Above the River, Chapter 24

Chapter 24

June to July, 1949

Gassmann-Bunke homestead

            Here it was, the second half of June, 1949. Hans, who’d been gone from his ancestral family home for twenty-nine years, was more of a topic of conversation now than he had been at almost any point in the past nearly three decades.

            Did Hans anticipate, when he made the phone call and invited the Gassmann-Bunke family to his daughter’s wedding, that this would lead to yet another of those situations with which he had been so intimately familiar during the years he lived here? Did he know full well that it would be his mother and father – Renate and Ulrich – who would decide which two lucky family members would be the first to bridge the long, intercontinental gap between the two Gassmann households?

            Or did he imagine that protocols had changed in the years since his departure? Did he picture the whole, extended family discussing the options around the supper table, and coming to a joint decision? If he was, indeed, imagining the latter scenario, perhaps it was because the memory of his intense feelings of being excluded from all decision making had faded over time. Or perhaps he felt content to allow the process to play out however it would, now that he no longer felt that the course of his own life depended on what was decided, no longer felt at his parents’ mercy.

            Whatever musings Hans did entertain about how the question would be decided, it seems unlikely that he would have been surprised to learn that no revolution took place in the old log house: as always, the final word rested with, and was revealed by Renate:

            “Ulrich and I have talked about the wedding,” she announced at supper the day after Hans called.

            Everyone at the table, including even Kristina and Ingrid, who weren’t even related to Hans, paused in mid-bite, or mid-sentence. It was as if they feared that continuing to eat or move at all might cause them to miss this important news. Renate waited to continue until she was certain that all eyes were upon her, all ears fully tuned toward her. This was her habitual way of enhancing the drama of any positive moment. Everyone could see the sparkle that arose in her eyes as she paused.

            “We feel it’s best for Ethel and Lina to go,” she said, finally.

            Ethel, who had been holding her breath in anticipation of hearing the decision, let out an excited sigh, but managed to suppress the exclamation of delight that wanted to burst from her lungs. Looking quickly around to the others, she was relieved to see the others nodding.  Both of her parents were smiling. Ulrich patted her hand affectionately, as if to say, “Did you doubt we’d send you?” Even so, Ethel felt it best to protest at least a bit.

            “But, Mama,” she began, “shouldn’t you go?”

            Renate smiled. “On these creaky knees?” She shook her head. “And entrust the running of the household to you, only to come back to who knows what state of things? I think not!”

            Ethel was crying now. She understood the great generosity of her mother’s decision: She was willing to forego what might be her last opportunity to see her son again in her lifetime.

            “Papa?” Ethel managed to say, looking questioningly into her father’s eyes, her gaze asking whether he, too, was really prepared to make this same sacrifice.

            Ulrich didn’t joke the way his wife had. It wouldn’t have been appropriate to do so. He genuinely was concerned about what might happen if the left the family business to Viktor and Peter and Marcus for even a week, never mind two months.  Things already felt on the verge of collapsing here, what with the tensions between the three men. As much as his heart ached to see his son once more, as much as he wished to have the same chance to smooth things over with him, once and for all, he couldn’t risk it. Nor could he give voice to those thoughts at the table. So, he made do with nodding to Ethel and patting her hand again.

            “Besides,” he did joke, though, almost as an afterthought, “what do I need to go to Illinois for? We already know there are no decent forests there. Isn’t that right?”

            Of all of them at the table, only Renate and Ethel and Viktor understood Ulrich’s reference. And each of them was immediately transported in their minds back to 1921. They each recalled clearly how Renate’s brother, Ewald, visiting for the first time after emigrating to Illinois himself, admitted that forests were few and far between around the small town of Durand where he now lived.

            Although Ulrich intended for his remark to bring some levity to the situation, he saw tears begin to fall from Renate’s eyes after he spoke. He realized that he’d miscalculated. Twenty-eight years had passed since that suppertime conversation took place, but its reverberations were still strong enough to tear Renate’s heart open.

            Ethel saw this, but so did Lina. And just as Ethel opened her mouth to say that Renate absolutely had to go, in her place, Lina spoke up.

            “Grandma, you and Grandpa can’t be serious about sending me to the wedding.” She paused and looked back and forth between Ulrich and Renate. “I mean…” Here she silently patted the arms of her wheelchair. In doing so, she expressed what others at the table had also thought, but not voiced. Even Marcus remained uncharacteristically silent.

            No one had gone back to eating yet. They were all awaiting Renate’s reply. She, for her part, had anticipated that Lina would object. In fact, Ulrich had questioned her reasoning the night before, as they talked the question over before bed. But Renate had convinced him that this was exactly what their granddaughter needed, as difficult as she knew the trip would be: by train to the coast, and then by steamer to New York; then another long train ride to Illinois.

            On the surface of it, if you looked at it from the standpoint of logic, the idea did seem, frankly, insane. Yet, Renate had a strong feeling that this was just the right way to proceed, even if she couldn’t put her finger on all the reasons why. She couldn’t say whether this idea and her belief in it came from God, or from deep inside herself, or whether it represented the kind of collaboration between God and human that the family had been talking about recently, around the supper table. But, although she couldn’t determine this, Renate nonetheless took the great leap and chose to trust her feelings.

            “Lina, dear”, she said, facing her granddaughter, but speaking to everyone present, “I don’t want to hear that kind of talk. Aren’t you the one who sat here, just the other evening, and told us that beautiful story about that bird? What was it, a swallow?” Of course, Renate knew full well what kind of bird it was that Lina had mentioned. In this moment, she simply intuited that it was essential to shift Lina out of seeing herself as doomed to be always a prisoner in her wheelchair.

            “Yes, Grandma,” Lina replied, nodding a bit wearily. “It was a swallow.”

            “Well, then,” Renate said, also bobbing her head, “you see?” She forged ahead, ignoring the fact that no one else seemed to be following the logic that seemed to her so iron-clad. “It’s settled, then! Ethel and Lina will go to Katharina’s wedding.” Then, as everyone began to heed Renate’s urgings to eat while the food was still hot, the Gassmann matriarch added, cryptically, “Besides, Lina. Something tells me that you and your Uncle Hans will have much to talk about.”

            This remark registered only in the most superficial way in Lina’s mind. She was too overwhelmed by the prospect of the trip to take in one additional bit of information. What can they be thinking? she wondered as the meal progressed. How can I possibly make it to the coast on the train, much less manage the crossing… It’ll be too much for Mama.” She was nearly in tears by the time supper ended.

            A bit later, during her evening stroll with Lina, Kristina did not even broach the topic of the trip. She could see that Lina was overcome by fear and confusion, and not up to talking. So, feeling no resentment whatsoever this time at her friend’s reticence, Kristina pushed the wheelchair in silence, pausing occasionally to lay her hand on Lina’s shoulder and give it a comforting squeeze. I’m here for you, whenever you’re ready to talk.

*          *          *

            In the days following her grandmother’s announcement, Lina often fell under the sway of fear and dread that settled onto her shoulders like a great weight. She couldn’t imagine how going to Illinois would be possible if she was still wheelchair bound.  At the same time, though, she found herself daydreaming about attending her cousin Katharina’s wedding with her mother – in America, no less! When she came out of such reveries, she always noticed that she was smiling.  But how to reconcile these two opposing thoughts? Having concluded – despite what her grandparents had concluded – that being paralyzed and traveling to America were mutually exclusive, Lina’s rational mind told her that there was only one possible course of action: If she wanted to go to America – and she did! – then she simply had to get out of the wheelchair.

            Even before Renate’s announcement about the travel plans, Lina had already felt cautiously hopeful about investigating this Bruno Groening she’d read about. There did seem to be promise in what the man was doing. More than that, even. Right now, given that the doctors had not been able to help her at all the past five years, Groening seemed like her only hope. And now, with the trip looming (that was how she thought of it, now, as something “looming”), she began to feel more and pressure each to get healed.  How long have I got? Lina wondered. Six weeks until we leave? Two months?  

            For this reason, Lina now approached the reading of each day’s newspaper with increased intensity. She spent each morning wondering whether there would be another article about him, and then she feverishly scanned the paper each afternoon. For a few days, she found nothing.  Then came June 23rd.

            Lina was seated in her usual spot at the edge of the forest.  The afternoon was cloudy, but warm, and despite the slight breeze, she didn’t need a shawl.  With a hope that she consciously tempered, in case today’s paper once again brought no more news of Groening, and anxiety that she consciously chased away, she turned to page three.  There, in the bottom right hand corner, was a short article, unaccompanied by a photo: “No More Canes for Herford Visitor to Bruno Groening”.  The subtitle read, “First-hand account by a Groening assistant”. The part that caught Lina’s attention read as follows:

“I noticed an old man one day who was literally hanging on his two sticks. He suffered from Bechterew’s syndrome – a progressive ossification and stiffening of the spinal column. As sorry as I felt for him, I couldn’t allow him in, because all the rooms in the house were already filled with help-seekers, about sixty people.  Even the corridor was full.  He had already waited for nine hours. It was well past midnight when I met him again in the corridor, not knowing who had let him in.  I was able to show him a spot where he sat down with extreme difficulty. I pointed him out to Bruno Groening who came in soon and addressed him.  Within a fraction of a second, the old man’s tired and drawn countenance was transformed.  He had told me shortly before that he had already suffered from that disease for ten years and had been given up as a hopeless case by the doctors. He got up from his seat – in this case the healing effect was particularly abrupt – and walked immediately without canes!  The wish to live had been so strongly awakened in him, that he immediately expressed the wish, followed by the action, not only once, but several times, to go up and down stairs without using the walls or banister for help.  After ten years of extreme restriction of movement, here was a newborn man!  He had come to Bruno Groening with a careworn and bitter face and radiantly happy and glad he left him now, filled with renewed courage for living.” [Author’s note: quoted from The Miracle Healings of Bruno Groening, p. 34]

            By the time Lina came to the end of the article, her hands – and, consequently, the newspaper – were shaking so much that she had to lay the paper on her lap, or else it would have fluttered off like a butterfly on the afternoon breeze. She noticed the same tingling in her hands that she’d felt when reading the first article three days earlier, and then she became aware of something else: a subtle sensation in both her feet.  Not a tingling, as in her hands, but a light fizziness. A barely-perceptible effervescence. Then she noticed a slight feeling of being weak in the knees. If this had happened under other circumstances, such as before she’d had her accident, she might have been frightened by it.  But not now.  It was a feeling, after all!  In her feet and in her knees!  Feeling! At the same time, a deep joy rushed into her heart, and she sensed the same underlying deep calm she’d experienced after reading the first article a few days earlier.

            Lina glanced down at her hands and turned them this way and that, as if she might be able to discover some visual clue for the source of the tingling sensation. But her hands looked the same as they always did.  So did her feet, when she pulled up her skirt to examine them, too. Of course, she had her shoes on, so she couldn’t tell for sure. She’d have to check them at bedtime to see whether anything was different about them…

            Then Lina picked up the newspaper once more and reread the story.  She noted with particular excitement that fact that Groening didn’t just talk to people from the balcony of that house he was staying at in Herford. He also met with people inside, individuals, evidently. People like her, who were sick, who couldn’t walk…

            Lina felt her chest constrict, as if a tiny cry was about to try to burst out of it.  How did they get to do that? she thought. That man, he waited nine hours to get into the house. Lina bit her lower lip and let her gaze wander to the path that led into the forest, while her thoughts traveled to that house in Herford. She imagined the corridor, and the old man sitting there, and Groening speaking to him.  The moment of healing in the corridor.  The stairs he had then climbed up and down, up and down.  I’d wait nine hours.  I’d wait more than that.  But how to get there? Then she remembered what she’d told Kristina a few nights earlier, when she’d shown her the first newspaper clipping, when they’d talked about God and how He could help them.  She’d said to Kristina, “I think it starts with our own wish. Like the swallow’s wish to fly free.”  And here was the old man whose “wish to live had been so strongly awakened in him.”  At that moment, Lina felt that the wish to live had also been strongly awakened in her, along with another wish:  I will go to Herford and see Bruno Groening!

            Lina took out her sewing scissors and resolutely cut the article from the newspaper. She folded it and placed it inside her apron pocket, next to the original piece about the “miracle doctor”.  Over supper later that afternoon, she animatedly related the tale – also gleaned from that day’s page three – of the dispute between their client Mr. Kropp and a belligerent town resident who’d refused to pay an extra postal charge.  Everyone found the story amusing, but not as amusing as Lina’s bright face and cheery voice had led them to expect it would be.  And Lina didn’t bother to explain a thing when Ulrich, seeing the neatly-trimmed edges of the newspaper where she had evidently cut something out, asked what she’d found there of interest. “Oh, just this and that,” she replied casually as she rolled herself over to the sink, her lap full of dishes from the supper table.

*          *          *

            “’Just this and that?’” Kristina asked Lina with a laugh, as they were taking their evening stroll down the road that ran along the forest.  The evening had cooled off, and Kristina adjusted the shawl around Lina’s shoulders. “Is there something new?” Lina’s mood seemed so much lighter than it had been a few evenings back, that Kristina knew it was all right to ask.

            “Oh, yes!” Lina replied animatedly, and waved her hand energetically in the direction of the forest entrance a ways down the road. Kristina correctly gathered from this gesture that Lina wanted Kristina to push her to what they now both thought of as their spot. She’d the wait until they were seated there before sharing her news.

            Once Kristina positioned Lina’s wheelchair at the edge of the path opening and took her seat on the fallen log opposite her friend, Lina pulled the fresh newspaper clipping from her pocket and read it to Kristina.

            “You have to go there!” The words burst from Kristina’s mouth as soon as Lina finished reading.  But then, realizing that it wasn’t her place to tell Lina what to do, she placed her hands demurely in her lap, but she clasped them together so tightly that the knuckles grew white.  In her excitement for her friend, though, she couldn’t keep quiet for long.

            “You want to go, don’t you?” she asked gently, looking at Lina intently.

            Lina immediately nodded and met Kristina’s eyes. “More than anything, Kristina.”

            “Because you have your wish,” Kristina replied.

            “That’s right. I do!” Lina smiled.  “I just don’t know how to go about it.” She paused and looked into the forest, as if following that path with her eyes could show her how to make her way to Herford.

            Kristina studied her friend’s face and saw the hope there, and the doubt that accompanied it, the fear of moving ahead. “I don’t know, either.  But Lina, think of it this way. If God hears our wishes, our deepest wishes, and He wants them to come true – which I believe He does – then don’t you think He will help?”

            “I haven’t thought things through that far,” Lina told her with a smile.  “What do you do with a wish once you have it?” She paused. “And what if it fails? I’ve already failed at being able-bodied. I might fail at being healed, too.”

            “You can’t start thinking like that!” Now Kristina looked into the forest, too. “Maybe it’s the way you said the other night. It starts with the wish.  And then God helps.”

            “But don’t we need human help, too, Kristina?  After all, we can’t walk all the way to Herford, with you pushing me along the road.” She looked at her friend and laughed, but then fell silent. Maybe I’ve made assumptions I shouldn’t…

            But Kristina seemed to have read her mind, and she was secretly relieved to realize that Lina wanted to include her in whatever plan was beginning to take shape. “Oh, don’t worry, dear one. If it comes to that, we’ll do it! But don’t you think we could start by mentioning it to your parents?  Or your grandmother, at least? Don’t you think she would want that for you?”  Kristina was about to add that, surely, Renate wanted Lina to be able to board the ship to America on her own, two legs.  But she thought better of mentioning this.

            Lina shrugged and looked down at her hands, which had once again begun tingling as she read the article to Kristina.  The thought of sharing all of this with her mother, or even her grandmother, terrified her.  She knew that Kristina was probably right, but this new wish felt so fragile to her, as if it could be ground to dust by the slightest opposition from those around her.  She wasn’t sure she was up to having her hopes dashed.  It was hard enough the day when she fell out of her wheelchair in the yard. She didn’t want to go through that kind of humiliation again.  She raised her eyes to meet her friend’s.  “But what if they laugh at me, Kristina? Poo-poo the idea?  I don’t think I could bear that.”

            Kristina reached out and took Lina’s hand.  “Do you think you could bear the rest of your life in this chair? Could you bear that any better?”

            Lina’s eyes filled with tears, and she shook her head.

            Kristina squeezed Lina’s hand in both of hers. “Then it’s settled.  Tomorrow we’ll find a time to talk with your mother and grandmother.  I’ll be right there with you.  Assuming you want me to be…”

            Lina nodded.  “Yes, I do.”  She freed one hand so that she could wipe away the tears that were flowing freely down her cheeks now.  “But Kristina, what if they do laugh at the idea? What do we do then?”

            “Then I get myself a pair of good, sturdy walking shoes,” Kristina replied with a smile.  “You seem to have forgotten that I walked halfway across Germany to get here. Herford would be a mere stroll for me!” Then, seeing Lina smile in response, she stood up and took her position behind the wheelchair to begin their walk back to the house.

*          *          *

            Lina found her moment – and her voice – the next morning.  Ethel was just finishing submerging the laundry in the two large kettles on the stove, while Renate cut up meat from two rabbits, in preparation for making a stew for supper.  Lina sat at the big kitchen table, shaping pieces of dough into the rolls that would accompany the rabbit stew. And Kristina? She had just come back into the house after collecting eggs from the hens.  She’d just set the wicker basket down on the table, when Lina began speaking.

            “Mama? Grandma?” She waited until both Ethel and Renate turned in her direction before continuing.  “I’d like to talk with you about something.”

            Ethel waved her arms in that wing-like way of moving she had as she wiped her hands dry on the towel tucked into her apron pocket.  Renate laid down the carving knife and smoothed her skirt.  They could tell that Lina wanted their full attention. But they weren’t so sure how she felt about Kristina being there. Mother and daughter looked discretely toward Kristina and then back to Lina.

            “It’s all right,” Lina reassured them. “I asked Kristina to be here for this, too.”

            Renate and Ethel sat down at the table. “What is it?” they asked, nearly in unison.

            Lina pulled the two newspaper clippings from her apron, then passed one to Renate, and the other to Ethel.  Then she patted the seat of the chair next to her and nodded to Kristina, who sat down and rested her hands in her lap, not sure where to look while the women opposite her were reading.  She didn’t want to seem adversarial, just supportive of Lina…

            Ethel finished first – she’d received the shorter, more recent of the two articles.  But she didn’t say anything right away, preferring to wait for her mother to read all the way through the other piece.

            Of course, from the first moment they glanced at the newspaper clippings Lina handed them, both Renate and Ethel surmised what Lina wanted to talk with them about.

            “We’ve been wondering when you would mention this to us,” Ethel said, but her face betrayed no hint of how she felt about the topic at hand.

            Lina’s mouth gaped. “You have?” she asked, looking back and forth between the two of them.  “But… You mean you already know about Bruno Groening?”  It took only a few seconds for the initial surprise she’d felt upon hearing her mother’s words to shift first into relief, and then hope.

            “Lorena saw this first one, too,” Renate said, laying the clipping onto the table in front of her.  She held its edges with one hand and smoothed it out with the other, looking at the photo of Bruno Groening as she spoke.  Then she raised her gaze to meet Lina’s. “She read it and told me about it.”

            “And?” Lina asked expectantly. She was still feeling stunned by this revelation. But now, an element of anger was beginning to creep in, too.

            “Well,” Renate said, glancing over at Ethel, who nodded, “I told your mother about it…”

            “And we talked…” Ethel continued.

            “And?” Lina asked once more, and a frown came to her face. She looked over at Kristina, who was doing her best to keep her face neutral. She didn’t really want to be drawn into the conversation, but she did want to show Lina that she was on her side.  She reached over and placed her hand on Lina’s.

            Renate let out a deep sigh. “Now, Lina, dear…”

            Lina knew from experience that when her grandmother began a sentence this way, it didn’t bode well. Not for Lina, at least.

            “’Now, Lina dear’ what?” Lina asked, sitting up stiffly in her chair.

            “Lina,” Renate repeated, summoning her inner strength as the Gassmann family matriarch, and reminding herself that she really did know best, “We decided not to mention it to you.”

            “And why was that?” Lina’s voice was dry and her gaze sharp as she stared at her grandmother.

            Smoothing the newspaper clipping once more, Renate began to explain. “We…” – and here she motioned to Ethel with her free hand –  “We felt it would only give you false hope. And Lord  knows you don’t need that!”

            Lina’s mouth dropped open again. She felt like she’d been punched in the stomach.  “False hope? Grandma, I’ve had no hope for the past four years.  Here is a man –“

            “Perhaps a charlatan!” Ethel put in, leaning toward her daughter. “You can’t be too careful.  Someone comes along and sways a crowd, and…”

            “Perhaps a charlatan?” Lina responded, her voice rising now along with her anger. “On the strength of that perhaps – when you have no evidence of that, by the way – you decided not to mention it to me?”

            “We felt that was best,” Renate repeated flatly.

            “I can’t believe what I’m hearing!” Lina said. Without even realizing it, she began rocking her wheelchair back and forth, and each time she rolled it forward, the front edge of the armrests tapped against the table’s edge. “Why do you get to decide what’s best for me? Was all that talk about free will just for show? Was it, Mama?”

            Ethel was swaying forward and backwards in her chair now, as if in subtle tune with her daughter’s movements. “We just want to protect you, Lina. Surely you can understand that?”

            “But what makes you so sure I need protecting from Mr. Groening?” Lina responded in a challenging tone.  Then she gestured at the clippings.  “Do you not believe that these people were really healed? Do you not believe it’s possible?”

            Here Ethel stopped swaying. She suddenly felt transported back to that awful suppertime conversation in 1921, when Uncle Ewald told them the tale of how a young boy named Bruno supposedly healed the young German soldier.  She recalled the heated conversation with Hans about faith and healing and belief in God and His ability to heal.  The look of recollection and shock on Ethel’s face stopped Lina just as she was about to launch her next salvo.

            “Mama, what is it?” She took her hands off the wheelchair wheels and leaned over, resting her elbows on the table and stared at her mother across the table. “What is it?”

            Ethel glanced at Renate, but the matriarch’s face gave no sign that she knew what had just occurred to Ethel. 

In fact, Renate knew full well what was going through Ethel’s mind. Really, she was surprised that Ethel hadn’t made the connection a week earlier, when Renate showed her the clipping Lorena brought over. Renate had been hoping that Ethel wouldn’t recall that the boy in the 1921 story was also named Bruno.  The last thing Renate wanted was to dredge all that up again. They all knew what that conversation about faith and healing and God had led to. Don’t say it, she silently willed Ethel. Leave it be. But then Ethel spoke.

“Lina,” she began, reaching across the table to take her daughter’s hand, “this Bruno Groening… This isn’t the first time I – we – have heard of him.”

“What?”

Even Kristina leaned forward now, in spite of herself. “You knew about him?”

Ethel nodded. Renate, realizing that a floodgate was about to be flung open, took a deep breath and nodded. Then, still looking at the clipping on the table before her, she absently waved a hand at Ethel. Go on, then. You’ve started it. Might as well get it all out.

“You know about how your Uncle Hans left in 1921, emigrated to Illinois in America to work with our Uncle Ewald?” Then she added, for Kristina’s benefit, “Ewald is my uncle, my mother’s brother. Hans is my brother, the one whose daughter is getting married.”

Both Kristina and Lina nodded, but said nothing. Lina was barely even breathing at this point. She was so full of surprise in anticipation of finally learning what her mother and grandmother had steadfastly refused to tell her all these years: the real reason Hans left for America.

“All right, now, how to tell this in as few words as possible?” Ethel mused. She paused briefly, to collect her thoughts, then continued.

“Well, Uncle Ewald came back from America to visit.  It’d been, what, fifteen years since he’d left?”

“Seventeen,” Renate corrected.

“Seventeen, then.” Ethel was looking past Lina to the opposite wall, aware of the fact that she was sitting in the very same chair she’d occupied during that fateful supper. “So, I don’t recall how we got onto the topic, but that doesn’t really matter. What’s important is that Uncle Ewald said that one of their neighbors had a nephew, back here in Germany –“

“In Danzig,” Renate put in.

“Yes, that’s right, Danzig.”

Now Kristina’s ears perked up. Danzig? Where she and Ingrid had sailed from? Something occurred to her, but she pushed the thought aside. She didn’t want to miss any of Ethel’s story.

“So, there was the nephew, a soldier, in a military hospital. Something with his leg, wasn’t it, Mama?”

Renate smiled and waved her hand. “I don’t recall what the problem actually was now. I recall that Ewald went back and forth about it.  Wasn’t sure himself, at first, and now I don’t remember what the true diagnosis was.”

Ethel laughed then, too. “Yes, that’s right! But in any case, it was serious, as I recall. Right, Mama?”

“Yes, that wasn’t in dispute,” Renate said, smoothing the part of the clipping that showed Bruno’s face.  “The doctors’ treatment hadn’t been working, and this nephew –“

“Leo!” Ethel exclaimed. “Yes, his name was Leo!”

“Yes, Leo,” Renate confirmed. “The doctors said that they’d have to amputate Leo’s leg the next day.

Lina couldn’t help herself. “And what happened?” She was leaning forward now, her long braid in her right hand. She’d wrapped it around her wrist and was twisting it back and forth.

“Well, as Ewald’s neighbor told it, there was this woman who came to visit the soldiers now and then.  And she usually brought her little boy with her.  His name was Bruno.”  She paused, looking from Lina’s face to Kristina’s, but neither said anything.  Too early in the story for them to react, Ethel decided. And she went on. “So this little boy, Bruno, goes over to talk to Leo, and he says to Leo, ‘I wish for you…’ Mama, do you remember what he said?”

Renate nodded. Every detail of that suppertime conversation had been etched into her memory, and she spoke out the young Bruno’s words to the women at the table, so softly that they had to strain to hear. “‘May you be totally healthy soon, by God’s grace’. That’s what he said to him.”

“And what happened?” Lina asked in a whisper.  Ethel could tell from her face, and from the look that she and Kristina exchanged, that now they’d gotten it.

“The next day, Leo’s leg was perfectly healthy. The doctors didn’t have to amputate it after all.” Ethel stopped there.  She knew that she needn’t say any more. There was plenty in what she’d already said for Lina to ponder. 

Indeed, Lina was sitting stock still in her chair, except for the absentminded twirling of her braid, as she sought to put all the pieces together in her mind. Finally, she asked, “Just how old was this Bruno then? What year was that?”

“It was just after the war ended,” Ethel told her, “the Great War. The boy was ten or eleven, Uncle Ewald thought.”

Lina reached over and took hold of the clipping in front of Renate, the one with the photo of Bruno Groening.  “Thirty-one years ago, the story with Leo.  If he was ten or eleven then, he’d be, what, early forties?” She brought the paper up to her face and studied the man in the photo.  Again, she felt the familiar tingling –in her fingers at first, and then streaming through her whole body.  “Could it be him?” she asked, showing the photo to Kristina, as if her friend could tell her the answer.  Then she turned her gaze to her mother and grandmother. “Could this be the same Bruno?”

“I thought so,” Renate answered slowly, “as soon as Lorena showed me this article.  I remember Ewald’s story so clearly, and I just knew this was the same person.”

Lina turned her eyes to her mother. “And you? Did you realize it, too?”

Ethel shook her head. “Not until just now, when we started talking. Maybe that seems strange, but it’s true.” She gently took the clipping from Lina’s hands and took a good look at Bruno Groening.  “To think he’s who we were all arguing about that day.”

“What day?” Lina asked, still not understanding what Bruno Groening had to do with her Uncle Hans’ emigration.

“The day we had the big argument about God and faith and healing and whether God can heal us if we want it enough,” Renate told her in a resigned voice.

“Or if someone else believes strongly enough that He can do that,” Ethel added.

“So, if I understand what you’re saying,” Kristina asked gently, “Mrs. Gassmann’s brother Ewald told about the boy Bruno, and the idea is that Leo and his family believed that it was Bruno who healed Leo.  Is that it?”

Renate and Ethel both nodded.

Now Kristina noticed a tingling in her hands, slight at first, but growing in intensity.  She stopped talking and gazed at her fingers in surprise, wondering what this sensation was. She had no idea that Lina, sitting next to her, was experiencing the same thing, only more strongly.

“But Grandma,” Lina persisted, “I still don’t understand how the story about Bruno and Leo is related to Uncle Hans leaving.”  Lina herself was surprised to hear this remark pop out of her mouth. After all, what she wanted most was to keep talking about Bruno, to convince her mother and grandmother that she just had to go see him. At the same time, though, she also sensed that if she didn’t get to the bottom of the Hans question now, when the topic was on the table – for the first time in her life! – then she might never get the chance again.

Renate didn’t answer at first. She let her gaze drift to where Kristina was sitting – Hans’ old seat. She let her eyes rest in that direction for a brief period. The other women at the table supposed that she was reaching far back into the recesses of her memory, to the same spot whence she had retrieved Bruno’s words to Leo, to find the answer to Lina’s question.  But the truth was, Renate had no answer.

“I can’t really say,” she told them finally.

Even Ethel looked shocked by this answer. “Mama, really?” she asked.  “How can that be?  How can you not know?”  Mama has always known everything…

“We never talked about it, Hans and I,” Renate explained.  “Or your father and I,” she said, looking at Ethel.  “Honestly, I don’t believe Hans ever told your father his reasons.  He certainly didn’t tell me.” She went back to looking in the direction of where Kristina was seated, but didn’t say any more.

Lina was entirely dissatisfied with this answer. I’ve waited my whole life to find out about this, and Grandma says she doesn’t know?? “Didn’t he tell someone? Maybe Uncle Ewald?” She looked back and forth between Ethel and Renate.

“Maybe he did,” Renate said slowly, finally shifting her gaze to her granddaughter.  “But if he did, Ewald never shared that with me.  Or with Ulrich. At least as far as I know.” Now the other women noticed that a thin layer of bitterness had crept into Renate’s voice. None of them wanted to poke at that layer, lift it up to discover what lay underneath.

“Mama,” Lina tried, “What do you think? What about the story about Bruno and Leo could have upset him so much that he up and decided to leave the country? That seems…”

“Crazy?” Ethel asked.  “It does.  I think we’ve all asked ourselves that question since 1921. Me, all I can say is that I hinted – we were talking about whether God will grant a healing if the person who’s praying believes – and I hinted, or, rather, just posed the possibility, that Hans didn’t believe God could heal someone if a person has strong faith.”

“No, Ethel,” Renate said, coming back into herself. “‘Maybe you don’t really believe He exists’. That’s what you said to him.”

Ethel sighed. “Yes, that was it, Mama.  He took it very personally, as if I was attacking him.”

“He took your remark to mean that if he’d had stronger faith, his leg would have been fully healed.” Renate glanced at Kristina and then added, for her benefit (although Lina didn’t know this fact, either), “He was injured in basic training.”

“Which is not what I meant at all!” Ethel protested, her cheeks reddening as if she were living through the whole conversation again.

“What did you mean?” Lina asked. She was starting to get confused.

“You see,” Ethel said, her hands raised in the air before her, “once Ewald told Leo’s story, we were all talking about whether what had happened was possible –“

“What exactly do you mean?” Lina broke in, her brows knitted.

“Oh, that the boy Bruno had asked God to heal Leo –“

“When he said, ‘May you be totally healthy soon, by God’s grace’,” Renate interjected.

“And that that’s what happened,” Ethel went on. ” That Leo was healed overnight because Bruno prayed for his healing with such faith and belief.”

“But…” Lina began again, “then what was the disagreement you all had about that?”

Ethel closed her eyes and spoke, as if she needed every ounce of concentration in order to present the situation clearly. “Hans doubted that someone’s faith could be so strong that God would grant a healing. And then I had to respond, and that’s when I said, Maybe you don’t really believe He exists.”

“And that was all there was to it?” Lina asked, thinking she must have missed something.

“Well, basically, yes,” Renate said.

“But not entirely,” Ethel said with a sigh.  “Hans asked me whether I believed such a thing was possible, and I said –“

“’I sure want to be able to believe,’” Renate put in. “That’s what you said.”

Ethel nodded, and then fell silent.

Kristina and Lina exchanged glances again. Then Kristina, surprised at her own boldness, asked a question.

“Do you think that’s why he left? Because his faith was called into question?”

Renate spread her hands out before her.  “As I said, I can’t say. I don’t know why he left.  All I know is that everything was going just fine until that whole topic came up, and once it did, things fell apart.”  She pointed a finger at the newspaper clipping. “Which is why we have stayed away from such discussions since 1921.”

Lina opened her mouth to say that this made no sense, since they had, in fact, not stayed away from them. What is it we’ve been talking about these past couple of weeks, if not that? But then Ethel caught her eye, and Lina realized from this non-verbal signal that the window of opportunity to discuss both Hans and Bruno Groening had slammed shut, at least as far as her grandmother was concerned. So she said nothing.  But as Renate stood up and turned her back on the table to return to carving up the rabbits for the stew, Ethel leaned across the table, gave Lina’s hand a quick squeeze, and whispered to her, “We’ll talk tonight, at bed time.”

The rest of this day passed more slowly than any day Lina could remember, except perhaps for the earliest period following her accident, when the passage of the hours had been marked only by pain and immobility.  Her evening walk with Kristina couldn’t come to an end too soon for her taste, since it meant that her daily routine was nearly over.  She didn’t even ask to go sit by the forest’s edge, as Kristina had expected she might. So, they talked only briefly as they walked, with both of them speaking in an unnaturally loud voice, so as to be heard by the other.  This arrangement didn’t lend itself to a thoughtful, subtle discussion.

“What do you think your mother will say?” Kristina asked her, the volume of her voice at odds with the gentleness with which she wanted to pose the question.

Lina shrugged. “It could go either way.”

“I know what you mean.  I couldn’t tell whether she’s sympathetic or not.  Certainly, she knows why you showed them the clippings.”

“Yes, without a doubt.  Especially since they’ve already seen the first one, thanks to Aunt Lorena.”  Kristina couldn’t see Lina’s face, but she didn’t have to in order to know that her friend was frowning.

“What do you think about them knowing already?” she asked softly, as if not wanting to intrude on Lina’s thoughts.  “And not telling you?”

“What did you say?” Lina replied, turning her head. “You’ll have to speak louder, Kristina!”

“I’m sorry.  I wasn’t sure you wanted to talk about it…”

“If I didn’t want to, I just wouldn’t have answered you,” Lina told her, and Kristina could see the corner of her mouth rise into a smile.

“All right, then, I’ll keep shouting!” Kristina joked.  “I said, what did you think about them already knowing. And not telling you?”

“At first I thought, oh, that’s wonderful! Now I won’t have to explain anything, won’t have to convince them. We can move right to talking about how to get me to Herford.” She paused.  “But then, I saw how my grandmother dropped her eyes to the table.  That is not like her at all.”

“I thought not,” Kristina said.

“Yes, you know her well enough to know that she’s one to look you straight in the eye and tell you exactly what she thinks. Exactly how things are going to be.”

“That’s Mrs. Gassmann, all right!” Kristina laughed. “But couldn’t that be a good sign? That maybe she’s not sure of herself?”

Lina shook her head. Kristina could see that with her right hand, Lina was twirling the end of her braid thoughtfully.  “No. I think that meant that she’d already made up her mind, and she knew her decision would upset me.”

“But even that is a departure from her usual behavior. You said it yourself!” Kristina said, leaning forward with her hands still on the handles of the wheelchair.

“That’s true.” Lina paused. “To tell you the truth, Kristina, my mind is in such a whirl, I’m not sure what to think.” Here she took hold of the wheel rims and turned the chair around so that she was facing Kristina. “I was so upset that they knew about Mr. Groening but didn’t tell me. That they thought they could make that decision for me!” She let go of her braid and slapped the arm rests of the chair with her hands.  “What gives them the right?”

Seeing that Lina was tearing up, Kristina leaned down and hugged her friend as best she could.  “I know. It doesn’t seem fair, does it?”  She could feel Lina shaking her head in response.  “Why don’t you just wait and see what your mama has to say tonight?” she suggested.  “Then we can figure out what to do next, once you know what she’s thinking.”

Kristina pulled back a bit, and Lina began drying her eyes with her handkerchief. “Yes. I guess that’s all we can do.”  Lina patted the armrests with her hands and then laid them on the wheel rims.  “Come on,” she said to Kristina. “I’ve got to move, get some of this feeling inside me out of me, or I’ll never be able to sleep. Race you!”

            With these words, and a mischievous smile, Lina braced herself against the back of her seat and began propelling her chair forward.  Kristina was caught by surprise, but she knew this was a good sign: Perhaps Lina was guarding a bit of hope inside her that her mother and grandmother might yet agree to take her to see Bruno Groening.  Kristina watched as Lina began picking up speed and rolled down the road in the direction of the house. Then she saw that, after about fifty yards, Lina abruptly spun herself around and raced back to Kristina, who was moving along at just a walking pace.

            “Come on!” Lina laughed, her face flushed.  “You’re not even trying!”

            This was not the first time they had played this game, and each time, Kristina would shuffle along at first, waiting for Lina to double back for her.  Then the race was really on, with Kristina running full tilt and Lina’s arms a blur at her sides, as she spun the chair’s wheels as fast as she could. On the occasions when Lina reached the lane to the house first, it was never for lack of Kristina trying.  Tonight was one of those times.

*          *          *

            “Mama,” Lina asked as Ethel was brushing out her daughter’s braid.  “Why didn’t you and Grandma want to tell me you already read that article?”

            Ethel had kept quiet about this subject while helping Lina get ready for bed, in the hope that her daughter might have decided not to revisit the conversation from that morning.  It was not a talk Ethel was relishing. But once Lina brought it up, she couldn’t very well stay silent. After all, she’d been the one to say they could talk at bedtime.

            Ethel paused in her brushing, choosing her words. “We didn’t want to call your attention to this Groening if he’s some kind of fake. Just think, Lina, how awful it would be for you to go to him, only to find out he’s like some swindler, or carnival snake oil salesman.”

            “But think how awful it would be, Mama,” Lina replied softly, “if he can genuinely heal people, and I never get the chance to see him. And maybe be healed, too.” 

            Ethel nodded, and Lina could see the nod in the mirror atop the dresser at the other side of the room.  But Ethel said nothing.

            “And just think, Mama, how awful it would be for me to sit in this chair for the rest of my life. Isn’t it worth taking a chance?”

            “We just don’t want you to get hurt,” Ethel said, her voice full of emotion. 

            “I already have been hurt,” Lina reminded her, her tone chilly.

            Ethel rested her hands on her daughter’s shoulders. “All the more reason to be protective of you! Grandma and I would never forgive ourselves if we took you to see him and nothing came of it. Can you see that?”

            “I don’t know,” Lina replied truthfully. “When I heard that you already knew about him and decided not to say anything to me, it felt like a real betrayal. I’m so sorry to say that, Mama.”  In fact, her heart was in her throat.  She had never dared to say anything remotely unkind to her parents or grandparents, and now she was accusing her mother of betraying her.

            “It’s all right, Sweetheart,” Ethel said quietly.  “It’s so hard to know what’s right to do.  Unless you’re Grandma, of course,” she added with a smile. “Grandma always seems to know exactly what to do.”

            Lina smiled at that, too.  “But you, Mama. Do you agree with her about this? Especially since this Bruno was able to help that boy Leo?”

            “Assuming it’s even the same Bruno,” Ethel replied, cautiously. 

            “But don’t you think it is?” Lina asked, turning her head as far as she could so that she could see her mother’s face.

            “I do, actually,” Ethel told her.  “I didn’t remember about Bruno and Leo – I mean, about the boy’s name being Bruno – until we were talking about it this morning.” She paused, not sure whether she should add what she was thinking. But then she did continue.  “And you should know, Lina, that it wasn’t just Leo that the boy Bruno helped.  There were lots of injured soldiers in that hospital. He helped a lot of them.”

            “You see?” Lina cried.  “It must be the same Bruno!  Oh, Mama, I want so much to go see him!”

Ethel had known in her heart that it would come to this tonight, and she had been wrestling with herself all day.  It was as if she was squarely back in 1921 again, at the supper table.  Now, as she stood behind Ethel, she could clearly see Hans right across the table from her – in her mind’s eye – and she clearly heard him ask his question: “Do you believe Leo could actually have been healed because that boy Bruno prayed so hard and believed so hard that God could heal him?” She also clearly remembered her reply, all of it: “I don’t know, Hans. I just don’t know.  But I can tell you this: I sure want to be able to believe.  Because, think of it: Wouldn’t that be a grand thing?  To be able to believe that if you have enough faith, then God will heal someone no doctor’s been able to help?  I want to be able to believe that.”

“Mama?” Lina asked, jostling her hand.  “Mama? Did you hear me?”

Ethel nodded. Of course she had heard her.  But she had to finish wrestling with herself before she could answer.  It’s not enough to want to believe any more. I have to either believe or not believe. And in that moment, Ethel made the decision to believe. For Lina’s sake. And possibly for her own, too.

“I want you to see him, too, Dear.”

*          *          *

            Renate dreaded the next day’s suppertime more than any other, even the one back in 1921. She couldn’t have dreaded that one, after all, since she’d had no idea what would ensue. But today… She knew the same questions would come up on this day as had done back then, and she blamed herself. If only I hadn’t allowed things to go so far the past couple of weeks.  If only I hadn’t let Lina go on about God’s will and God’s plan. That’s what Renate was thinking to herself this morning as she sliced the potatoes and put them into a pan to bake with some bacon and onion. 

            But in her heart, Renate knew that she couldn’t have stopped all of this from happening. She recognized that this condemnation was a thought from her old self.  Not that she knew what her new self was.  But she had managed to hold onto the deep, newfound sense that she really was working with God now, instead of trying to handle and figure out everything on her own. Somehow, now, she was able to remind herself of this, which meant that she could summon a bit of courage in regard to supper. 

            She couldn’t imagine – with her mind – how it could be a good thing for Lina to go see this Bruno Groening, for the reasons Ethel had laid out to Lina. What if he’s a swindler?  Then there was also her general aversion to situations that had a lot of emotion connected to them, and uncertainty. She so much preferred everything to be quiet, and in order, and stable. But at the same time, there it was, inside her: a quiet voice. This voice – was it the voice of God? – urged her to overcome her fear that another 1921-like situation would develop, and to embrace the plan that Ethel had broached with her the night before:  They would find a way to get Lina to Herford to see Bruno Groening.

            But before they could formulate a way to make this happen, the idea had to be presented to the whole family. Not for discussion. Renate had not changed that much! No.  As with all other decisions involving the family (the domestic side of their life, remember, since Ulrich handled the business end of things), Renate would simply announce what she had decided. And everyone would fall into line.  That was her fervent hope.  By “everyone”, Renate really meant Viktor and Marcus and Peter.  She had already spoken to Ulrich, who, though surprised, knew better than to throw up roadblocks where Renate had a clear direction laid out in her mind.  Ethel had spoken to Viktor, too, Renate knew. But how had he reacted? Ethel didn’t elaborate on their conversation when Renate asked her about it after breakfast. All she said was, “He won’t stop us.” That was not as enthusiastic a response as Renate was hoping for, but beggars couldn’t be choosers. As suppertime grew closer and closer, Renate unexpectedly found herself whispering, “Dear God, please give me the right words.”

            Renate waited to share the plan until everyone at the table had eaten their first helping of sausage and potatoes.  Let everyone at least have something in their stomachs first.  She began by saying that Lorena had given her a newspaper clipping about this man named Bruno Groening.  She even produced the clipping – the original article Lorena had given her, since Lina wouldn’t let her own copy leave her side – and laid it out on the table for anyone who wanted to peruse it themselves. 

            “Ethel and I discussed it,” Renate told them all.  “We thought this Groening might be able to help Lina. We talked with her about it yesterday, and she felt that way, too.  So, we decided to take her to Herford and try to see him.”

            Kristina glanced at Lina, concerned at first that her friend might object to how Renate was presenting the story of the way Bruno Groening had come into their lives.  But she could tell by the slight smile on Lina’s face that she appreciated her grandmother’s artistry.  Indeed, for perhaps the first time in her life, Lina truly understood how gifted Renate was. She could discern a larger picture and then paint it for her family so that her words would highlight what she wanted them to notice, while laying a gentle shadow over what she wished for them not to see.  All of this she did with the aim of presenting a situation in the way which would be most aesthetically pleasing – and convincing – for her family.

            Thus, here, when explaining the situation to the family, she summarized the success Bruno Groening had had in his healing work, pointedly retelling the story of the man who came to see Mr. Groening with canes and left without them.  If you didn’t know she’d initially been against taking Lina to Herford, you never would have guessed it, to hear her now.  As we have seen already, once Renate came round to an idea, she held on to it as tenaciously as a dog who comes across a bone in a neighbor’s yard and then proceeds to defend it as if she was the original owner.

            Those who already knew about the plan – Viktor, Ethel, Ulrich, Lina, and Kristina – listened quietly to what Renate had to say, each with his or her own thoughts regarding it.  Peter felt both shocked by his grandmother’s words, and intrigued.  This didn’t sound at all like the kind of plan she would come up with: Renate, who, like a sheep dog, preferred her flock to be either in the meadow or the paddock, all together, and not wandering off somewhere unfamiliar. But when he cast a glance across the table at Lina and saw her face beginning to glow, he knew that something almost magical must have taken place to shift their grandmother into a frame of mind – or heart – in which she was willing to take a risk of this type. To be clear: He had no doubt that there was a risk.  But that look of hope and joy on Lina’s face was enough for him.  If there was something to be hoped for, let her hope.

            It was – not surprisingly, somehow – Marcus who responded first to Renate’s announcement that Lina would go to see Bruno Groening.  To his credit, he let Renate say her piece before going on the attack.  Most likely, he felt the pressure of the stern gaze his father was directing at him from across the table.  He understood that look.  It was not unlike the feeling that the vice grip of Viktor’s arm around his shoulder in the barn a couple of weeks earlier had produced.  And Viktor’s words echoed in his mind: “It’s not worth it, Marcus.”  “But,” Marcus thought stubbornly, as the anger rose in his chest, “It is worth it. I have to speak up.  I have to.” And he did.

            “Why is it,” he started in, as soon as Renate stopped speaking, “that when Lina wants something, everyone bows and scrapes to make it happen, but when Marcus wants something, we do ‘what’s best for the family’, and not for Marcus?  Can someone explain that to me?” He furrowed his brow and narrowed his eyes and looked in turn from one family member to the next.

            “That’s not what’s going on here, Marcus,” Ethel replied calmly. “It’s just that –“

            “Oh, that is what’s going on, Mama!” Marcus retorted, not even bothering to turn and look around Lina to try to find her gaze. Instead, he directed his eyes to Kristina, hoping to find support.  But Kristina’s eyes were on her plate, as she strategically pursued a potato in the hope of staying out of this family discussion.

            Renate straightened herself up in her chair, smoothed her apron skirt, and then tapped her right forefinger on the table near Marcus’ elbow.  “It’s been decided, Marcus,” she said in a voice that was both stern and kind. “And I don’t see that this is anything but good for all of us.”

            Marcus looked stunned. “You don’t? You think dragging my crippled sister to a charlatan will be nothing but ‘good for all of us’? Are you all blind?”  He looked at Viktor.  “And you agreed to this?” he nearly shouted.

            Viktor looked hard at Marcus, trying to discern whether the young man across from him was actually feeling some concern for Lina’s welfare, or whether this was a calculated ploy.  The latter seemed unlikely to him, but perhaps he underestimated Marcus’ ability to think on his feet when presented with a threatening situation.

            “So, you’re worried only about that?” he asked calmly.  “About Lina being disappointed? Or misled?”

            “And about this family pouring money we don’t have to take her to see this swindler who will undoubtedly bleed us dry with pleas for more and bigger payments.”

            “He doesn’t accept any money for his work,” Ethel told them. “Says what he has is a gift from God, and that he’ll lose it if people pay him.”

            Marcus snorted. “My God, you people are even more gullible than I thought.  It’s bad enough to believe he can heal people – we haven’t even talked about that!  But to believe he doesn’t want to get anything out of it for himself? Come on.  You –”and here he gestured to everyone at the table “- may like to think the best of everyone around you, but the whole world is not like Bockhorn. What makes you think you can trust this… what’s his name?”

            “Bruno Groening,” Lina said quietly.  She wanted to tell him and all the rest of them about what she’d experienced when reading the articles, about the tingling, the joy, the sense of connection with God.  But she couldn’t bring herself to utter one word about it.  She knew Marcus would scoff, and she didn’t think she could bear to be attacked that way right now.  The hope she was feeling was still a very young and tender shoot, so vulnerable to being cut down.  So, instead of speaking, she laid her hand against the newspaper clipping in her apron pocket and focused on gathering strength from it.  Then she looked across the table at her father, hoping he would say something to salvage the situation.

            “If Lina can be healed by going to see this Groening,” Viktor began, glancing at Lina before settling his gaze on Marcus, “then it will be good for everyone in the family.”

Lina felt a twinge in her heart as she had the thought that her father was supporting the plan not out of love for her, but because of a rational assessment of odds and benefits.  But then he gave her another quick look, and, just for a second, she glimpsed love in his eyes.

Upon hearing Viktor’s remark, Ethel, too, at first found his tone business-like and cold. But a second later, she realized that he had carefully calculated how best to achieve Marcus’ acquiescence, and she had to admit that he was insightful. Marcus was likely to sign on to any project if he stood to gain by it.

“With Lina back on her feet, and in the forest,” Viktor went on, “things will change around here.”

Ethel was impressed by Viktor’s dexterity in handling Marcus, but the question remained in her mind (and in everyone else’s, too): Did he really believe Groening might be able to heal Lina, or was he just hedging his bets and supporting the plan most likely to keep things calm in the family? Not that she would condemn him if it was only the latter.  Not necessarily. He’d shown over the years that he was quite capable of acting in ways others would find objectionable, if those actions meant his family would be safe.  Ethel really wanted to know what was motivating him now, but he wasn’t showing his hand, and she hadn’t asked him last night how he really felt.  At that moment, she’d been content that he agreed to do whatever it took to get Lina to Groening.  Now, though, she was back in 1921 again. During that conversation, Viktor hadn’t said whether he believed that little Bruno had healed Leo or not. The most he said was that he’d come to believe in God again once he was on the Gassmann homestead.  Looking at Viktor now, at his cornflower blue eyes that now had much more of an edge to them than they had back in 1921, Ethel wished she could read her husband’s mind.

Viktor, for his part, was thinking of 1921, too, about how he’d thought, during that suppertime conversation, that if anyone was capable of mustering enough faith to believe in Bruno’s healing abilities, it would be Ethel.  The night before, when she told him what Lina wanted to do, he looked at her and saw that the bright light of that faith – which had shone so intensely in her hazel eyes when they first met – had faded some over the past twenty-eight years.  That was partly his fault.  He knew that. But he hoped, deep in his heart, that Ethel still had the ability he’d sensed in her then, that she’d be able to call up her reserves of faith now, at this time when maybe they – including him – needed help more than ever before.  So, he agreed to help, to find a way.  Then they’d all find out how much faith there was in each of them.

First things first, though: Marcus had to be pacified.

“Things will change?” Marcus asked, tilting his head to the side suspiciously. “Just what do you mean?”

Viktor leaned back in his chair and draped one arm over the chairback. “If Lina gets back to being able to work in the forest again, we won’t need you to work here in the business anymore.” That said, he picked up his fork and began to eat the sausage that had been patiently awaiting his attention.

Marcus’ mouth dropped open.  He looked at everyone at the table in turn before replying.  “Are you serious?” he asked quietly, as if afraid to scare the possibility away by asking too loudly, or too enthusiastically.

Viktor just nodded, without even looking up from his plate.  Everyone else was silent, too. Ethel felt a rush of affection for her husband, and pride, even, at how he was handling the situation.  Renate was pushing potatoes onto her fork with her finger, too excited to look at anyone else, for fear of jinxing what seemed on the verge of transpiring. Ulrich was sitting back in his chair, a slight smile on his face, his eyes shining.  The whole situation seemed magical.  Everything hung in the balance here. It floated before all of them in the air, like a circus trapeze artist who’s let go of the swing he’d been holding onto and, after executing a somersault, is hurtling toward the partner who awaits him on the opposite side of the arena, arms outstretched. Will he grasp onto those strong arms, or fall to the hard, unforgiving earth? Lina held her breath and pressed her hand hard against the newspaper clipping in her pocket. Peter was dumbstruck, barely even understanding what was going on, it was all moving so fast.  Kristina and Ingrid, who, despite their four years here, still knew little of the ins and outs of the family dynamic, were as if spellbound, sensing that this moment was of monumental significance for all of them.

Marcus paused, floating in mid-air in the circus tent of the Gassmann-Bunke kitchen, taking in everyone around him once more.  Then he slowly extended his right hand out across the table.  Viktor looked up from his sausage and potatoes. As everyone watched, he calmly wiped his hands on his napkin, then leaned forward, took Marcus’ hand, and shook it. As Viktor wordlessly returned his attention to his meal, Marcus spoke.

“I’m in, then.”

It seemed as if all of them exhaled at once. This sigh of relief filled the room, despite the fact that not a single person in the room knew what now awaited them.

Lina flashed a smile at Viktor and noticed that her hands were trembling. She felt her mother’s arm wrap around her shoulders, and realized that tears were streaming down her face.  Looking across the table to where Kristina sat next to Viktor, she smiled again and mouthed the words, “To Herford. We’re going to Herford.”

*          *          *

            That night, as they got undressed for bed, Ethel walked up behind Viktor and, wrapping her arms around his waist, leaned her head against his back.

            “Thank you,” she said quietly.  “Did you see how happy Lina was?”

            She felt him nod.  He glanced down, and his gaze alighted on the wooden ring on her right hand. He traced the flower on its top – a bit rubbed down by now, after all these years – with his finger.  He recalled how he had worked so carefully and lovingly to carve it, nervous about how Ethel would receive it, and whether she’d accept his proposal. Twenty-eight years ago.  Only twenty-eight years.  It felt like much more than that to him – so much had transpired since the evening he slipped the ring on her finger. So much he wished he could take back. So much he didn’t understand. How did everything come to what it came to? He could see now that he’d made terrible mistakes, committed terrible lapses in judgment, terrible deeds, even. Four years now, since the end of the war, and yet he still carried those burdens – and the lapses that led him to where he ended up during the war. How to make it all right again?

Viktor had been asking himself this question quite often during the past four years. And clearly, he hadn’t yet come up with a compelling answer. Otherwise, he felt, everything in the household, in the family, and in the business would be back in order again. Whatever that means. That’s how untethered he felt now – and had felt for the past four years.  Certainly, he still exuded his old confidence, and was still able to exert a large measure of control here on the homestead. But when Viktor had the time and inclination to reflect on where things were headed for the Gassmanns and Bunkes, he felt very much at a loss regarding what course was best.

Once he came back from the war, Viktor hoped that returning to the physical work in the forest and in workshop would set him back on the right path in short order.  Not that he was quite sure what “the right path” was. That’s how bad things were with Viktor.  All he knew when he separated from the unit he served with during the war, and set foot back on the Gassmann-Bunke homestead, was that he couldn’t muster any sort of tender feeling for anyone: not for Ethel, not for Peter or Marcus, and not even for Lina, with her devastated body.  When he first saw her, he just took in her condition without any emotion whatsoever.  He’d seen worse during his time away.

But don’t think that Viktor was unaware that he felt nothing for any of his loved ones.  He noticed his numbness, and he concluded that it had taken possession of him unnoticed, at some point during the war.  He couldn’t say precisely when. Thinking about it now, which he did do occasionally, he assumed it came on little by little: Most likely, he concluded, the little voice inside him – the one that nudged him to open his heart to those around him who were suffering terribly – just gradually found it more and more difficult to make itself heard amidst the sights and sounds of the suffering he witnessed or inflicted.  For this reason or that, he began shushing that little voice, more and more forcefully, until, finally, he didn’t have to endure hearing it any more.  Or maybe it had even stopped calling out to him.  This last explanation was more frightening to him than the other, somehow, because he knew all along that the small voice was God speaking to him.  What did it really mean, then, that he stopped hearing the voice? Did God give up on me?

That’s what Viktor began asking himself when, after a year, then after two, and three and four years, the voice did not return.  He told himself he’d given it every opportunity to come back.  He was working and living on the homestead again, with his wife and his children and his in-laws.  He recognized now, that he never should have spent that time away in Schweiburg, back in the early thirties.  But you know what they say about hindsight…he told himself. He knew there were still things that needed to be made up for, set right again. At least he’d reached the stage where he wanted to set things right. For all his sincere belief that a man needs to take action and be firm and uncompromising in order to succeed, in order to bring his family life into order, Viktor also felt that this was not entirely the way to go about things now, after the war.  Was it that he saw the limitations of relying on force? That’s unclear.  But what Viktor did see was that the family was not happy, and he understood that the reason for this went far deeper than Lina being crippled. 

He realized this right away, in the summer of 1945, but this understanding wasn’t based in some intuitive, affectionate connection with his family members. Because, to his surprise, Viktor did not experience the burst of love and affection for them that he’d assumed he’d feel when he finally got back home. In fact, he realized that he felt far more distant from his so-called “loved ones” now that they were reunited, than he had at any time during the war.

It wasn’t that he felt particularly connected to his family as he served in a location not so terribly far from home – not so far, in terms, at least, of kilometers. Quite the opposite, actually. The nature of Viktor’s assignment during those years created an unbridgeable emotional and spiritual gulf between him and his family. No loving letters came to him from home: He made it clear to Ethel that it was best not to write, and, instead, to pass verbal messages to him through the underlings who made those deliveries of food and goods the family could sell on the black market.

It wasn’t just concerns about security that led Viktor to make this request of his family. It was also his awareness that he would not be able to bear to read expressions of others’ love for him while he was doing what he was doing. As he saw things – not that he consciously considered this point – such letters would have drawn him into the realm of kindness and affection, and there was no room for that in his wartime heart.  How could love exist alongside killing?

Thus, it wasn’t that Viktor felt a stronger bond of love with his family during the war than he felt now. Back then, he just locked his relatives away in a part of his mind and heart that rested far from his conscious awareness. Only once he got back home did he realize that opening that part of himself back up was not as simple as retracing his steps along the physical road he travelled to get back to the homestead.

  Give it time, Viktor told himself at the beginning – by which he was instructing himself to give time to both his family and himself.  But the situation – the family’s emotional situation – did not improve over time. Certainly, they settled into a routine of caring for Lina. He and Ulrich got the forestry side of the business back on its feet, and Peter did the same for the woodworking.  Marcus, for all his bluster and arrogance, really did provide the essential financial contribution to carry them over from month to month.  Even so, Viktor noticed that as time went on, other families – take Lorena and Stefan and their children – appeared to achieve a stable and even enviable way of life, in the sense that they seemed to have come closer together after the hardships they endured as a family.  But for the Gassmann-Bunkes, the thin, oppressive layer of sadness that Kristina noticed upon arriving in the summer of 1945, just never seemed to fully lift.

Viktor did a very good job of giving the appearance that he had a clear idea of what the family needed to make its way forward. And since his own ideas generally coincided with Renate’s on the home front, and Ulrich’s, as regarded the business, there was no discord when it came to making decisions.  (Not until it came to Marcus, in 1949, that is.)  But Viktor had to strive hard to maintain this veneer of power and competence, because beneath it lay a persistent emptiness, both emotional and spiritual.

Over these past four years, Viktor reflected more than once on how his life had changed after he first arrived on the homestead in the spring of 1921.  He’d felt numb in those days, too, but to only a very slight degree, compared to what he was experiencing now. Back then, what turned his life around was spending time in the forest. That was where, under Ulrich’s tutelage, he discovered God, where he sensed the divine power of God flowing in all the trees and plants and forest creatures he encountered.  And then there was Ethel. She was so full of that divine energy that it seemed to have replaced every drop of anything earthly within her.  Coming to work and live with the Gassmanns, Viktor found both God and the love of God, in the form of his love of Ethel.

After returning from the war, Viktor wanted to regain all of this, and he knew instinctively that the forest was the place to start looking for it.  That was one of the reasons he threw himself into the forestry work with all his might (not with all his heart, mind you, since his heart was not yet up to such a task). He knew God was in there somewhere, or had been before the war, anyway, and he meant to find Him.

That is something that’s easy to say, and easy to want, but not so easily accomplished.  It was during the moments and hours that he spent in the forest, back in the 1920s, alone or with Ulrich, surrounded not by human voices, but by the sounds of the trees and the wind and the birds and the animals, that Viktor came to know God.  He gradually became aware of the ways God spoke to him, through the forest, and through his own body and mind.  He learned how to take in that divine energy that Ethel radiated with her whole being. And although he never attained that level of fullness that he sensed in her, Viktor knew what it felt like when it coursed through his body. He knew the lightness of spirit that came along with it, the joy, the peace. He became well acquainted, too, with the quiet voice that eventually began riding into his heart atop that wave of divine power.  He could sense what it wanted to tell him, translate its message into words when he shared it with others, and be content with just knowing the message when he was keeping it for himself.  It was this voice which he gradually ceased hearing during the war.  Or, rather, if he was going to be honest with himself, Viktor had to admit that he began hearing it less and less way back in the early thirties.

This was what Viktor was seeking in the forest, beginning in the summer of 1945: to feel the divine power streaming through him again, to feel the joy and peace it brought along. And the voice.  The voice that used to guide him, but had stopped. Which he had stopped. But, despite spending hours and hours in the forest, days and days, over the past four years, Viktor still did not feel reconnected to God, to the divine that he had once accessed with such ease.  True, on some days, after a good morning or afternoon of work amongst the trees, a subtle lightness might appear, unexpectedly. He would notice it and seek hungrily to hold onto it, only to feel it drain away once he came out of the forest and glimpsed his crippled Lina and limping Peter.

During these nearly four years, he did not confide anything about his state of mind and spirit to Ethel, or to anyone else, for that matter. He preferred to muddle along on his own, despite the fact that he did not truly want to be alone in solving this problem. He felt the need to preserve his image as the strong, male protector of the family. Ulrich’s near 70 now, for God’s sake!  Someone has to take care for everyone… And so, he trudged along, doing the forestry and woodworking, and toiling on his own in the spiritual sense, too.  At least, he believed himself to be toiling alone.  Why was that? It was because, although he had gone down on his knees in the forest many times and asked God for help, he felt he had not received the wished-for assistance: His heart still felt empty. He still heard no inner voice giving him the guidance he at least knew enough to know he needed. 

Then, finally, one day in late June of 1949, after nearly four years of asking for help, Viktor felt something.

He happened to be out deep in the forest at the time, coincidentally – or perhaps not – near the old treehouse where love had first sprouted between him and Ethel, and where he had given her the carved wooden engagement ring.  The sight of the treehouse caught him by surprise, and he immediately walked over to the old beech tree and laid his hand against its thick bark.  Without even thinking, he laid his axe against the tree trunk. Then he hauled himself up onto the lowest branch (although not as nimbly as he’d done in 1921), and stretched out a hand toward the opening in the side of the treehouse. Is the ladder still there? Could it be?

Improbably, Viktor detected the knot of rope that still tied the ladder to the treehouse floor. He reached his hand as far over the edge and toward the interior of the structure as he could, and pulled on the bit of rope he felt there.  He pulled and pulled, and the ladder, along with the accumulated detritus of years of fallen leaves and beechnuts, tumbled over the side and downward, until the ladder hung, just as it had done so many years earlier.  The difference was, Viktor noted soberly, that he was alone now.  No Ethel below him to impress by clambering up into the treehouse.

Still, clamber he did, but without carefully testing the ladder the way he’d done when Ethel first took him there. And as a result, he slipped and fell a short distance when his left foot tore through a rung that had been weakened and nearly torn through by the ravages of time and weather, or perhaps by the persistent teeth of a mouse looking to soften its nest with the fibers.  But he recovered and was soon resting on his belly on the floor of the treehouse, amongst the leaves and small branches that blanketed it.  He lay that way in silence for a bit, comforted by the firm support of the branches that formed the floor beneath him.  Then, finally, he sat up and scooted backwards until his spine and shoulders came to rest against the trunk of that old, old beech.

He closed his eyes and allowed his palms to rest atop the layer of leaves, decaying ones on the bottom and last fall’s drier ones on the top. Memories of the time he’d spent here with Ethel flooded his mind.  It was like watching a newsreel: the first time she brought him here; the early evening talks they had here as the sun got lower and lower and the light more and more golden; the day in the woods when he understood that he really did love her – that day when he saw how he’d lived his life until then and vowed, No more ploys!; Ethel’s surprise when he gave her the little leather pouch with the wooden ring, and the joy on her face when she realized what it meant, and when she said yes.

As Viktor relived these experiences in his memory, he began to feel a sensation in his heart.  It started as a quiet, dull ache and then grew stronger and stronger, until it felt like someone had taken hold of his sternum and, after digging deep into the bone with both hands, was wrenching it apart.  The pain was more intense than any he had ever felt, the way he imagined a lightning bolt might feel.  He cried out, but that lasted but a moment, because the pain grew more intense and prevented him from making another sound.  He found himself plunging his hands down into the bed of leaves beneath him, as if seeking something to grab onto. But there was nothing he could grasp.  I must be dying. That thought briefly flitted into his brain. Then it, too, was eclipsed by the pain. 

Perhaps strangely, Viktor felt no fear at this thought, only a distant, analytical awareness. Then other words came. I can’t die like this.  Without making everything right. Then, still other words came to him, words that he actually spoke out loud.

“Please, God. I just want to do what’s right. Help me make it right, Lord. Please.”

It was as if a dam opened within his heart when he pronounced this plea.  He felt sadness welling up inside him, decades’ worth of sadness that had lain there deep within him, pushed down, unacknowledged. Now it all flowed out of him, in a minutes-long flood of tears and vomit and wrenching sobs and screams. When it finally came to a halt, Viktor gazed around him in a daze. He felt surprised to still be in the treehouse, although who knows where he imagined he should be at that moment.

Still disoriented, he managed to get himself down the ladder, and find his way back to the homestead.  When Ulrich asked Viktor where his axe was – because his son-in-law never, ever, left his tools in the forest – Viktor made no reply. He just went to the faucet on the side of the workshop and doused his head with water.  The Gassmann-Bunkes being the Gassmann-Bunkes, there was no discussion of this incident. Ulrich didn’t ask Viktor about it further, and he never mentioned it to Renate, either.  He just concluded that Viktor had been working something out, deep in the forest. He concluded that it must be between Viktor and God.  And he was right.

It was two days after this occurrence that Ethel broached the topic with Viktor of taking Lina to see Bruno Groening. She would have been a bit worried to bring it up, if not for what she experienced two days earlier, on the afternoon we’ve just described. What she experienced was that Viktor came in from his afternoon work in a state none of them had ever seen him in before.  He was pale and looked distracted at best, confused at worst.  He smelled a bit like vomit to Ethel, and when she reached her hand out to touch his shoulder, he barely reacted.  He just walked slowly up the stairs to their bedroom. When he came back down, he was wearing different clothes. That was something he never did, unless he was very dirty from working.  He didn’t explain anything to any of them, and no one asked, although Ethel noticed that she and Renate and Ulrich were keeping a close eye on him, in case it should seem that he’d suddenly been taken ill.  But although he was mostly quiet at their light evening meal, he ate normally and even discussed a bit of business with Ulrich later on. 

That night, when she and Viktor got into bed, Ethel sensed that something was different with her husband.  All these four long years, she had felt like she was sleeping next to a board.  Or no, rather, a stone, since even boards carry the divine energy of the forest in them.  He had never been a big talker, but after the war, he was even more silent with her.  When they were first married, they had to remind each other lightheartedly to stop talking and go to sleep. That’s how much they used to enjoy sharing everything from their day with each other.  Ethel recalled how it often happened that they agreed to finally go to sleep, and then one of them launched into one last thing.  At that point, the other one silently reached over and laid a hand on the offending spouse’s lips. They both laughed, and then they really did close their eyes to sleep, most often lying in each other’s arms.

This is not at all how they went to sleep now.  To be honest, that way of welcoming the night faded in the early thirties, and it never fully returned. Ethel so missed that closeness they had in the early years.  There was a rekindling of sorts after Viktor came back home from his time alone in Schweiburg, but it faded again in the run-up to the war.  And since the war ended… Well, there was no rekindling in 1945, and none since then, for that matter. It was something Ethel missed terribly.  She prayed about it.  Please give me my Viktor back, she often asked God.

In actuality, Ethel began offering this wish to God during the war, and back then, the plea was mostly about having him come home alive.  He did come home alive, but once he was back, Ethel no longer felt the love that had always radiated from him toward her. Even during the difficult years, she could always sense it coming from him.   And, back then, he never stopped being affectionate toward her, even when things were hardest between them, when the challenges they were facing made them angry with each other. But now, since he came back from the war, he seemed dead inside to her.  They rarely even kissed any more.  They occasionally made love, but you couldn’t call it that any more. Viktor’s embraces were devoid of the vibrancy and loving energy that used to combine with Ethel’s to bring them so close together that it seemed impossible that they could ever be torn apart. But that’s exactly what happened. And so, Ethel prayed for things to turn back around.

Then, on the night of the day that Viktor went through what he went through in the treehouse, he came up behind Ethel as they were getting ready for bed. Ethel was already in her nightgown. Lightly, hesitantly, even, Viktor leaned over and slipped his arms beneath his wife’s and wrapped them loosely around her waist. He bent his head down and rested his cheek on her shoulder.  This was something he used to do, years ago, just to feel the way her body felt against his, and to silently take in her energy. 

Surprised, Ethel glanced in the mirror and saw that he had his eyes closed. After resting like that for a half a minute or so, Viktor tightened his arms gently around his wife and, almost shyly, kissed the bare part of her skin that peeked out between her shoulder and her neck.  And she felt it then, something she hoped she wasn’t imagining: a thin little stream of love coming from him.  Not as strong as back in the early days, but it was definitely there.  She reached down and took his hands in hers.  His hands began to shake, and a moment later, she felt his face contort. He was crying, softly, and silently.  And she could hear him saying to her in a low, hoarse voice, “Forgive me, Ethel.  I just want to make it all right again.”

There wasn’t any sharing of thoughts that night, or any jolly shushing of one by the other.  No lovemaking, and not even any kissing.  But they got into bed and lay in each other’s arms, and something that reminded them of their love in the old days flowed gently through them as they fell asleep, feeling each other’s breathing in their own chests.

It was this experience that emboldened Ethel to raise Lina’s wish with Viktor two nights later.  Certainly, things between them had not suddenly – miraculously – shifted back to how they’d been twenty years earlier. But even so, they both understood that something had cracked open in Viktor that was allowing them to feel connected in what was both a new and also familiar way. 

It was thanks to the reappearance of this connection that Ethel ended up slipping her arms around Viktor’s waist that evening, an action that mimicked the way he’d come up behind her the other night.  She felt him take her hand and run his finger over the carved ring. Then he turned around and embraced her, gently, and with a tenderness that surprised her. Even though a bit of love had been peeking out from inside him for the past two days, Ethel didn’t wanted to hope for more.  Be patient, she told herself.  Don’t try to rush him. But now here he was, with his arms around her and his head buried in the curls of her hair at her neck. And now he was kissing her there, too, the way he always used to do. On this night, when they got into bed and leaned into each other’s arms, there was lovemaking, and it was worthy of the name.

After Ethel fell asleep, lying with her head on Viktor’s chest, he stayed awake a while longer. Partly, this was because he simply wanted to savor the joy he was experiencing now, the peace of having his Ethel asleep in the crook of his arm. Partly, it was because he was full of wonder at what had taken place within him over the past forty-eight hours.  He couldn’t explain it, at least not in words.  He knew that it was, as Ulrich had put it, between him and God. He also knew, deep inside him, that God had not ever given up on him, not once during all the years of trouble, not during the war years, either.  He understood that he, himself, had allowed the connection to God – and, in turn, to his family – to be squashed down within him, and God’s voice to be silenced.  He listened to Ethel’s steady breathing, synchronized with his own, and was overcome with a feeling of gratitude.  If what he experienced out in the forest two days earlier wasn’t grace, then he didn’t know what else would qualify.

This realization, in turn, was the other reason Viktor had not yet closed his eyes to sleep. It led his thoughts back to the fateful 1921 suppertime conversation.  The memory of that day had sprung vividly into Viktor’s mind when Ethel told him about the newspaper articles about Bruno Groening, about Lina’s wish to go see him, and about how Renate was in favor of the plan.

Viktor assumed that not only he and Ethel, but his in-laws, too, were revisiting that day now, too, especially given the topics that Lina had recently raised at their 1949 table.  In fact, it surprised him that Ethel didn’t immediately put the Bruno of Ewald’s story together with the newspaper article Lorena passed on to Renate.  Gazing down at her now, he almost touched her shoulder to ask her about it.  Then he smiled wistfully and put a hand to his own lips to seal them. It didn’t really matter that Ethel didn’t think of young Bruno as soon as she read the newspaper article. Even without that, neither of them had to remind the other of the questions that formed the crux of that long-ago argument: What do we believe is possible, and how strongly do we believe it? But Viktor knew that pondering those questions really would keep him up all night if he pursued them. So he chose instead, to pursue the sweet embrace of sleep while embracing his sweet Ethel.

*          *          *

            Lina, on the other hand, was coming to believe she might never sleep again.  She barely slept the night before, after her mother  promised to talk things over with Lina’s father and grandparents.  And after Viktor and Marcus shook hands across the table this afternoon, she felt like she might fly right out of her chair from excitement!  Her evening walk with Kristina didn’t calm her down a bit, either.  Quite the opposite. Kristina was almost in shock that everyone had actually agreed.

            “How did it happen,” Kristina asked Lina thoughtfully, as they made their way out to the main road, “that Marcus didn’t put up a fuss? I mean, given the way he was talking those other days about God’s will and all that… I’ll just say I was flabbergasted.”

            Lina nodded. “I was, too.  But at the same time, I wasn’t.  You don’t know Papa, or at least not very well.  What he did today… that was pure Papa. Papa at his best, in regard to Marcus.”

            “What do you mean?”

            “It goes back a long time,” Lina told her, looking off into the distance, as she went back in time to dig up a memory that would explain the dynamic between her father and Marcus.

            Kristina waited in silence for Lina to continue. She had the sense that whatever Lina told her would give her deeper insight into the man she had come to love.

            “All right,” Lina said finally, as if spying a lost button in the grass.  “Here you go. This was when we were all little.  I was probably seven or eight, so Marcus was twelve or thirteen.  There was some conflict over Papa being away from home so much.  Papa happened to be home at that point, and I remember the whole thing clearly, because – well, you know it yourself – no one ever makes a fuss openly in this family.”

            “Except for Marcus, it seems,” Kristina put in.

            “Yes, that’s true!” Lina laughed. “I don’t know why I always say no one ever makes a fuss, when he’s done it all his life!” She shook her head and then went on. “So, Papa had been away from home a lot. I don’t know what it was all about –“

            “Because no one talks about things like that!” Kristina said, laughing.

            Lina nodded her head and smiled. “Absolutely right! So, this was one of those times when it was only Marcus who spoke up.  He was saying all sorts of things about how Papa was ruining the family, not taking responsibility for taking care of us all…”

            “Really?”

            “Do you mean, did Marcus really say that, or was Papa not taking responsibility?”

            “Both,” Kristina replied in a quiet voice.

            “Well, yes, he really said it, and he really meant it. I don’t know to what extent it was true. I was too little. All I can say is that Papa was gone for what seemed a long time, and there was a lot of tension at home, probably about that.”

            “So what did your father do?”

            “Well, so there was this hunting rifle of Papa’s that Marcus really coveted.  But Papa wouldn’t let him use it. You see, it was Papa’s favorite rifle, and Marcus was often not very careful with tools and things, so Papa didn’t want to risk Marcus ruining it.”

            “I can see that,” Kristina said.

            “But that day – I recall it. It was after the evening meal, and we were all out in the yard, for some reason. Maybe it was too hot in the house? I don’t know.  But we were all out there.  And Marcus – Papa sent him outside during dinner because he wouldn’t stop yelling about Papa being away.  So, Marcus was out there, sulking, and then all the rest of us came out and sat down.  Without saying a word, without even looking at Marcus, Papa went into the workshop. And he came out holding the rifle, which he proceeded to hand to Marcus. ‘You can use this while I’m gone,’ he said to him. ‘But if you damage it in any way, you’ll regret you ever held it in your hands.’”

            Lina couldn’t see Kristina’s eyes grow wide, but she could sense the chill that passed through her friend’s body.  After mulling this all over a bit, Kristina asked, “And what happened? With the rifle?”

            “Oh,” Lina replied with a laugh, “I think that rifle was in better condition when Papa came back a year later than it was when he left.”

            “But how can you laugh about it?” Kristina asked her in a whisper.  “It’s horrifying, in a way, isn’t it?”

            “It is, yes,” Lina said, serious again now.  “But you have to understand, Kristina, Marcus was so awful to Peter and me growing up.  He was mean to anyone he could get away with being mean to, and Papa is the only one who could ever really get him in line. And it was, as far as I recall, mostly Papa using violence or threatening to use it that did the trick.” She let out a long sigh.  “At least there wasn’t that today.”

            “No,” Kristina agreed. “Today was all carrot and no stick, as far as I can tell.”

            Lina nodded. “And that’s a good sign, I think.”  

            “Especially since it means that you’ll be going to Herford!” Kristina told her, pushing aside the discomfort she felt at Lina’s story. 

            For the rest of the walk, the two of them chattered excitedly, wondering how soon the trip could be arranged.  But neither voiced the question that concerned them both most: Could Bruno Groening really heal Lina?

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Above the River, Chapter 21

Chapter 21

Fall, 1921

Gassmann homestead

            Sometime during the second week of Ewald’s visit, the dinnertime conversation turned once more to the topic of the Germans living in America, and their ties to loved ones still in Germany. 

            “It was so hard during the war,” Ewald told them. There was no longer awkwardness about the discussion taking this turn. By now everyone was once again feeling that Ewald was one of them. So, it was acceptable to talk about these deeply personal experiences that transcended the restraints that the political and geographical distances had placed upon them during the war years.

            “Tough not being able to send letters back and forth,” Ewald continued. “That was such a torture for all of us German families there who have family here still.”

            “It was awful for us, too,” Renate told her brother. “It was hard enough to get accurate news about what was going on near us –“

            “Or in Germany as a whole!” Ulrich put in.

            “Yes,” Renate continued. “We just had no idea which way was up, what was happening in Varel or Oldenburg, never mind the other side of Germany.  To try to imagine what was going on over there in America, in Illinois, in Durand… No, that was just impossible!”

            “For us, too!” Ewald told her, nodding. “What with all the patriotic news … I almost said ‘propaganda’, but I guess I wouldn’t go that far…”

            “Oh, I would,” Ulrich said.  “I mean, about what we were reading here.  We basically gave up trying to figure anything out. We couldn’t tell at all what was really true and what was meant to give us hope, or to turn us against… you, against America… So we just gave up.  We concentrated on getting through each day here. And on praying that each person we knew – whether here or over there with you – would be safe and sound.”

            Everyone around the table nodded.  Even Viktor nodded this time, since he really had done something akin to praying while his father was off fighting, and when he, himself, had gone into the army, too.  It had been too late to pray for his mother, but he’d hoped for his step-mother and Hannelore and Walter to all come through the war alive, too…

            “We only got news now and then,” Ewald told them.  “But mostly not.  It was only after the armistice that the mail began getting to us again. That’s when we all really started to get a picture of what our relatives went during the war, and what it was like afterwards.  We all felt so helpless then, over there, stuck without a way to help you all here, afterwards, even, with so many injured and trying to get back into some kind of normal life.”

            “How could life ever be normal after that?” Hans asked.  “I mean, I never got into the fighting.” He looked around the table, gauging how the other men in the room felt about this. 

            “Thank the Lord for that,” Ewald said, and Ulrich nodded.  Viktor gave a quick bob of his head.  “Me, neither,” he said, adding, for Ewald’s benefit, “I never saw the other side of basic training.  War ended in the middle of that for me.”

            Ewald gestured at Hans. “Even so, you were still injured, without even being in battle.”

            “My injury was nothing,” Hans said. “Not compared with what others went through.  I thank God to be home alive and safe, even with one slightly bum leg.”

            There was a pause while everyone turned their attention to their plates.  Then Ewald spoke again, gesticulating with his fork.

            “You know, what you say about your leg, Hans – it reminds me.  Elise’s parents’ neighbors heard something really kind of crazy just after the war ended.  Turns out their nephew – the son of one of the brothers or sisters who stayed behind in Germany when the others, Elise’s parents’ neighbors, left for America – they live in Danzig.  And, well, this nephew – Leo was his name – Leo was badly injured in battle and sent home. He was in some army hospital there in Danzig, for a long time. I don’t know the details, what exactly had happened to him, but he had to have some surgery, something with his legs, I think. Lots of broken bones, maybe?  Or maybe partial paralysis?  I don’t know, I don’t remember. Elise might. But he was in a bad way. He just didn’t seem to be getting better.  I think there were open sores on his legs. Maybe they were going to amputate a leg? Or both of them.  Gangrene, maybe?”

            Ulrich interrupted him, laughing. “For heaven’s sake, Ewald, what do you know about what happened?”

            Everyone laughed, and Ewald opened his hands and nodded. “Yeah, I know it. Sorry. But the point is this: There was this woman who came by regularly to visit the soldiers in the hospital. And she had a son. He was maybe ten or eleven. And sometimes she brought him with her.  And all the men in the hospital, well, they noticed that when she brought her son with her, for some reason, and nobody knew why it was, they all felt better by the time he left.”

            “Do you mean they felt better as in they weren’t sick any more, or they were in a better mood?” Ethel asked, intrigued.

            “Well, now,” Ewald said, turning to her and tipping his fork in her direction, “Now, that’s the odd thing about it. Yeah, they felt happier, and, this Leopold told his family, they weren’t in such pain.”

            “Really?” Renate asked.  “What did he do?  He wasn’t a doctor, was he?”

            “Mama,” Hans said, “the kid was ten!  What kind of doctor could he have been?”

            “True,” Ewald went on. “But all the same, all the same, the sick soldiers felt different somehow. Better.  And if this woman came one time without her son – Bruno, that was his name, yes, Bruno! Yeah, if the woman came without him on a given day, the boys in the beds, the soldiers, they’d say, ‘Ma’am, please bring your Bruno with you when you come.  We feel better when he’s here!’ And so she did do that.”

            “And?” Ethel asked. “Is that it? The soldiers were happier?”  She paused and looked down at her lap, and then added, “I mean, I’m sorry. It isn’t that I mean that that’s not enough, because, of course, that’s enough. Who wouldn’t want the wounded to feel better, even just a little bit?”

            “But that’s just it, Ethel,” Ewald said.  He sat up straighter and turned to her.  “That wasn’t all! Some of those young men in the beds actually got better. Totally healthy, I mean.  Including Leo.  He had all this pain in his legs, even after the surgery that was supposed to cure him.  So much pain, and his wounds weren’t healing after the surgery. Now I remember. He seemed to have some infection where he’d had the surgery on his legs.  The doctors were really worried about it, because they weren’t having any luck clearing it up. And the day before they were actually planning to cut off his leg – I remember now, that’s what his aunt said – this boy Bruno came by.”

            “And so what happened? With the boy Bruno, I mean?” Renate asked.

            “Well, it’s hard to say. That is, it’s clear what happened: The boy was there one day – the day before they were going to amputate – and he sat down on Leo’s bed and talked to him for a little bit. Then he shook Leo’s hand and said, ‘May you be totally healthy soon, by God’s grace’.  Then he left.  As Leo’s aunt told it, it was a very funny scene.  I mean, think of it: a little boy shaking a soldier’s hand in a very solemn way.”  He mimicked the gesture.  “And by the next morning, when Leo woke up, the infection was gone, and the wound was nearly healed up.  And his pain was gone.”

            Ulrich frowned.  “I don’t understand,” he said. “What did the boy do?  He must have done something. It’s impossible otherwise.  And he wasn’t a doctor…”

            “That’s just the thing,” Ewald said emphatically, tapping his fork on the table for emphasis. “Nothing but talking and taking Leo’s hand and wishing him well.  Nothing more.  And then he was nearly all healed up the next day. Within another day, it was complete.  No one could explain it.”

            “And you heard this from who?” Viktor asked with a frown, speaking for the first time in the conversation. He was trying to keep the skepticism out of his voice, but inside he was thinking that this is the sort of story that gets passed around and garbled the further it goes.  No way that could happen.

            “Leo’s aunt,” Ewald told him.  “In a letter she wrote to Elise’s parents’ neighbor, her sister.

            “How could that be?” Viktor asked.  “That kind of thing just doesn’t happen.”

            “Exactly!” Ewald said. “But it did!  And that wasn’t the only time. Some of the others were cured, too.  One of pneumonia, another of appendicitis – he didn’t need the surgery after all.”

            There was a pause as everyone chewed – both on their food and on what Ewald had told them.  Then Ethel spoke again, as if thinking out loud.

            “Do you think it could be some kind of faith healing?” she asked, addressing no one in particular. 

            “Sis,” Hans told her, “did you hear?  This kid was only ten. Where’d you ever hear of a ten-year-old faith healer?”  He shook his head and returned to his dinner, but, almost unconsciously, he laid his left hand on his own leg, the one that had been injured during the war.  And he wondered…

            “So he’s young,” Ethel retorted.  “Does that mean he can’t be close to God?”

            “Close to God is one thing,” Ulrich said. “But to have some kind of healing powers?  Again, how would something like that work, even?”  How?

            “Through faith?” Renate suggested, thoughtfully pushing her potatoes around her plate. “Faith that God could heal those boys, those soldiers?”

            “Who has that kind of faith?” Ulrich asked, his tone thoughtful, rather than critical. “Especially now?” His mind was wandering to thoughts of war injuries and atrocities, and to just the war itself. “How do you keep your faith in God after all we’ve been through?”  Looking at Ewald, he added, “All of us.  Not just us Germans. The whole world.”

            Viktor nodded. “That’s right.  How do you believe in a God who would allow this to happen?”  The words jumped out, and now, surprised at his own openness and honesty, Viktor looked down and cursed himself for getting into a discussion of religion.

            “But God gave man free will,” Ethel said, directing her gaze at him.  “And man has chosen to make war.”

            “Then what does God do all day?” Hans asked, an edge coming suddenly into his voice.  “Can’t He do something to stop all of this? Why not stop the war?”

            “Because then He’d be violating man’s free will,” Ethel told him, her voice firm.

            “Then what good is this God?” Hans threw back at her, “If He just sits and watches everyone in the world try to wipe each other out without doing something to stop it?”

            “But He does do something,” Ethel retorted, sitting up straighter. She was surprised at the annoyance she felt rising inside her.  “He is here with us always, letting us know He is here, that the divine is here. All around us.”

            “In the forest, say,” Viktor added quietly.

            “That’s right!” Ethel pointed across the table at him.  “You can feel Him there. Papa, you’ve felt God’s presence there.” Ulrich nodded.  “You know He exists,” Ethel went on.

            “But what good does that do us, God being around us?” Hans persisted.  “I don’t understand how that helps us. Especially when He sits by and lets wars and everything else bad go on.”

            Ethel frowned.  It took a moment for her to reply, but everyone at the table waited patiently until she did.  “Hans, I guess what I’d say is that when I feel God is near me… or when I feel connected to God, to the divine … Well, then it’s easier for me to feel what it’s right to do. I’m calmer. Not upset. And I don’t get so worked up about things.”

            “So,” Hans said to her, “you don’t feel like making war when you feel God. Is that it?”

            “Is there something wrong with that, Hans?” Ethel asked him, a slight edge to her voice. “With feeling connected to God? Maybe if more people were really connected – then maybe there’d be less war.”

Renate felt the conversation heading in a direction she didn’t like, and jumped in.

            “I’m no theologian,” she began, “but I think that having God, knowing He’s there – even if you don’t feel it yourself – I personally think it helps a person feel safer.”

            “How in the world does that make you feel safer?” Hans exclaimed, exasperated.  “I certainly didn’t feel safer during the war because of believing in God.”

            “Maybe you don’t really believe He exists,” Ethel suggested. Although there was no edge to her voice this time – she was simply thinking aloud again, not casting aspersions on her brother’s faith – Hans heard an edge. He sat up straighter.

            “What, so now I’m a bad believer? And that’s why I got hurt in the war?”

            Ulrich laid his hand on his son’s arm. “That’s not what Ethel meant.”

            “But that’s what she said. ‘Maybe you don’t really believe He exists’.  Well, maybe you’re right, Ethel. Maybe I don’t.  Maybe I don’t.”  He took a breath in and exhaled loudly.

            “No, Hans,” Ethel told him, “I wasn’t accusing you of that. I was just reflecting, thinking about that boy Bruno and about the idea of faith healing and about what it means to have faith. About what might be possible if we really do have faith and are very strongly connected to God.”  She looked at everyone else around the table.  “I don’t know whether I really have faith myself. I mean, the kind of faith that believes those soldiers could be healed by the grace of God.”

            “Do you think that’s what happened with them?” Renate asked her. “That that boy Bruno asked God for them to be healed? And then it happened because he believed it would?”

            Ethel turned to Ewald. “What was it he – that boy – said to Leo?  About wishing him….”

            “Yes, wishing for him to be completely healthy soon, by the grace of God.  That’s what his aunt told us, anyway.”

            “So, this boy wished, really, really wished, for Leo to get healthy,” Ethel said. 

            “It sounds like he asked God for that, a kind of prayer,” Renate added.

            Ethel nodded.  “And then it happened.  Leo did get healthy.”

            Hans shook his head and leaned back in his chair.  “No way that could happen.”

            “Why not?” Viktor and Ethel inquired at the same moment, and then both laughed.

            Hans scowled at them.  “You know how many men on the battlefield, or in hospitals all over Germany, and not just Germany, all over France and England… How many of them begged God for healing, at the top of their lungs?” He paused. “And how many of them got it?”

            No one replied.  “And now, this little slip of a boy comes into a ward, and suddenly the wounded start jumping out of bed and throwing away their crutches?”

            “No need to make fun of it,” Renate told him.

            “But Mama,” Hans went on. “Really!  How many?  Ethel, tell me, if you believe this story – and don’t take it personally, Ewald. I’m not saying you’re lying, but –“

            “Hans, do you believe Leo actually got better?” Ethel asked.

            “I’ll grant you that.” Hans absently picked up his napkin and began twisting it in his hands.

“Then how did it happen, if it wasn’t from God?” Ulrich broke in.

“How should I know?” Hans snapped.  “Maybe he was actually on the mend anyway, and the doctors just didn’t realize it. I don’t know. Why does it have to be God? And besides, can God really even heal like that?” He looked around the table at his family’s motionless faces.  “Why’s everyone ganging up on me?  I asked a simple question: How many wounded men in that war prayed to God to get healed, and how many did get healed?  How many didn’t?  And if they didn’t, then why not?  Maybe they didn’t really believe, either? Maybe there’s only this one little boy in Danzig who really believes enough, that God answers?”

Now Viktor, uncomfortable at the rising tension, and also feeling protective of Ethel, who was bearing the brunt of Hans’ rant, reentered the conversation.

“I don’t know what it takes for God to answer a prayer,” he said.  “For myself, I can say that I gave up asking God for anything after he let my mother die when I was little…”

“You did?” Ethel asked, incredulous.

“I gave up then, and never started up again until I came here.”  Don’t mention the forest. Don’t mention feeling God there. He managed to keep his mouth shut, and prayed a small, but fervent prayer that no one at the table would ask him to explain himself. 

“Exactly!” Hans cried, and Viktor silently thanked the Lord for this small miracle.

“’Exactly!’ what?” Ethel asked, her attention shifting from Viktor to her brother.

“What I mean is, why pray when our prayers aren’t answered?” Hans continued. “When we don’t even know whether God can answer them.”

“There may be all sorts of reasons a prayer isn’t answered,” Renate offered. “Because I believe God can do anything.”

“But doesn’t this God want everyone to be happy?” Hans persisted.

Renate nodded. “I believe He does. I absolutely believe that.”

“Then why allow the suffering?” Hans asked, opening his arms, palms open upward. “What kind of God allows that, assuming He has the power to turn things around?”

“It’s what Ethel was saying about free will,” Ulrich suggested. “Each man has to make his own choices about how to live and act.”

Hans gave a dry, sarcastic laugh.  “Is this how you people explain it to yourselves – explain that God has abandoned you?  Or that he hasn’t been able to help you? By resorting to this idea of free will? By blaming all of our misfortunes on us? We do every possible harmful thing to ourselves, but God just stands by and lets us do it?”  He looked from one to the other of them, then went on.  “Even just a human parent pulls a child back if he’s about to walk off a cliff. Why not God? If we’re about to walk off the cliff toward war, say.”

“Because we have to learn on our own,” Ethel said. “That’s what I think. We have to learn on our own what’s bad and what will hurt us. If God just keeps saving us, we’ll never learn for ourselves what’s right and wrong.”

Renate nodded. “I see it that way, too.  We choose. And God helps us choose the right path.”

“How does God help you choose, Mama?” Hans asked. “Because I never have the feeling God is helping me choose.”

“He shows us the way,” Ethel continued.  “Sends us messages. I’ve heard them in the forest.  And I know you have, Papa.”

Ulrich nodded.

Hans sighed loudly, but said nothing for a moment. Maybe he didn’t know how to respond to this. Maybe he was sick of fighting about it.  Maybe he just didn’t have any hope that they’d come to any agreement on the topic.  Or any hope that he’d come to understand whether or not he did have any real faith in God. Finally, he turned to Ethel.

“So, do you believe Leo could actually have been healed because that boy Bruno prayed so hard and believed so hard that God could heal him?”

Ethel inhaled slowly and deeply and then let out a big sigh. “I don’t know, Hans. I just don’t know.  But I can tell you this: I sure want to be able to believe.  Because, think of it: Wouldn’t that be a grand thing?  To be able to believe that if you have enough faith, then God will heal someone no doctor’s been able to help?  I want to be able to believe that.”

Viktor gazed at her. And in that moment, he was at least able to believe that if anyone could muster enough faith to be able to achieve something like that, the only one around this table who had a shot at being able to do it was Ethel.  She has as much faith, as much connection to God, as all the rest of us put together.

“What about you, Hans?” his mother asked him softly.  “Do you believe it’s possible?”

Without answering, Hans folded his napkin and laid it on the table.  “Thank you for the meal, Mama,”’ he said, rising from his chair.  “I need to get some air.”

He didn’t look angry, and didn’t sound it, either, and yet, everyone at the table was stunned.  His sudden departure might have been more comprehensible, had it been accompanied by yelling, or by sharp, abrupt motions.  But there was none of that.  That wasn’t his way.  He just calmly left the table and the house.

Ethel followed him with her gaze. Then she looked at her mother, who, reading the question in Ethel’s eyes, said, to her as much as to everyone else, “Leave him be.  He just has something he needs to think out.”

In fact, this was true for all of them.  Only Hans had taken the step of removing himself from the group in order to do his thinking somewhere else.  The rest of them stayed at the table and conversed only about topics they were certain would be free of controversy.  The stormy discussion they’d just endured was so unlike what they usually experienced during meal time, that they were all at a loss.  Behind the bland words that continued to come out of their mouths, questions floated through the background of each mind, each question unique to its thinker, but each prompted by the uncomfortable scene that had just played out.  Before long, this evening meal ground to a halt. The thoughts of those sitting at the table seemed finally to have overwhelmed the thinkers’ ability to think about one topic – the topic they really wanted to be attending to – while speaking about another, uninteresting, and unsatisfying topic.  Renate rose from her seat and began collecting the dishes from the table.

“I’ll head back to the farm, then,” Ewald said. He stood up and stretched.  His words and tone sounded formal and awkward, as if he were some stranger they’d invited to dinner. Have I been away so long that they don’t feel I’m family anymore?

“It’s a nice evening,” Ulrich said. “I’ll walk with you.” And Ewald felt a bit relieved. 

The two men remained silent until they came to the main road and turned left to head toward the Walter farm. Each was beginning to allow some room in his head for the thoughts that had been pushed to the background by Hans’ hasty departure from the table.

“Sure wish I hadn’t told that story,” Ewald said finally. What he was feeling most at this point was anxiety that, in his new role as outsider – for this really was how he’d come to see himself since his arrival, despite the warmth of everyone’s welcome – he had unwittingly, out of ignorance of everyone else’s state of mind, caused a great upheaval.

“No need,” Ulrich replied, reaching over to lay his right arm across Ewald’s shoulder.  He allowed it to rest there for a few paces, even though it wasn’t comfortable for either of them to walk that way.  “How could you know it’d be such a touchy subject for Hans?”

Ewald turned to him. “Did you know it would?”

Ulrich shook his head and allowed his arm to return to its natural position, but not before giving Ewald’s shoulder a firm pat.  “Came as a complete surprise to me.”

“Me, too. But I thought it was maybe because I just wasn’t here while he was growing up.  If I knew him better, I might have known better than to bring it up.”

“I’ve lived with him his whole life,” Ulrich said, smiling, “and I never had any idea.”

“I guess most folks don’t sit around the table talking much about God and faith. We never did, growing up, and we sure don’t now, either, at home.  In Illinois, I mean.” Damn it.  “At home.”  You’re just making it worse.

But Ulrich smiled again, clearly not taking any offense.  “You mean to say,” he said, “that you Illinois Germans are just as tight-lipped as us German Germans?”

“Mmmhmm.”  Now Ewald smiled, too. “There’s so much that those Midwesterners just don’t say. Sometimes it seems like they’re just the same as us Germans, as if I didn’t really leave home – home here – at all.  Of course, there really are a lot of German families there, even if they left a generation or two ago. But still…  The pure Americans in Illinois are mighty quiet, too.  No one wants to say the wrong thing.  Nothing controversial.  ‘Do the right thing.’  ‘Be considerate.’  ‘Don’t upset Mr. Smith.’ That kind of thing.  And what that translates to is everyone keeping their thoughts and feelings to themselves.”

“Sounds pretty German to me!” Ulrich said, his smile broadening.  “And here, I thought you’d become more American, somehow.”

“What do you mean?”

“Hard to put my finger on it.”

They were walking past the forest on their left now, the Gassmanns’ forest, and farm fields on their right, and both men studied the landscape as they walked along it. Ulrich made a brief attempt to imagine how it would look to him if he’d been away for seventeen years and was seeing it anew after that long absence. Ewald, meanwhile, was delighting in the way the early evening’s sunrays played amongst the tree leaves and rendered the forest more achingly beautiful with each moment.  The silence reigned until they reached the end of the Gassmanns’ land. Then Ulrich spoke again.

“Seems to me you’re freer.  You seem more open to me, happier than you were way back then, more willing to speak your mind.”

“Not that you liked it back then, on the occasions I did speak my mind,” Ewald half-joked.

“True, true,” Ulrich agreed.  “There was that one particular, last, time you spoke your mind that I’ve wrestled with all these years.  But the others – those times I always agreed with you, as I recall, so there was no bite to them.  But still, they were few and far between, don’t you think?”

He turned to look at his old friend. Although Ewald was nearly two decades older than when they’d parted, he still looked fresh and full of life. Ulrich, though, felt as if he, himself, had been hauling heavy weights around all this time. And that, despite all his physical labor and his strong and basically healthy body, this inner weight had caused his very being to sag and droop in a way that Ewald’s didn’t.

“Oh, I do. I agree with you!  Before I went to America, I think I kept most everything inside, or at least the things I figured would cause a commotion if I brought them up. But the things that would cause a commotion – they didn’t go away just because I didn’t talk about them.  They just kept building up in me until I couldn’t not let them out.  I can see that now. That’s why my decision to go to Illinois came as such a shock to everyone.  It was totally new to all of you, totally out of the blue, like a lightning bolt.”

“Yes, that’s true,” Ulrich told him.  “We none of us could understand it at all.  Where did that come from? That’s what we were all asking ourselves and each other. It seemed so sudden to us that we couldn’t believe you were serious.”

“What you didn’t know was that I’d been thinking about it from the time Ralf went over. And the idea just got stronger and stronger until finally I made up my mind.”

“But why didn’t you ever talk to us – or at least to me – about it before you announced it?” Ulrich asked. Ewald could hear the combination of a sigh and his friend’s persistent sadness about this topic.

“Ulrich, I can’t explain it.  Well, I can a little bit now.  I couldn’t have, back then.”  Ewald paused and turned to look at his old friend.  “The way I’d describe it now is that I was afraid that if I brought it up early on, when it was still just a thought I was considering, then I’d never have the chance to decide about it on my own.”

“What do you mean?”

“Well, I knew for sure that the family wouldn’t be happy.  You remember how rough it was for Ralf when he made his decision?  It was months of arguing and hard feelings in that period before he set foot on the boat.  And I knew I’d get resistance from my folk, too.  I mean, my parents would have been tough enough, but Renate?” He shook his head in a combination of awe and the respect.  “I preferred to give her the healthy distance you’d give a cyclone you know has the power to crush you.   She may talk about free will,” he went on, with a smile, “but that’s for her, not for anybody else. So, I announced my decision and high-tailed it out before the cyclone could get up to full power.”

Ulrich knew exactly what Ewald meant.  “Yeah, she packs a punch,” he said simply, smiling.

“A big one.  I think she’s mellowed out a bit these past years,” Ewald said. He raised his hand when Ulrich began to object.  “Really, I do.  And I think it’s because she’s happy, Ulrich.  Happiness does that to a person.  That’s what I feel, about myself.  You call it more open, being more willing to speak my mind.  Maybe that’s true, but if it is, it’s not so much because I’m in America, but because I’m happy. Despite everything I told you the other day. I love my family and they love me.  It’s the love that does it. I believe that.  And Renate has that, from you and Ethel and Hans.”

“Yes, that’s true,” Ulrich granted.  “Maybe she is a little less fiery than when she was younger.”

“Less combative,” Ewald suggested.  “Oh, I don’t know how to put it.  I guess what I mean is that when I announced I was going, it was as if she felt it was a threat to the whole family order, that everything would unravel if I left, that her own personal vision of how the family should be would crumble.”

Ulrich listened, evaluating Ewald’s explanation.  Then he said, “She hasn’t changed a bit in that regard.”

“Oh, no?”

“Nope.  It’s just more under cover.  I never analyzed it, but what you say – it makes sense.  She really is like that, still.  She has her idea of the way things need to be so that everyone will be happy, and she’ll do what she needs to do to get them there and keep them that way.”

Ewald stopped and pointed emphatically at Ulrich. “Exactly!  That’s exactly it!  And that is why I waited until everything was set for me to go before I breathed a word of it.  I knew I couldn’t hold up under months of her pressure. Or at least not until I was a hundred percent sure myself it was what I wanted and that I could do it. Otherwise she would have worn me down.”

Ulrich nodded. “I can see what you mean.  That’s where you and I are different, my friend.  Your sister and I have never had that kind of disagreement.”

“Why’s that?  Haven’t you ever wanted to do something she didn’t want you to do?” Ewald was looking at him in amazement.

“Oh, I wouldn’t quite put it that way.” Ulrich turned and gazed into the woods, recalling the times when he’d wanted to do things one way and Renate another. 

“How would you put it, then?”

“Like this: In the end, the things we disagreed about… they didn’t matter enough for me to fight against that force of nature that is your sister.”  He smiled, but Ewald was still looking at him in surprise.

“But if it was something you really felt strong enough about?  What then?”

Ulrich shrugged. “It never was, Ewald. It just never was.  I take my cue from her, as far as family matters go.  Always have done, probably always will. She knows how to adjust things, keep them in order in the family. Her way of doing things keeps everything calm and good.  Happy.  For all of us.  I’d rather have her as an ally than an opposing force.”

Here Ewald understood that all the apparent peace and joy in his sister’s household came at a price, at least for Ulrich.  And what about Hans? And Ethel?  What weren’t they speaking about out loud as they went along with Renate’s way of doing things?

“Well,” he said to Ulrich, “I’d say your Hans isn’t afraid of speaking his mind.”

“Are you saying I am?” Ulrich objected, and Ewald could tell from his tone that he was hurt.

“I’m sorry, Ulrich.  I didn’t mean it that way. All I meant was that Hans is willing to go head to head with his mama, if need be.”

They were just coming to the lane that led onto the Walter farm, and Ulrich turned to face Ewald. “Do you think there’ll be a need?”

“Wouldn’t be surprised at all, judging by the dinner discussion tonight,” Ewald told him.

“That did come out of the blue, him getting riled up like that.”

“Exactly my point.  And I’m sorry if I caused some harm there.” It was Ewald’s turn now to put his arm around Ulrich’s shoulder.

“Not at all,” Ulrich said, embracing his brother-in-law.  “People need to be free to think their thoughts and speak their mind. Thoughts are free, aren’t they?” He spoke, apparently without realizing that his own life was not necessarily lived in accord with this ideal.  “I understand now why you kept quiet about your plans for so long.”

“Even to you,” Ewald told him.  “Especially to you, maybe.  I knew you’d tell her if I told you, and then…”

“Cyclone winds?”

“Mmmhmm.”

The two men laughed then walked into the farmyard. Lorena – also a force of nature, but a refreshing summer breeze to her sister Renate’s cyclone – caught sight of them and herded them along into the kitchen for cake and coffee.

*          *          *

            Ethel also felt the need for fresh air as an antidote to the stultifying effects of the dinnertime conversation. So, once she and her mother finished cleaning up after the meal, she walked out into the yard.  She felt the desire – and need, even – for Viktor’s company, and was delighted to see him sitting on a bench outside the workshop. He was bent over a thin board with a piece of paper on it, pencil in hand.

            “What are you working on?” she asked, coming over and leaning down to look at the paper.  He motioned for her to take a seat next to him, which she did.

            “Just a sketch for a design on that chest of drawers Hans and I are going to do. For a family in Varel.”

            Ethel nodded and leaned over again, studying the graceful lines of the ivy design.  “I like your carving so much, Viktor.  This will be beautiful.”

            He thanked her and then placed the board on the bench next to him, positioning the pencil so it would stay put.  “Feel like a walk?  I need to move.”

            Ethel jumped up.  “I was just about to ask you the same thing.  I love a walk at this time of day, with the sun just starting to get low.”

            Out of force of habit, they headed for the main path into the forest.  Walking slowly, they both remained silent for a bit, allowing their breathing and thoughts to be calmed by the energy of the trees and the beauty of the golden light filtering through the branches and leaves.  Viktor spoke first.

            “Will you show me the treehouse? The one you and Hans built?  If it’s still there, that is.”

            Ethel smiled.  “Oh, it’s still there.  Probably will be as long as the tree stands, and it’s a beech, so I imagine it’ll be there for decades!”

            “For your children and even grandchildren to scamper up into it,” Viktor suggested, imagining such a scene, even though he couldn’t fully picture the house, not having yet laid eyes on it.

            Ethel turned and smiled at him, but said only, “Over here, then.  Follow me.”

            She led him off the main path, into a stand of pines, and then through a section with more oaks, and then back to pines and spruces.

            “How do you remember where it is?” Viktor asked.  He could see no discernible path, unless it was beneath the fallen leaves that muffled the sound of their footsteps.

            “Have you forgotten I grew up in these woods?  I could probably find it blindfolded.” She blushed.

            “No need to test that,” he told her.  “I believe you.”

            “All right, then, come on. And stop doubting me.”

            After a few more minutes, Ethel raised her hand and pointed to something in the near distance.  “There it is.  See it?”

            “Nope,” Viktor replied, after following the direction of Ethel’s pointing finger.  There were still some leaves on the trees, mostly the oaks’, so he figured the structure must be hidden behind them.  He saw some beeches, but no treehouses.

            “Oh, my goodness, and you call yourself a forester!” she teased.

            “Never!” he objected.  “Cabinet maker, yes, forester – not yet!  So, please take pity on me!”

            Ethel shook her head in mock disgust.  “All right, then, keep going.”

            After tramping about a hundred more yards through the leaves, underbrush and small fallen twigs, Viktor finally saw it.  A tall, spreading beech tree, its silvery bark both in shadow and yet also shimmering in the early evening light. He was surprised to see that the treehouse was only about ten feet off the ground.  He wasn’t sure what he’d been expecting, especially given that it was built in a beech tree.  

            Viktor said nothing at first, just walked with Ethel up to the tree.  He laid a hand on its cool, smooth bark and looked upward, studying the floor of the treehouse: Perched on the low-slung branches of the beech, it had a roughly hexagonal deck, which consisted of small logs – birch, it looked like to Viktor – that had been laid like a floor. The treehouse rested on and was supported by five large branches spreading out beneath it from the central trunk, which ran, unhindered, up through the house’s center. A series of rough planks had been nailed from below to the birch log “floorboards”.  At the house’s outer edge, one end of each of the supporting planks rested on two of the tree’s main branches, one at each of the plank’s ends. At the center, a series of short logs slightly thicker than the floorboards supported the floor.  Viktor was impressed by the design: the thicker supports were needed at the center, because the beech’s branches were not level.  If the floor had been allowed simply to rest on the branches, the floor of the treehouse would have tilted down in the middle, like a funnel. 

Stepping back so he could see how the house itself had been constructed, Viktor discovered a simple, but effective design that was also economical in terms of the amount of materials it had used: Five or six upright birch logs had been nailed to the floor logs as posts, and long twigs had been woven between these posts and tied around them to form what served as the house’s walls.  The roof, such as it was, started as a round length of thick rope affixed to the beech trunk about six feet up from the floor.  Long, thin willow branches had been looped or hooked or tied over this rope – all of these methods had been used in various spots –  and then anchored between the woven branches of the walls.         

            “Doesn’t look like you nailed any of the planks or posts to the tree itself?” Viktor asked Ethel, still studying the construction.

            “That’s right!” Ethel told him, patting the tree. “That was the whole thing. Papa said we could build the treehouse, but we had to plan it so it wouldn’t hurt the tree in any way.”

            “So that’s why there had to be the rope ladder, instead of nailing boards onto the trunk.”

            “Exactly.” Then Ethel laughed.  “Although I think Hans suggested it more to keep me from climbing up there on my own than to protect this dear tree.”

            Viktor smiled, too.  “You all did such a beautiful job.”

            “I can’t take credit.  Except for clamoring for it to be done.  I was only three.”

            “Still,” Viktor told her, struck by how beautiful she looked in the soft light.  “Can we go up?  Is it still solid?” he asked, peering here and there.

            “I imagine so. It’ll have to be, if it’s going to last for kids and grandkids!” She smiled at him.  “I’m not sure whether the ladder will still hold us, though.”

            “I don’t see any ladder,” Viktor replied.  “Where is it?”

            Ethel pointed up to the square opening in one wall of the treehouse, about three feet wide.  It took Viktor a few seconds, but then he saw two thick, curving sections of rope wrapped around one of the floor branches.  “Ah,” he said, “the end of the ladder’s attached to those?”

            Ethel nodded. “When Hans and I got older and stopped using the treehouse, we just folded it up up there and left it.  Papa wanted to cut it, but we protested so much he relented.”

            “Why did you stop using it, if you couldn’t bear to have him cut the ladder down?”

“It wasn’t that we lost interest in it, not at all.  It was our favorite place.”

            “What happened, then?” Viktor asked. 

            “The war,” Ethel answered. “It was during the war. Papa was worried that hobos or other people travelling across the land, people who didn’t want to be found, might see the treehouse and decide it was a good place to hide.”

            Viktor looked around, at the deep forest surrounding them. He thought that if he had been travelling the land without a job back then, the treehouse would have been very appealing, indeed.

            “And so Papa ordered us to stay away from it.  Didn’t want us to stumble on anyone, or startle someone who might hurt us.”

            “Seems sensible,” Viktor replied.

            “Sensible, yes,” Ethel said, patting the tree trunk once more. “But it was very sad for Hans and me.  This was our safest place, where we could come and sit and read. Or I would work on my ‘pictures’ up there.”  She looked up wistfully. “Every time we came out here – and for the first couple of years, I was only allowed to come here with Hans – I had such a strong feeling of anticipation and joy.  The closer I got, the happier I felt.  I’d fly up that ladder and find my spot, back against the beech trunk, looking out through the gaps in the sides. It was heaven.”

            Viktor was studying her face. It was glowing now. Some color had come into her cheeks as she told him of those treehouse times.

“That last time we were here,” Ethel went on, “I climbed down the ladder, then Hans pulled it up and half-climbed, half-jumped down.  He was lanky by then. It wasn’t such a big drop!”  She laughed, remembering that afternoon. “But to me, it looked like a mile from the house down to the forest floor!  I was in awe of him, that he could do that.  He’s never tired of reminding me of that ever since – of how in awe of him I was!”

            “So, how’re we going to get up there, to get the ladder?” Viktor mused aloud.  Perhaps he could perform some feat of strength and dexterity that would impress Ethel as much as Hans’ had…  He studied the tree and the arrangement of the lower branches.

            “I bet I can hop up on this branch,” he said, “then stand up and lean over and grab the ladder, pull it down.” It wasn’t a super-human feat by any means, but it might do.

            “Yes, if you think you can, go ahead!” Ethel said.  “I’m so eager to see it again myself!”

            Striving to appear both as graceful and strong as possible, Viktor hoisted himself up onto the lowest branch – about four feet above the ground – and was pleased that he managed to do so in one, smooth movement.  All that chopping and moving of wood had made his arms strong.  Then, steadying himself against the trunk, he straightened up.  At this point, his head was just below the treehouse floor, and so it was easy for him to stretch out a hand to the left and catch hold of the side of the rope ladder nearest to him, just above the spot where it had been secured to the branch at the edge of the opening.  Gripping one of the supporting planks with his right hand, he began tugging on the rope.  It felt heavy, but it was moving more or less freely. Soon the first rung came into sight, the rope pushing a layer of old dead leaves and small twigs and beech nuts ahead of it and out over the edge, down to the ground.

            “Step back, Ethel,” he called down. “Who knows what might be resting up here on the rope.” 

            Ethel, who was standing right at the bottom of the tree, where the ladder would eventually come to rest, moved back about five feet, and was shortly glad that she had: Viktor began pulling harder on the rope, and soon, years of detritus was cascading from the floor of the treehouse as the ladder snaked out and over the edge. Swinging his left foot over and resting it on one rung of the ladder, Viktor slowly shifted his weight to that side and examined the loop of rope that evidently was still holding the ladder tightly to the floorboard.  He ran his left hand over each of the two rope loops, testing with his fingers for any frayed parts or other damage that might compromise the ladder.  The rungs themselves appeared undamaged, too, which amazed Viktor, since the ladder had lain on the treehouse floor for a number of years now. But, finding no damage, he brought his right leg onto the ladder, too. Then he slowly lowered himself down, step by step, testing each rung by bouncing slightly as he moved gradually downward.  If one of the steps did give way, at least he wasn’t so far above the ground. It was his pride more than his body that would be most hurt if he did fall at this point!  But the rope rungs held, and before he knew it, he was standing next to Ethel once more.

            “Heavens!” she exclaimed, a broad smile on her face. “I’m so excited!  It’s been six or seven years, Viktor!”  She grasped the ladder and put a foot on it.

            “Maybe I should go first?” Viktor said suddenly, taking hold of the side of the ladder.  “I mean, who knows what might be up there.  Maybe I should take a look?”  Besides, he felt that it was not quite proper for him to come up the ladder behind – and beneath Ethel – with her skirt billowing.  And what if she needed a boost to get up onto the floor?  If he went up first, he could take her hand and pull her up, but this way… he certainly couldn’t support or push her from beneath.

            But before Viktor had time to decide how to approach the situation, Ethel began making her way up the ladder, alternately lifting her skirt’s front hem and holding it in her right hand, which also gripped the side of the ladder, and then stepping up to the next rung, pulling herself upward with her left hand.  Watching her, Viktor knew he needn’t have worried that she’d need help.  She scampered up the rope. As she reached the very top rung, she deftly leaned over slightly and half gripped, half rested her hands on the second log in from the edge and lifted herself up and onto the floor.  A moment later, she was leaning over the edge, summoning Viktor.

            “It’s still perfect up here!  Lots of leaves, and probably some squirrel or mouse nests, but it’s perfect!  Come up and see!”

            He did.  Unused to climbing this sort of ladder, he felt clumsy.  Going down was easier than coming up! But Ethel didn’t seem to notice, and when he reached the top, it was she who tugged on his sleeve to pull him up onto the floor.  Not because he needed the assistance, but because she was so eager for him to see her favorite childhood spot.

*          *          *

            Hans, too, went out for a walk when he left the house abruptly, but he didn’t head for the forest.  Rather, as his father and uncle would do a bit later, he headed in the direction of the Walter farm, although he had no intention of stopping by to visit with his relatives. Enough family for one day, he thought to himself glumly. He wanted to be alone.

            Hans couldn’t pinpoint what it was, exactly, that had upset him in that evening’s conversation.  He had suddenly just grown so agitated that he couldn’t sit still.  It was all that about that stupid boy, Bruno.  Who was he, after all?  Why did people believe he’d gotten those soldiers healed?  They were all so gullible!  As if something could happen just because you want it enough.  That’s the way it seemed to him.  Why was that boy’s wanting more powerful than mine?  Almost unconsciously, he stopped for a moment and stretched out his left leg, his weak leg, as the doctor referred to it. That was the way he thought of it, too. Damn it! he thought. Damned weakness!

            He started walking again, glancing at the woods he was passing on his left, the Gassmann forest that was such an important part of his family’s history and identity.  But he didn’t feel the least bit drawn to go into their forest, which didn’t feel like it belonged to him at all in this moment. He didn’t understand it when his father or Ethel went on and on about sensing the divine when they were amongst the trees.  To him, trees were just trees, sources of future furniture.  He respected them as the means of his livelihood, but some kind of spiritual relationship to the trees?  Come on. So, he always felt left out, when the two of them got going on about God in the forest.  Isn’t it enough for God to be in the church?  Not that he ever felt God there, either. 

            Hans kept walking, looking almost resentfully at the trees – another place where he felt all on his own, excluded, even. Their trunks looked more solid and sturdy than his own, “weak” leg, which was beginning to object a bit to the fast pace of Hans’ walking.  Those trees are standing there mocking me.  “Don’t you hear us? Feel us?” they seemed to be asking him.  Or maybe they aren’t even bothering to ask meNot even bothering with me, Hans concluded now.  Just standing there, stock still, looking at me blankly, as if I’m not worth the effort.  They’ve given up on me, clearly. Turned their backs on me, in fact.  They prefer Father, or Ethel. Or Viktor: Now he claims to have found God in the forest, too. 

Hans shook his head in disgust and began walking faster, ignoring the signals from his leg to slow down. He passed the Walter farm without even noticing it, so full of thoughts was his mind.  More thoughts of being left out: out of the connection with the forest. Out of the family, out of being connected to God.  Do I even really want to be connected to God? He asked himself.  He wasn’t sure he did want that, but being without it left him feeling he’d somehow been passed over.  Why is that?  Why am I not good enough to feel God, too?  Not good enough to have my leg healed by God

Not that Hans had really ever prayed to God for his leg to be healed, or for anything else – at least not with all his heart. Before he left for basic training, he prayed with his family, first in church and then at home, on the morning of his departure, that he’d return safe from the war.  Which he had done, except for a broken tibia and fibula that left him with a persistent weakness in his leg. Plus a constant, if subtle, fear of taking a wrong step that would land him on the ground once again, with more broken bones and more pain. 

He was also left with everyone in the family looking at him as if he were now not fully himself any more. They saw him as broken and weak. Not that they said it, but he saw it in their eyes sometimes, when he stumbled – I just tripped, and not because of any problem with my leg, damn it! – or when he absently reached down to rub his lower leg after a tiring day of work.  It was as if they were looking out for him, expecting him to fall or stumble.  Because they see me as weak.  So do others in town. He was sure of it!  “Oh, that Hans,” he was sure they thought, and even said to each other behind his back. “Hans who couldn’t even make it through basic training without getting himself hurt and discharged.  Lucky thing he didn’t make it into war.  He’d never have made it back out.”  That’s what he imagined others were saying. And worse, even: Hans imagined that some even harbored suspicions that he’d contrived to break his leg on purpose, hoping to be sent home.  But I didn’t do that! he objected in his mind.  I fell when I was running over the iron barriers on the obstacle course. That soldier behind me fell on top of me, and my leg got wedged between the iron bars, and Bam! – both those bones snapped.  Sure, I took a wrong step, but I didn’t mean to.

All these thoughts and memories flooded Hans’ brain as he walked – sprinted, nearly – down the road, far past the Walter farm. His face grew flushed with a combination of anger and shame.  Damn that Bruno! Damn those healed soldiers! He stopped short of damning God, too, because he was beginning to fear, although he didn’t want to accept such a thought, that he himself was to blame for the fact that his leg still gave him pain.  I’m not worthy of being healed, a small and quiet voice inside him whispered, so softly that he couldn’t quite make out the words.  But he felt the emotion that accompanied these undecipherable words.  It was a painful and sad emotion, despair, even.  But the words that he could hear were quite clear: Ethel was right. I don’t believe God exists. Or at least I don’t believe enough. I really don’t. If He exists, why didn’t He save me from the pain of this broken leg, from this weakness?

It was almost fully dark by the time Hans turned around and began making his way back home.  Only a faint pink still hung above the edges of the horizon. As he moved steadily closer to it, it grew more and more subtle and diffuse, like a beautiful flower fading in a vase, until its bright petals turned dark with decay. All Hans could see before him, at the horizon, where his family home lay, were his own weakness and his own lack of belief in God. 

If only Hans had been able to jump forward to 1949 and sit with his as-yet-unborn niece Lina that day in June!  She might have shared with him her idea that was just beginning to blossom, the one about how maybe there really was a purpose to our pain and suffering.  About how God has a plan for each of us, and about how maybe He intends each of us to work with him to discover that plan and our purpose in life.  And to carry it out, by striving together with Him.  But Hans was still in 1921, certain that a God he didn’t even really believe in had cursed and abandoned him in his pain and weakness.  Did God have a plan for Hans?  Of course He did, Lina would say later.  But Hans was not thinking along these lines and could not yet have the benefit of discussing this with his niece.  There would be time for that.  But not yet.  In the meantime, here’s a question that was floating beneath Hans’ consciousness now: Can God help us even if we don’t believe in Him?  Does He?

Hans was now coming up on the Walter Farm.  He saw the windows lit by lamp light, and made the sudden decision to stop in and ask Ewald the question that had been taking shape in his mind as he walked.

*          *          *

As Hans was walking briskly further and further from the Gassmann homestead, Viktor and Ethel were settling themselves in the treehouse, their backs against the beech tree’s trunk.

            “Wasn’t I right?” Ethel asked, smoothing her skirt absently.  “Isn’t it just the most perfect place?”  She gave Viktor a quick glance, then focused her gaze on the wall of the treehouse and the twigs that served as its roof. She examined each part of the structure, trying to determine what had changed since she had last sat in this spot. On the one hand, she wanted to sit still, peacefully. On the other, she felt too much happiness to do that.  It was as if every cell in her body were dancing. 

            “It’s like being with an old friend!” she continued, without giving Viktor time to answer. In fact, he opened his mouth to reply, but then Ethel piped up again, turning her gaze back to the floor and walls and roof. So, he just sat there silently, smiling a bit in amusement as he took in her excitement.

            “Has it changed much?” he managed to ask finally.

            Ethel turned to him, her face bright and a little flushed. Then she took in a big breath, tipped her head back to rest against the tree’s trunk, and, eyes closed, let the breath back out in a contented sigh.  “Well, yes – I mean, there are all the leaves…”

            “And definitely a mouse nest, over there,” Viktor put in, pointing to the far corner (although “far” was relative: The whole treehouse measured not more than ten feet across).

            Ethel nodded and laughed. “Oh, yes, that’s different.  It was always very clean, back when Hans and I were up here all the time.  I had a little broom I brought out here to sweep the floor with!”

            Viktor smiled, too, and waited for Ethel to continue.

            “And there are some gaps in the thatch, of course. That’s to be expected.”

            “But aside from that?  Is it different?”

            Ethel closed her eyes again for a few seconds. Then she shook her head. “No.  It has the same feeling.” She paused. “No, that’s not quite true.  I guess what I mean, is that I feel the same kind of peace here as I used to. It makes me so happy to be here!”

            “But what, then? What’s changed?”

            Ethel laid her palm atop one of the logs that formed the floor and then turned to Viktor.  “The tree has missed us,” she said, holding her hand still, as if to sense something in the wood. Then she turned to face the tree trunk and, kneeling, laid one cheek against its smooth bark. She wrapped her arms as far around the trunk as they would go.  “I’m sorry,” she whispered to the beech.  “Sorry I’ve been gone so long.”

            Viktor turned, too, sideways, so that his shoulder leaned against the tree and he was looking at Ethel.  She was facing away from him, so that he saw only the back of her head and the mass of light curls that were beginning to gleam in the early evening light.  He welcomed this chance to study her. His eyes took in her shoulders and back, the way her apron the ties hugged her waist, and her gathered skirt flowed out beneath the apron.  He was gazing at her arms, their graceful curve visible beneath the white sleeves of her dress, when she turned her head back toward him and sat down, cross-legged and facing him.

            “Maybe you think I’m silly?” she asked him.  “Hugging the tree?”  Her look told him that although she was hoping he did not find her silly, she was also prepared to stand her ground, and defend her love of this particular tree.

            “Not at all,” he told her, quite honestly.  True, he hadn’t really given any thought to this question of whether or not she was silly for hugging a tree.

            “Really?” she asked.

            “Now, well, no, I don’t think you silly.  To tell the whole truth, I was distracted.”

            “By what?” she asked, her brows knitting in curiosity.

            “By how beautiful you are,” he told her.

            Ethel looked down and straightened the folds in her apron between her fingers.  “Well, then, maybe I shouldn’t have mentioned hugging the tree at all, if you didn’t notice!”  She looked up at him, and he saw that she was smiling.

            “I noticed, but I didn’t take note.  Of that in particular.  Just of you.”

            Now she was smiling even more. “All right.  We can leave it at that.”

            “Or maybe not?” Viktor asked her, turning so that he was once again leaning back against the tree trunk and looking out through the gaps in the wall.

            Ethel wasn’t sure quite what he was getting at, but she felt her cheeks flush fully.  Her heart had picked up its pace, too, but she was at a loss. She had no idea what to say.  Maybe we shouldn’t be up here together?  She sat up a little more stiffly now.

            Sensing Ethel’s confusion, Viktor sought to reassure her.  He adopted a cross-legged pose across from her, and although he wanted to take her hand, he crossed his hands in his lap instead.  Then, meeting her gaze, he said, “Don’t be worried.  I’m sorry. All I meant is that I want to tell you that you’re so beautiful.  And that I feel honored that you’ve shown me this favorite spot of yours.  That you’re sitting here with me.”

            Unable to keep looking him in the eye, Ethel shrugged. “You asked me to see it,” she said quietly.

            “True.” He paused, fighting the urge to take her hand in his. “Would you have brought anyone here? Just anyone, I mean?”

            She shook her head and looked back up.  “Oh, no. Not at all.  Only you!” Then she cast her gaze back down at her lap again, her fingers worrying her apron.

            Now Viktor did take hold of her hand, very gently. He cradled it in both of his, striving to take in all of its qualities as it lay there.  “That makes me very happy,” he told her, quietly, just loudly enough for her to hear.  Releasing first her palm and then her fingers, he allowed her hand to come to rest once more on her apron. Then he stretched out his legs and leaned back against the tree again, his hands clasped in his lap.  Now it was his turn to take in a deep breath and let it out.

            Ethel shifted her position, too. The two sat that way, their shoulders nearly touching, and the old, old beech supporting them both. She eventually spoke.

            “It makes me happy, too, Viktor.  I wouldn’t bring anyone else here. I only want to share it with you.”

            In this way, the treehouse gained a new significance for Ethel: The revisited joy of a personal and sacred space now expanded to embrace the new joy of a young woman sharing this space with a man she was coming to love, and whose love for her was solid enough to embrace even the image of his beloved hugging of a tree.

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