could properly care for it and see it grow into a child who could someday be more than an orphan. I knew this plan would be met with disagreement from my companion, so I’d crept out before Feliks could wake. His love of the impossible would make him want to keep the sweet unfortunate. And I did not want to be convinced. Because, you see, a new plan for my future had formulated within me as I’d spent the evening rocking Baby and watching Feliks dig a grave for the Roma mother.
He’d buried her near the glass jar of names.
The newborn cared nothing about this grave, but I knew Baby could feel the thoughts in me as I’d stood over the mound and placed the plume of a peacock feather where a headstone should have been. When the wind blew that feather away, Baby wailed. It wailed not only in grief, but as a negotiating tactic. It wanted to be known to me as a real human, and it saw that I respected grief more than anything. This was a shrewd plan, one much advanced for an infant, but as a hardened girl, I required more.
I looked down at its face now, wiped the sleep from its dark eyes with my shirtsleeve, and hoped that this attention to hygiene could serve as a substitute for love, but the infant mistook it for a gesture of true affection and blushed. Already, it wanted me as family. I felt sorry for it for choosing to love me even as I moved toward its abandonment, holding it at arm’s length while footing through the rubble.
During this walk, I noted what I was leaving behind. Once, I was Mengele’s experiment. And now, it seemed that I would be an experiment for the war-torn countries, the disassembled, the displaced — how do you restore everything to its rightful home? everyone was asking. Of course, I wasn’t alone in being an experiment in this way. There were so many like me, and I wondered how many among them would make the choice that I was going to make.
You see, the pill the avengers left me with, the poison intended for Mengele that I’d carried in my mouth out of the depths of the salt mine — it was secured in my sock. It took every step with me, whispering all the while into my ankle, which just so happened to carry nerves and veins that sided with my heart. This poison wasn’t the bully I’d expected it to be but a strange comfort, a modern invention that knew my pain. It was wiser than I was; its chemicals had passed over the earth for centuries, and it was a well-traveled substance, practiced in human dismissal. From time to time, it tried to escape my ragged sock, but I only pushed it back and kept walking. The distance between myself and the orphanage was growing ever shorter, and I wanted to appreciate the walk because, though the city was gray and rubbled, it was the last city I’d see, and so I saw all I could — the old woman blowing dust from her photographs, the children collecting husks of bullets in a heap, the shop window full of stopped clocks and my reflection.
I pretended that the clocks had stopped for Pearl and me. I had failed at protecting her in life, but there was a chance, I believed, of finding her in death. She would want it that way, I told myself, and not just because she wanted to see me. Pearl would want me to die because she knew me, she knew how intolerable it was to my spirit that Mengele would escape unavenged, wholly beyond my desperate reach, my every wish for justice. Even if I was never reunited with her — I could not live with that failure.
And if there was a life for us beyond this death, we could embark on a new set of tasks and divisions.
Pearl could take the hope that the world would never forget what it had done to us.
I could take the belief that it would never happen again.
No one would know us as mischlinge. In that life, there would be no need for such a word.
And then I came to my destination. A red mitten was impaled on the iron gate, like a pierced heart. The paving stones before the remaining walls of the orphanage were upturned, the earthworms were surfacing in the exposed soil, the rosebushes were showing their roots, and the thorns were pointing the way to the iron knocker on the red door, a bold but tarnished lion. I wiped the dew from the doormat and laid Baby down upon it. I was no savage — I was careful to keep it wrapped in the blanket that had belonged to its mother. Baby appeared content — there were coos, a pleased thrashing of fist. I placed its thumb in its mouth. It was the least that I could do, I thought, though it began to wail a moment later. I started to leave, and I would’ve done so quickly, I would’ve passed through the gate and headed down the street to take my poison pill in a quiet corner, but I did not look where I was going and I collided with a man. He was coatless; his clothes were ragged, and his shoes were in pieces. He had no face — at least, none that I could see, because he held a Soviet newspaper before his head. The print shrieked across the front page. I begged his pardon. He begged mine. Or he almost did. For some reason, he stopped short in his apology. Then he clutched my numbered arm, and the paper fell at my feet.
There, on that front page, was a face I knew better than any other. It floated in a sea of other faces, behind the barbs of a captivity I knew too well.
From above, a drop descended to the page, threatening to blot the face out. Thinking it rain, I snatched the paper from the ground, and that’s when I heard the crying.
You might wonder how I could recognize a man by his crying when I’d never, in all the years we’d spent together, heard him cry. Laughter had been his chosen sound, and shouts of frustration largely featured too in those last days before his disappearance, when he was trying to negotiate with the other men of the ghetto, all of them so interested in doing good, and all of them bearing conflicting ideas as to how to achieve it. But there, at the steps of the orphanage, it was his cry that solved our long separation.
“You are alive” was all I could say.
My father held me close. He sobbed. His sobs should have made him still stranger to me, but instead, they reintroduced a man who knew what it meant to search and press on, to ignore all doubts that wanted so badly to diminish him. I shouldn’t have been surprised by this — Papa was never good at doubting, not for as long as Pearl and I had known him. And now, in our father’s eyes, there was all the good I’d ever known, and there was good to come; there were days to see and stories to hear and weapons to abandon. From his threshold, nestled in his basket, Baby went quiet, so quiet, as he observed our reunion. They say the newly born see nothing. They are wrong. I can testify to this fact because in my own way, within Papa’s clasp, I was newly born too.
When I saw Papa, the world rolled on for me. In seeing his face, so changed, I felt found by luck, by miracles. All became awe, and rain fell to join our tears. How strange, I thought, that rain remains rain after what we’ve endured! Some things were unchanged; this was proof. Another unchanged thing: my father lived, and as he pressed me to his chest, I could still hear his heart! It did not know quite what to say.