Ginsberg nodded. To her he looked as if he had aged a decade since she had last seen him only a few days earlier. "My faithful staff is doubtless across the street drinking coffee and waiting for me to calm down. A few minutes ago I was quite emotional. Do you wish to know why?"
"Yes," Debbie said timidly.
Mr. G. held a batch of papers in his hand. "I finally got these this morning. They came from a friend of mine in the International Red Cross in France. He's been trying to track down the family my wife and I had in Europe. You will notice, dear Debbie, that I used the past tense."
Debbie cringed. "I heard you."
"Twenty-one of our relatives were alive in Germany and Poland as of a few years ago. Some on the German side, my side, were imprisoned before the war, while those on my wife's side, in Poland, we had hoped were refugees who maybe had fled to Russia. Do you know how many are left?"
"No, sir."
"Four," he said in a rasping voice. "Four out of twenty-one. The ones who went to Buchenwald died a long time ago, only we were never informed. Notifying next of kin of dead Jews was not a Nazi priority. As near as my friend can tell, the people in camps like Buchenwald were worked very hard, fed very little, and finally died of malnutrition or any of the hundreds of diseases that will strike down a weakened body. If they were unable to work for their keep, they were beaten, sometimes beaten to death.
"My wife's people who lived in Poland were swept up by the Germans after the invasion and taken to a place in Poland the Germans called Auschwitz. Do you know what went on there?"
Debbie could only repeat herself. "No, sir."
She'd heard the stories, but, like most people, she'd found them too terrible to be true.
"My friend referred to it as a death factory that may have swallowed millions of victims, mainly Jews, and spat out only their ashes. When the inmates first entered the camp, the healthy were separated from the weak- like the proverbial wheat from the chaff- by some Nazi who had appointed himself God. The weak were stripped of their clothing and valuables and sent into what they were told were showers. When they were all together, they were gassed from the showers and died. Do you know what the healthy Jews had to do?"
Debbie shook her head.
"They had to get rid of the bodies. But first they plundered them for eyeglasses, gold fillings, nice hair, and anything else that might help Hitler. The clothing the dead left behind, even though much was just rags, was sent to German families who had lost possessions because of the bombing."
The thought of it sickened her. Paul had written to her of some of it. He'd seen a couple of the smaller camps and had told of emaciated Jewish refugees wandering Europe. She'd read other accounts in Time and elsewhere, but they were as if she were reading fiction. It couldn't happen to her or to someone she knew. Now she knew she'd been horribly wrong.
"But," Mr. Ginsberg sighed, "six survived."
"I thought you said four?"
"Six, and that is the cruelest irony. There were two others who made it through the hells of Auschwitz. They were Polish Jews, a brother and sister in their early twenties. When they returned to the village they'd lived in, the nice Catholic Poles beat them to death for having the temerity to try to reclaim the property that was once theirs. The Russians are in control in Poland, and they have no wish to prosecute anyone for the harmless act of killing Jews. Now that almost all the Jews in Europe are dead, no one cares."
Debbie sagged. She was both Catholic and Polish, and Mr. G. knew that. "I'm sorry. Do you want me to leave?"
He ignored her comment. "What frightens me, Debbie, is that I'm learning to hate after all these years of trying to be a good Jew and not make waves. The war is over but the killing goes on. Now I am convinced that it will never stop for Jews so long as we have to live with non-Jews." He caught the hurt look on her face but did not back off. "I know what others say about me, and the fact of your working here. They say I'm not a bad man even though I'm a Jew, don't they?"
Debbie recalled some of her parents' comments about Jews. Some of their comments were quite harsh. Jews had killed Christ. Jews cheated. Jews were kikes with funny noses. "What about the four?" she asked.
"Three young men and one young woman. The two men are from my wife's side, and the others, a brother and a sister, from mine. The two from my wife's side have already made it to Palestine, while the others are in internment camps in France. The young woman, by the way, was forced to be a prostitute for the German soldiers, even though sexual relations between Jews and non-Jews was forbidden according to Nazi law. Tell me, what is the difference between a concentration camp and an internment camp? Nothing. If you are inside, surrounded by barbed wire, and you don't have the freedom to leave, there is no difference at all."
"What are you going to do?"
"Do?" He glared at her and she realized she had never seen Mr. Ginsberg so angry. "Do? I'm going to get the two in France out of those goddamned camps and over here if they wish. They can't get to Palestine because the British are afraid of offending the Arabs so they won't let any more Jews in, and they certainly won't be safe if they try to return to their homes. No, I will try to bring them here. Then I'm going to work for a separate state for my people, and the hell with the gentiles and the Arabs and anyone who stands in our way."
Debbie stood as well. "Do you want me to leave?" she repeated.
Mr. G. nodded sadly. "I think it would be best." She put on her coat and was headed for the door when he interrupted her. "Debbie, please give me a little time to get over the worst of this."
She smiled slightly. "Of course."
"Good," he sighed. "I will call you, and very soon. I am very fond of you and would not wish to lose your friendship. I also think I will need your help with the paperwork to bring my people over here. And I will continue to pray for your Paul's safe return. Now, on your way out, would you please get those two fools from across the street and tell them to start selling furniture. They are Jews too, thereby proving that even a Jew can be a fool, and I will wish to talk with them about my plans."
Chapter 23
Bound hand and foot and blindfolded, Chambers woke up, helpless and immobile. His worst fears had come true; he had been recaptured by the Japanese. He moaned in fear and he heard a slight rustling.
"Listen to me and be quiet," a low, deep voice said, speaking almost into his ear. "You're wrapped up like this for your own protection. There are Jap soldiers only a couple of hundred yards from here, and neither of us wants to draw their attention, do we? Stay still. Do you understand that?"
Dennis nodded and tried to grunt a yes through the gag. Then he realized that the voice had spoken English. Hell, was he hallucinating? Or was he a prisoner and this was all part of some devious Japanese trick? His mind whirled in confusion.
After a period of further silence, he heard, perhaps felt, the presence of the other man. "Okay, Mr. Chambers, nothing has changed. You are still in very great danger and I will not hesitate to leave you here if you are so stupid as to do anything to draw attention to yourself.
For that matter, I will leave you if we are discovered even if it isn't your fault. Is that clearly understood?"
"Umph," Dennis grunted, and nodded vigorously. He was delighted at the sound of the other man's voice. The accent was clearly American. That meant that his captor was another escaped prisoner and not a Japanese.
"You are dumber than shit, you know," the other man said as he removed the gag. "You should never have taken on those four Japs in your weakened condition, no matter how drunk they were and no matter how desperate your situation might have been. If I hadn't been right nearby and wondering what the hell was going on, you'd be dead by now. They'd have found you and chopped you into little bits of living flesh for killing those two guys."