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Books. Change. Lives.
Copyright © 2022 by David R. Gillham
Cover and internal design © 2022 by Sourcebooks
Cover design by Olga Grlic
Cover images © Lee Avison/Trevillion Images
Internal design by Ashley Holstrom/Sourcebooks
Sourcebooks and the colophon are registered trademarks of Sourcebooks.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems—except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews—without permission in writing from its publisher, Sourcebooks.
The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious or are used fictitiously. Apart from well-known historical figures, any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.
Published by Sourcebooks Landmark, an imprint of Sourcebooks
P.O. Box 4410, Naperville, Illinois 60567-4410
(630) 961-3900
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Gillham, David R, author.
Title: Shadows of Berlin : a novel / David R Gillham.
Description: Naperville, Illinois : Sourcebooks Landmark, [2022]
Identifiers: LCCN 2021037069 (print) | LCCN 2021037070 (ebook) | (hardcover) | (epub)
Subjects: LCGFT: Novels.
Classification: LCC PS3607.I44436 S53 2022 (print) | LCC PS3607.I44436
(ebook) | DDC 813/.6--dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2021037069
LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2021037070
Contents
Front Cover
Title Page
Copyright
PART ONE
New York City
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
PART TWO
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
PART THREE
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
Author’s Note
Reading Group Guide
A Conversation with the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Back Cover
To my wife, Ludmilla
Every angel is terrifying.
—Rainer Maria Rilke
PART ONE
The Dead Layer
New York City
1955
1.
All Is Perfect
She imagines the final moments as white, pure white, as the plane plunges through the blizzard. The snow obscures the cockpit glass until the mountain emerges in a split second of clarity, the cliff face surging forward in the instant before impact.
Her shrink tilts his head. Slightly. “Why only plane crashes?” he wonders. “Why not floods or train wrecks or any number of other disasters?”
She recalls the headline of the story that she had carefully scissored from the newspaper that morning with her sewing shears. JET HITS MOUNTAIN IN SNOW SQUALL. Below the headline, a photo of the wreckage revealed the result. A twisted, torn fuselage in pieces. Chunks of smoking steel.
“I think the crash of an airplane is different,” says Rachel.
Dr. Solomon frowns reflectively. An arm and a leg he’s being paid, so it’s his job to ferret out this young woman’s madness, isn’t it? Just as it’s her job to be just mad enough to be cured. “Different?”
“Because they are so sudden,” she explains. Quietly. “So complete. And so very few survive it. How is the decision made?”
The man tilts his head again. She can tell he’s not quite sure what she means. How is what decision made?
“Only a handful may live through it when most do not. How is that decided?” she asks. She began collecting the clippings from the newspapers sometime after she and her uncle had arrived in the States and taken up residence in the hotel for refugees on Broadway. She was always buying newspapers at her uncle’s insistence. To improve their English, he maintained, though what did he end up reading, her Feter Fritz? Der Forverts in Yiddish. Sitting at the little café table with his cup of Nescafé. But was that really when she began snipping out the headlines of aerial catastrophes?
She was twenty-one the year they arrived in the Port of New York aboard the Marine Sailfish in 1949. Over six years ago. The few photographs of her taken at the time show a haunted, dark-mopped waif. She was an open wound at that point. Bundled in ill-fitting castoffs, thin as a matchstick, and still faintly stinking of a continent burnt to ashes. Stumbling over her English, she was boiled by the summer’s heat and overpowered by New York’s towering intensity, the skyscraper architecture, crush of people, and blare of traffic. Berlin’s Unter den Linden was famously perfumed by the sweetly honeyed scent of the linden trees, till the Nazis ordered them cut down, but New York City stank of exhaust and ripening garbage. It was deafening, smothering, and teeming with pedestrians trying to trample one another. Simply keeping up with sidewalk traffic was exhausting. Also exhausting was contending with the city’s abundance. The lavish variety of produce, the sumptuous profusion of color filling the shelves of a corner market were so taxing to her senses that buying cabbage and cucumbers was enough to cause her to panic.
But surely it was after those first dizzying months had passed that she first started her collection of clippings. It had to be after the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society had helped them find the tiny apartment on Orchard Street. A tenement house populated by mobs of homeless refugees. Jews like themselves, just off the boats from the displaced persons camps. She remembers stowing the clippings in an Endicott Johnson shoebox. But she didn’t start pasting them into scrapbooks until she married Aaron. That’s when she began treating the clippings like a secret, a shameful secret, hiding them in the rear of the closet behind the vacuum cleaner, where she knew her new husband would never look. After all, why would he ever touch a vacuum cleaner?
“So am I here to make a confession, Doctor?”
“You’ll have to decide that for yourself,” the doctor tells her.
She nods. So that’s how it’s going to be, is it? All up to her? Should a sinner willingly confess to sin? Jews don’t make confessions inside little booths. They must expiate their sins on earth through good deeds, but she is not much for mitzvot these days. Last Christmas, there was a brass band from the Salvation Army playing outside Macy’s. On an impulse, she dropped a five-dollar bill in their pot, but she still couldn’t find a cab. Her bet is that God just pocketed it.
“I’d like you to consider painting again,” says Dr. Solomon.
Rachel stares. “Painting.”
“Yes.”
She feels a sickly terror and has to look away, glancing at the leather sofa to see if Eema has arrived, but it is empty of mothers. “And why should I want to do such a thing, Doctor?” she asks. To push a brush into the crazy woman’s hand. To shove her at a canvas and order her to paint? It’s dangerous. What raving madness might explode from her body and bloody the canvas?