Above the River, Chapter 25

Chapter 25

1921

Gassmann homestead

            It was early December now, and Viktor had spent the past couple of weeks carrying around the bombshell Hans had dropped on him: the news that he was planning to leave Germany for America and join his Uncle Ewald in Illinois.  During this period, Viktor’s intuition and powers of observation were working overtime: He was constantly studying Ulrich’s expressions and mining each word in every conversation, in hopes of learning whether Hans’ father knew of his plans.  But Ulrich was a man a few words in his most garrulous moments, and not prone to sharing personal thoughts or concerns. After a week of waiting for Ulrich to reveal on his own what he did or didn’t know of Hans’ intentions, Viktor realized, reluctantly, that he might have to come out and ask his future father-in-law about it.  But this would be a big step.  How to decide what to do?

            Ulrich had spoken to Viktor on numerous occasions about receiving guidance from the trees.  This was something Ulrich did talk about.  In fact, he was at his most philosophical and open when speaking about the way the trees communicate and share God’s love with us. Receiving the trees’ guidance at this moment when he really needed it appealed to Viktor. But Ulrich never spoke explicitly about how he went about asking the trees for guidance. So Viktor wasn’t quite sure how to go about requesting assistance.     Then, one day, when he was out in the forest on his own, hunting, he recalled the afternoon when he’d leaned against the spruce and had the big revelation about how he had lived his life up until now, and how he wanted to live it from now on.  He happened to be in a spruce grove at that moment, so he once again sat down and leaned back against one of the older trees in that part of the forest. 

He thought back to his experience with that other spruce tree.  What did I do then? he asked himself, but nothing came to mind.  I was just sitting there, thinking, and then I got an insight.  Maybe you can’t consciously ask the trees for help and get it… But that’s what Ulrich seems to do.  Might as well try…

Viktor closed his eyes and settled back against the tree trunk. After a minute or so, it seemed to him that he was feeling something in his back: a bit of warmth, maybe even some tingling.  But he couldn’t be sure.  “Dear tree,” he found himself saying, in a quiet voice, “please help me know what to do”. He stopped.  Talking out loud to a tree? Ridiculous! Suddenly feeling embarrassed, he was about to stand up and get on with his hunting. Then he remembered the way Ethel had hugged the big beech tree trunk when they were up in the treehouse. But that’s Ethel, not me. As he was thinking this thought, his back began to feel warmer, and he definitely felt his back tingle, noticeably now.  Could this be a sign? From the tree??  He waited to see what would happen. The sensations persisted, and he concluded that this might be the spruce’s way of encouraging him. In for a penny, in for a pound…

“Dear tree,” he said again, a bit more loudly now, “please help me know.  Should I ask Ulrich whether he knows Hans’ plans, or just wait for him to bring it up?” Then he waited.  The warmth and tingling grew stronger. Viktor realized that this must be an answer to his question, but was it a Yes or a No? How could he tell what the warmth and tingling meant? He frowned and then decided to ask again, two separate questions.

“Dear tree,” he began, “should I ask Ulrich whether he knows?”

He waited, and before long, he felt a pulsing warmth and new tingling, this time in his feet. There was also a calm feeling inside him.  Is this a Yes?  He proceeded with the second question.

“Dear tree, should I just stay silent and not ask Ulrich?”

Almost as soon as Viktor finished posing the question, he felt the warmth and tingling subside. Thirty seconds passed, and there was no trace of the sensations he’d felt at first.  In fact, as he sat there, he noticed that an unpleasant tightness began to creep into his throat, almost as if his airway was being constricted. That must be a No

Can this really be the way it works? he wondered, the way you get guidance from trees?  On the one hand, it seemed insane, but on the other, there was a clear difference in the way he felt when he asked the two questions. This was perhaps the oddest thing he’d ever experienced. But it was also exhilarating, somehow.  Thoughts began crowding into his head, rational arguments that wanted to tell him that he was an idiot to put any stock in such a process.  But he knew intuitively to turn away from them, because he was feeling a deep calm in his heart.  This was the same calm he felt when he asked himself whether he really loved Ethel or not. Intrigued, he wanted to test this method further. But what to ask about? He considered this for a moment, and then inquired further of the tree:

“Dear tree, should I go out on my own in business after Ethel and I are married?”

Instead of warmth and tingling, Viktor felt a strong pain rise up in the back of his neck and travel swiftly down to his chest. It felt as if he’d just been punched in the solar plexus.  Definitely a No!

When he asked about whether he should continue to work with Ulrich after the wedding, all the pain flowed away, as if it had simply evaporated, and was replaced by a joyous feeling in his heart, and that now-familiar sense of calm.

Viktor smiled, fully convinced now that what Ulrich had said about asking the trees for guidance was absolutely true.  He stood up, turned around, and laid the palm of his right hand against the spruce’s rough bark. “Thank you, friend,” he said. And then, not even caring whether anyone was watching – But who would be watching, out here so deep in the woods, aside from God, maybe? – he wrapped his arms around the spruce and gave it a firm hug.  Then he headed off on his way, not yet fully realizing the magnitude of the gift he’d received, the new tool he’d gained.

After receiving what he interpreted as the go-ahead to raise the topic of Hans’ plans with Ulrich, Viktor found himself feeling unsure of when he should ask.  Two days after his consultation with the spruce tree, Viktor was seriously considering turning to the trees to pinpoint the right time to approach Ulrich. But then he figured he’d try going by his own intuition. That very afternoon, the two of them were in the wood, cutting the last of the trees they’d marked earlier in the fall to be used for firewood, when Viktor felt an inner urging. All right, let’s go.

            “Feels good to be getting these trees down for the winter,” he said, wiping his forehead with his handkerchief, as he and Ulrich laid down the double-handled saw they’d been working with and took a break.

            Seated on the forest floor next to an adjacent pine, Ulrich unwrapped a piece of cloth from his pocket and unfolded it to reveal a chunk of Ethel’s cheese and a thick slice of bread. He held it out to Viktor.  “Want some?”

            Viktor shook his head and, smiling, pulled his own cloth bundle from his shirt pocket. “Those two women take good care of us, don’t they?”

            “That’s for certain,” Ulrich replied, as he stacked the farmhouse cheddar atop the bread and took a bite.

            “Do you think Hans has his eye on any of the girls in Bockhorn?” Viktor asked.  He’d intended to come to the topic of Hans in a more direct way, but this question just popped into his head, so he decided to go with it.

            “Oh, I don’t think so,” Ulrich said.   He sighed and gazed out into the forest before taking another bite of his snack.  “I think his tastes run more to Illinois girls.” 

             “He did make some remark about that when Mr. Walter was visiting, didn’t he?” Viktor smiled, then leaned toward Ulrich.  “Can’t see why he’d prefer American German girls.  Not at all.”

            “Well, of course you wouldn’t,” Ulrich smiled back, although just thinly.  “You’ve snagged the very best of the German girls yourself.”

            Viktor raised his bread and cheese in a toast. “Now that’s the darn truth!”

            After a moment’s silence, Ulrich said, “But if we’re being serious now, Viktor, then you should know I wasn’t joking.”

            “About the American German girls?”

            “About Illinois.” Ulrich let out a sigh, then stared off into the woods.  He continued without turning to face Viktor.  “He’s making plans to go there.”

            A look of surprise came over Viktor’s face.  Not at the news, of course, but at how easily he’d learned what he’d been wondering. So, he does know, Viktor thought. Now the question was whether or not to let on that he knew, too.  He paused before answering, and suddenly felt a tingling in his hands.  What?? It struck him that this could be guidance from the trees, but how? He hadn’t even asked for help. Even so, he concluded that this was a positive nudge.

            “He told me as much, the other week,” Viktor said, in as neutral a tone as he could. 

            Ulrich immediately shifted his gaze to Viktor. “He did? Now, that’s a surprise.”

            Viktor certainly agreed, but he wasn’t quite sure exactly why Ulrich thought so, too.

            “The news was a shock to me,” Viktor said.  “And that he even told me – that shocked me, too.  I’m not sure why he did.”         

            “Doesn’t make any sense does it? Him going, I mean. Or him telling you, either, to be honest.  Nothing against you, son, but Hans hasn’t really taken a liking to you, and he’s not the confiding type, either.”

            Choosing not to share his thoughts about Hans strategy in telling him, Viktor simply replied, “No, Sir, it doesn’t make any sense.”

            “You’re going to have to stop calling me ‘Sir’ once you’re married to Ethel,” Ulrich told him with a smile.

            “Guess so,” Viktor laughed. 

            Ulrich dug into his bread and cheese. “Say,” he asked after a moment, “if you already knew Hans was leaving, why’d you ask about the Bockhorn girls?”

            Viktor shrugged. “I’m not sure. To tell the truth, I wanted to ask you outright whether you knew, but my brain decided otherwise, and I asked about the girls.”

            This brought a smile to Ulrich’s face. “I think you’ve got girls – or girl, to be specific – on your mind, Mr. Bunke.”

            “You’re right about that,” Viktor agreed. But he also recognized that this was exactly how he might have gone about getting information out of someone in the past, in this somewhat underhanded way, instead of coming right out with a question. He didn’t like that realization about the way his mind was obviously still working, given that he was striving to live free of any ploys now.  Okay, then, he told himself. Just keep on the honest track now.

“What he didn’t tell me,” he said to Ulrich, “is why he’s going.”

            “Didn’t tell me, either.  He just announced it to me. Well, rather, he talked to Ewald first, and then the two of them came to me, right before Ewald left.”

            Not knowing the history of Ewald’s own departure, and the damage it did to his relationship with Ulrich, Viktor had no idea what went through Ulrich’s mind when his best friend and his son disclosed their plan to him and asked for his help. But Viktor did feel the sadness that flowed out of Ulrich now, as he talked about Hans and his plans.

            “Ewald is working on everything from his end. He’s already sent an invitation to Hans, and submitted whatever other documents need to be put in.” He waved his hand in the air. “I don’t know what all is involved, but Ewald does. He’s handling all he can from there, and I’m helping Hans here.” He took a glance at Viktor.  “He’s got to get all kinds of papers together and send them,” he said, by way of explanation. Viktor also detected a shade of relief in Ulrich’s tone.  It was as if he was grateful to be able to talk about it with someone. Something suddenly occurred to Viktor.

            “Wait, Ulrich… Does Mrs. Gassmann know?”

            Ulrich shook his head slowly.  “That’s the kicker, Viktor.  It’s two months now that we’ve been working on everything, Ewald and Hans and I.  All in secret.  Trips to the notary and the town hall and the post office in Bockhorn to get copies of records…”

            Now Viktor’s face did register surprise, totally genuine surprise. He didn’t know what history had passed between Ewald and Ulrich and Renate, but he intuitively grasped that this was a very delicate situation.

            “When will Hans tell her?” he asked as he folded the cloth and stowed it back in his shirt pocket.

            “It’s going to have to be soon,” Ulrich told him.  “Can’t let it go much longer, not with the holidays coming up. And the wedding.” He managed a weak smile, then added, “But it won’t be Hans.”

            “Who, then?” Viktor asked.

            “It will have to be me,” Ulrich replied. “There was a lot left unsaid, kept hidden, when Ewald emigrated. Between Renate and me, I mean,” he went on.  “I can’t let things play out that way again. Of course, she would be a force to be reckoned with no matter when we told her, but I told Hans it was best to wait until the first paperwork was all done, on Ewald’s end.  The further along the plans are, the harder it’ll be for her to derail them.”

            “Do you really think she would try to?” Viktor asked, although he knew as the words were leaving his mouth that Renate would certainly be capable of that, if she felt her family was at risk.

            “Can’t say. She’s both regular as clockwork and unpredictable at the same time.  That doesn’t matter, though.  We’re just waiting for Ewald to give us the word that things are proceeding.  Should be any day now. Which means it’s time to let Renate in on it.”

            “I don’t envy you,” Viktor said simply, and Ulrich understood that this was not a criticism of Renate, but a gesture of support.

            “Thank you, son,” Ulrich replied.  “And since you’re soon to be a married man yourself, I’ll tell you one thing.  Secrets always seem a good idea while you’re keeping them, but never once you’ve told them.”

            Viktor could feel the truth of these words in his own stomach. Not mentioning Hans’ plans to Ethel had been hard on him, and it had only been a couple weeks.

            “All the same,” Ulrich added, “let’s keep this one between us for now, can we?  It’s on me to break the news to Renate.”

            Viktor nodded. But as he did so, he felt an unpleasant sensation in the pit of his stomach. Not as strong as what he felt in the woods the other day, when he asked about setting up his own business and got the “no” answer.  But it was an unpleasant feeling, nonetheless.

            “It won’t be long now,” Ulrich assured him.

            That’s how it came to pass that Viktor ended the day as the keeper of two other men’s secrets. That evening, he sat down on his bed in the larger of the two bedrooms in the workshop and began unlacing his boots. In a way, he reflected now, he’d gotten what he’d wanted ever since arriving six months earlier: He was truly a part of the family now, privy to the Gassmanns’ most private concerns and secrets.

            But this wasn’t the way he’d hoped life as one of the family would play out. In his imagining, he and Ulrich and Hans were jovial comrades, always clapping each other on the back or shoulder, their mouths open in broad and joyful smiles. But here, he had quite a different situation: the three of them tight-lipped, jaws set in determination not to reveal confidences that held the potential to tear an irreparable rent in the fabric of their lives. How much strain could this fabric bear?

            Viktor’s eyes now fell upon Ethel’s quilt, and he shifted his position, so that he could see it more fully. He loved this crazy quilt that his fiancée had pieced together from bits of fabric that would have seemed unlikely to coexist alongside each other. And yet, Viktor thought, Ethel had somehow managed to use her intuition to arrange every piece just so. She’d carefully stitched each to its neighbor and laid this or that one atop another, in unexpected juxtapositions. In the end, it all came together into a harmonious composition.

            Examining the quilt, Viktor decided that it represented the entire Gassmann family – not just Ethel and Hans and their parents, but Ewald, too. Then there was Renate’s sister, Lorena, and her family, too. Viktor had just run through this list of family members in his mind, when his gaze was drawn to a part at the far end of the quilt, right at the spot where it met the end of the mattress. Viktor had never studied this section before. But now, he leaned over onto his elbows and then down onto his forearms, until he could see this small area clearly.

            The part in question, about five inches wide by six inches long, was made up of fabric with a speckled pattern of brown against an ivory background. Not speckles, really, Viktor concluded as he examined it. More like diamonds. They reminded him of nail heads. But what caught his attention was something else: Embroidered onto this rectangle of fabric, in lighter brown embroidery floss (more the color of cherry wood, as opposed to the walnut-colored fabric diamonds, Viktor decided) was a sawhorse, with a saddle atop it. And above that, embroidered in gray, was a two-handed saw, just like the one he and Ulrich had been using that day. Oh, and here’s a bed! Viktor exclaimed wordlessly. It was off to the side, rendered in a lighter, more pine-tinted floss. Viktor straightened up. How did I never notice this before? But before he came up with an answer, a crash resounded from the other side of the wall, from inside the storeroom that shared the far wall with his own bedroom.

            Jumping up, Viktor strode quickly to the storeroom and opened the door. There, lying on the floor, instead of atop the pegs put into the wall to hold it, was a two-handed saw. Just an average saw, smaller than the one he and Ulrich had been using. But it struck Viktor that it looked exactly like the saw embroidered on the quilt on his bed. Viktor’s mouth dropped open. How did it fall? He sensed that this was not a simple matter of a saw slipping off its pegs. Viktor had heard the family’s tale about Ulrich’s grandfather, Wolf, how he stubbornly remained in this very room when the rest of the family moved into the new log home that Detlef built.

            Viktor remembered what Ulrich had shared with him one day in the forest, about how Wolf kept his bed in the storeroom. And how Ulrich had loved riding the sawhorses with his grandfather by his side… Viktor walked over to one of the sawhorses that stood by the wall, and ran his hand over its rough top. As he did so, he imagined Wolf there in the room with little Ulrich, and he felt the happiness that must have flowed between grandfather and grandson. Then, suddenly, Viktor heard a laugh. It was clear as could be, and it was a happy laugh.

            Viktor turned around. He was alone in the room. He glanced at the various tools that were hanging on the wall that the storeroom shared with his bedroom – the room, where a bed stood, covered by Ethel’s quilt. The quilt where Wolf’s room is pictured, Viktor suddenly grasped. Then: “My bed is your bed, isn’t it?”he asked aloud, looking in the direction from which the laughter had sounded. Viktor didn’t see anyone there, and, indeed, there was no one there to be seen, just someone to be heard, and sensed. For, at that moment, Viktor laughter sounded again, a bit louder this time. And he would have sworn in a court of law that some unseen person clapped him firmly and jovially on his back…

            Viktor took another look around the storeroom, then returned to his bedroom, undressed, and climbed into bed. He noticed that when he extended his right foot, his toes ended up directly below the embroidered piece he’d been studying before his brief visit to the storeroom. How did I never notice this before tonight? he asked himself, even shaking his head in dismay. He heard no reply, but as he leaned back and rested his head upon the pillow, he murmured out loud, “Sorry for leaving you out of the list of the family members, Mr. Gassmann. No offense meant, Sir.” Viktor thought he caught sight of a cloud-like form perched on the chair across from the bed. An old man, it seemed to Viktor. Suspenders atop a billowing white shirt. And a long, gray beard. As Viktor settled back under the quilt, preparing to sleep, a thought drifted into his consciousness. Guess I’m really one of the family now… For better or for worse.

            And thus, Viktor closed his eyes at the same time as the two other male members of the future Gassmann-Bunke joint family, and in just the same way: with something to hide. As he lay in bed, his arms crossed behind his head, Viktor reflected on the fact that he had kept his fair share of facts to himself over the years. These included one which he knew would shock Ethel and her family when it came out – if it ever did.  He hoped it would never come to light, but that was something he couldn’t entirely control, since other people were involved, too. Ulrich’s words about secrets came to mind then. Followed by the memory of his recent vow to live his life in a straightforward and honest way now.  No ploys. No more calculations.  But what is all this business now, if not calculations?? He recalled the feeling that had arose in his stomach when Ulrich asked him to keep silent.  Damn it! He’d gotten himself out of the spot between one rock and a hard place, only to end up wedged in somewhere else. He pulled his arms out from beneath his head, turned onto his side, and plumped up the pillow with an energetic pummeling, before closing his eyes and wishing for a deep sleep to blot this all out. 

            However, the whole situation did not fade from Viktor’s consciousness, either during his sleeping, or his waking, hours. He found himself distracted, no matter whether he was cutting trees with Ulrich, or moving along on a furniture project in the workshop, or out on a stroll with Ethel.  She, of course, perceived this distance and wondered whether Viktor might be having second thoughts about marrying her.  She’d had no experience with men before he came to work and live on the homestead, after all. And although she could guess his moods easily, she found it difficult to intuit what exactly might be drawing his attention away from her. She noticed that he spent a good part of mealtimes looking back and forth between Hans and Ulrich and Renate, scanning their faces.

Finally, after the second day of this, Ethel decided to say something to her fiancé about it.

She chose their evening time together, when, at her request, they had gone to the treehouse.  It was on this visit to what had become their favorite spot, that she realized how much Viktor had come to love this place, too. He sat down with his back against the beech tree trunk, spread his legs so that Ethel could sit between them and recline against his chest – in their most familiar pose, these days. Once she did that, he wrapped his arms gently around her waist and sighed deeply, but said nothing They loved to sit there like that, in silence. Not that they ever talked about it. Each just understood that being together this way was soothing to them both. It enable them to let go of whatever had gone on during the day and simply feel each other’s love, and the divine energy of the forest, too.  Sitting in the treehouse, they often lost track of time, the darkening of the forest their only clue that night was approaching. 

This evening, as always, Ethel felt and heard Viktor’s breathing slow down, and his heartbeat, too. But again, her earlier suspicion was borne out: Something was on his mind, preventing him from fully connecting with her right now. He’s in another world somewhere, Ethel thought to herself. And, indeed, he was. 

It was that damned question of whether or not to talk with Renate about Hans’ plans that had captured Viktor’s attention once more.  Ulrich had asked him not to say anything, but for the past two days, from the moment Ulrich made his request, in fact, Viktor felt in his gut that he should tell Renate what lay ahead.  Maybe it was his old pattern popping up again: that long-standing compulsion to figure out how he could make everyone happy while alienating no one, thereby keeping himself in the clear and unharmed. 

But as he considered whether this was his motivation in the current situation or not, he felt the unpleasant sensation in his stomach that he’d lately come to believe was a sign – From the trees? And thus from God? – not to stay silent about the matter. He was, actually, a bit relieved to detect this feeling, since it seemed to him that even noticing what he felt there was an indication that he had shifted his way of approaching life.  He’d just posed to himself the question of how to go about not betraying what his stomach was telling him, when Ethel spoke.

“My dear…” she began quietly, and then waited for his reply.  It took a few seconds, but she heard him whisper in her ear.

“Yes, dear Ethel?” Then he leaned forward and gave her a light kiss on her earlobe as he spoke. “What is it?”

She laid her hands upon his and noticed how small hers looked by comparison.

“I was wondering… You seem to have something on your mind.  Is something wrong?”  Then she held her breath, glad that she was facing away from him, in case he was looking for a way to give her bad news.

“I can’t put anything over on you, can I?” he said with a smile in his voice that brought Ethel some relief, as did the playful squeeze he gave her waist.

No longer frightened, she just shook her head. “What is it, then?”

“It’s a matter of a secret someone has asked me to keep,” he said finally.

Upon hearing this, Ethel sat up and turned around to face him, crossing her legs beneath her skirt.  “A secret? What secret?” Then, realizing what she had just asked, she laughed. “I’m sorry. It wouldn’t be a secret any more if you told me would it?”

Viktor shook his head. “Two people have told me it now, and I wish neither had.  And the second one asked me not to tell a third.”

After letting this sink in for a moment, Ethel said, “Well, all I can say is that I hope no one is asking you to keep something terrible from me.” 

“No, no, nothing like that.”  He grasped her hands and then took each of her fingers in turn into his, tapping it lightly with his thumb.  As he did so, still thinking about what to do, he had a thought, and the thought was accompanied by a lightness inside him, a feeling of calm. Ahhhh! That’s what to do!

He smiled.  “In fact, no one asked me not to tell you.

“Really?” Ethel sat up straighter now.

“Yes.” Viktor nodded. “Do you want me to tell you?’

Ethel hesitated, her lips parted.  Unbeknownst to Viktor, she was at this moment listening to what her body – her “little voice”, as she called it – was saying to her. Yes or no?

After a moment, she felt her answer.

            “Yes, I do.”

            And so he told her about his conversation with Hans, and then what Ulrich had said in the woods.

            “I… I can’t believe it!” Ethel whispered.  “And yet, I’m not surprised,” she said. “Not after that conversation when Ewald was here, when Hans left the table.”

            Viktor nodded. “It does seem connected to that, doesn’t it? I mean, at least in the timing of it.”

            “I can see now why you’ve been so distracted the past two days, thinking about it.”  Now she was the one tapping his fingers with hers.

            “What’s eating me up inside is that your father asked me not to tell Mrs. Gassmann, but I feel inside that I should tell her.”

            “Then why haven’t you?” Ethel said, studying his face as she waited for his answer.

            He cradled his chin in one hand and looked out into the forest, rubbing his jaw as he thought how to answer.

            “I can’t explain it, quite,” he began. “Not to you. Not to myself.  Partly it’s because I respect your father so much.  He’s the head of your family, after all –“

            “The family that you’ll be part of, too, as of next spring,” Ethel reminded him.

            “And that makes it harder.  I know it’s not my place to tell her, because I’m not part of the family, and this is nothing if not a family matter.”

            “Yet, you feel inside that you should tell her?” Ethel asked. “And you don’t know whether to listen to my father or to your own inner feeling.”

            “Yes, that’s exactly it,” he told her, both relieved and grateful that she understood his dilemma. I certainly did pick the right girl to marry!

            “I don’t envy you,” Ethel told him after considering the situation herself for a bit. 

            “Tell me,” Viktor said, taking both her hands in his, “have you ever been in this kind of situation? With having to decide between doing what someone wants you to and doing what you feel is right?”

            Ethel thought.  “Hmmm. Not with any big decisions, anyway,” she said. She held up the hand with the ring he’d carved for her. “For the biggest decision, I knew in my heart that what you asked me to do was right.” She gave him a big smile, which coaxed one out of him, too.

            “But with smaller things,” she went on, “yes, I’ve had those times. With my quilts. A client will swear up and down that she wants certain colors, while I have a strong sense that what she’s asking for is all wrong.  A couple of times, when I was first starting out, I gave in and did what the client wanted, instead of what I knew was right.”

            “And how did it turn out?”

            “Awful. Well, at least that’s how it seemed to me.  The clients claimed to be happy, because they got what they said they wanted, but I knew the quilts would have been more beautiful, if I’d just totally obeyed my inner voice.”

            “But I’ve never seen any of your quilts that wasn’t heavenly,” Viktor told her, quite honestly.

            She leaned forward and touched his nose with her index finger. “You didn’t see any of those early quilts,” she teased him.  “I learned my lesson.”

            Viktor sighed.  “But if I tell your mother, she is going to be upset at the news and upset that she didn’t hear it from your father or brother. And they’ll both likely be mad at me, then, too.”

            “You may be right,” Ethel told him thoughtfully.  “But what Mama cares about most is everyone being happy, and she always wants to know everything about everything. You know that!”

            “I do,” Viktor said. “Sometimes I’ve felt like a criminal, what with all the questions she asks me about this or that.”

            “That’s right.  So if you give her information she can use to help keep everything in the family in order, she’ll be in your corner for life.”

            “But I don’t want to do it for that reason,” he said, taking Ethel’s hands again. “There’ve been too many times in my life when I’ve done things just to get something out of it, Ethel. And I made a promise to myself not to do that any more.”

            She looked at him intently for a moment.  He wasn’t sure what she was doing, but it wouldn’t have surprised him – not any more, at least – to learn that she was tuning in to her heart, asking herself the very question he’d recently posed to himself: Was he marrying her just to get ahead in her family, or did he really love her? Ethel was sure she knew the answer, but a quick check wouldn’t hurt, she decided.  So she did look for the answer inside herself, and she discerned swiftly that the love she’d been feeling coming from him these past months was genuine.  

            “Then I would say to you to go with what you know in your inner being to be true and right,” she told her fiancé.  She paused, and then added, “Otherwise you might regret it. And we’re not talking about quilts here.”

            Viktor took Ethel by the shoulders and gently turned her around, so that they could sit in their favorite position.  As they sat silently, he could feel the love flowing strongly between them, with the divine energy of the trees mixed in, too.  When it became clear to both of them that it was time to head back to the homestead, Viktor embraced her from behind, kissed the back of her head, and then spoke softly into her ear.

            “I don’t know how I managed to ever deserve you, Ethel. In fact, I don’t think I do! But I’m more grateful for you than I can say.  And I love you more than I can say, too.”

            Back at home, Ethel checked on the goats and chickens before going into the house. On the doorstep, she ran into Viktor, who was just coming out.  Knowing that it was not his usual pattern to be in the house at that time, she gave him a questioning look.

            “Just filling up the kitchen wood box for tomorrow,” he told her.  Then he squeezed her hand and bade her a good night. She watched as he made his way toward the workshop, leaning down to pet one of the cats as he went.

*          *          *

            The next morning, Hans came up alongside Viktor in the workshop and laid a hand on his shoulder.  It felt like an almost friendly act, or, at least, not hostile.

            “Tornado warning,” Hans said in a low voice. When Viktor turned to face him with a quizzical look, Hans smiled.  “Papa told Mama last night.”

            This was the first mention Hans had made of his plan since the day of his tense conversation with Viktor about it. Viktor, for his part, had not raised the topic with his future brother-in-law, not even after his heart-to-heart with Ulrich. But now Hans had brought it up himself.

            “So, everything’s moving along the way it should be, then?” Viktor asked. “With all the documents?”  As always, he felt like he was walking a fine line between showing a genuine interest in Hans’ plans and upsetting Hans by indicating any great closeness with Ulrich. But as Hans spoke, detailing with great excitement – but in a low voice – which papers had been submitted, and how good it all looked, in terms of him getting approval to travel to Illinois, Viktor saw that his own relationship with Ulrich didn’t matter to Hans in the least any more.  Evidently, Hans no longer felt he needed his local family’s love and affection in order to feel good about himself: “I’m going to America!” his expression said.
“Let them all try to top that!”

            Viktor figured it would be appropriate to extend his hand to Hans, and he guessed right: Hans immediately grasped it and pumped it hard. Then he even threw his other arm around Viktor’s shoulder.

            “Ah, Mr. Bunke,” he said, in a light and friendly tone which communicated that all was well between them now, and his earlier prickliness a thing of the past.  “I’m glad you’ll be here to take care of Ethel.” Here he leaned closer and whispered, “Because I’m going to have my own wife to look after before long.”

            “Really?” Viktor asked, smiling. “You already have someone in mind? You do move fast!”
            Now Hans released both hand and shoulder and put his own hands up in a gesture of denial. “Oh, not quite yet,” he replied with a laugh. “But once I get there, it won’t be long, I assure you.”

            “What won’t be long?” Ethel called out to them in her ringing voice. Both men turned to see her standing in the small doorway to the workshop, backlit by the morning sun so that her blonde curls looked like a halo.

            Thinking back to their conversation the evening before, Viktor felt a wave of love for her that seemed stronger than it had even twenty-four hours earlier. How can that be?

            “Oh, just guy stuff,” Hans told Ethel with a wink. “Giving him advice on his upcoming nuptials.”

            “Oh, yes,” Ethel scoffed, laughing. “You with all your experience. I’m sure Viktor has been taking careful notes.” She looked over Hans’ shoulder at her fiancé and, in spite of herself, blushed at the thought that the two of them might actually have been talking about her wedding night.  She, too, noticed that she somehow felt even more in love with Viktor this morning.

            Viktor said nothing, but just waved the notebook he held in his hand, and pulled out the pencil he’d earlier tucked behind his ear. 

            Ethel covered her face with her hands out of embarrassment. Then she turned and, floating out of the workshop without seeming to touch the ground at all, she called back to Hans and Viktor:

            “Come into the house.  Mama wants to talk to us all about something.”

            Both men looked at their watches. It was only 10:25. Dinner wasn’t due for another two hours.  They exchanged glances, and Hans’ lightheartedness faded, replaced by the expression of a man who knew his death sentence had been commuted, but who still had to face the judge simply as a matter of protocol. At least that’s what Hans hoped to God was the case…

            The Gassmanns’ kitchen did, indeed, have the air of a courtroom when Ethel entered, followed by Hans and Viktor.  Renate was sitting in her usual spot at the far end of the table, but Ulrich, instead of taking his seat at the opposite end, was standing at Renate’s side, doing his best not to betray any emotion or give any sign of what was to come. The rest of them sat in their familiar chairs around the table.

            Renate seemed to have piled her dark braids atop her head with particular precision that morning, and although her eyes had looked red to Ethel earlier, at breakfast time, she hadn’t given them any hint that anything was amiss. But they all knew that it had to be something important for Renate to summon them all in the middle of the morning’s work.

            “Your father told me your news last night,” Renate began, without any preamble, looking at Hans and only Hans.  “It seems that the whole thing is already quite advanced.”

            Ethel cast a quick glance at Viktor, whose face registered mild surprise. Then she looked at her brother and asked, “What plans?” For a moment, she regretted that Viktor had shared everything with her. She also felt a brief pang as she made a decision to make use of the conversation she’d interrupted in the workshop. “Hans!” she burst out. “Are you getting married, too?” Her remark seemed idiotic to her as soon as she’d uttered it, but at least it might convince her mother that she had not known what was going on. That might be a comfort to her… Hans said nothing, and Renate spoke again.

            “Hans is not getting married, Ethel,” she said sternly. She paused, and then continued, in the tone of a parent who has been informed that her child has engaged in an act of unparalleled naughtiness.  Ethel waited for her to say, “It has come to my attention…” but Renate chose different words.

            “For those of you who don’t yet know,” she said dryly, looking to Viktor and then to Ethel, “Hans has spent the past two months planning his flight –“

            Ethel glanced again at Viktor, who now looked suitably surprised. At least that’s the way it seemed to Ethel. Did he not tell her last night after all??

            “Mama!” Hans burst in, even making a move to rise from his seat. But he fell silent when Ulrich raised both hands and motioned for him to sit back down.

            “Let her say her piece,” he told Hans. “It’s the least you – we – can do.”

            “His flight,” Renate repeated. “His escape. To America, of all places. To Illinois.”
            Here Ethel didn’t restrain herself, and her question was quite sincere. “But Hans, I don’t understand she cried, leaning forward to stare at him. It had suddenly sunk in that this whole situation was not abstract, but real, and that if it went through, then her brother would sometime soon be half way across the world. “Illinois –“

            “Illinois,” Renate confirmed, nodding her head slowly.  “Evidently he feels there are more opportunities to be had there, with his Uncle Ewald, than here, in the bosom and comfort of his nearest and dearest family members.”

            Ethel could see that her mother, who was tapping the table unconsciously with her right hand, was fighting back tears. Seeing Renate’s uncharacteristic display of emotion, Ethel, too, grew emotional, and felt tears well up in her own eyes. 

            “Hans,” she whispered, and reached across the table to take her brother’s hand.  “Why?”

            “Yes, Hans,” Renate echoed coldly, “go on, then. Tell us all why you’re going.”

            Hans’ face grew red at this, and he laid his hands flat down on the table top.  “I’m not some five-year-old who stole a pot of paint and painted the cows red,” he said, more loudly than he intended. “Don’t scold me like a child.  I’m a grown man and I can make my own decisions without having to answer to all of you! I don’t have to tell you a thing!”

            Renate was struggling to contain herself, and now she was clutching the skirt of her apron in her lap with both fists, eyes closed. But the tears began pouring out anyway. Suddenly, she resembled not a tornado, but a bent-over sapling left in the storm’s wake. Leaning over, she rested her head on her folded arms. They could all see her shoulders heave as muffled sobs came from her covered face.

            Everyone exchanged glances, and then Ulrich silently shooed them all out of the kitchen, back into the yard.  Ethel was the last to leave, and as she turned, she saw Ulrich kneeling on the floor, embracing Renate, who had thrown her arms around his neck and was crying, crying, crying.  It was the saddest sight Ethel had ever witnessed, and she didn’t understand it, at least not fully. Nor did she ever forget it.

            It was only later on, after supper, that Ethel was able to discuss the goings on with Viktor. This evening, they just took a stroll down the road, walking along the border of the Gassmann property, in the direction of the Walters’ farm.

            “So you really did just take in the firewood last night?” Ethel asked as they strolled, hand in hand in the grass alongside the dirt road.

            Viktor shook his head. “No, she was alone in the house, and I told her.” Then he turned to look at Ethel, who knitted her brows in confusion.

            “But… She said that Ulrich told her last night.”

            “That’s true, he did.  He told me as much after supper while we were felling some birches this morning.”

            “And was he upset that you told her first?”

            Viktor stopped and turned to face her. “That’s the thing, Ethel.  He doesn’t know I told her.”

            “What? That doesn’t make any sense.”

            “No, it doesn’t,” Viktor agreed, as he began walking again. “Unless she didn’t tell him.  And it seems she didn’t, because your father thanked me this afternoon for not breathing a word of it to her.”

            Ethel was the one to stop now.  “He did?”  When Viktor nodded, she said, “That explains why Mama made such a show of announcing the news to you and me. ‘For those of you who don’t yet know.’”

            “Yes,” Viktor replied. “At first I didn’t understand why she did that, because she knew full well that I knew.  But then I guessed that this was her way of giving me a signal that she hadn’t shared with your father that I had told her.”

            “A signal that she would keep your secret-sharing to herself,” Ethel said thoughtfully.

            “I guess so. But why?”

            Ethel looked into his eyes and then embraced him.  “Maybe she loves you and doesn’t want things to get off on the wrong foot between you and Papa before you and I are even married.”

            “That doesn’t sound totally right to me,” Viktor said.  “She has no reason to protect me that way.”

            “No, it doesn’t feel that way to me, either,” Ethel admitted. She paused, and then laid her hand on Viktor’s chest. “But she does have a reason to protect Papa,” she said quietly. “From thinking you betrayed him by telling Mama something he’d asked you not to.”

            Viktor sighed.  “Now that makes sense,” he said wearily.  “Damned if you do, damned if you don’t…”

            They continued their walk mostly in silence, both reflecting on how the morning had played out.

            As they turned around and headed back toward the homestead, the setting sun glowing yellow and red ahead of them, Ethel shared one of the thoughts that had come into her head during the silent part of the stroll.

            “Now I see why Mama looked so, so sad when we left the kitchen this morning,” Ethel said. “At least part of it, anyway.”

            “Why’s that?”

            “Well, tell me this. How do you think I’d feel if you were keeping a big secret from me, and I had to hear it first from someone outside the family?”

            “It’d break your heart, I think,” Viktor told her.

            “That’s right.”

            They walked home hand in hand, sobered by Hans’ news and their own, private thoughts about what that news would mean for them, and for the rest of the family.

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Above the River, Chapter 23

Chapter 23

Fall, 1921

Gassmann homestead

            When Hans knocked on the Walters’ door that evening in 1921, he was met by his Aunt Lorena.

            “It’s a shame you didn’t come by a bit earlier,” she told him, motioning him into the kitchen. “You could have had some coffee and cake with your father and us.  But that’s okay, I’ll put out some more.”

            But Hans, acting as if he hadn’t even heard her, said that he’d stopped by to have a word with Ewald.  Lorena was taken aback, since Hans was always one to say yes to sweets. But she called Ewald, who emerged from the main room. 

At Hans’ request, the two men went back outside.  Hans wanted to speak to his uncle in private.  The conversation didn’t last long.  Lorena wasn’t shy about looking out the kitchen window in the men’s direction, as she tried – and failed – to catch some of the conversation taking place out in the yard beneath the apple tree. She saw Hans shake his head once, vehemently.  Ewald nodded and clapped his nephew on the shoulder. Then watched as Hans turned and walked quickly down the lane and back out onto the main road, heading in the direction of home. 

Back inside, Ewald, uncharacteristically, rebuffed his sister’s request for information about the conversation. Then, seeing that she was hurt by his reticence, he put his arm around her.

“Don’t ask, Sis. Guy stuff.  That’s all.  Nothing for you to busy your head with.”

Ewald may have been gone for the past seventeen years, but Lorena still recognized the look she now saw on his face.  It was the expression that he always wore – beginning when they were tiny kids – when he had a secret.  Not a secret he was holding off telling her, just to tease her, but one it might not be safe to tell. Back then, it was because one of them might get a thrashing if he told. Like the time when their cousin accidentally broke a piece of farm equipment they were playing on, and Ewald had been with him.  But what about now? Lorena wondered. What here might not be safe to tell?

*          *          *

            For the remainder of Ewald’s visit – and for nearly the next 28 years, for that matter – there was no more discussion of God or faith or faith healing or that little boy Bruno over supper or dinner or breakfast at the Gassmanns’ place.  Renate made sure of that. Her brother’s time with them was too precious to her to allow it to be marred by any discord caused by religious topics.  Everyone else clearly felt the same way, because the rest of the month flowed by with little more than small talk when the family was all together.  There were plenty of other topics to explore, such as more details about Ewald’s life in America. But even at these times, all parties were vigilant, censoring their own words when it occurred to them that the remarks on the tip of their tongues might lead someone to feel hurt or insulted or left out… The list of emotions to avoid causing in others was long, and this naturally limited the mealtime conversations. 

As a result, the rest of the month passed very smoothly, it seemed to Renate: no ill will, no bruised feelings, no resentment. Renate made this assessment based on what she herself observed, and on all that she heard from the other individual family members.  Of course she was sorry to say goodbye to Ewald that day when they all got together at the Walters’ farm to send him off, but she wasn’t despairing, the way she’d been when he left the first time, in 1904.  This time, the whole family gathered around him, and the tears that were shed were of sadness, certainly – at the fact that he hadn’t been able to stay longer, and at the knowledge that they had no idea when they might see each other again, if ever.

But there were other kinds of tears mixed in, too.  Ulrich and Ewald embraced in tenderness and love, grateful that they had swept away the misunderstanding they’d carried with them for so long.  Renate, too, had forgiven her brother for what she had interpreted as his slight of her, in writing to Ulrich and not to her.  As well, she had learned enough of his life in America, that she could feel genuinely joyful for him.  Thank goodness he had found a wife who made him happy, and that they were raising a wonderful family.  Renate kept reminding herself of this and pushed away her own feelings of regret that she’d never meet her sister-in-law and nieces and nephew.

“You know that young man is in love with you, don’t you?” Ewald asked Ethel quietly as he hugged her goodbye.  Taking her blushing cheeks as an answer, he said, “Be happy, Ethel, dear. This family’s been through so much. Allow yourself to bring some joy into it. Some new life.”

Only a few words passed between Hans and Ewald as they took leave of each other, and no one overheard what they said. The two shook hands heartily, and Ewald clapped Hans on the shoulder.

Lorena and her mother shared their own, private words with Ewald. Then he hopped up in the front of the wagon, alongside his father, who was taking him to the train station in Varel.  The two men would talk about whatever needed discussing on this ride and make their final, brief, and undemonstrative goodbyes on the platform.

A job well done! Renate thought to herself, as she walked slowly back to the homestead with her husband and children, hand in hand with Ulrich.  Now life can get back to normal. God knows there’s enough work to be done to prepare for winter!

*          *          *

About a month later, on a sunny Saturday afternoon in November, Viktor and Ethel took an after supper walk to the old treehouse.  They walked together nearly every day now, in the early evening, after the light meal was cleared and the dishes washed, and the horses and goats and chickens put in for the night, and whatever woodworking project was under way put to bed, too. Although their strolls took them in various directions – toward Bockhorn or Varel, or down any of a number of paths through the Gassmanns’ forest – the treehouse had become their favorite spot to sit with each other and share their thoughts.  So, on this day, it didn’t surprise Ethel when Viktor expressed the wish to go there.

The days were growing both shorter and cooler, and when they climbed the rope ladder, they found the treehouse floor littered with fallen leaves in various stages of dryness. 

“I love the scent of the leaves!” Ethel exclaimed, as her head emerged from over the edge.  This time, Viktor had gone up the ladder first, since he enjoyed reaching a strong hand out to Ethel to grasp as she reached the top of the ladder. She delighted in this part of the visit, too. So, she often shooed Viktor up the ladder before her, even though, as he had learned on their first visit, Ethel needed no help whatsoever climbing the rope rungs and hoisting herself onto the treehouse floor.

“They do smell wonderful, don’t they?” Viktor replied, nodding. “The green ones still smell like the tree, somehow, and the dry ones already smell like the earth.  It’s the whole yearly cycle before us.”

Ethel hadn’t been up in the treehouse during the autumn for many years, and she had missed being there at that time. She began sweeping the leaves up into a small pile using the small broom she’d found resting against the railing when she and Viktor had first climbed up here a couple of months earlier.

“I can still hardly believe this lasted all those years,” she said with delight, pausing in her sweeping to wave the broom in Viktor’s direction.

He laughed, swept up himself by Ethel’s childlike joy.  “It must have magical properties,” he said.

“Oh, yes!” Ethel replied, sweeping again now.  “Or maybe the fairies used it while Hans and I were absent.  Maybe they replaced any broken or rotted straws.”

It didn’t even occur to Viktor to ask if he could help.  He understood that this was Ethel’s own personal communion with the leaves. So, he watched silently from where he sat near the ladder, as Ethel moved the leaves into a pile against the beech tree’s trunk, next to where he was sitting.  It seemed to him that she was nudging them the way she’d urge a goat kid or a kitten along, not wanting to hurt it, but with her goal still clearly in mind.

When the leaves were all gathered together into the shape of a narrow bench, Ethel motioned to him.  “Come, sit!”  He did, and the two of them settled down atop the leaves, some of which crackled, while others slipped.

“Did you do this with the leaves when you were growing up?” Viktor asked.

Ethel nodded.  She was picking up leaves, one by one, examining them, crumbling some of the driest ones, and bending the ones that were holding tight to their green-ness this way and that, testing their flexibility.  “What we liked best was to cover the whole floor with a thick layer. Then we’d lie on them for hours, like they were a featherbed and look up at the sky.”

“There must have been more leaves then – or did you do that later in the fall?”

Ethel laughed, remembering it. “No, we didn’t wait. We couldn’t wait. As soon as the leaves began falling, we’d bring a rake along with us, and collect all the fallen leaves around this tree. Sometimes for a long ways in all directions. Then we’d put them in baskets we’d brought with us– we came prepared! – and haul them up to the top of the ladder with a rope and dump them out here, and spread them all around.”

“Quite the production!” Viktor said, laughing, too.  He loved watching her when she told these stories of her childhood, as she often did when they were up here in the treehouse.  She really came alive out in the big beech.  Although the treehouse was barely ten feet above the forest floor, it was as if Ethel was transported even higher, into some divine realm free of all domestic cares, or worries about family matters.  Not that Ethel ever really seemed weighed down to him, not the way others in the family often did, but here she was even lighter. When he was with her in this spot, Viktor understood why her brother and parents had felt the need to tether their dear, ethereal Ethel, lest she float away, up into the heavens, and never return.

Sitting with her now, Viktor suddenly began to wonder about that tethering.

“Ethel,” he asked thoughtfully, “do you ever feel that your parents, or Hans even, have kept you from being yourself?” He had turned to face her, and his serious question surprised her.

“What do you mean?” she asked, even though she grasped what he meant right away.

“I mean… you’re so full of joy and life. I see it so clearly up here in the treehouse.  You’re like a beacon of happiness here.  Even in the way you swept up the leaves.”

“And I’m not full of life when I’m not up here?” she asked, with a light tone and a slight teasing smile she hoped would mask her emotion, the love she felt so strongly for the man beside her.

Viktor shook his head and, smiling, wagged his finger at her. “Don’t try to trip me up, now!  That’s not what I meant at all.”

Ethel took his hand and tapped it against his leg. “I know. I was just teasing you, Viktor.”

            He laid his other hand atop hers. “But I asked in all seriousness, Ethel,” he continued. “Because I see your quilts.  And how close to God you are.  I think you’re the one in the family who most believes in God.”

            “Why are you bringing this up, all of a sudden?”  Ethel scrutinized his face.  The two of them hadn’t ever discussed the question of faith, even after the argument about it when Ewald was visiting.  That was probably because of the to-do that the discussion caused that day when Hans had left the table.

            Viktor shrugged. He wasn’t quite sure of the answer himself.  He hadn’t planned to bring it up.  “I just see how full of the divine you are, Ethel.  And I remember how – that day when your Uncle Ewald was still here and we were talking about God and why he doesn’t stop us from doing certain things, even if they’re bad for us. I saw it then in you”

            “I remember that conversation well,” Ethel said with a nod.  “And Hans asked me whether I believed God could heal you if only you believed enough. Is that what you’re thinking of?”

            “Yes, but not just that.  You talked about how we all have free will.  Because …. I think you said it’s because God wants us to learn for ourselves what’s right and wrong.”

            “I do think that. I don’t remember exactly what I said that day.”

            “I do,” Viktor told her, squeezing her hand. “You said that God is always around us, giving us signs that He’s there, and showing us the way. The right way. Helping us choose.”

            “Yes. Even if He can’t stop us from walking off a cliff. That’s the phrase Hans used, isn’t it?”

            “I think so. Something like that.”

            “But, Viktor, dear, why did you want to talk about that now? And here?”

            Viktor turned and looked out through the branches that formed the pillars of the railing that ran around the treehouse. 

            “I guess,” he began slowly, “because I see how light a spirit you are, and I want you never to lose your connection to God.”

            “But why would I lose it?” Ethel asked him, a confused frown forming on her face.

            “I saw how hard it was for you when Hans disagreed with you. You had this beautiful idea and hope and belief, and he did his best to crush it.”  He waved his hand to encompass the treehouse around them.  “But here. Here, Ethel. This is your pure element, where you’re surrounded by God. Where no one would dare tell you not to believe in that.  At least I hope they wouldn’t.  I wouldn’t.”

            Ethel was so surprised by the turn the conversation had taken that she didn’t even know where to start with a reply.  So she just looked at Viktor and allowed her hand to rest in his, and to feel the love for him that rested so strongly in her heart.

            “And I would never want you to walk off a cliff,” Viktor went on, his voice very earnest now. 

            “A cliff?  What cliff?” Ethel asked, feeling a bit exasperated.  “Viktor, what are you talking about?”

            Silently, Viktor pulled his right hand free and began brushing aside some of the leaves in the pile that lay between them. Then he stopped and motioned to Ethel. “Go on,” he told her, indicating that she was to keep brushing the leaves away.

            She did so, and after a moment, she came upon a small, dark gray, cloth bag with a drawstring closure. She looked to Viktor, still confused. He motioned to her to pick it up.

            “Go on, look inside,” he urged her.

            Ethel picked up the bag, which was light as air in her hand, and slowly loosened the drawstring.  First she peered into the opening, but since she couldn’t see anything, and could only feel that there was something rather solid, but light inside, she tipped the bag upside down above her palm.  She had to give it a bit of a shake, and when she did this, something small and wooden fell into her hand.  She realized right away that it was a ring, and she brought it up to her face to get a closer look. Carved of light wood, with a band the width of the nail on her pinky finger, it had been sanded to silky smoothness. But it wasn’t just a plain band: A carved flower nestled amongst delicate leaves rose up from one edge. 

            “I carved it from a piece of a fallen branch, from beneath this tree,” Viktor told her quietly.  “Since this tree means so much to you.”  He paused and took her free hand in his. “And since you mean so much to me.”

            Ethel was quite literally speechless, captivated by the beauty of the little wooden ring, and overwhelmed by the surge of joy that was rising up in her. 

            Viktor, seeing that Ethel didn’t know how to proceed, gently picked the ring up from her palm.  “Can we see if it fits?” he asked, and when Ethel nodded silently, he slipped it onto the ring finger on her right hand. 

            “How did you get it just the right size?” Ethel asked in amazement, having found her voice. 

            “That’s a woodworker’s secret,” Viktor whispered, leaning down and kissing her hand.  “Do you like it?”

            “It’s beautiful,” Ethel whispered back. “I can’t even imagine how you made it.”

            “With love,” Viktor told her, somewhat embarrassed by his show of emotion. “I love you, Ethel,” he went on.  “Am I wrong in thinking you feel the same way?”

            Ethel shook her head and smiled, as tears began flowing down her cheeks.  “I love you, too, Viktor.”  It felt so wonderful to say this to him, after all the times she had said the words in her thoughts.

            Viktor turned so that he was sitting cross-legged before her. “If that’s the case,” he said, “then, will you marry me?”

            “Yes, yes. Oh, yes, of course!” Ethel told him, her arms around his neck now, and her head resting on his shoulder as she allowed her tears to flow freely now. 

            Viktor stroked her hair with one hand, taking in the sweet scent of her hair and the joy that filled him, too.  After a minute, he turned his head and found her lips with his. Their first kiss as a betrothed couple.

            They sat up in the treehouse for a while after that, watching as the sun got lower in the sky.  Ethel was leaning against Viktor, his arm around her shoulders.  For a bit, neither of them spoke, each taking in the love that flowed through them, and the divine love they felt coming more strongly now from the forest around them.

            Then Ethel, her head still on Viktor’s shoulder, remembered something he’d said earlier.  “Viktor, tell me: Why did you mention all that about free will? And the cliff?”  She felt him shrug.

            “I didn’t intend to talk about that,” he told her.  “It’s just that I wanted to ask you to marry me up here, in this most heavenly spot in this divine forest you love. That we both love!”

            “But that doesn’t explain the cliff,” Ethel persisted.

            Viktor felt a little sheepish, but he answered her. “Well, I wanted to ask you in this spot, because this is where you feel closest to God.  And since you believe God guides us along the right path, I was hoping you’d feel guided by God to give whatever answer was best for you. To decide with your own free will.”

            “Even if that was a ‘No’?” Ethel asked.  She lifted her head off his shoulder, so that she could look at his face.

            “Yes,” he told her, facing her now, too. “If marrying me would mean that you were jumping off a cliff, then I wanted God to tell you that now, so that you could refuse me. Because I don’t ever want to lead you off a cliff, Ethel.”

            Ethel shook her head and looked at him, hoping that he could see all the love she felt for him.  “No, Viktor.  I don’t feel God’s telling me there’s any cliff up ahead with you. Just love.  That’s the way it feels to me.  I’ve never felt so happy in my life.”

            Viktor wrapped his arms tightly around her and held her close.  “As God is my witness, Ethel, I don’t want to ever tether you to the earth the way I saw Hans do. I want you always to feel as light and free and happy as you feel here tonight.”

*          *          *

            Ethel was feeling a bit anxious when she went back into the house that night, after accepting Viktor’s proposal. When Ethel came in from the yard, Renate was laying a towel over a bowl of bread dough on the counter for its overnight rise.  Ethel approached her mother from behind, but said nothing, not knowing quite what to say.  But, hearing her, Renate turned around and looked her up and down, barely able to conceal a smile whose origin Ethel couldn’t surmise.

            “Well,” Renate asked in a jolly tone, “what do you have to say for yourself, Ethel, dear?”

            At a loss for words, Ethel simply stretched her right hand out toward her mother.  Renate noticed the trembling fingers and immediately grasped her daughter’s hand. First she brought it up to her lips.  Then, smiling now without trying to hide it, she leaned over to study the beechwood ring on Ethel’s finger.

            “Mama,” Ethel said quietly, with a mixture of excitement and trepidation, “Viktor asked me to marry him.”  She held her breath, waiting to hear what her mother would say.

            Renate took her time responding. She realized this was perhaps not the kindest way to treat Ethel, since it left the young woman in doubt for long, long seconds, but this was a big moment, and Renate wanted to dramatize it as much as possible.  After all, there seemed to be so few occasions these days for big bursts of happiness in their lives.  So, she peered at the ring, and then up at Ethel’s face, and then back at the ring. Finally, she squeezed her daughter’s hand.

            “Well, I hope you said yes!” she replied, beaming now.

            Ethel threw her arms around her mother, grateful that Renate approved of the engagement. Now she could let her tears out, and her breath, too. 

“I did, Mama!” Ethel burst out. “I did!” 

As the two women were hugging each other and swaying in a joyful dance, Ulrich walked into the kitchen.

“What’s all the commotion about?” he asked, smiling, too, but acting as if he knew nothing.

“Our Ethel’s engaged,” Renate told him, lifting Ethel’s hand up to show him the ring.

“Papa, look!” Ethel said.  “Viktor made it for me, out of wood from the beech tree the treehouse is in.”

Ulrich inspected the ring, turning Ethel’s hand this way and that, with dramatized seriousness, as if he were a jeweler taking the measure of a rare and expertly-cut diamond.

“Lovely work,” he said finally, and he clasped her hands in his.  “He’s a good man, Ethel.  He’ll do right by you.”

“I think so, too, Papa.  I know so.”  She hugged her father, too, noticing a look of happiness and peace on his face that she hadn’t seen for many years.

She also noticed that neither of her parents looked the least bit surprised.

“Did you know he was going to propose?” she asked them.

Renate and Ulrich exchanged glances, as if deciding who should be the one to tell her.

“He came to me yesterday,” Ulrich said.  “Asked me for your hand. Once I said I’d be very happy to have him as my son-in-law – as long as you agreed, of course –” Here Ethel laughed.  “- he showed me the ring.  Asked whether it would be an insult to give you this instead of a traditional ring.”

“And what did you tell him?” Ethel asked.

“That I thought it couldn’t be more perfect.”

“Oh, Papa, you’re right!”  And she began pointing out this or that detail of the ring to her parents, marveling at the beauty of the design, and at how it was both delicate and sturdy at the same time.

“An engagement ring should be just like this,” Renate told her.  “It should be just like your love for each other: beautiful enough to inspire you to make each other happy, and strong enough to weather everything you’ll have to go through together.”

*          *          *

So, as it turned out, the news of Viktor and Ethel’s engagement came as no surprise to anyone but Hans.  He noticed the ring on Ethel’s finger at breakfast the next morning.

“What’s that, Ethel?” he asked, reaching across the table to take her hand.

Ethel looked over at Viktor, seated on Hans’ left, but he encouraged her with a tip of his head. Their news was hers to share.

“Well,” Ethel said, for some reason smoothing her apron with her free hand and then looking at the ring herself once more before continuing, “Viktor asked me to marry him last night.  And I said yes!”

Hans’ jaw literally dropped open. He turned to Viktor, his eyes squinting in disbelief.  He looked like he was hoping Viktor would deny it. 

“It’s true,” Viktor told him.  “I’m the luckiest man alive.”

Hans looked to his mother’s face, and then his father’s.

“Did you two know about this?” he asked, his tone accusatory.

Is he upset we didn’t tell him earlier? Or about the engagement itself? That’s the question they were all asking themselves.

Renate, wanting to calm the turbulent waters they could all feel rising inside Hans, quickly answered.  “Now, Hans,” she began, immediately realizing she’d chosen the wrong words. Now, Hans… She knew he hated when she began sentences that way, because it meant she didn’t agree with whatever opinion he was voicing.  Striving to salvage the situation, she forged ahead, using a different tack.

“Ethel just told us last night,” she told him, “after you’d already gone up to bed.”

Hans sighed audibly, looking from one to the other of them.  Ethel was beaming. Their parents had donned subdued expressions, but Hans could tell they were happy about it, too.  Viktor was keeping his mouth shut.  Smart man, Hans thought.  He’ll fit in well with the Gassmanns. Even as this thought came into his head, Hans didn’t yet realize that he was already distancing himself from the family.  His family.  Now they weren’t “us Gassmanns”, but, rather, “the Gassmanns”.  I’m on the outside. Yet again. That thought came into his head, too. Along with, They couldn’t bother telling me. But, at the same time, he wasn’t yet ready to relinquish his lifelong role as Ethel’s closest ally, as her protector. 

“I’d like to talk to you later,” he said to Viktor. “I have a few questions for you.”  He was trying to strike a tone that would show Viktor that he had something of a say in his sister’s future. That Viktor would have to satisfy both Ulrich and him if Ethel was going to be allowed to marry him.

Ethel did not take his words the right way at all. “Hans!” she whispered as if no one else at the table could hear her. “Stop. You’re embarrassing me.  Viktor already talked to Papa, before he proposed to me.”

Ulrich nodded and was about to speak, but Hans held his hand up. 

“I’m your older brother. I should have the chance to discuss this with the man who wants to marry you.”

Now Ethel tossed her napkin onto the table. She opened her mouth to speak, but Renate quickly laid her hand on Ethel’s and squeezed it. This was the motion she had always used to signal to her children that they were going off the rails in a conversation. But she hadn’t had to use in years, not since they’d been little. What’s going on with them? she asked herself. First Hans last month, and now Ethel…

Renate would have squeezed Hans’ hand, too, but Viktor was in the way: His seat at the table was next to Hans, while she was seated to Viktor’s right, at the end of the table. But, after his six months living with the Gassmanns, Viktor possessed keen enough insight into the various family members, that he’d anticipated Hans would react this way to the news.  The evening before, in the treehouse, he even thought of suggesting to Ethel that she share their news with Hans right away, so that he wouldn’t feel left out. But she was so giddy with happiness when he proposed to her, that Viktor didn’t have the heart to dampen her high spirits by trying to guide the situation.  Besides, he figured Renate would be equally aware of the possibility that Hans might feel left out, and would make sure Ethel confided in her brother before bed. A second line of defense. Evidently, though, Renate, too, was overcome by the high spirits of the occasion. And the news came to light in a clumsy way.  No problem, Viktor thought. I can still make this right.

“It’s fine, Ethel,” Viktor said calmly, looking at his fiancée and nodding gently to her when she seemed on the verge of continuing her protest.  Then he turned to Hans and went on. 

“I’ll be happy to sit down with you. It’s natural that you feel protective of her. If Ethel were my sister, I’d want to do just the same.”

Hans nodded and pressed his lips together, an expression that said, Yes. That’s good. This is the way men who respect each other act.

“Later on, then,” he said to Viktor, and clapped him on the shoulder.

Now that the crisis was averted, everyone could all turn their attention back to their rolls and cheese and coffee.  The conversation shifted to lighter topics. When Viktor happened to glance in Renate’s direction a minute later, she gave a barely perceptible nod and a quick blink, showing her appreciation that he had salvaged the meal.  We’re going to do well together, Mr. Bunke, Renate thought to herself.

Renate was genuinely happy that Viktor had proposed to Ethel.  It was clear that he doted on her, and although they hadn’t known each other long, certainly not as long as she and Ulrich had been acquainted before getting engaged, she felt this would be a good step, both for Ethel and for the family.  Viktor had shown himself to be a good worker.  More than good, even. He’d grown so connected to the forestry work since he came: Ulrich had even remarked to her that it was as if it was in the young man’s blood.  Renate could see how much this pleased her husband, especially since Hans showed no interest in the forest itself.  As we’ve noted before, Ulrich’s melancholy had noticeably eased since Viktor’s arrival, and Viktor himself had grown more open and joyful as he worked alongside Ulrich and his connection to the forest deepened. 

Renate had noticed the atmosphere in the home growing lighter these past six months, too. Seeing everyone else’s growing happiness, she, too, grew more at ease, and when she gave Ethel her assent for Viktor’s courtship, that felt like just the right move: Reflecting on Ethel’s giddy delight at her engagement, and Viktor’s considerate treatment of Hans at breakfast, Renate concluded that this current state of the Gassmann household was a clear sign from God that she’d taken the right approach in her carefully-planned management of the family.  She even sighed with relief, thinking about the engagement and what this meant for the future here on the Gassmann homestead.  She’d learned from Ulrich that Viktor no longer had any family left. That means he and Ethel won’t be moving away, back to any Bunke family home.  They’ll marry, there’ll be children… The Gassmann homestead will become the Gassmann-Bunke homestead.  Renate felt such joy rise up in her at the mere thought of it…True, as she contemplated the various ways her daughter’s marriage would affect life there at home, Renate did feel a faint undercurrent of unease where Hans was concerned, but she pushed it away. I must be sensing some holdover from last month’s kerfluffle. That’ll pass, too.

*          *          *

            Viktor had begun considering how to deal with Hans late the previous evening, after Ethel accepted his proposal. Imagining that Ethel must already have told her brother, Viktor pondered the question as he lay in his bed in the room off the workshop.  He did his best to put himself in Hans’ position, to see the various reasons Ethel’s brother might view their engagement as a threat to himself and his position in the family.  Viktor, like Renate, had felt tension in Hans during the past month.  Also like Renate, he attributed most of Hans’ prickliness to the awkward suppertime discussion about God that they’d all endured during Ewald’s visit. Unlike Renate, though, Viktor also saw that other factors were contributing to the chip his future brother-in-law seemed to have on his shoulder. 

            He’d seen Hans tense when Ulrich praised Viktor’s work. And there was the afternoon when Ulrich and Viktor emerged from the woods, laughing and high-spirited after a day spent soaking up the trees’ heavenliness as they worked.  They met Hans as he came out of the workshop. At the sight of them, his placid expression shifted, and he greeted them with a dour countenance. This wasn’t the last time this kind of scene played out, and so, then – at the beginning of the summer – Viktor began approaching his interactions with Hans with extra care and forethought.

            Here was Viktor’s dilemma: How could he establish a good relationship with Hans, while also strengthening his connection with Ulrich?  Good relations with Ulrich were absolutely key, if he was to fit in here over the long term.  (He began considering all of this right from the start, long before he even considered trying to court Ethel, but once he made up his mind to woo her, he knew that cultivating good terms with her father and brother could only help…)

Looking at all of this from the outside, it might seem that Viktor had sought – and was continuing to seek –  to actively manipulate both Hans and Ulrich, so that he could reach his goal of a long-term job at the Gassmann homestead.  Indeed, he was striving for this goal.  At least that had been his objective at the beginning.  And really, Is there anything wrong with that?  After all, for the first time in his life, Viktor had landed in a spot where he had good work amongst good people. He wasn’t about to let that slip away through inattention, or because he overlooked something in the relationships.  Thus, he felt he had to not only utilize his powers of observation and intuition, but hone them. 

When Viktor began falling in love with Ethel, though, the situation grew more complicated.   Yes, doing the best job he could do, both in the forest and the workshop, was still paramount for him. But Ethel gradually came to occupy an equally important place in his life. There was his work on the Gassmann homestead, and there was Ethel, and he felt he couldn’t do without either of them.  He pushed aside worrying thoughts that sometimes came into his head: that Ethel’s family might suspect him of courting her as a way of solidifying his work position. 

When this concern finally made its way fully into his head, Viktor, for the first time in his life, actually examined his motives with a critical eye.  He reflected on all of this one summer afternoon in the woods.  He was taking a break from cutting down a thick spruce. Ulrich had gone back to the workshop and left him to his task.  As he sat there, his back against another spruce, he realized how others might view his interest in Ethel.  This awareness was a gift of insight from the divinely-infused forest around him. And a question formed inside his heart: Do I really feel this way about her, or is this just a ploy? 

It was a moment of deep honesty for Viktor.  He felt a chill run through his body. Whether it flowed up into him from the spruce behind him, or whether the cold originated in his heart and was now streaming out and down into the forest floor beneath him, he couldn’t tell.  But as it flowed, he realized, for the first time ever, the extent to which he had spent his life jockeying for position, employing ploys: sensing what others wanted and giving it to them so that he could gain a measure of security for himself.  His had been a lifetime of doing things that he maybe didn’t even really want to do.  He could see this now.  It horrified him. What do I want? he asked himself. What do others want of me? Can I even tell the difference?

How terrifying it was for him to come face to face with these thoughts!  It was as if his entire life had been called into question.  And it wasn’t just the realization of how he had lived up until now that horrified Viktor. No. Now that he knew what he knew, he had to make a decision: How do I live from now on? How do I know what I really want? And then the next thought: Do I really have the right to move toward what I do want?

At this moment, Viktor was grateful for Ulrich’s absence, since it gave him time to ponder. But at the same time, part of him wished the other man would come back, so that he could put off trying to solve this dilemma he’d uncovered.  But Ulrich didn’t come back.   Viktor, leaning against the spruce, which seemed to be linking him to the divine power of the heavens, found himself also resting his palms against the forest floor, so that he could feel the earth and its power, too. Help me, Lord, he mouthed silently. He closed his eyes and allowed himself to notice the energies flowing into him from, as it seemed to him now, two directions. 

Gradually, his breathing slowed, and after a bit, he noticed that all his anxiety and fear had drained out and away from him. In their place, he now felt deep peace and calm.  Joy. And a strong feeling of love in his heart.  Love for the forest and the trees, for this place on earth where he now found himself. But the love he felt most strongly… that was his love for Ethel.  

This love was so profound in him that Viktor knew it was genuine. That it was his. That he really felt it, and could trust it. He knew then for certain, that his motivation for courting Ethel was pure.  He could move forward now without doubting himself.  He hoped this would be the start of a new way of approaching life: He would strive to feel in his own heart what it felt right to do, and then to do that.  To deal honestly with others, to take note and care of other’s wishes, but without manipulating them. No more ploys, he vowed as he sat there anchored firmly between heaven and earth.

But Viktor’s determination to be keenly aware of what both he and those around him were feeling, actually had an unintended consequence: It led him into what we could characterize as a double life. While working in the forest with Ulrich, he gave full rein to expressing his genuine love of the trees and his growing affection for his employer. But when Hans was around, Viktor dialed back the intensity of his enthusiasm, so as to not cause tension between father and son, or son and himself.  He also allowed his true inclinations to come out when he was speaking with Ethel, and even, though in a more subdued form, with her mother. 

The upshot of this was that, while Ulrich, Renate, and Ethel saw before them a jovial, open, and strong young man who was full of joy for the natural world and for those whom he held in affection, Hans – although he didn’t consciously think about this – felt that he was working with a man who had a habit of keeping everything inside.  Not that their whole family didn’t do this, but Hans was confused: He saw his family members treating Viktor with a kindness and affection he himself didn’t understand.  What is there in this man to be so fond of? The two of them hadn’t formed a close bond, despite working together for months now, not even a friendship, really, and Hans began to wonder whether he was missing something that all the others saw. Or whether he was seeing the real Viktor Bunke. 

As it turns out, all of them were seeing the real Viktor Bunke, just different sides of him.  And although Viktor did manage to avoid seeming overly fond of Ulrich and Renate and Ethel in Hans’ presence, this duplicity didn’t feel right to him in his heart.  He wondered whether the fact that he was – as he saw it – less himself when Hans was around, caused the others to doubt his sincere affection for them.  He didn’t see any signs of this in his interactions with Ulrich or Renate, and certainly not with Ethel, but it weighed on him.  He didn’t want to have to dampen the joy inside him around Hans, just because he felt it was crucial for relations between them to be good.  Viktor didn’t see the irony of this: that his careful attempts to avoid giving Hans cause to fear that he was trying to usurp the other man’s position in the family actually caused Hans to feel more and more of an outsider in his very own home.  

The engagement brought everything to a head for Hans.  Upon discovering, that November morning, that everyone but him already knew that Viktor had proposed to Ethel, and that she had accepted, Hans felt he had been suddenly and violently and permanently shoved outside his family circle.  Certainly, he knew how things were decided around here: His parents were the decision-makers, giving a thumbs up or thumbs down on any matter of importance, i.e., one that would affect the whole family.  Hans had long ago accepted that way of doing things. But upon seeing Ethel’s ring, he suddenly suspected that the whole system had been controverted. That was why he asked his parents whether they’d known about the engagement.  Later on, he wished he hadn’t posed the question, because it seemed to him too revealing of his true feelings: To Hans, this engagement represented the final step in Viktor’s gradual invasion of his family. First he won Ulrich over, then Renate, and now, Ethel. Now there’ll be no getting rid of him.

As we know, Viktor foresaw that Hans would feel left out if Ethel didn’t tell him of their engagement right away.  When he heard Hans’ question at the breakfast table, Viktor kicked himself for not discussing with Ethel about how to handle telling Hans.  What he felt was a combination of frustration with himself at mishandling the situation, and a genuine desire to be on good terms with his future brother-in-law. It was this feeling that led him to immediately express his willingness to talk with Hans.  It would have been better if they’d avoided this awkwardness in the first place.  But what’s done is done, Viktor told himself.  Now go make it right.

*          *          *

            After spending the morning in the forest with Ulrich, Viktor sought out Hans. He found him in the workshop, where he was planing a piece of wood for a table leg.  Viktor stood for a moment, just inside the door, watching Hans rhythmically lean forward and then straighten up, as he pushed the plane along the wood and then drew it back, brushing aside the thin, curling wisps of wood so he could see his path clearly for the next round.  Viktor knew Hans had caught sight of him out of the corner of his eye, but Viktor didn’t want to disturb him in the midst of this delicate work.  So, he sat down on a stool at the workbench at the far end of the room and waited until Hans leaned back and reached over to set the plane down on the workbench.

            “You could have told me, you know,” Hans said, speaking even before he turned toward Viktor. “No one in this family tells me anything.” He brushed some sawdust off his forearms and then turned to look at Viktor.  “Not that you’re family,” he added snidely, without giving Viktor a change to reply.  “Not yet.”

            Viktor stayed seated, surmising that if he stood up, Hans would perceive this as a challenge. Don’t take the bait. “No,” he said calmly. “I’ll never be family.” Good to tell him that.

            “But you want to be, right?” Hans asked in a clipped voice. “Isn’t that what you’ve been doing? Worming your way into everyone’s affections here? First my father’s, then my sister’s?”

            “Hans, I…” Viktor began, but Hans interrupted him.

            “It’s a nice setup here, isn’t it?  We’re all so nice, except for me, of course. I was on to you from the start.”

            Viktor could tell that there was no point in trying to rebut anything Hans was saying.  He was too upset to be able to take anything in right now. Besides, Viktor had the sense that if he took even a single step forward, Hans would immediately strike him.  And that would be hard to walk back. So, Viktor stayed seated and let Hans have his say.

            Now Hans walked right up to Viktor, who was still seated on the stool, his right knee bent and his foot on one of the stool’s rungs.  To Hans, he looked relaxed, cavalier, even.  Bastard! Hans thought. He doesn’t give a damn!

            “No one even thought to ask me,” Hans went on.  He was standing right in front of Viktor, and he slapped his palm against his own chest, emphasizing the words as he spoke.  “Me, who has taken care of Ethel since she was a little girl.  I was the one who made sure she was always okay, that she never got hurt.  Spent all those hours, days even, with her in the treehouse.” He paused and shook his head, then let out an exasperated laugh.  “And now,” he said, looking Viktor in the eye, “she thinks she can take care of herself.  So does my father, evidently.  Good God!” He looked away now and, hands on his hips, strode back to the workbench.  He placed his hands on the edge of the bench and leaned forward, head down, tapping one toe.  He stayed like that for a bit, then spun around and walked back to Viktor.  Raising one hand before Viktor’s face, as if he were about to hit him, he extended his index finger toward Viktor and said, in a low and angry voice, “If you do a single thing to hurt her, Bunke, you’ll have to answer to me. Do you understand?”

            Viktor, doing his best to maintain a calm demeanor, despite his inner desire to defend himself, both verbally and physically, simply nodded. 

            “I gather that you asked my father for her hand before you proposed?” Hans was a bit less agitated now.

            Viktor nodded again.

            “But you didn’t think to confide in me. Me, your future brother-in-law.” Hans gave his head a disgusted shake.

            What can I say to that? Viktor thought.  Better to say nothing than to start explaining myself. Is he hurt that I never brought the topic up, never let on that I was in love with Ethel?

            “To tell the truth, Hans,” Viktor said finally, “I wasn’t sure how you’d feel about it.  I know how protective you are of Ethel.”

            “Damn right!” Hans frowned, then scratched his arm where a bit of sawdust still clung.

            “Like I said this morning,” Viktor went on, “I would be, too, in your place.”

            “Do you have a sister?” Hans asked, challenging him. “Have you looked out for her?”

            “I had a sister,” Viktor told him. That was all he said.

            “Then you do know, maybe,” Hans replied, softening a bit.  “What it’s like.  All I want is for her to be happy.”

            “I love her, Hans,” Viktor said, his tone serious and sincere. “All I want is for her to be happy. And safe. Just like you do.  I’ll do all I can to make sure she is.  We all will,” he added. “I mean, you’re still her brother.  Always will be. That won’t change just because she’s getting married. Besides, we’ll still be living here.  You’ll be able to keep an eye on us.” He gauged whether a bit of a smile might be in order, and determined that it would.  But Hans seemed not to notice.

            “Well, actually, it will change,” he said.  “I won’t be able to keep an eye on her. Or you.” He’d pursed his lips and was looking over toward the workbench now, instead of at Viktor.

            “What do you mean?”

            “What I mean is, I’m not going to be around here much longer.” Now he turned to face Viktor again.

            “Not around much longer? How’s that?” Viktor was the one frowning now.

            Hans let out a big sigh and stood up straighter.  “I’m going to Illinois, to work with my uncle Ewald.”

            At this, Viktor let out a long whistle.  “For a while? Or forever?”

            “Seems like it’ll be forever.”

            “But why?” Viktor asked, although he didn’t much expect that Hans would give him an answer. 

            “What, now that we’re going to be brothers-in-law, you think suddenly I’m going to tell you all my secret thoughts and desires?” Hans smirked.

            “I’m just surprised, that’s all,” Viktor told him.  In fact, his mind had begun to race, full of questions about the business and how they’d carry on without Hans. “Does Ulrich know?” he asked.

            “You two are so close,” Hans said sarcastically, looking Viktor in the eye. “I’d think you’d already know the answer to that question.” With that, he turned and strode out the side entrance of the workshop, pulling the door closed behind him with just enough force that it banged, but not loudly enough that you could call it a slam.

            Viktor sat motionless on the stool for several minutes, as if rooted to the spot.  Here, he’d come out to make things right with Hans, but he seemed to have failed completely.  He hadn’t even gotten a clear idea of how Hans felt about him marrying Ethel, or even about him personally, for that matter. But he had learned that one bit of crucial information. Leaving for Illinois to join Ewald? That came as a total shock.

            Viktor wondered whether he’d missed any clues in the past month.  He’d been so caught up in everything to do with Ethel and proposing to her that he hadn’t paid much attention to Hans, aside from the projects they were working on together. Damn it.  Great job he’d done of cultivating a relationship with his future brother-in-law. 

            As he thought over their conversation now, Viktor wished Hans had never told him about his plans. Did Ulrich know? To be honest, Viktor had felt a sting at Hans’ remark about his closeness to Ulrich. Wouldn’t Ulrich have told him what Hans was planning, if he knew himself? Damn it. Now he was in a difficult spot. Do I mention it to Ulrich or not? It’s not my family.  Not yet, anyway.  Which means, it’s not my business.  But it’s not entirely not my business, either… I’m damned if I ask Ulrich about it, and damned if I don’t.  And now Viktor realized that Hans was pleased to have put his not-yet-brother-in-law in this difficult position by telling him a secret.   Holy hell.

*          *          *

They set the wedding for June 11th, the Sunday after Pentecost.  This would give enough them time to make arrangements for the church in Bockhorn, and for Renate and Ethel to sew the wedding dress and get the trousseau ready. On an early December day, Renate brought up the topic, so that she and Ethel could discuss what all they’d need to make.

            “Mama,” Ethel protested, “why bother with that?  It’s so old fashioned.  It isn’t as if I’m moving away, to his family’s home. Viktor will just be moving into the house. I’ll even be in the same room!”

            Renate shook her head.  “But Ethel, we need to do things the right way.”

            “Who are we trying to impress, Mama?” Ethel protested again.

            They were talking while making supper in the kitchen, and at this question from Ethel, Renate set the pot of stew she was about to warm up onto the stove, wiped her hands on a towel, and turned to her daughter.

            “It’s not about impressing anyone, Ethel.  It’s about starting you and Viktor off on your married life in a beautiful way.  You’re beginning a whole new stage of life, and everything about it should be very special and new.”

            Ethel nodded. “I hadn’t thought of it that way.  And it’s true – I am excited to make a quilt for us.”

            “See?” Renate said, smiling, and running her hand over her daughter’s blond hair.  “It’s not just a regular day, and we don’t want to treat it that way. We want to celebrate in every way possible.”

            “All right, then,” Ethel told her, acquiescing.

            “Heavens, child,” her mother remarked, turning back to the stove, “you must be the first girl in the history of the world not to care about a new nightgown for her wedding night.”

            Ethel laughed, but said nothing. Her mother was right: She really didn’t care about the nightgown or towels or sheets, or even the wedding dress, if you came right down to it.  She knew that Viktor loved her for the person she was, not for any trappings she might adorn herself with.  The two of them would be happy to live in the treehouse with a bed and blanket of leaves.  They didn’t really need anything other than each other.

*          *          *

That night in bed, Renate related her conversation with Ethel to Ulrich.

“Like mother, like daughter,” he told her, smiling as he thought back to their own engagement.

Renate objected. “What do you mean?  I wasn’t like that!”

Ulrich nodded.  “You certainly were. How can you have forgotten? Lorena was going on and on about what she and your mother were going to make for your trousseau, what embroidery patterns they’d use, where they’d get the silk for your dress – “

“I don’t recall any of this!” Renate objected again.  “You’re making it up. My dress was made of cotton.”

“And where they’d get the silk for your dress…” Ulrich went on.  “And you – “ he held up his hand playfully to silence Renate, who was about to protest once more.

“And you said that you wouldn’t have any of that talk, because none of it mattered.  It was too frivolous to spend time and money making fancy dresses everyone would wear only once, and embroidering sheets no one but you and me would see.”  Ulrich raised one eyebrow and waited for Renate’s response.

She pursed her lips, so as not to laugh, then raised her chin and replied haughtily, “It was frivolous.  And my dress was not made of silk!”

“I know.  I remember that very well, too. You told your mother you’d be just as happy to get married in a cotton flour sack.”

Here Renate couldn’t contain herself anymore, and a smile spread across her face.

“So yes,” Ulrich said, “your dress wasn’t silk, but it wasn’t a flour sack, either.”

“That’s right,” Renate relented, taking his hand in her two.  “Mama’s a good negotiator.  She realized I wouldn’t accept silk, so cotton was the compromise.”

Ulrich nodded. “Yes.  That’s exactly the way you originally told the story to me.  Funny that you didn’t remember that when Ethel started down the same road.”

Renate gave him a sly smile.  “I didn’t want to remember, silly.  I knew I was happy with the cotton dress.  Maybe I’d even have been happy with silk in the end. Who knows?”

“Cotton was perfect,” her husband replied, pulling her to him.  “Come to think of it now, though, the flour sack would have been even more perfect. You bake so much, you’re as good as covered with flour most days, anyway!”

The two of them, married now for a bit more than twenty years, laughed at this memory. Ethel, who heard their merry voices from her room above theirs, smiled, too, imagining how she and Viktor would be just as joyful and in love twenty years hence.

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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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Above the River, Chapter 20

Chapter 20

Fall, 1921

Gassmann homestead

            There was much to be happy about and thankful for on the Gassmann homestead as the fall progressed.  The family business was picking up: More and more orders for furniture were coming in, and since construction was up in the area, they were also able to easily sell all the wood they wanted to the saw mill in Varel.  For the first time in so many years, there was a sense that work was going in the right direction: They were able to support themselves (and pay Viktor his wages), and Ulrich even hired two workers from Bockhorn to help out in the forest, since Hans and Viktor were increasingly occupied with cabinet-making.

It was also a banner year for the vegetable garden and fruit trees and bushes. Renate and Ethel were flat out with canning and preserving now, as harvest season approached its end. For her part, Ethel was also working on several quilt commissions, thanks to the enthusiastic reviews of her handiwork that Mrs. Kropp and Hannah had given to relatives and friends. Ethel thus found herself in the kitchen with her mother by day, surrounded by canning jars and crocks and vegetables and fruits waiting to be put up, while her evenings were spent in her joyful creative pursuits.  She was looking forward to the onset of fall: The jars and crocks would be lined up in the root cellar, and she would be free to sew and quilt during the day, too.  She would also have more time to herself, which meant more time to spend with Viktor.  She was looking forward to that at least as much as to the quilting. Perhaps more, even. 

Their courtship was proceeding quietly, without fanfare.  Or, at least that was how it might have looked from the outside.  A casual observer who passed by the homestead or an acquaintance who stepped into the yard might see Viktor and Ethel in quiet conversation. Fairies in the forest might glimpse them sitting together in the woods beneath cover of a decades-old lean-to. Quiet laughter might be heard, but no more.  And although Ethel often popped into the workshop to check on Viktor’s progress with a chest of drawers or kitchen table, none of their gestures or words indicated more than simply a cordial, friendly relationship.  That was the way the two of them wanted it, especially for Hans’ benefit.   But despite the lack of any outward show of affection or words that would betray a growing depth of feeling and attachment, the connection was, nonetheless, there, and the young couple themselves felt it growing deeper and deeper. 

This strengthening of their bond was clearly visible to Renate, though, and she was, on the whole, pleased by it. After all, her gauge of whether any given development was good or not was how much harmony it produced in the family. For now, life in the home was as harmonious as she had ever experienced since her marriage to Ulrich. There was a combination of hard work that produced good results and good prospects for the future; a stability in the supply of foods and other goods they needed to live; and a state of peace and joyfulness between everyone in the household.  Touched by the sweetness that new love contributed to the atmosphere on the homestead, Renate told Ulrich that she was glad she’d given Ethel the go-ahead to think about Viktor, to allow him to court her, if he wanted to. 

Ulrich, who hadn’t been informed previously of his wife’s initial discussion with Ethel, saw no reason to question Renate’s judgment.  When had he ever done so? Why start now? Besides, he himself was growing fonder of Viktor, seeing in him a hard-working man with just enough creative vision to help the business, without derailing it with frivolities.  There was also the sensitivity Viktor showed to the forest, his clear love for the trees, and for communicating with them.  Ulrich was grateful for this younger man, whom he felt might be a good match for his daughter, in both his dedication to his work and his blossoming spiritual awareness.  Unlike Renate, Ulrich didn’t really realize anything was growing between Viktor and Ethel until she pointed it out to him.  But like his wife, he did recognize how Viktor had changed. He’d been observing with interest the young man’s transformation since the two of them had begun spending more time working together in the forest.

Hans, on the other hand, hadn’t yet caught onto either of these developments.  What had captured his attention, and was holding it fast, was the swift growth of the business.  Seeing the positive effects of Viktor’s methods – that’s what he called Viktor’s approach to working with clients: his methods – he discarded his initial skepticism and suspicion of the newcomer in favor of outright enthusiasm, and even respect.

Hans’ new view of Viktor was revealed quite powerfully toward the beginning of November, when Uncle Ewald, Renate’s older brother, came from America – “all the way from America!” “From the state of Illinois!” – to spend a month with the extended family. 

Hans was only three years old when Ewald emigrated to Illinois, and so had almost no memory of his uncle. But he could see that Renate and Ulrich were – in their own, understated ways – growing more and more excited as Ewald’s arrival drew closer and closer, and this piqued his interest, too. Both Hans and Ethel – who had been born a few months after Ewald’s emigration and thus, had no memories of him whatsoever – noticed a combination of anticipation and impatience in their parents in the week leading up to arrival day. Ethel also sensed an anxiety in both of them that surprised her. In the course of the eighteen years she’d lived so far, she hadn’t yet had to endure the pain of such a separation from a beloved person. Thus, she didn’t have the personal experience with the doubts, offenses, resentments, disappointments, hopes, and fears that might have enabled her to interpret this fleeting expression on her mother’s face, or that moment of seemingly anxious silence in her father’s presence. But, although she lacked insight into her parents’ feelings, she was nonetheless fully aware of them, since they represented shifts in the homestead atmosphere.  As a result, she, like the rest of the extended family, felt a strong sense of anticipation in the days leading up to what everyone saw as Ewald’s homecoming.

He spent the month staying with Renate’s sister, Lorena and her family, and their parents, on the farm where he’d grown up. Indeed, part of the reason he decided to make this long trip by boat was to see his parents, perhaps for the last time.  Both Ingo and Veronika were very elderly now, and although of hardy farmer stock, both were failing. Ingo was nearly deaf, and Veronika was so crippled with rheumatism that Lorena had almost entirely taken over the running of the household, with her daughter Esther’s help. Lorena’s husband Stefan ran the farm with several hired hands. (Life was good for the Walters now, too.)

Since it was only a short walking distance between the Gassmanns’ homestead and the Walters’ farm, various members of both families trooped back and forth each day – sometimes even more than once a day! – so they could spend as much time as possible with this beloved son, brother, and uncle.  And brother-in-law. Ulrich, who had been so saddened by Ewald’s emigration seventeen years earlier, was perhaps the most moved of all of them to lay eyes once again on this man who had headed off across the sea so long ago.  Thirty-nine years old now – to Ulrich’s forty – Ewald reminded Ulrich so much of the way his father-in-law had looked back then, as if both elderly Ingo and young Ingo were somehow standing side by side. 

At that first meeting, on the day of Ewald’s arrival, Ulrich sought in his friend’s face traces of the young man he’d once been so close to. He asked himself: How? How did I not write to him these past seventeen years? How did I not write about what was really important?  It suddenly seemed inexplicable to him: the combination of sadness and the feeling of loss, and of betrayal, even, that crept into his heart when Ewald first announced his plan to leave. He realized now, that this pain had remained there ever since, lying atop the layers of those same feelings which were laid down during his childhood, and which bore fruit as the melancholy that he couldn’t name, but felt nonetheless.  How will Ewald greet me? Ulrich wondered as he walked to the Walters’ that first afternoon with Renate and Hans and Ethel. He was feeling nervous, wondering what lay within Ewald’s heart. Was he angry back then, too? Is he still? These questions flooded Ulrich’s brain more and more powerfully as the Walters’ farmstead came into view.

But now, in 1921, when the two men met anew, the time that had passed since 1904 – and all the myriad, conflicting thoughts and emotions –  seemed not to exist.   Ulrich and Ewald clasped each other in a strong, tender, and long embrace, each man’s cheeks wet with tears long kept inside. Their hearts overflowed with the love they both still held dear, despite the years and the distance and the as yet unresolved tensions.

The first time Ewald joined them all for dinner at the Gassmann homestead, he immediately and naturally took a seated next to Ethel (which, it turned out, had always been his spot) and opposite Viktor. Renate sat on his left, at one end of the table. This was the first look Viktor got at Ethel’s uncle: He, perhaps naturally, hadn’t been invited to the big welcome dinner at the Walters’.  Here was a very strong man, Viktor saw right away. He also noticed a lightness and confidence that set him apart from Ulrich and Hans, and from Renate.  He wondered whether this was part of Ethel’s family inheritance. Did she come by her ethereal nature thanks to the same hereditary qualities that seemed to inhabit her uncle? Of course, Viktor noted, Ewald’s ethereality was expressed not in his body, which was strong and solid, but in the very air with which he moved through space. Ethel’s, by contrast, manifested not just in her ringing voice and light hair and energy, but also in her seemingly weightless body.  

How much of Ewald’s relaxed and self-assured air, Viktor wondered, could be attributed to the fact that he’d lived so long in America and – more to the point, as far as Viktor’s current reflections were concerned – that he hadn’t lived through the war in Germany?  Sure, Viktor was willing to grant, America went through the war, too.  But not the same way we we did here. Glancing at each person sitting around the table, he saw inscribed on each of the Gassmanns’ faces the imprint of the wartime cares and trials. Least of all on Ethel’s, it seemed to him, but still, it was there, too.  But not on Ewald’s.  His face radiated health and joy and strength. It seemed to Viktor that part of the reason for this must be the life he’d been living since he’d crossed the ocean to start a new life abroad.

Viktor’s suppositions were borne out when Ewald began telling about his life in the small town of Durand, in the large Midwestern state of Illinois, in the inconceivably – in Ewald’s view – sprawling country of America.

“I don’t know how to give you the idea of how large it is,” he told them as they all sat at dinner. The table was barely visible beneath the plates and platters and bowls full of the foods Renate knew her brother loved. 

“When the ship arrived in New York, a relative of Mr. Becker – he was my sponsor from the Methodist church there – met me, took me home with him, and then got me on a train to Chicago.  How long do you figure it took me to get to Chicago on that train from New York?” Ewald asked, looking to each of them in turn, already delighted in anticipation of what were sure to be their wildly inaccurate guesses.

Hans sat there, his brows coming together as he evidently strived to work out in his mind how long the train took from Oldenburg up to the coast, and how many times he’d have to multiply that number… He was good at calculations, but this was stumping him.  While he was still working out this math problem in his head, Ethel blithely called out her answer:

“Eighteen hours!” She, too, looked at each other person around the table, her bubbly mood evident in her light tone and the laugh that followed her answer.

Ewald shook his head and looked at Ulrich.  “Well, my friend? Your guess?”

Ulrich took in a deep breath, let it out with a sigh, and leaned back in his chair before answering, “A year and a day.” 

“Close!” Ewald laughed, and Ulrich’s mouth showed a good-natured grin. It’s good to be laughing together again.

“Sis?”

“I’m not playing your game here, big brother,” Renate told him, shaking her head affectionately.  “I know you too well.  You love nothing better than when you know something we all don’t!”

“Anyone else?” Ewald asked.  Viktor put up his hands in a gesture of surrender, not sure whether he had even been included in the invitation to guess.

“Going once….” Ewald began.  “Going twice…”

“Three days, six hours!” Hans shouted out at the last moment, hurrying to raise his hand, like a bidder at an auction.

Ewald wagged his finger at Hans.  “You always were good at measuring,” he told his nephew, “even at three.”

“Did he guess it?” Ethel piped up.  “Tell us!  How long?”

“Two days, nine hours,” he announced. “To Chicago.  And then another two – hours, that is – to Rockford.  That’s where Mr. Becker picked me up.  But if you count the time waiting at Union Station in Chicago – now that’s  a train station! – for the connection, add on three hours…”

“For a total of two days, fourteen hours!” Hans announced.  “I win!” He jumped up from his chair, fists raised in triumph.  

Renate observed this exchange with satisfaction. She was heartened by seeing Ewald and Ulrich in the same room once more, and by the generally lighthearted atmosphere.  Life had been so demanding and draining for so long that she almost thought they’d all forgotten how to laugh and relax and simply enjoy each other’s company. Even Ulrich, she thought, although she could tell there were words yet to be said between him and Ewald.  But that time will come, she knew.  Soon.

As the many dishes were passed once, and then again, and again, everyone was eager to hear about Ewald’s new life. 

“What’s Illinois like? Durand?” Ethel asked.

Ewald paused, knife at the ready to slice the piece of roast pork that his fork had already pierced, so as to think how best to describe the town where he lived.

“It’s a small town, smaller than Bockhorn, certainly,” he began.  “A town square, a ‘downtown’ they call it, with a little park in the middle, between the two sides of the main street – that’s where most of the shops are.”

“Is that where your shop is?” Hans inquired.

Ewald shook his head as he chewed a bit of meat. “No. We’re off on one of the side streets.” He stretched his hand out, in front of Ethel’s face, in fact, as if to show which direction they should walk to find it. “But the town isn’t big, like I said. Doesn’t take long to walk from one end of it to the other.”

“What’s the land like?” This from Ulrich.

“Rolling in some places, flat in others.  Flatter than here.  You can see so far. That’s when you begin to be able to see how large the country is. Goes on forever.  Farms. Corn fields. Cows and pigs.”  He shook his head from side to side, as if still amazed by this.

“And what about the forests?” Ethel asked. 

“Not so many forests there, I’m afraid,” Ewald told her.

She put down her fork. “What do you mean?  I thought you went there to be a woodworker. Didn’t you?”

Ewald nodded. “Yes, yes, I did. And I am.  But not a forester.  No one does that there.”

This bit of information was met with disbelief.  How can that be? they all seemed to ask at once. They looked back and forth to each other.

“I know,” Ewald told them. “Took me a while to get used to that, too.  Here I get to Durand, to work with Mr. Becker, and all the way we’re riding there in the wagon, I’m looking around. Fields, farm houses, cows, and grain silos – these tall round buildings they store the grain in.  But hardly any trees. Trees by the farmhouses, trees along the edges of the fields. Maybe a small stand of oaks or maples here and there. Finally, we get to Durand, and I say, Mr. Becker, Sir, where are all the forests?  And he laughs and says to me, Son, this is farming country.  Trees block the light!”

Ulrich was frowning by now. The rest of them were just staring, until Hans finally spoke up.

“But then where does the wood come from for your carpentry work?”

Ewald shrugged.  “Up north. Minnesota, Canada. Still forests galore up there.”

“So,” Viktor said, speaking up for the first time, “looks like Germany has something on America after all – our forests!”

They all laughed, but then also felt a certain awkwardness. Everyone felt certain that Viktor wasn’t intending to bring politics or the recent war into the conversation.  But his comment reminded them all that Ewald, although German by birth, was now an American citizen.  What had that meant: being a German and an American, too, in America during the war?  This was not a conversation anyone wanted to begin, at least not now, and Viktor was quick to try to shift the tone.

“I mean, we do have the best forests, right? That’s just a fact.”

“Yes, sir!” Ewald confirmed, his convivial tone and smile showing that he had taken no offense, and was even grateful to Viktor for understanding what he’d been thinking.  “I may be a citizen of America now, but I am still a German in my heart, and it does my German heart good to see our woods again. And you’re right, Mr. Bunke, even the Americans admit that our forests can’t be matched. I’ve missed them,” he added, sighing. “I really have. The landscape just looks barren without them.  Funny, isn’t it?  All those fields there growing food for the whole country, and all I want to do is walk in the woods!”

“Well, we’ll do that, too, that’s for sure!” Ulrich told his old friend. He felt relieved that the rough patch had been smoothed over, and glad for the chance he knew a walk in the woods would give them to talk.

“Enough about wood and forests, now,” Renate announced, pointing a serving spoon from the bowl of potato salad at her brother.  “What can you tell us about American women?  Specifically, about your American woman.  And those half-American children you’ve managed to produce.”

Ethel turned to face her uncle, tipped her head to the right, and pursed her lips slightly, while taking one braid in her hand and bobbing it up and down. “Now, you’d better tell me those American girls can’t hold a candle to us German girls!”

Ewald laughed and then looked from Ulrich to Renate, but neither showed any inclination to help him out of this pickle.

“You’re on your own,” Ulrich told him. 

“Well?” Renate nudged.

“Now, you’re putting me in a difficult spot,” Ewald began.  “I want to ‘plead the fifth’, as we – they – say in America. That means you don’t have to say anything that’ll incriminate yourself.  But, as we say, damned if you do, damned if you don’t.  Between a rock and a hard place.”

“Enough stalling!” Ethel teased him. “What’s your answer?”

“Can’t a man eat a homecoming dinner in peace?”

Hans shook his head. “Nope.  This is crucial information about American culture.” He turned to Viktor and winked.  At this, Ethel looked at Viktor and raised one eyebrow. Viktor wisely maintained a poker face.

“All right, all right,” Ewald replied.  “Well, if push comes to shove, I’d have to say that my Elise is the most wonderful girl in any country.”
            Ethel feigned offense, frowning and planting her hands on her hips.

“Sorry, my dear Ethel,” Ewald told her.  “I should have said, the most wonderful girl for me in any country.  And I’m sure there’s a man right here in Germany who will say the very same about you someday.”

Ethel blushed, and it was all she could do to keep from turning her eyes to Viktor. Instead, she just said, “Well, all right, Uncle Ewald, I’ll let you off the hook.”

Having once more avoided discord, Ewald went on to tell about his family.  Funny to think, Renate mused, as she listened to her brother, that he has a family of his own now.  But then again, I have my own, too. Nothing so strange about it. As natural as could be. That’s what she told herself, but deep inside she detected a sadness that her brother had built an entire life for himself on the other side of the world, a wife and two sons and a daughter she might never meet. How can such a state of affairs be natural? Renate didn’t voice these thoughts, not wanting to dampen the high spirits of the occasion.  At the same time, she recognized that Ulrich was feeling something similar: a regret that he had not been alongside his best friend as he built this new life, that he had missed standing up with him at his wedding, or being godfather to his children.

Hans and Ethel, though, Renate noted, were genuinely taken with Ewald’s tales of life in America. Especially Hans. He told Ewald that wanted to know more about the social life of Durand, by which he really meant that he wanted to know more about the girls there.

“What, not enough eligible young women here, in Bockhorn, or in Varel?” Ewald asked.

“Do you see anyone here with me?” Hans replied, spreading his hands open and turning to gesture at those at the table.  “No such luck. Haven’t found anyone to suit me.”

“Another condemnation of German maidens!” Ethel announced with a ringing laugh.

“Well, my Elise is a German maiden,” Ewald objected.  “By blood, anyway.  She was born there, in Illinois, just in another town, but not far off.  Lots of German families settled there, for some reason, in Freeport, in Lena. Durand, too.  Lucky for me, they raised their children to speak German. Otherwise, I wouldn’t have had anyone to talk to when I got there!”

“And your children?” Renate asked him.  “Do they speak German, too?”

Ewald nodded.  “We speak German at home.  Or, German with a bit of English thrown in. That started once the kids went to school.  Elise knew English, of course, since she went through school there. But she speaks perfect German.  Cooks perfect German, too!” he added with a laugh. “But don’t get on your high horse, Renate.  German food still tastes more like home here than it does there.  Same ingredients, but they taste different there, somehow.”

Renate, pleased at her brother’s praise, immediately began spooning more potatoes onto his plate from the serving bowl.  He didn’t object.

“Tell us about our cousins,” Ethel asked.  “But eat, too!  I’m sure we can come up with something else to talk about and give you a break for a few minutes.”

“Yes, let me eat!  Ulrich, Hans, tell me about the business, how it’s going.”

“We had some tough years,” Ulrich began, “during the war.  You know. Or can imagine. All I can say is, thank the Lord above for our forest.  It’s the game and the mushrooms and berries that saved us when rations were scarce, or when there weren’t any at all.  Naturally, there was no carpentry work for us then.  Folks wanted wood from us, but without any money to pay for it.”

“Sometimes folks bartered with us for wood, or for meat, for eggs,” Renate explained.  “And sometimes we just gave it to them,” she added. “What did we need with their heirloom plates or lace or jewelry?” She shook her head. “Could I really sit here now, eating off someone else’s plates, our serving bowls on top of some other woman’s doilies, knowing I’d taken their possessions for the rabbits that happened to breed on our land by happy circumstance?”

“Plenty of people did,” Ethel said quietly. “Barter that way, I mean.”

Ulrich nodded.  “True.  But your mother and I, we didn’t want to do that.  Between Ingo and Veronika’s farm and our woods and garden, we were better off than most.  We shared when it felt like we could.”

“But we also kept an eye on the forest,” Hans reminded him.  “I patrolled.  You patrolled, Papa.” He turned to Ewald.  “Firewood was scarce or, as Papa said, people couldn’t pay for it. So they came in at the edges of the forest and wanted to cut their own on our land.  We couldn’t let that happen.”

“We did do our best to hold the line on that,” Ulrich agreed. But those times of need and despair, and those moments when they had to confront trespassers in the woods weighed heavily on his heart.  Hans, though, was a teenager at the time, and his devotion to protecting the family assets was more pronounced than his consideration for their neighbors’ plight.  Still today, he saw little reason to apologize for safeguarding what was precious and life-preserving from those who sought to take it without right or permission.

“We were blessed,” Ethel remarked. The lightness in her eyes and smile took on a different quality now, as tears began flowing.  “God protected us.  We always had enough, and we had enough to help others, too.  I know that most people wouldn’t say that – that we were blessed.  And Hans,” she said, glancing over at her brother, “please forgive me for saying it, because I know you didn’t feel blessed when you were injured and sent home from training…“ She raised her hand to show that he needn’t say anything in response.  “But you know, during that time, during the whole war, I never felt in danger, not really.  We were always hearing news – from Aunt Lorena and Uncle Stefan, and Grandma and Grandpa, from the folks who came by. It was always bad news, and they poured out their hearts and their sorrows.  But I always felt in my heart that we would all survive. And we did.  By the grace of God.”

“By the grace of God,” Renate repeated softly. The others bowed their heads briefly in prayer, too.

“Let us give thanks for God’s bounty that He provides for us still,” Ulrich said.

He held out a hand to each of his children beside them who, in turn, reached to clasp the hand of the person sitting next to them, until they were all holding hands around the table, each silently expressing gratitude to God that they had come through the war. Except for Viktor, who had become acquainted with God only in recent months, in the forest that helped the Gassmanns survive the war.  It wasn’t that Viktor wasn’t giving thanks.  He was. It was just that, at this moment, he wasn’t focused on having lived through the war – he managed that, he reckoned, more by the skin of his teeth and the sharpness of his wits, than thanks to any divine help.

Precisely because Viktor hadn’t opened up communication with God before arriving at this heavenly spot, he concluded, during all those tough years of growing up and making his way, that God wasn’t working on his behalf.  It was only once he landed in this divine spot and got acquainted with God, that he came to believe – totally, one hundred percent! – that God was protecting and helping him.  He knew this had to be the case. Otherwise, how would I have found Ethel?  He had watched her and listened in amazed silence as she said what she’d just said. He took in the shining light in her eyes – the light of God, he felt –and the depth of faith and love that her whole being expressed to a degree he had not seen before this. Certainly, both the faith and the love also found expression in her quilts and her cheese and her bread, but now it was simply radiating from her, Viktor saw.  It was for this that he was offering thanks to God.  For Ethel.  For the gift of her in his life.  Glancing around at everyone else at the table, he could tell that each and every one of them felt the same away about her.

“Yes, things have come back since then,” Ulrich began, slowly and softly, as if reflecting on the war years and the nearly three years that had passed since the war ended.  “People are rebuilding, and even though so many are still out of work, enough are working that there is work for us, too.”

Ewald had taken a look in the workshop with Ulrich earlier in the afternoon, and he’d been pleased to see several projects in progress and hear that the orders were coming in steadily.

“Enough work for a new helper, too, I see!” Ewald said, gesturing at Viktor, who nodded.

“He’s a clever one,” Hans said, even clapping Viktor on the shoulder.  “Always seems to know what’ll bring a client in, what they’ll like.  And then we make it. We’re on more solid ground every day, thanks to him.” 

  “I’m glad to be able to help out,” Viktor said plainly. Then he added, “and grateful for the work.  It’s been a scarce commodity, as you’ve heard.”

Viktor felt pleased at Hans’ praise, but cautious, too, since he was well aware that Hans didn’t feel at all welcoming to him early on. He knew he was treading a narrow path here: He was a valued employee, and Hans was even presenting him as key to the business.  But Viktor was also developing a new role here – not just in business dealings, but in the family, with his courtship of Ethel. And he knew that he had to proceed with utmost care as he moved forward, so that Hans wouldn’t feel threatened by his success with the clients, or by what he hoped and prayed would be success with Ethel. 

“We’re grateful to have you,” Ulrich said. Then he inquired of Ewald, “So you have plenty of work there, too, in Illinois?”

Ewald nodded.  “We fared better there than you did here…” He paused.  “It pains me to say that, though. It was really hard being there while you all were here, and knowing I couldn’t do anything.” Ewald knew how much his family had gone through here during the war years, and he felt guilty, somehow, for having always had enough food at home – home in Illinois – and for never having to worry that his daughters or wife would be in physical danger.  And yet, it didn’t seem right to pretend that all had been smooth sailing. “I had to keep my own head down, actually.”

“Germans not so popular in America then?” Ulrich asked, without any trace of a smile.

Ewald nodded.  “Some folks we know – other German immigrants – they forbade their kids from speaking any German, and spoke only English themselves at home.  We didn’t.  We reckoned, everyone we worked for or with already knew who we were, knew us well. If they didn’t want to work with us, they wouldn’t.”

“Your Mr. Becker,” Ulrich asked, “he’s a German, too, if memory doesn’t fail me?”

“That’s right.  But his family came over late in the last century, and they married Americans, some of them.  He and his brothers and sisters, they all learned English first, along with German. Actually, his German’s kind of old-fashioned, stilted. His schooling was in English, and he picked up what German he did at home and from relatives.  So, Germans like him, they had an easier time of it.  Since his shop has had a good reputation for years, and since he vouched for me and Ralf – we’re the only two German Germans working there – he didn’t lose any business.”

“But what about you and Ralf, and your and Elise’s family?” Ethel asked, laying her hand on her uncle’s wrist.  “Did you run into any trouble because of the war?”

Ewald shook his head.  “The benefit of living in small towns where everybody knows each other, I guess.  I mean, I can’t say what people thought in their heads, or what they said in their own kitchens. But what I can say is that we really encountered mostly kindness from everyone.”

“Mostly?” Renate asked.

“There’s always this and that,” Ewald replied with a shrug. But the look he gave her, and which she immediately understood, told her it was better not to get into this topic more than they already had.  She got it: This is a happy occasion.  Let’s count our blessings

Ethel, who also intuited her uncle’s wish for a shift in topic, asked him to tell them everything about her cousins, and he happily obliged.  Pulling out two cardstock black-and-white photographs from the satchel he’d hung on the back of his chair, he proudly displayed them, introducing his children to their cousins, aunt, and uncle.

“This is Marie, our oldest,” he began, pointing to the tallest of the three children.  Thirteen years old, she had blonde braids, like Ethel, and she was healthy and strong looking.  She wore a gingham dress and dark stockings and black, lace-up shoes. 

“She looks like you, Mama, don’t you think?” Ethel asked Renate.

Peering at the photo, Renate nodded.  “More like you when you were that age, I’d say.”

“And this is John.  He’s in the middle, twelve now.”

“And already tall like his dad,” Ulrich noted with a smile.  He liked the look of the young man in the plaid shirt and the dark pants that hung on him.  “Got some filling out to do, hasn’t he?”

“Yep, a bean pole!” Ewald laughed, too.  “He’ll tower over me before long, I think.”

“Interested in carpentry?” Hans asked.

“Afraid not,” Ewald told them.  “For some reason, he’s gotten into the dairy business, helping on one of the farms with the milking.  Who knows why?  Can’t stand the animals myself.  My God, the smell that comes off those cow fields when you ride by!”

“And who’s this one?” Hans asked, pointing to the third child, a dark-haired girl, with braids that matched her sister’s, and a similar dress, too.

“Little Erika.  She’s just about to turn ten.”

Ethel held the photo up close to her face to study it, while the others complained that they couldn’t get a good look at the girl.

“Who’s she look like?” Ethel asked. “What do you think?” She passed the photo around, but no one had a clue.

“She might have your mouth, Ewald,” Renate ventured, “and your hair, except hers is dark, but other than that, I don’t see any of you there.”

“Yep,” Ewald confirmed with a nod. “She’s practically all Elise.”  And, so that the group could draw their own conclusions, he took out a second photo, one of him and Elise together, and laid it on the table next to the photo of the children.

“Oh, yes!” Renate exclaimed.  “Erika’s the spitting image of your wife!” She noted her own delight and marveled at it, somehow both surprised and pleased that she was experiencing genuine happiness at Ewald’s family, pleased that joy had replaced her earlier disappointment at having missed out on being near Ewald over the past seventeen years.

“You weren’t lying,” Hans told him, eyebrows raised. “A real beauty!  If she’s what your Midwest has to offer, sign me up!”

Everyone laughed and expressed their agreement with Hans’ assessment. But Ulrich’s smile faded before the others’, and Renate noticed some slight anxiety in her husband.

Ewald, though, pleased that his wife and children seemed to have won his family’s approval, was in an expansive mood. 

“Plenty of good girls to marry,” he said, tipping his head to the side as he looked back at Hans. “And plenty of work for good cabinet makers.”  Here, he, too, must have sensed that Ulrich was becoming tense, and he tried to turn it all into a joke.  “For all of you,” he said, taking in Ulrich, Hans, and even Viktor in an encompassing gesture. “We can move your whole operation to Illinois!”

“That won’t do at all!” Ethel objected lightheartedly. “I’d miss our forest too much, seeing as how they’re in short supply there in your Illinois.  Unless we can take it with us, that is. Can we?”

“Guess not,” Ewald told her.  “Guess not.”

“Then count me out,” Ethel told him firmly. “I’ll stay a German girl in Germany.  Especially since you have plenty of German girls there!”

And so, the discussion of the life in the great American Midwest ended for now, and although it seemed to have finished up on a light note, Ulrich felt a rising anxiety in his guts. Renate noticed it. So did Viktor, who had, over the past few months, grown more attuned to his employer’s moods.  But Hans noticed none of this. A seed had been planted.

*          *          *

            The very next day, Ulrich got the chance for the private conversation with Ewald that he’d been wishing for ever since he learned his old friend would be coming to visit.  It was Saturday afternoon, and Ewald walked over from the Walters’ farm, also eager for some time alone with Ulrich.  When Ulrich saw him walk into the workshop, he immediately set down the piece of wood he was holding and put his hand out.  Ewald took it, drew Ulrich in, and gave him a hearty hug.  Without even talking it over, the two men headed out into the forest. They eventually came to sit on a fallen spruce trunk that was waiting to be attended to before the snow set in.

            They sat silently at first, both men taking in the sounds and smells of the forest. This helped calm Ulrich, and soothe his mind, so that he’d be able to speak clearly with Ewald. But Ewald was overcome with nostalgia: Once again, after seventeen years, he was sitting deep in the forest, and not just any forest, but one in which each and every sound and sight and scent came together to form a whole that to him represented that very specific German forest of his youth.  He was so moved by the unexpected feeling of being home, that he felt tears rising.  Ulrich knew Ewald – at least the Ewald of their shared youth – well enough to let him sit, quietly, until he felt ready to speak.  This approach also had the benefit of giving Ulrich time to decide what he wanted to say to Ewald.

            After a bit, Ewald sat up straight and let out a long sigh.  “It’s been a long seventeen years, Ulrich,” he said finally.  “Don’t get me wrong.  A good seventeen years, very good.”

            “You have a beautiful family,” Ulrich said, nodding. “Mostly, I think that’s the most important thing – family.”

            Ewald grasped two meanings to Ulrich’s words, even if his brother-in-law didn’t consciously mean them that way. “It’s not easy having your family split on two sides of the ocean,” Ewald went on, “even if the family you’re with is the most loving one there could be.”

            Ulrich nodded.  “Renate’s missed you.  I’ve missed you.  You parents have, too.  And Lorena.”

            What am I supposed to say to that? wondered Ewald.  He could feel Ulrich’s melancholy, and his own annoyance.  Why can’t he just be happy that I’m back for a while?  Why replay all of that again? Or if he has to, why not just shout at me and be done with it?

            “All of that” was the scene – that’s how Ewald thought of it, and had done, for all these long years – the scene Ulrich made just before Ewald set off, back in ’04.  In a rare – or, rather, singular, unique – display of strong emotion, Ulrich came to him in his bedroom, where he stood, in the middle of packing his trunk for the ship, and begged him to stay.  It’s not fair to your parents to leave, he said.  Not fair to Renate.  And not fair to me, to our work.  How will we get by without you?

            That was the only time Ulrich ever played on his brother-in-law’s emotions – or anyone’s, as far as Ewald was aware of.  It wasn’t something he did. Ewald always knew that Ulrich felt things deeply.  Even before his emigration, he’d long been aware of his friend’s tendency to melancholy.  But never had he seen Ulrich try to change someone’s mind about a decision using what, these days, we’d call emotional manipulation.  And, unwilling to be influenced by this tactic that his own mother had employed, ultimately unsuccessfully, Ewald said something to Ulrich which he had regretted for the past seventeen years:

            “Just because you’re going to have a harder time in the workshop, doesn’t mean I can’t go live and work where I see fit.”  That was it.  And it worked, if by “worked”, we mean that these words shut Ulrich up.  What could his friend say to that? Stay for the sake of those who love you. Sacrifice your plans and your dreams for us.  No.  It had cost Ulrich a great deal of pride and strength to make the request in the first place, and after Ewald’s response, he had no strength left to mount a second campaign. 

            “Look,” Ewald said, softening a bit when he saw Ulrich’s face fall, saw him drop his eyes to the floor, “I’m going to miss you all, too.  But – it’s America, Ulrich!  There’s no limit to what we can do there.  It could be good for all of us!”

            Ulrich frowned. Then he found his voice again – not to try to sway his brother-in-law, but just to set out what was in his heart. “Good for all of us, Ewald?  I don’t see how.  How is you leaving hearth and home going to be good for us when we’re here and you’re there?”

            But Ewald’s reasoning convinced him that his decision was fully validated by all Ralf had told him about Illinois and Mr. Becker and the booming carpentry business there. Why wouldn’t it benefit us all if I get set up with good work, even if it’s far across the ocean?  Ewald didn’t consider that this might be just the thought he clung to in order to justify indulging his wanderlust, as well as a certain conviction that dogged him: that the last place he wanted to be trapped for the rest of his life was on a farm in the German countryside, where he’d end up marrying some girl he’d known since he was three, a girl from a neighboring farm (and he knew full well that his mother had such a girl in mind) and raising a family of his own within no more than half a mile from where he grew up.  Yes, he certainly would miss Ulrich – Ulrich was the only one he would probably truly miss – but Ulrich was not reason enough to stay. 

This is exactly what Ewald’s original response conveyed to his brother-in-law, and it stung Ulrich: the realization that, when push came to shove, this friendship between them was just not strong enough.  But, Ulrich did not ask himself, Strong enough to what? To survive being apart? To keep Ewald here? What was it that Ulrich was really worrying about here? What did he want from Ewald, exactly?  He wasn’t able to formulate an answer for himself.  All he could do was fall back on the same thought that came to him, over and over, during his childhood, when fate dealt him this or that blow: This is not fair! That’s what it came down to for Ulrich, even if he couldn’t articulate it: It wasn’t fair that his mother left and died, that Aunt Claudia poisoned his childhood, that his father grew distant, that Erich grew distant… A whole string of It’s not fair! experiences.

In 1904, at age twenty-four, Ulrich still, remembered each of these unfair moments, but with a child’s brain and heart.  At this moment, when his closest friend was about to leave him, Ulrich felt every bit as powerless as during all those other unfair moments.  So, he couldn’t have said what he wanted from Ewald.  He had no sense of himself as someone who could take action to remedy a situation so large and painful.  All he felt capable of doing – and this was a monumental achievement in and of itself! – was to state his view of the situation.  Then, he hoped, although without consciously realizing it, Ewald himself might make a decision that would turn it all around.  That was what Ulrich was hoping for, deep inside, when he made “the scene”. But Ewald didn’t play along.  He simply and bluntly stated that his friendship with Ulrich was not enough to hold him there.  He doesn’t love me enough to stay, Ulrich concluded suddenly. Just like Mama.  Just like Erich. This realization – and all that lay beneath it in his heart – devastated Ulrich and added a new, deep, and rich layer to his mind’s already fertile field of melancholy.  

And that was how the two men left it.  That was how it was between them when Ewald’s father drove him off in the wagon to meet the train that would take him to the coast, to his ship.  

            Once in America, once he got a bit settled in Durand, Ewald began writing to his family regularly, letters full of cheery news about his work, and amusing details about life in America.  He wrote about meeting and marrying Elise, about the birth of the three children. Except during the war.  The other Germans there advised him not to write.  Indeed, the same conversations played out here, at home, in Germany. The Walters’ friends whispered, or even said in loud voices, that it would be best not to write.  Thus, during those four long years, there was no communication, while worries abounded on each side of the ocean, alongside hopes that their loved ones were being protected through all their prayers.  And so they were.  

            But throughout the years between 1904 and now, whenever the letters could flow freely, Lorena always passed them on to Renate. She read them to Ulrich, who invariably nodded and replied, “Good. He’s doing well then. That’s good.”  Or, when the first one arrived after the war ended, Ulrich crossed himself and murmured, “Thank God.”  But he never once asked to hold or read one of these letters himself.

            Several letters written just to Ulrich arrived, too, in the early years.  Ulrich didn’t share them with Renate, so she had no idea what was in them. Nor did Ulrich volunteer any information, even when Renate asked him outright what Ewald had written. “All going well.”  That was the most Ulrich ever said.  All these years, Renate had wondered.  Is he telling the truth? What does Ewald have to say to Ulrich that he can’t say to us all in the regular letters?  In her own, sisterly, sadness, she felt envious of these individual letters to Ulrich, even a bit resentful.  And envious whenever she saw Ulrich sit down and put pen to paper, to write back to Ewald.  What heartfelt things was her brother sharing with her husband, with whom he didn’t even parted on good terms?  Why did he receive letters of his own, while she, his very own blood sister, had had to make do with the family letters?           

Now, in 1921, as Renate stood at the kitchen window (her favorite vantage point for keeping an eye on the goings on on the homestead, since it afforded a clear view of the yard and the workshop, as well as the main path into the woods), she got to wondering again.  What was in the letters?  Is that what they’re going to talk about? She stood, a dish rag in her hand, and watched these two men, both so dear to her, walk slowly into the woods. The short distance between them conveyed to Renate both a desire to be physically close and friendly, and an invisible obstacle that was keeping them from achieving that, despite how warmly they’d greeted each other at their reunion.  Yes, she could see that the obstacle was still there.  At least for now. Renate prayed that they would emerge from the forest different men.

            Ulrich was surprised by the way Ewald started their conversation.  Things were hard for him? Ulrich thought.     

            “Was it really so hard?” Ulrich responded, a bit surprised that he had gotten right to the heart of it. Ewald was surprised, too.  He didn’t realize that his friend, the friend of “the scene” had learned a little about transcending feelings and moving to action in the past nearly two decades.  Ulrich had learned this, with difficulty, during the war, when it ceased being possible to live one’s life without deciding how to live it, without choosing sides, without assertiveness.

            Ewald turned and looked at him, in an attempt to interpret Ulrich’s tone, which sounded both challenging and sad.  He nodded.  Then he began to feel annoyance rising in him.  Anger, even, an old and deep feeling of resentment.  “Did you even read my letters?” He asked, an edge in his voice, too.

            Ulrich nodded.

            “And?” Ewald asked.

            “’And’ what?” Ulrich was just looking at him, and it seemed to Ewald that the sadness was winning out in Ulrich, despite his somewhat hard tone.  He seemed in some ways the same Ulrich of that departure day in 1904, the “it’s not fair” Ulrich.  Ulrich the sad sack.  But the fact that Ulrich was now questioning him so openly hinted that something had changed in his old friend.

            “Well, I mean, did you read them?  I ask, because you never wrote back.”  Ewald was holding Ulrich’s gaze now.

            “Oh,” Ulrich said with a sigh and a shake of his head, “I did read them.  And I did write back.”

            “But I never got a letter back from you,” Ewald said, his brows knitting together.

            “That’s because I never mailed them,” Ulrich told him, and a hint of a smile came to his lips. This was a very conscious choice – to write but not mail that letters – that Ulrich made once and then held to for the intervening years.

            Ewald stood up and spread his arms in exasperation. “And you’re laughing about it?”

            “Nothing else to do about it now,” Ulrich offered.  It was already seeming ridiculous to him that he stubbornly remained silent all those years. He’d realized the ridiculousness of that as soon as he saw Ewald again.  And, having understood this himself, it somehow didn’t occur to him that Ewald might not have gained the same insight.

            “But why not send them?” Ewald pressed him.  He was confused by Ulrich’s laugh. Has he been mocking me all these years? Did he really stop caring about me the day I left? “Why didn’t you send them?” he repeated.

            “Pride?”

            “Pride?” Ewald asked. “But I was the one who wrote to ask you to forgive me for being so cruel.” He paused, sat back down on the tree trunk, and asked, without looking at Ulrich, “You couldn’t forgive me?  Was that it?”

            Ulrich shook his head.  He kept his eyes ahead of him as he answered, focusing on the beetles scurrying in and out among the fallen, dried leaves.  “No, that wasn’t it.  Of course I forgave you.  I was hurt. I was mad.  But I forgave you.”

            Now Ewald looked at Ulrich.  “But then why not write?  Were you trying to punish me?  All these years, I just figured, when I never got any answers back, that you just disowned me, that you decided it was best to cut me off and show me just how bad a mistake I made in leaving.”

            This surprised Ulrich. “Do you think it was a mistake?”

            “No.  Well, not exactly. Not entirely.” He paused. “Yes, in some ways.”

            “What ways are those?”

            Ewald took a deep breath and then let it out, and lifted his eyes to stare out into the forest.  “This, for one thing.  The forest.  You know, I… I don’t know what I thought.  Well, yes, I do, in fact. I thought, if I’m going there to do carpentry work, there’ll of course be places like this.  How could there not be?  Or, well, actually, now I come to think about it, I didn’t think about whether there would be forests like this.  I assumed there would be. But not in the sense that I consciously asked in my mind, ‘Will there be forests like this?’  I never asked myself that, because it wasn’t until I got there, to Illinois and those Midwest plains, that it even occurred to me how important these forests were to me.  It dawned on me gradually, when I woke up in the morning and there was no scent of the forest nearby. When there was no place I could go where the day turned dark from all the trees around… That’s when I began to understand.  That was one mistake.”

            “And others?” Ulrich asked.  He was fully aware that he had not answered Ewald’s question, about whether he’d sought to punish him through his silence. But he wasn’t yet ready to answer the question, just as he hadn’t been ready back then to send off the letters he’d written. 

            Ewald understood this, too, and he chose not to press his brother-in-law.  He’d grant him the right to answer when he chose to do so, if he ever did.

            “Others…” Ewald replied, thinking.  “Family.  Friends.  Friend,” he said quietly, as if to himself.  “This is a cruel thing to say, Ulrich, but I’ll say it only because I don’t see things this way anymore. The way it seemed to me back then, when I was leaving, was that America was far, but it wasn’t so far, and that, anyway, what I wanted to do was most important. I figured I could do without you all.  At least for a while.” He paused.  “You may not believe me, Ulrich, believe what I wrote in those letters to you. About wanting to bring the family over, so we could all live a good, solid life there together.  But it was the truth.  I had these two ideas – and I know they don’t work together – that, on the one hand, I didn’t need you all in order to make in there in America. And on the other hand, I concocted this idea of all of us together.  As if I was just the pioneer, and you’d come along afterwards.  Ralf and I talked a lot about that, about bringing both our families over.”

            “Oh, I believed you, all right,” Ulrich told him, reaching out now to rest a hand on Ewald’s shoulder.  “And I understood both those things you’re talking about here: that here you didn’t need us, but that you wanted us there.  Clear to me.”

            “Then why not write and tell me you understood?” Ewald asked again, exasperated now.

            “I couldn’t figure out a way to say what I needed to say without it being hurtful,” Ulrich began.

            “And what was it you needed to say?”

            Ulrich swept his right hand across the view before them and then pointed in the direction of the house they’d come from.  “I couldn’t leave any more than you could stay,” Ulrich told him, turning to look him in the eye.  “Not even for your friendship.”

            The two men didn’t speak for a bit. At one point, Ewald rested his bent elbows on his thighs and lowered his head to his hands.  Ulrich saw the head shaking slowly back and forth.

            “That’s the hard thing, isn’t it?” Ulrich asked finally, laying his arm once more on Ewald’s shoulders and pulling his friend gently toward him.

            Ewald nodded.  He no longer needed an answer to his question about punishment.

            “But you know, Ulrich,” he said, “Sure, I have a good life over there. Like I said, a wonderful family, a loving family. And I love them. Don’t get me wrong! But at the same time… I’ve felt so alone there. Like an outsider in my own town. Sometimes in my own home. If you had been there, Ulrich, it would have been different. I’m sure of it.”

            Ulrich listened quietly, nodding to show that he was taking in what Ewald was saying, but staring off into the forest before him.

            Then he turned his gaze to Ewald. “I’ve felt alone, too, Brother.”

            Ewald felt a twinge in his heart. He couldn’t bear to answer for a minute or so. And Ulrich didn’t push him for a reply.

            “Are things any better now?” Ewald asked finally. “I mean, business is good. And the new fellow, Viktor. He seems to have fit in well?”

            Ulrich nodded. “I’m grateful for him. He’s great with the wood. But more than that… I don’t feel as alone with him around.”

            “I’m grateful for him, too, then,” Ewald replied softly.

            After another quiet moment, Ulrich gave his brother-in-law’s shoulder a gentle shake.

            “Let’s not make these mistakes again, Ewald. Let’s not.”

            Ewald nodded again. “Life is too short. Too much of it has already passed.”

A while later, Renate saw the two men emerge from the forest, Ewald with his arm around Ulrich’s shoulder, and Ulrich smiling and joking. Renate let out a sigh and nodded, smiling out of gratitude, as tears began flowing down her cheeks.

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