Above the River, Chapter 34

Chapter 34

August 5-6, 1949

Gassmann-Bunke homestead

Near Varel, Germany

            The day is nearly here. Tomorrow morning, Marcus will drive Ethel and Lina to Oldenburg, to the train that will take them to Marseille. There, on August 7th, they will board their ship, and sail to New York, arriving on August 20th. Their trunks have been packed for days already and stowed behind the stairs leading up to the second floor, awaiting departure.

            Today, Ethel has finished sewing together the fabric pieces that will comprise the top of the quilt she is making for Marcus and Kristina’s wedding. Renate and Lina have been telling her for days not to push herself to finish it before she leaves, but she has been stubborn about it, and finally, this afternoon, she sews the last seam.  Now it is late afternoon, before dinner, and she has laid the quilt top out on the bed in the room she shares with Viktor, to get a sense of how it will look as a finished quilt.  She has smoothed it down as best she can and is standing at the foot of the bed scrutinizing it, when Viktor quietly comes into the room. He walks over beside her and looks at the quilt top, too. They stand there in silence for a minute. Then Viktor speaks.

            “It reminds me of the day we went to the Kropps’ together. When you were delivering the quilt for Hannah, and I was going to talk about plans for the wardrobe. Remember?”

            Ethel nods, and a smile – both happy and tinged with sadness – comes to her face.

            “You wouldn’t tell me anything about it while you were working on it,” he goes on. “I had to wait, like everybody else, until you spread it out on Hannah’s bed, just the way you’ve laid this out here now.”

            “Yes,” Ethel says softly. “I didn’t want you getting any ideas.” Then she laughs. “But it was too late for that, wasn’t it?”

            “Oh, yes,” Viktor tells her. “I was already gone by that point. Head over heels in love.”

            “Me, too,” Ethel admits.  But her tone is not light, as it would have been, had they had this conversation before the family’s second visit to Groening.

            “You were?” Viktor looks at her in surprise.

            Ethel nods. “I just never told you. Didn’t want it to go to your head.” Another smile, although she is still looking at the quilt top.

            Viktor leans over to study the design, resting his arms on his knees so as not to put them on the fabric.

            “Look!” he says, extending a hand to point to one spot. “You added a butterfly here! Like the ones on Hannah’s quilt. And is it out of the same fabric? I don’t quite recall.”

            “Yes, yes,” Ethel replies, more animated now.  She steps forward, too, and runs her finger over the spot where she has appliqued a large butterfly sewn from blue and pink fabric on top of the spot where three other fabric strips meet. “I remembered how happy it made me to create that quilt, so I wanted to tuck a butterfly into this one, too.”

            Now Viktor reaches out and points to a different swatch of cloth, pale yellow with tiny brown flowers. “I do remember this one,” he tells her. “It’s from the quilt you made for us, to mark our first wedding anniversary.” He leans over to inspect it, then, cautiously, places his hand on top of it.

            “That’s right,” Ethel says, and her voice is very soft. 

            Viktor can tell from the way she speaks that she is crying, and when he stands up and turns to look at her, there are tears in his eyes, too.  He takes both of her hands in his.

            “Ethel,” he says, running his index finger over the beechwood ring he carved for her so many years earlier, “when I asked you to marry me, I told you I didn’t want to ever force you to jump off a cliff in order to be my wife.  And then that’s exactly what I went and did.”

            “I don’t think you had any idea you were headed for a cliff yourself, did you?” Ethel asks.

            “No! I didn’t,” he tells her. “Please believe me.”

            In the next moment, he is on his knees before her, still clasping her hands in his. At first, he is staring down at the floor, but then he raises his eyes up to meet hers. His voice is hoarse and grief-stricken as he speaks. “I have no right to ask you to forgive me, Ethel. But I tell you with all my heart, that I regret all I have done to hurt you and the family… and all the others I have hurt.” He lowers his lips to her hands and kisses them. “But I intend to find a way to make it all right.  And if you can find it in your heart to forgive me, I swear to you that there will be no more cliffs.” Now he leans his forehead against her hands and begins to sob quietly. Ethel doesn’t pull her hands away, but neither does she give Viktor any encouragement.

            In the weeks since Peter’s and Lina’s healings, since the revelations about her husband’s wartime acts, Ethel has struggled as much as any of the other family members, perhaps as much as all of them put together, even. While the others got a respite from the situation each night, Ethel has had to face her husband – and herself – every evening when she and Viktor have gone up to their bedroom for the night. All day, every day, Ethel has found herself thinking obsessively about what she would, should, could say once the two of them were alone again.

            What she has most wanted to say to her husband is nothing at all, and for him to say nothing to her. And, in fact, that is the way things played out for a few nights after the family’s second visit to Groening. That first evening, when Viktor sat out by the goat pen until Ethel went out and led him back in, he tried to talk. But she made it clear that she was not prepared to discuss any of it at the moment, and that she would let him know when she was prepared – if that moment ever arrived.

            Now, on the eve of her departure with Lina, she feels far more prepared to take a trans-Atlantic voyage, than to initiate the conversation her husband so desperately wants – and his desperation is clear in his eyes every night when they get into bed. “Tonight?” he seems to be asking her with his gaze. And each night, her negative answer has been obvious in her face. Some nights, she looks long and searchingly into his eyes, while remaining silent. Other nights, she hugs him briefly, or, sometimes, for a minute or more.

            It seems to Viktor, during these longer embraces, that she is seeking to learn some deep, inner truth through her contact with his body. Meanwhile, he concentrates on telling her, with his heart, that he loves her, loves them all, and is prepared to do whatever she wants, if only she will agree to find a way to move forward, together. For he senses, as does everyone else in the family, that it is all up to Ethel now, this decision about how the family will proceed.

            This is just the way things played out during the “Schweiburg period”: It was Ethel who made the decision to go after Viktor, with Marcus and Peter in tow. Back then, when Ethel first began talking about following Viktor to Schweiburg, Renate’s mind immediately traveled back a few years, to when Hans chose to emigrate to America. The pain of being excluded from this decision, of being denied the chance to sway his thinking, was still fresh in Renate’s heart, and she wasn’t about to miss her chance this time. Unwilling to be silenced, she readily shared her views and advice with Ethel, pressuring her to stay on the homestead and let Viktor sort out his own life at a distance, where he couldn’t wound them with his lies.  But Ethel kindly, but forcefully, asked her mother to leave her to decide for herself. She chose to go to Schweiburg. AndRenate released her fiercely-guarded decision-making role only with great difficulty and anguish.

            Thus, we can see that years later, in 1945, when Lina summoned a similar forcefulness to demand (as Renate saw it) that she be allowed to take on chores, this was not, actually, the first time a Gassmann or Bunke child had had a say. That was just a convenient story that Renate told herself. That was easier than allowing her mind to revisit the devastating moments when her two children had exercised their free will – and she ultimately, had had no say in either matter. Back then, in Ethel’s case, just as in the case of Lina’s chores, Renate recast her own powerlessness as a story of consciously lending support to a choice she initially opposed. As Ethel prepared to leave the homestead for Schweiburg, Renate told Ulrich that Ethel’s decision was for the best. “Besides,” she told her husband, “They’ll be in Schweiburg. That’s well outside my jurisdiction.” Ulrich knew enough to simply nod and congratulate his wife on her clear thinking.  

            “And here we all are again,” Renate tells herself now, in August of 1949. “Another situation.” And yet, she recognizes that her response is different. She notices no fear inside, no impulse to push Ethel in any certain direction. In fact, she is surprised by the ease with which she is now able to wait, day after day, week after week, to learn how Ethel wants to proceed. She notices a bit of relief, too – relief that the weight of this decision is not resting on her own shoulders. And confidence that whatever Ethel ultimately does will be the right thing for all of them.

            Marcus, too, is content to allow his mother her free will. That hadn’t been the case in the 30s, when he was a teenager. They were back living on the homestead by then, but it was clear to all of them that Viktor was still involved with violent agitators in Varel and Schweiburg. Marcus was not shy about voicing his concerns, about urging his mother to drive “that monster” away. He got no further than Renate had, half a dozen years earlier.

            But now, Marcus seems the most at ease out of all of them with the uncertainty of how the present situation will play out. That’s because he has already had his say on the matter, at the breakfast table the morning after Lina’s healing. So, no matter what his mother ends up doing, his own path forward is clear to him. Groening may have urged him to not despise anyone, but he has decided for himself: He will not forgive his father.

            For her part, Lina has often thought in recent days, grateful for the distraction of getting ready to travel.  Thank goodness for all the preparations! Now, on the last day before she and her mother are to set off, everyone – especially Viktor – is on tenterhooks. She has to decide before tomorrow morning, doesn’t she? they all think. Even Ethel, who has, by now, made a decision, is nervous as she ponders how best to share her thoughts with her husband.

            As Viktor joins his wife in their bedroom, as they look at the quilt together, Ethel reviews the conclusion she has come to: She just cannot give Viktor the forgiveness he is pleading for. Nor does she feel she can send him away. The family has been through so much these past months – years, and even decades, really. It has become clear to her that she has to sort everything out, piece by piece, the way she’d plan a quilt, the way she created her “pictures” as a little girl. But she can’t simply force things to fall into place. She must wait for the creative impulse to arise, and then allow it to guide her to just the right solution, just the right arrangement. And for that, she needs time. “This trip will give me that,” she says. She realizes that she has spoken aloud only when Viktor lifts his head and looks up at her.

            “What do you mean?” he asks, barely breathing. “What will the trip give you?”

            Ethel looks down at Viktor where he is kneeling before her, and meets his eyes. “The peace and calm I need to decide how to proceed.”

            “But…” Viktor begins, but Ethel interrupts him.

            “I know, I know. You want me to tell you right now. Do I forgive you or not? Will we remain a family on this homestead, or not? But I’m saying to you that I just cannot answer those questions yet.”

            “Then… What…?” Viktor asks.

            “Lina and I will go as planned. I’ll think things over. And it will all fall into place.”

            Viktor makes no reply, but his head slumps forward in disappointment. He is still clasping his wife’s hands in his.

            Ethel lowers herself to the floor, too. Pulling her hands gently from Viktor’s, she wraps her arms around his neck and lays her head upon his shoulder. He brings his arms around her back and embraces her, but she can feel his uncertainty about how tightly he is allowed to hold her now. Then he lowers his head, so that the two of them are kneeling, cheeks touching. Their flowing tears mingle as the last rays of the day’s sun spread into the room and briefly illuminate the butterfly on the quilt top, before fading, suddenly, into the shadow of twilight.

*          *          *

            In the morning, they have a quick breakfast. They are all grateful that there is no time to linger over the meal: this day is so full of strong emotions, that it would be torture to have to make idle conversation. Ethel has shared her decision with Renate, who has informed the others. Except for Lina, who will have the trip ahead to distract her from the cares of life on the homestead, and Marcus, whose own way forward seems clear to him, they all feel at loose ends. How are we supposed to manage here, with all this uncertainty?

            They have all made their real goodbyes already, the day before, so now each member of the family heads off to his or her routine tasks, striving to treat this like just another day. Before going back into her room to sit for a few minutes before they leave, Lina calls out to her father as he turns to walk out the kitchen door.

            “Papa,” she tells him, “Don’t go yet! I have something for you.”

            With a look of surprise, Viktor stops. She walks up and hands him a small bundle of cloth. Unfolding it, he sees that it is a little sack, with a drawstring.

            “For your tin foil ball,” Lina tells him. “Like this one,” she explains, showing him the pouch where she keeps the ball Bruno Groening gave her. “I made this for you, so you can always carry the ball from Mr. Groening with you.” She shows him how he can loop his finger through the drawstring and wrap his hand around the sack. “So you’ll never lose it.”

            Viktor is so touched that he doesn’t know what to say. So, he just gently wraps his arms around Lina and holds her tight for a minute.  She allows him to do this, making no attempt to sort out the conflicting feelings that rush into her heart and mind. There will be time enough to examine them during her trip. As Viktor stands there, his feeling his daughter’s arms loosely wrapped around his waist, he hears her whisper something to him.

            “Trust and believe, Papa. Trust and believe.”

            And then, she is walking back across the kitchen. He watches her vanish into her bedroom. 

            Viktor looks down to study the pouch Lina has made for him.  He sees that it is made of the very same fabric that Ethel used to make their first anniversary quilt. Did she know that when she chose it? He turns and walks swiftly out of the house, across the yard, clutching the pouch tightly in his hand.  

            Even as he is crossing the yard, walking past the clotheslines, he hears Ethel in the kitchen, calling out to their daughter.

            “Lina? Marcus is pulling the car up.  Did you hear? Are you ready?”

            But before he can hear Lina’s reply, or the engine of the Opel Kapitän as Marcus pulls it up by the door, Viktor is stepping onto the path that leads into the forest. To the treehouse…

To be continued…

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Above the River, Chapter 33

Chapter 33

Gassmann-Bunke homestead

            Lina awakens with the sun the next morning, and it takes a moment before she realizes that she is lying on her side, instead of her back. For four years, she has slept on her back, but here she is now, on her side.  She is confused at first. Then a smile spreads over her face. I must have turned onto my side in my sleep! she realizes. So, it’s true! I’m really healed! Rolling onto her back, she slowly raises herself up to a sitting position. Then, bending her knees, she scoots backwards, so that she is resting on her pillow against the headboard. And all this she does without any pain whatsoever.  Lina smiles and feels a deep well of gratitude within her.  It’s true!

            Moving aside the sheet she’d been sleeping under, Lina straightens out her legs, then pulls her nightgown up to her knees, so that she can examine her legs. After four years of such examinations, she knows the course of each scar, the outline of each discoloration, by heart. She has always had the feeling that if these spots where her skin and bones were broken could talk, they would whisper to her the secret of how and why the accident happened. Many, many times in the previous four years, she touched the white traces on her skin, the lichen-like blotches, and asked them to help her understand.  Funny, she thinks now, I haven’t looked at my legs since before the last time we went to see Bruno Groening. And that was the night when she did finally understand how the accident occurred. She runs her index finger lightly along one of the scars.  “Was it you who sent me that image?” she asks out loud, “So that I could understand?”  She spends the next few minutes bobbing her knees up and down and watching how these movements alter the way the scars and blotched patches of skin appear to her.

            Before this morning, her motionless legs always reminded her of dead tree trunks, lying helplessly on the forest floor, vulnerable to attack from all manner of insects and sharp human implements. Now, though, they seem to have sprung back to life, somehow reconnected to their roots, to their source of sustenance.  Even the scars and discolored spots have acquired a certain vibrancy, as the muscles beneath them undulate. Lina leans forward and then swings her legs over the side of the bed.  Stand up on the earth now, little saplings! she calls to them in her mind. Summon your strength up from your roots!

            The bed is just high enough that, when Lina lowered her legs, the soles of her feet come to rest against the floorboards. For the first time in four years, she feels the wood beneath her feet, really feels it. Wood to wood, she thinks, as her newly-enlivened trunk-legs meet the pine planks beneath them.  The floor is cool to the touch of her soles, and as Lina slides her feet this way and that, she notices that the pine is smooth here, roughened there.  She stretches out her right foot and touches her big toe to the edge of the hooked rug that lies half a foot from the bed. She smiles at the sensation of the wool against her skin as she moves her toe back and forth.

            It is this smile that Ethel sees on her daughter’s face when she walks into Lina’s room, just as she has done every day for the past four years.  Seeing Lina perched on the edge of the bed, Ethel’s first impulse is to rush to take hold of her daughter’s shoulder, lest she topple right over and onto the floor. But then she remembers what Groening said the evening before: that they should treat her like the healthy person she is. So, she just stands in the doorway, overcome with emotion at the sight of her daughter gently stretching out her fully-functioning leg.

            “Mama, can you believe it?” Lina asks, rising to her feet.  Slowly, not out of fear or discomfort, but out of the desire to savor each step, Lina walks over to her mother. Tears come to Ethel’s eyes, just as they did when tiny, one-year-old Lina took her first steps, in this very room. Joy and wonder, and gratitude, too, flood her heart as she and Lina embrace.

*          *          *

            When Lina comes out into the kitchen for breakfast, the others, who are bustling around either finishing the cooking or helping to setting the table and lay out the food, all stop what they are doing at the sight of her.

            “Aunt Lina,” Ingrid asks her, “why are you wearing boys’ clothes?”

            Indeed, Lina is dressed in one of the pairs of Peter’s dark gray pants that she always used to wear to work in, before the accident.  They are a bit big on her, since she has grown thinner over the years of inactivity. The white work shirt – also Peter’s – hangs loosely, too, but this suits her somehow:  As she extends her arms out straight to the sides and slowly spins to display her new-old look, the extra fabric in the sleeves and torso billows (although there is no breeze inside the house), and, for a moment, she resembles nothing so much as a dove that is just taking flight. Or, perhaps, a swallow.

            Ingrid has come over to her now, cloth napkins still clutched in one hand, and is looking her up and down in surprise. Lina reaches out and playfully tugs the little girl’s braids.

            “These are my work clothes,” she tells her gaily. Ingrid looks to Kristina for explanation, but Kristina is just as shocked as her daughter. She, too, has never seen Lina dressed this way, and it feels a bit much to grasp: first the healing, and now the clothes. Marcus and Viktor, too, are taken aback. After all, it was only after they both went off to the war that Lina began donning her brother’s pants and shirts and working alongside Ulrich in the forest. And when they returned home in 1945, it was after her accident, and she was once again wearing skirts. For Ulrich, Renate, and Ethel, seeing Lina dressed this way is not so much a surprise, as a welcome flashback to the wartime days before the accident. Here’s the Lina we knew! Ulrich finds himself thinking. For Peter, too, Lina’s garb is not unfamiliar.  After being discharged from the army due to his leg wound, he had more than a year to observe how natural his sister looked as she moved about the homestead in his clothes. And not once did he object: Seeing her head off into the forest wearing in his pants and shirts helped him feel that in some small and symbolic way, he was still able to participate in those efforts, if only by contributing the clothing his sister inhabited with such ease.

            Ingrid reaches out and touches Lina’s pants, then looks at the men in the room to inspect what they’re wearing in a way she never thought to do before. Then she rises up on tiptoes and brings her mouth next to Lina’s ear.

            “Isn’t it harder when you have to go to the toilet?” she asks in her stage whisper, a serious expression on her face.

            Lina laughs and puts her arm around the girl’s shoulders. “Well, I would say it is not,” she replies. “Fewer layers of fabric to keep track of,” she whispers into Ingrid’s ears.  This is evidently all Ingrid needs to hear.

            “Mama,” she calls out to Kristina, “can I wear pants, too?”

            They all laugh, perhaps more loudly than the question really warrants, for everyone is grateful to have something else to discuss besides the revelations that came to light in Bremen the night before.

            “I don’t think these will fit you,” Lina tells Ingrid, as she takes a plate of fried eggs from her mother and sets it down on the table. “So, you’re out of luck, at least for now.”

            Over the coffee and rolls and jam and eggs, the family members pepper Lina with questions: How does she feel? Any pain? What did it feel like to wake up and realize that her legs really did work? And this from Viktor:

            “Are you really intending to go out into the forest with us today?”

            He looks at her with eyes red from lack of sleep, and his usual upright posture has shifted. His shoulders aren’t exactly slumping, but there is a kind of listlessness in his muscles – the exact opposite of the way Lina’s legs feel now. Did my healing somehow come at the expense of his vibrancy? Lina wonders as she looks at him.

            “Yes, I’d like to. Nothing too heavy,” she tells them all and sees that they are relieved to hear this.  “But I’ve spent so many years not being able to help, that I see no reason to sit here doing nothing.”

            “And who, exactly, will help me hang out the laundry, then?” Kristina asks, her hands on her hips, feigning insult, although, to tell the truth, she really will miss Lina’s company during the day. Will she still want to take our walk tonight? she wonders.

            “Heavens!” Lina tells says, happy to be made a fuss of in a light-hearted rather than pitying way. “We’ll hang it out after dinner, before I go back out, all right?”

            “Nonsense!” Ethel tells them both. “We don’t want to work her to death on her very first day, do we, Kristina? I know you can manage on your own.”

            Catching sight of her friend’s crestfallen face, Lina says, “And I’ll help you take it down after supper. How about that? I can reach the clothespins now!”

            Kristina, relieved, smiles. “Agreed!”

*          *          *

            After breakfast, Ingrid is off to school, Marcus to work in Varel.  Lina heads out into the forest with her father, grandfather, and Peter.  They are all carrying various saws and other implements – except for Lina, who has reluctantly agreed to take it a little easy this first morning.  They are still seeing me as weak! she thinks in consternation.  But they are her family, and she loves them, so she carries nothing.  As they reach the beginning of the path into the woods, Lina pauses.  The others, who are walking ahead of her, turn.

            “Are you all right?” Peter asks, a look of concern coming to his face.

            “Yes, yes, I’m fine!” she tells him with a bit of irritation.  “I’m just greeting the trees. You go on. I’ll catch up with you.”

            It is the first time she has entered the forest under her own power in more than four years. There is so much happiness in her heart, that tears come to her eyes.  She looks up at the crowns of the aspens and pines, sees them waving ever so slightly in the summer breeze. Hello, friends! she says to them in her mind, and takes the increased waving as their response.  May I come in here with you today? she asks.  A moment later, a burst of energy comes into her feet from the earth beneath her.  It rises up through her legs, through her entire body, into the very tips of her fingers, and the top of her head.  That is a ‘’Yes”! she knows. She notices that her body is tingling and vibrating in just the same way as it was the evening before, in the Birkners’ parlor. Ahhh, she thinks. The Heilstrom?  She gazes again at the tops of the trees, then runs her eyes downward along their trunks, to the point where their roots meet the ground, where myriad small and middling plants are also growing, where mushrooms have poked their caps up after the rain that fell a few days before. Nature is God, Lina thinks. Groening said that. She closes her eyes and opens her palms. The tingling in her body increases, and joy floods her heart.

            “Good morning, nature,” she says aloud, taking in the rich scents of the pines and the fungi. “Good morning, God.”

            Moving along the path, Lina feels a lightness in her body, as if she could just float up off the ground. But she wants to be on the earth, to notice how it feels and sounds different beneath her feet as she walks on bare dirt, a cushion of pine needles, or a layer of several years’ worth of dried and decaying leaves. Each of these has its own give and bounce as she moves across it, and its own scent, too. This really is the heavenly, just the way Grandpa always says.

            Before long, by listening for her relatives’ voices, she finds the spot where she needs to leave the path and head into the woods in a different direction, to where the men are preparing several large oaks for cutting.  Selected for their straightness and size, they will eventually be transformed into tables and sideboards for clients by Viktor and Peter.

            “How beautiful they are!” Lina exclaims, as she joins her relatives. She walks over to one of the trees and lays a hand on its bark.  “Do you ever think,” she says, without directing her question to one or the other of them, “what the oak must think at this moment? Here it’s been growing, growing, growing for all of these years, straight and strong and handsome, only to be cut down one day without warning. Taken away from its family, isolated, alone. And without knowing the reason for it.”

            Ulrich smiles wistfully and nods, and they all recognize that his words pertain not just to the trees, but to Lina, too, and to Viktor. Perhaps even to all of them. “I have thought about that many times, Lina,” he tells her. “Especially when I was young.  Sometimes it felt like a monstrous thing, to cut a tree off at the roots, to fell it in such a violent way, with such sharp tools, to tear it away from its loved ones. As if it is being punished for some grave mistake. Except that it has no idea what it’s done wrong, or why no one gave it the chance to do things differently.”

            “Yes, Grandpa, I was thinking that now,” Lina tells him. Tears come to her eyes.

            “But then,” Ulrich says, “I came to a different view of it.  Like Mr. Groening said last evening, nature is God.  And God has created this beauty in the forest.”

            “The heavenly,” Lina adds, and Ulrich nods.

            “And so, when we cut down a tree like this beauty here, and create a table or chairs or a wardrobe out of it, then we are taking God’s beauty and moving it into someone’s house.”

            “But not everyone approaches the trees and the table-making the way you do, Ulrich,” Viktor interjects. “Plenty of woodworkers – I’ve worked with them! – see the wood just as a product to be shaped according to their idea. They don’t see their task as working with what’s divine in the wood to create something that’s in a different shape, but still divine.”

            “And some trees are just cut down for firewood,” Peter adds, thoughtfully. “Because they’re deformed, or damaged in some way, and nothing divine seems to come from them.”

            “No, that’s true,” Ulrich agrees, reaching out to touch the tree, too. “What both of you said. But the damaged tree… it still can give warmth.”

            Lina jumps in. “And if it can do that – provide warmth – then there still must be some bit of the divine in it, don’t you think? To keep people from freezing to death, to allow them to cook their food. That’s an act of kindness, too, isn’t it?”

            They all nod. And Viktor looks intently at his daughter’s face. He feels that she’s speaking to him, and about him, even if it is in a very indirect way. He wants to believe that this is the case.

            “I think it is an act of kindness,” Ulrich offers, nodding.

            “So, however we use the trees, then,” Peter adds slowly, “they’re all ways of allowing the trees to be of service in one way or another.”

            Here Lina thinks of the picnic they had out here in the woods the week before. She recalls the insight she gained then: that her accident had to happen, so that the whole family could come together in love. So, she thinks to herself, even those bone-breaking rounds of firewood were able to serve us all in a good way, and help us.

            “I reckon you’re right,” Ulrich told his grandson. “Even so, there’s something about transforming the tree’s wood into an object of beauty, a piece that preserves the divine … It takes a rare ability to be able to do that. And you,” he says, waving a hand in Viktor’s direction, “are able to do that. I see that especially in your carving.”

            Viktor, who is standing, axe in hand, glances at his father-in-law with gratitude. There is so much history between the two of them, both easy and trying… After the previous night, Viktor is thankful that Ulrich still has a good word for him.

            “But if I am able to do that, then I learned it from you,” Viktor replies.  “Before I met your grandfather,” he tells Peter and Lina, “I was one of those ‘other woodworkers’ myself. I couldn’t sense the heavenly in the wood. Probably because I never spent time in the forest before I came here.”

            Ulrich shrugs. “You can’t be faulted for that,” he tells Viktor. “Generations of our family have worked in this forest and lived alongside it. We came to feel its power as a matter of course.”

            “But you never took it for granted, Grandpa,” Lina says.

            “That’s true.  My father, and my grandfather, Wolf, they brought me into this forest from the time I was born – just the way your father did with you.” He gestures to Peter and Lina. “I felt God here before I could speak and put a name to what I felt. But I knew that here is where I would find it. And that I didn’t feel this same divinity when I was in town. Or on other folks’ homesteads.  That’s how I came to understand how special this forest is. How powerful.”

            Lina sighs and runs her fingers over the oak’s bumpy trunk.  “I never realized what the forest gives us until I couldn’t be out here in it every day.  In those early days, I thought I’d die from not being in with the trees.”

            Peter steps over and hugs her. “And now you’re back with them. With us and them.”

            Lina nods.

            Viktor looks from one to the other of them, and feels a mixture of love for them and shame in regard to himself. On the one hand, if Bruno Groening is to believed, he has made things right – with God. But then there is his family. Although no one has said anything yet, he is certain that they are all looking at him differently now. Even Ethel didn’t raise the question last night when they went to bed. She looked to him like she was in a daze, and she went to bed without a word. How to make things right with all of them? The answer to this question still eludes him.

            “This forest saved my life,” he says, his voice catching. He clears his throat and looks down at the axe.

            “It did?” Peter asks quietly.  “How?”

            “As I told your mother many, many years ago – in fact it was at supper that day with your Uncle Hans and Uncle Ewald, Grandma’s brother, the day when we all talked about God.”

            “And it was after that that Uncle Hans left?” Peter asks.

            Viktor nods. “Anyway, that day, I told everyone that I didn’t believe in God before I came into this forest, before I worked with your grandfather here, amongst the trees.”

            “But how did it save your life, Papa?” Lina asks.

            Viktor gazes at her gray eyes that matches Ulrich’s, then over at Peter, whose sandy hair came from him, and his mother’s hazel eyes.  Can they forgive me? God, please help me!

            “You are very lucky,” he says to the two of them, “to have grown up here, with this family – here I’m leaving myself out – and in these woods, where you could be with God.  I didn’t have that when I was growing up. I didn’t know God. Saw no evidence whatsoever that He exists. But here –” Viktor raises his right arm and makes a large arc with it, indicating everything around them. “Here I came to know that God does exist. And that saved me. Gave me hope – for myself, for our family.”

            Feeling he might have said too much, he looks down.

            All of them realize that he is speaking now about much more than his early years on their homestead. They each, like Viktor himself, feel a mix of emotions.  Here is this man they have loved – Peter and Lina, for all their lives, and Ulrich, for more than two and a half decades – and who has also committed acts that turn their stomachs.  His two children want to run to him and cry in his arms, beg him to explain it all to them, so that they can forgive him as God apparently has done. At the same time, they want to run from him.  This new side of him that’s been revealed terrifies and repulses them. They don’t know how to incorporate it into their vision of their father. 

            Certainly, they have seen him angry and, especially with Marcus, they have seen him act harshly. But somehow they have been able to ignore that aspect of his personality – perhaps because neither of them ever had to experience his harshness themselves. And in fact, they saw him as their protector: He was the one who kept them safe from Marcus. Or, at least, Lina thinks, He kept mesafe from Marcus. She remembers now what Peter told her about Marcus’ bullying, about how he knew he couldn’t go to their parents, that Marcus would only grow more brutal if he did.  So, did he nottake care of us after all? Lina wonders. 

            Peter, looking now at Viktor, realizes how torn up his father is feeling. The thought that perhaps their father did not care for them as he should have done – this is not a new thought for Peter. But he, like Lina, has long ago found a way in his own mind and heart to focus more on the love and care their father has shown them in the course of their lives, than on what he did not do for them. At this moment, too, Peter wants very badly to continue to love his father, to see the good in him.  But how? Peter asks himself. Can there be an explanation for what he did? An explanation that will make it all right? Or that will at least allow them to return to seeing him without the shadow of what Groening revealed.

            Then a memory comes into his mind. He sees a field on the Eastern Front, an operation that took place just a few days before the one in which he was wounded. His group of ten soldiers is moving through a forest that stands alongside what was once a field where crops of some sort were growing. Wheat, maybe? There have been reports of an enemy partisan force here, and Peter and his fellow soldiers are searching for them. They move more deeply into the woods, and then, suddenly, the partisans are upon them. Peter’s friend, Rolf, is shot at close range. Peter sees the partisan who made the shot, but this partisan has not seen him. The rest Peter remembers in clear detail, but also as if through a haze: pulling his knife from its sheath, coming up behind the partisan, grabbing him around the neck, and plunging the knife deep into the man’s back at the level of his heart.  To this day, Peter cannot make sense of how he could bring himself to kill another human being.  Of course, he tells himself, there may have been other times when he killed enemy soldiers at longer range, when shooting into a line.  Until that moment – when it is your knife drawing blood from another man’s back – it is easy to tell yourself you haven’t caused anyone’s death.

            As this memory fades, Peter looks once more at his father. What brought Papa to give that order? Viktor’s face provides no answer, and Peter is left – as are they all – to make his own choice: to find space in his heart to continue loving this man, despite the truths they now know, or to allow the horror he feels to take the upper hand.

            Ulrich, in a moment of outspokenness that surprises them all, listens to what Viktor has said and then asks, “And was it when you left the forest that you forgot that God exists?”

            A slight frown comes to Viktor’s face. “What do you mean, exactly?”

            Ulrich takes in a deep breath, and then lets it out. “When you went to Schweiburg,” he begins, “when you were away from this forest, away from the divine – was that how all those awful ideas were able to get in?”

            It is such a blunt question, and they are all taken aback that Ulrich has spoken without mincing any words whatsoever. And yet, they also notice, there is no anger in his eyes. He, too, seems to be wanting to find a way to hold onto the good that has existed between himself and Viktor, while explaining away the horrific.  Ulrich studies his son-in-law, who has, over these decades, felt like more of a son to him than his blood son, Hans. He has almost always seen Viktor as the human equivalent of the great oaks they are preparing to cut today: strong, straight, even in grain, with a bark impenetrable to parasites or nature’s calamities, its shade sheltering the small plants on the forest floor, so that they might flourish.

            But, what if they were to cut one of these oaks and, upon studying its core, find there a dark rot spreading throughout its center, from crown to roots?  Could part of the wood be salvaged? Could something beautiful still be created from the divine wood? Or does the rot at the center negate the divinity of the entire trunk and force it to be relegated for use as mere firewood – to burn down to ashes, leaving no trace of the grand beauty and power the forester mistakenly felt the tree possessed?  Even if, in the process, it provides crucial warmth to a human family inside, say, a long home? This is what Ulrich is wondering as he asks his question of Viktor.

            “Yes, Ulrich,” Viktor says finally, while looking also at Peter and Lina. “Yes, I believe that is what happened.  Here I was protected, safe, for the first time in my life.  And when I left this heavenly haven – then I lost the protection. I didn’t know how to carry it with me when I went out there.” He searches their eyes for clues to what they are thinking and feeling, and his sharp intuition picks up the absolute truth: They just do not know, yet, what they think. But Ulrich does speak again.

            “And you never regained that protection, not even after you and Ethel came back from Schweiburg. I don’t think you did, anyway. Your carving has not been the same since then.”

            This makes Viktor so sad he could cry, because he knows it is true. It is only in the past few weeks that he has once again fully felt the connection to the divinity of the forest, to God.  Did I get it all back too late? He nods, accepting Ulrich’s assessment.

            “And then I went to the war,” he says quietly.  “Without that protection. Without God.”

            “In that state,” Ulrich says softly, “anything can happen. And it does.”

*          *          *

            Two hours pass, and the four of them stop their work to have a snack of bread and cheese.

            “Lina,” Peter says, “let’s go to the treehouse and eat this there.”

            Lina is on her feet in a moment, for she has been having the same thoughts. Off the two of them go, heading deeper into the woods, hand in hand.

            “Reminds you of when they were tots, doesn’t it?”  Ulrich asks.

            Viktor nods, his heart aching with both love and regret as he watches them.

            Ulrich and Viktor are sitting, side by side, on the earth, atop the dry and decaying leaves, and amongst the small plants that have pushed their way up through them to expose their green shoots to the filtered sun and air. For the first few bites of Ethel’s sourdough bread and cheese, neither man speaks. Ulrich, on Viktor’s right, is sitting cross-legged, his long, branch-like arms resting awkwardly atop his knees, one hand holding a hunk of cheese, the other, bread. Viktor’s legs are straight out, the cloth that holds the food spread out atop his thighs, a flask of water leaning against his hip. He doesn’t have much of a stomach for the food. Then he hears Ulrich clear his throat.

            “Son,” he begins, “we none of us were prepared for what Mr. Groening said last night.”

            Viktor, who continues to look ahead of him, nods.  “I know I wasn’t.”

            “And you already knew all of what he said.” Ulrich lifts his left hand and takes a bite of the sourdough, chews it.  “Imagine,” he says, and Viktor can hear that he still has a small piece of the bread in his mouth, “what a shock it was for all of us to hear that, when we had no idea.”

            Viktor is looking at the piece of cheese he is holding, remembering his first days with the Gassmanns, and how he’d complimented Ethel’s cheesemaking. He chokes down a piece of cheese now, then turns to Ulrich and forces himself to look into the older man’s gray eyes. Ulrich’s sandy-colored hair, which has grown gray to match his eyes, was once so much the color of Viktor’s, although curlier, that the two of them really did resemble father and son. Viktor recalls how happy he was, the first time Ulrich called him “Son”. That was all he had wanted then – along with marrying Ethel: to be like a son to this man who taught him so much about the forest, forestry, God, and living. He never looked up to his own father – dead for thirty-two years now – the way he does to Ulrich. But now, he fears he has destroyed this relationship, too. Why did I tell Groening I wanted to make things right? Why didn’t I just stay silent? He tries to call back the memory of the lightness and relief he experienced the night before in the Birkners’ living room, the joy of those moments when he sensed God looking at him through Groening’s eyes and knew for certain that God had forgiven him. He can no longer feel what he sensed then. Even if I could still feel it, he asks himself, what good would it do me? Receiving God’s forgiveness is one thing. But gaining his family’s, which is what he is most wishing for now, is, he sees clearly, an entirely different matter.

            “But you had some idea, didn’t you?” he asks Ulrich.

            The older man shrugs. “Well, not in the particulars,” he replies. “But I felt it in your voice, saw it in the way you moved after you came back from Schweiburg.”

            “And in the way my carving changed.”

            Ulrich nods, chewing a bite of cheese.

            “You didn’t need to know the details to know something was wrong?” Viktor asks.

            Ulrich nods again. “You came here unsettled in ’21, Viktor. You got settled, through the grace of God –“

            “And through this family,” Viktor tells him, the emotion audible in his voice.

            Ulrich waves the hand that holds the bread. “It’s all the same, Viktor – the heavenly. Whether it flows through the trees, or these young plants here, or Renate and Ethel and me, or you. I’m not sure you ever realized that. Back then, anyway. Keep yourself in the flow of that heavenly, and you’ve got a fighting chance of coming out alive. Of coming out a human being.”

            Now Viktor folds the edges of the cloth over the remaining food and offers it to Ulrich, who shakes his head. So he lays it gently on the ground beside him.

            “You’re right, Ulrich,” he says. “About all of it. I can see it now. You’re right – I didn’t realize it then.”

            “And I didn’t care to learn any details,” Ulrich tells him. “I chose not ignore the signs. I regret that now. Perhaps I could have helped you somehow if I’d had the courage to talk to you about it.”

            Viktor doesn’t respond to this confession. But then, sensing that Ulrich wants to help him now, he goes on. “Last night, at the Birkners’, after it all came out, I looked into Groening’s eyes.  I felt God then, Ulrich.”

            “In Groening?”

            “I wouldn’t put it that way, exactly.  I’d say more that it was … as if, in his eyes, a door opened up, so that I could see God.”

            “And what did you see?” Ulrich asks, taking the last bite of cheese into his mouth.

            “I can’t say I saw anything,” Viktor tells him. “But I felt God there, and such joy and gratitude. And I knew that what Groening had told me was true – about God forgiving me.”

            “I felt it, too,” Ulrich tells him simply.

            “Felt what?” Viktor turns so that he is sitting cross-legged, facing his father-in-law.

            “That God has forgiven you,” Ulrich replies.  “And that God was looking out at each of us – through that door in Groening’s eyes, if you want to put it that way.”

            “And what did you see there?” Viktor asks, feeling now, for the first time since the evening before, the strong flow of the heavenly – the Heilstrom – in his body.

            “Nothing like what you did,” Ulrich tells him, a bit of a smile coming to his lips. “But I had a knowing, too, through a kind of inner hearing. Sort of the way I hear the trees telling me what they tell me.”

            Viktor nods. “What did you hear?”

            “That God gave Groening the message that you were forgiven as a challenge to the rest of us.”

            “What do you mean? What kind of challenge?”

            “What I heard was, ‘And you? Can you also forgive him?’”

            Looking into his father-in-law’s eyes, Viktor wonders what is behind them, in his mind, and in his heart. “And what did you answer?” he asks, his throat tight.

            Ulrich shakes his head. “I didn’t have an answer then,” he replies, reaching out and laying a hand on Viktor’s shoulder. “Still don’t.” Seeing Viktor close his eyes, he goes on. “I’m not a saint, Son. No one in this family is.  We all love you, but something like this… it’s not easy to forgive.  Or even to make sense of.  You went to the Birkners’ one person and came back somebody different. So did we. That’s how it seems to me. To all of us, I’d wager.”

            Viktor nods.

            “Like our Lina, there,” Ulrich went on, gesturing in the direction of the treehouse. “Sure, she looks different today, in Peter’s clothes again. But it’s not just the clothes. The second she got out of that chair, she was a different person than the second before. That’ll take us some getting used to, too. We all need some time.”

            “But can you all forgive me?” Viktor asks, although, even as he is posing it, he realizes how ridiculous his question is.

            “That depends on you – and on us,” Ulrich tells him. “If we can see you as the you we’ve always loved, then, yes, I think we can.”

            Viktor knows that Ulrich and Renate and Ethel all had the chance to see him when he was this man Ulrich is referring to.  But what about Lina? And Marcus and Peter, for that matter? Did they even know me before I changed?

            “But how do I make you see me that way?” Viktor asks, looking deeply into Ulrich’s eyes, seeking an answer there, seeking the older man’s guidance.

            “You can’t make us,” Ulrich says. “What we all need here is the heavenly, to not be away from it for a moment, if we can manage that. You’ve got that thingy Groening gave you, right?”

            Viktor nods and digs the tin foil ball out of his pocket. He passes it over to Ulrich, who wraps his fingers around it, closes his eyes, and sits silently with it for nearly a minute. Finally, he holds it out for Viktor to take back.

            “I don’t know how he got the power of God into it,” he says then, “but it’s there.  Keep it with you, like Groening said. I think it’s your lifeline to the heavenly, to the Heilstrom, if you want to call it that. So that you can be that man we remember. The one I know you want to be again.”

            “But what about the rest of you?” Viktor asks.

            “We’ve got our own connection to the heavenly, here on the homestead. We need to come to terms with ourselves, too”

            “But Ulrich,” Viktor persists, “will that connection be enough?

            “I can’t say. Marcus was right, you know. We do all have our free will. But unlike Marcus, I believe God can help us while we’re deciding how to use our free will.”

            “How? How does He help?”

            Ulrich is folding up his own square of fabric now. “I can’t say that for sure, either, Son.” He slides the cloth bundle into his shirt pocket. “But I suspect it’s through the heavenly Heilstrom. Viktor, if you and I were able to feel God last night when we were awash in it, and I know we feel it out here, too, and Lina got healed from being in it… Then I think anything can turn around to the good if we’re in it.”

            Viktor ponders this for a bit, then shares his thoughts. “It’s just as you said about the protection earlier.  The heavenly protects us. And when I left the homestead, I left the protection, and then I fell in with people I shouldn’t have.”

            Ulrich nods.

            “But the heavenly – or the Heilstrom, to use Groening’s word – it doesn’t just protect us. Is that what you’re saying? That it helps us? Heals us?”

            “That seems right to me,” Ulrich says. “I never thought of it in those terms, but that must be right.  I say that because I experienced it myself last night.”

            “Experienced what?”

            “Healing.” Now Ulrich looks straight ahead, out into the forest.

            “But you weren’t hurt, were you?” Viktor asks, scanning the other mans’ body for signs of an ailment.

            “Not physically, no,” Ulrich tells him.  “But inside, yes. In my heart.” He lets out a long sigh before continuing. “My mother left us when I was a tiny baby,” he says.  “I never knew her. But I missed her. Cried for months, my father told me once, when I was grown. And later on, I came to hate her for leaving us.”

            “Why did she leave?” Viktor asks, but Ulrich waves him off.

            “Not important,” he says. “What is important, is that the first time we went to Groening, we were sitting there, and all of a sudden, my mother’s face came into my mind.  I never saw her, mind you – or not so as I remember the way she looked – but I recognized her.  And I felt very warmly toward her.  For the first time in my life.” Ulrich reaches down and gently moves some dead leaves away from some new green plant leaves that are trying to make their way to the light. “Then last night,” Ulrich tells Viktor, “while Groening was talking to Kristina, I saw Mama’s face again. And in that moment, something shifted inside me, in my heart, like a clasp opening up and two cupboard doors spreading apart and letting love out.” He shows this motion with his hands. “I saw my mother – her whole body now – and she stretched out her arms to me. She embraced me, and I embraced her. I told her I forgave her for leaving us.  And I knew in my heart that it was true.”

            “Is such a thing possible?” Viktor asks. “To see someone that way, someone who’s dead?” He was thinking of Wolf again. He felt sure now that Ulrich must have seen him sometimes, too.

            “I don’t know,” Ulrich tells him. Then he smiles. “But whether it’s possible or not, I did! I saw her.  Maybe it’s not so different from your intuition, the way you pick things up, Viktor.”

            “You could be right,” Viktor says, “and it’s just a different kind of knowing.”

            “One that comes about when we’re in the heavenly. That’s what I think.”

            Viktor nods, and before him appears Wolf’s spirit. He’s also sitting amongst the leaves, nodding.  

            Ulrich points a finger in Viktor’s direction. “That’s why I said what I did about things turning around when we’re in the Heilstrom. Because of last night. That’s how I know it can happen. Because I experienced it myself.”

            “If we want to forgive, God will help us. Is that what you think goes on?” Viktor asks.

            Ulrich nods. Then he gets to his feet and stretches his arms up overhead and then straight out to the sides.

            “I do,” he tells his son-in-law.

            “But did you want to forgive your mother?”

            This gives Ulrich pause.  “You know, I never consciously asked God to help me forgive her.  But in my heart, I wanted to. I can see that now. Maybe that’s all it takes – to want it in the deepest part of your heart.”

            Viktor brightens at this. “And doesn’t the deepest part of everyone’s heart want to forgive?”

            Ulrich can tell where Viktor’s going with this thought.    

            “I can’t say, Son.  All I know is, as far as this family and forgiveness is concerned, it’s between each of us and God now.”

*          *          *

            “To think that less than a week ago, I never could have gotten up here!” Lina exclaims. She and Peter are sitting in the treehouse, their bread and cheese bundles open on their laps, looking out through the woven walls.

            “I wouldn’t have been able to do that two weeks ago, either,” Peter replies, speaking around the chunk of bread in his mouth. 

            Lina nods. “It didn’t hurt at all, climbing up here,” she tells her brother.  “After four years in that awful chair, how is it possible that my muscles work so well? That I don’t feel weak?”

            “I don’t know. Doesn’t make sense to me, either.  I feel lighter in my steps than I ever have, even before the war.”

            Lina reaches over and takes his hand. Her face is beaming. “It really is a miracle, isn’t it? For both of us!”

             “Oh, yes, a genuine miracle.” Peter says, with a nod.  “Isn’t there something odd about it – that the two of us were healed within a week of each other?”

            “Odd, why?” Lina is now breaking off little bits of her mother’s farmhouse cheddar and savoring the flavor. “You know,” she says, before Peter can answer, “I think Mama’s cheese tastes better to me now than it has for the past four years. Now, that’s strange!”

            Peter laughs.  “Yes. The whole forest looks brighter to me today, Lina. The greens look more vibrant. That’s strange, too!”

            “It is! But what about our healings?” Lina prompts him.

            “Right. Remember last week, when we were here – or, rather, down there – talking, and you said you felt responsible for me being wounded in the war? And you told me that vision you had at the Birkners’ place?”

            “Yes.” Lina is testing the bread now, to see whether it, too, tastes better than usual. It does.

            “Well, I’ve been wondering why in the world you would have done that. Caused the accident, I mean.”

            “And have you figured anything out?”

            Peter shrugs. “Not figured out, exactly.  But the whole past week, after my leg got healed, I was feeling that it wasn’t fair for my leg to be healed while you were still in the wheelchair.”

            “Peter,” Lina begins, but he holds up his hand.

            “Listen.  What I mean is, that it became so clear to me that you and I are more like twins than just brother and sister.”

            “Yes, I feel that, too. That’s nothing new, though, Peter. We’ve talked about it before.”

            “I know, I know. But because we are so close – and who knows why that is, but it’s true – maybe because of that, we can’t bear to be unlike each other.”

            Lina frowns and puts down the piece of bread.  “I don’t quite get it.”

            He sits up straighter and looks at her with shining eyes. He reaches out and touches her shirt.

            “I go off to war, and you start wearing my clothes and working in the forest with Grandpa.”

            “Well, I couldn’t very well wear my dirndl, could I?” Lina asks him with a laugh.

            “Hear me out, Sis,” Peter tells her. “You put on my clothes and learn my job.  I come back from the war and can’t do the forestry work anymore, so you keep it up for me. But, as you told me yourself, you’re feeling guilty that I got wounded and can’t use my leg properly.  And then…” He pauses and looks her straight in the eye. “Then, you’re feeling it’s your fault, and so, you cause an accident that makes it so that you can’t work in the forest or use your legs, either.”

            Lina’s jaw drops. “Wait, Peter! What are you saying?”

            “And next,” he goes on, “within a week of my leg being healed, you are miraculously healed, too.”

            “Peter, I don’t understand what you’re saying,” she tells him, shaking her head.

            “I’m not sure I do, either. But what if you and I are so connected – in our souls, if that makes any sense, or if it’s even possible – that we are constantly striving to reflect each other? We’ve known all our lives that we were so alike in our personalities.  Couldn’t that happen in our souls, too?”

            Lina frowns, but simply in confusion, not annoyance.  “Peter, for the life of me, I have no idea!”

            “But doesn’t it make an odd kind of sense?”

            Lina applies herself to the bread and cheese again, as she mulls this over.  Then, finally, she says, “As if we’re playing a constant game of copycat.”

            “Trying to keep up with each other, to be always in the same spot.”

            “In our bodies and in our souls,” Lina adds, and Peter nods.

            As they both ponder this, they finish their snacks and fold up their cloths. Lina looks at her own clothes and her brother’s.

            “Whyever this is all happening,” she tells him with a smile, “it’s convenient that I can wear your clothes. As for the rest of it, I don’t know what to think.”

            “Me, neither,” Peter admits. “But can we just tell our own souls and each other’s, that they can stop this game now?” A smile comes to his face.

            “Agreed!” Lina says. “Hear that, souls?” she calls out, lifting her head to look up high above her.  “Everything’s in order now. Can we leave it at that?”

            Peter laughs and reaches over to hug his sister. 

            “Lina, I’m so glad you’re well now.  You have no idea.”

            “I think I do. It has to be the same joy I feel that you’re well, too.”

            “And we had both better get back to Papa and Grandpa before they fine us a day’s wages!”

            Indeed, as they are lowering themselves down the ladder, they catch sight of Viktor, who is making his way through the woods toward him. Today he does not look as carefree as the last time, when the three of them shared the heartfelt chat beneath this old beech. Looking at him now, Peter understands why their father was reluctant to tell them about how the family came to live in Schweiburg for several years. “A story for another day. A sad story.” That’s what he said, Peter recalls.

            Viktor reaches the bottom of the old beech and, as he gazes up at his son and daughter, he is overcome with joy at the miracle of their healings.

            “Just look at the two of you!” he calls out tenderly. “Did you both really climb up there?”

            “We did!” Lina tells him, with a broad smile, and he sees the brightness in her eyes. He also notices another, more somber, emotion fleet across her face. He sees it in Peter’s expression, too, along with a joy in his eyes that matches that in his sister’s. Please, dear God, Viktor begs inwardly. Please help them forgive me!

            Once Lina and Peter have fully descended and are back on the ground once more, Viktor stands facing them. Then he walks up and wraps his arms around the two of them together. There is an awkwardness in this embrace that they all feel, as Viktor tightens his grip and pulls them to him, but then each of them finds a way to let go of this and lean toward each other. Viktor says nothing in words, but Lina and Peter sense all that his heart is expressing. After a moment, brother and sister both reach one arm around their father’s back. As he fights the tears that rush to his eyes as he feels their hearts’ complex messages, Peter’s hand meets Lina’s, and they lace their fingers together, and rest their intertwined hands against Viktor’s back.

*          *          *

            While at work in Varel that day, Marcus manages to keep at bay all the thoughts about his father that keep trying to invade his mind.  He is busy enough with his work that, in fact, he doesn’t have much time for reflection.  But by the time his coworker drops him off at the Gassmann-Bunke homestead, he notices that the thoughts are swirling in his brain.  He turns his focus to the brief exchange he had with Groening the evening before.

            “Mr. Groening, about the Heilstrom…”

            “Yes, Mr. Bunke?” Groening gazes at Marcus, giving him his full attention.

            “You said that it comes from God.”

            “That’s right,” Groening replies. He is looking intently into Marcus’ eyes.

            “But, my whole life,” Marcus tells him, slowly, cautiously, “I’ve felt a strong power deep inside me, here.” He lays a hand on his abdomen. “I’ve always felt it. But I don’t think it’s from God.” He watches Groening’s face for signs of disapproval, but sees none. “I think it’s my power. And when I’m trying to decide something, I go to that spot with my mind. And then I know what to do.”

            “Even though you don’t always do what the voice there tells you, do you?”

            Marcus holds Groening’s gaze and shakes his head. “That’s true. But what I’m wondering is this: Is it right to trust that power, to let it guide my decisions? Even though I don’t think of it as coming from God? I mean… maybe I’m wrong, but it feels like it’s my power.” He pauses. “And God did give us free will, didn’t He?” He looks intently at Groening now, happy to have given voice to all of these questions.

            Groening tips his head thoughtfully to one side, then nods, a small smile coming to his face. He places a hand on Marcus’ shoulder. “We do all have this power you speak of, Mr. Bunke, inside us. And you do have the free will to choose what to do.”

            Marcus, overjoyed, feels like he’s grown taller.

            “If we use this power carefully, and with love, then all is possible,” Groening continues. But then he wags a finger at Marcus, and his smile grows less broad.

            “Although it can be your guiding compass, you must take great care to seek its guidance properly,” Groening says. “Find calm within you, and only then listen to the voice that speaks with the power. This is very important. The other side – the evil – will try to masquerade as the good, Mr. Bunke, and trick you into hurting others. When angry thoughts come to you, listen carefully. Ask yourself, ‘Who am I hearing? The good power? Or the evil?’ That is your task now. Be on guard!”

            Then Groening reaches out and places a small, tin foil ball into Marcus’ hand.

            “Keep this with you. It will help you hear the voice of the good power inside you. It will help you recognize the evil and avoid its trap. Don’t engage with the evil!”

            Marcus nods solemnly.

            “And remember, Mr. Bunke. Let us not despise anybody. Let us absorb brotherly love, and be good to one another.”

            “Yes, Mr. Groening. Yes,” Marcus replies, nodding again.

            Running through this conversation in his mind now, as he nears the house, Marcus resolves to heed Groening’s advice – and his warnings. He knows that the evening meal with his family will be a great test for him.

*          *          *

            As the family sits down to supper, Ulrich jokingly laments the fact that Lina has been too busy out in the forest to read the newspaper and give them her usual report. 

            “On the other hand,” he says, “she has become reacquainted with some of her favorite trees.”

            “And the treehouse,” Peter adds.

            “She climbed the ladder herself,” Viktor tells them, smiling at Lina.  “So did Peter,” he says. He turns to look at his younger son. In his eyes is an expression of both pride and gratitude, as well as an indication of some greater closeness between the two of them. 

            Marcus sees this in Viktor’s gaze and cannot understand it – especially now, given what Groening revealed about their father the evening before. As he notices what passes between Viktor and Peter, Marcus also detects a bitter taste in his mouth, and an upwelling of anger in his chest.  Don’t they see right through him? This thought comes to him, and he wonders whether it is from his own inner power, or from the evil that Groening warned him against. He also has a fleeting thought: Let it go! He recognizes this as the voice of his inner power, and resolves to do what Groening told him: to heed it. So, he composes himself, wraps his hand around the tinfoil ball in his pocket, and decides to broach the subject that is on his mind.

            “So,” he begins. “About my job.” 

            Viktor shifts his gaze from Peter to Marcus, and Marcus immediately senses that his father is now on his guard. Strangely, though, Marcus does not detect any of the aggression he has felt coming from his father his whole life.  It is an entirely different complex of emotions emanating from the man now, although Marcus can’t yet decipher it. But what he does understand, without rationally examining it, is that things have shifted, and that he suddenly has the upper hand in the relationship. This comes as a shock to him, and the voice inside him says, “Go easy”.

            “Now that Lina is healed,” Marcus continues calmly, gesturing with his right hand at his sister, who is sitting next to him, “I will be staying at my job in Varel. I’ll tell Mr. Weiss tomorrow.”

            Ethel opens her mouth and looks from Marcus to Viktor, who makes no response. But this is not the Viktor of old, who consciously bided his time by feigning indifference and leaving his interlocutor to anxiously await his response. This time, he is simply not engaging with Marcus.

            “Did you hear me?” Marcus asks, raising his voice slightly. The tiny voice inside urges him to stay calm, but Marcus is once again feeling angry. It’s as if all the anger that he’s pushed down over the years is now pressing back up, demanding to be expressed.

            “I heard,” Viktor says, but without meeting Marcus’ gaze.

            “And?” Marcus asks, grasping his napkin with his free hand.

            “That was our agreement,” Viktor tells his son flatly, finally looking across the table at him. 

            No one else at the table is even eating. They have all laid down their utensils. Renate and Ulrich catch each other’s gaze.

            “You don’t have anything else to say?” Marcus asks him, his tone suddenly simultaneously incredulous and biting.

            Viktor shakes his head.

            Marcus notices the contrast between his inner power’s voice and a voice that seems to be connected to the anger. “The bastard!”it is saying to him.

            Now the anger gains the upper hand within him, shouting down Marcus’ own inner voice that is urging calm, but unheard.

            Marcus rises from his chair so swiftly that it falls back onto the floor, making Ingrid jump. He throws his napkin onto the table, then leans forward and places both hands on the table – the tin foil ball abandoned in his pocket – until his face is a foot from his father’s.

            “I bet you don’t have anything to say about last night, either, do you?” he asks Viktor, his voice full of sarcasm.

            Now Ulrich stands up and reaches an arm out to his grandson.

            “Marcus, Son,” he begins, but Marcus cuts him off.

            He straightens up and points his left hand at his father.

            “This man,” Marcus says, struggling not to shout, “whom I do not even want to claim as my father… This man ordered two hundred prisoners put to death.” He pauses and takes in all of his family members in a glance around the table.  “Two hundred!” he repeats.  “Are you all content to sit here in the same room with him, as if nothing has happened? Content to talk about the forest and the treehouse and about how Lina’s wearing pants again?”  His mouth is open in disbelief.

            “Marcus!” Ethel cries, rising to her feet, too.

            Marcus turns to face her. “What, Mama?” he asks, his expression a mixture of sadness and anger and disgust. “Are you going to defend him? The way you did after Schweiburg?” He shakes his head and grimaces. “I told you back then that he was a monster –“

            “That’s enough!” Ulrich says, raising his voice with a tone more ominous than any of them has ever heard from him. But even this does not cut short Marcus’ outburst. There is no way he can hear the voice of his own inner power now, urging him not to speak words he might come to regret.

            “No, Grandpa, forgive me,” Marcus says, making a small, tight bow in Ulrich’s direction, “but it is not enough!” His voice rises to a shout.  “A man sits here who has done unspeakable things, and you all say nothing! How can that be?”

            Once again, he looks around the table.

            Peter spreads his hands open before him. “But what do you want us to do?”

            Marcus looks at him, wide-eyed. His breathing has calmed a bit now, and he is no longer shouting, but his tone is still one of contempt and amazement. “How about at least talking about what Groening said last night?”

            “I don’t see what good that would do,” Renate offers, after clearing her throat.

            Marcus shakes his head.  “What? Are you all planning to sit here at this table, day after day, and pretend nothing has happened? Ignore what he did? Can you really do that? I can’t.” He turns around, walks behind his overturned chair, picks it up, and sets it carefully back in its place. Then he waves a hand at no one and everyone at the same time.

            “Groening says God has forgiven him, and what? We have to forgive him, too? Do we?”  He waits, but, once more, no one answers him. “Is that God’s will?” he cries. “For us to forgive Viktor Bunke, the way He has?”

            Again, Marcus hears a faint voice inside him. Enough. Ignoring the admonition, he closes his fist and brings it against his own chest.

            “Well, not me, my dear family. I am about to prove to you what I said at this table back in – whenever that was…  God can wish all He wants, but He cannot make a plan for me and force me to follow it. No. I have my own free will, my own power, that comes from inside me, and I am choosing to use that free will of mine to not forgive that man.” He points at his father. Then he leans over, facing Viktor, and brings the palm of his hand slowly down onto the table.  “I will never forgive you,” he says quietly, but in a chilling voice. “Not for what you did to this family. Not for what you did to all those others.”

            At this point, Viktor silently rises from the table. Without saying anything, without meeting anyone’s gaze, he walks slowly to the door and steps out into the yard, carefully shutting the door behind him.

            “Yes, leave!” Marcus calls after him. Then, facing his mother and grandparents, he adds, “So? Will you let him come back this time, too?”

            Again, still, silence reigns.

*          *          *

            Viktor does not leave, at least not in the way Marcus is expecting him to do.  Once outside the family home, he picks up a wicker chair from the sitting area near the door and carries it to the far side of the yard, beyond the goat pen.  He spends the rest of the evening sitting there, observing everyone else’s activities.  Kristina and Lina come out and take the laundry down from the line. Then he watches as the two of them begin to walk down the drive for an evening walk. He sees Ingrid come running up behind them, pushing the empty wheelchair. She hops up and down and tugs at Lina’s sleeve, while Kristina looks a bit put out. Then, Viktor can see that Lina is laughing. In the next moment, Ingrid has taken a seat in the wheelchair, and Lina is beginning to run, pushing the chair ahead of her, while Kristina walks heavily along, making no effort to catch up, until they turn around and wave to her.

            Ulrich and Peter leave the house and go into the workshop. A light goes on. A few minutes later, Ulrich comes out again, but Peter remains inside. Most likely working on those plans again, Viktor concludes, as Ulrich goes back into the house without even a glance in his direction.  Do they even know I’m here?

            Kristina, Lina, and Ingrid return, looking more buoyant, with Ingrid pushing Kristina in the chair this time.  Ingrid and Kristina kiss Lina on the cheek and go into the workshop. The light in their room goes on. It’s Ingrid’s bedtime. Lina pauses as she turns toward the house, and gazes over at her father. Ah, so they do know I’m here. She looks as if she is considering coming over to him. But then she hesitates, choosing to wave to him instead, before reentering their home.

            After that, there is a lull in the yard. Viktor notes the voices of the goats as they communicate whatever they need to communicate to each other before settling down onto the hay in their shelter. He hears the evening bugs buzzing and calling to each other, too. Errant fireflies float in the open space of the yard, hoping to catch a mate’s eye.  The sun is down now, and the dusk is growing deeper when the light in Kristina’s room goes out and she and Marcus come together to sit on the bench just outside the workshop door. Of course, Viktor is too far from them to hear anything, but he can see from their gestures that his son is still agitated, and Kristina concerned.  Then he watches as they tenderly kiss goodnight. Kristina follows Marcus with her eyes as he crosses the yard, opens the kitchen screen door, and steps inside. A lamp is burning in there, too.  Kristina heads back into the workshop.  Peter must still be working…

            The yard is illuminated only by the moon and the stars now, and by the faint light from inside the workshop. Viktor looks toward the forest, studying the way the dark shapes of the trees rise against the sky like a mountain range. An unconquerable range, it seems to him now.  How to get over it? He is pondering this, and recalling Ulrich’s words from earlier in the day, when he hears the sound of the screen door slapping shut.  Someone is moving toward him through the near-total darkness.  It is Ethel, he realizes, with both joy and dread in his heart. She walks to the edge of the goat pen, and he sees that she is dumping a bowl of scraps in for them, for their breakfast.  Then she walks over to her husband. Standing in front of him, she pauses, then speaks to him. In her tone, he senses his own mix of emotions.

            “Are you going to come in?”

            He wishes he could see her eyes, but then, in the next moment, is glad he cannot. And that she cannot see his. “Should I?”

            Ethel extends her free hand to him.  “Come on, then,” she says quietly, her voice tinged with exhaustion, sadness, disappointment, and yet, a bit of tenderness, too. “Nothing’ll be helped by you sitting out here alone all night.”

            He takes her hand and holds it tightly as they walk across the yard and into the house.

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Above the River, Chapter 32

Chapter 32

Bremen

            Thursday evening found the entire household once more headed to Bremen – as before, in their pickup truck and the Opel Kapitän, which Marcus had borrowed once more from Mr. Weiss. And this time, even Ingrid was with them. Having heard so much about Bruno Groening during the previous week, she’d begged so much to come along, that Marcus had finally said that she could come and see what all the fuss was about.

            When they arrived at the Birkners’ house, Silvia Birkner ushered them all the house.  She even leaned down and gave Ingrid a special welcome.

            “Hello, Ingrid!  So, you’ve come to see Mr. Groening, too? How wonderful!”  She looked up at Kristina and Marcus, then back to Ingrid. “You can sit right with your mama and papa. Mr. Groening is always happy to have children come along, too.” 

            Kristina blushed at Mrs. Birkner’s assumption that Marcus was Ingrid’s father, but said nothing.  Indeed, Ingrid did share both her mother’s and Marcus’ wavy hair, although hers was a few shades lighter than Marcus’ and much lighter than Kristina’s dark, dark tresses. And her blue eyes matched her future step-father’s almost exactly. Marcus, feeling pleased by their hostess’ assumptions, thanked her, and they all filed into the parlor.

            Ulrich rolled Lina’s wheelchair into the spot at the end of the front row which Mrs. Birkner had already cleared for her, then sat down next to her with Renate. In the second row, Marcus took a seat on the end this time. Then came Kristina and Ingrid, who was sandwiched between her mother and Ethel. Viktor was next in the row, and finally Peter.  As Peter walked easily down the row of chairs to his seat, he saw that Mr. Handler was already there, in the chair in front of him, just where he’d sat the week before.  After getting settled, Peter leaned forward and tapped Mr. Handler lightly on the shoulder. When the latter turned, Peter told him that he, too, had been healed of a lame and injured leg.  Handler jumped up and held out his hand warmly to Peter.

            “Why, that’s just wonderful!” he cried, pumping Peter’s hand up and down in excitement. “I hear that this happens often with Mr. Groening – kind of a chain reaction of healing.  One person gets their hearing back, say, and then suddenly someone else in the room can hear, too, after twenty years of deafness.”

            Peter went on to tell Handler all about how he’d realized his leg was healed, about revealing it to the family at breakfast, about how he’d hopped around the kitchen, and how Ingrid – he pointed her out to Handler, had asked if the two of them could hop together.  Handler and Peter ended up dissolved in quiet laughter. No one in the room seemed to mind, or find the laughter inappropriate, especially since most of them had been present the week before and remembered Handler’s healing and Peter limping.  People began turning to each other with whispers of “the healing that young man there had after he left last time”.

            Ingrid was taking in the people in the room and also inspecting the décor. She peppered Kristina with questions: “Who painted those pictures of the forest and the lake?” “Who are the people in those photos on the mantel?” “Can I go up and look at them?” “When will Mr. Groening get here?” “When will Lina get out of her chair?”

            As Kristina fended off these inquiries as quietly as she could, she noticed that she was already feeling the same tingling that had flowed throughout her body the last time. To her dismay, she also began to notice a vague unease in the pit of her stomach.  A bit of fear. But why? she asked herself.   She turned to her right, to take Marcus’ hand, although whether out of anxiety or affection, she wasn’t sure. But as she did, she caught sight of the woman who had sat behind her the week before, the one who had come in doubled over in pain, and left fully upright and happy.  The woman recognized Kristina, too.

            “Hello, dear,” she said, stretching out her hand.  She looked at least ten years younger, now that pain was no long contorting her face. 

            “You look well,” Kristina told her.

            She nodded. “I am well. As you see, I don’t have to lean on my grandson at all anymore!”

             “Was it true what Mr. Groening said to you?” Kirstina asked. “That you might have those pains again?”

            “Yes, yes, that did happen. The night we were here, after we got back home, my stomach hurt so much that I was so afraid! But in the morning, I felt fine again.”

            “And did you go to the doctor?”

            “I did!” the woman told her, beaming. Then she leaned over across Marcus, so that she could grab Kristina’s arm. “He did the tests, and the cancer is gone!  It really is!”

            At this, everyone who was sitting within earshot stared at the woman, and the whispering began again. Marcus and Kristina exchanged glances, and both smiled, each for different reasons: For Kristina, it was because the woman’s experience had strengthened her faith that God could heal anything, while for Marcus, it was his belief in Groening’s personal power that had just received a boost.

            Nearly all the seats were full by now, mostly with people who had been there the week before, but there were some new attendees, as well.

            Lina also heard what the woman told Kristina, since they were talking right behind her.  This news, plus the knowledge of Peter’s healing, and the sight of Mr. Handler, who was clearly still walking with ease, without his cane, gave her hope.  She wrapped her hand a little more tightly around the fabric pouch in her hand.  She’d finished sewing the little bag that day when all of the women were talking in the kitchen.  The tin foil ball was now securely stowed in the pouch, its drawstring pulled tight, and the cord looped around Lina’s middle finger.  The warmth from the ball was flowing into her palm and on up her arm, and this comforted her. And when the woman who’d been talking with Kristina came up to her and said, “I know you’ll get your healing, too, Dear. I’m rooting for you!”, she felt even more encouraged.  At the same time, though, she told herself not to get her hopes up. Can I really be healed tonight?  Doubts started to flood in. She closed her eyes and frowned, and grasped the tin foil ball in her right hand even more tightly. Trust and believe. The divine power helps and heals.

            Meanwhile, Ulrich was saying hello to Helmut Birkner, who, once again, was seated three chairs down from him. The same scarf rested on the chair next to him – Mrs. Birkner’s, Ulrich assumed – and there was the other empty seat. Ulrich supposed that Egon-Arthur Schmidt would sit there, if he was present again tonight.  Indeed, after Ulrich and Helmut had shared their pleasantries, Mrs. Birkner strode energetically into the room, followed by the tall, light-haired Schmidt.

            Now Lina opened her eyes and looked toward the two of them.  This time she didn’t feel the need to observe everything in the room in detail, although she did note that the setup was the same as before: a little, round table to the right of the fireplace, with a small lamp and a glass of water.  Another lamp on the bookcase against the wall by the arched entranceway to the parlor was also lit.  The room seemed lighter to Lina than it had the last time, the wallpaper a bit less dingy.

            Mr. Schmidt was talking to them now, following Silvia Birkner’s introduction. Lina saw Silvia settle into the chair next to her husband, leaving the seat next to Ulrich vacant for now. Mr. Schmidt’s instructions were, presumably, for the new guests, but he did say some things that she didn’t recall hearingbefore, so maybe he wasn’t just saying the same things. She began paying closer attention.

            “You have come seeking healing,”Schmidt was saying. “Mr. Groening will only accept one gift from you – that is your illness.  Give it to him! In return, he will give you what you have been longing for for so long – your health.”

            Upon hearing these words, Marcus nodded and smiled. Yes, he will give that to us!     “What Mr. Groening expects from you in return,” Schmidt went on, “to help the effect of his healing power, is twofold: one is that you must be inwardly prepared to take up the Heilstrom that radiated from him, and, secondly, that you must have a deep, unprejudiced belief in the divine healing power and, therefore, in the Creator.”

            Can we really not have the healing power without believing in God? Marcus mused. Then he remembered the way Groening had admonished them before not to think but, rather, to feel. So, he turned his attention away from his own thoughts, and back to Schmidt’s instructions.

            Schmidt was showing how they were to sit: backs straight, with their hands open atop their laps, without crossing their arms or legs, so that they wouldn’t short-circuit the flow of the energy.  As Lina opened her hands, she heard Ingrid whispering to Kristina behind her.

            “Mama! I feel all fizzy inside!” A small laugh escaped her lips. Ethel looked at her and smiled.

            Kristina gently shushed her.  “Yes, Sweetheart. That’s the Heilstrom Mr. Schmidt is talking about. I feel it, too.”

            Lina looks around, too, to smile at Ingrid, and when she turns to face the front of the room once more, Bruno Groening is standing before them. He scans the room, nodding to those whom he has seen before, pausing a bit longer when his eyes meet the new visitors.  Then he speaks. He motions to a dark-haired man who looks to be in his late twenties, and motions for him to come to the front of the room. Viktor recognizes him as the man he saw the previous week, who walked in hugging his left arm, which was bent at the elbow, to his chest.  But now the man’s arm swings freely at his side.

            “Sir,” Groening says to him, “can you tell us what you experienced after our last gathering here?”

            “Yes, indeed,” the man says, although he looks at the gathered people rather shyly. Groening gestures with his hand, inviting the man to continue.

            “Well, those of you who saw me last week, perhaps you saw that I couldn’t move this arm.” He raised his left arm. “It was broken during the war. I was trapped underneath a jeep during a battle, with my elbow pinned under the wheel.  The elbow joint was broken – shattered, the doctors said. And by the time I was taken for medical care, well, they said the elbow couldn’t be made right again. They put it in a cast, but it never healed properly.  It was as if it was frozen.  I was given a disability card. These past five years, none of the therapies they’ve tried have helped at all. I just had to go around like this.” He moves his arm back into the bent position.

            “And what happened when you came here?” Groening prompts.

             “Yes, well, I was in attendance here, but when Mr. Groening asked what I felt, I said – and it was the truth! – that I didn’t feel a thing. I even thought, Oh, here you’ve come, and now you’ve wasted your time.  That’s what I was thinking when I walked home. I live not far from here, and when I got there, I thought, You’re going to go in, and everyone’s going to want to know what happened, and you don’t have a thing to tell them.  So, I walked into the back, where our garden is, and there’s a shed back there.  And I walked over to the shed and opened the door and went inside. Just to collect my thoughts about what I’d say. And for some reason – I can’t explain why – I thought, Try to stretch your arm out now.” He looks at Ulrich, who’s sitting right in front of where he’s standing, and smiles. “So, I did.  And I could extend it all the way out!” He demonstrates how his arm had moved, and smiles broadly, extending the arm and then bending it, then repeating the action a few times.  “Well, once that happened, I knew my elbow was healed!  So I ran right into the house, and everyone was confused about why I’d come in the back door!” He laughs.  “I was so excited I couldn’t even speak. I just walked into our living room and kept stretching my arm out and bending it again, to show them!”  The man is beaming now. “You should have seen their faces!”

            The man’s good humor is contagious, and everyone in the room is soon smiling.

            Next Groening calls up the woman whose cancer was healed, and she tells the story of the terrible pains, followed by the wonderful results of the doctor’s tests. “He just couldn’t believe it!” she tells them. “But I said to him, God is the greatest physician! That’s what you told us, isn’t it, Mr. Groening?”

            Groening nods.

            Peter is summoned to the front of the room next. 

            “Tell us,” Groening says to him, “how you noticed the healing.” And Peter obliges, happy to be telling tale again, since his earlier conversation with Mr. Handler had gone so well.

            “And do you know how it happened that you were healed?” Groening asks, in a friendly voice.

            Peter thinks for a moment and then shakes his head.  “I’m sorry, Mr. Groening. I don’t.  I remember you telling us not to think of anyone else, and to pay attention to our own bodies. But I wasn’t doing that!”

            “No?” Groening asks. “What were you doing at that moment?”

            Peter gestures at Lina. “I was looking at my sister, Lina, and wishing with all my heart for her to be healed.” Lina presses her lips together, and tears come to her eyes. She mouths the words “Thank you” to him.

            “Ah, yes,” Groening says, placing a hand lightly on Peter’s shoulder. “And in this case, dear friends, this was the right thing for Mr. Bunke to do.  Yes, I told you that night to think only of your own bodies. But I also said, Do not think of your illness! Do you recall that?”

            Some of them nod. Others cock their heads to the side, trying to decide whether this sentence is familiar to them or not.

            “But often this is too hard for you – to not think of your own burden.  And then, the Heilstrom – God’s divine power – cannot work.  But Mr. Bunke –“ he pats Peter’s shoulder once more. “Mr. Bunke, here, all his thoughts were going to his sister. He wasn’t sitting on his burden, as I like to say. No! And in the moments when he wasn’t thinking of his own injured leg, but instead was wishing for his sister to be completely healed – then the Heilstrom could work!  It did work! His leg was healed!” He looks over at Peter. “And now he can hop!” he adds, a smile spreading across his own face.

            As if on cue, Peter begins hopping, to show that Groening has not exaggerated. The crowd laughs, and Ingrid claps her hands and bounces up and down in her chair.

            “Yes, my dear friends,” Groening says as Peter moves back to his seat, “this is what can happen, when we tune in to the divine transmission, instead of the evil.  When we say No! to the evil and take in the good instead.

            Groening now begins walking slowly back and forth, from one side of the room to the other.“How did it actually come about that the human being became ill?The original human being was not ill. People have become bad, worse from generation to generation. The badness had escalated so much that it is almost impossible to live. Quarrels and strife in families, more war than peace between nations! Worries have brought emotional suffering to humanity and have taken such deep root that people are bound to get sick. People are miseducated; they have distanced themselves from what is natural; many have lost their belief in God. And whoever loses the divine path, also loses his health.”

            Marcus frowns. Did I ever have that belief at all? But I’m still healthy…

            Groening walks over to the window and points to the trees that stand just on the other side of it.

            “Do you see these beautiful trees? The flowering bushes, with the bees buzzing around them?” People crane their necks, straining to see what is beyond the windowpane.

            “Centuries ago,”Groening goes on, “man went on the path away from nature, gave up belief in our Lord God. Everyone believed that he could maintain things alone: ‘We are on this earth now. We’ll manage now as we see fit,’ they say. And everybody thinks, ‘We know how to help ourselves.” Here Groening stops his pacing and points at them with his finger. “But I let you know that nobody can be helped without our Lord God. And whosoever believes that he can withdraw from the nature that the Lord God has created so beautifully for us, let him go where he wants to. People have withdrawn from nature, going over to culture. But we cannot manage without nature. Man doesn’t have the right to withdraw from it. Nature is God.”

            Here the Gassmanns and Bunkes nod and exchange happy glances. Groening has confirmed what they have felt for many years: God is in the forest.Except for Marcus, that is. He sees his entire family nodding. And, for a moment, negative thoughts begin flooding his brain, telling him that he must not be one of them, that he doesn’t belong, since he certainly doesn’t believe that God is nature. Or perhaps even that God is. But then Groening’s eyes meet his, and he feels the same powerful stream of love coming from this small man that he experienced the week before.  And the disturbing thoughts fade away.

            “You can also be displaced,” Groening tells them. “You have truly been moved from the place where God put you. Why? Just because you listen to other people rather than to God. As you have now become obedient to God you tune into the divine transmission now –you will slowly get back to the place from which you were displaced.”

            At this moment, Kristina begins to cry.  Yes, she is thinking, Yes! I was displaced. Ingrid and I! The fear that has been lurking just below the surface of her awareness flares up now. She is suddenly back in the forest again, terrified that someone will kidnap Ingrid. Unable to control herself, she cries out and, wrapping her arms tightly around Ingrid, she pulls the girl to her.

            Lina turns around and sees a look of sheer terror in her friend’s eyes. Marcus has laid his arm around Kristina’s shoulder, but she seems not to notice.

            “Nature is God,” Groening says to Kristina kindly. “You and your daughter are safe now.”

            “But why is she still so afraid?” Lina asks him, recalling Kristina’s reaction when she fell from her chair in the woods.

            “This is not the original fear,” Groening says.  “Nor was it the other night in the woods, Mrs. Windel,” he tells her. “This is a Regelung.  The evil is mighty, but God is almighty. The evil is now coming out of your body, out of your mind.  You need not be afraid of this Regelung pain.  On the contrary: be happy about it, because when new life moves in, everything is straightened out again, and that sometimes hurts.”

            Now Kristina’s eyes grow a bit calmer, and she loosens her grip on Ingrid, who was frightened by her mother’s outburst.

            “I did feel so free after we were here last week,” Kristina tells Groening.  “For the first time since Ingrid and I left home, I felt calm. All the worries were gone. I felt peaceful. I knew everything would be all right.”

            “It is all right,” Groening replies.  “What you felt in the woods the other night, and what you felt just here, just now – it is all the Regelung. And now you are truly free.” Then he looks at Ingrid and leans toward her over Renate and Ulrich’s shoulders, so that he is closer to eye level with her.

            “And you, little Ingrid,” he asks. “What do you feel now?”

            “I was scared when Mama screamed and grabbed me,” she tells him.

            “And how about now?” he asks her, his voice soft and tender. It even seems to the little girl that his eyes are sparkling.

            “Fizzy!” she replies brightly.  “Fizzy. Like I could hop all day, with Uncle Peter!”

            The people in the room laugh, relieved to be able to release the tension that built up in them when Kristina cried out.

            “Do you feel happy?” Groening asks her.

            “Oh, yes!  Happier than ever!” Ingrid tells him.

            Groening nods. “And you don’t have to worry about that nightmare any more. You know which one I mean. We don’t need to say it here.”

            Ingrid gives him a surprised look. She is about to ask him whether he means the nightmare about the dogs – which she has never shared, not even with her mother – but Groening puts a finger to his lips. 

            “It’s gone now!” he tells her.

            Groening turns his attention back to Kristina. “What do you feel now?”

            “Calm again. Peaceful. Happy.” Now her tears are tears of relief.

            “No worries?”

            Kristina shakes her head.

            Good. You have taken in the good. Now keep it!” Groening tells her, moving to the center of the room now, in front of the fireplace. “Do you see, friends? You must not reconnect with evil any longer. Firstly, dissociate yourself from it. At the moment you disconnect, the disturbance in your body will be removed. Then, tune in to the divine stream. If once isn’t enough, do it twice. To be precise, you must always do so, daily.”He pauses and looks at one or the other of them.  “Do not tune in simply when you are here in kind Mr. and Mrs. Birkners’ parlor! No! You must do this not just every day, but every morning and every evening.” He leans this way and that, so that he can see how they are all sitting.  Here and there, he corrects a person whose legs are crossed, or whose fingers are interlaced.

            And now,” he tells them, “Free yourself from all the bad things and take in the good which is the healing wave here, which is not from humans, but from God. Give me your illness! Give me your worries! You can’t deal with them. I’ll bear them for you. I have broad shoulders.”

            He directs his gaze to Renate, in the front row.    

            “You, Madam. What do you want?”

            She clasps her hands together, but then, remembering Groening’s admonition, unclasps them and lays them back on her lap, facing up. She gives Ulrich a quick look, then replies.

            “Forgiveness, Mr. Groening,” she tells him quietly, and her face flushes.

            Behind her, Ethel knits her brows. What does Mama need to be forgiven for? She exchanges glances with Viktor, who shakes his head. I don’t know, either, his gaze tells her.

            Groening, meanwhile, is looking deep into Renate’s eyes. He stands silently for about ten seconds, looking a bit above Renate’s head, then tells her, “Mrs. Gassmann, do not worry. Your sister says she never blamed you for what happened.”

            As Renate takes in Groening’s words, all of the family members are wondering what Lorena might have blamed Renate for – all except for Ulrich, that is, who knows that Groening is referring to a sister the others never even knew Renate had had.

            “She’s forgiven me?” Renate asks.

            “What happened to her was not your fault. It’s very important to her that you know that.”

            Renate begins crying, softly at first, and then in wracking sobs that cause her shoulders to shake. Ulrich takes his wife’s hand and squeezes it.

            “How do you know?” Renate asks, wanting to believe Groening, but also wanting proof of some sort.

            “Because she is right here with you,” he says, matter-of-factly. “Spiritually, of course.  In the form of a girl of about ten.”

            “Oh! I saw a vision of her the night we were here, and she was just that age!” Renate announces, turning to Ulrich and then to Lina. 

            “But in case you don’t trust that vision,” Groening goes on, “she asks me to tell you that she was wrapped in a light yellow blanket the day she died, and that you had embroidered daisies along the edges of it for her.”

            “Yes! That’s true, that’s true! Oh, dear Anna-Liese!” Renate whispers through her tears, looking all around her, seeking to see Anna-Liese again.

            “She has been your guardian angel ever since that day,” Groening tells her.  “So you see, there is no need for her – or God – to forgive you. Just you must forgive yourself.”

            Renate, still overcome by what Groening has told her, simply nods and presses the handkerchief she’s dug out of her pocketbook to her eyes.

            “And you, Miss Bunke,” Groening says, turning slightly to face Lina. “What do you want?”

            “To walk,” Lina tells him fervently, encouraged by the stories the others have told, and by what her grandmother has just experienced, even if she doesn’t understand what it is all about.  “The same as last week. The same as always. To get up and walk and never need this chair again.”

            Groening nods.

            “Each one of you has come tonight with a wish in your heart, have you not? So, I tell you once again, do not give any attention to your burdens.  To do that is to deal with the evil, and we do not do that here! No! Pay attention to your body. Don’t feel just anything, but what really is in your body.  This is truth. It is also the truth, that today you are here, and you have been given the opportunity to reflect on your body.

            Everyone in the room closes their eyes to concentrate, striving not to think about their own illness, trying their best to notice what they are feeling in their body.  But at the same time, all of Lina’s family members, having just heard her express her deepest wish, are all inwardly asking Bruno Groening to please take her burden, to please make her legs work again.  Groening can see this, just as he has been able to see all of the details he has already mentioned.  Now he steps over to the edge of the second row, where Marcus is sitting.

            “What do you feel?” he asks.

            Marcus takes an inventory of his body and replies, almost apologetically, but also with a bit of a challenge in his voice, “Nothing.”

            Groening lays his hand briefly on Marcus’ shoulder, and suddenly the young man sees two images in succession, in his mind’s eye. First, he is standing with his father in the workshop, Viktor’s arm gripping his shoulder like a vice as he whispers in his ear that there is no use fighting him about the Civil Service job. The second image is from just a few days earlier: Once again, he and his father are in the workshop, that afternoon when they were with Ulrich and Peter, talking about his wedding and the log sawing.  Again, Viktor’s arm is around Marcus’ shoulder, but now, he is smiling. The two of them look happy. Stunned that these memories have popped up at the moment Groening laid a hand on his shoulder, Marcus just looks up at the small man beside him with a questioning expression. He notices that Groening’s touch is both firm and warm. Loving. And Marcus now feels like a hot stream of something is flowing into him at his shoulder, and from there spreading out throughout the rest of his body. But before he can say what he is experiencing, Groening removes his hand (although the sensation stays in Marcus’ body for the rest of the evening).

            “I have said,” he tells them all, walking back to the front of the room and taking a small sip from the glass of water that stands on the small table there,“that it depends upon the person whether I can help them, irrespective of what ailment they have. It does not depend upon me. It depends upon the person! Each person has a choice. To accept the divine power, or not.It is out of the question that I will be able to help everybody, because it is about good and bad people here.  For example, my friends can bring just about anyone to me. When I know that the person will not change, nothing can be done.  Some people are still carrying their weaker self inside. There are people who say, ‘I will give him a good dressing down!’ Friends, don’t ask me to carry on now. Otherwise, I might get personal. I might even name individuals. This type of person is still serving evil today.”

            Marcus has a fleeting thought: Is Groening talking about me? But before he can even begin to consider this, before the frown that is wanting to come to his face can even take shape, the thought flies out of his head. He recalls that this is just what happened the other day in the workshop, when he’d been unable to actually say the words that would provoke his father. Instead, now, as then, he feels the calm that has arisen as the current flows through his body.

            Groening goes on. “Each and every person has the duty and the obligation to do good here for as long as he is allowed to be here on this divine Earth, so that nothing evil happens to him. Woe to the person, though, who does evil here and who burdens his own conscience. And, if a person would, to sum it up, walk over dead bodies here – without a concern for a human life, if he has fallen for this greed, this selfishness, and works on how he can get a lot of money, and if he then believes that he can do a better job of forging his own destiny… No, dear friends, those who fall for the evil, who serve the evil, they really won’t fare well.“

            Here Groening slowly scans the assembled group. His gaze comes to rest on Viktor, who is suddenly feeling extremely hot. His stomach is burning inside.

            Groening asks him, “What do you want?”

            Viktor pauses, looks into Groening’s eyes, and replies, “I just want to make everything right.”

            “What, precisely, do you want to make right?” Groening asks, holding Viktor’s gaze.

Viktor looks at his lap and says nothing.  Ethel has turned to him and is staring at him intently.  Everyone else in the room is doing the same.

            Groening clasps his hands behind his back and begins pacing slowly to and fro across the front of the room.

            “Does God forgive, Mr. Bunke?” Groening asks, his voice stern. Viktor snaps his head up, hoping that Groening will give him the answer he so wants to hear.

            “Mrs. Gassmann’s dead sister has forgiven her.” He indicates Renate with a nod of his head.  “But then again, there was nothing really to forgive in that case. Mrs. Gassmann mistakenly took the blame upon herself.  But what about when there is blame? Then what happens? Does God forgive the kind of ‘everything’ you ‘just want to make right’?”

            “I don’t know,” Viktor replies, his voice so soft that most of the people in the room can’t make out what he’s said. They each turn to their neighbors and whisper, “What did he say?”

            “Let’s start with what those things are, Mr. Bunke,” Groening goes on, still pacing.

            When Viktor continues to sit silently, Ethel calls softly to him. “Viktor?” But he can’t bring himself to look at her. He is feeling tremendous pain in his chest and stomach now.

            “All right, then,” Groening says. He has stopped walking and is standing at the front of the room again now, facing them all. It just so happens that Viktor is right in the middle of the second row, directly opposite Groening. 

            “Let’s start with Schweiburg,” Groening suggests.

            At this, Renate, Ethel, and Ulrich all begin to feel uneasy.  How does he know we lived there? Ethel wonders. Viktor is sitting stock still.

            “We’ll take just one example from Schweiburg. The Jewish family’s bakery where you and your ‘friends’ broke the windows and set the fire.”

            A collective gasp rises in the room.  Renate and Ethel and Ulrich, who never knew any actual details of what Viktor was up to in Schweiburg, and later, in Varel, feel their stomachs start to turn.  Ethel takes hold of Viktor’s arm with her right hand.

            “Viktor,” she whispers, tugging on his sleeve. “Tell him to stop! Don’t let him lie about you!” But Viktor remains mute and motionless.

            Groening continues. “Plus other additional incidents. There and in Varel.  Is that correct?”

            Viktor nods, almost imperceptibly.  He is sitting ramrod straight, and in his posture, he still resembles, as he always has done, the strong oaks of their family’s woods. But just as trees that have suffered an attack by insects, or a limb broken in a high wind, decay and die from within long before they ever topple to the forest floor, Viktor’s cornflower blue eyes betray his inner struggle: He has almost stopped breathing and is wondering how he will manage to keep from bursting from the pounding in his chest.

            Ethel has pulled her hand back in shock, and uses it to cover her mouth instead. Her pale skin has grown even more pale.

            “And then there is the war to consider,” Groening says. His voice does not seem angry to any of them, but neither do they sense there the kindness and love that has reigned in it until this point.  “Shall I go on, or would you like to tell about the ‘things’?”

            Without looking up, Viktor lifts a hand and gestures to Groening, indicating that he should continue.

            “As a member of the Death’s Head Unit, you were second in command of the Concentration Camp Administration.” Groening pauses. “Please stop me if I make any mistakes, Mr. Bunke.” When no reply is forthcoming, he goes on, his arms now crossed in front of his chest.

            “Throughout your tenure in this position, which you held from 1940 to 1945, while prisoners in German concentration and death camps were starving, as were many Germans living throughout this country, you and your colleagues routinely received bonuses in the form of special foodstuffs – such as cigarettes, chocolate, and coffee, for example.  These goods you regularly sent along to your own family, outside of Bockhorn.”

            Every single person in the room is quiet now, not shifting the slightest bit in their seats, so as not to miss anything.  Ethel is slowly shaking her head, and her body begins to sway forward and back, and then side to side, like a bird trying to free itself from a trap that’s tethering it to the ground. We accepted those packages, she recalls, and a chill comes over her. Renate is looking straight ahead, at the fireplace, tears rolling down her cheeks. Her hazel eyes, both guarded and challenging, look up at Groening. She wants to protest, We didn’t know! Ulrich’s shoulders have slumped, and his arms, instead of resembling the upward-striving branches of the aspens he loves, droop to his sides, as if suddenly deprived of the life force.

            “In April of 1944, as part of your duties, you were dispatched to the Bergen-Belsen Concentration Camp. There you personally gave the direct order to the Camp Commandant to inject 200 prisoners with phenol, thereby causing the deaths of these human beings.”

            People in their seats let loose cries and gasps. Audible crying can be heard. 

            “Mr. Bunke,” Groening says softly, leaning forward, “are these the things you just want to make right?”

            Viktor has now propped his bent elbows on his knees and leaned forward to rest his head in his hands, which are compulsively clutching and releasing his thick, sandy hair. All he can manage at this moment is a nod.

            There is complete silence for perhaps fifteen or twenty seconds.  Then Marcus, who now notices intense rage rising up within him, beings to lean forward. He fully intends to attack his monster of a father, throw him to the ground, do whatever is warranted in such a case… But then, for some reason, he glances in Groening’s direction. The small man, while still holding his gaze on Viktor, has extended his left arm toward Marcus, who understands what Groening is communicating to him: Now is not the time. Sit back. So, Marcus runs a hand over his hair, then settles back into his chair. He wants to try to sort out the thoughts that were coming into his mind a moment earlier, but he finds they are gone now.  So he tries his best to do what Groening asked them all to do earlier, and observe what he is feeling. Aside from the anger, which is more muted now, there is a disorienting feeling of dizziness, as if the floor beneath him has turned to sand, or water.  

            “I ask again,” Groening says, lifting his eyes to look at each of them in turn now, “Does God forgive?” Here some of those present nod tentatively, while others have crossed their arms angrily in response to the litany of Viktor’s sins that they have just heard recited. Groening reminds them with a movement to open their posture once more.  “I tell you,” he offers, finally, “that God does forgive. If,” and here he raises one finger in the air, “If we regret the evil acts we have done. If we hold onto the evil, we cannot be free, cannot be healed.” Now he watches the reactions of the people before him. “But if we say, ‘Dear God, I know I have done evil, I know it was wrong, and I regret it, and I will never do evil again…’ Then, dear friends, yes, then God does forgive. But those who cling to their actions, saying, ‘I was right to do it!’ ‘I would do it again tomorrow!’ – They will not receive God’s forgiveness.”

            Now Groening pauses and stares for a moment at the space above Viktor’s bowed head.  Then, he says, firmly, “Mr. Bunke?” Viktor can tell by Groening’s tone that he must look at the man before him.  Reluctantly, he raises his eyes and meets Groening’s gaze.

            “It is forgiven,” Groening tells him. Now the kindness reigns in his voice once more.

            Viktor keeps his eyes focused on Groening for half a minute or so. Just as Renate wanted some proof that what Groening had told her about Anna-Liese was true, now Viktor is not sure whether he can accept what Groening has told him.  Does he really know this? But as Viktor continues to look into the small man’s gleaming, blue eyes, everyone in the room around him seems to fade away into clouds, into silence, and in Groening’s gaze, he glimpses something he cannot name in words, something he cannot even fully grasp. It is a knowing, more than something tangible that he can see. But in his body, which is shaking uncontrollably now, he feels a lightness that grows, until it expands to fill every cell. It feels as if some spiritual being’s gossamer arms are embracing him, and as he looks into Groening’s eyes, a deep peace comes into him and takes him over, along with a feeling of the greatest gratitude: for this moment of connection with God (for he knows for sure that this is what this is), for the forgiveness he now knows God has granted him, and even for the horrible moments he somehow feels he had to endure in order to gain this connection with God.  In the months to come, there will be times when he wonders whether he really did experience God when he looked into Groening’s eyes, because he will not be able to call these feelings back into his body and mind and heart.  But then, each time, he will tell himself, No. It did happen. And that knowledge will carry him through what he has to go through next.

            But as Viktor is staring into Bruno Groening’s eyes and feeling God’s boundless love, many around him in the room have begun to feel anything but loving.  The whispering has started up once more.

            “Is there any person here who does not need God’s forgiveness for some act?” Groening asks, sounding genuinely curious.  “Raise your hands.” Some of the guests look at the floor, others to their companions. Shrugs and pursed lips can be observed.

            “I thought not,” Groening tells them, his voice again soft and loving.  “Dear friends, what you have done in the past – what others have done… Hand that over to me now, too.  All of it!  For those memories – of your own evil deeds, and of others’ – they only burden you. One should not do this – think back about the evil, about the war, about how others have wronged you.  Or how you have wronged others – once you have repented of your evil actions, it goes without saying.” He scans the crowd and knows that some of those present are not yet feeling able to release incriminating thoughts, whether about themselves or those close to them.

            “Haven’t you learned from it yet?” he asks them. “When you thought back, looked back, even one time, to the evil of the previous yearsor even just to two days ago –  weren’t you sad? Please look back now on an evil hour, an evil moment! On a moment of fear, when you – when your whole body – was seized, when it was petrified.  Such as Mrs. Windel, here. Think about it now! And keep thinking about it! Then evil will soon have a grip on you. And so I ask you: Do you want to always bring up the past, throw it down in front of your own feet – or your loved ones’ – again and again, and always walk over it, and be reminded of it again and again?”

            Each person shakes his or her head. Some even have sheepish expressions on their faces now.

            “Forgiveness,” Groening tells them softly, “comes not just from God. It comes from each of us. Do not keep the evil in your hearts!”

            While the people in the room mull over these statements, Groening once again walks over to the little table and picks up the glass of water. He takes a leisurely drink and sets the glass back down. Then he strides quickly across the room and halts three feet in front of Lina.

            “Stand up!” Groening tells her stridently, in a voice that brooks no opposition.

            And Lina stands.

            “Now, walk!” Groening commands her, stepping backwards to give her room.

            Lina looks at him and begins to reach for the arm of her wheelchair, but Groening shakes his head. “Now, walk!” he repeats.

            Lina takes first one tentative step toward Groening, and then a second.  A third step follows, and a fourth, until Groening, who has been taking one step backwards with each of Lina’s toward him, has backed all the way up against the wall.

            “Now turn around and walk back,” he tells her.

            As she slowly puts one foot in front of the other, Groening motions – without taking his eyes off Lina – to Egon Arthur Schmidt. Schmidt gets up, picks up his own chair and comes around behind Groening, who is matching Lina’s movement forward, step by step. Groening motions to Schmidt with this left hand, and his helper deftly rolls Lina’s wheelchair away and replaces it with the wooden chair.  When Lina reaches the chair that now stands where her wheelchair had been, Groening instructs her to turn around and sit down.  This she does.  In a daze, she, like her father a minute before, is unaware of any of what is going on around her. She hears only Groening’s voice instructing her, and feels only the sensation of her legs moving beneath her.

            Now that she has sat back down, Lina assumes that she is done, but that is not the case.

            “Stand up again, please,” Groening tells her, and then instructs her to walk back and forth across the front of the room.  She does so, slowly at first, and Groening walks alongside her, his smile growing broader with each turn, as he sees her movements gaining in both strength and speed. Lina, too, is beaming.  I am walking! she tells herself. Walking! She starts to turn to look at her family, but Groening tells her quietly to focus.

            “Just walk now.  You can look at them in a bit. I can tell you that they are all smiling. Your mother is crying,” he says with a smile, at which Lina laughs a bit. She is crying, too.

            “That’s enough for now,” Groening tells her tenderly, after they’ve walked to and fro before the guests five or six times. “The muscles are still a bit weak. But you are walking! You are healed!”

            Lina, who is, indeed, feeling tired now, but pleasantly so, turns to Groening before returning to her seat.  “But Mr. Groening,” she asks, a puzzled look on her face, “How did it happen? Why now?”

            Those present are leaning forward in anticipation of the reply.  Groening looks at her, and there is a twinkle in his eye.

            “All evening, instead of handing your burden over and trusting the Heilstrom to work, your family has been thinking only about your healing. Wishing for it so strongly that the divine power could do nothing.  But when I was talking with your father here, everyone’s thoughts turned to him. For a second, they forgot about you. Then there was an opening. Then IT could work! And you were healed.”

            Lina barely notices how the rest of the evening passes.  She is in a daze of exhilaration and exhaustion and joy. She notices that Groening gives a photograph of himself to each one of them.

            “The power of the Heilstrom is contained in it,” he tells them.  “I do not need to be physically present in order to help you.  You need only address me in your thoughts, and I will help.”

            Lina holds the photo he gives her in her hand gently, so as not to bend it.  Somehow, she understands that it is time to go, and stands up. As she is walking out of the room alongside her father, Bruno Groening comes over to him. “I will be in touch with you,” Groening tells him. “I am going away for some time now, but I will get word to you about when and where to come. But for now, use the photo to connect with me. And this.” Then Lina sees him hand Viktor a tin foil ball just like hers.

            What Lina does not see is when Marcus approaches Groening, just as the crowd of guests is beginning to disperse. But Kristina sees this, because Marcus whispers to her that he’ll return in a minute, and then walks up to Groening. Kristina sees that her fiancé’s manner is humble and thoughtful. He and Groening exchange a few words. Marcus places his hand on his own abdomen. Then, it seems to Kristina, Marcus asks Groening a question. She can tell by the intensity of Marcus’ expression, and by the focused way he gazes at Groening, that the answer to whatever question he has posed is very important to him.

            As Kristina looks on, Groening takes a moment to look Marcus in the eye. Then he tips his head slightly to the side, as if considering his reply. Then, finally, he nods and gives a slight smile, an expression that is both warm and a bit stern. He lays his hand on Marcus’ shoulder and nods. Marcus immediately rises up a bit taller, and Kristina can tell that he is pleased by Groening’s answer, excited, even. Groening’s smile broadens, and, at the same time, he wags a finger at Marcus. Marcus nods, and Groening places something into his hand. Then, a moment later, the small, unassuming man moves out into the hall. Marcus looks over at Kristina and gives her a little wave. “We’re going now,” he mouths to her across the room. He rejoins her and Ingrid, and they, too, exit the Birkners’ parlor.

            The next thing Lina notices is that she has walked all the way to the car on her own – after Groening cautions her family to believe that she is fully healed, and to treat her accordingly, after giving her a few days to rest up.  Then, she is in the car, with Marcus driving and Renate, Ulrich, Kristina, and Ingrid squeezed into the back seat. Before they have been on the road for even ten minutes, she is fast asleep.

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Above the River, Chapter 31

Chapter 31

            The peace and high spirits that had prevailed at the family picnic carried over into the next four days, despite the fact that these days were filled with drenching rain that prevented the hanging out of laundry on the line and drove the men into the workshop. But this sequestering of the family members created a sense of coziness and ease. It also opened the door to conversations that might not have taken place, had everyone been spread out through the house, yard, workshop, and forest, as they usually were.

            On one of these afternoons, Ethel, Renate, Kristina, and Lina were cooking and sewing in the house, or, to be more precise, in the main room of the house. They had positioned themselves in various spots in this giant room, which, since it had originally comprised the entirety of the log cabin Detlef built, was home to both kitchen and sitting area, as well as Lina’s bedroom. The latter had been first curtained-off and then walled-off in one corner, long before Lina was born.

            Renate was once again engaged in preserving food for the winter, although today it was raspberry jam she was putting up, not pickles. Since Kristina had learned a different method of jam-making from her mother, the two women were comparing recipes at the counter.  Ethel was sitting across the room in an upholstered chair near the window, embroidering a floral design on the edge of one of the pillowcases she intended to give Hans’ daughter, Katharina, as part of her trousseau. Although they had had electricity in the house for decades now, Ethel still preferred working in the natural light.  This was certainly more economical than switching on a lamp, but Ethel’s preference was not based on finances: She felt that her handiwork gained a connection to the natural world as the sunlight flowed over the flowers and leaves that Ethel was embroidering.

            Lina sat a couple of yards away from her mother, working on a small pouch she’d begun sewing the day before. Similar in design to the cloth bag Peter had sewn to hold her fairy rune, this one was being constructed from fabric with a light-hearted floral design in muted yellow tones.  She and Kristina had found it in a cupboard where her mother kept fabric remnants that evidently dated “at least from antediluvian times,” Lina joked to her friend when they saw the stacks and stacks of carefully-folded pieces of cloth.  Lina was making the pouch for the tin foil ball Bruno Groening had given her.  The ball was so slippery that Lina feared it would roll out of her hand overnight as she slept, and besides, holding it all the time left her palm feeling sweaty. She had already stitched the sides of the little bag together and was now sewing down the fold she’d made at the top to form a casing for the cord she’d thread through it to serve as a drawstring.

            “It feels so frivolous to be sitting here doing embroidery in the broad daylight,” Ethel said, holding the pillowcase up to the good light by the window.

            “Why’s that, Mama?” Lina inquired.  “I’m knitting. Or, at least, I will be, once I finish this little pouch. That’s just as frivolous.”

            “I wouldn’t say so,” Ethel replied. “Socks are a basic necessity.  Embroidery on a pillowcase is a frivolity.”

            “But’s it’s for cousin Katharina’s wedding!” Lina exclaimed.  “I doubt she’d think it frivolous!”

            Ethel smiled. “Even so, it seems I should be doing something more consequential during the daytime.”

            Renate looked over her shoulder at her daughter.

            “Who do I hear talking?” she asked with a smile. “This from the woman who spent the first twenty-five years of her life making designs everywhere she went – with scraps of fabric, in the dirt, in the garden…”

            “And your quilts, Mama!” Lina added.  She waved the pouch aloft. “I’m amazed at how much fabric you still have left from all of them, from back in the ‘thirties!”

            “From before then, too,” Renate put in. She turned and pointed to Lina’s pouch. “Take that fabric you’ve got there. That fabric’s from a quilt you made back in the ‘twenties, isn’t it, Ethel?”

            Ethel glanced over at Lina’s pouch and nodded.  “Yes,” she said, “for the Hockners.”

            “I bet it was very pretty,” Lina told her. “I’ve always loved your quilts, Mama.”

            “You aren’t the only one,” Renate told her, while Kristina measured out some sugar and poured it into a pan on top of a pile of raspberries.  “People from town would order them from her.  Started when she was just a girl, twelve or thirteen.”

            Ethel nodded.  “That’s right.”

            “She had quite a business going there,” Renate went on.  “Her designs were so unique, not the usual squares and triangles. Folks loved them. There was a special beauty about them.”

            Lina pursed her lips and frowned. “But why don’t I remember you making them when I was growing up?”

            Ethel was working again now, pulling her needle, with its strand of cornflower blue embroidery thread up through the cloth. “Because I stopped around that time.”

            “But why?” Lina asked. “If people wanted you to make them.  Did you not like it anymore?”

            Renate turned back to consulting with Kristina about the jam, but part of her was listening to her daughter and granddaughter, too.

            “Oh, no,” Ethel told Lina, laying her sewing onto her lap. “I always loved it.  I can’t tell you how happy it made me to come up with those quilt designs and sew them.”

            “Each one of them was a work of art,” Renate put in.

            “Then why did you stop?” Lina persisted.

            “The joy just went out of it,” Ethel said.

            “Out of life, you mean,” Renate said softly. “First out of life, and then out of the quilts.”

            Now Lina was frowning in earnest.  She barely recognized her mother and grandmother.  The other day they were giving Kristina marriage advice, and now they were talking about the joy going out of life. Why were they suddenly so talkative about private things?

            “What do you mean, Mama? Grandma?”  Lina looked back and forth to them, but since Renate was now facing the kitchen counter and not her, it was left to Ethel to explain.

            “That was the Schweiburg period,” Ethel said after a pause. Her tone was neutral and somewhat distant, as if she was speaking about the history of Germany. But this didn’t ring a bell with Lina.

            “The Schweiburg period?” she asked. “I’ve never heard of that.”

            Renate laughed. “Not in the national sense. Just the family sense.”

            Ethel explained. “You were born in Schweiburg, Lina. That’s where your father and I were living – with Marcus and Peter, too, of course – when you were born.”

            “Well, I’ve never understood why that was, either,” Lina said, laying her knitting on her lap. 

            No comment was forthcoming from Renate this time. Ethel looked out the window and seemed to be choosing her words carefully before speaking.

            Lina grasped her long braid in her right hand and wound it around her wrist, in anticipation. Ethel smiled, seeing this. She was suddenly transported back to when Lina was a toddler. Even then, when her curly hair barely reached her shoulders, she would always twine it around her fingers when she was excited or anxious.

            “How we got to Schweiburg…” Ethel began.  “To be honest, Lina, I’ve never totally understood that, either.”

            “I thought Papa was working there,” Lina asked.

            “Well, yes, that’s true, he was,” Ethel told her, nodding.

            Now Renate entered the conversation once more, even though her eyes and hands were focusing on the pot of raspberries and sugar that she and Kristina were tending. “It’s how he came to be working there that’s the confusing part.”

            Lina just looked at her mother and waited for her to continue.

            “Well, I guess it started with our wedding,” Ethel said finally.  Renate nodded.

            “Your wedding! That was, what, in 1922?” Lina exclaimed. “But I was born in ’28, and you weren’t in Schweiburg all that time, were you?”

            “Oh, no. Not until 1927.”

            “Then how did it start with your wedding?” Lina persisted.

            Now Renate turned around to face them, spoon in hand. “Goodness, Lina, your mother will be telling the story until midnight if you don’t let her just tell the story her way.”

            Suitably chastened, Lina let out a sigh and made up her mind to not say a word until her mother finished talking.

            “You see,” Ethel began, “when Papa came to work here, he told us that his father had died fighting in the war.  And that his step-mother and sister – her sister was named Hannelore – were dead, too.”

            “He implied they were dead,” Renate corrected, but without removing her eyes from the pot.

            “Well, yes,” Ethel allowed, “I imagine you’d have to say that he implied it, but the point is, that’s what we all understood him to be saying.” She looked out the window, at the fruit trees there behind the house that were laden with pears and apples just thinking about ripening.

            “And so, naturally,” Ethel went on, shifting her gaze back to the room, “when Papa and I were getting ready for our wedding, we were talking about his family, and how sad it was that none of them were alive to come to the wedding.”

            Lina was holding her tongue, even though a multitude of questions had rushed into her mind. Renate, on the other hand, evidently felt that she didn’t need to honor her own request for no interruptions.

            “Tell her what he said when you said you were sure you would have loved his sister.”

            Ethel smiled at her mother’s words.   “Maybe you should just tell the story, Mama?”

            Renate shook her head.  “Not mine to tell, Ethel. You go on.”

            “Yes, well, as Grandma mentioned, I told Papa that I wished I could have met Hannelore, because I was sure I would have loved her.  And he said something like, Oh, I doubt that.” 

            “’Oh, I don’t know about that,’” Renate chimed in. “That’s what he said.”

            Ethel waved in her mother’s direction. “Yes, basically.  And when I protested, he went on to say that there was something very wrong with his sister that turned her very mean.”

            Lina raised her eyebrows, but said nothing.

            Intuiting at least one of the questions Lina wanted to ask, Ethel told her, “Of course, I wanted to know what he meant, but we weren’t even married yet, and I didn’t want to pry into his family business. So I didn’t ever ask him what had happened to her – or to his step-mother.”

            Lina couldn’t keep from asking one question. “But what about his mother? What happened to her?”

            “She died giving birth to Hannelore, it seems.”

            “If we can even believe that!” Renate said, not entirely under her breath.

            “Mama, please!” Ethel told her.  “Let me go on. You said it yourself, otherwise we’ll be here all night!” 

            Seeing Renate nod, Ethel continued. “Well, so we got married, and Marcus was born, and then Peter a year later. And then, one day in 1926, a letter came for Papa.  From his step-mother, Gisele.”

            “She was alive after all?” Lina cried. Even Kristina, who had been focusing on the jam so as not to seem overly interested in these private family matters, turned around, her mouth open in surprise.

            Ethel nodded. “And Hannelore, too.  They were still living in Schweiburg – that’s where Papa grew up.”

            “What did they want? With writing the letter, I mean?” Lina asked, and both Ethel and Renate realized it would be both pointless and perhaps even unkind to make a fuss about the interruptions.

            “Oh, I don’t even remember all the details,” Ethel told her. “The main point was that Gisele accused Papa of abandoning them after the war, when they were all alone.”

            “It took them five or six years to track him down,” Renate added.

            “Yes,” Ethel said. “You see, he worked for a number of carpenters before he came here. And in a factory in Oldenburg for a while, too. So it was hard for them to find him.”

            “But what did they want?” Lina asked in a whisper, as a feeling of dread filled her.

            “They wanted him to help them, take care of them.”

            “And why did he lie about them, say they were dead?” Lina asked, her voice anguished.

            “I’ve never fully understood that,” Ethel said.  “You see, Lina, when that letter showed up, it was like my whole life turned upside down.  It wasn’t just that Gisele and Hannelore were alive.  It was that Papa had lied about it.”

            “And also that he’d abandoned them,” Renate added sternly.

            Ethel frowned at her mother. “Well, as I came to find out, the story was a bit more complicated than that. But yes, he had these relatives we didn’t know about. And he had, at the very least, hidden himself from them.”

            Looking at her mother’s solemn face, Lina realized that this must have been one of the occasions Ethel had been referring to the other day, one of the moments that require more of you than you expect when you got married.

            “So what happened then?” she asked. 

            By now, Kristina had turned the gas beneath the jam down a bit, to allow it to thicken, and she and Renate had turned around and were leaning back against the counter, listening.

            “As you can imagine, it was a terrible blow to all of us,” Ethel said, her own voice going very soft for a moment. Then she took a deep breath and let it out.  “Papa felt he’d let us all down, and so he left. Went to Schweiburg. Said he wanted to ‘make things right’ with Gisele and Hannelore.”

            “Yes,” Renate said, “that’s exactly what he told us: ‘I just want to make things right.’”

            “But it didn’t feel like that was all that was going on,” Ethel said. “I don’t quite know what was going through his mind, but it seemed like, one day he was here, and the next he was gone.” 

            They could all see that tears were welling up in her eyes.  Lina began to roll her chair over, hoping to comfort her. Ethel waved her away, but not unkindly.

            “I’m okay, Sweetheart,” she said.  “And so there was my husband, in Schweiburg, with two ghosts – that’s the way I thought of them – and here I was, with two little boys.  And now I felt like the abandoned one.”

            “You were the abandoned one!” Renate said tenderly.

            “Up until then, for those nearly five years, I was the happiest woman alive. I loved my husband, and he loved me, and we had the two boys we loved, too. It was a perfect picture.”  She paused, then looked down at her lap. “And then, suddenly, one day, I no longer knew him. And suddenly, in a flash, he was gone.”

            “But then how did we all end up in Schweiburg?” Lina asked.

            Ethel waved her hand again. “That is a story for another day, Lina. But to put it into one sentence: I went after him.”

            “And then I was born.”

            Ethel nodded, but clearly she was thinking back to that time.

            “But what about Gisele and Hannelore?” Lina asked softly, not wanting to upset her mother, but also not wanting to leave this bit of family history unexplored.

            “Oh,” Ethel said, turning to look at her, “what Papa had said about Hannelore was one hundred percent true.” She sighed and shook her head sadly. “So was what he said about Gisele, even though they weren’t blood relations.”

            Lina wanted to ask for details, but it was clear this topic was closed.

            Kristina turned back to the pot on the stove and scooped a dollop of the jam mixture onto a saucer to cool, to test whether it had thickened enough.

            “Things were just never the same after that, though,” Ethel said, wiping the tears that had fallen onto her cheeks.  “Papa was never the same.”

            “What happened to him?” Lina asked, her braid now tightly wrapped around her wrist.

            Renate saw that Ethel was struggling to come up with an answer, so she offered one herself.

            “He fell in with some despicable people there, Lina. Got involved in some bad doings.” Then she turned to inspect the raspberry blob on the saucer.

            “This looks jelled, don’t you think, Kristina?”

            Lina knew this was the end of the conversation.  A pall had fallen over the room, and she felt it was all her fault.

            “Mama,” she said quietly, rolling over and placing her hand on Ethel’s, “I’m sorry I asked. I didn’t mean to upset you.”

            “Don’t apologize, Lina,” Ethel replied, taking her daughter’s hand in both of hers.  “I was the one who started talking about it. And besides, your papa and I… We… well, I guess I’d say we’ve gotten back to the way things were at the beginning.  Or at least, most of the way there.” She stopped talking and looked over at Renate. “I don’t know what came over me!”  she announced brightly. “What’s going on with us these days? All this talking about matters of the heart. This is not at all like us, is it, Mama?” She smiled. “But you know,” she added, holding up the pillowcase she was embroidering, “I guess I started talking about this because yesterday I had the thought, Ethel, don’t you feel like making a quilt?”

            “And do you, Mama?” Lina asked her.

            “Yes, I do!  I don’t know why.  Your grandma’s right – after we came back from Schweiburg, I never made another quilt.  The creative energy just wasn’t in me anymore, I guess.”

            “But now it is?” Kristina asked, feeling that this was safe enough territory for her to venture into.

            “I think it is,” Ethel said, and she smiled again, sincerely now. “I felt it the day after we went to see Mr. Groening.  I was looking for something in the cupboard where I have all the leftover fabric stored, and all of a sudden, an idea for a pattern came into my head. And it made me feel happy.”

            “Mrs. Bunke,” Kristina said, “why that’s wonderful!”

            Renate gave a wry smile and quoted Kristina. “’Mrs. Bunke.”

            “Yes, you’ll have to stop that, Kristina,” Ethel told her.  “I’ve been trying to get you to call me Ethel ever since you’ve been here, but now you’re really going to have to let go of that. Please start calling me Ethel.”

            “Or Mama,” Lina put in.  “Some women call their mother-in-law that.”

            At first, Kristina smiled, but then she took them all aback by suddenly bursting into tears.

            “What is it, Dear?” Renate asked, slipping an arm around Kristina’s shoulders.

            “I’m sorry,” Kristina said through her tears. My God, she thought to herself, first I fall apart the other night, and now this!  

            “No, no,” Ethel said, in an attempt to comfort her. “What is it? Did we say something to upset you?”

            Kristina shook her head so forcefully that her one, dark braid, danced back and forth behind her back. “Not at all.  I was just thinking about my own parents, back home. And my brother. I don’t have any idea whether they’re even still alive.”

            Renate and Ethel exchanged glances. They knew that, as soon as Kristina arrived at the Gassmanns’ homestead, she began trying to contact her family back in East Prussia, but her letters remained unanswered. All her inquiries to the organizations that sought to reunite family members separated during and after the war had yielded no information.

            “They don’t even know I’m here,” Kristina went on, snuffling. “How will they find me? If they’re even still alive…”

            Renate gave Kristina’s shoulders a squeeze.  “If they are, then I know they’re looking for you, just the way you haven’t given up looking for them, these past four years.”

            “And maybe you’ll get a letter one of these days,” Lina said.  “With good news.”

            “Wouldn’t that be the very best letter you could get, Kristina?” Ethel asked. “A letter telling you your long lost family is still on this earth?” She knew they were all thinking about the story she’d just told.

            Now the three women felt like they’d made a terrible mistake in talking about Viktor’s supposedly dead relatives without a thought about how that might make Kristina feel. Ethel in particular was overcome by a feeling of her own insensitivity toward her future daughter-in-law.

            “I wish very much for you to receive such a letter, Kristina,” she said lovingly.  “And preferably before your wedding!” This attempt to shift everyone’s mood, as convoluted as it was, did lighten the atmosphere a tiny bit. At the very least, the four women felt more closely connected to each other now, thanks to Ethel’s open-hearted sharing about the “Schweiburg period”. It wasn’t quite the type of pre-wedding chatter Kristina might have anticipated from her new family. Even so, she was quite sure that this information would prove far more valuable to her than any discussion of embroidery patterns for her trousseau ever could.

            Meanwhile, oblivious to that fact that family history was being divulged a mere thirty yards away, the Gassmann and Bunke men were tending to the quite tangible details involved in the crafting of furniture. Even so, their tending did not preclude conversation – conversation that was just as emotionally-tinged as their female relatives’.  They, however, being men who’d been raised to be tight-lipped, kept those emotions much more tightly under wraps. They concealed them beneath the tracings of pencils upon wood and paper, or within the movement of an arm as it planed what would become the back of a chair.

            Peter was perched on one of the tall stools at the workbench that lined the room’s far wall. He noticed with pleasure how comfortable it was for him to sit there, without having to bend his right leg to keep discomfort at bay. He was enjoying being able to focus on his plans without being distracted by the tearing aches that had plagued him ever since he’d returned from the war. 

            Ulrich noticed his grandson flexing his leg as he sat on the stool.  “Does your leg hurt, Peter?” he asked, concerned.

            “Not at all, Grandpa,” Peter replied, pausing and flipping his pencil back and forth with his thumb and middle finger.  “I was just testing it out, to see how it felt.”

            Viktor was at an adjacent seat, engaged in the beginning stages of carving a strip of wood that would form the apron for the oak table that a client in Bockhorn had ordered. For the first time in a long while, he found himself fully enjoying the delicate process of moving away layers of wood to create the shape he wanted. He felt a deep peace spread through him as he moved the tool gently along the wood.

            “And how does it feel?” he asked Peter. 

            “Amazing,” Peter replied.  “After so much pain for so long, I almost can’t believe it’s really gone now.”

            “I can’t believe you didn’t notice you were better until after we got back home,” said Marcus, who was stationed at a saw horse, planing a plank that would form part of the top of the table. 

            “Doesn’t make any sense to me, either,” Peter told him.  He shrugged and leaned back over his drawing, but Marcus went on.

            “Now that you’re back on both feet,” he began, “I don’t see any reason I need to come back to work here full time.”

            Ulrich, who had been expecting this topic to come up from the moment Peter hopped across the kitchen floor, noticed a slight stiffening in Viktor’s back. Figuring he’d he’d give Viktor a chance to choose his own response, Ulrich spoke. “How’d you figure that?” he asked in a neutral tone, without the slightest pause in the sanding he was engaged in.

            Marcus straightened up and blew on the plank before him to scatter the wood shavings, then tested the surface with his fingertips.

            “Well, seems clear to me.” He paused, and Ulrich, to his surprise, sensed in Marcus’ tone a slight willingness to discuss, rather than simply push his point. “Peter’s been concentrating on the cabinetry because he couldn’t work out in the forest, right?”

            “Not entirely,” Viktor said, also in a calm voice. But Ulrich noticed his tensed muscles.

            “Why, then?” Marcus asked, also a bit surprised at how relaxed he was feeling about raising this topic. Maybe, he thought, it’s because I know I’ll be able to stay at my job. No need to even worry about it.

            “It was also because I always enjoyed this part of the business anyway,” Peter told him. His tone lacked the defensiveness that would normally have crept into his voice in such cases.

            “Which I never have,” Marcus said, matter-of-factly.  “We all know that.”

            “And we also know,” Ulrich said, raising the hand that held the sandpaper and extending his forefinger, “that we have always made adjustments in this family when adjustments needed to be made.”

            “We don’t always get to do what we want to do,” Viktor added, but without turning around.

            “Except for you,” Marcus said, but without any evident rancor, as he, leaned forward into the next planing movement. It was as if he was stating a simple fact.

            At this, Peter shook his head, but kept his eyes on the paper before him. Here we go, he thought to himself. Ulrich put down the sandpaper and wiped his hands against each other, brushing off the sawdust.  Viktor slowly turned around on his stool, until he was facing Marcus, who was working about ten feet away from him.

            This situation felt familiar to all of them. They’d experienced it many times in the past: Marcus would be dissatisfied with this or that decision, provoke a confrontation with his father, and the two of them would nearly come to blows, before Marcus finally acquiesced.  At this moment, though, Marcus seemed less agitated than past experience led the others to expect. Viktor, too, although he had taken a stance that could swiftly shift into aggressive action, seemed to Ulrich to be considering whether he might get out of this conflict without using any force at all.

            In fact, Viktor, like his son, was surprised by what he was feeling inside. Maybe it was that Marcus’ tone sounded less abrasive than usual. Or maybe he himself was simply calmer for some reason, maybe because the carving was feeling so good to him. But whatever it was – although he had noticed the tense muscles in his own back that Ulrich had also seen – Viktor found himself able to sit in relative peace and hear his son out, rather than tensing his entire body like a notched arrow waiting to vault forward in attack.

            “What, exactly, do you mean by that?” he asked Marcus. He didn’t even have to make an effort to keep his voice calm.

            Marcus planed another swath of the wood, then straightened up.  For a moment, he felt a quick burst of anger, and the words of a stinging reply flashed through his mind.  But only for a second. Then they were gone. He couldn’t call them back. He paused, his mouth opened to speak, but then a different thought came to him. Leave it be. It’ll sort itself out. So shocked was Marcus by this entirely novel way of viewing things, which would never have occurred to him two days earlier, that he ended up by shrugging.

            “I don’t know, really,” he said, and the three others were as confused by his response as he himself.

            Ulrich and Viktor exchanged glances, each of them wondering what was going on.  Is this just a clever ploy? Viktor wondered.  Ulrich knitted his brows and went back to his sanding.  Peter shook his head again. Marcus, he thought. At least it looks like we’ll get away without a fist fight today.  And with that thought, he found his body relaxing, but not entirely.  He still wasn’t able to believe that Marcus had changed, that the Marcus of “my dear Kristina” was there to stay. Best to remain on guard.

            But what Viktor said next caused Peter to put down his pencil for good and spin around on his stool, too.

            “Well, now, Marcus,” Viktor was saying, “we did have an agreement, you and I. That if Lina got healed, you wouldn’t have to come back to work in the business full time.”

            Marcus nodded. “Yes. I remember.” He narrowed his eyes a bit at his father, but again, none of them detected any hostility in his voice.

            Nor had they detected any in Viktor’s.

            “Right,” Viktor went on, with a nod. “So, we go back to see Groening day after tomorrow.  How about we just wait and see what happens then? I’m still happy to abide by our agreement if Lina gets better.” He extended his right arm in Ulrich’s direction. “You, too, Grandpa?” he asked.

            “Yes, indeed!” Ulrich confirmed, pursing his lips and sticking them out, while nodding firmly.

            “Good, then?” Viktor asked Marcus. And when his son nodded in assent, Viktor hopped lightly off this stool and walked over to the saw horse and extended his right hand across it to his son. Marcus grasped it, and the two men shook hands, just as they’d done across the supper table a couple of weeks earlier. Then, still holding Marcus’ hand, Viktor stepped around the side of the sawhorse and placed his free arm around his son’s shoulders.  Smiling warmly, he clapped Marcus’ shoulder with such open affection that Ulrich, Peter, and Marcus alike, were stunned.  Viktor, himself, felt his heart fill with tenderness, and Marcus, muttering something about sawdust, reached up to wipe away some dampness from his eyes.

            Feeling uncomfortable with this display of emotion, Ulrich shifted the topic to Marcus’ upcoming marriage, evidently having decided that at least here there could be some sharing of manly advice that wouldn’t bring tears to anyone’s eyes.

            “Viktor,” Ulrich said, “now that our Marcus here is going to be sawing the log outside the church after the new year – what’s the date again?” he paused to ask, although he knew as well as any of them that the wedding had been set for Saturday, January 14th.

            Viktor, Peter, and Marcus recited the date in unison, which convinced Ulrich that he now had distracted them from the awkward scene of moments earlier.

            “As I was saying,” he went on, smiling mischievously, “as we all know… Well, at least your father and I know, since we’re the married men here, the most important part of the wedding festivities is the log sawing.”

            Viktor nodded, playing along with Ulrich.  But at the same time, he was fondly recalling how he and Ethel had joined forces to cut through the birch log that Ulrich had set out on the very sawhorses Marcus was now using. He also recalled the way Ulrich’s grandfather, Wolf, had appeared and laid a steadying hand on the log. He glanced at the sawhorse now, and although he saw no visible trace of Wolf’s spirit, he heard the old man’s laugh, and the words, “Nice to have all us menfolk here together.” No one else seemed to hear this remark.

            “So,” Ulrich went on, motioning to Viktor, “what advice do you have for our Marcus? What’s the best strategy for the sawing?”

            Viktor turned and gave his father-in-law a sly smile. “Why don’t you share your advice first? You and Renate have been married much longer than Ethel and I.”

            “True,” Ulrich admitted, “but my strategy… well, I really had no strategy. I just handed her the log and the saw, and that was it!”  He laughed at his own joke, and the three others followed suit.

            Viktor, realizing he couldn’t get away without answering, struck a thoughtful pose.

            “My advice?” he began. “Here’s what I think. Now, your mother was – and still is – a very strong woman.  And so is your Kristina, by the way, Marcus.  Been through a lot, and that’s made her strong. Don’t forget that about her, when you come to the log. Of course, you have more physical strength, but that doesn’t mean you can just grab the saw and do what you want with it.  Remember, it’s a two-handed saw. And that’s for a reason.” He paused and looked at both his sons, who were listening with interest, Marcus more attentively than Peter.

            Now Viktor positioned himself on the far side of the saw horse where Marcus was standing. He put one leg in front of him and leaned forward on it. Then, putting his hands out in front of him, he made a gesture of sawing. 

            “Since you do have more physical strength, use it to make the first cut. But even then, be careful. You don’t want to push or pull so hard that first time, that you knock your bride off her feet.” He chuckled, and the others also laughed. Marcus and Peter glanced at each other to try to determine whether their father was making an off-color joke or not.

            “But once you’ve got that groove started,” Viktor went on, a broad smile on his face now, “pay close attention to how she moves, and adjust the strength of your own sawing to hers.  Allow her to feel she is guiding the sawing.”

            “But it sounds like she is guiding it,” Marcus remarked.

            “In a way, she is,” Viktor told him.  “But not entirely. You’re still lending your strength to the effort, and without that, she’d never saw the log in half, not all on her own.”

            “You see, Marcus,” Ulrich said, picking up his sandpaper again, “we both gave you the same advice.”

            “That’s not at all true, Grandpa,” Peter said, breaking into laughter.

            “So it seems to you now,” Ulrich replied cryptically. “Come to me in twenty years and tell me there’s any difference.”

            Peter and Marcus turned to Viktor, hoping for explanation, but he gave none. Pleased that he’d contributed to creating an air of mystery around the tradition of the log sawing, Viktor jovially clapped Marcus on the shoulder. Then he leaned forward. “Good luck to you, Son!” he whispered.   

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Above the River, Chapter 30

Chapter 30

Marcus and Kristina planned to announce their engagement to the family the next morning at breakfast, over coffee and sweet rolls. It was either that, or wait until the evening meal. They both knew that Kristina wouldn’t be able to keep the secret all day, so they decided to tell everyone first thing. 

Kristina did tell Ingrid the news as soon as the little girl got up, but asked her not to say anything at breakfast until she and Marcus told the rest of the family.  But Ingrid, who was excited that there would be a wedding, and that she would be allowed to be a flower girl, found it hard to sit still at the kitchen table. She fidgeted so much on her chair, looking up at her mother, or nudging her elbow, that Renate finally asked whether she had ants in her pants.

Instead of answering, Ingrid glanced up at her mother again, her eyes wide. “Mama?”

Everyone laughed, thinking that Ingrid was asking Kristina to answer Renate’s question. Kristina obliged.

“Not actual ants,” she said, smiling. “Ingrid’s just excited.” 

“About what?” Renate asked. “Something at school?”

Ingrid shook her head and smiled, thrilled that there’d be a game. “Guess again!” she said eagerly.

“Is Stick going to have puppies?” Peter asked, playing along.

“No, Silly,” Ingrid replied indignantly. “Stick’s a boy. He can’t have puppies!”

“True enough,” Viktor said, reaching up to pat Ingrid on her shoulder. “Good girl.”

“Keep guessing!” Ingrid seemed to be fidgeting even more now.

“Did you make a new friend at school?” Ethel asked.

Ingrid shook her head again. “I told you, it’s not about school.  It’s about here!”

“Is one of the goats going to have babies?” Lina asked, inspired by Peter’s question.

“No, no, no!” Ingrid told them.  Then she burst out with, “But maybe Mama will!”

Kristina’s face went crimson, and she put her arm around Ingrid and whispered something in her ear.  Then she looked over at Marcus with an expression that said, “Help!”

“What Ingrid means, I think,” he said, for some reason rising to his feet, “is that, last night, I asked Kristina to marry me, and she said yes!”  Clearly, he wanted to make a toast to his future bride, but, lacking any drink that would be suitable to the occasion, he picked up his coffee cup and raised it. “To my dear Kristina!”

A bit awkwardly, everyone at the table followed suit, except for Ingrid, who raised her glass of milk. “But there might be babies, right Mama?” she asked Kristina in a whisper so loud that the others couldn’t help but hear. 

Lina stifled a laugh and called out, coffee cup raised high, “To puppies and goat kids and human kids!”

Ingrid put down her glass and clapped her hands, bouncing up and down merrily on her chair.

The others also raised their cups, but it was clear that they were all feeling uncomfortable.  It was partly the suddenness of the announcement. Ever since they’d been to see Bruno Groening, the whole homestead seemed to be in motion: There was Peter’s healing, and Lina’s tumble in the woods, and her discovery that being in the trees helped her pain fade, and now this.  There were also the insights and subtle interior changes that many of them were experiencing as a result of the trip.  It was so much to take in, to make sense of, and they all felt a bit off balance. 

Maybe that was why Peter had asked whether Stick was expecting puppies.  With so many parts of their physical and interior landscapes shifting, he thought that he might not have been surprised at all for a male dog to give birth! Later that day, when he considered this new development, he told himself he shouldn’t have been surprised.  After all, I saw Marcus and Kristina  kissing outside the workshop that evening a while back. But still…

Renate seemed the least surprised of them all. Why did they think I sent him out with the tea last night? she wondered as she looked at her family’s confused faces.  I guess they haven’t been paying attention. She was pleased. Kristina would now be a true member of the family. She’d be a Bunke soon, with full rights to stay here forever.

Lina’s voice, as she offered her impromptu toast to puppies, kids, and kids, carried more enthusiasm for this match than she actually felt in her heart. Why is that? she wondered. Was the strong pain that had crept back into her legs overnight impairing her ability to feel joy?  Or was it her disappointment that Kristina hadn’t told her how much she cared for Marcus?  Or perhaps it was her concern that her best friend was now engaged to the man who had terrorized Peter when they growing up? Both of these possibilities ran through her head as she studied Kristina’s face.  Although clearly still embarrassed by the way Ingrid had shared the news, she looked happy and more at ease than she had in the four years since she’d come to live with them.  That’s a good thing, Lina told herself. A good sign.

But it wasn’t just these thoughts that left everyone not quite sure how to respond to what Marcus had said.  It was the way he’d said it. “My dear Kristina.”  No one in the family had ever heard him talk that way to anyone, or about anyone. And they certainly had never heard in his voice what sounded like genuine affection, like love.  Ethel glanced over at Viktor during the coffee toast and caught his eye. “Is that our Marcus?” she seemed to be asking him.  He shrugged, and his slightly raised eyebrows told her that he was as mystified as she by their son’s new demeanor. Is this a new Marcus? Viktor was asking himself. Or just a more skillfully manipulative old Marcus? He wasn’t alone in his wondering. Among the Gassmanns and Bunkes around the table, Renate was the only one who didn’t share the skepticism and wariness which crept immediately into the other family members’ thoughts and hearts.  Perhaps these feelings had arisen in her mind, too, but if they had, she had ignored them, choosing instead to trust her heart and its devotion to Detlef Gassmann’s long-cherished wish to see the log cabin he built full to bursting with new life.

            Despite the new family composition that was now on the horizon, breakfast finished up in the usual way,: Renate, Ethel, and Lina cleared up from the meal, Kristina saw Ingrid off to school; Ulrich and Viktor headed out into the woods, and Peter into the workshop; and Marcus was waiting at the end of the driveway for his office colleague from Bockhorn, who picked him up each day on his way to work in Varel.

            As Kristina walked back into the kitchen, she saw that each of the other women was already settling into her task for the morning, as if nothing at all was different. Do they not care? Kristina thought to herself. The joy and lightness she’d felt after they saw Bruno Groening were nowhere to be found now. They had been usurped by doubt. The feeling of terror she’d experienced so often as she and Ingrid were fleeing their home – and which had lain in her heart and chest as a layer beneath every other emotion for the past four years – was beginning to make itself felt anew, creeping stealthily into her mind.  Maybe they won’t really accept me after all… That’s the thought that had just risen up in Kristina’s mind, when Ethel suddenly turned from where she’d been standing at the counter, measuring out some sourdough starter for the day’s bread.  She brushed a curl out of her eyes and then, opening her arms wide in that odd, but graceful way she had of spreading them as if they were wings, she walked over to Kristina and embraced her.

            “I’m so happy for the two of you,” she said warmly, taking a step back to look at Kristina, and then placing her hands on the younger woman’s shoulders.  “Marcus couldn’t have found a better woman for his wife,” she went on. 

            Renate looked back over her left shoulder at them. “That’s the absolute truth!” she said, tapping her hand on the counter for emphasis.  “These last four years, I’ve been afraid some local lad would snatch you away from us.  Now I don’t have to worry about that anymore.”  She smiled and turned back to the cucumbers she was getting ready for pickling.

            Lina, who had rolled up to the table with some mending, raised her threaded needle in a repeat of her earlier toast. “Here’s to your future wedding dress! We had better sit down today and start designing it.” She shifted her gaze to Ethel. “Don’t you think so, Mama?”

            “Oh, yes,” Ethel said, bringing one hand to the side of her face, index finger pointed up, to express that there was thinking to be done. “Unless, of course,” she added, smiling widely, “you want to follow the family tradition and get married in a flour sack!” Ethel looked back at her mother, and the two of them laughed heartily.  But since it was clear from Kristina and Lina’s faces that they didn’t get the joke, she explained it for them.

            “Both my mother and I felt – at first! – that we had no need of a nice dress to get married in. Why make such a fuss and spend all that time on it?”

            Lina knitted her brows. “But Mama, your wedding picture is right there on the wall. You wore a beautiful dress! Not a flour sack at all. I’m confused.”

            Ethel went over to where the photo of her and Viktor in their wedding clothes hung on the wall, near the door that led into the addition.  It had been a long time since she’d looked at it, and when she did, now, she was struck by the joy in their faces. They looked so young and radiant.  She smiled, grateful that she and Viktor were once again beginning to regain the closeness and intimacy they’d had at the beginning, and had then gradually lost. She took the photo off the wall and handed it to Kristina.

            “Lina’s right,” she said.  “Mama,” she went on, gesturing at Renate, “convinced me that it really was right to make a fuss over a wedding dress, because it marks the beginning of your new life with your husband.  Nothing will be the same after you get married,” she told them, coming around to look at the photo over Kristina’s shoulder. “It’s a new stage of life, and dressing up for it helps you – and your husband – recognize that you’re leaving some things behind. And that other things will be required of you in life now, things you can’t even imagine on the day you get married.” 

            “You make it sound a little scary,” Lina told her, sounding like a normal twenty-year-old young woman who has yet to find the man she’ll marry, and who isn’t quite sure she’s up to what that new stage of life might demand of her.

            Ethel raised one eyebrow and tilted her head to the right. “Well,” she finally replied with a sigh, “married life can have its scary moments. Mine has had them. I won’t deny it.” She looked down at her wedding photo again. 

            “But knowing about them now,” Lina asked, her mending forgotten in her lap, “you’d still marry Papa, wouldn’t you?”

            Ethel paused so long that Renate stopped slicing the cucumbers and turned around, a curious look on her face.

            “Yes,” Ethel said slowly.  “Yes, I would. I imagine every couple goes through very hard times. Do you think so, Mama?”

            Renate shrugged.  “I imagine so, Sweetheart. Your father and I have been very lucky. Hardly a disagreement in all these years.”

            “That,” Ethel said with a smile, “is because Papa manages the forest, and you manage the family. We all know that!”

            “You do?” Renate asked, looking genuinely surprised that her secret was out.

            Ethel nodded. “Now, your father and I,” she said, nodding to Lina, “we both think we know what the other should do, and we haven’t hidden those opinions from each other.”

            “But that seems like the right thing to do,” Lina told her.  “Why wouldn’t you talk about everything?”

            “Ah, Lina, Darling,” her mother said, coming over and smoothing her daughter’s hair, “that is the question, isn’t it?  When to talk about things and when not to.”

            “As you may have noticed, Kristina,” Renate threw over her shoulder, since she’d turned back to her cucumbers by this point, “our family is not big on talking about things.”

            “Mine isn’t – wasn’t – either,” Kristina replied, not sure how much she should say about her own views on this topic, although this response seemed sufficiently neutral.  The last thing she needed was to offend her future in-laws on the morning of her engagement by giving them the impression that she would be too outspoken or too meek in her relationship with Marcus. Without even realizing it, she was still doing what she needed to do to protect her position on the homestead.

            “Now, that’s true,” Ethel said, placing the photo back on its nail on the wall, “About us not liking to get into big conversations as a family.”

            “Only leads to trouble,” Renate put in, shaking her head. They could hear the rhythmic thud of the knife she was using to slice the cucumbers.

            “But, just think,” Lina objected. “If I hadn’t mentioned Bruno Groening, and if we hadn’t talked about it over supper that day, we never would have gone to see him. Peter never would have gotten his healing.”

            “Not necessarily,” Renate announced. Her remark was rendered all the more enigmatic by the fact that they couldn’t see her face. All they saw were her elbows bobbing along in a motion that matched the sound of the knife against the cutting board.

            “I think what Mama – Grandma – means,” Ethel said, as if translating from a foreign language for Kristina and Lina, “is that there are various ways one can help a situation move in the direction you want, aside from bringing it up to the whole family for discussion.”

            “Amen to that,” Renate said, and they could hear the smile in her voice as they saw her head nod.

            “What does that mean?” Kristina asked, quietly and hesitantly. She was still standing just inside the doorway, but she didn’t move, fearing that this would somehow cause the conversation to shift its focus. And the current conversation suddenly seemed desperately important to her and her future married life. Somehow, it had never occurred to her to think about this when she was married to Artur, Ingrid’s father. With him, she’d never felt the need to nudge anything in a given direction.  Things just flowed. But maybe that’s just the way it seems to me now… Kristina thought to herself. I was so young then…

            Renate finally turned around.  She took her apron in her hands and slowly wiped them clean as she spoke.

            “Get to know what is most important to your husband, what he knows the most about.  And let him make all the decisions about that part of your life. Then get to know what is most important to you, what you know the most about. And make it clear to him that if he tries to encroach on your territory, he’ll regret it.”

            Ethel and Kristina and Lina exchanged glances, and it was clear that all three of them were shocked as much by what Renate had said as by the fact that she had said it at all.

            “But Mama,” Ethel said, her hands spread wing-like once again, “you never told me that when I got married.”

            “You never asked me,” she replied, a gleam in her eye. “Kristina here did.”

            Open-mouthed, Ethel stared at her mother. “But you might have shared that with me, as a bit of motherly advice, on my wedding day, for example.”

            Renate shook her head. “You wouldn’t have listened.” When Ethel raised one finger, in preparation for objecting, she asked her, “Would you?”

            “I don’t know,” Ethel answered honestly, and then she smiled. “Maybe not. But still, Mama –“

            “Don’t ‘Still, Mama’ me, Dearie,” Renate told her lightly.  “Kristina here asked, and it’s a good thing she did.  Took me long enough to figure this out myself –“

            “But Grandma,” Lina objected, “didn’t you know this all along, with Grandpa?”

            Renate’s eyes twinkled. “I just really understood it last night,” she admitted. “Isn’t that something?”

            “So,” Ethel clarified, “you couldn’t have told me when I got married, then, even if I had asked?”

            “I don’t imagine I could have,” she said simply.

            Ethel shook her head in amused dismay, and she felt both relieved that her mother hadn’t consciously withheld valuable advice from her more than two decades earlier, and also sorry that Renate hadn’t had this insight into things sooner. She could have used the guidance.

            “But now I can,” Renate went on. “And given our Marcus, I think it might come in handy for you, Dear.” Here she nodded at Kristina.

            Kristina was not quite sure how to interpret the remark, especially since Renate turned back around to her cucumbers before she could interpret the expression on the older woman’s face. Lina and Ethel gave her no help, either. 

            “Do you have any other words of wisdom for us married or soon-to-be married ladies?” Ethel asked, only half joking.  “Now that we’ve opened that door?”

            Renate shook her head sharply.  “Nope. A one-time special.” And with her left hand, she made a gesture of pushing a door closed.

            “Then that makes Kristina very, very lucky,” Lina announced, picking up her needle and thread again.  “And what about you, then, Mama?” she added, looking up at Ethel.

            “Well,” Ethel began, as she retrieved a crock with flour from the shelf on the wall near the stove, “I may have missed out on the key advice, but I’d say I’ve gathered a bit of knowledge in the past twenty-seven years.  Mostly the hard way.”

            “That’s always the way it is,” Renate put in, matter-of-factly. “For all of us.”

            “So, what did you learn the hard way?” Lina asked the question she knew Kristina was eager to have answered, and she herself wanted to hear her mother’s thoughts, too. She knew enough from growing up in this household that moments of such openness were rare indeed.

            Ethel paused, wrapped her arms loosely around the flour crock, and stared off across the room, past Lina. “What have I learned the hard way?” she asked, as if posing the question to herself. 

            “About things being required of you that you didn’t expect, maybe?” Lina piped up, impatiently.

            “Just let her tell it herself,” Renate chided her. “She’s spent her whole life raising you and your brothers and living through a war, and not philosophizing about how she’s lived her life.”

            Ethel gazed affectionately at the older woman. Although Ethel knew that her mother loved her, Renate didn’t often directly offer words of support, so she took some time to savor this moment before speaking.

            “What I would say,” she began finally, “is this.  When things happen that you don’t expect, things that make you wonder who the man in front of you is… I mean, when it seems to you that some stranger has replaced the man you married… When that happens, you have to look into his eyes and struggle as hard as you can to see – in the eyes of that stranger – the man you married, the man you fell in love with.  That’s the only thing that will give you a fighting chance.”

            Neither Kristina nor Lina had expected such a serious and disquieting bit of advice. Kristina wasn’t about to say anything here, since she sensed it was a delicate family moment that she couldn’t possibly grasp. Lina, who had no more insight than Kristina into what events had enabled her mother to gain such insights, did speak up.

            “What happens otherwise? If you don’t fight to see him?”

            Ethel looked Lina in the eye and then Kristina. “Then your marriage is over,” she said, simply, in a deadly serious tone.

            Kristina and Lina exchanged glances. Then Kristina, who hadn’t had enough years with Artur to encounter such a situation before he was killed on the Eastern front, asked, “But what do you do then?”

            Ethel pursed her lips, then replied. “Either you stay, or you leave.”

            The two younger women looked to Renate, hoping she would clarify things somehow. But the Gassmann family matriarch remained where she was, her back to them, slicing cucumbers for pickles, just as she had done in this very same kitchen for more than forty years.

*          *          *

            During the days that followed, before the family’s next trip to Bremen to see Bruno Groening again, each of them was engaged in the process of not only understanding what had or had not changed for him or her in the time since the first meeting, but also observing what was different with others in the household. This was a week of changes, both visible and unobserved, physical and internal. The healing of Peter’s leg was clear to them all, and all of them, at this point, applied the word “healing” only to the physical body.  Although they all found themselves looking at the world, each other, and themselves, in new ways during these days, none of them would have claimed that they had been “healed” of anything, despite the fact that they each underwent shifts after the meeting with Bruno Groening. Rather, the whole Gassmann-Bunke clan spent that week in something of a daze, experiencing certain thoughts and feelings, but without analyzing them.

            For some of them, like Renate, long-suppressed memories came to mind. One day in the forest, Ulrich found himself thinking of his mother with kindness, even though she had died when he was just a babe, leaving him to be raised by his father and volatile step-mother.  Others, like Ethel, felt unexpected lightness and joy. The closeness that she and Viktor had regained of late only deepened after they went to see Groening, and by the middle of the following week, Ethel found herself singing in the kitchen and looking forward to sinking into her husband’s arms at night.

            Kristina, who at first was filled with relief and happiness, then sank suddenly and inexplicably into the terror of the past. Had she been able to ask Groening about what had happened that evening in the forest, when Lina fell from her wheelchair, he would have told her not to worry. He would have explained that this was simply part of her healing, a release of the old fears – the evil – that had settled into her body. “Regelungen” is what he would have called it, even though he’d spoken only of physical Regelungen that evening in Bremen, and not of the sometimes terrifying way the mind and heart also release long-held burdens.  But Groening was not there to reassure Kristina. So, she ended up spending the next week alternating between joy at her engagement to Marcus and a low-level, but still perceptible, concern that her old fears would come back again and spoil her new-found happiness.

            Marcus, whose sudden expressions of affection stunned those around him, was not at all aware that he seemed to them like an entirely different person.  He just delighted in the openness of his heart and in the warmth and love that now filled it, sensations he never recalled having experienced in his whole life. He spent no time analyzing why this was happening now. But while he strode around the homestead with unprecedented lightness of bearing, his brother and sister and parents seemed to be holding their breaths, as if waiting for the “old” Marcus to reappear in an outburst of rage or recrimination.

            Viktor was the only one among them who was able to place the breathtakingly painful sensations he had felt at the Birkners’ house into a larger context: He understood that the energy of the forest and the power that Groening called the Heilstrom affected both his body and mind, and in nearly identical ways: this power somehow enabled deeply-held terrors to be freed and released. For some reason, he didn’t try to explain this to himself. Rather, he found himself picturing the injured swallow Lina had mentioned to them. He kept seeing, in his mind’s eye, the moment when the swallow gained the strength to lift off the ground, free. And he knew that, although what he had gone through both times – in the forest, and in Bremen – disturbed, and even frightened, him, it was all meant to help him.

            Lina, who was able to detect a persistent sense of inner peace during this time, nonetheless struggled to maintain her faith that the pain that came and went in her legs really was the Regelungen Groening had described, and that the Regelungen would lead to complete healing for her. During this time, she also strived not to compare herself to Peter, not to entertain the thought that perhaps he had been healed, while she hadn’t, because he somehow believed more perfectly than she did. When the temptation to invite these thoughts in did arise, she would, through force of will, shift her attention back to repeating the phrase Groening had whispered in her ear: Trust and believe. The divine power helps and heals.

            Lina also felt the loving support of her family in a way that she hadn’t before.  It wasn’t that she had felt a lack of concern before. Or, at least, she hadn’t felt that for four or five years now. But when they all enthusiastically jumped on the Bruno Groening bandwagon, when they all went to see him with her, she began to sense that they had come together as a kind of team to help her. That was something new.  She believed – unlike in those darker moments early on – that each member of her family, did think about her situation, that they did want to help her. But until Bruno Groening came along, there just hadn’t been any force that could unite them to fight for her and for her return to health. That’s exactly how Lina thought of Groening: as a force that somehow managed to give everyone in her family the hope that she would be able to walk again. 

            Thinking about Bruno Groening in this way, Lina was also, like her father, reminded of the swallow with the injured wing. She recalled what she’d told her family about how she’d first despaired that it would die, and how she’d then seen it summon strength from somewhere and rise up and fly off.  She remembered telling them that she felt that power must have come from God. The day after they visited Groening, as Lina called to mind the image of that swallow, she knew that she’d been right about how the wing had been healed, and about how the swallow had been able to fly again: It took in the power of God and was healed, she told herself. And now, here’s Bruno Groening, giving us all hope and strength, by connecting us to God’s power. That’s the way Lina saw it, even though she couldn’t begin to explain how Groening was able to do that.  But she saw no need to strive to explain it rationally. She was just grateful that he could do it. More and more often during the week between the first and second trips to see Groening, Lina thought of the swallow, of its injured and then healed wing, and of her own legs. Trust and believe, she repeated to herself. The divine power helps and heals.

            Once the swallow made its way back into her consciousness, Lina also found herself reflecting back on the day she had caused such controversy at the supper table the month before by asking, “Does God have a plan for us?” Lina recalled Marcus’ vigorous rejection of this idea, based on his belief in our absolute free will: There was no use in God making up a plan for our lives – a “wish”, as Marcus had called it – since He was, in fact, powerless to affect our actions in any way.   Given that Marcus thought this way, it wasn’t surprising, Lina thought now, that he had also scoffed at her when she suggested that perhaps any suffering we experience is really part of God’s plan for us. She and Kristina had gone on to discuss this question on their own.  Was it God’s plan for her to become paralyzed? For Peter to be injured in the war? For Kristina’s husband to die in the war, and for Kristina and Ingrid to experience those horrors as they fled to safety? The two of them hadn’t come to any conclusion about whether such things really could be in God’s plans for them, much less why this would be the case if it was the case.  But now this question arose once more in Lina’s mind.  Maybe she would have the chance to ask Bruno Groening about it when they saw him next.

            One clue to the answer Lina was seeking was actually right in front of her, although she didn’t realize it. But what she did notice, the very first day after their trip to Bremen, was that everyone in the household was suddenly going out of their way to let her know they believed she’d be healed.  Throughout the day, one or the other of them would lean over and pat her on the shoulder and say, “Just a few more days until we go back,” or “You’re looking stronger already,” or, in Ingrid’s case, “Will you push me in the wheelchair after you’re healed?”  Kristina was always reminding her to keep hold of the tin foil ball. Lina guessed that Kristina must have told Ethel and Renate Groening’s parting words, because one day she heard the two of them in the kitchen softly singing, ‘Trust and believe, trust and believe,” to some made-up tune.  All of this shored up Lina’s own belief that she would actually walk again soon.

            She was also strengthened by daily trips into the heart of the woods. This new daily routine came about in the following way: Thanks to her foray to the treehouse with Peter and also to those heavenly minutes she spent lying on the forest floor that same evening as she waited for Kristina to bring help, Lina was able to convince herself that she did, indeed, feel less pain in her legs when she was amongst the trees. No one could explain why this was, at least not in words.  But Ethel surmised, and the others agreed, that this shift was connected to the divine energy they associated with the forest, with God’s energy that somehow circulated through the trees.   So, already on Saturday, the day Ingrid announced that her mother and Marcus were getting married, Viktor decided that they should make sure Lina spent a good amount of time in the forest each day, so that she could absorb the heavenly there.

            That first day Viktor carried her into a lovely, sunny clearing in the woods and lowered her gently onto a thick fallen log so that she could sit.  But Kristina, who had also come along, noticed right away that Lina wouldn’t be comfortable sitting like that for long, since there was nothing to lean back against.  So, she ran back to the house and enlisted Peter, who soon reappeared in the clearing, carrying a wicker chair from the porch. He and Viktor lifted Lina off the tree trunk and eased her down into the chair.  She smiled as she leaned back and rested her arms on the rounded chair arms.  Kristina sat down on the forest floor, using the fallen log as a back rest. 

            “Go off back to work, you menfolk,” she said to Peter and Viktor. “We’ll be fine here for a couple of hours, won’t we Lina?”

            Lina nodded, indicating the knitting bag she’d brought with her.  And Kristina pointed to her basket.

            “I’ll collect some berries, and Lina will knit.”

            Later on, toward supper time, a whole parade of Gassmanns and Bunkes made their way into the woods to see how their Lina was faring.  She laughed as she saw both of her parents and grandparents, along with Kristina and Peter, walking gaily amongst the birches and alders.

            “Are you off on a picnic?” she asked them.

            “We just came to collect you,” Ethel told her, leaning over to kiss her daughter on the cheek and give her braid a playful tug.  

            “Now there’s an idea, though,” Renate exclaimed.  “A picnic!”

            Ethel, who was standing with her arm hooked around Viktor’s elbow, surveyed the treetops above her. Closing her eyes, she took in a deep breath and slowly let it out. 

            “It’s been so long since I’ve been out here at all,” she said. “I’ve forgotten how divine it feels.” She turned to Viktor and smiled. The light in her eyes made his heart fill with tender feelings of love for her. Afraid he might start crying, he summoned up a husky voice.

            “Then why not have a picnic out here tomorrow?” he suggested.

            Ulrich seconded the idea. “We’ll get that other spruce down by the end of today,” he said to Viktor. “A picnic will be a nice reward for us all.”

            “Can we have it at the treehouse?” Peter asked, sounding almost like a little boy in his joyful anticipation.

            “No, Peter, that’s too far for you to carry me again,” Lina said, not wanting to put anyone out.

            “Oh, I’m not planning to carry you,” he said, turning to her with a crafty smile.   

            Now Lina felt very awkward. “Well, we can’t ask Papa or Grandpa,” she began.

            “Nope,” Peter agreed. “But we won’t have to!”

            “Why’s that?” Renate asked.  Then she saw Ulrich smile.

            “Peter’s come up with something to spare his grandpa and papa’s backs,” he told them.

            “What is it?” Kristina asked.

            “Well, I took one of the other chairs like this one, and I lashed two poles to the sides of it, like this.” He indicated with his hands where the poles were, running front to back, and extending out about three feet in front and back.

            “It’s a palanquin,” Ulrich told her, smiling. 

            “Fit for a queen!” Ethel chimed in, leaning down to kiss the top of Lina’s head.

            “But…,” Lina replied, looking from one to the other of them, “someone will still have to carry me.”

            Peter nodded. “Yes, but there will be two of us in front and two in back, so it won’t be difficult at all.”

            “We’ll be your litter-bearers,” Ulrich said with a smile. 

            He had been so happy when he’d walked into the workshop a bit earlier and seen Peter’s contraption. Although he hadn’t talked about it these past four years, it had been a terrible blow to him, too, when Lina was paralyzed. In his view, she was the person in the family whose ties to the forest equaled his own, and the one he could count on to continue his collaboration with the trees with the same heart he possessed.  There was Viktor, of course, but his connection to the trees, while strong, had also waxed and waned over the years. It now seemed to be waxing steadily once more, but even so, it was in Lina that Ulrich had always seen the future of his life’s work.  Thus, he had been devastated by her accident, which seemed to deprive him of both his vibrant granddaughter and his rightful forestry heir. Already a taciturn man, Ulrich had grown even more so over the past four years, speaking little with the family, except about the running of the business. 

            Renate noticed during these years, that Ulrich barely listened to all her commentaries and calculations regarding the family. But she was at a loss when it came to knowing how to bring him out of the melancholy that had seeped back into him. It was only when she handed him the newspaper clipping about Bruno Groening that a hint of the old spark came back into his eyes. Seeing this convinced Renate that taking Lina to see Groening would be the right thing to do, and not just for Lina, but for Ulrich, too. What she didn’t realize then, was that it was the right thing to do for every single one of them.  

            Thus it was that all the members of the extended Gassmann-Bunke family, which Kristina and Ingrid were now just a few months’ shy of joining officially, made their way to the treehouse late in the morning on Sunday. The women wore their everyday dresses and aprons, the men an assortment of more of less clean work clothes.  Wicker baskets abounded, some brimming with loaves of bread, while others covered in worn, but still cheerful, kitchen towels concealed chunks of cheese and ramekins of butter. Yes, Renate assured Marcus, slapping his hand playfully as he bent to lift one towel to peer beneath it, there was sausage! There were also bottles of homemade cider and even their home-brewed beer.  And, of course, cake: a simple sheet cake topped with raspberry jam and dusted with powdered sugar.  

            If this group picture was all you saw on this morning, you’d say that this troupe looked like any other family heading into the woods for a mid-summer picnic. But if you shifted your gaze to the front of the group, you’d see Lina sitting erect in a wicker chair, while the four male members of her family walked along – two on her right, and two on her left – with the poles that Peter had lashed to sides of the chair resting on their shoulders. Their slow walking and the fact that Lina sat at their shoulder level, so that her head rose higher than theirs, lent a certain regal air to the whole procession. In fact, Lina’s bearers were making their way along the path at a measured pace because none of them wanted to be the one to trip on a branch and send Lina tumbling to the ground.  So, they directed their eyes downward as they walked. This also enhanced the impression that they were carrying a queen who commanded their utmost respect and devotion. For her part, Lina sat as still as she could, resisting the urge to look back over her shoulder and wave at the adoring masses – namely, Renate, Ethel, Kristina, and Ingrid – who were bringing up the rear.  Ingrid, who wanted to help carry Lina, but whose head barely came up to the shoulders of the men, made one brief foray to the front of the procession, walking between Marcus and Ulrich, her right arm raised and her little hand touching the pole, to symbolize her contribution to the effort.

            Even once they reached the old beech tree and Viktor, Ulrich, Peter, and Marcus gently lowered themselves – and thus, Lina – to the ground, Lina still felt quite queenly, since everyone around her took seats either on the ground or on the nearby large fallen tree trunk.

            “We’re not allowed to have our heads higher than yours,” Ingrid announced solemnly, as she walked around, bent over and carefully measuring her own height with her hand and comparing it to Lina’s.   They all laughed at this, and Lina found that she did, indeed, appreciate the higher vantage point that she’d enjoyed on her “ride” here and even now.  How liberating! she thought, realizing the toll that spending four years at the level of everyone else’s waists had taken on her. It was exhilarating! She swore that the cheese and sausage had never tasted as good as they did today. 

            Viktor noticed this, too: Renate’s cooking had grown even tastier since the visit to Groening. He hadn’t realized, back in 1921, when he complimented his future mother-in-law’s cooking, that the quality of her cooking would, like his step-mother’s, suffer under the sorrow she endured when Hans left for America.  In the past few days, though, Renate’s stews and side dishes had regained the sublime quality that Viktor had noticed when he first came to the Gassmann homestead. Now, it was finally beginning to peek out of her heart once more, and into the dishes she placed before her family.

            Even Marcus, who, to Lina’s surprise, had not balked at being one of the chair-bearers, looked relaxed and happy as he leaned back on one elbow, his crossed legs stretching out before him, alongside his fiancée. Peter, who was sitting opposite them, between Renate and Ulrich, was looking at Kristina with an intensity that surprised Lina.  How did I not see this before? she thought, as she grasped how her brother felt about the woman who would soon be his sister-in-law.  How much I’ve missed these past four years, she thought. But this realization did not sadden her. Rather, she delighted in what she was now able to observe about her family members.

            Viktor and Ethel had taken seats on the fallen log kitty-corner to Lina, and Lina was struck by the way they seemed to have eyes only for each other.  Occasionally, Viktor would reach out to take his wife’s hand, and his cornflower blue eyes looked brighter than Lina remembered them ever being. She also saw what appeared to be almost a halo around her mother’s head. Lina concluded that this was just the light through the trees playing on the strands of blonde hair that had escaped from Ethel’s braids and framed her head.

            “Can I go up?” Ingrid asked, addressing all of them.  She was standing at the foot of the treehouse’s rope ladder, one small foot already poised on the lowest rung.

            Marcus jumped up and brushed off his pants.  “Come on, then. Let me help you,” he offered.  She’s going to be my step-daughter before long, he was thinking.  But even he, so unused to being connected to his heart, noticed that the thought to help Ingrid climb the ladder had come not from his head, but from his heart, where he detected a little bit of happiness and warmth toward Kristina’s nine-year-old daughter.

            “I don’t need help,” Ingrid announced brightly.  “Just permission.”

            They all laughed, and Marcus, who had, by now, reached the ladder, demonstratively spread his arms wide, ceding her point, and directing a wink and a smile toward Kristina.

            “I think we all see who’s really going to be able to keep Marcus in line,” Renate joked, and the crowd laughed once more.

            Marcus stood alongside the ladder (and surreptitiously placed his foot on the lowest rung to steady it, once Ingrid began making her way up). The little girl confidently climbed upward, hand over hand, until her head and shoulders cleared the top. 

            Watching Ingrid, Viktor was overcome by the memory of watching Ethel climb up the ladder on that first day she brought him here. She’d seemed so self-assured, so strong and graceful, then – so free.  He looked at her now, took in her smile as she watched Ingrid, and smiled back at her when she turned and caught him gazing at her.  Their eyes met, and Viktor recalled the evening he proposed to her, how he told her that he wanted her to be guided by God to give him the answer that was right for her, even if that meant refusing him.  He told her that he would never want to lead her off a cliff. Looking at his wife now, Viktor recalled how confused she was by his words about the cliff.  She said she couldn’t imagine him ever leading her off a cliff.  And yet, he ended up doing just that. All the same, she had remained strong and graceful and confident to this day, even as she found herself pushed to the very edge of the cliffs that neither of them could have imagined as they sat up there in the treehouse.  He felt so much love for her now, as he stared into her eyes and saw in them her love for him.  The now-familiar pain had returned to his chest, alongside the joy and peace that the love brought.  I just want to make it all right.    

            Ingrid paused at the top of the ladder, trying to figure out how to maneuver herself up onto the treehouse floor.

            “Grab the second floorboard from the edge,” Ulrich called out.

            At this, Ingrid shot back, “I know, I know!”, and a moment later, they all saw her again. Now she was leaning over the treehouse railing and announcing what she had found up there.

            “Leaves. Some pine cones. But why pine cones?” she asked with a frown. “This isn’t a pine tree, is it?”

            “It’s a beech tree!” they all answered, nearly in unison.

            “She needs some tutoring,” Ulrich said, smiling.

            “Don’t worry about it, Kristina,” Viktor told her. “Your future grandpa-in-law will teach her everything about the forest.”

            “Just like he did me,” Lina affirmed with a nod.

            When Kristina heard these words, her heart melted. She gazed at each member of the Gassmann-Bunke family, these people who would soon be her family, too, hers and Ingrid’s. We are blessed, she thought. And for the first time since she’d been living here, she truly believed her own words. There was no trace now of the earlier terror that had descended on her when Lina fell out of her chair in the woods. Now she really did feel like she belonged.

            She glanced at Lina and was surprised to see a cloud-like figure standing behind her. Kristina immediately recognized this as the old man whose spirit she’d glimpsed in her room years earlier.  She couldn’t forget those gray-blue eyes and long gray beard. So, Wolf, she thought, You’re here, too. This seemed so fitting to Kristina that she nearly pointed him out to Marcus.  But then she restrained herself, afraid her fiancé would think her crazy. She could have mentioned it to Viktor, though: He was, at the same moment, also looking at the space behind Lina’s chair. It had been nearly twenty-five years since he’d heard the old man’s ringing laugh, but he heard it now, and he smiled to himself.

            Lina, however, did not sense her great-grandfather’s presence. She’d never seen him. But she did notice something that touched her deeply. She glanced over at Ulrich and saw how he was beaming as he looked up at Ingrid.  It reminded her of the way his face looked when she was Ingrid’s age, when he’d bring her out here into the forest and introduce her to each tree.  “Miss Lina,” she remembered him saying, “meet Mr. Pine.”  Now, it might seem that this memory combined with watching her grandfather and Ingrid now, might leave Lina feeling a bit sad, for any number of reasons. But this wasn’t the case at all.  Rather, Lina suddenly felt an upwelling of tenderness for Ingrid.  Maybe it was that she saw herself in the little girl, the way Viktor saw Ethel in her.  Or perhaps it was that, as Lina concluded from watching Renate’s face, her grandmother was glimpsing the bright future that this new addition would bring to their family. 

            Lina couldn’t put her finger on why she felt the way she did, but she didn’t feel any particular need to figure it out.  At that moment, she was content with the happiness that was filling her heart and lending a distinct lightness to her whole body. In the course of these hours spent in the company of her beloved family and the trees she adored, the pain in her legs had vanished entirely. And this was enough for her right now: for all of them to be here together, smiling, with love and affection flowing between them.

            Lina was certain that their family had never experienced a time together like this, at least never since she’d been alive.  Is this what happiness is? she wondered. Is this God’s plan for us all? To be together and to share this kind of joy and love? Lina caught sight of her grandmother’s face – her smile so broad, her eyes so brightly lit now – and as she did so, a swallow, iridescent black and purple in the sunlight, swooped down between the trees and landed on one of the beech’s low branches.  Lina’s mouth opened in surprise. A swallow here? I never see them in the woods.  The bird was looking right at her, and – Am I imagining it? –  it extended one wing down to touch the branch it was resting on.  Then, in one, swift, powerful movement, it lifted off the branch and, giving a sharp chirp, rose sharply into an opening between the beech tree and the surrounding pines, and vanished in the sky. 

            Lina was too shocked to speak, or to call anyone’s attention to the bird. Besides, it was gone in an instant.  But in the brief time of its visit, Lina felt herself filled up with power, a force that tingled throughout her body and brought her a lightness that gave her the sensation that she was floating above the seat of her chair.  She felt weak in the knees and, simultaneously, full of gratitude, for she knew that this was a gift from God.  And at this very moment, a flash of insight came to her: It was in God’s plan for me to have my accident.  She glanced around once more, shifting her gaze from one to the other of those sitting here with her; and then up at Ingrid, too, who was continuing to entertain them by piling dried leaves on top of her head as a crown, and striking the most regal pose she could. I had to have my accident, Lina thought, for this:  to bring us all together, in happiness.  

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Above the River, Chapter 29

Chapter 29

Once the family came out of the Birkners’ house, they pushed Lina back out to the car and got her settled in. Marcus drove the car, and their grandparents rode in the back seat, just as they’d done on the drive to Bremen.  Peter rolled Lina’s empty wheelchair over to the pickup truck, easily hoisted it into the back, and then joined his parents in the truck, stepping lightly up into the cab and taking a seat next to his mother, who was sitting in the middle. 

When they arrived back home, it was already so late – after eleven – that everyone’s sole focus was on helping Lina out of the car and into the house, so that Ethel could get her ready for bed.  They were all dead tired, but, at the same time, each of them was also filled with a strange energy.  It was a mental alertness that was unfamiliar to them, and which made no sense, since Mrs. Birkner had not served any coffee or tea.  They all felt something in their bodies, but the something varied, and the intensity varied from person to person: Marcus barely noticed any physical sensations, but was surprised at his wakefulness. He also perceived a certain clarity regarding his situation, even though he couldn’t yet articulate it. Renate and Ulrich, too, just couldn’t get to sleep, so they lay awake, discussing the evening. 

At one point, Ulrich asked Renate to lay her hand on his arm and tell him whether she could feel the strong vibration he was sensing in his body.

“No,” she replied, after doing as he’d asked. “But maybe that’s because my own hand is tingling.”

“It’s odd, Renate,” he said then. “Mr. Groening was talking about the current – the Heilstrom, he called it, right?”

“Yes, that’s right.”

“Well, that’s what I feel when I’m amongst the trees,” Ulrich told her.  “I know I’ve always said that I feel God out there, feel God in the trees.” He saw Renate nod. “So is that what I’ve felt all these years? The Heilstrom?”

“I can’t say, my dear,” Renate replied, surprised at her own lack of certainty about this, after a lifetime of feeling certainty about everything.

“It felt pretty much the same,” Ulrich went on.  But then he noticed that Renate didn’t seem interested in exploring this fascinating topic.  She looked distracted.  “What is it?” he asked her.

“You know, it was strange,” Renate told him.  “There was a moment, when Mr. Groening was looking at each of us. Remember?” Ulrich nodded, and she went on. “Well, when he looked at me, I suddenly remembered Anna-Liese.”

Ulrich raised himself up on one elbow and looked at his wife with a shocked and concerned expression. “You did?”

Renate nodded. “I could see her face, Ulrich, so clearly. But not her face when she was a baby.” She paused. “Not when she was still alive.”

“How, then?”

“She looked older. Maybe ten? Eleven? But I knew it was her, Ulrich. I recognized her.”

Ulrich said nothing, but drew her to him.

“What can it mean?” Renate asked quietly.

“I don’t know,” Ulrich told her.  “You’re the expert when it comes to that kind of thing,” he said jokingly, although he could tell that this was nothing to make light of.

But Renate went on, as if she hadn’t noticed his tone, and she certainly hadn’t taken it amiss. “It was so, so long ago.  Why did I see her? An older her?”

“I can’t say,” Ulrich replied.  “But how did it make you feel when you saw her?”

Here Renate began crying.  Ulrich started to get worried, but she patted him on the arm. “At first, I felt a bit frightened. I’ve never seen her – that way, seen her face – since she died. I thought maybe she was coming to blame me.”

“No, no,” Ulrich said, seeking to comfort her. “You said it yourself. It was so long ago. If she wanted to blame you, she would have done it years ago.  And besides, she has nothing to blame you for.” He could feel Renate shaking her head.

“That’s not true. What happened was all my fault.” Now the tears poured out of her even more, and Ulrich held her tight as she cried.  The first, faint light was creeping into the sky by the time they finally drifted off to a restless sleep.

* * *

Viktor and Ethel were also too worked up to sleep.  Viktor was consumed with thoughts of the sensations he was feeling in his body.  Back in the Birkners’ house, when Groening came into the room, Viktor begun feeling hot all over. He’d been overly warm even before that, but once Groening began talking, he suddenly felt warmer than he had ever felt in his whole life, as if he was surrounded by a blazing fire. It also felt like flames were scorching him from the inside, especially in his stomach.  The pain from it was intense, right from the start, but he didn’t want to let on to anyone about it, not during the gathering, and especially not afterwards, because Lina was the one who was really suffering. They needed to get her home and into bed as soon as possible.  He was grateful that it was already dark by the time they were driving home, so that Ethel beside him in the truck couldn’t see his clenched jaw, or the way he gripped the steering wheel to keep his attention focused on the road.

But it wasn’t just heat that Viktor felt at the Birkners’ house, or pain in his stomach. Something also happened in his heart, although it was gone now.  If he hadn’t known better, he would have been certain he was having a heart attack. But he did know better. He recognized this pain: It was exactly what he’d felt in the woods the other week. Well, maybe not exactly, since he managed not to double over or scream or cry or vomit right there in the Birkners’ parlor, the way he did in the treehouse. But it was the same kind of pain as then. 

As unhappy as Viktor was to go through that again, he realized that something else about this second experience was familiar to him, too. Lying in bed now, with his stomach still burning inside, he noticed a little well of tenderness inside him, where the pains in his heart had been earlier.  That’s what he had felt after the afternoon in the treehouse: First the terrible dam opened up inside him, and all that pain and sadness came out, and then he suddenly begun to feel alive again.  Just a bit of joy emerged at first, just a bit of tenderness and love for Ethel. That was how it started. And over the next couple of weeks, he noticed that he was feeling more loving toward her. They were falling asleep each night holding hands, or embracing. 

Tonight, at the Birkners’, when Groening looked at him, when the pain in his heart began, and grew, that pain was accompanied – which made no sense to Viktor at all – by the sweetest feeling of love for every member of his family.  Lying in bed with Ethel now, Viktor recalled how he looked at each of them, one by one, as they sat in the parlor listening with rapt attention to Bruno Groening, and how he was overcome by such a wave of gratitude for each of them, and by the strong wish to make everything all right for all of these ones who were so dear to him.

Of course, he didn’t express any of this to Ethel, or ask her what he had asked himself: Could these pains be the Regelungen pains Groening spoke of? He contented himself with drawing his wife closer to him, holding his arm around her shoulder as she rested against his chest.  But he needn’t have worried that Ethel would ask him anything about his own experience that night.  She seemed to be floating on the clouds.  It’s a good thing I’ve got an arm around her! Viktor thought to himself with a smile.  This really was the Ethel of the period of their courtship and early marriage: so joyful and vibrant.  The only thing that tempered her flight into the ether was her concern about Lina.

“Viktor,” Ethel said, “she was never like this – in this much pain, I mean. Not even at the beginning, right after the accident.”

“They gave her some kind of pain medicine then, didn’t they?” he asked, as he gently stroked her blonde curls.

“Yes, in the hospital they did,” she told him. “But before that, right after it happened, before we got her to the hospital, she didn’t seem to be having any pain at all.”

“That happens,” Viktor said, “especially with serious injuries. I don’t know why it is. The brain seems to shut down. It’s as if the person doesn’t even understand that they’ve been terribly injured.”

Ethel realized that he must know this from the war, so she didn’t ask him to explain.  “But,” she did ask, “why would she be having pain now, if she didn’t have it then?  This kind of horrible pain?”

“And in her legs,” Viktor added thoughtfully.

Ethel nodded and raised herself up so that she could see his face. “She felt something in her legs tonight, Viktor.  For the first time in four years.  Surely that must mean something, something good.”

Viktor wrapped his other arm around her and leaned down to kiss the top of her head, so tenderly that he saw tears come to her eyes. 

“I do think it means something,” he said softly.  “Let’s pray to God that it means she’s going to get better.”

*          *          *

Alone in his own room, Peter undressed, and pulled back the bedcovers. Then he sat down and swung his right leg up up onto the bed. He followed with the left and lay down, pulling just the sheet over himself, since the summer night air was still warm.      He had barely closed his eyes – even though he, like the rest of his family, felt too full of energy to sleep – when a thought came into his mind.  He had not noticed it at the time, when they were getting ready to leave the Birkners’ house, or when they arrived back home, but now he realized something.  He’d been the one who helped Lina out of her chair and into the car. Then he’d rolled her chair over to the truck and stowed it there.  After that, he had hopped right up into the front seat of the pickup.  And hopped right down once they got home.  He’d rushed to get Lina’s chair for her, and he’d pulled her up out of the car and into her seat. Then he’d pushed her into the house.  And all – this was the part that gave him pause – without limping, without any pain whatsoever in his mangled right leg.

Peter stopped breathing for a moment or two, and went over all the details in his mind again.  Yes, there really had been no pain. He was sure of it.  Still lying down, he took a deep breath. Then he began slowly bending his right knee and tilting his leg this way and that.  It didn’t hurt.  Next, he sat up in bed, pulled the covers off, and swung first his left, and then his right, leg over the side, until both feet rested on the floor. He did it effortlessly, with no discomfort.  His stomach fluttering now, he stood up and looked down at his right leg, before taking a few steps across the room.  Still no pain. He strode back and forth across the room, faster and faster.  Nothing hurt. 

Next, he lifted his left leg and stood there on his right foot. He hadn’t been able to do that since before the war, because the muscles had been so damaged, and the break a bad one.  That’s what the doctors had said.  But now, he was standing on his “bad” leg. Eager to test what was now possible, he lifted himself up onto his tip toes, and back down again.  It was as if he’d never been wounded. After a few rounds of lifting and lowering himself, Peter suddenly found himself hopping on that right leg, hopping lightly and effortlessly, just the way he’d done as a child. He hopped around the room, his chest bursting with joy.  He had to stop himself from laughing out loud.  He didn’t want to wake anyone.   How? he asked himself in amazement, tears running down his cheeks? How did it happen?

In the room kittycorner from Peter’s, Lina lay in her bed, eyes swollen from all her crying, her jaw clenched from the pain that was coursing ruthlessly through her legs. One hand clutched the bedsheet, and in the other she held the tin foil ball Bruno Groening had given her. “Trust and believe.” That’s what he told me. “The divine power helps and heals.” Squeezing the ball tight with her fingers, she began repeating these two sentences, over and over, over and over. When the morning light streamed through the curtains of her bedroom window and Ethel came in to help her get up, Lina was still holding the tin foil ball, and Ethel could tell by her face that she hadn’t slept at all.  Her face was contorted by pain, but when Ethel leaned over to kiss her daughter on the forehead, Lina looked up at her and whispered, in a tired, but determined voice, “Trust and believe, Mama. The divine force helps and heals.”

*          *          *

The next day was Friday, and the family assembled for their usual breakfast of coffee and sweet rolls before Ingrid headed off to school and Marcus to the office in Varel. Despite the excitement of the previous evening – or perhaps because most of them had not slept so much during the night –no one seemed eager to talk about their visit to the Birkners, or Bruno Groening.  They could all see that Lina was in excruciating pain: Her face was pale, and she sat at the table with her eyes closed, except when she was eating.  Her left hand, which lay in her lap, was wrapped around the tin foil ball Groening had given her.

Kristina, who had helped Lina get washed and dressed that morning, looked across the table, hoping to catch her friend’s eye.  In the nearly four years since she and Ingrid had come to live with the Gassmanns, she had seen Lina hostile, bored, angry, lacking in hope, and full of hope.  But until this morning, she had never seen her in pain, as she was now.

“My God, Lina!” Kristina exclaimed when she walked into Lina’s room and saw her friend sitting, staring glassy-eyed at the door – not at Kristina – one hand gripping the wheelchair’s arm, the other folded around the tin foil ball.  Her lips were moving slightly, but Kristina couldn’t hear any sound.  “What is it?” Kristina asked her. “What did you say?”

Now Lina shifted her gaze to Kristina’s face.  It seemed to take her a few seconds to recognize Kristina, who had to repeat her question once more before Lina answered.

“Trust and believe,” she said, so softly that Kristina just barely caught the words. “The divine power helps and heals.”

Not knowing how to respond, Kristina just nodded.

“Mr. Groening told me that last night before he left,” Lina explained, having realized that Kristina wanted an explanation, but hesitated to ask.

“Ahhh.” Kristina stood looking at Lina for a bit before continuing.  She thought about asking whether she was in pain, but that was clear without even talking about it, so she forged ahead, to the heart of the matter. “Lina,” she said, crouching down next to the wheelchair, so she could look up into Lina’s eyes, “what do you think the pain means?”

“Kristina,” Lina said in a tired voice, “this is the first time I’ve felt anything in my legs in almost four years…”

“That has to be a good sign!” Kristina burst in, eager to encourage her friend.

  “That I’m feeling something?” Lina nodded. “I believe that. I do. But I’m also so scared, Kristina.”

Now Kristina saw that tears were forming in Lina’s eyes. She placed her hand on Lina’s, the one holding the ball, and noticed that her own hand began to tingle immediately.

“Why are you scared?”

“What if this is the way it’s going to be, for the rest of my life?”  Lina grabbed Kristina’s arm with her free hand. “What if it keeps on hurting like this, and I still can’t walk?  Or if I am able to walk, but the pain stays?” She looked at Kristina with genuine fear in her eyes.

Kristina stood up and wrapped her arms around Lina.  “No, no, it won’t be like that, Lina!  It can’t!”  Now she felt tears coming to her eyes, too. For she wondered – just for a brief second –  whether Groening could have somehow harmed Lina. What if he is a charlatan after all? But then she forced this thought out of her mind. She didn’t really believe it, anyway, but even if this was the case, mentioning her thought to Lina would only make things worse. So many people have tried to rob her of her hope and faith. I won’t be one of them. I have to trust and believe, too.

“But, Kristina, it might be like that – that I’m doomed to feel this way forever!  And then what will I do? I don’t think I could go on living like that.”

Kristina had nothing to say to this, so she just kept hugging Lina as she cried.

“That’s what I’ve been thinking about, all night long,” Lina said finally. “Here is how it goes for me: First the pain comes – really, it never goes away. It’s there – strong, strong strong. And I get so frightened that it’ll be this way forever.  Then I repeat, Trust and believe. The divine power helps and heals. And the pain quiets down a little. Then it starts up all over again. Again and again, that’s what I’m thinking and feeling, Kristina.” She leaned her head forward so that it rested against Kristina’s shoulder.

“So when you say that, it helps?” Kristina asked. 

Lina nodded.  “I realized that, toward morning, so now I’ve taken to repeating it.  It helps keep the fear out of my mind.  Not totally, but it helps.”

“Trust and believe,” Kristina said, trying out the words aloud. “The divine power helps and heals.” Then she repeated the phrases a few more times. This felt right to her, and the doubts she herself had been struggling with faded away.  “Let’s just keep saying that, all day long, if we have to.”  She took Lina’s hands in hers. 

“They’ll all think I’m crazy,” Lina replied, and she even managed a thin smile.

“Let them!” Kristina told her. “We need to do whatever we have to do to help you make it through this next week, until we take you to see Mr. Groening again.”

“Oh, Kristina,” Lina cried, “but what if we go back and my legs hurt even more?  I really couldn’t stand that.  I couldn’t!”  The look of fear returned to her eyes.

“Trust and believe,” Kristina told her sternly.  “And remember all those people who got healed in Herford.”

Lina looked her in the eye. “What if that was all a lie?” she said softly. “People planted in the audience to pretend they were healed?”

Oh, so that’s occurred to her, too… Kristina stood up and put her hands on her hips. “But what about that man last night, Mr. Handler? You saw with your own eyes how his leg was healed.  You saw the way he walked around the room, how Groening broke his cane!”

“He could have been a plant, too,” Lina whispered, as if simultaneously wanting to confide in Kristina, but also not voice her doubts.

But Kristina shook her head vehemently. Her own mind was clear now. No doubts!   “No, Lina! No!  I won’t believe that, and you shouldn’t, either!” She pointed at the tin foil ball in Lina’s hand. “How could that be fake, whatever it is that makes my hand tingle when I touch it?”

Lina’s mouth opened in surprise. “I’ve been holding it all night. It makes my whole body vibrate, just like I felt at the Birkners’. You feel that, too?”

Kristina nodded. “And it gives me a peaceful feeling, a feeling of being loved. He couldn’t fake that, could he?” Kristina asked.

Lina shook her head. “I feel that, too, despite how much my legs hurt.”

The two of them were silent for a moment. Then Kristina cried, “But Lina – the newspaper clipping!  We both felt something from that.  For me it was a tingling. And happiness. And I felt that last night in the room. You did, too. I know it. You told Mr. Groening.”

“Yes, but…”

“What I’m saying is this: Even if somehow he could put something in the room that could make us feel that way – although who knows how that would be possible – even if he did, how could he put something into a sheet of newspaper? Something that would cause us both to feel that way when we held it, when we looked at his photo?”

Lina considered this, stopping for a moment as a wave of pain flooded through her.  Then she said, “Yes, you have to be right. He couldn’t fake that.”

Kristina saw a bit of light come back into her friend’s eyes.

“All right then,” she told Lina, stern again. “Then we don’t spend a single minute thinking any more about whether it’s all true or not. You just hold that ball and remind yourself of what Mr. Groening told you. We’ll say it together when we’re working or walking. Agreed?”

Lina nodded. Then she added, “You really felt all of that last night, too, Kristina?” she asked quietly.

“I did.  It felt like a wave came up from the floor, into my feet and up through my body.  A wave of energy, I guess I’d call it.  Like the tingling I felt when I held the clipping, but stronger. Wider, I’d say, if that makes any sense.”

“It does.”

Now it was Kristina’s turn to look off across the room, as if she was thinking back to the evening before and trying to regain full awareness of what she’d experienced then.

“And I felt such calm, Lina.  For the first time since the war began, I felt at peace.  It’s as if a load has been lifted off my shoulders. All the worries. I’ve worried so much about Ingrid, about what I’ll do if another war comes. Even about how I can manage to stay here.” She could see that Lina was about to object, to reassure her, but she shook her head. “I know what you want to say, that we are like family now, that we can stay here forever.  But Lina, I have dreams all the time, where I’m rushing to pack things up, waking Ingrid up to drag her out into the night to flee.” She looked at Lina and took her hands again. “But last night, when Mr. Groening was talking to us, I started to feel so light. That wave – it was more of a trickle, really, but it was still there – it flowed through my body, and I had a feeling, that…  No, I knew it. Everything will be okay. Everything is okay. For the first time since the war began, I went to bed last night feeling at ease, and really knowing that we can stay here with you all.”

“That’s so wonderful, Kristina,” Lina told her. “But I’m so sorry.”

“Whatever for?”

“That I never knew you felt that way.  I mean, I knew you were happy to be living here, to have a more normal life again. But I didn’t know you had those dreams, that you were still so worried. I’ve been so consumed with my own state that I never asked about yours. Forgive me.”

“No, no. There’s nothing to forgive. I have to tell you, Lina, I wasn’t fully aware myself of how strong the worry has been, until it lifted last night. I guess I just lived with it.  But even if I had fully realized it, I wouldn’t have said anything.  After all,” she said with a smile, “it’s not the way we are, we Germans, right?”

Lina shook her head, and knew that she didn’t even need to ask Kristina not to share the conversation they’d just had.  And when she happened to open her eyes and look over at Kristina during breakfast, Kristina blinked once at her, and Lina could see her lips silently mouthing Mr. Groening’s phrases, encouraging her.  That was a good thing, too, because in the next moment, Marcus, holding a hard-boiled egg in his left hand, began gesturing toward Lina with his right.

“I know we don’t talk about things in this family,” he began sarcastically, “but don’t we have to talk about this?”

“What precisely do you mean?” Viktor asked in a flat tone. He had hoped they would be able to get through breakfast, at least, without this conversation.

Marcus tapped the arm of Lina’s wheelchair with the egg, to crack i. “This!  The fact that she is still using this!”

“First of all,” Ethel told him sharply, “you’re talking about your sister, who has a name. Lina.”

Marcus raised his hands in his familiar gesture of mock surrender, then put the egg back down on his plate and directed a challenging gaze at his mother. “And second of all?”

Ethel stared him down.  “Second of all, why do we have to talk about it at all? Mr. Groening asked us all to come back next week, and –“

Shaking his head, Marcus brought his hands to his forehead and ran them back, smoothing his hair. “That charlatan?” he said with a smirk, looking around the table.

“Don’t say that,” Lina told him softly.

“Why not? Let’s call a spade a spade, for once, in this family!”

“Marcus, please!” Renate asked, even reaching toward him. But he just looked at her hand as it approached him and kept talking.

“I agreed with this insane plan to humor you all,” he said.  “But now it’s clear that the experiment has failed. Why can’t we just admit it and get on with our lives?” They all heard the bitterness that had crept into his tone.

“No, Marcus,” Viktor replied, an edge to his voice now, too. “You agreed because there was something in it for you if Lina was healed. You’d be able to stay at your job. Remember?”

Marcus knew that his father was trying to embarrass him, but he wasn’t going to go down that road. “But now the whole thing is irrelevant, because Lina’s never getting out of that chair. She’s stuck there.  All because that fake, Groening, took you all in. And I’ll be stuck here on the homestead for the rest of my life, too.”

At this point, Ulrich and Viktor rose to their feet in unison. But before they could speak, Peter suddenly stood up, too. He’d been sitting at the opposite end of the table from Marcus, on the other side, next to Viktor, and no one had noticed that his shoulders and face went tense when Marcus began his tirade.  The last thing anyone expected was for Peter to get involved in a dispute, even verbally, and much less, physically.  So, all eyes turned to him, and they all fell silent.

“Groening is not a fake,” Peter said in a soft, but strong voice. 

“Peter,” Lina told him, “you don’t have to protect me. I know it looks bad –“

“I’m not protecting you,” Peter replied.  “Well, I am, I guess, but what I’m saying is that I know Groening is on the up and up.”

Marcus guffawed, and they all looked back to him. “Right.  And just how do you know that?” He shook his head, picked the boiled egg up again, which he’d peeled in the meantime, and shoved it into his mouth whole.

“There was that Mr. Handler last night,” Renate put in. “The one whose leg was healed.  We all saw it!”

Marcus shook his head again and spoke with his full mouth, but they all understood. “A plant.  Handler never had an injury in his life.”

“And the woman behind me,” Kristina boldly reminded him.  “Her pain went away.”

Marcus rolled his eyes. “So she said.  I can’t believe you were all taken in by him.”

“But thousands were healed in Herford,” Lina said, and then, silently, kept repeating in her mind, Trust and believe. The divine power helps and heals.

Marcus was about to offer a retort, when everyone noticed that Peter was now standing near the corner of the table, between Ethel and Ulrich, in the middle of the kitchen floor.

“And not just in Herford,” Peter said.

“What’s that supposed to mean?” Marcus asked, not even turning to look at his brother.

“This,” Peter replied simply.  Then he slowly lifted his left leg and stood there, balancing on his right leg, the one everyone knew was his “bad” leg.  At first no one grasped the significance of this posture. It was only when Peter began hopping on his right leg that it slowly dawned on them.  Ethel started out by wondering why Peter was jumping up and down like a schoolboy, but ended by springing from her seat and grabbing him by the elbow. Even so, she couldn’t get any words out. Nor could any of the rest of them.  Marcus finally deigned to turn his head, and when he saw what Peter was doing, his mouth fell open. Bits of hard-boiled egg dropped out and onto his shirt.

Peter stopped hopping and proceeded to walk the length of the kitchen, from the back door to the fireplace. His gait was as smooth as it had been before the war. 

Ingrid was the first to speak. “Mama,” she said, leaning over to Kristina, “Can I hop, too?” Kristina looked at her, as if she hadn’t even heard her daughter, and then shook her head.

“Peter?” Lina asked finally. “What –“

But he put up his hand and said to them all, “That’s not all.  Look at this.”  He walked through the doorway into the addition to the house. Although only Renate could see what was happening from her seat, all of them could hear that Peter was climbing the stairs to the second floor.  They could hear the sound of his footfalls on the wooden steps, moving steadily and evenly up, and then back down again.

When he reentered the kitchen, his face flushed and his eyes shining, with a broad smile on his face, everyone was speechless for a long moment, even Marcus.  Then Viktor and Ulrich, who had remained standing following Marcus’ earlier remarks, both made their way over to him.  A moment later, everyone was standing around him, except for Marcus, who remained seated on principle, and Lina, who had backed her wheelchair up and rolled over next to Peter. 

“You see, Marcus,” Peter said to his brother, speaking strongly and clearly now, “Groening really can heal. How could he have faked this?”

  A chorus of voices asked him to explain how and when it had happened, and he told them the whole story of when he had realized he was healed, and of his nighttime gymnastics.

“You should have awakened us,” Renate said.  “Our room is right across from yours.”

“You should have told us all!” Ulrich added, realizing too late, from the awkward look on Peter’s face, and from the way Lina had bent her head down, why it was that Peter had kept the news to himself.

In the silence that followed her grandfather’s words, Lina raised her head back up. She reached over and took Peter’s hand in hers.

“I understand why you didn’t wake the whole household,” she told him tenderly. “You’re always trying to protect me.  But you should have told us right away.”

Peter, who was experiencing a mixture of elation at his own healing and despair at the knowledge of how his success would affect his dear sister, leaned down and hugged her tightly around the shoulders.  At this gesture of loving affection, she began to cry, but then hastened to reassure them all.

“No, it’s all right. I am so happy for you, Peter.  It’s a miracle!”

Kristina, who was standing behind Lina’s chair now and also next to Marcus’ chair, spoke up. “But not just that.” They all turned to look at her. “Don’t you see? It proves that Mr. Groening isn’t a fake.”

Renate nodded. “Yes, it certainly does. The living proof is right before us!” She wrapped an arm around Peter’s waist and hugged him to her.

“And if Peter has been healed,” Kristina went on, more outspoken in this moment than she had been in her four years with this family, “then Lina can be, too.”

“Yes, yes!” Ethel affirmed. “She will be healed, too.”

“We’ll see Mr. Groening again next week,” Renate added. “You just have to hold out until then, Lina, dear.”

At this point, Ingrid, who saw no reason why she shouldn’t have some fun, if a miracle had just occurred, wedged her way between Renate and Peter and took Peter’s hand.

“Uncle Peter,” she said, “let’s hop, together!” 

This brought a laugh from everyone, even from Marcus.  Although he had remained seated during the flurry of activity and excitement around Peter, scowling, as if he was furious at having been proved wrong, now he pushed back his chair. He stood up and slipped an arm around Kristina’s waist. She turned and gave him a questioning glance, surprised that he would show her this affection in front of his family. She was also taken aback by the change she saw in him. Two minutes earlier, he had been filled with vitriol, but now his eyes were bright, his smile genuine.

“Hop to your heart’s content, Brother!” he called out to Peter, raising his right arm in an expansive, celebratory gesture.

Everyone turned to look at him, wary that his remark was but another sarcastic attack. But the change in his demeanor struck them all, too.

“Now that you’re back on your feet, soon you’ll be back in the forest, too.  Which means I’ll be staying in Varel for good!”

At this, the family members fell into an awkward silence. Marcus seemed not to understand why.  He felt Kristina slip out of his embrace. 

“Ingrid, come on,” she said a bit curtly, “let’s get you off to school.”

Even Ulrich sounded gruff when he said to Marcus, “Don’t you have a car to get back to your boss?”

Lina, without a word to anyone, slowly turned her chair. Rolling through the kitchen door that Kristina held open for her after she and Ingrid had gone out, she pushed herself down the ramp and into the yard, over to where the path led into the forest.  There she sat, squeezing the tin foil ball in her right hand, and soundlessly repeating Groening’s phrase over and over again.

It wasn’t long before Peter came out of the house, too. But instead of heading into the workshop as he usually did following breakfast, he strode over to where Lina was sitting and crouched down beside her, resting on his knees.

“Lina, I’m so sorry,” he said quietly, laying his hand on her arm.

When she turned to him, he saw not the blame he had feared he’d find in her eyes, but love.  Certainly, he could see the pain on her face, too, but he realized now that he was not the cause of it.

“Peter,” she asked quietly, “why are you apologizing? You have nothing to be sorry for!”

“But I do,” he told her. “For getting healed while you’re still in this damned chair!” 

“How could that be your fault?”

Peter shrugged. “I don’t know… Believe me, Lina, last night at the Birkners’, I wasn’t thinking of myself at all!  The whole time, I was just thinking of you and asking Mr. Groening for you to be healed.  I didn’t stop doing that – not for a single second!” 

“Peter,” Lina said firmly, “it’s not your fault that I wasn’t healed last night!”

“But then whose fault is it?” Peter replied, almost angry now. “Damn it, Lina! It should have been you, not me!”

Lina shook her head. “Don’t talk like that, Peter.  I’m really, truly, so happy that you got healed.”

“If I could trade places with you, you know I would,” Peter told her, grasping her arm more firmly now.

“I know you would, dear Peter,” Lina said, her voice as full of love as her eyes, even though her whole body seemed to be tensing with pain now.  “But I wouldn’t want you to.”

“Why not?  You should want that. I was the one who crippled you in the first place. It should be me who’s in that chair, not you!”

She pulled her arm from his grasp and, taking hold of the wheelchair’s wheels, turned herself so that she was facing him.

“How can you say that, Peter?” she said, leaning forward and taking his face in her hands. “It wasn’t your fault I got hurt.  I don’t blame you!”

“But I still blame myself,” he said. 

“Please, we’ve been over that! It wasn’t your fault! And besides,” Lina went on, “did you see the look on Marcus’ face this morning when you got up and started hopping around? Good God, Peter, you proved him wrong!  In front of everyone!” Here Lina began to smile as she remembered the scene.

Peter smiled back at her and nodded his head. “I have to admit that it did feel good to get the better of him, for once.”

“It’s not just that,” Lina told him. “Seeing you this way – the new you! – gives me hope, just like Mama and Grandma and Kristina said.  Hope that I can be healed, too.”

“I believe it, too!” Peter said earnestly.

“But you don’t know how many doubts kept rushing into my head last night, Peter.”

“Because of your pain?”

Lina nodded.  “And because I felt like a failure, somehow.”

“Why a failure?”

“Because that Mr. Handler got healed, and the woman behind Kristina, too.  And all I got was pain. The thought kept coming into my brain that I did something wrong, and that’s why I wasn’t healed, too.”

“Oh, God, Lina,” Peter cried, grasping her hands that were still cupping his face, “And then I come in this morning and announce that I got healed, too. I’m so sorry!”

“Stop that!” Lina told him sharply.  “You are my hope, don’t you understand? Now I can watch you walk, as if nothing ever happened to you in the war, and that reminds me that Mr. Groening is not a fake, not a charlatan.  You are living proof of that for me.”

As Peter listened to her speak, he noticed that his left cheek was feeling very warm beneath Lina’s palm, and that she was holding something against his cheek. Reaching up and taking her hand, he saw the tin foil ball that Groening had given her the night before.

“It felt so warm where it was touching my cheek!” he told her, leaning over and looking at it with curiosity.  “Is it just tin foil?”

She grasped it between her thumb and forefinger. “I think so.  But I feel heat when I hold it, too. And tingling. The way I felt it in the room last night.” She held it out to him. “Here, hold it yourself.”

Peter hesitated at first. “But Groening gave it to you,” he said.  But when Lina moved it toward him once more, he opened his hand so that she could lay it onto his palm. He felt the warmth again, and then a slight tingling appeared, first in his hand and then up through his entire arm.

“Did you feel that at the Birkners’?” Lina asked him.

“I’m not sure,” he told her.  “I don’t really recall feeling anything then. I was concentrating on watching Groening and watching you, too, to see if anything was changing. So, maybe I just wasn’t paying attention to what I was feeling, even when he asked us to do that.  But I feel it now, holding this.”  He closed his eyes and sat crouched there like that for a few moments, taking in the sensations that were flowing not just in his arm now, but through other parts of his body, too.  When he looked back up at Lina’s face, their eyes met, and Peter felt a great joy.  He could see that she felt the same way.

“You know what this is?” he asked her, indicating the ball.

  “Besides just a tin foil ball, you mean?”

Peter nodded, and Lina shook her head.  Then he leaned forward,

“It’s a fairy rune,” he said, a conspiratorial smile on his face.

Lina laughed now, a sweet, tinkling laugh that reminded Peter of their mother’s. “How did I not realize that?” she asked him, opening her eyes wide and then winking at him.

“I don’t know!” Peter replied. “It’s obvious!” He was so happy to see her smiling. “And do you know what this means?  This part here?” He pointed to a series of small wrinkles on the ball’s surface that did, in fact, resemble tiny versions of their old fairy runes’ letters.

Lina leaned over to scrutinize the wrinkle-letters, eager to play along.  She looked back up at Peter.

“No, I don’t.” She couldn’t wait to hear what he’d say.

“Hope,” Peter replied, with an impish grin, holding his sister’s eyes with his own. “Just the same as on our runes.”  He handed the ball back to Lina, who brought it up close to her eyes and examined it.

“You’re absolutely right,” she told him, taking his hand in hers now. “How did I not realize that, either?”  And when she began to cry, a frown came to Peter’s face. He was about to apologize for upsetting her, but she shook her head. “Mr. Groening knows us well, doesn’t he? To give me a fairy rune?”

“And thank goodness I was here to interpret it for you!” Peter said, smiling again now.

Lina nodded. “Yes, thank God.”

Peter lowered himself down until he was sitting on the ground, with his knees bent. He wrapped his arms around his knees and clasped his hands together, marveling at how comfortable he felt.  Lina, who had seen her brother struggle over the past four years to find a position in which he could comfortably sit or stand, was struck by how at ease he looked.

“So,” she asked him, almost gingerly, “your leg doesn’t hurt anymore?”

Peter shook his head. “It isn’t just that I can move it normally again. There’s not the least bit of pain.”  He didn’t want to go into it in detail, fearing that Lina might feel discouraged.  But she forged ahead.

“How did you realize you’d been healed, anyway?” she asked, and Peter could tell she was truly curious.  So he told her once more the story of what had happened when he’d gotten into bed the night before.  She smiled as he told her how he’d been hopping all over his bedroom.

“I can’t believe I didn’t hear you!” she said. “Or Grandma and Grandpa.  They’re just a stone’s throw away from your room.”

“But their hearing isn’t as good as yours,” he replied, and they both laughed.

For a few minutes, they both directed their gaze into the forest, which was coming alive in the early morning light, innumerable insects and spider webs visible in the thin rays of sunshine that made their way to the spaces between the trees.

“It’s so beautiful, isn’t it?” Lina asked, her voice calm.

“The forest? Yes.”

“Even though I haven’t been able to go in there,” Lina went on, “just sitting here these four years has helped me a lot.”  She looked over at Peter.  “Even from here I can feel God. Not as much as when I was amongst the trees, of course.  But I can still feel Him.”

Peter nodded.  Then his mouth opened, as if a thought had just come to him, and he jumped – easily! – to his feet.  He stood so that his back was to Lina, right in front of her chair.  Then he crouched down once more and bent his arms so that his hands stretched back toward Lina.

“Lean forward and put your arms around my neck,” he said to her. “Can you do that?”

“I… I don’t know,” she said, perplexed as to what he intended. “I can try.  But why?”

He turned and looked back over his shoulder at her. 

“Remember back after the accident, when I said I wished I could carry you to the treehouse?”

“Yes, but…”

“Well, now I can carry you.”

“But, no, Peter!” Lina cried.  “You’re not strong enough!”

He turned around again. “I don’t believe that, Lina!  I’m healed!  I am strong enough.  Do you doubt that Groening healed me entirely?”

This gave Lina pause.  She didn’t want to doubt that, because then she might start doubting that she could be completely healed, too…

“All right,” she said, finally. “Let’s try it. But if you get too tired –“

“Don’t even say that!” Peter told her.  “Just lean forward and put your hands around my neck.  I’ll reach back and hold onto you under your knees. And with any luck, I’ll be able to tip you forward and walk that way.”

“A piggy back ride,” Lina said, her voice growing light again.

“That’s right,” Peter told her. “Just like when you were a little girl.”

And that is exactly what they did.  It took a couple tries for Peter to lean forward the right amount so that he could both get Lina squarely onto his back and slip his arms beneath her knees without them getting caught on her skirts. But then, suddenly, there they were, moving slowly, but surely along the path that led into the forest. 

Lina was still holding the tin foil ball in her right hand, which made it harder for her to hold onto Peter, but he didn’t mind having it press against his collarbone. Quite the opposite, really: It helped him feel stronger, somehow. Since coming back from the war, he’d never hauled this much weight around, so he was surprised at how easy it was for him to carry Lina through the woods. It felt to him like Bruno Groening was walking along the path with them, helping him carry Lina, helping her hold onto him.

When they got to the old beech tree, Peter was all set to try to climb the ladder with Lina on his back, but she wouldn’t hear of it.

“That ladder may hold one of us, but it’ll never hold us both,” she told him, laughing. “Just lower me down here, and I’ll lean against the trunk.”

And so it was that Lina and Peter came to be sitting at the foot of the beech tree that had played such an important role in their parents’ lives.

“Remember how Mama would tell how she and Uncle Hans used to play up there when they were little?” Lina asked, leaning her head back to look up at the logs that formed the floor of the treehouse.

Peter nodded. “They played Hansel and Gretel, right?”

“I know she said they played that when they went out in the woods and built little lean-tos to play in, but probably they did it up there, too. It’d be easy to pretend that was a witch’s house, don’t you think?”

“I do!” Peter looked up, too, and reached out a hand to take hold of the rope ladder.  “Why do you think you and I never played Hansel and Gretel?” he asked as he absentmindedly swung the ladder to and fro.

Lina shrugged and stared off into the woods, noticing how happy she felt being out amongst her dear trees again, after such a long absence. Then a thought came into her mind.  More of a memory, really, of their childhood.

“Maybe it was because we didn’t need to make up a witch.  We had a real, live terrifying creature right at home.”

Peter turned and saw that she was looking at him.  She held his gaze and then slipped her arm through his.

“You mean Marcus?” Peter asked her finally.

“Mmhmm.”  She looked away. “God, I’m sorry to say that.”

“But it was true, Lina. And you’re right. We didn’t need to invent a witch.  We needed to escape one.”

They both sat silent for several minutes, each taking in the freshness of the morning air, listening to the insects that flew around them, and delighting in the smell of the earth beneath them. 
            “You’re right,” Lina told him at last.  “This – not just the treehouse, but the whole forest, our fairy runes, all of it – it was our sanctuary, wasn’t it?”

Peter nodded.  “It really was.” He swung the rope ladder again.  “I don’t think I ever told you the feeling that came over me every time we climbed up the ladder and then pulled it up behind us.”

“No, I don’t recall you ever telling me that. What was it?”

“It felt like such a relief. I knew we were safe up there. Safe from him.  That he wouldn’t be able to get us if we just scrambled up there and hauled up the ladder.”

“I did notice that you always seemed to run the last little bit to the treehouse, that you always hurried me to climb up. I just thought it was part of a game. Sometimes we pretended wolves were chasing us. Remember?”

“I do.”

“But it wasn’t a game you were playing, was it? You really were scared.”

Peter nodded.  “I was. For myself. But more for you. You were so defenseless.”

“But you were the one he took everything out on. I don’t think I was ever really in danger. I was so scared of him, but I don’t think he would ever have hurt me, not really.”

Peter’s face grew stern now. “I would have killed him if he had.”  He looked at Lina, extracted his arm from hers and wrapped it around her shoulder. “I mean, really. I told him so. That if he ever laid a hand on you, I would kill him in his sleep.”

Lina stared at him, her eyes wide and her mouth open in shock. “You did?”

“Yeah.  I don’t know why he believed me, but he did.  Maybe because he sensed I really would do it. And I would have.”  He tightened his arm around her shoulders and pulled her toward him.

“My God, Peter,” Lina said quietly. “I never knew that. Never had any idea.”

“You couldn’t see how truly monstrous he was, Lina.  I saw it, even before you were born. The things he said and did. The anger in him.”

“I saw that, the anger. And felt it.  He didn’t have to actually do anything to me.  I felt that he wanted to. But he took it out on you, instead.  But why didn’t you fight back when he attacked you?”

“I didn’t believe I had any choice.  Doesn’t make much sense, does it? It was like an unspoken bargain I made with him. As if we both understood that his hatred had to expressed somehow – that he just couldn’t hold it inside him – and that someone had to bear the brunt of it.  And that if it wasn’t going to be you – which I told him I would not allow to happen – then it would be me.”  Peter said this in such a matter-of-fact tone that Lina didn’t know quite how to respond. 

“You make it sound like just divvying up the chores or something,” she said softly. “It’s horrific, Peter.”

“I guess it was,” he replied.  “But it was worth it.  Every second of it.”

“But why didn’t you tell Papa?” Lina cried. “Surely he wouldn’t have let it go on?”

“Marcus also made it clear to me that if he got punished, then you would be the one who’d suffer.  So, as much as I could, I kept quiet. Sometimes I just couldn’t. If the bruises were too big, and so on.”

“But Peter,” Lina said, crying now, “I wasn’t worth you going through that!  There’s no way I could be worth that!”

“Lina, you were always worth it.  You’re my sister.  We’ve always been a team, haven’t we? From the time you were little.”

“It’s true,” Lina replied. “Especially when we came out here. It was as if no one else existed, and especially not Marcus. We really were safe here. With each other, and with the forest.” She paused and reached up to touch his hand.  “I’ve loved you more than anyone in the family, Peter.  Something about you – I have always felt so close to you.”

She felt him nod.

“I’ve always felt that, too,” he said.  “Like there was – is – some invisible connection between us.”

“Yes,” Lina told him. “It’s as if I can sense you, somehow.  I can’t explain it. As a spirit, maybe?  It doesn’t make any sense, but that’s the only way I can put it.”

“I understand.  I have always felt that way, too. From the time you were born.”

“Really?”

“Yes. I’d stand by your cradle, and I’d look at you, and when our eyes met, it was like somehow we’d known each other already for a lifetime. And now we were together in one family again.  I couldn’t get enough of looking into your eyes when you were a baby.  To see in you someone I recognized, and who recognized me, too.”

“I don’t remember that, of course – that recognition, I mean – but I do recall you standing by my cradle a lot, and just being with me.”

Peter laughed.  “It was funny.  Mama would chide me for it. She thought I was trying to avoid doing my chores, so she’d chase me out of the room.  She didn’t realize that I just loved you!”

Lina smiled at this story.  “I knew that you loved me!  I felt that so strongly, Peter.  I never thought of it as some kind of connection from another lifetime.  But the ties were there, even so. When you went off to the war, I thought I’d die.  You felt so far away, and I couldn’t feel your presence in the same way as when you were home.”

Peter just nodded in affirmation that he had experienced the same thing.

“And then you came home, wounded,” Lina went on, “and I was beside myself with worry.  I kept thinking that if I had been there, it never would have happened.”

“Me getting wounded?” Peter asked in surprise.

“Yes.  That sounds silly, doesn’t it?  How could I think I could have prevented it? What could I possibly have done to keep you safe? Nothing!”

“Maybe not in the way you’re talking about. But knowing that you were at home and still loving me – you and the rest of the family, too – that helped so much. It gave me the will to survive, and to not be captured, that day when I was shot. It was thinking of you all here – and especially of you – that got me back to my unit. I’ll still never understand how I managed to run on that injured leg.”

“God must have protected you. Don’t you think?” Lina asked him.

“I do.”

They were both looking off into the trees again.  Lina noticed that the pain in her legs had quieted down.  In fact, she couldn’t detect any discomfort at all in them at the moment. 

“Are you in pain now?” Peter asked, as if reading her thoughts.

She shook her head. “Not really. Just a few aches. I don’t know why that should be.”  Then she laughed. “Why am I looking for a reason? I should just be happy about it!”

“Are you?” Peter asked, his tone serious. “Happy, I mean?”

“Yes, I am,” she told him.  “I am.  But what makes me happier is that your leg is healed.”

“Why’s that?”

“I don’t know, to be honest,” Lina told him. Once more, she took hold of his hand that was lying on her shoulder. It was a minute before she spoke again.  “As strange as that sounds, I think I feel relieved.”

“Relieved? Because if Bruno Groening healed me, then he can heal you, too?”

“No, that’s not it.”

“What, then?”

She paused again, as she tried to work it out in her mind. “I just now realized that I have felt responsible for you getting wounded in the war.”

Peter leaned forward now and turned to face her. “But Lina, that’s insane!  You weren’t even there!”

“Exactly,” she told him. “I’m not saying it makes sense.  I’m just telling you what I have felt, deep inside me, ever since you came back from the war, with your leg mangled.”

“You’re right! It makes no sense!” He hugged her. “As you are always telling me, it was not your fault!” He smiled, trying to shift her out of this odd frame of mind.

“Yes, and that’s the other thing. Me getting hurt was not your fault. It was mine!  I can see it now.”

Now Peter removed his arm from around her shoulders and took both her hands in his.  “That is simply impossible, Lina,” he told her sternly. “I won’t listen to you talk like that.”

“No, but do listen!” she said to him, equally sternly. “Remember how no one could understand how the accident happened?”

I understood it,” Peter said petulantly. “I gave the horses the signal to move, and they did, and the wood rolled out onto you.”

“Do you actually remember giving them the signal?” Lina questioned him.

“No. But I must have done it.  There’s no other explanation,” he insisted.

“Yes there is,” Lina told him.

“Well, I’d like to hear it, if there is one, after all this time!”

  “I gave them the signal,” Lina told him softly.

He just stared at her.  Before he could object, she continued.

“Those horses know me as well as they know you,” she said. “And I banged on the side rail of the wagon, just the way I always did when I was letting them know we were done putting in a load and they could start off.”

“But I don’t remember hearing it,” Peter said.
            “And I don’t remember giving it,” Lina replied.

Peter gave her a confused look.

“Or, rather, I should say, I didn’t recall giving them the signal, not until last night.”

“At the Birkners’?” Peter asked her.

“Yes.  We were sitting there, and Mr. Groening was talking. And all of a sudden, a picture flashed into my mind. It was like a newsreel, except that it was in color.  I saw myself, from a distance, well, not from a big distance. But I was standing there behind the wagon, and the back railings weren’t up. And then, very methodically, I reached out and rapped my palm against the side of the wagon. Twice.  Very firmly.  And they started off.  And the wood fell.”

“Is that all you saw?” Peter asked, clearly shaken.

“Yes.  It didn’t make sense to me at the time. It was only last night, when I was lying there awake and in pain in the darkness, when the vision came back to me again, that I understood. It was all my fault. I made the mistake that day, not you.”

Peter leaned over and put his head in his hands.  Lina watched as he began to shake his head back and forth.  “No, no, Lina!” he cried. “That can’t be what happened.”

“But I’m telling you, it is,” she insisted, calmly, her voice full of love.  “That’s why I’ve always been able to tell you you weren’t to blame – because you weren’t! Even if I didn’t remember what I’d done until last night.”

“It doesn’t make sense, though,” Peter told her, looking at her now with eyes full of tears. “You loaded the wagon and worked with those horses for years, just like you said. And you never did that before – giving the signal before everything was ready.”

“And yet, I did it that day.  And what’s more,” Lina said, “it looks like I did it deliberately.”

“What does that mean?” Peter asked, his brows knitted. “I can’t make sense of any of this.”

“I mean, when I saw the newsreel, or whatever you want to call it, in my head, I could see it all very clearly. I looked at the wood, oh, and I didn’t tell you this part: I noticed that the back rails were not up – I know that, because I saw myself look over to the other side of the wagon, where they were lying on the ground. And then I paused and then, I consciously raised my hand and gave the signal.  It was quite deliberate, Peter, not an offhand, absentminded action.”

“But why would you do that deliberately?” Peter nearly shouted, slapping his knees with his open hands.  “Why??”

“I don’t know,” Lina told him simply. “And I never remembered it after the accident.  Why didn’t I remember doing it? And why did I do it? God, I wish I had remembered. It would have saved you feeling like you were to blame these past four years. Peter, I’m so sorry!”

“No, Lina, no!” he cried, rising to his feet. “I can’t accept this.  I’m the one who made the mistake, not you.  And what does this have to do with you feeling guilty about my wounded leg? Is everything suddenly your fault now?”

“I have no idea, Peter,” she told him, suddenly sounding tired. “I’m just telling you the way it feels to me, and what I experienced last night.”

As Peter was standing before her, Lina caught sight of someone coming toward them through the forest.  Seeing Lina looking at something behind him, Peter turned and saw their father gradually making his way through the dry leaves and small branches that lay in his path.

It was odd for them to see Viktor from such a distance.  Usually they saw him from across the table or across the yard, but not from fifty yards away. There seemed to Lina to be something lighter about his gait than before, and at the same time, stronger. Her father had always seemed strong to her, but in a deeply-rooted way.  Now he was moving through the trees in a confident, but also fluid, way, and he swayed a bit as he walked, the way the trees around him swayed when the wind came through the forest.  If Lina squinted a bit, he resembled the pines he was walking amongst, his arms out a bit from his sides, angled down toward the forest floor. Then, realizing that Peter and Lina had seen them, he raised both arms in greeting, and suddenly, he was an aspen, his hands waving at them the way the aspen leaves always waved at him.

“Mama and Grandma were starting to worry about you two,” he said cheerfully when he’d gotten close enough for them to be able to hear him.  “But I saw you set off along the path, and I figured this was where you were headed. I told them I’d come look for you.”

“I’m sorry they were worried,” Lina told him.  “It was just a whim.”

“I wanted to bring her here,” Peter explained.  He leaned over and patted the trunk of the beech tree. “She’s missed this old friend so much.”

Viktor nodded and took a seat in front of Lina, then motioned for Peter to sit back down, too. Now that Peter could see their father clearly, he, too, noticed that something was different about him.  The cheerfulness was new.  His smile looked relaxed.

Viktor leaned over and touched Lina’s foot affectionately. “How are you feeling?”

“It’s strange, Papa, but since I’ve been out here, my legs have almost entirely stopped hurting. Just some little aches now.”

A broad smile came to Viktor’s face. “Really? Lina, that’s wonderful! There’s something about this forest, isn’t there?” he asked, looking up to take in the treehouse and the spreading branches of the beech tree.  “You two, you’ve known it all your lives. You know that you feel something special here – heaven, that’s what your grandfather calls it. I didn’t believe it at first.  Didn’t know what he meant. I was never any place like this until I came here, back in ’21.”

“Aren’t there forests in Schweiburg?” Lina asked. “I don’t recall seeing so many trees when we were living there, but then again, I was little.”

“And we weren’t there for so long,” Peter added.  “But mostly, there was the water, what with the coast being so close.”

Viktor nodded.  “That’s right. I grew up with the coast, but the water never really called to me.  Nature in general didn’t.  Not until I came here and started working with your grandpa.”

“Why do you think that was, Papa?” Lina asked.

Viktor reached down and picked up a handful of leaves in varying stages of dryness and decomposition.  Then he closed his eyes and took in a deep breath.  Watching him, Peter and Lina naturally did the same. 

“This smells as good to me as Mama’s rabbit stew,” Viktor said after he’d let his breath out, and they all laughed. “But it really is like your grandpa says.  You feel God out here.  I know you feel it, don’t you?”

Peter and Lina both nodded.

“That’s why I brought her here,” Peter said. “I could tell she needed to feel that.”

“We all do, Son,” Viktor replied, his tone softer than they’d ever heard it, tender even. “This forest – it saved me, back then.  Being out with these trees and taking in God’s divine energy.  I felt like I could stand among them and take in their strength.”

“But then why did we move to Schweiburg?” Lina asked.

Peter looked at his father intently. Lina saw the look and realized that Peter, since he was four years older, must remember that time more than she did.

But Viktor deflected the question.  “That is another story, for another day.  Not a happy story. And so, not for today. Because today is a happy day. Right?”

“Yes!” Lina chimed in. “Peter was able to carry me all the way out here, Papa.  It really is a miracle.”

Viktor nodded.  Then he took hold of the toe of Lina’s shoe and gave it a playful shake. “And soon, no one will need to carry you to the treehouse.”

“Peter was all set to try to haul me up there when we got there, but I wouldn’t let him,” Lina said.

“Probably just as well,” Peter said with a chuckle. “That would have been quite a sight for you, Papa, if we tried it and the ladder gave out, and you came upon us both lying on the ground in a heap!”

Viktor smiled, and then recalled his first visit to the treehouse with Ethel.

“The first time Mama brought me here,” he began, leaning back on his elbows and crossing his legs out in front of him, “I was worried about that ladder, too.”  He glanced up at it. “It’d been lying up in the treehouse for who knows how many years.  Could have been rotted through.”

“But it wasn’t, right?” Lina said.  She hadn’t heard this story since she was little.

“Nope.  I climbed up on that branch there,” Viktor told them, pointing to the branch in question. “Then I managed to lean over and grab hold of the rope, up there, right where it’s tied to the floor.  Of course, I was doing my best to impress Mama with my strength and daring.” He winked at Peter, as if sharing a secret, man to man.

“And did you?” Lina asked.

“Of course!” Viktor told her with a laugh. “Or, in any case, at least I didn’t fall down, and the ladder didn’t collapse.  I considered that a success.”

“But how did you manage to make her the ring in secret?” Peter asked.

Viktor winked at him again. “That information’s classified.” He tipped his head in Lina’s direction. “But don’t worry, I’ll share it with you when you need it, Son.”

“And when you find out,” Lina said, “you’ll tell me, right?”

“I don’t think you have clearance,” Peter told her sternly, and they all laughed. 

“Feels good to laugh, here in the heart of the forest,” Viktor said.  “Especially right here. At this treehouse, where Mama and Uncle Hans played, and Mama and I fell in love, where the two of you played.  Where your children will play, too, God willing.”

This heartfelt sharing of feelings and wishes left all three of them feeling tears rush to their eyes, but Lina was the only one who let them flow. Peter hastily got to his feet and tugged on the ladder.

“But I say we replace the ladder before then. If I’m going to ask a girl to marry me up there, I don’t want to risk making a fool of myself by falling through a rotten rope.”

“Agreed,” Viktor said, leaning forward and brushing the dead leaf fragments off his shirtsleeves. “But now, I think we’d best get on back to the house.  Otherwise, Mama and Grandma are likely to mount a search party themselves. And you know what that means, don’t you?”

Peter and Lina shook their heads.

“Dinner will be late!” Viktor said with a laugh. “And we don’t want that.”

Lina and Peter laughed at this, and in Lina’s voice he heard her mother, twenty-eight years earlier, standing at the foot of this very tree, back in the days before things needed to be made right.

They decided that Viktor would carry Lina out through the forest. It was a good thing he had come out to find them, because Peter now realized he would have had a hard time getting Lina situated on his back again, since she was sitting on the ground.  But father and son managed to first lift Lina up beneath her shoulders until she was leaning more or less upright against the beech trunk. Then Viktor was able to crouch down before her, and, with Peter’s help, Lina leaned onto her father’s strong back and wrapped her arms around his neck. 

Viktor straightened up and gave a little hop to settle Lina into a more comfortable position, and then began walking.  He felt that she was holding something in her hand that was pressing against his neck, but it wasn’t bothersome. In fact, he began to feel more energetic. He was sensing not just the divine energy of the forest now. There was also a tingling that reminded him of what he’d felt at the Birkners’ the evening before. But he didn’t give it any real thought. Instead, he focused his attention on how good it was to be helping Lina.  He was glad for the conversation they’d had, too. It reminded him of the early years, when he and the kids would play together.  Too bad Marcus wasn’t here with us today.  Although he knew, deep inside, that if his oldest son had been there, things would have played out differently.

Little by little, Viktor told himself as he walked toward the end of the path and the bright sunshine that awaited them there. Step by step.  Soon it’ll all be good again.

*          *          *

After the foray to the treehouse, Lina noticed that although the pain in her legs eased when she was among the trees, it gradually increased again once Viktor had carried her back to the yard and then into the house.  At first, Lina grew frightened when her legs began to ache once more.  That evening, on her walk with Kristina, she expressed her worry.

“Kristina,” she told her friend, even before they rolled out onto the main road, “why do they hurt again?  I felt so light and happy by the treehouse.  And now… What did I do wrong?” Her long braid was wrapped around her wrist, the end tucked into her left hand, while her right held her tin foil ball.

Kristina heard the fear creeping into Lina’s voice, and although she had no real answer to Lina’s question, she knew that she couldn’t give into the doubt that was knocking at the door of her own mind. Trust and believe, she told herself. And then some words came.

“Maybe you should ask what you did right.

“What do you mean?” Lina asked her.

“Well,” Kristina continued, allowing the sense inside her to form into words, “you felt better in the woods. That’s true, isn’t it?”

Lina nodded.

“Maybe that was the right thing.  You did a right thing.”

“Going into the woods? That was the right thing, you’re saying?”

“I don’t know. I just have a feeling that this is the way to look at it.”

Lina fell silent, and they walked, by which we should understand that Kristina pushed her in the wheelchair, as she’d done nearly every day for the past four years. Kristina rolled the chair along, and Lina held the tin foil ball in her hand, alternately squeezing it lightly and bringing it up to her face so that she could inspect the so-called writing she and Peter had detected on it.

“To our usual spot?” Kristina asked as they neared the spot where they could see the fallen log where they would often sit and discuss the day’s events.

“No,” Lina said, in a tone whose lightness surprised Kristina, given the fear she’d detected just minutes earlier. 

“Where, then?”

“I mean, go to the log, but then on along the path there. Even just a little ways.”

They had never done this before, since the path was overgrown with grass and small bushes and blocked by fallen branches.  The family didn’t use it now, and Lina had never wanted to ask Kristina to go to the effort of clearing a space or maneuvering the heavy wheelchair along. But now, she thought it might be worth a try.  An experiment.

Kristina understood what Lina had in mind, and she eagerly set about removing the smaller debris from the path.  Lina watched as twigs, larger branches, and pine cones flew into the underbrush where Kristina tossed them along the sides of the path, along with clumps of the taller grasses.  After about ten minutes of this, Kristina straightened up, turned to Lina, then rubbed her hands together vigorously to shake off the dirt. Then she pushed aside tendrils of the wavy, brown hair that had come free of her braid and fallen into her eyes.

“Ready?” she asked, wiping her hands on her apron.  When Lina nodded, Kristina got behind the wheelchair and rolled it over to where they could now see a space that looked slightly navigable. 

The sky was still light out by the road, but even just a small distance inside the forest, the shadows were already deepening, and the sounds of the evening bugs louder.  They managed to move to the end point of where Kristina had removed the obstacles, about twenty feet in, without much trouble, although Kristina did find it harder to push the chair here than out along the grass or the road. The two young women didn’t converse.  Kristina was silently leaning against the chair, to move it forward, and Lina was softly repeating, Trust and believe. The divine power helps and heals.  From her position behind the wheelchair, Kristina couldn’t see the path, but she kept pushing anyway.

At some point, she noticed that the grass was taller beneath the wheels and her shoes.  Then she bumped over a small branch in the path. In the next moment, she felt the left wheel dip sharply and then come to an abrupt halt.  Kristina’s legs somehow kept moving, though, and she found herself leaning forward over the back of the wheelchair, which had stopped short.  And as she herself was resting with her stomach against the back of Lina’s seat, she saw that Lina, too,  had continued moving: She was toppling out of the chair, a surprised, “Oh!” escaping from her lips.  Kristina managed to catch hold of Lina’s shoulder as she tipped, but with the chair between them, she couldn’t break Lina’s fall.  She watched in surprise and horror as her friend half slid, half pitched, forward and onto the ground. She came to rest on her stomach. 

“My God, Lina!” Kristina cried, rushing to Lina. “Are you hurt?”

Lina remembered the day not many weeks earlier, when she had tried to stand up and had similarly found herself sprawled in front of her wheelchair.  This time at least I made it further into the forest!  she thought to herself.  “Yes,” I think I’m all right,” she said aloud.

  “The wheel must have gone into a rut, “Kristina told her, inspecting the wheel. “Lina, I’m so sorry!”

“It’s all right,” Lina told her.  “I really thing I’m okay. But there’s no way you’ll be able to get me back into this chair on your own.  Go back to the house for help.”

Kristina turned this way and that, biting her lip. Her eyes grew wide, and suddenly she sounded very agitated.  “But I can’t!” she cried. “I can’t leave you here!  There’s no telling who could come by.  It’s not safe!” She was beginning to cry.  Lina reached out and tugged on Kristina’s skirt.

“Kristina,” she said calmly, “Look at me. We need help. I’ll be all right here while you go get someone.”

Kristina grabbed her long braid in both hands and began picking at the end of it, still biting her lip. “I don’t know, Lina…  I don’t think it’s safe for you here alone.”

“I’m telling you. I know this forest. This is our forest.  No one will hurt me here.  Just go. Now. Run!”

Somehow this got through to Kristina, and she did run.  She raced back to the where the path opened out onto the grass, and then she sped off down the road, calling out for help.  As she came to the drive that led to the homestead, she saw Marcus walking across the yard. She shouted to him to follow her.

“Lina… she fell… in the forest,” she explained breathlessly as they both ran.

When they reached the path once again, Kristina led Marcus along the trail the wheelchair had made. Lina was lying only about twenty feet into the woods, but Kristina fell to her side as if she’d been miles away, deep in the wilderness.

“Lina, dear one, are you all right?” she asked in a frenzied voice, her cheeks streaked with tears.

“Yes, yes, I’m fine,” Lina told her, and then grimaced in embarrassment when she saw Marcus. But for once, he didn’t seem annoyed.  He sat down beside her and helped her sit up, taking care to ask her whether anything hurt. Once he determined that she really did seem not to have hurt herself, aside from a deep scrape on her left hand, which she’d used to break her fall, he inspected the wheelchair. 

“It just went into a hole,” he announced. Then, giving the handles a quick jerk, he pulled it backwards and freed the stuck wheel.  “Seems all right,” he added, after rolling the chair back and forth a bit. “I don’t think the rim got bent. Let’s get you up and back into it, Lina.” 

While Kristina steadied the wheelchair, Marcus somehow – Kristina was amazed at how strong he evidently was – slipped his arms under Lina’s, tipped her up and onto his chest, and then gently lowered her down to her seat. 

On the short walk back to the homestead, Marcus pushed the chair, while Kristina walked alongside them in a daze, one hand picking at the end of her braid, the other gripping Marcus’ elbow tightly.

“I really am fine,” Lina told them all when Marcus rolled her into the kitchen and explained what had happened. Indeed, she looked calm.

“How about your legs?” Ethel asked, a concerned look on her face.

“Well,” Lina told her, even smiling now, “I still can’t walk, but they’re hardly hurting again at all, just like when Peter and I were at the treehouse this morning. And you may not believe it, but when I was lying there on the ground just now, before Kristina came back with Marcus, I felt so peaceful. As if God was right there with me, taking care of me.  As if He had wrapped a blanket of love around me to keep me safe.”

This seemed to allay everyone’s concern, except for Kristina’s.  She looked so dazed that Renate insisted on making her a cup of tea.  Ingrid, who had been in their room in the workshop, reading before bed, came in now, since she’d heard the commotion in the yard. 

“Is there a party?” she asked brightly, holding her book in one hand and scanning their faces. It never happened that the whole family gathered like this in the evening, but their expressions didn’t look like party faces. Before anyone could explain, Kristina caught sight of her daughter and, leaping up from her chair, rushed to the door and took Ingrid in her arms.

“You’re all right, too, aren’t you?” she cried, leaning back to look her over, before hugging her once more.

“I’m fine, Mama, just fine,” Ingrid told her, a bit of annoyance in her tone.

“Kristina,” Renate said to her gently, “why don’t you take Ingrid out and get her settled in for bed, and I’ll bring your tea out to you?”

Kristina nodded tensely, muttered her thanks, and left the kitchen, clutching Ingrid as if for dear life.

In the kitchen, no one knew what to say.  This was exactly the kind of display of emotion that made this family feel awkward.  It was as if they had accidentally witnessed some intimate moment that none of them was ever meant to see.  Ethel made a point of examining Lina’s arms and face for scratches and bruises.  Renate was getting tea ready to put into a small pot for Kristina. She paused, as if considering whether to speak, and then turned to face everyone.

“There was one night, during those first few months after Kristina and Ingrid came to us.  I had a feeling in the middle of the night. I don’t know why, but I got up and came out into the kitchen here. I looked out toward the workshop and saw a light burning in their room. I just had the sense that something was wrong.  So I went out there.  The door to their room was wide open, and when I walked in, there was Kristina, with her suitcase open on the bed. She was in a frenzy, grabbing any of their things she could lay her hands on, and stuffing them in the suitcase, willy nilly.”  She paused to check the tea kettle, which had not yet boiled.

“I asked her what she was doing, and she looked at me with these wild, terrified eyes.  Kind of like tonight, but worse.  And she said, ‘We have to leave. It’s not safe here in the woods for Ingrid.  The men took that other girl.  They’re coming back for her. I have to get her somewhere safe.’”

A small cry of sorrow escaped Lina’s mouth, and she brought a hand to her face and covered her mouth.  

“My God, Mama,” Ethel said to Renate, “and you never told me. Or any of us.” She looked to each of the others in the room, and they all shook their heads. They hadn’t known, either.

The teakettle had come to a boil now, and Renate slowly poured a stream of the hot water into the waiting pot. “It wasn’t mine to tell,” she said with a sigh.

“There are so many stories of the war,” Ulrich said softly.  “And just because Kristina wasn’t on the battlefield doesn’t mean she didn’t suffer.”

“Her husband was killed on the Eastern Front,” Lina said.  Apparently they all knew this much, at least.

“How she and that little girl ever made it to Danzig from where they were, I don’t think I even want to know,” Ulrich told them, shaking his head.

“And then those months in Bergen-Belsen,” Renate added. “It’s horrible.”

“Bergen-Belsen?” Viktor asked sharply. “They were there?”

Ethel looked at him in surprise. Surely he knew that… But then she remembered that Kristina and Ingrid had already been here for a little while when Viktor was decommissioned and came home.  Maybe she hadn’t told him the details of how they’d come to be there, or maybe she had, and he just didn’t remember. That wouldn’t be surprising.

“Yes,” Ethel told him, “but not for long. Somehow they were sent there, to the Polish camp – as displaced persons, you know – even though they weren’t Polish. Maybe because they’d come through Poland. I don’t know.  But it was a hideous place – that’s what she said.”

Viktor just nodded.

“Thank God they made it here,” Peter said quietly.

“Marcus,” Renate said at that point, indicating a small wooden tray that now held the teapot and a cup, “you take the tea out to her, will you? She’ll like that.  Ethel and I will get Lina cleaned up for the night.”

            Marcus was, for once, happy to do as his grandmother asked.  He’d never seen Kristina so upset. It had shocked him a little, since she generally acted so meekly, keeping her emotions inside even more than the rest of them – or at least more than he did.  Her unassuming way of moving through the world and the way she deferred to him in their conversations made it difficult for him to determine with any certainty where he stood with her.  That had changed with their recent declaration of love for each other, of course.  Aside from that one time, though, she seemed never to tell him what was on her mind. This frustrated him, because he saw the way she and Lina laughed with each other. That must mean they were telling each other their secrets.  Had she told Lina about her flight through Danzig? About her fears for Ingrid’s safety?  Or other thoughts and feelings she had kept from him? Tonight, though – tonight she had shown him more of herself. The way she called out to me for help, and the way she clung to my elbow as we walked back to the house – she’s opening up to m, Marcus concluded.  She does need me, he thought to himself as he approached the side door with the tray that held the teapot and cup. Balancing the tray on one hand, he opened the door with the other.

Inside, the workshop was dark, and Marcus saw that the door to Kristina and Ingrid’s room was shut. But a dim thread of light spread out beneath the door. Flipping on a light in the workshop, Marcus set the tray down on one of the workbenches across the room and gave a light knock on Kristina’s door. It was the first time he’d ever done this – come to her room after Ingrid’s bedtime – and he felt a mixture of apprehension and excitement.

“Kristina,” he said softly, but loudly enough that she’d surely hear him, “Renate sent me out with the tea for you.”

For a long half a minute he heard nothing, but then the door opened slowly, and Kristina slipped out.

“Ingrid’s just getting to sleep,” she told him softly, and then turned to close the door quietly behind her. 

They were standing close together there, with Kristina’s back nearly touching the door, and Marcus just a few inches in front of her. Standing like this, the difference in their heights was striking. Marcus, tall and lanky like Viktor, towered over Kristina, so that she had to tip her head back to look up at his face.  He thought about kissing her right there, but then held back. It didn’t seem right, somehow, with Ingrid just on the other side of the door.

“I put the tea over here,” he said instead, gesturing to the workbench against the wall. “Come on, I’ll pour it for you.” He held out his hand to her.

She grasped his hand and followed him across the room. Walking with him, she squeezed his hand, seeking some explanation of where the physical strength he’d displayed earlier came from. He looked at her and smiled, then brought her hand up and kissed it. They took seats on two of the tall stools next to the workbench.

As he poured the tea for her and stirred some sugar into it, she was studying him, as if for the first time.  He really did resemble his father – especially in his build and in those cornflower blue eyes – but his hair was dark, like hers, not sandy like Peter’s.  Viktor didn’t look strong, either, she mused, but she’d seen him move logs like they were nothing. Marcus must have that same kind of strength.  She found that comforting.

“Thank you for saving Lina tonight,” she told him as she accepted the cup of tea he held out to her. He could see that tears were welling up in her eyes as she spoke.

He laughed lightly. “I didn’t save her.  I just picked her up off the ground.” But inwardly, he was pleased she had put it that way.

“Well, I do say you saved her,” Kristina insisted, smiling now, too, although the tears still seemed prepared to fall at a moment’s notice.  “Who knows what might have happened there in the woods, with her being helpless, and it getting so dark.”

Marcus leaned forward. “The wolves don’t come out until much later,” he said, in a mock serious tone.

“Don’t tease,” Kristina told him, only half-kidding. 

He could see that she genuinely was a bit hurt by his joke, and as he watched her take a sip of the tea, for the first time in his entire life, he felt a twinge of regret at causing someone else distress.  As she moved the teacup away from her lips, he took it from her, set it down, and wrapped his hands around hers. He was sitting facing her now, his legs bent to the side, so that her knees touched the outside of his thigh.

“Forgive me, my dear Kristina,” he said earnestly. “I was just trying to cheer you up.”

She sighed deeply and nodded, and now two preliminary tears did escape onto her cheeks.  She looked down. “Ingrid and I had some terrible nights in the woods. During our flight.” Marcus squeezed her hands, but didn’t say anything. He hoped she’d tell him more, and after a minute of silence, she did.

“I don’t know where it was… Somewhere before we got to Danzig, at least.  We would camp anywhere we could.  Sometimes there was a farmhouse with a barn.  And once or twice, a family even took us into their house, but that was only once or twice.” She looked up to see whether he was listening, and when he nodded to show her he was, she looked down again.

“So, groups of us often slept out in the woods.  I tended to think we were safer, Ingrid and I, if there were more of us.  There was something quite frightening about sleeping just the two of us in the woods, not knowing what each sound meant, whether it was a person or an animal…”

“If you’re not used to being in the woods at night,” Marcus said, “it really is frightening.” Not that he remembered ever being scared out in the woods, but he thought this might encourage her.

“It is!” she said, sighing again. “One night, there were, I don’t know, perhaps twenty of us, all camped out in one area. Five or six small groups of us.  No camp fires or anything. We just all huddled in our own little spots, but not right next to each other.” She paused, trying to find the best words to express what she’d experienced. “You see, some of those people I’d seen now and again in the weeks before that.  We were all heading in the same direction, and so you recognize faces. But at the same time, we all kept to ourselves.”

“But why not get to know people?” Marcus asked, his question quite sincere. He knew nothing about what these refugees had gone through, but he found that he very much wanted to understand what Kristina and Ingrid had experienced.

“Because you never knew what they might do,” Kristina said quietly.  “None of us had enough food or clothing, and it was cold by then.  So some people would steal what little the others had.  Kill them for it sometimes, even.”

Marcus squeezed her hands to show encouragement, and he felt a tenderness welling up inside him as she told her story. “Kristina, did anyone ever attack you?”

She didn’t answer him directly. “That one night, I heard a woman a ways off from me scream, not very loudly, and then her screams were muffled. And then they stopped. And in the morning, at dawn, when we all left, I saw that a woman was still lying over by a pine tree.  I wondered why she hadn’t gotten up to leave – because everyone would get on the road as early as possible. I did ask one of the other travelers, a woman about my age, one I’d seen before, whether she’d heard the screams during the night, and whether that woman under the pine tree was all right.”

“And what did she say?”

“She just asked me under her breath whether I had a knife with me.  I told her I did, and she said, ‘Be prepared to use it. And don’t sleep a wink at night when it’s like this.’ She told me then that a week earlier, when she and her husband and their two girls were spending the night in the woods, two men who were drunk – Lord knows where they got the liquor –dragged away a young girl – someone else’s daughter –  during the night.” She looked up at Marcus. “I don’t want to tell you what they did to her. But she was barely alive when they found her the next morning. And crying that she wished they had just killed her.”

Now Marcus released Kristina’s hands and wrapped his arms around her. “If that had been Ingrid,” he found himself saying, his voice full of quiet anger, “I would have killed those men with my bare hands.”

Kristina’s head was leaning against his chest now.  She kept on talking, but very softly, and he couldn’t hear her so very clearly. But he didn’t want to ask her to repeat herself, so he just leaned his head against hers and strained to catch what she was saying.

“I did have a knife,” she was telling him.  “I was so terrified after that night, Marcus. I spent each night with that knife in one hand, and my other hand on Ingrid next to me.  When I just couldn’t stay awake, I’d lean on top of her and doze that way, so that I’d wake up if anyone tried to take her from me. But how can you really sleep that way? I don’t think I slept more than a few minutes each night the whole rest of our flight, until we got onto the boat. Even there, though, it wasn’t so safe.”

“And in the refugee camp?” Marcus prompted softly, gently rubbing her back as she spoke.

“I slept there,” she said. “There we women did come to know each other a bit, and we took shifts, sleeping and watching each other’s children. We did feel safer there, because the men were separate from the women, of course, but even so, you never know… We still didn’t have enough food, or blankets. And my God, it had been a concentration camp before we got there. How can you rest knowing that?”

Marcus listened silently. He noticed that, as Kristina spoke, his anger faded, and he felt love welling up inside him, for her, and for Ingrid, too.  And sadness that they had gone through all they had.  This feeling of sadness at others’ suffering was new to him, but as Kristina leaned against his chest, he felt more connected to her in his heart than he had ever felt to another human being. He was struck by this feeling of connection to her, by the sense that their hearts were beating as one. His whole life, he had rejected this kind of phrase as ridiculous romanticism, but now that they were leaning together like this, and love was flowing so strongly in him, he marveled at what he was feeling, amazed that it was even possible to feel this way.

Kristina had stopped talking by now, and the two of them sat perched on the stools like that, as if holding each other up, in silence, for several minutes.  Marcus was the first to speak. 

“You don’t ever have to worry again, Kristina,” he whispered into her ear. “Do you hear me?” he asked, stroking her hair.

He felt her nod. “I will take care of you. You and Ingrid.  Make sure you’re safe.  Do you hear?”  Again, she nodded.

Then he felt the love well up in his chest even more strongly, and a thought came to him.  He leaned back and moved her gently backwards, too, so that she was sitting far enough away that he could see her eyes. 

“Will you let me take care of the two of you?” he asked, in a voice so tender that he didn’t even recognize it as his own. “So that you’ll never feel abandoned or in danger?”

Kristina nodded once more.  She wiped her eyes with her arm, and looked at him with her chestnut brown eyes.

“What I mean,” he said then, “is this… Will you marry me, Kristina?”

She stared at him so long with her lips parted, but without speaking, that Marcus began to fear that he had badly misjudged the situation.  He was about to try to recover from his mistake, when she nodded once more, first just slightly, and then more forcefully, until, finally, she threw her arms around his neck and looked him directly in the eye.

“Yes, Marcus,” she said, the smile he had been waiting for spreading across her face now. “Yes! I will!”

They kissed then, their first kisses as an engaged couple, and Kristina had to tell Marcus over and over again that her tears were different now.  These were tears of happiness, tears of joy. Of relief. She didn’t voice these last two words, though.  Perhaps she didn’t fully hear them herself, in either her head or her heart, but they were certainly there in her soul. As Marcus held his fiancée, and her head rested once more against his chest, they both felt her body relax, as the strain of so many years began to loosen its grip on her being.

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Above the River, Chapter 28

[Author’s note: The words of Bruno Groening’s in this chapter that are in boldface are his actual words. I have excerpted them from lectures and talks that were recorded during his lifetime and later transcribed and translated into English by the Bruno Groening Circle of Friends, which has very kindly given me permission to use them.]

Chapter 28

July, 1949

Gassmann-Bunke homestead and Bremen, Germany

            The days following Lorena’s announcement that Bruno Groening had left Herford and gone who knows where, were among the hardest for the Gassmanns and Bunkes since the period following Lina’s accident.  Now, as then, the family members did their best to project an air of hope and confidence that they would find Groening. 

            But beneath the outward profession of positivity lay the persistent fear that they had missed their chance. And their chance was precisely the way they all thought of it. After all, it wasn’t just Lina who had something to gain if the visit to Groening took place and Lina was healed.  Each of them was invested in the success of this venture for his or her own reasons, even if these reasons were never voiced out loud. They all spoke only of how Lina’s life would change – and for the better! Lina, of course, sensed her relatives’ unspoken thoughts, but she didn’t judge them harshly for wishing for their own lives to be easier, too.  In fact, she appreciated it that they did keep their own desires to themselves. It made her feel that they really did care about what happened to her: After four years of what seemed to her like no one doing anything to change the situation, at least they were all working toward a common goal. 

            Even so, Lina was realistic enough to understand that if there wasn’t some progress soon, enthusiasm for the project would wane. They might all slip back into a state of stagnation, like the swallow she’d seen on the riverbank, one wounded wing in the mud. But that was just the way it was at the beginning, Lina reminded herself, before the bird summoned the strength and took flight once more.  As the days passed, Lina kept calling to mind that swallow, panting in the mud. That’s where I am now, she told herself over and over. Just waiting for that power to flow into me.  And then I’ll fly!

*          *          *

            The first encouraging moment came two weeks after the evening they had all gathered around Marcus’ boss’ car, so looking forward to heading to Herford the next morning, the evening when Lorena had rushed over to tell them the bad news.  Now, it was Marcus who rushed into the yard after work, beaming with excitement.

            “Bremen!” he cried out, bursting through the door, expecting the whole family to be gathered for his announcement. But it wasn’t quite suppertime yet, and only Renate and Ethel were in the kitchen.

            “Where is everyone?” Marcus said, annoyed.  “I have news!”

            Renate, who had been pulling plates off the shelves to set the table, turned to face him, her arms cradling the stack of dishes.  Ethel wiped her hands on a dishtowel and walked toward Marcus.

            “What news?” she asked softly, studying her son’s face for clues.

            But he shook his head, refusing to tell them.  “Where’s Lina?” But before they could answer, he was already out the door and searching for his sister.  He found her on the other side of the sheets that were drying on the clothesline. She and Kristina were just taking down some laundry that was dry. 

            “There you are!” Marcus called, running over to her.

            Startled, Lina dropped the clothespin she was holding. When Kristina bent down to pick it up off the ground, Marcus took it from her and threw it aside.

            “Forget the laundry, Kristina!” Then he got crouched down in front of Lina and took hold of her hands.  “Bremen!” he nearly shouted. “He’s in Bremen!”

            Lina grew pale and looked back and forth between Marcus and Kristina.  “Bruno Groening?” she whispered.

            Marcus nodded.  “Yes, Groening!  Who else would I be talking about?”

            Now Lina allowed herself a smile.  Seeing that, Marcus smiled, too.

“That’s my girl!” He jumped up, stepped behind Lina, took hold of the wheelchair’s handles and began pushing his sister around the yard, in and out beneath and between the hanging sheets. Kristina and Lina shrieked with laughter and begged him to stop before all the laundry lay in the dirt. 

All this commotion drew everyone out into the yard: Renate and Ethel from the kitchen, Peter from the workshop, and Ulrich and Viktor, who were just coming out of the forest, carrying a two-man saw.

“What’s the excitement about?” Viktor asked, and looked to Ethel, who came over to stand next to him and slipped her arm through his. He realized from her expression that she, like he, was trying to remember a time when Marcus had ever treated Lina this way – as a loving older brother.  He couldn’t. Neither could Ethel. 

“Papa,” Lina called out breathlessly, although it was Marcus who’d been moving the wheelchair.  “Marcus said Mr. Groening is in Bremen!”

“Ahhhh!” Viktor exclaimed. “Now that’s some news!”

“And only a couple of hours away,” Ulrich noted with an approving nod of his head.

“Marcus,” Renate asked, “how did you find that out?”

“From my boss, Mr. Weiss,” Marcus told them, leaning over to brace his hands on his thighs.  He was feeling a bit winded from the exertion.

“But how did he know?” Renate continued.  “Lorena’s been listening to the radio non-stop for the past week, and she hasn’t heard anything.” She was frowning, as if somehow insulted that she hadn’t been the one to learn the news and present it to the family.  Ulrich put his arm around her shoulders and laughed.

“Hush, Renate, and let the young man tell us!”

It was a funny scene, with all of them standing around the yard, instead of taking seats indoors. No one wanted to wait to hear Marcus’ explanation. Even Stick, the dog, was racing around them in excitement, his tail catching on the sheets and causing them to dip and billow.

“It happened like this,” Marcus began, gazing around at his audience and pleased that everyone was now present.  “Mr. Weiss came in this morning… Oh, well, of course, I told him what happened, when I took the car back to him last Friday. I had to explain why we didn’t go to Herford after all.”

“Yes, yes,” Renate said impatiently, waving her hand to hurry him along. “Mr. Weiss knew about why we were going to Herford. But how did he find out where Mr. Groening is now?”

“Mama!” Ethel told her with a laugh, “Marcus is telling us.  Just let him tell us!”

Renate nodded, and Marcus continued.

“So, evidently, Mr. Weiss told his wife the story – about Lina and how Groening was in Herford and then had to leave.  Turns out she – Mrs. Weiss – has been following the whole thing in the papers, too. And apparently, Mrs. Weiss has a cousin who lives in Bremen, and this cousin said that her next door neighbor, a woman named –“

“For heaven’s sake, Marcus, we don’t care what her name is!” Renate burst in, but she quieted down when Ulrich squeezed her shoulder.

“Right, Grandma,” Marcus said. “To make a long story short, Groening was at the cousin’s neighbor’s house two nights ago, and a group of people came.  The neighbor even invited the cousin, but she didn’t go. But she did tell Mrs. Weiss about it, because it seemed like such an unusual occurrence.  She –“

“She? Who?” Lina asked, and no one shushed her, figuring that if anyone had a right to ask for clarification, she did.

“The cousin,” Marcus said.  “A Mrs. Schneider.  Mrs. Schneider said she saw a man go into the house – and this is a side-by-side house, connected, so she got a good look at him – and she said he was on the short side, with long, dark, wavy hair –“

“That’s him!” Lina cried, her eyes shining brightly.

Marcus nodded.  “Yes, it was Groening. And Mrs. Schneider said that as she was looking out the window, trying to get a look at him, he stopped on the walkway and turned. And he looked right at her!  As if he knew she was there watching him, even though she was kind of hiding behind the curtain so he wouldn’t see her. And he just looked at her for a few second, in a serious way, and then he continued walking and went into the house.  And Mrs. Schneider said that she felt something when he looked at her.”

“What?” they all asked, hanging on Marcus’ every word. “What did she feel?”

But Marcus wanted to drag out his moment in the limelight.  So he paused, looking at them each and taking Lina’s hand.  Finally, he said, “Love. That’s what she said, Mrs. Weiss told her husband. And peace.”

Lina squeezed her brother’s hand, and they could all see that she had begun to cry quietly.  Kristina, who was standing on the other side of the wheelchair, leaned over and hugged Lina. Then she asked Marcus:

“Did Mrs. Schneider go over to the neighbor’s then, too?”

Marcus shook his head.  “Seems she was too embarrassed. But after everyone had left, she did go next door…” Here he paused again, for effect, before continuing. “And the neighbor told her that Groening is coming back again… tomorrow night!”

Now everyone in the yard began talking and gesturing, nodding and clapping their hands and hugging. Stick began racing around once more.

“Well, then,” Viktor said, smiling broadly, “we have some plans to make, don’t we?”

  “We might as well all go in now,” Renate announced. “Supper’ll be ready in a few minutes. Everybody get washed up, and we can discuss it all when we sit down.”

Ethel looked at Viktor and raised her eyebrows.  He could see a smile in her eyes, as if she was asking him, “When has Mama ever said we’d discuss something over supper?” Viktor hugged her and whispered in her ear, “Maybe a new day is dawning for this family.”

*          *          *

So it was that, the next evening, the Gassmanns and Bunkes and Kristina (Ingrid had reluctantly gone to the Walters’ farm) found themselves at the curb outside the home of the Schneiders’ neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. Birkner.  Kathrin Schneider hurried to the front door of her house as soon as she saw them pull up.  She watched, mouth agape, as Marcus, Kristina, Renate and Ulrich climbed out of the Opel Kapitän, which Mr. Weiss had generously offered Marcus for the trip.  Lina was still seated in the front passenger seat, waiting for Viktor, who had driven to Bremen in the pickup truck with Ethel and Peter, to park and unload Ethel’s wheelchair from pickup’s bed. Mrs. Schneider, a short woman in her fifties, with small eyes and tightly curled, dark hair that hugged her head just so, was amazed not only by this large number of people who had come together, but also by the juxtaposition of her brother-in-law’s Opel and the family’s dusty farm truck.  They seemed a motley crew, indeed. Not raggedy, no.  They were all dressed in their Sunday best, that was clear.  But it was also clear that these were country folk.

Mrs. Schneider stepped outside onto her own front stoop, now, and watched them all make their way up toward the Birkners’ side of the house. Still, she pointedly didn’t look at Lina, who was now being moved into the wheelchair by two men Kathrin assumed must be her father and brother. Even so, her gaze settled on this scene. Kathrin immediately averted her eyes, not wanting to be caught staring, especially since the girl herself was casting glances around, as if she didn’t want to be seen.  But then Kathrin caught sight of a young man who was limping, too.  There’s nowhere to look! she thought.  So, she walked right over to them and introduced herself.  Then she turned and led the way up to the Birkners’ door, taking on the role of guide. She, after all, was the one who had learned about Groening’s visit in the first place! 

Inside – once Viktor and Marcus lifted Lina’s wheelchair up the one step and over the threshold into the house – Mrs. Birkner greeted them warmly. A tall, lithe woman, with her wavy, straw blond hair pulled back loosely, she seemed both relaxed and energized. She leaned down to take Lina’s hand in her own and give it a firm shake as a heartfelt smile came to her face. 

“Miss Bunke? I’m Silvia Birkner. I’m glad you’ve come.” She looked to the entire assembled family as she spoke the last sentence.

“Come along in here,” she continued, walking ahead of them. She indicated with her hand that they should make their way through a large, arched opening, and into a parlor of sorts.  At least that’s what Renate thought she’d call this room, since it was neither kitchen nor dining room, and seemed to function solely as a place where people would sit and chat.         

The room measured about fifteen feet across and twelve feet deep, and there was a small fireplace with a dark surround and mantel fashioned out of wood that matched the rest of the trim in the room.   An assortment of upholstered and wooden chairs, settees and benches faced the fireplace and had been arranged in rows, along with two small couches along the two outside walls. Just to the right of the fireplace, where, it seemed to Renate, one of the armchairs must usually go, there stood a little table. It held a small lamp, already lit, and a glass of water that had been covered with a small lace doily.

Ethel was taking a good look around, too. She’d been wondering what kind of house they’d be in, and she was relieved to see that the Birkners were not some fancy, rich people who might object to them being foresters and cabinet makers.  The furniture was not new, but not overly worn, either, a hodgepodge of designs and ages.  The room’s wallpaper was a big dingy, but not torn, and the curtains looked like Mrs. Birkner gave them regular airings and washings.  On the wall hung several photographs – family portraits, Ethel assumed. There were also several paintings of landscapes, originals, probably by someone in the family. A few more, smaller, photos in simple frames occupied the fireplace mantel, along with a vase of flowers, probably from the Birkners’ flower garden, and a clock. A floor lamp stood in one back corner, and a table lamp was perched atop a bookcase on the other wall, near the arch. Ethel caught her mother’s eye, and the two women nodded subtly to each other, acknowledging that both had surveyed the room and felt that everything was going to be all right.

While her mother and grandmother took in their surroundings, Lina looked nervously at the how the furniture was laid out. She wondered where her wheelchair could possibly fit in this tightly-packed arrangement.  But Mrs. Birkner already had a plan.  She moved aside the last chair in the front row, closest to the large arch that met the hallway.

“Here you go,” she said to Lina.  “Mr. Bunke, you can park your daughter’s chair right here, if that’s all right.”

Viktor thanked her and rolled Lina first forward and then back into the spot Mrs. Birkner had indicated.

Lina felt her cheeks burning, and she could barely breathe, although the windows in the room were open and a pleasant breeze was pushing the curtains aside and flowing into the room. Why isn’t anyone else here? she wondered.  And where is Mr. Groening?

            The rest of the family, and Mrs. Schneider, too, were obviously all asking themselves these very same questions. Mrs. Birkner hastened to put them all at ease.

“Don’t you worry, now,” she said as she showed each of them in turn to a seat with a gentle wave of her hand.  “Others are coming,” she went on, “and Mr. Groening will be here soon, too.  He called a bit ago and said he wouldn’t be long.  So, you just make yourselves at home.”

“She’s nice enough,” Renate whispered to Ulrich after Mrs. Birkner left the room, “but how are we to make ourselves at home? I wish we’d just get started. It’s hard to wait, isn’t it?” she asked, turning now to Lina.

But the only response Lina could manage was to nod.  Her throat felt so tense that she doubted she could get any words out, even if her life depended on it.  As she tipped her head in acknowledgement to her grandmother, she felt Kristina’s hand come to rest on her right shoulder and give it a squeeze.  Grateful, Lina brought her left hand (because her right was inside her pocket, grasping the newspaper article about Bruno Groening) up and laid it atop Kristina’s.

            Kristina ended up sitting directly behind Lina, with Marcus to her left and Viktor and Ethel and Peter in the seats heading the rest of the way down that row.  In the front row, Renate sat next to Lina, and Ulrich was on her left.  Mrs. Schneider was directed to the chair next to Peter. The two seats to the left of Ulrich were, evidently, saved for other guests.  On the closest one lay a folded newspaper, and a small scarf was bunched up on the next spot. As Ulrich took this in, he glanced at the man, who looked to be in his fifties, sitting in the third seat to his left. He turned when he noticed Ulrich’s surveying glance, and extended his hand.

            “Helmut Birkner,” he said simply. When Ulrich made a motion, as if to indicate Mrs. Birkner, he nodded and smiled.  “Yes, that’s my wife, Silvia. She’s the organizer. I’m the waiter,” he told Ulrich with a laugh.

            Ulrich introduced himself, and then he, too, went back to waiting, wondering whether Mr. Birkner was waiting for something in particular. The man had no obvious disabilities or injuries, but Ulrich knew full well that not all infirmities were outwardly visible.

In the fifteen or twenty minutes that followed, other people did, indeed, arrive, mostly in twos, and mostly women, but a few individual men and women also came into the room.  One man, in his mid-thirties, Peter guessed, walked in slowly and deliberately, leaning heavily on a cane and dragging his right leg behind him. Another man, who caught Viktor’s eye, held his left arm to his chest, bent at a right angle, but there was no sling holding it, and no cast, as there would be if the arm were broken. Finally, an older, gray-haired woman, in her sixties, perhaps, doubled over in pain and supported by a much younger man – her grandson? – made her way toward the seat directly behind Kristina.  As the young man helped her align herself to sit down, she was bent so far forward that Kristina could feel the woman’s ragged breath on her neck, and her hand actually clutched Kristina’s shoulder as she settled back onto the chair.

“Oh, please excuse me!” the woman half-whispered, half-cried out.

Kristina sensed that this effort to observe the social niceties had cost the woman dearly: As Kristina turned around in her seat to reassure her, she glimpsed a drawn face and eyes glassed over in agony.  “Don’t give it a second thought, Mother,” Kristina said kindly, patting the woman’s clenched hand with her own, before turning back around.

Some of the people who came into the parlor greeted those who already sat in the rows, or made eye contact with them, but the majority stared down at the floor and simply made their way silently to the seats that were still unoccupied. Each person in the room seemed focused on his or her own distress, or that of the person he or she had brought here.  It seemed to Ethel, who slowly turned this way and that to take in the room, that it wasn’t so much that these people were self-absorbed, able to think of nothing but their own suffering.  There was that, of course, but something else was at play here. In all the guests with visible burdens or pain, Ethel recognized the attitude she had seen in Lina these past four years: A keen awareness of how obviously they did not fit in to the society around them, and a strong desire to remain unnoticed. 

Back in the early days following her accident, Lina never shared with Ethel the fear that haunted her for months, that some town official would suddenly come by and cart her off to be euthanized or, at the very least, locked away in an institution for citizens who were no longer of use to their great country.  But Ethel had seen this fear in her daughter’s eyes, especially during her immediate recuperation period in the hospital.  She’d seen the way Lina looked at her whenever she came back into the room after stepping out into the hall to speak with the doctor. 

Ethel never revealed to Lina – and she had no intention of ever telling her this – that the doctor had, in fact, raised the possibility of sending Lina to the very kind of institution (“home”, he called it unctuously) that terrified Lina so much that she often lost entire nights of sleep over it. But Ethel told him in no uncertain terms that they would care for Lina at home, and that if he ever mentioned this option to anyone in their family again, she would report him to the head of the hospital for promoting eugenics. 

In fact, Ethel was not fully informed about the details of this policy that the Nazis had enacted, but she knew enough – they’d all heard reports and propaganda during the war – to know that Lina might well have been taken from them if she’d been paralyzed earlier in the war. She also knew that, these days, the government had an official policy of cracking down when anything resembling these views popped up now. At least, Ethel thought at the time, that’s what she thought she’d read.  Whether this was or was not the case, Ethel’s threat was effective.  Lina’s doctor never mentioned the “homes” again.

But here, in the Birkners’ parlor, Ethel could see that new government policies didn’t necessarily mean that crippled or otherwise disabled German citizens felt comfortable being out in public, where their infirmities were on display for all to observe.  In Bockhorn and Varel, you almost never saw anyone out on the street who was not in good health, at least physically. Even Lina preferred to stick to the homestead and the area of road between their house and the Walters’.  Never mind that it was a production to take her anywhere – just getting her here had taken so much time and effort.  That was the least of it. Ethel knew that.  Steeling herself for passersby to gawk at her, pity her, disdain her… That was what took a bigger toll on Lina.

Ethel knew this, and she sensed that Lina was feeling this discomfort right now, amidst strangers.  And Lina wasn’t the only one who felt that way, Ethel concluded as she glanced around the room.  The shame of being different, of not being seen as whole and healthy, the fear of denunciation by others… Ethel glimpsed all of that and more in the eyes and posture of the people who filled this room. She knew she couldn’t entirely grasp what they were feeling. But she did understand that it had taken unimaginable strength and courage for them all to come here tonight and to face being ridiculed, shunned, or perhaps even verbally assaulted.  And yet, they had come.  Certainly, Ethel concluded, each one of these people, like Lina, had been given up on by the doctors, told there was no hope for them, told,  “You just have to learn to live with it,” just as the doctor had said to Lina.  Yet, something had given them the power to hope. And so, here they were, grasping at this very last straw: Bruno Groening.

Viktor was already feeling overheated in his buttoned-up shirt, and judging by the fidgeting of those around him and the way some women were fanning themselves with their hats, he was not alone.  Ethel, moved by the scene around her, and by the fact that her husband had come home from the war in one piece, took his hand and gave it a squeeze. They exchanged tense smiles as they waited.  Marcus and Kristina were enjoying the sensation of being seated so close to each other that their shoulders touched if they both leaned the tiniest bit toward each other.  Peter, meanwhile, felt that Kathrin Schneider was staring at his wounded leg, at the same time as she was making a point of not wondering about how the young man next to her had acquired his limp, or how the others around her had come to be so physically wrecked.

It wasn’t just the temperature in the room that was causing the guests to shift in their seats.  Nearly everyone noticed that the atmosphere had grown tense, in the sense that it felt filled with anticipation, as if a guitar string was being slowly tightened more and more.  And just when it seemed to them that this string would break and they would all explode, Mrs. Birkner reappeared in the room, her step lighter than before, her face joyful.   Behind her came a tall, slim man with dark blond hair slicked back from his forehead.  The two of them came to stand at the front of the room, facing the guests, which now numbered about twenty-five.

Mrs. Birkner indicated the man at her left. “Those of you who were here the other night know Mr. Schmidt,” she began. “Egon Arthur Schmidt. He is one of Mr. Groening’s helpers, and he’s brought Mr. Groening here tonight.”

At this, everyone in the room began leaning this way and that, trying to get a view of the hallway outside the arch.  But there was no Groening there to be seen. And at the same time, they all noticed, the uncomfortable tension in the room hadn’t lessened with Mrs. Birkner’s reappearance. In fact, it seemed to have intensified.  Lina felt she might very well faint, or cry out.  It wasn’t anything painful, just the difficulty of waiting. For heaven’s sake, where is he?? She heard someone behind her, a woman, moaning.  Another further back and off to the side, was crying quietly, while someone shushed her, but not unkindly.

Now Mrs. Birkner sat down next to her husband, having picked up her scarf from the seat. Mr. Schmidt smiled and continued to stand before them, his hands at his sides. “Yes, dear ladies and gentlemen,” he began, “Good evening.” He paused and glanced out across the room. “You have all come here seeking healing. I know you’re anxious to see Mr. Groening, and I assure you that you will, in just a few moments. But first, he has asked me to give you these instructions, instructions that will help you take in everything you can receive here tonight.  So, I ask you first of all, to sit so that you are not touching anyone else, whether next to you, or in front of or behind you.”

At this, the sound of chair legs scraping on the wood floor and rug could be heard, as people shifted this way and that.  Marcus and Kristina reluctantly moved their chairs just far enough to comply with Mr. Schmidt’s instructions. 

“Thank you. Next, Mr. Groening asks that you sit without crossing your arms or legs.  Just let your hands rest in your lap without clasping them.  This will allow the current to flow freely through your body without short-circuiting.”

“Current?” Marcus whispered to Kristina.  “What current?” And he was not the only one in the room who glanced at the floor around the chairs, to see whether there were electrical cords running throughout the room. But there were none.

It is at this moment, as the guests are occupied with arranging their arms and legs in the correct position, that those of them on the hallway end of the rows notice a small man move quietly into the room.  Lina feels rather than see him at first.  She senses a strong heat along the right side of her body, as if she were out in bright sunlight on a sweltering day. She feels drawn to turn her head to that side, to determine the source of this great warmth. And there he is: Bruno Groening.  He walks silently to the front of the room, passing a mere six inches from her as he des so.

All movement and noise in the room ceases as the guests realize that Bruno Groening is finally before them.  No one wants to miss a single word from this man. Groening now stands next to the small table, with his back to the front wall of the room.  Mr. Schmidt has taken a seat in the front row, next to Mrs. Birkner. The first thing Groening does is to take his keys and lean over slightly to lay them on the table next to the water glass. Then he straightens back up and, still silent, slowly directs his gaze to each person in the room, his eyes moving down one row and then back up the next, pausing for a moment as he encounters the face of each sufferer or the person who has brought him or her here tonight.  Mesmerized, no one speaks, but their faces show a whole range of emotions: here, someone smiles tentatively at Groening; here, another person looks down; tears well up in many eyes, while others stare back at the small man with skepticism; other faces show just pain; and often, there is desperation and a silent plea for help.

When Groening’s gaze reaches Lina, she feels as though his shining blue eyes are looking into the depths of her soul, seeing everything about her. And although he is not smiling, and his expression looks serious – stern, even – what Lina feels coming from him is not criticism or condemnation, but love.  That is how she described it later, anyway, even though it was not like any love she had ever felt from another human, not even her mother and grandmother.  This was both an emotion and a connection of some sort. Maybe this was what Mr. Schmidt meant when he spoke of a “current”. 

What Lina senses now reminds her of the tingling and lightness she felt when she read the newspaper articles about Groening, only so much stronger. And back then, there hadn’t been this feeling of love, of a clear connection.  Connection to what? Lina asks herself, watching Groening survey the men and women before him. Is it to him that this love and this current are connecting me? She attempts to think about this, but then the tingling in her body grows more intense, until finally she notices that her whole body is vibrating, and she’s simply no longer able to engage in thought. If she were able to think at this moment, she would notice that her feet and legs were tingling and vibrating just as much as the rest of her.  But she is too caught up in experiencing the love that is flowing into her, and the peace that now reigns inside her, to pay attention to anything else.  All she can do is to allow what is flowing to flow, and to take in Groening’s appearance as he stands just a few feet in front of her.

Lina’s attention is drawn first to his eyes, to his gaze, and then to his expression.  Considering his entire face now, she can’t decide whether or not she finds him handsome. This question seems somehow irrelevant, given all that she feels radiating from him.  But, she decides, if she were to judge him objectively, by his physical features alone, she would have to say that in appearance, he was unassuming. Small in stature and build, he is also dressed in a way that would attract no one’s attention: a dark blue polo shirt with a zippered opening, beneath a neat but worn dark gray suit jacket.  His slacks are also dark gray, and the toes of his plain black shoes are scuffed. He holds his arms crossed in front of his chest, and his hands look like they have seen quite a bit of manual labor. 

As he turns his head to take in the other side of the room, Lina has to admit that his hair is quite unusual. Although she’d seen the newspaper photo of him, she hadn’t gotten a look at his hair. Dark, and slicked back from his face to reveal a receding hair-line, it is thick and falls in waves, all the way to the base of his neck.  And his neck! Lina thinks as he turns to face the room straight on once more. What is that? Groening’s polo shirt is unzipped to just below where his collar bones meet his chest, and his throat is bulging out in two big puffy sections, one on each side of his neck.  How did I not notice that before? Lina wonders. Was it like that when he came in? As she stares at his neck, it seems to her that it swelled out even more. A goiter, perhaps?  But again, her thoughts are quieted by the tingling and growing feeling of peace she is sensing in her body.  And then Groening speaks.

            “My dear seekers of healing,” he begins, in a voice that is quiet, but strong. “Your pleas to the Lord God were not in vain. Dear friends, I want to briefly introduce myself to you here.  I say it to you very clearly.  I don’t know much – I only know that which man today no longer knows, is no longer able to know. He has fallen prey to the human way, and he regards everything from the human, rather than the divine, viewpoint.  Therefore, dear friends, it looks sad for every individual person.  He can no longer find the path.  He no longer knows what is true.  He – the human being –has, practically speaking, fallen prey to every great sin without knowing it, without even perceiving it, without a guilty conscience, i.e..

            “What he does feel, is that a dissonance has not only arisen around him, but it has seeped into him, and everyone – you as well – will ask himself the question, ‘How is all that possible?’ How did it come to the point where evil what you call ‘illness’, but I tell you that it is the evil – seized your body? So that you really no longer feel comfortable in it, so that you yourself have perceived that your body no longer obeys you, that you can no longer give it orders, that it has, so to speak, gone on strike?”

            Tears rush to Lina’s eyes now, as she feels deep within her, that what Bruno Groening is saying about their bodies – her body! – is true. Part of her wants to think about this, but only this thought comes to her: The evil? How did it do this to me? She reaches up to wipe her eyes, then focuses on simply listening.

            “Evil is around us,” Groening continues,“and man can easily – very easily! – take it into himself if he forgets himself only once. It’s like the radio.” Here he stops and gestures to the radio set on top of a side table at the back of the room. “We can also receive everything. We only need to tune into the divine transmission,the healing stream: the Heilstrom. However, if someone comes and misleads you, leads you to what is satanic, to what is evil, then you are tuning in to the evil transmission. ‘I am curious,’ you say. ‘I just want to try to hear the evil transmission.’  You see, you can also receive the evil transmission in your body, and up until now, that has been the casewith you. This is what you have done.  I believe you understand me now. It depends totally on your attitude, on how you tune in here. Yes, friends, you have such a wonderful body. If today I were to tell you about everything you are capable of when you take possession of the divine power, meaning, that first you are worthy of taking it in… oh, then you could do so much good!”

            Here Groening smiles, and it seems to Lina that his eyes are shining more now.

            I make you aware,” he says, now beginning to walk slowly back and forth across the room, his arms still crossed in front of his chest, “that healing only benefits those who carry in themselves faith in our Lord God, or who are prepared to take faith in.”  Here he pauses, as if giving the assembled guests the chance to consider where they stand on this question. There is some shifting in the seats. ”Or who are prepared to take faith in,” he repeats.

            Here Groening gazes at Marcus, who shifts in discomfort. Does he know I have no faith? But Groening’s expression doesn’t strike him as condemning. As well, Marcus senses what he can describe only as love, flowing toward him from Groening. If he does know, then how does he still have that love for me? Or maybe it’s not for me. Marcus glances at Lina. Maybe it’s for her. She believes. He looks at his parents and grandparents, at Kristina, at Peter, too, at their rapt gazes. They all believe.”

            “Man should now,” Groening continues, “once and for all, come to self-reflection. He should know that he is a divine creature, a divine being, and that it is God Himself who has granted him this body of his for an earthly life!”

            Is this true? Marcus wonders. Would I really not be here, if not for God? Don’t I exist without God?

            “But we are earthbound after all,” Groening asserts, “earthbound through this body of ours. And thus, it is our first duty, the first task of every single individual, to pay attention to this unique body of his and to grant his body what God has intended for it.”

            ‘What God has intended for it’? Marcus muses. So, we’re back to this question of God and His plans for us. He frowns.

            Suddenly, Groening looks in his direction, and now his face is stern, although Marcus still feels the love flowing, and recognizes that this love is, indeed, directed towards him, too.

            “Don’t think,” Groening says, focusing his eyes first on Marcus, and then shifting his glance to encompass everyone in the room. “Don’t think. Feel! Your thinking is blocking the flow of the Heilstrom.”

            The Heilstrom? Marcus thinks, in spite of himself, despite his willingness to follow Groening’s instructions. Is this Heilstrom the love I’m feeling? But then he consciously turns his attention to Groening and his words, instead of the words in his own head that seek to distract him.

             “Pay attention to this unique body of yours,” Groening repeats, by way of a reminder.  “Grant your body what God has intended for it.”

            Yes! Lina thinks to herself, and she is not the only one. But what has God intended for my body? And how to give it that?

            “But this will only be possible,” Groening tells them, answering her unspoken questions, “if you pay attention to yourself,or, to put it more clearly, to your body, and if you tell yourself –  where you, that is, your body, has been seized by evil –   ‘That is not in order.’  You would use the words, ‘It is sick’” or ‘The sickness is here and there’  You even maintain that it is your sickness”!

As he speaks, he looks at various people in the audience, as if he knows that this woman has suffered for three months, and that man for seven years.  

“My dear seekers of healing,” Groening says, “Do not think of your illness now. Put it behind you and concentrate just on what you are feeling in your body! What must happen for each individual, what they deserve, and what they wish for themselves: It is already happening. Your heart, your body, your soul must be pure. Then God can enter, where Satan has been until now. Then I can help you all! In the end, you are all God’s children. But the greatest physician is and remains our Lord God!’”

Here he pauses, as all the people before him turn their attention to their own bodies, some with eyes closed, others staring blankly at a spot on the wall.  Groening has stopped pacing and is now standing in front of the fireplace again, studying the people in the chairs and taking note of each of them.  Finally, he begins speaking once more.             

So, my dear friends, pay attention to your body now. Do not take in any thought from the outside, but pursue the feeling, how it –this Heilstrom, the divine current from God – is working in your body.  Do not think of home now. Do not think of your business. Do not think of your job, or of your neighbor. No. Think only of yourself.  And now, as you pay attention to your body, you will receive so many realizations, that you will have to say to yourself, ‘Yes, what he has just told us is correct. I do notice it. That is new to me!’ In ultimate peace and calm, only observe the body, what is going on in it!”

Here Groening again starts to walk back and forth before the people who are listening to him in rapt attention. Now and then, he stretches out a hand to indicate one of them with his hand.

  “What do you feel?” he asks, and at one point, it is Lina whom he addresses.

Embarrassed at being singled out, she shrugs at first, and then, when Groening continues to look at her, waiting, she realizes she must give some answer. She does what he has told them to do: She observes what she is feeling inside, and is surprised at what she finds there. “Peaceful,” she tells him. “I feel peace. And happiness.”

Groening nods. Then he turned to the man with the bent arm. “And you, Sir? What are you feeling?”

“Nothing, I’m afraid,” the man replies, in an apologetic tone.

Groening waved his hand. “That is of no consequence. The current is already flowing through you.” He turns back to Lina then. “What do you feel now?”

She directs her awareness inward. “Tingling, Mr. Groening.”

“Where do you feel it? Pay attention to your body and tell me.”

Lina closes her eyes and concentrates. Then, she slowly opens her eyes, her lips parted in amazement. “I feel it through my whole body.”

“Even in your legs?” Groening asks sharply.

“Yes,” Lina tells him, sitting up straighter in her chair now.  Renate turns to her granddaughter, but before she can say anything, Groening raises a finger to his own lips to silence her.

“You have the connection to Him now,” he says, indicating not just Lina, but everyone in the room now. “But I warn you, you won’t be filled with the good until you have really disassociated yourself from evil, until there is no more evil left in you, and you say, ’I no longer want anything to do with evil!’ Only then will you be worthy to receive the divine transmission, to get all the good back in your body that belongs to you, that God has determined for you, that God has determined for your body.”

Silently, he once again fixes his intent gaze on each of them in turn.  Only after he has met the eyes of every person in the room does he speak again.

            “I ask each of you now: Give me your illness. Throw away all the dirt, and then promise yourself, ‘Now I’m going to stop, I’m not going to take in anymore evil.’ This is what I urge you to do, to first give away all the evil. Give it to me, and I offer you health.  I bring you the healing for which you have been longing for so long!”

Now everyone in attendance is staring fixedly at Groening. Does he mean it? they wonder. Can he really do it? Marcus, back to reflecting now, thinks, So, he, Groening, he’s the one who brings us the healing… Others, in a near frenzy, ask themselves, But how? How do I give him the illness, what he calls the evil??

Lina is among this latter group. And as she tries in her mind to understand how she is supposed to do what he has asked, all of her family members (except for Marcus) are either looking right at her, or – in the case of Renate and Ulrich, who are seated in her same row – holding her image in their minds. And each one of them, except for Marcus, who is musing on his own thoughts, is urging her, with all of his or her heart, Do it, Lina! Give away the evil! Give it away now!

  Groening waits for what seems to everyone an agonizingly long time, standing silently before them. Then he speaks, his voice ringing.

“In the name of God, I declare you all healthy!”

Those in attendance are quiet, as if each is now searching his or her body for a change, some shift. Groening stretches his hand out in the direction of the woman sitting behind Kristina.  “Madame, what do you feel?”

She doesn’t reply at first, evidently still in the process of completing the inventory of her body. Then she raises her eyes to meet Groening’s and says, in a soft, nearly inaudible voice, “I feel nothing, Mr. Groening.”

“What do you mean, precisely?” Groening presses her. “Nothing at all?”

She shakes her head.  “No. I mean that I feel no pain.” 

At this, Kristina turns in her chair and sees that the face of this woman, who had come in wracked by pain, is now as if full of light. She is smiling from ear to ear. 

“Did you have pain when you came in?” Groening asks her.

“Why, Mr. Groening, I have been full of nothing but pain for two years now.  The doctor, he told me he couldn’t help me. Told me it was stomach cancer…”

But Groening interrupts her. “Madame, we don’t speak of the evil here. And no need to speak of that burden, because now you are free of it. Tomorrow, go to your doctor and ask him to do his tests. He will confirm your healing.”

At this pronouncement, a buzz spreads through the room, as people turn in astonishment to their neighbors. Marcus turns and gazes at the woman. So, Groening healed her! he thinks, without noticing the joy that has crept into him.

Groening says no more to the healed woman. Instead, he crosses the room and casually picks up his keys from the small table where he’d placed them at the beginning of the evening. Standing by the table now, he motions to the man who had come in with the cane, dragging his right leg. He is sitting at the end of the first row, ahead of Peter.

“Sir,” he says, “may I ask you something?”

The man nods, and Groening, who looks like he is about to pose his question, and even opens his mouth to speak, instead suddenly drops his keys onto the floor, as if they have slipped through his fingers.  Seeing this, the man who was waiting to be questioned springs from his chair, takes two quick steps, and leans down to pick up Groening’s keys. As he straightens up, he looks in surprise at the keys and then at Groening, and, finally, at his cane, which is lying on the floor by his seat.

“Thank you,” Groening says simply. “Now,” he continues, laying a hand on the man’s shoulder, “Would please do me the favor of walking over to the archway there, and then back to me again?”

This the man does, tentatively at first, and slowly. But once he reaches the arch and turns around, he strides confidently back to where Groening is standing.  He, like the woman behind Kristina, is beaming. Tears are streaming down his face. 

“Now,” Groening asks him, his hand on the man’s shoulder again, “which leg is it that was crippled during the war?”

The man, who towers over Groening, now that he is no longer hunched over a cane, ponders this, and then replies, his brows knitted, “I…I don’t remember!”  Laughter breaks out in the crowd. Someone calls out, “It was your right leg!  I saw you pulling it along when you came in.”  And the man himself chuckles, realizing the absurdity of his response. “Really, I don’t recall!” he cries.

“And indeed,” Groening tells him, “Mr. Handler, why should you remember? That leg which you broke when an ammunition box fell on it –  it’s now right as rain!”

The man looks at Groening and wonders how this man could know how his leg had been broken, or his name, for that matter. But before he can pose this question, Groening makes another request.

“Kind Sir, will you please hand me your cane?”

Handler walks easily to his seat, bends down and picks up his stick, and strides back over to Groening.  Groening takes the cane in his right hand and studies it for a moment.  Then he stretches his left arm out straight before him, raises the cane with his right hand and brings it down onto his left arm with a sharp whack. The cane breaks in two. The shocked audience members respond, some shouting, others clapping, still others simply nodding and smiling. Groening leans down to pick up the pieces of the cane that now lie on the floor, and then holds them loosely in his hands.

“You won’t be needing this anymore, will you?” When Handler shakes his head, Groening adds, “Please accept this broken cane as a reminder of your healing.”

In the first moment after Groening breaks Handler’s cane over his arm, Lina suddenly feels a strong and sharp pain in her legs. It starts in her ankles and then runs quickly up through her calves and thighs, and then into her hips.  The pain catches her so off guard that she cries out, but no one seems to hear her, since so many of the people in the room are responding to what Groening has done.  Only Renate turns to look at her granddaughter, who has now gone very pale and is staring straight ahead of her, at the fireplace.  Renate lays her hand on Lina’s, but she seems not even to notice. 

What’s going on? Lina asks herself, although her whole lower body hurts so much that she can’t formulate any explanation for what is going on.  The pain is intense, and searing, as if she is being simultaneously torn apart and compressed beneath an anvil.  She can’t understand this with her brain, but as time passes – really, only a few minutes go by, but Lina has a sense of being outside of time, in a space of eternity – she gradually comes to recognize what she’s feeling. Not a memory, but a recognition.  This is what I felt that day. When the wood fell on me.  

In the nearly four years since her accident, Lina had never remembered what her body experienced following the accident.  In the early weeks, she sometimes wondered why it was that she had no memory of the pain that she must have felt when the crushing load of wood tumbled on top of her.   Then how can I recognize it now? That thought does penetrate her mind now, but again, what she is feeling at this moment is a knowing, not a remembering.  She is sure of it, even if she can’t explain it.

And once she knows what it is that she’s feeling, Lina is suddenly overcome by fear.  Now she turns to her grandmother, and Renate sees the terror in her eyes. Lina grasps Renate’s hand in a vice-like grip, but can’t get any words out.  “Lina, Dear,” Renate whispers, leaning over, “What is it? What’s happening?” But Lina just shakes her head.

Then, in an instant, Groening is standing before them.  “What do you feel, Miss Bunke?” he asks Lina.

“Mr. Groening,” she cries, “I feel terrible, terrible pain.”

“Where do you feel it?” 

“All up and down my legs.” She begins to cry now, for it hurts so much.

“Do you recognize these pains?” he asks.

Lina nods.  Her family members are exchanging glances. What can he mean by asking her this?

“Where do you know them from?” Groening asks her.

“From the accident,” she says, sobbing. Now she is leaning forward, rubbing her thighs with her hands. Renate reaches over to put an arm around her shoulders, and Kristina leans forward to embrace her, but Groening waves them off.

“Do not touch her. It will interfere with the current.” After making sure that they will heed his words, Groening looks intently at Lina.

“Please check your body.  Are these the same pains as before? The same as when the wood fell on you from the wagon? And in the period before your casts were removed and the pain went away?”

All the Gassmanns and Bunkes look at Groening in amazement.  How does he know this about her? Kristina turns to Marcus with a question in her eyes, but he shakes his head. “I didn’t tell anyone what happened to her,” he whispers to her. “Only that she was paralyzed.” How does he know these things?

Lina sits, directing her powers of observation to her legs.  It’s so odd to feel anything at all there, after all these years, all this time when I seemed not to have any living legs at all. But are these pains the same as before?  Lina looks up at Groening like a schoolchild who’s been asked a math question far more complex than she’s able to comprehend.  But he just waits for her to come up with answer.  She closes her eyes, concentrates.

“They are in the same spots,” she finally says, slowly.  “But…”

“But what?” Groening prompts her, his voice gentle now.  Now the room is so silent you can hear the gentle ticking of the clock on the mantelpiece.

She looks up at him, and Renate can see that the fear is gone from her eyes. “They are not accompanied by the same thoughts as before.”

“What thoughts did you have, then, with the old pain?” Groening persists.

Lina inhales deeply, as if deciding whether or not to share what she has never revealed to anyone. Finally, she begins.

“’A home.’ ‘Get rid of me.’”

Groening interrupts her. “Speak up, Miss Bunke, please.”

‘Useless,’” she goes on, after clearing her throat. “‘Euthanasia.’”  As Lina speaks, she hears her mother inhale sharply.

Groening nods. “And now?”

“There aren’t any of those thoughts now. And I feel peaceful. Even though it hurts so much.”

Groening nods again, and he smiles at her, in such a kind way that she feels even more peaceful inside, even a bit happy.

Then a question bursts from Renate’s mouth. “But Mr. Groening, why does it hurt so much? That can’t be right! Can’t you help her?”

“It is right,” Groening says, answering Renate’s plea, but still focusing his gaze on Lina. “And it has to be that you feel pain. Those are the Regelungen – the regulation pains.The body is being brought into order.  After being paralyzed for four years, you can’t expect the change to occur without any pain. Pains occurring after the healing imply Regelungen.They will stop.  Observe your body. Observe it attentively.  In three or four days, you will notice more changes. I ask you to come back with your family in a week’s time and report these changes to me.

“Mr. Groening,” Ethel queries from the row behind Lina, “does that mean, then, that Lina is healed?” She and all other members of the family barely dare to breathe at this point.

“The pain will come and go until the healing has been completed,” he replies, speaking to the group as a whole now.

Ethel turns to Viktor and frowns, and then asks, “But this pain… Why does she have to feel it? It went away. Why did it come back?”

Groening is now standing once more in front of the fireplace.

“Healing is a Regelung. Every illness that finds its Regelung will be accompanied by Regelung pain.” He points now to the woman sitting behind Kristina. This is true for you, also. An organic disease needs Regelungen.  The illness disappears, but on the other hand, the Regelung does cause pain.”

“But I feel no pain,” the woman sitting behind Kristina reminds him.

“There is still evil within you that must leave. And when you experience that, do not fear that the healing has not been successful for you.The Regelungen – these are the evil leaving the body.”

Certainly, there are many confused looks on the faces of the people in attendance. Mr. Handler is sitting with his eyes closed, as if trying to determine whether he is feeling any of these regulation pains. He notices nothing that he thinks might qualify, and looking at Lina, who is smiling despite the fact that her body is now wracked by pain, he counts himself lucky.

Everyone seems in a daze.  Lina barely notices when Mrs. Birkner stands up and thanks Mr. Groening for coming.  Their hostess tells them that they are invited to come back the following week, and that they may bring others with them, too.  Groening speaks some words of encouragement to the guests – although neither Lina nor her family members are taking them in at all. Then Groening starts walking toward the door, and Lina feels a new burst of fear.  She reaches her hand out, but she needn’t have worried.

He stops in front of her and places one hand on her shoulder.  Then he reaches into his pocket and pulls something small out of it. It’s a small, round, shiny ball, she realizes when she sees it. It looks like it’s made out of tinfoil. Groening places it into her hand, which begins vibrating once her fingers close around the ball. The sensation is similar to what she is already feeling throughout her body, only stronger.  Is that ‘current’ in it??

“Keep this with you at all times until you come back next week.”

“Mr. Groening,” Renate breaks in, “will she be able to walk?”

Groening does look at her this time, but his words seem meant for all of them.

“Do not demand that order manifest immediately,” he says.“The more extensive the disorder, the more work is required in the body, and so it will be, for as long as it takes, until complete order manifests.” Then he leans over and says, to Lina alone, “Trust and believe. The divine power helps and heals.”

At this point, Egon Arthur Schmidt comes up behind Groening and touches his elbow lightly. Groening nods, and the two men stride out of the Birkners’ parlor, leaving the people in the chairs wondering what they have just been a part of.

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Above the River, Chapter 26

Chapter 26

July, 1949

Gassmann-Bunke homestead

The day after Viktor worked the equivalent of a magic trick that secured Marcus’ support for taking Lina to Herford to meet Bruno Groening, an atmosphere of excitement and almost frenzied activity dominated throughout the homestead. This was so unlike these people who, despite the fact that they all had the ability to see clearly the path before them, generally moved along that path with deliberateness, rather than wild abandon. Ethel was the only one in the family who tended to float ahead with a lightness that seemed based on whims, but which was, in reality, based wholly in her strong intuitive connection to the world around her. 

But this ethereal nature of hers had, as we’ve seen, been a bit dampened by the struggles of the previous two decades.  Even so, when the decision was made to take Lina to Herford, Ethel’s lightness somehow worked its way back up through the layers of sadness and worry that had settled upon her over the preceding twenty years.  Viktor was the first to glimpse its reappearance, when she broached the topic of the trip with him that one night before bed.  He saw that, as his wife told him about Groening and about how Lina wanted to go to Herford to see him, she seemed to come alive.  It was as if little points of her long-buried light began to penetrate her skin, more and more, until, finally, he saw before him the Ethel of 1921, fully illuminated, the way she had appeared to him in the early days of their acquaintance, and then, courtship. It was this sight, combined with his own, heart-opening experience in the forest that one day, that made it possible for something of the Viktor of those early days to resurface, too. And although neither he nor Ethel spoke about these changes that were taking place in each other, something shifted between them, as we have seen, and it was this shift that convinced Viktor that they must get Lina to see Groening.  He couldn’t explain why he was so certain of this, but he felt very keenly that therein lay the key to making things right in his family. If just the thought of taking Lina to Herford brought the brightness back into Ethel’s whole being, then what might happen when they actually got there?

   Perhaps surprisingly – because in other ways he was so very calculating – Marcus was the other member of the family who tended toward impulsiveness.  He seemed to have inherited his father’s ability to see every situation for what it was and judge where the personal benefit lay.  Still, the two of them differed: Viktor, by the time he reached the age Marcus was now, had realized his tendency to manipulate others, and had sworn to follow a different road for the rest of his life. But Marcus had not yet gained this insight. He was still firmly on the path of self-interest. 

Like the younger iteration of Viktor, Marcus had no use for, or belief in, God. His suppertime refutations of God’s existence were quite sincere, rather than constituting the idle philosophizing he tried to pass them off as. Early in his life – even on up into early adolescence – he made a great effort to believe in God. There was a great deal of mention of God and His supposed powers in the household, even though the Gassmann-Bunkes were strictly Sunday worshippers. So, when Viktor beat him for an infraction, Marcus cried out to God in his heart, begging for an end to his father’s brutality. The beatings persisted. When he prayed to be allowed to use the rifle, this prayer was, indeed, granted, but the terms of the agreement turned out to be so harsh that it felt to Marcus as if God was just laughing at him. It was this incident with the rifle that destroyed any scrap of belief in God that he might have still had. After that, Marcus swore he would never pray for anything again. And on the recent evening, when he fled to the forest after Viktor’s announcement that Marcus would have to come back and work at home, all of Marcus’ resentment toward both his father and toward God erupted in an explosion of anger: As he swung the dead birch branch against the ground, over and over again, it was the rifle he was imagining smashing, smashing, smashing.

Thus, early in his life, Marcus was left without God to turn to. Finding himself in this predicament, he didn’t seek guidance from the trees, or from some thin stream of the divine deep within himself. Rather, much in the way his grandmother, Renate, had done before the suppertime discussions about God led her to see things differently, Marcus felt – no, knew – that he could rely only on himself. He would determine and forge his own way, based solely on his own judgment.

Let’s be clear: In this approach, he did differ from his grandmother in one important way. Renate had always firmly believed in God. It was just that she never – until now – included Him in her decision-making process. Marcus, however, felt that he was fully on his own. He saw no one around him whom he could trust to help him make his way through life. As he saw it, his father actively strived to thwart him. (When following this train of thought, Marcus conveniently disregarded how Viktor had gotten him placed in the Censorship Office during the war, and in that plum Civil Service position afterwards.)

The Civil Service position in Varel was absolutely key to Marcus’ long-range plans, and he was committed to fighting to keep it. He may not have heard God whisper to him in the darkest part of the night that this job was part of His plan for Marcus. And he may not have felt this idea flow into him from the sturdy, reliable trunk of a spruce tree at his back. But he did feel every bit as convinced of the plan’s rightness as if he had come by this guidance in one of those ways. That was because Marcus did feel something deep inside him, a power that he tapped into when he was faced with making a decision. He found it more difficult to calm himself down than Viktor did with his spruce tree, more difficult to get into a state that would allow him to sense this “something”, but he had developed a way to do this. 

Not every night – because sometimes he was just too agitated, as he’d been when he pounded the birch branch against the ground – but every couple of days, late at night, he took a seat on the edge of his bed. The first time he did this was the night before he started working in Varel. Full of anxiety at beginning this new post, overcome by fear of not meeting his new boss’s– or his father’s – expectations of him, he found himself sitting on his bed, bent elbows resting on his knees, his head in his hands. He was so anxious, so beside himself, that he even stopped breathing without noticing it.  But he still felt his heart pounding.  Then, reflexively, he gasped. The sudden intake of air calmed him, and the loud exhale through his mouth helped slow his heart rate, too.

In the years following that first experience, this process grew into a habit of sorts. Marcus rested his hands on his knees and breathed deeply – in through his nose, out through his mouth, until he felt his breathing slow – until it felt like the very core of him shifted out of his muddled head or his tight throat or chest, and settled firmly into his abdomen. When that happened, Marcus felt both calm and strong. First his belly grew warm, and he felt a mild pulsing there which grew in intensity as the minutes passed. Then this pulsing spread outward, in all directions, throughout his body.

Marcus never would have described the pulsing he felt as the divine power that Lina and their grandfather mentioned feeling when they were in the forest, or as something that came from God. As we’ve seen, God was just not in the picture for Marcus. What he sensed within him as he sat on the edge of the bed of an evening – he thought of it as just a power. It was a neutral strength that existed in him without any of the divinity or sweetness or loving overlay that Lina and Ulrich seemed to associate with what they felt flowing inside them.  If someone were to push Marcus to define this power, he would say, with a shrug, that it was simply his core, his essence. It didn’t come from anywhere or anyone else. It was just… him.

Marcus had developed the habit of embracing the ideas and insights that came to him when he felt this power pulsing steadily within him. He somehow recognized that the ideas that came through to him when his essential power was flowing were to be trusted – he just knew what to do – but that the ones that flew into his head when he was agitated did not serve him well. This he learned through trial and error. And although it was often very difficult for him to keep from acting on the spur of the moment, under the influence of the agitated thoughts, he tried his best to hold back at these times. He strived to wait until he could have a quiet moment alone, before making any decision. It seemed to him that following this procedure represented the key to expressing his own free will – which he prized so highly – and to avoiding falling under others’ control.

So, what about the moment at the supper table, then, when Viktor extended his hand to Marcus, with the promise that Marcus could stay in his job in Varel, if Lina went to see Groening, and was healed? Wasn’t it an impulsive decision that led him to reach out and take his father’s hand? In fact, it was not. As Marcus listened to what Viktor said, he sensed his power, his essence, settling firmly into his core. He felt strong and calm, and deep within him, he felt clearly that agreeing to this bargain was the right step to take, even though he couldn’t have said, at that moment, why it was right. He just knew that it was.

For this reason, once Marcus accepted his father’s offer – and hand – over supper the day before, he felt an inner urge to move, move, move, to make everything happen before it could fade away like a mirage.

Certainly, everyone else in the family felt an urgency about the situation, too, even if each individual had his or her reasons for supporting the plan.  They were all grateful that the initial discussion did not devolve into a tense argument over the real heart of the matter: Could this Groening really heal Lina? No one could explain what had kept them from talking about this over supper the day before – and since then, too. It was as if everyone knew that they were on the cusp of an event that could truly transform all their lives, and understood intuitively that asking the obvious question might destroy the fragile fabric of this opportunity that had somehow come their way.  For this reason, they focused on the practical details: Since the unanimous thought was that time was of the essence, they decided to head off for Herford on Friday.  Today was Wednesday. That gave them only two days to make all the decisions prepare for their journey.

Looking at the maps, they calculated that it would take them half a day to drive to Herford, and half a day to drive back. But there was no telling how long they would have to wait to see Mr. Groening, assuming they were able to see him at all.  This thought – that something might prevent the meeting – came to everyone in the family, but, being Gassmanns and Bunkes, they didn’t voice it, as if they feared that expressing it aloud might draw that result toward them.  Instead, they threw themselves into preparations for a trip that might stretch to two or three days, if they ended up having to wait for an audience.

  So, in addition to carrying out their usual daily chores and work, each family member took on additional tasks that would contribute to putting the plan into action – except for Lina. She had no extra assignments.  She was in such a state of anticipation and distraction, that it was all she could do to take care of darning the socks without stitching the mending to her apron through inattention. Finally, seeing how worked up her daughter was, Ethel rolled her out into the yard. “Take a good, long stroll, dear one,” she told Lina.  “Enjoy that wheelchair while you still can. Once we’re back from Herford, we’re going to really put you to work!”  Lina laughed and began rolling herself toward the gate. A minute later, she was moving faster and faster down the lane, for once full of joyful expectation, instead of frustration and hopelessness.

Given the high level of excitement around the homestead, everyone was actually grateful to have extra chores: It wasn’t just Lina who had excess energy to work off! It was Wednesday morning, and Renate was baking extra bread to take with them. Meanwhile, Ethel checked the cheese supply in the cellar and set about making some fresh goat cheese for the trip.  There was plenty of bacon they could take, and some smoked sausage, too.  Kristina offered to take on the task of readying pillows and blankets: If they did end up having to stay in Herford for several days, who knew what conditions there might be like?

Peter and Viktor loaded a china cabinet they’d just completed into their pickup truck (acquired two years earlier, thanks to the extra income Marcus’ job brought in) and set off for Varel to deliver it to clients there. On the way, they dropped Ulrich off at the Walters’ farm, where he planned to talk with Lorena and Stefan about possibly borrowing their truck. Of course, they’d need it only if Marcus failed to complete his assignment: He was to ask at his office to see whether any of his coworkers would lend him a car for a few days.  If not, the whole extended Gassmann-Bunke family would head south to Herford in the two pickup trucks.  That wouldn’t be ideal, and even if Marcus arranged a car, they’d still have to take one of the trucks, because they certainly could not all fit in one car…

It was quite the discussion at the table the evening before all this activity, when they got down to deciding who would go to Herford, and who would not.  At first, Viktor said that he and Ethel would take Lina on their own. But then, Renate asserted her right to come along. “It was my idea in the first place!” she cried, although by then, nearly everyone knew this was not the case.  Next, Lina declared that she didn’t want to go without Kristina (who was grateful for her friend’s devotion). Marcus insisted on being part of the travelling party, if only so he could make sure the plan proceeded in a timely fashion. As he saw it, the sooner they got Lina to Herford, the sooner he could rescind his letter of resignation. Ulrich had been hanging back in the conversation, but when Renate looked pointedly at him, he coughed and said that, as head of the family, he’d better come along, too. Besides, he was the one who knew how to get the pickup started up again if it stalled. At this point, Peter, who’d noticed his own secret hopes in his heart, announced firmly that he wasn’t about to be left behind, if the whole rest of the family was going.  That left only little 9-year-old Ingrid.

“What about me?” she asked, brightly, already looking forward to the prospect of what she interpreted as an adventure, rather than a last-ditch effort to help Auntie Lina.

Almost in unison, and with only slight differences in phrasing, Kristina, Renate, and Ethel immediately told her, “You’ll stay with Aunt Lorena and Uncle Stefan while we’re gone.” Crestfallen, Ingrid was about to object, but Kristina silently gave her a stern look, and she closed her mouth and slumped in her chair, dejected.

By late afternoon on Wednesday, all was in readiness, or on track to be ready by Thursday evening, when they intended to pack everything, in preparation for an early morning departure on Friday. Loaves of bread were cooling on the counter, and fresh cheese was draining and would be ready to be packed in crocks the next day.  These would be placed into baskets alongside cured sausage wrapped in cloth. Renate made sure there was also plenty of fruit – fresh berries and dried apples.

But all of these preparations seemed minor achievements compared to the news that Marcus shared when he arrived home from work.

“I’ve gotten us a car!” he announced proudly as he sat down with them around the table for their evening bread and salami. “I’ll pick it up after work tomorrow.”

Lina, who’d been sitting with her long braid wrapped around her wrist, raised her arms in such jubilation that the freed braid flew into the air above her before falling back to her chest. “Marcus, you did it!” she cried gleefully. She clapped her hands together with a joy that reminded her parents and grandparents of the light-hearted young woman Lina had been before her accident. It did their hearts good to see it.

Spirits were understandably high that evening. They all felt restless, and since the sun was still setting late in the evening at this point in the summer, they didn’t seem to know what to do with themselves.  If Marcus had brought the car home this evening, they would certainly not have been able to restrain themselves from heading out that very minute.  As it was, though, they had to wait another day. And after all, as Ulrich reminded Renate, there were still things to take care of on the homestead tomorrow, so that they could be sure that everything would run smoothly while they were away.

Renate and Ulrich were the only ones who remained at the house that early evening, having decided to “take in the air” by sitting outside the back door in two rocking chairs Viktor carried outside for them.  Peter headed to the workshop to start organizing the wood for a set of dining room chairs he and Viktor would work on once they got back from Herford. Marcus, feeling in an expansive mood, uncharacteristically offered to help his brother. Like the others, he didn’t quite know what to do with himself, and he had to keep himself busy until it was time for his usual evening chat with Kristina.  As for Viktor and Ethel, without even talking it over, they immediately set out for the treehouse, where they had both found so much peace in the past.  With a bit of luck, perhaps they could resurrect this way of connecting to the divine and to each other.

Lina and Kristina had hoped to have a bit of time to discuss the events that were about to unfold, but Ingrid, knowing that she would soon be separated from her mother for at least a day or two, pleaded to be able to join them on their evening stroll. Kristina didn’t have the heart to deny her this, and Lina acquiesced, too.

“Come on, little one,” Lina told Ingrid. “I’ll race you to that fallen log by the path into the woods. See it?”  She leaned forward in her chair, hands poised on the wheel rims, and made the noises of a car engine being revved.

Ingrid laughed and set off at full speed before Lina could even call out, “Ready… Set… Go!”

Lina smiled, too, and turned around. “Come on,” she told Kristina, “You’re going to have to push me if we’re going to have any chance of catching her!”

And thus it ended up that the three of them reached Lina and Kristina’s favorite talking spot almost at the same time. But Ingrid was the first to touch the log. In fact, she sprawled across it, holding her side, although none of them could say whether the ache was from exertion or laughter.  Just a moment later, Lina’s toes touched the log, too, as Kristina pushed her right up to it.

“You cheated!” Ingrid chided them. “Mama, she was supposed to do the race on her own!”

Kristina froze for a moment, wondering how Lina would respond.  But she needn’t have worried.

“I will race you on my own next time,” Lina told Ingrid cheerily, reaching out to touch the girl’s flushed cheeks with her two hands.  “I promise!”

By the time the sun set and darkness was beginning to fall, Ingrid was in bed. Lina and her parents and grandparents were all inside the house, busying themselves with whatever they found to occupy their hands or their minds.  Peter was still in the workshop, sitting at the workbench, shoulders hunched, staring down at the plans for the chairs, but without really taking them in.  Having Marcus out there with him had done the opposite of quell his anxiety, and he was grateful when his brother finally went outside to talk to Kristina.  The door to the yard was shut, and Peter was happy about that.  He had no desire at all to hear their personal discussions.

Peter knew the two of them were courting, of course. No one in the family had any doubts about that. What Peter couldn’t understand was why Kristina had fallen for his brother.  Doesn’t she see through him?? Without even realizing he was doing so, Peter viewed Marcus and everything he did through the lens of their childhood. When he looked at Marcus, he only ever saw a bully.  It was beyond his capabilities to imagine that his brother could actually feel tenderness for someone.  As Peter saw it, his brother was tainted by meanness and aggression. It never would have occurred to Peter that his own experiences shaped how he saw his brother.  Once a bully, always a bully. That was Peter’s view regarding Marcus. And so, over the previous two years since Marcus began courting Kristina, a combination of anger and worry and indignation and envy took root in Peter. Since he was convinced of the durability of Marcus’ negative character traits, he worried that Kristina might suffer at Marcus’ hands, and when this thought came to him, his own persistent anger at his own and Lina’s mistreatment rose up.  But he immediately stuffed it down again. (After all, Marcus was the angry one, not him!)

Then there was his disbelief that Kristina had chosen Marcus over him. Not that Peter saw himself as any prince charming, but for God’s sake! He, Peter, was the nicer one, the better carver, the handsomer one.  He knew all of this to be true.  Of course, there was his gimpy leg, and Peter had spent the previous two years telling himself that if only he was as physically whole as Marcus was, then Kristina would see clearly which of the two brothers was the better bet for her. Hence the envy.  Hence the high hopes that he, too, placed on the visit to Bruno Groening.  If Lina managed to see Groening – even if they all just had to stand out in that yard, in front of the house – then they’d all be there with her. That meant there was hope. For now, though, it was Marcus and Kristina sitting together outside the workshop.

Like everyone else on the Gassmann-Bunke homestead, Kristina was full of excitement about the coming journey to Herford, and when Marcus joined her, her face – her whole being, really – shone with joyful anticipation.  She even patted the spot next to her on the bench, something she had never done before.  Every other night, she waited meekly, her hands folded demurely in her lap, as if she were holding her breath and waiting to see whether Marcus would really come out to talk with her.  Now, though, she seemed to have come alive in a way he hadn’t seen before. 

Seeing this change in her, another person might have drawn the conclusion that she was just excited for Lina, but Marcus – being Marcus – interpreted her new openness as an adoring response to the tremendous feat he’d accomplished that day: securing his boss’ car for the trip.  She’s proud of me!  This emboldened him, so that he gave her a big smile and a strong hug as soon as he sat down. He leaned back against the wall behind them, still smiling, stretched his arms out above his head, and then slowly lowered them, so that one fell to his side, while the other came to rest around Kristina’s shoulders.

“I can hardly believe it,” Kristina said, turning to him. “Lina’s actually going to get to see Bruno Groening!” She raised her hands in front of her and brought them together, as if she was getting ready to clap them together.

Marcus nodded and ran his right hand over his hair, smoothing it, but said nothing.

“I can’t wait to see what it’s like there – in Herford,” Kristina went on, animatedly. “How does he actually heal the people who come?  It’s so mysterious!”

“Hard to know what to think of all that,” Marcus replied, in a noncommittal tone, “but if she gets back on her feet again, that’s what counts.”

When she gets back on her feet,” Kristina said, as if reminding herself. Then she turned herself on the bench so that she was facing him with her whole body. “We all have to believe he can do it, believe for her!”

  “I’ll leave that to you all,” Marcus told her.  “I’m just the driver.” He smiled, to underscore the joke, but Kristina looked at him closely.

“Do you not believe that Mr. Groening can heal her?” she asked quietly.

“Kristina,” he said, gently pulling her closer to him, “What do I know about these things? I don’t believe or not believe.  Seeing is believing. Isn’t that what they say?”

She nodded, and he went on.

“Right. So, if Lina gets healed, then I’ll believe it. Like I said, for now I’m just the driver.”

“Don’t you think, though, that it will help her if we all believe it’s possible?”

Marcus paused, trying to find a softer way to express what he was thinking. Finally, he said, “Don’t you think that if he can really do what all those people say he can do, then it doesn’t matter what we think?”

Kristina pondered that. “I never thought of it that way,” she replied thoughtfully. “You mean, if he really is that powerful, then one of us not believing won’t keep Lina from being healed?”

“Something like that,” Marcus said. He wanted to distract her from this potentially dangerous topic, and he was happy that his words had come across as more positive than his actual thoughts on the subject. “The main thing is, day after tomorrow, we’ll head down there and find out exactly what this Groening can do.” 

Kristina, shifting her focus to the actual trip, began talking about what was really most important to Marcus. “It’s so wonderful that you were able to convince your boss to lend you the car!”

“Didn’t take much convincing,” he told her, sitting up a little straighter.  “He was happy to help.”

Kristina leaned her head on his shoulder. “He must think a lot of you, Marcus.”

She couldn’t have said anything more pleasing to him, or in a more adoring tone.

“Oh, I don’t know about that,” he laughed, but he squeezed her shoulder and briefly leaned his head down to touch hers.  His tone sounded light, but his stomach was in knots, as he tried to judge when the best time would be to say what he wanted to say.

Kristina allowed her head to remain on Marcus’ shoulder. She was enjoying this closeness with him and the new lightness between them.  He seemed so at ease…

“He’s not the only one, you know,” she said after a minute.

“Not the only one what?” Marcus asked, turning his head toward hers.

Here Kristina grew shy and, sitting up again, looked down at her lap.  “The only one who thinks a lot of you.”  She waited a moment and then glanced over and met his gaze.  He was smiling, and in just a very genuine and happy way, so she went on. “What I mean is that I think a lot of you, too, Marcus. More than a lot.  Much more than a lot.”

He removed his arm from around her shoulder and took both of her hands in his.  “I’m so happy to hear that,” he told her, his voice low, but strong. “Because I think a lot of you, too.” He paused.  Now! “In fact, Kristina, I’ve been wanting to tell you that I love you.”

Although she had thought he might have been about to say this, Kristina still blushed and took in her breath sharply. Then she smiled with her whole heart, looked down at her hands inside Marcus’, and said, so softly that he asked her to repeat herself, “I love you, too.”  She wanted to ask him why he had waited until now to tell her this, but her heart was so full of joy that she pushed the thought aside and concentrated on wiping away the tears that suddenly began to flow from her eyes.

Marcus reached up to dry the tears, telling her tenderly not to cry.  Then they leaned their heads together and kissed.  First it was just tentative, soft pecks, but these soon gave way to deep, heartfelt kisses that left them oblivious to everything and everyone but each other. They were so locked in each other’s embrace and joy, that they didn’t even notice Peter when he emerged from the workshop to head back to the house.  He caught sight of them, sitting there in the near darkness, and in his shock and disgust, he nearly said something he would certainly have regretted later. But he caught himself in time and moved soundlessly along his way, toward the dim light that still emanated from the windows of the log home.

*          *          *

It was past the time when Marcus usually got home from Varel the next night, and although no one said anything about it as they sat at the table, eating a light supper, they were all worried that something might have gone wrong. Then, just past 5:30, they heard a motor outside.  They all craned their necks to look out the windows, and Ulrich, who sat closest to the door got up from his seat with surprising speed. He leaned out the open door and then turned around to address them, his eyes shining.

“He’s here!” he shouted, although there was really no need to shout. “With the car!”

They all immediately rose from their seats and headed out to the yard – with Kristina pushing Lina’s wheelchair ahead of her.

What they saw, amidst the dirt and sparse grass and clumps of flowers in front of the workshop was a gleaming, black Opel Kapitän. Marcus climbed out of the driver’s seat, beaming as if he himself owned the car.

“So this is your boss’ car?” Ethel asked, clearly impressed. She ran her hand over the hood, while Ulrich bent down to examine the headlights. 

“Must be one of the new ones,” Ulrich announced. “The old ones had those hexagonal headlights.” He shook his head. “Must have cost a pretty penny.”

“How’d you arrange it, Son?” Viktor asked, and Marcus felt himself swell with pride, hearing the approval in his father’s voice.

“I just talked to him, to Mr. Weiss,” he explained. “Told him we had a family emergency with Lina, here, that we had to go to Herford, and said I was looking for a car to borrow for a few days.”

Renate had come over now and was peering through the windows at the leather seats. “And he just offered you his, just like that?”

“More or less,” Marcus replied.  “He wants me to keep working there as much as I want stay, so he told me he’d help.  And that’s why I’m so late. I drove him home and then took the car.”

Kristina had come up beside him now and was smiling and shaking her head in amazement. “Marcus, you did it! You really did it!” she said, excitedly, and slipped her hand into his without thinking how this would look to the rest of the family.  It did not escape anyone’s notice.

Turning to Kristina, Marcus asked, “Did you doubt me, Tina?”  He had a smile in his voice, but even after the previous night’s avowals of love between them, his heart still seemed to stop as he awaited her response.  But he needn’t have worried. She shook her head fiercely.

“Never, Marcus. Never!”

Just then, their old hunting dog, Stick, came bounding out from behind the workshop and ran full tilt toward Marcus who had, for some reason, always been his favorite. Full of joy, Stick propelled himself headlong at Marcus, leaping up and knocking him back against the car. Marcus laughed and wrestled playfully with the dog, but when he let go, Stick, still playing, leapt up and, missing Marcus, came down against the car door. Marcus’ face went white. Pushing Stick aside roughly, he immediately crouched down to examine the finish.

“Get him out of here! Marcus shouted, to no one in particular. “He scratches this car, and I’m done for!” He tried to make a joke out of it, but they could all see the genuine anxiety on his face. Peter took Stick by the collar and led him to the workshop, where, after moving the water bowl inside for him, he shut the dog up for the night. 

He was just coming out of the workshop when Stefan pulled into the yard, his wife, Lorena, sitting next to him in the cab of their pickup truck. 

As Lorena lowered herself slowly out and down to the ground, Renate, confused, asked:

“Did Ulrich not tell you we won’t need your truck tomorrow? Marcus’ boss lent him this Opel. Look!”

Lorena shook her head, gave the car a glance without really taking it in, then gestured to Renate that she wanted to speak with her in private.  By now, Stefan had gotten out of the truck, too, and joined the crowd. But all eyes were on the two sisters.

Renate bent her head close to her sister’s mouth, because Lorena was speaking in such a low voice it was barely audible.  But when Renate heard what Lorena had to say, she straightened up and looked her sister in the eye, and the rest of them could see her shaking her head, while Lorena slowly nodded, confirming that her words were true.

Visibly saddened, Renate walked over to the assembled family, with Lorena following behind her, and took a position next to Lina.

“Grandma?” Lina asked, her voice tight.  “What is it? Is something wrong?”

“We won’t be going to Herford tomorrow after all,” Renate intoned flatly.

Various cries of disbelief could be heard, and everyone began questioning her at once, demanding an explanation.

“Well,” Renate began, and then, as if she couldn’t bear to go on, said, “Lorena, you might as well tell it, since you’re the one who heard it.”

Lorena, who was shorter and slighter and less imposing than her sister, nonetheless managed to imbue her words with authority.

“I was listening to the radio just a bit ago,” she told them, standing up as tall as she could, hoping her stance could lend them all the strength they’d need.  “And there was a story about Mr. Groening.” She paused, glancing at the confused faces of those before her.  A story about Mr. Groening, Lina thought.  That must be good. More healings, perhaps. But if that’s the case, why does Aunt Lorena look so serious?

“Go on,” Renate whispered, laying a hand on her sister’s shoulder.

“Yes.  Well, they said that as of yesterday, the city of Herford has issued a healing ban against him.”

Lina’s face went pale. She couldn’t speak. 

But Ethel found her voice. “A healing ban? What does that mean, exactly?” she asked, looking intently at her aunt.

“According to what they said on the radio, it means that the city has forbidden him to do any healing work at all there.  And all the people who’ve come to see him – everyone waiting out on the square in front of the house – they’ve been ordered to leave.”

“But what about people who just come to see him at that house?” Lina asked in an agitated voice.  “Maybe he’s still allowed to help them?”

“I’m afraid not,” Lorena replied.  “He can’t do anything that the city officials might consider healing work.”

“But they can’t just drive people away!” Kristina cried, releasing Marcus’ hand and making her way over to Lina, who was sitting stock still, staring at Lorena.

“That’s exactly what they’re doing,” Lorena told them all. “Not like they’re criminals or anything, mind you. But they’ve ordered everyone to leave.”

“It’s a disgrace,” Peter said bitterly. “No one wants anything to do with the sick and the hurt. Just imagine what a scene that must be, thousands of people in front of that house.  People that that city – and our whole country, too – don’t want to admit exist.  Not in our perfect Germany –“

“Stop, Son,” Viktor said firmly, but with kindness. He laid his hand gently on Peter’s back, a gesture that did not escape Marcus’ notice.  “The city probably just doesn’t want giant crowds, unpredictable crowds, gathering to see a man who –“

“Who what, Papa?” Lina asked softly. “Who can do something that no doctors in our country seem to be able to do? Where’s the harm in that?”

“There’s no harm, Lina, of course,” Ethel said.  She’d crouched down beside Lina now and was holding her hand.

Viktor looked down at his hands and paused before he spoke. “It’s just that people, and by that I mean the government, are understandably skittish. I mean, a man comes out of nowhere. A charismatic man…” He didn’t need to go on.

“But Papa!” Lina cried, speaking through tears now, “that’s not what’s going on with Mr. Groening. He’s helping people! Don’t you believe that?”

They were all staring at Viktor now.

“I do believe it, Lina,” he told her, and he was speaking the truth.  “I’m just trying to imagine what the city officials’ reasoning was.”

“From what I could tell from the radio story,” Lorena said, “it was partly that they said the big crowds were a public health concern.”

“Meaning what?” Ulrich asked. Until now, he’d remained silent, standing next to the car and listening to everything that was being said.

“Apparently, they were worried that disease might spread, what with folks all crowded together there.”

Peter snorted.  “What a lie.  What they were really worried about was that good health would spread, and then there’d be no more work for the city’s doctors.” He punctuated his words by jabbing his right index finger into the air before him.

“There was that, too,” Stefan confirmed.  “I heard that part. Seems it was the city’s doctors who went to the city government with complaints.  Something about Groening violating some healing practitioners law.”

“Of course he did,” Peter said, his voice dripping with sarcasm.

By now, all the women had crowded around Lina and were hugging and comforting her in any way they could think of.

“But what about Groening?” Ulrich asked.  “What’s he going to do?”

“They didn’t say,” Stefan replied.  “Just that he had to leave town. Not that they were driving him out. But he knew that if he stayed there, then people would just keep coming, hoping to see him, even if he told them he couldn’t see them.”

Marcus, who had been leaning against the car with his arms crossed this whole time, finally spoke.

“Lina, don’t worry,” he said, his voice calm and confident.

But his sister looked at him in disbelief.  “Not worry?” she shouted.  “Not worry, when now I have no hope of seeing Mr. Groening?  Now that I’m condemned to this chair for the rest of my life?”

Even Ethel was looking daggers at her son, wondering what had led him to say something that came out sounding so cruel.

Marcus stood up and put his hands out in front of him, palms open. “Sis, who says there’s no hope of you seeing him?”

“Didn’t you hear Aunt Lorena?” Ethel asked him tartly. “He can’t do his healing work any more.”

“Not in Herford, he can’t,” Marcus responded calmly. “As I understand it, it was just Herford that banned him.  Is that right, Aunt Lorena?”  He turned to his great-aunt, who nodded.

“I mean, they didn’t say that exactly,” she replied, “but they didn’t mention that any other city had banned him.  That’s true.”

Now Marcus allowed a bit of a smile to come to his lips.  “Well, then.  So this Groening has left Herford.  All that means is he’s gone somewhere else, and wherever that is, no one’s keeping him from healing people.  At least not yet.”

“But what good does that do us?” Lina replied, dejected.

“Yes,” Kristina asked Marcus, “After all, he could have gone anywhere. Even out of the country, for all we know.”

“Did the radio say where he was going to go?” Renate asked Lorena, but keeping one hand firmly on Lina’s shoulder.

Lorena shook her head. “I’m afraid not.”

“Don’t worry,” Marcus said again, and this time, Peter took a step toward him.  But Marcus waved him off in a genial way. Then he walked up to Lina, squatted down in front of her, and placed his hands on the wheelchair’s arm rests.

“Sis, we’ll find him.”

Lina shook her head. “But how, Marcus? It’s not possible.”

Marcus leaned in until his face was right in front of hers. “It is possible, Lina, and we’ll do it.  We’ll find this Groening. And we’ll take you to see him.”

This was the first time Lina could ever remember Marcus offering to do anything for her, anything kind.  But she could feel that he really meant it, and she wasn’t ready to let go of the straw she’d grasped onto. She looked into his eyes and, seeing there, too, that he was sincere, she spoke.

“Promise?” she asked quietly.

“Promise,” he said with a smile.  And he held out his hand to her.  “Let’s shake on it.”

Lina didn’t hesitate. Wiping her tears away with one hand, she stretched out the other, which was still shaking from all the shock and emotion of the past few minutes, and felt Marcus’ close around it.  She felt the strength in his grip. That didn’t surprise her.  But what did was something else she sensed there. It seemed to her that it was love.

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Above the River, Chapter 24

Chapter 24

June to July, 1949

Gassmann-Bunke homestead

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

*          *          *

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

*          *          *

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

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

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

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

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

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

            “Because you have your wish,” Kristina replied.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

*          *          *

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

            “And we talked…” Ethel continued.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

“What?”

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

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

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

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

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

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

“Seventeen,” Renate corrected.

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

“In Danzig,” Renate put in.

“Yes, that’s right, Danzig.”

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Renate and Ethel both nodded.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

“Well, basically, yes,” Renate said.

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

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

Ethel nodded, and then fell silent.

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

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

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

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

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

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

Lina shrugged. “It could go either way.”

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

“I thought not,” Kristina said.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

*          *          *

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

“I want you to see him, too, Dear.”

*          *          *

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

“I’m in, then.”

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

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

*          *          *

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

*          *          *

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

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

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

            “What do you mean?”

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

            “Really?”

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

            “Both,” Kristina replied in a quiet voice.

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

            “So what did your father do?”

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

            “I can see that,” Kristina said.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Above the River, Chapter 22

Chapter 22

July, 1949

Gassmann-Bunke homestead

            So it came about that Marcus began the process of extricating himself from his job in Varel so that he could return home to work in the family business.  His supervisor, was shocked by Marcus’ decision, as were all his coworkers, given how lucrative Marcus’ position was, and how much room there was for advancement.  Everyone knew that you don’t give up a Civil Service post – and the financial and career security that come with it – just like that.

            Besides that, everyone at the office knew how happy he was with his position. Marcus had felt so at home working there. He’d felt that this was just the right spot for him: He was respected, and the confidence that arose as a result of that respect lent him a greater feeling of worthiness at home – not that he’d have put it that way, or even consciously recognized it, but that was definitely part of his feeling of satisfaction. So, there was a lot of speculation at the office about Marcus’ reasons for leaving.  Certainly, everyone there was aware that now, after the War, even though nearly four years had already passed, many families were still in disarray, with able-bodied workers in short supply. 

            Indeed, this is exactly the way Marcus explained his departure when he submitted his resignation and gave notice.  But despite the objective reasonableness of this explanation, it seemed feeble to Marcus, and felt certain that people would see through him, that they’d see the situation for what it was: proof that he did not have control over his life.  It was his father who was calling the shots.

            Marcus didn’t want to go through the pain of seeing that realization in his coworkers’ eyes. But that was exactly the way the situation at work began to play out. Although Marcus had hoped to be able to leave immediately upon tendering his resignation, this wasn’t possible: There were protocols to be followed, documents to process, and so on. So, in the course of his last month, Marcus’ tasks diminished as the supervisor began shifting his duties to other officials there. As this happened, Marcus found it increasingly difficult to maintain his image as a strong and independent civil servant. He began to feel a sting of humiliation which grew steadily more intense, as if he’d been fired from his post, instead of resigning. 

            It was precisely this experience – this feeling of somehow having been shamed – that Marcus had wanted to avoid by leaving his job immediately.  Instead, the day after he informed his supervisor of his plans, the news began to spread like wildfire.  By the next morning, he noticed all the other officials looking at him – some with curiosity, but most with an air of superiority, and a few even with pity in their eyes.  Although some of his colleagues approached him and expressed regret that he’d be leaving, Marcus saw through this false collegiality. He sensed in each man who approached him this way – with a clap on the back or shoulder, or a handshake – an unspoken satisfaction that was rooted in the speaker’s hope that Marcus’ departure would open up room for his own advancement.

Now, Marcus could have viewed these interactions as a sign that the other officials did, in fact, recognize him as a rising star in the Civil Service and, thus, a threat to their own careers. Sensing this, Marcus could, then, have taken pride what he’d accomplished during his four years of service.  But Marcus being Marcus, he took their reactions as a slap in the face, as if his colleagues and supervisor – and not his very own father – had been the ones to send him home to the Gassmann-Bunke family homestead.  In each conversation with the other men at the office, he felt sure that they were both congratulating themselves on their unexpected good luck, and also – and here was what really stung Marcus – silently expressing their view that Marcus was weak, unable to stand up to his daddy.  Marcus glimpsed what he interpreted as this unspoken contempt for him in each of his colleagues’ eyes.  No matter how good he was at his work, no matter how much his supervisor valued his contributions, he was still, when it came down to it, subject to Papa’s wishes.  “A twenty-six-year-old wet noodle of a boy.”  “Not at all a man.” That’s what Marcus imagined they said about him behind his back.

None of the men in Marcus’ office had ever met his father. His supervisor, Mr. Weiss, though, had heard the name Viktor Bunke – which meant, of course, that whatever Weiss knew gradually became common knowledge for all who worked there.  But what, exactly, did he know, aside from the name?  Mr. Weiss never revealed those details with Marcus, perhaps assuming that the young civil servant knew very well what one of Mr. Weiss’s own superiors had shared with him.  But he was wrong on that count. 

Marcus, thanks to his father’s insistence on utter secrecy about where and how he had spent the war, knew nothing aside from the fact that his father’s wartime position had kept the family well-supplied with food and commodities that could be sold on the black market.  No one in the family had asked for an explanation.  Not as far as he was aware, anyway.  Did his mother and grandparents know the details?  He wasn’t sure. But what he did know was that Mr. Weiss knew something about Viktor Bunke and, as a result of that something, Mr. Weiss had a healthy respect for the man.  “Not a man to be defied,” Marcus overheard Weiss telling one of his deputies by way of explaining Marcus’ departure at his father’s request. “A man to be reckoned with,” Weiss told another.

Based on his limited, but powerful impression of this picture of Bunke the elder that Weiss had painted for those in the office, Marcus came to believe that every man there now saw him as Viktor Bunke’s cowardly son – the son who had backed down when push came to shove.  So much for free will, Marcus often told himself bitterly as he faced his colleagues’ false smiles and good wishes. But he did this without asking himself why, exactly, he had acquiesced to his father’s demand, given the emphatic defense he’d offered around the supper table of our right to control our own lives.  Rather than pondering why he himself hadn’t exercised his God-given free will, though, Marcus jumped right to resenting his father for – as Marcus saw it – depriving him of it.  He didn’t see the contradiction between these thoughts and his suppertime assertions a month earlier.  If God couldn’t force us to do anything, how was it that a mere mortal father could do so? 

Marcus didn’t entertain this line of thought.  It was easier to condemn his father than to ask himself, “How is it, exactly, that a father so thoroughly overrides something given by God?  And that a son allows him to do so?”  These are relevant questions, but neither Marcus, nor Viktor, nor Mr. Weiss, nor the colleagues – nor even the Gassmann-Bunkes, who considered this step undeniably necessary and right – gave any thought to such religiously-tinged queries.  Marcus knew only that the pain of humiliation was growing within him with each hour he spent at the office. By the second day after he submitted his resignation, he couldn’t wait for his final month to be over.

That was at work.  Upon arriving home each evening, the feeling of humiliation that Marcus experienced all day long shifted swiftly and easily to anger, as he unconsciously sought to assert himself on the home front in a way he was no longer able to do in the office.  He picked fights with his siblings over trifles, remained mostly silent with his parents and grandparents, and endured business-related conversations with his father only with the greatest effort, always on the verge of lashing out at the older man physically or verbally. Only with Kristina and Ingrid was he able to exhibit some measure of genuine affection, since he considered them blameless.  Besides, now that he was losing his Civil Service position, it felt all the more important to him to hold on to his relationship with the two of them.  To show that in some way he was still very much a man.  A man to be reckoned with in his own right.  So that Kristina would still see him as worthy of her.

This was one of the reasons Marcus was most upset at having to leave his position in Varel: His plan to gradually move up through the Civil Service ranks played a key role in his courtship of Kristina. He was convinced, although he couldn’t have explained why, that he couldn’t win and keep her as just the son of a forester – or now, even worse, as just a forester himself!  He needed to stand out from the crowd in some way.  Not that there was a stream of men coming to court Kristina, but he sensed that she was beginning to wonder why he hadn’t yet proposed to her.  After all, they’d been courting now for two years, and he hadn’t even told her he loved her.  Not using those three words, anyway.  She hadn’t come out and declared her love for him, either.  That in itself made him a bit anxious. He didn’t understand that her position in their household left her feeling like something of a second-class citizen.  How, she thought, could she dare to declare herself to him first, even though she was quite sure of her love for him?  Not grasping this, Marcus concluded that he hadn’t yet impressed her sufficiently.  So, he pinned all his hopes on advancing through the Civil Service to a level where Kristina couldn’t fail to be dazzled by him.  But now… How am I to win her now?  How can I prove to her I’m every bit a man? Or even more of a man than his father. That would be preferable.

However, this was not such a simple task.  There was one incident during that transitional month that entirely erased any doubt Marcus might have had about the truth of Mr. Weiss’s characterization of his father.  It was a Saturday, a few weeks before Marcus’ final separation from his job.  Marcus, Peter and their father were all in the workshop. Viktor and Peter were standing at one of the workbenches, consulting over plans for a piece of cabinetry that had been ordered.  Marcus walked into the building, and for the first moments, just watched his father and brother as they stood conversing, their backs to him.  Marcus could hear the friendly tones of their conversation. He saw the intent, respectful way his father listened as Peter, indicating various points in the drawing before them on the bench, explained what he had in mind.  Viktor was listening and nodding thoughtfully.  When Peter finished, Viktor nodded once more and, laying his hand briefly on his son’s shoulder, and said, “It’s a good plan, Peter.  Move on ahead on it.”

“What about the carving, Father? Will you do it?”

“No, Son,” Viktor replied.  “You can handle it on your own.”

Peter smiled, and a feeling of satisfaction spread through him.  Viktor was a gifted carver, and although Peter had learned at his side from early childhood, Viktor’s skill still surpassed his son’s, and that of anyone else in the area, to be honest.  Peter was touched by his father’s confidence in his abilities.

            Marcus witnessed this exchange, and something in his father’s tone, the sight of his hand on Peter’s shoulder, and Peter’s smile, brought a rush of anger up in Marcus. As Viktor turned to greet his other son, he detected the fury in Marcus’ narrowed eyes, and took note of his flushed cheeks and tightly-set mouth.  Instinctively drawing himself up a little taller and straighter and extending his chin a bit forward, Viktor took a step toward Marcus and put out his hand. Viktor himself recognized this gesture as ill-timed and inappropriate, insufficient, but this was the habit he’d developed during the war when faced with resistant subordinates.  There was something about grasping a potential adversary’s hand in a seeming act of respect and even friendship that also allowed him to transmit his own power and take control of the situation. But in this case, Viktor realized too late, when he was dealing not with a subordinate, but with his own son – who, nonetheless, had felt more and more like an adversary these past weeks – the extended hand telegraphed too much formality and distance to have the desired effect of assuring complete control. 

Certainly, Viktor understood from Marcus’ expression that his easy familiarity and affection with one son had infuriated the other, but he had no inclination to show Marcus a similar measure of affection. Had that been the case, he would have gone over and jovially clapped Marcus on the shoulder, too.  But no.  Viktor had calculated the effect of his actions, wishing to exhibit a harder edge with Marcus, so as to show him that he was, if we can use Mr. Weiss’s words here, “a man to be reckoned with”. It was important to Viktor to maintain dominance over Marcus: Fully aware of his son’s dissatisfaction with the shifting situation, and of his general tendency to seethe and cause disruption wherever possible, Viktor felt that a strong hand was necessary if Marcus were to eventually settle in as a cooperative and submissive contributor to the family work. 

A different parent – or a parent with a different upbringing, or a different war experience – might have felt that a kinder approach was worth a try, a show of equal affection to both sons, perhaps.  But that was not how Viktor saw things. He’d had enough life experience to know that seething resentment that was allowed to grow unchecked or undisciplined was dangerous.  Of course, it was best to avoid creating the environment for such resentment in the first place.  But that battle had long been lost, where Viktor and Marcus were concerned.  Viktor knew that.  He also knew full well that once resentment toward you crept into someone’s heart, there was generally little you could do to turn it around, because whatever had caused the ill will hadn’t necessarily been your fault in the first place. So, why spend your time pussy-footing around your son or wife or subordinate, trying this or that to make better what you couldn’t make better anyway?  No.  Viktor had no patience with others’ resentment. He saw it as a weakness of character, as a choice a person makes to see himself as a victim, instead of as an actor.

Interestingly enough, however, Victor was not bothered by his son Peter’s physical handicap.  True, he was frustrated that Peter had been unable to help with the forestry work, but Peter didn’t anger him the way Marcus did.  Peter had been injured while serving his country in battle, which was more than could be said of Marcus: He spent the war safe inside the confines of the Censorship Office and never had to face down an enemy.  What’s more, when Peter came back too injured to work the forest, he’d thrown himself into the cabinet making, toiling away tirelessly, with never a complaint. Viktor was actually proud of Peter and of how hard he worked to help the family prosper.

Let’s note that whenever Viktor went over these facts in his mind and reflected on the differences between his sons, and between his feelings for the two young men, he conveniently chose not to recall that he was the one who pulled strings to get Marcus that post in the Censorship Office and, then, his position in Varel.  Had he reflected on that stage of Marcus’ trajectory, Viktor probably would have concluded that the two sons might have fared better if they’d switched roles: Marcus’ arrogance might well have been tempered by time at the front that would have left him humbled, and grateful to be alive, even on a boring homestead in the countryside. Peter , meanwhile, might have brought a kindness to the Censorship Office which would have benefited all around him and spared him the nagging belief that his wound proved that he had not been a good enough soldier.

Viktor believed he possessed keen insight into his sons’ current patterns of viewing the world around them: Marcus’ overly-high opinion of himself was combined with a conviction that he could in no way be even partly responsible for anything that ever went wrong for him. As Viktor saw it, when things took a direction which felt unfair and unjustified to Marcus, he always saw himself as a victim of others’ jealousy and ambition.  Why can’t they just not see my great skill, my unlimited potential, and allow me to fulfill that potential? That’s how Viktor imagined Marcus’ self-perception. But, as intuitive as Viktor was when it came to others, he failed to intuit the insecurity that lay beneath Marcus’ bravado.

He was quite accurate when it came to his view of his other son, however: Peter, unlike his brother, was quick to assume that everything that went wrong was, in fact, somehow his fault.  Inattention, insufficient skill, or simply carelessness: These were the behavior traits Peter ascribed to himself, and the way he explained the misfortunes that seemed to dog him.  His war injury and his role in Lina’s accident were just two examples.  There were others, dating from earliest childhood: the pot of boiling laundry that somehow ended up on the kitchen floor while he and Marcus were wrestling, and the scalding of his (Peter’s) foot that resulted; the goat kid that ended up strangled by its own lead rope after Peter tied it where it could subsequently become tangled in amongst the bushes; and the time Lina fell from the top of the treehouse ladder while climbing up, because he lost his grip on her hand as she was coming up over the top. Luckily she wasn’t hurt, and he begged her not to tell their parents. She didn’t.  So, while Marcus early on come to feel he should be the boss of everything and everyone, Peter learned to stay as quietly possible in the background, trying to do as little damage as possible, while also making a great effort to be useful and respectful.  If Marcus tended to constantly make waves of tsunami proportions, Peter was more like a backwater fed by gentle runoffs and small snowmelts, but offering no strong movement of its own accord.

Now, Viktor’s view that it wasn’t worth trying to be kind or understanding to those who resented you, because you hadn’t caused the resentment in the first place – this was a view he adopted in the mid-1930s, when his relations with his wife Ethel were particularly strained, and when Marcus began nursing a strong and, as Viktor saw it, unwarranted, grudge against him. The situation was this: Marcus took exception to what he (as just an adolescent!) saw as the ill effects that his father’s decisions had on the life of the family.  But Viktor, seeing these decisions as sound and positive, concluded that if his family objected, then that was their problem. Viktor decided that it be wrong for him to capitulate in the face of his family’s resistance when he knew he was in the right.  If they wanted to resent him for holding to his principles, then so be it.  So it was.  And so it continued, up to and throughout the war and, to a certain extent, even following his return home once the war ended.  Viktor was a man who made decisions independently and confidently. He did not really care to hear dissenting views, once he made his decisions – or while he was making them, for that matter. That was why he always chose a course of action on his own.  When this was possible, of course.

During the war, Viktor had the good fortune to serve under a superior officer whose views nearly always coincided with his own. Only rarely did Viktor find himself tasked with implementing a decision with which he disagreed.  But on these occasions, as a fully-professional officer who understood and believed that order needed to be observed and upheld, he carried out his orders.  Without any qualms? Without even a hint of resentment?  The answer to that question can wait for the moment. Because now Viktor’s son Marcus was standing before him, not grasping his outstretched hand.

I’ll be damned if I’m going to shake his hand, Marcus thought, glancing in silence from his father’s hand to his face. The two men stared each other down, neither wanting to give. Viktor sensed he was about to lose the upper hand.  He couldn’t allow that to happen.  Before Marcus could say anything, Viktor, who stood half a head taller than his son and was stronger, too, than his wiry appearance suggested, wrapped the proffered arm around the younger man’s shoulder in a smooth motion, and pulled him toward him.  Marcus tried to pull back, but Viktor’s grip was firm. Marcus found himself with his shoulder and upper body pressed tightly to his father’s chest, sideways, so that his left ear was directly in front of the taller man’s mouth.  Viktor held his son that way for a few seconds, waiting to see whether Marcus would resist.  The latter made no effort to free himself, but his whole body tensed.  Finally, Viktor spoke, his voice barely above a whisper – Peter on the other side of the room would not have heard what he said – but full of power, nonetheless.

“It’s not worth it, Marcus,” Viktor said.  “Believe me. It’s not worth it to fight me. You’ll get nowhere.”  He tightened his grip more as he spoke, so that Marcus felt his father’s arm running along his back and holding his, Marcus’, shoulder in a vise-like grip, with his forearm in front.  But that was only for a couple of seconds. Then Viktor’s muscles relaxed, he loosened his hold and, stepping back, the father used his other hand to pat the son on the released shoulder, a movement that to Peter, who saw it as he turned, perplexed by the silence behind him, seemed identical to the affectionate pat Viktor had placed on his shoulder a minute earlier.  It was not the same, of course.  The now light palm on Marcus’ shoulder was a signal to him that things were settled: His father would not tolerate any insubordination or show of disrespect.

“Head out to the aspen grove and help your grandfather and Stefan with the survey,” Viktor told Marcus. Then he strode out of the workshop without even waiting for a reply, leaving Marcus full of anger he was at a loss to know what to do with. 

“Morning, Marcus,” Peter said, smiling, not understanding what had just passed between his brother and their father.

It was all Marcus could do to keep from rushing Peter and slamming him against the workbench. Instead, he gave his brother a curt nod, turned, and walked out of the building.  He headed down the main path into the forest to join Ulrich and Stefan, but then paused, once he’d gone a good ways into the woods. The blood was pounding in his temples, and his breathing was sharp and shallow.  His chest felt tight, and he could feel his face burning. He wanted to regain his composure before his grandfather saw him. But after even a few minutes of standing there, he felt that the rage inside him, instead of receding, was picking up steam.  Casting his eyes about the woods around him, he spotted a fallen birch log roughly the length and thickness of his father’s arm. 

Marcus picked it up and, bringing it first high above his head with both hands, slammed it over and over again against the forest floor.  The repeating, dull thud it produced when it hit against the earth felt satisfying to him.  He noticed with curiosity the vibrations that traveled up into his arm from the birch branch following each blow, and he kept pounding the branch until it gradually split into long pieces, until the vibrations flowing from the wood were joined by ever-increasing pain in his arms.  Stopping then, Marcus looked at the splintered wood and wondered whether the log, too, felt any pain or discomfort from the beating; and whether the vibrations had spread far enough through the ground that his grandfather and Stefan could also feel them where they were working, deeper in the woods.  But that was only a moment’s reflection.  Marcus threw the remains of the log to the ground and kicked it for good measure, before continuing on along his path.

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Above the River, Chapters 15-17

Chapter 15

August, 1904

Walter farm, Near Varel, Germany

            None of what Ewald was saying to them was making any sense to Ulrich.  This was how the conversation over dinner went on that one summer evening at the Walter farm:

            “Ralf’s gotten set up in a town in Illinois, doing carpentry for a business there,” Ewald was explaining.

            “Where’s Illinois, again?” Lorena asked.  She asked this same question every time Ewald mentioned his friend. Lorena had heard this detail numerous times before, but she never really took it in. Probably because the information just seemed irrelevant to her. Like Ulrich, her interests were strictly local and focused mainly on her fiancé, Stefan, whom she would be marrying the following year.

            “On the bank of one of the big lakes they have there, Lake Michigan.”  Ewald paused.  “And…” he then continued, scanning his parents’ faces, and Renate’s and Ulrich’s, too, hoping to discover beforehand their response to the news he hadn’t even shared yet. 

            “And what?” his father, Ingo, asked, setting down his utensils on his plate.  He knew something was coming.

            Renate stopped chewing. Oh, no! she thought.  Her intuition had been accurate, as usual. No!

            Ewald took in a deep breath and let it out.  “He said there’s lots of good work. His boss said he’ll take me on, too. If I go over there.”

            “To Illinois?” Ewald’s mother Veronika asked, just as Renate said, “To America?”

            “Yes.”

            Stunned silence. 

“Is Illinois a city?” Lorena suddenly asked, in what seemed like a total non sequitur.

            Ewald, who was eager to proceed with discussing his plans, felt annoyed at his sister’s question. On the surface, this seemed like just one more of the absent-minded queries she often posed. But the whole family knew that although this question seemed, like her first, to be concerned with geography, the underlying emotion was different. They knew that this was the way Lorena always responded when she was worried or upset: She focused on establishing minute details, so as to stay tethered to the ground, instead of floating off on a wave of anxiety.

            “No, it’s an American state,” Ewald explained patiently. “Think of it like Bavaria. But a lot bigger.”

            Lorena nodded and turned her attention back to her schnitzel.  Although she said nothing more, they all realized that she was feeling every bit as shocked as the rest of them were.  Except for Renate, who was feeling a deep sadness rise up in her, sadness for every member of the family, and especially for Ulrich.

*          *          *

By the end of the fall, Ewald had sailed for America, his final destination Durand, Illinois, a small town in the state’s northwest corner. Ulrich had, as he saw it, lost a brother and a friend.

Chapter 16

Summer, 1921

Gassman homestead

            Just as Ulrich had found the peace and love and familial warmth his heart desired on the Walters’ farm, the more time Viktor spent living and working amongst the Gassmanns, the more his soul blossomed and his heart opened.  Not that he would have put it that way, because he was only barely aware of this growth that was going on inside him.

            Certainly, we could attribute this largely to his growing love for Ethel, and to hers for him.  But it would be a mistake to say that Ethel catalyzed this transformation all on her own.  Not that her love was not a powerful elixir for Viktor.  It was. But equally powerful was the effect that the forest exerted on him.

            Following that first walk to Bockhorn with Hans, on the day they went to meet the Kropps – the day of Viktor’s first creative contribution to the family business – Viktor felt drawn to learn about the trees he would eventually saw and carve and nail, shaping into furniture and walls and stairs. 

            Viktor’s father, who himself had thought of wood as material to be worked, rather than as a once-living source, never instilled a respect for trees in his son.  His approach to his work was much more utilitarian: he’d acquire already-prepared wood, and then create with it. But, as Viktor began working alongside Ulrich, he understood that his own father, as beautiful as his carving work had been, and as skillful a carpenter as he had been, had also lacked something. This something was clearly present in Ulrich. 

Viktor didn’t know quite how to describe it, at least not at first.  He’d never encountered it before in any of the master carpenters he’d trained with.  But it was powerful.  He sensed it already the first day, as Ulrich showed him around the workshop, indicating the various projects he was working on.  There was the care with which Ulrich touched the wood, a near caress when he picked up a table leg he’d been turning and brushed off the sawdust.  Viktor noticed this… this relationship of Ulrich’s to the wood, but it was only when Viktor went out with Ulrich into the forest for the first time that he began to understand what was going on.

One day at dinner, a couple of days after that first trip to Bockhorn, Viktor asked Ulrich to tell him about the forest, nd about his family’s connection to it.

“Our eleven hectares of heaven!” Ulrich said, and Viktor saw a sparkle come into his eyes.  “That’s what I call it.” He smiled, and as he did, Viktor noted that the Gassmann family patriarch seemed not the least bit sheepish about expressing how much he loved the forest. A less confident – or less loved – man might have looked to check Viktor’s response, to gauge whether he’d made a fool of himself. But Ulrich didn’t.

“That’s right,” Ethel said, as she bit off a piece of bread.  “It is!”

Renate and Hans nodded, too.

“Of course, it’s beautiful,” Viktor replied.  “But why ‘heaven’?” His question was sincere, but he didn’t want to look like an idiot. Perhaps everyone in the world except him knew about this.  So, he adopted an expression that he hoped would indicate casual interest instead of the yearning he was just beginning to realize he felt for the answer.

“Ah,” Ulrich said, holding up his right hand, index finger pointing at Viktor to indicate that the question was well-taken, perhaps even expected.  “Exactly. You cut to the core of it.  It really is heaven. It’s not just a figure of speech I was using there, meaning to say that I like being in the forest.”  He paused.   “Beauty.  Yes, there’s that. But beauty alone doesn’t indicate the heavenly.  In fact, I’d wager that it’s the heavenliness that creates the beauty.”  He turned and smiled at Renate.  “As with my dear wife.”

Renate shook her head and looked down at her lap, where her hands were smoothing her napkin. But a smile flitted across her lips.

Ulrich, more expansive and light-hearted than Viktor had seen him up to this point, leaned back in his chair, tipping back onto the two back legs, and cocked his head to one side.

“Why do I draw an equals sign between heaven and the forest?  I’m not saying I know what heaven feels like.  But if heaven does end up feeling like the forest, then I’ll be quite content when I take up residence over on the other side.”

That wasn’t a real answer to Viktor’s question, and everyone at the table knew it.  Only Ethel stepped in to help.

“I agree with Papa, but I, too, have a hard time saying what it is.  But I am completely sure it is heaven, and that the real heaven will feel that way, too, when I get there.”

“If it feels like heaven to you,” Viktor commented, slowly, “then maybe it actually is.

Ulrich was still resting back in his chair.  Ethel was chewing contemplatively.  Hans was saying nothing, focusing instead on his potato salad.  He took Viktor’s question as yet another attempt by the newcomer to worm his way into his father’s good graces by flattering the older man. (His father’s, not Viktor’s, as much as the young stranger might want to become like a son to Ulrich…).  Renate was eating slowly, while gazing at her husband with an expression Viktor hadn’t noticed on her face before.  She was smiling contentedly, clearly made happy by her dear husband’s sudden vibrancy and glowing face.  It was true: Renate was content. She so seldom saw Ulrich like this, free of his habitual undertone of melancholy, and she was delighted to bask in it, for as long as it lasted.  Seeing her husband come alive, her own heart opened a bit toward the young man whose genuine interest had drawn Ulrich out of his dark-lined shell. 

Ulrich laughed. “Precisely!” he nearly shouted. He leaned forward in his chair, so that its front legs clapped back into contact with the floor with a thwack.  “Come out into the forest with me tomorrow, Viktor, and you can tell me what you think makes it heaven.”

“Papa,” Ethel said playfully, “perhaps Viktor won’t find a speck of heaven in the forest.  What then?”

“Oh, I think I might, find it,” Viktor answered.  Especially if you are in the forest, too. “If you all are convinced it’s there, I’m game to search for it, too.”

Ulrich shook his head now, but not in a harsh way. “No need to search for it, son.  It’ll find you itself, if you let it. Put itself right in your very path.  And all around you.  It’ll find you all right.  If you’re still.” He paused again. “And if you wish it to.”

Hans, who was the first to finish his dinner – after all, he had been eating while the others had been philosophizing – thanked his mother and sister for the meal and put his dishes on the table by the sink.  “See you in the shop,” he told Ulrich, but without a glance at Viktor. Then he was gone, thinking to himself,  Son?

*          *          *

            The next day, Ulrich took Viktor out into the woods as he went to survey part of the forest. Thus began the younger man’s tutorial in the ways of heaven.

            Hans was not with them, having stayed behind to work on the Kropps’ cabinet.  And in any case, Viktor knew that Hans had more interest in what was made out of wood than in the trees the wood came from.  He wondered, though, when Hans’ focus had shifted.  After all, as a child, he and Ethel had spent days at a time in the forest, and Hans had told him about the treehouse and how much he’d loved being up in it.  Then again, Viktor realized, Hans had spoken most about what he and his father had made in the forest, how they’d constructed the treehouse, and not at all about how it had felt to him to be in the treehouse. Nothing at all about heaven.

            Viktor was correct about where Hans’ interests lay.  What gave Hans the most satisfaction was putting the wood of the forest to use in some way, perhaps even in a creative way.  Like other carpenters Viktor had encountered, although Hans knew the trees and how they could best be utilized – as material – he didn’t seem to know or care what else the trees and the forest had to offer, i.e., heaven.  This “what else”, Viktor surmised as he followed Ulrich into the woods along a dirt path wide enough for a cart and horse, was exactly what this forester knew.

            Viktor made a couple of attempts at starting a conversation as he and Ulrich walked, but Ulrich shook his head gently. 

            “Just walk for now,” the older man said softly.  “And notice.”

            So, for probably the first time in his life, Viktor made his way through a forest without talking to a person by his side.  As a child, he simply hadn’t played in the woods by himself, and hardly with other kids, either, to be truthful.  During his military training, his time in the woods had been about as far-removed as could be imagined from what he was experiencing now.  As for keeping silent, Viktor wasn’t used to being quiet with other people and had, in fact, never particularly liked it. He always preferred to talk, to get a sense of the other person or people he happened to be with.  So, now, at first, he had to contend with the voice in his own head, which, in the absence of words from other human interlocutors, provided both sides of the conversation. The thoughts came fast and furious: Notice what? Ask him.  No.  He said to just walk and notice.  But what?  Is this a test? God Almighty, what should I be looking at?

            Then, as if reading his mind, Ulrich said, “Don’t think.  Just walk. Forget about noticing for now.”

            Viktor relaxed a little, shook out his shoulders.  Just walk. Don’t think.  Easier said than done.  In an effort to not think, since he imagined Ulrich had a good reason for this instruction, Viktor turned his attention actively to what was around him.  To the slightly damp and still cool air.  He could feel the remnants of the morning’s mist, and it seemed to him as he looked in between the trees, that perhaps he could even see it.  Like the vaguest of thin, cottony shadows against the background of the leaves on the low branches of the young oaks.  Or maybe those were just spider webs?  Don’t think.

            As Viktor consciously looked here and there, his gaze took in the pine needles and the decayed, brown, last year’s leaves beneath his feet and in the underbrush off to the side of the path.  The pine needles sounded and felt different beneath his boots than the old leaves, and, naturally, they smelled different, too.  Both scents were rich, but the pine’s was lighter, and the smell of the leaves darker and heavier and sharper, more sour, even, he concluded.

            He felt his breathing deepen and slow, and his gait also shifted.  Up until this point, he had continually found himself having to consciously reduce his speed, so as not to bump into the older man just ahead of him.  But now, somehow, he noticed that his own pace had naturally attuned itself to Ulrich’s.   As he slowed, he began to take in the sounds of the woods. First he noticed the louder bird calls, although he had no idea what birds they were.  Then chirps of crickets and softer birds’ songs came into his ears, as if competing for his attention with the rustling of dry leaves close by and new ones further up in the trees.  At one point, Viktor was so captivated by a waving aspen leaf that, smiling, he stepped off the path and wrapped his fingers gently around it, wishing to test what it felt like.  Soft, it turned out. Softer on the top than on the bottom, where the ridges protruded.

            “Ah,” I see you’ve met one of the most welcoming trees of our forest,” Ulrich said, his voice transmitting his smile.  He had noticed that Viktor had stopped walking, and he’d turned to see what had caught his attention.

            “Welcoming?” Viktor asked.

            “I’ve always thought so,” Ulrich said, coming up alongside Viktor and grasping another leaf in what, to Viktor, resembled a handshake.  He smiled at the thought of trees and humans shaking “hands”.

            “Have you heard the phrase ‘quaking aspens’?” Ulrich asked him.  Viktor nodded.  “But they don’t look to me like they’re quaking,” Ulrich remarked. “If they were quaking, that’d be from fear, wouldn’t it?  But what’s to be afraid of here?” he asked, swiveling his head to look at the forest around them, and making a sweeping gesture with his arm. 

            “The forester’s axe?” Viktor asked, with a slight smile.  He looked down at the leaf in his hand.

            “Perhaps some foresters’ axes,” Ulrich agreed.  “But not in this forest.”

            “You don’t cut any aspens?” Viktor inquired, his eyebrows rising in surprise.

            “Oh, we do.  But not just at random. Not just to cut.”

            “How, then?”

            “That is a process of discussion between the forester and the tree,” Ulrich told him.  He ran his hand along the branch of the small aspen before him, patting it gently as his fingers progressed closer to the trunk.  Viktor waited for him to continue and followed Ulrich’s hand with his eyes. Ulrich rested his hand on the branch and spoke again:

            “They can communicate, you know.”

            “I didn’t know,” Viktor said simply.  It wasn’t that he didn’t believe what Ulrich had said, and that realization surprised him, actually.  He wasn’t sure how to respond, but Ulrich seemed to take his words as assent, as acceptance of the veracity of what the experienced forester was telling him.

            “Many people don’t,” Ulrich continued.  “I used to think they must.  I heard the trees talking to me from the time I was a boy, and figured everyone did.  Found out that wasn’t the case the first time I shared what I heard with my father.  Turned out my own father didn’t know these things. He didn’t believe it was possible for trees to communicate.  Didn’t accept it.  Tried to drum it out of me.”

            Here, Ulrich turned his gaze to meet Viktor’s.  Was he consciously telling Viktor this to gauge his response, his openness to this idea?  For once, Viktor wasn’t focused on trying to figure out what someone else was all about. He was just listening to the forester standing before him. And replying in a most natural and sincere way.

            “So, you ‘picked things up, too’,” he said simply, his voice full of a kindness that surprised him.  “And you still do.”

            Ulrich sighed deeply, and then nodded.  “My father tried to beat it out of me, but he failed.  No matter what he did, I could still communicate with the trees. I just learned not to talk to him about it.”

            “Did you tell anyone else?”

            Ulrich nodded again. “Renate.  Because she understood.  Not that she understands the trees, or even hears them, for that matter.  But she understands me, and she hears me.  And she hears and sees enough other things – like the fairies and the wood spirits – that she believed me about this.”

            Viktor thought back to the way he’d seen Renate looking at Ulrich the day before, at dinner, and he realized that Ulrich was a very lucky man, indeed. He told him as much.

            “Yes, that’s very true,” Ulrich agreed.  “Having a person with you who understands who you are, who believes what you believe to be true, even if she can’t understand it fully herself – now that is a gift from God. That is heaven.”

            “I imagine you’re right about that.”  Viktor didn’t speak from personal experience.  But he desperately hoped that this would someday be his personal experience.  Someday soon.

            “And so, the aspens…” Ulrich said, pointing to the leaf Viktor still held between his finger.  “They aren’t quaking in fear. They’re greeting us, welcoming us.  That leaf there, it was waving to you, inviting you to make its acquaintance.  And you did!  See there, son, you’re already communicating with the trees, too!”  He laughed. And as he did, Viktor once again saw a sparkling light come into the older man’s eyes, just the way it had done at dinner.  The difference was, that this time, Viktor grasped a bit about why it had appeared. He also sensed, without being able to put it into words – without even trying to do so! – a little bit about the nature of what constituted the heavenly in these woods.  And as the two men stood there, greeting the aspen, Ulrich saw something else that Viktor couldn’t possibly see: A sparkling light had come into the young man’s eyes, too.

*          *          *

            This was just the first of many mornings or afternoons in the next few weeks that Ulrich and Viktor spent together in the forest.  Having seen Viktor’s response to the trees, Ulrich correctly surmised that the newcomer could grow into a skilled forester, and that learning about the trees would only enhance his cabinetry work.  Discussion between them in the woods – about the personalities of this or that type of tree, and about why a given variety of wood was suited to being shaped into a particular piece of furniture – continued as the two men moved from forest to workshop to kitchen.  Although mealtime conversations had always been lively, with everyone present taking part, things now gradually shifted, subtly, but noticeably: Ulrich and Viktor brought an ebullience to the table, their joint enthusiasm spilling over.  Ethel and Renate and Hans all noticed the shift, but each had a unique take on what was happening.

            Hans, still suspicious of the new arrival (although Viktor had already been with them for more than two months at this point), was experiencing a combination of fear and jealousy.  It was true that he, himself, had no real interest in learning more about the forest than he already knew, more than what he had taken in as a child playing amongst the trees and using them for his own projects.  He knew which wood to use for which job, but, unlike his father – and now, Viktor – he couldn’t have explained the why of it.  He had always been eager – and content – to move ahead with whatever he was constructing. Why did he need to know more?  But despite the fact that he couldn’t have cared less about the particular properties of oak that made it suitable for cabinets and tables, it bothered him that Viktor did care about this, that Viktor’s desire to find out more clearly pleased his (his – Hans’) father.  With each meal where the conversation seemed dominated by this topic, Hans’ resentment of Viktor grew. He felt as if a wall were growing ever taller between him and his father.  What?­ he continued to ask himself.  What is this man up to?

            A different question kept popping into Renate’s mind.  Who is he? She often found herself wondering this, as she watched Viktor walk off into the forest with Ulrich of a morning, or saw their animated conversations as they emerged, hours later, full of joy, and smiling.  She couldn’t deny that a new lightness had come into Ulrich’s step since the younger man took an interest in the life of trees.  Nor did she want to deny it. She welcomed it!  It gladdened her heart to see the connection between the two of them, a connection fostered, it seemed, by their shared connection to the trees.  It was almost as if Ewald had come back, in Viktor’s form. Renate – as Ulrich had told Viktor that day in the forest – did understand this bond.  She knew from her own experience the joy and peace that come from time spent in stillness in the woods, and it pleased her that Viktor had come to know this, too.  She’d seen a shift in him since that first day, just as she’d seen it in her husband.  Viktor’s step had grown lighter, too. There was a greater ease about him, and that ease radiated from him more and more each day.  She felt it in the air around him.  She saw it reflected in the carvings he was doing on the furniture orders – of which there were more now, thanks to the Kropps’ delight with how their sideboard had come out.

            Renate was happy for Viktor, pleased that he was blossoming, both as a forester and a cabinet maker. But she could also see quite clearly that Hans felt threatened by Viktor’s steady transformation.  Hans’ habit of playing protector within the family was coming into play here, and along with it, his fear that his position in this family he loved was gradually being usurped by an outsider.  She felt, more than saw, him cringe each time Ulrich added “son” to a sentence directed to Viktor.  She even mentioned this to Ulrich one night as the two of them were undressing for bed.

            “How would you have me behave?” Ulrich asked her, a bit bewildered by his wife’s concern.  “Viktor understands the trees.  It’s natural for us to talk about that.”

            “I know it is,” Renate replied, nodding, as she buttoned up the front of her nightgown.  “And I am so happy that you two share this love of the forest.”

            “But?” Ulrich asked.

            “But do you not see how left out Hans feels when you and Viktor are lost in conversation about the beeches and the oaks?”

            Ulrich raised his eyebrows.  “I’m afraid I really haven’t noticed that,” he admitted.  Then he pursed his lips.  “I just feel so invigorated when we’re on that topic, that I guess I lose track of what else is going on around.”

            Without Renate needing to point it out, Ulrich realized where she was headed. “My dear,” he told her, coming over and wrapping his arms around her.  “Thank you.  I do not want to be my father. A father whose son feels abandoned.  You know how much I love Hans.”

            “I do,” Renate told him, leaning her head against his chest.  “But he may not.  Remember how Erich felt all those years.”

            It took Ulrich a minute to grasp what Renate was getting at.  Then he nodded.  “Yes. He felt that Aunt Claudia had somehow stolen our mother away and slipped into our house to take her place. Like a thief.”

            “Yes, that’s it.”

            Ulrich pulled back and looked down at Renate. “Do you think Hans feels that way about Viktor?”

            “I know the situation isn’t exactly the same, but it feels similar to me.”

            “I understand,” Ulrich told her, pulling her close to his chest again.  “That is the very last thing I would want.  For Hans to feel Viktor is taking his place in my heart.”

            Renate was unable to get to sleep right away after they set aside this topic for the night: Her thoughts kept circling back to Aunt Claudia.  To Erich.  And to the terrible sadness and terror Claudia had brought into the Gassmann household.  Renate remembered how, for the first fifteen years of her marriage to Ulrich, her husband had gone over and over the question of his mother’s disappearance from the household, and of her death in some location that had never been revealed to him.  How did she die? he would ask, both aloud, in his conversations with Renate, and in his own mind, silently.

Ulrich, too, lay awake for part of the night, long after he saw that Renate had finally drifted off to sleep.  Hearing Renate speak about interlopers, about abandonment, about jealousy, he thought back to the day, two years earlier, in 1919, when Aunt-Mother Claudia was on her deathbed. That was the day he finally received the answer to his decades -old question about what had happened to his mother.

Ulrich had gone to sit with Claudia at Renate’s urging, despite his old feelings of hurt. “You’ll regret it if you don’t,” she told him, although Ulrich was not at all sure she was right.   But at that point, after nineteen years of marriage, Ulrich trusted his wife’s judgment.  He went.  

Claudia, already within several days of passing, but her voice still strong, suddenly said to him, “Ulrich.  Your mother died of pneumonia.  When you were eight months old.” She paused, studying Ulrich’s face, which registered first shock, and then confusion.

“Pneumonia?” he asked. “But why not tell us that, me and Erich?  She got sick and died.  Why not tell us that?”  Ulrich was surprised to hear that he had overcome his decades-long habit of avoiding this subject and uttered these words. But Claudia herself had raised it…  Even so, Ulrich was not sure what would come from her mouth. The decades of angry outbursts had left him wary.

Claudia coughed long and noisily and painfully into her handkerchief, then squeezed the damp cloth in her fist.  “Because she wasn’t at home when she died.”  She wasn’t making eye contact with Ulrich. She delivered her words in a flat tone, as if it was all she could do to even utter them.

“I don’t understand. What difference does that make? Was she in the hospital?”

“No, Dear.” 

She’s calling me “Dear”? What’s this all about? Ulrich wondered.

“Not in the hospital,” Claudia continued in the same, flat tone.  “She was living with a man named Karl.  She caught the pneumonia and died there.”

“I still don’t understand,” Ulrich said.  “Who was this Karl? Why was she living with him?”

His aunt-not-mother took as deep a breath as she was able to do, and laid her damp hand, still holding the handkerchief, on top of Ulrich’s.  Even now, though, she would not meet his eyes.  Ulrich was so shocked by her hand on his that he sat as if frozen, listening to her answer.

“She left your father when you were just a few months old. Just ran away. Crazy, kind of.  No one could ever understand why. That happens sometimes, when a woman has a new baby. Sometimes they kind of go crazy for no reason.”

Ulrich waited for Claudia to condemn her sister, or this Karl, to launch into a tirade. But she didn’t.

“But who was Karl?” Ulrich asked again, even though he could see that Claudia was fatigued.  He understood that this was his only chance to learn the full How? of his mother’s death.

Claudia waved the hand with the handkerchief vaguely in the air and looked toward the window.  “Someone who courted her before she married your father.  She felt desperate, and he took her in.”

“But why didn’t she go back to you and your parents? And why did she leave Father in the first place? Was that the craziness? Or was there another reason she left?”

Claudia looked back down at the quilt on the bed, frowned. Then she chose one of the questions to answer quietly. “Our parents wouldn’t take her back.  We all tried to convince her to go back to Detlef.  Mother and Father were harsh, hoping she’d relent.  But she didn’t.” Another fit of coughing.  “I wish to God we had relented.  Perhaps it would all have turned out differently, Ulrich. For everyone.  Please forgive me.”

Ulrich was as shocked by Claudia’s tone of voice, which had softened and become plaintive, as he was by the sad look in her eyes when she raised them to him, finally.

“But why do you need forgiveness?”  Aside from forgiveness for all the screaming and criticism...

“Because I sided with our parents.” A pause.  A cough seemed ready to erupt, but then didn’t.  “For my own reasons.”  She dropped her eyes to the quilt.

Ulrich felt his chest and throat constrict.  “What reasons?”

“I was in love with Detlef, too, Ulrich.  But he chose your mother. My sister, Iris.”  She stopped, staring at the handkerchief, which she was now worrying with both hands.

“So, when she left my father, you saw your chance.” It wasn’t a question, and Ulrich was surprised by the icy cold tone in which the words came from his mouth.  He felt deep sadness rising in him, which was quickly replaced with anger, and he understood for the first time in his life why he had intuitively hated Claudia. 

After a lengthy pause, she raised her eyes to his.  “Yes.  That’s right.” Ulrich heard a hint of the old defiance in her voice.  But then bitterness, too, crept in, as she told him, “But you know, Ulrich, I never should have stayed.  Your father never loved me.  It was Iris he loved, and he loved her deeply.  As much as I thought I could replace her, I couldn’t.  I’d realized that by the time Inna was born, but I didn’t have the strength to leave.”  Her eyes narrowed, and she stared out the window.  “I was so angry at him.” Now the coughing fit did come, and Ulrich sat in silence until she was able to speak once again.  “Angry at him for not loving me.  Angry at Iris for leaving him and giving me hope.  Angry at myself for staying when he didn’t want me. For having Inna and Monika with him despite that fact.”  She finally looked back at Ulrich.  “He just tolerated me, you know.  I was a good cook and housekeeper.”

Not really, Ulrich objected, in his thoughts.  There was never any love in that food.  It tasted as bitter and flat as your words.  And the house may have been clean, but it was never the sanctuary a home should be. But you can tell yourself your own version of the story, I guess.

  Then Claudia softly repeated her request: “Please, forgive me.”  She even placed her hand atop his once more, hoping that this would sway him.

  Ulrich didn’t say anything for a few moments. Her seemingly-sincere confession of anger helped him see the way she had been all his life in a new light. Even so, he wasn’t yet ready to accept her words as genuine.  He saw in the way Claudia had placed her hand on his, the same kind of drama-infused manipulation he continually experienced growing up:  emotional displays calculated to either wrest pity from a family member, or terrify them into submission.  Not that Ulrich ever saw through her tactics at all before Renate gently clued him in about them. But now he was feeling the same churning in his gut that he had always felt, and he knew that he did not want to be drawn in to her game.  And yet, he thought, How can you not offer forgiveness to the woman who raised you when she asks it of you on her deathbed? Even if she raised you in that terrible way, she still raised you. Claudia.  Barely an aunt.  Certainly not a mother.  Not even a step-mother.  He couldn’t bring himself to refer to her using any of those words.  In this moment, it was as if he suddenly didn’t even know her at all, as if she were a complete stranger.  And in that moment, looking at this stranger, he was able to assent to forgiving her, the way you’d forgive a stranger who accidently tossed a still-burning match onto your thatched roof, with the result that your house burned to the ground with your entire family inside. 

“Yes, of course, I forgive you.”  That’s what he said, his tone wooden.  Claudia looked at him as if she believed him.  Perhaps she was willing herself to believe him, or perhaps she genuinely believed that Ulrich’s words were sufficient, even if he had uttered them insincerely.  Perhaps she thought she had discharged her duty by revealing these damning facts before exiting the earth. 

How could I tell her I forgave her?  This was another How? question Ulrich had occasionally asked himself in the two years since this deathbed conversation.  And yet, although part of him genuinely did forgive her – for, in effect, wishing for his mother to be out of the picture, and for not telling him the truth until now – there was still a part of him that had not forgiven her in the least.  Or his father, for that matter.  How had his father dealt with being abandoned by his wife, left with two little boys?  The thought had crossed Ulrich’s mind over the years that Detlef had been happy to have Claudia come, to replace the wife who had somehow just gone crazy, that he had been as unattached to Iris as he seemed to the whole rest of the family.  Maybe it had all been the same to him which wife he had, as long as he had one?  Really, the thought had often occurred to Ulrich in the past two years, that he and Erich had, in fact, been abandoned by both their parents. After all, their father was so focused on his own plans and thoughts most of the time that he seemed to hardly pay attention to the actual personalities and needs of the people around him. Detlef had an uncanny ability to focus on forestry work and carpentry, and to draw Ulrich and Ewald and others who worked with him into that work, but there was little personal connection between them.  They could have been anyone off the street, practically, as long as he could teach them what needed to be done.

Over the next couple of years, as he reflected on what Claudia had told him, Ulrich grew convinced that he had to give up blaming Erich for the way things had played out: he came to believe that Erich had known no more than he, Ulrich, had.  And once Ulrich found out the whole story, he couldn’t even tell his brother about it: Erich had died the year before, in 1918, strangely enough, also of pneumonia he had developed as a result of the flu.

But Ulrich did fault Erich for leaving the homestead to work in town.  That had felt like abandonment to him, too.  That whole series of events – Erich leaving the forestry work, Ulrich assuming the role of heir apparent to the family business, all the while knowing he wasn’t his father’s first choice for that – had left a bad taste in Ulrich’s mouth, and his spirit.  This was another layer of melancholy atop the one that had already settled in early in childhood.  Layers of abandonment and sorrow, with some bitterness mixed in. 

Then Ewald left.  A brother-in-law-brother-in-spirit.  That felt hardest of all to Ulrich.  Or maybe it just seemed that way because the two of them were so close.  That was in 1904, but it seemed like yesterday. And the hurt and sorrow connected with Ewald’s abandonment of him had not dulled in the past seventeen years, remaining so strong that when Erich passed away in 1918, Ulrich barely grieved. He felt he’d lost that brother years earlier. The loss of Ewald felt somehow much fresher.

Two brothers lost, and a sorrow that did not lift with the birth of his own son, Hans.  At first, when Hans was young, Ulrich would occasionally think, Ahh! A son!  He’ll work side by side in the forest with me. We’ll build furniture together. They would have the kind of relationship he never had with Detlef.  He would show Hans how much he loved him.  The family business would be full of joy.  Gassmann and son. 

But as Hans grew older, the wished-for strong bond, based on a shared love of the forest and the work, failed to take root in the space between son and father.  Hans appreciated the forest, certainly, but he felt none of the divinity there that Ulrich always talked to him about.  Our eleven hectares of heaven.  It was as if Hans saw the woods as our eleven hectares of future furniture.  As dense as Ulrich generally was when it came to reading people, he couldn’t not sense that Hans had no understanding of what the forest meant to his father, and that Hans didn’t care to learn about that, to experience it for himself.  When he considered this rationally, Ulrich knew that Hans’ lack of interest in this did not mean that Hans was not interested in him, Ulrich, as a person, as his father. But: Another abandonment.  That’s how Ulrich saw and felt it in his heart.

What a joy it was for Ulrich, then, when Viktor Bunke showed up.  Viktor Bunke, who did take an interest in the trees. He wanted to learn about them as trees, not as a source material. And he sensed the divinity in the forest.  To be honest, Ulrich felt that in Viktor, he had gained a second son, one who was more like him in his nature.  More a son than his son, the way Ewald had been more a brother to him than Erich.  How could that not make him happy?

At the same time, he knew that Renate was right about the perils of the situation. I have to make things right with Hans, he concluded. And then keep them right. So, he lay there awake for hours after he and Renate spoke, trying to work out in his mind – his mind – what he could do differently, so that Hans would not feel left out, relegated to second place in his own family and home.  How to make it all right??  In setting this goal for himself, what Ulrich did not know, was that he was, in fact, powerless to make Hans feel any way at all. He didn’t know that how Hans felt was not in his – Ulrich’s – control, but depended, instead, solely on Hans himself.  Lacking this key insight, Ulrich unconsciously opened the door for anxiety and melancholy to slip back into him, unnoticed, and to crouch – silently for the meantime – behind the joy hefound in his interactions with Viktor.  Now his conscious will – to help Hans feel loved and needed – began to operate at odds with his heart, whose only desire was to express the joy and love that had begun to warm it once Viktor had arrived.

Chapter 17

June 25, 1949

Gassmann-Bunke homestead

            The question that settled so strongly into Ulrich’s heart that night in 1921 as he and Renate discussed Hans and Viktor never entirely loosened its grip on his heart.  How to make it all right? Here it was, 1949, and in the intervening decades, Ulrich had, instead of learning how to answer this question, been faced with more and more situations that needed to be made right. Layer upon layer, they piled up.  He didn’t care to recount them to himself, but he was nonetheless fully aware of each of them, and he never stopped seeking ways to explain How? these situations had cropped up in the first place. Nor did he stop searching for ways out of them.  So, on that June evening, when Lina raised the topic of the plans God has for each of us, Ulrich felt inside him that there might be a road here to a solution.

            Clearly, Ulrich was not the only one in the family who held a deep interest in this topic, for it came up once again the next day. Except for that one time back in 1921, which we haven’t yet made our way to in the telling of our story, no one in this family had ever – not even once! – initiated a discussion of religion around the table, much less a discussion of faith, which is what this question seemed to come down to, at least partly.  Even so, the extended Gassmann-Bunke family had now ventured into uncharted territory, dragging along with them Kristina and young Ingrid, who must have wondered what had stirred up this hornet’s nest.

            It was Renate who started things off the second night. The queen of concocting plans for her family and figuring out the best way to implement them, Renate wanted to know how Lina thought it was that God worked out His plans.  Maybe, Renate thought, she could learn something from gaining insight into His methods. Hurriedly setting the bowls of food on the table and motioning to the family members to help themselves, Renate sat down, smoothed her skirts and, without even serving herself, began speaking. She was anxious to get back to this topic before anyone else started in on more frivolous questions of furniture orders or forest surveys.

            “Now, Lina, dear,” she began, “about God’s plans and our free will.”

            Ulrich glanced at his wife and smiled.  Her eagerness didn’t surprise him: The night before, she would have talked with him the whole night about this, if he hadn’t finally protested that he needed to get at least a little sleep before morning.

            “Yes, Grandma?” Lina replied.

            Content that the floor was now hers, Renate picked up a bowl of boiled carrots and spooned some onto her plate as she spoke.

            “So, there’s God’s plan. And there’s our free will.  And somehow they work together.” She waved the serving spoon to this and that side as she spoke, as if indicating God’s plan on the one side, and humans’ free will on the other.

            “That’s what I think,” Lina said, nodding, as she placed potatoes and sausage on her plate.

            “That’s not an explanation,” Marcus said testily. “It’s barely a theory.”  He paused to take a sausage, then added, reproachfully, “Since when do we talk about religion in this family?”

            Ethel shushed him. “Since now.”

            Sulking, he applied himself to his meal, but not before looking across at Kristina and rolling his eyes. This action was not lost on Viktor, who was disgusted by the way his confident, swaggering son was devolving into a sarcastic schoolboy before his very eyes.

            “But what I want to know,” Renate persisted, cutting a potato in two, “is, why does God have a plan for us at all?”

            “Exactly,” Marcus said, his mouth full of potatoes. He’d adopted a flippant tone, but in actual fact, he was as interested in this topic as the others.  He’d spent a large portion of the night reflecting on it.  But he didn’t want to let the others see this.  So, he chose to speak in a way he hoped would seem dismissive, rather than curious.  He pointed his fork in his grandmother’s direction.  “What good is God’s plan, if we can all just do what we want anyway? We’ve got free will.  Why can’t we just be deciding and handling everything on our own?”

            Renate looked at him in annoyance, although she did agree with the idea that we  could handle things on our own. Or, rather, she would have agreed with it until the day before, when the topic came up.  It was as if, while Renate listened to Lina’s musings on the possibility of God and humans working together, a tension long buried in her began to surface.  It was as if some tiny voice in her soul had been trying, throughout her whole life, to suggest she consider this. But she had been ignoring that little voice the whole time, choosing instead to solve every situation she faced on her own. Yes, to solve and manipulate it according to the conclusions that her rational mind, spurred on by whatever strong emotion was ruling her at the moment, offered her about what steps needed to be taken. 

Now, however, something in Renate had shifted: At some moment during the previous day’s conversation, a tiny entry point somehow opened up in her consciousness. The voice of Renate’s soul instantly seized this opportunity and slipped through this opening, this chink in the armor that had until now so fiercely repelled the soul’s every attempt to enter her rational mind.  And what did this voice say to Renate, once it was inside?  She couldn’t have expressed that now. But when Lina suggested the possibility of a collaboration between God and humans, Renate experienced deep inside her what she would later characterize as a feeling, first of curiosity, accompanied by a sense of recognition.

But how can it be a feeling of recognition, if I haven’t ever before had this conversation?  That’s what she would ask herself later, as she tried to work out for herself what had happened that day.  She would say that as this feeling of recognition – of remembering, even – grew inside her, she came to feel that Lina was absolutely right, even if she couldn’t rationally explain it.  She just knew somehow, and as this sense of knowing – knowing without words to express it – grew stronger, a certain lightness spread throughout her body.

At the same time, all the tension that had built up over decades of trying to do everything all on her own began to drain out of her.  As she listened to her granddaughter, Renate began to feel lighter and lighter in her physical body, so much so that she even felt a bit weak in the knees. At this very moment, joy began to fill her heart.  And relief.  Finally, she thought, although, rather, she just knew it, and again, she knew it without words: Finally, I no longer have to figure everything out on my own.

It seemed clear to her then, that the little voice inside her – the one she’d ignored her whole life – was actually the voice of God. He had been trying to speak to her all her life, trying to guide her.That was why, the night before, when Ethel began weeping, overcome with joy and hope at Lina’s belief that God could help her, Renate, too, fell to crying, just not as loudly as Ethel. She was full of gratitude for the message her soul had finally been able to deliver to her: God will help Lina. And He will help you, too. 

It was this last part of the message that surprised Renate the most, for what had made life so hard for her was not just the belief she’d always had – deep in her marrow – that she had to figure everything out herself.  That was difficult enough, but what underlay this belief was even harder for her to live with: her firm conviction that she was not worthy of being helped by God.  Renate had never allowed this thought to rise up into her conscious mind. It was not yet there at this moment, either, but it was making its way in that direction, encouraged – emboldened, perhaps? – by the upward movement of Renate’s recognition of a collaboration of the human with the divine.  And close behind this second thought, a third began stirring. This third one would reveal the link between a memory and her belief in her own unworthiness.  But for now, this third thought was just barely opening its eyes and beginning to get its bearings in the depths of Renate’s soul.  It would be some time before it followed the second thought’s lead and set Renate’s conscious awareness as its ultimate destination. 

Right now, though, hearing her grandson’s question about what good God’s plan is, if we can all do what we want anyway, Renate concluded that she could make use of his objection.

“Marcus,” she said, “I didn’t exactly mean my question that way. I understand now that if He does have plans for us, we often go against them. Or don’t want to know them in the first place.  So, knowing us well enough to know that we might fight Him tooth and nail, why does God still have plans for us?  That’s my question.  Not, What use is it for God to have plans for us?” 

            “Grandma,” Lina replied before Marcus could try to derail the conversation once more, “I think… I think maybe it has to do with… maybe God has a plan for what He wants us to do with our free will.”

            “That’s not a plan,” Marcus snapped, without raising his eyes from his plate. “That’s a wish.  Wishes won’t get you squat.  Even if you’re God. I don’t think God can run our lives. And besides, if we do have free will, then why does God even get to have a plan for us? I repeat, shouldn’t we be the ones to decide about our own lives?”

            The crux of the matter for Marcus was his sense of powerlessness to control the circumstances of his own life. If I accept Father’s logic, and Lina’s, he reasoned, What happens in life always comes down to what someone else wants – whether that’s your father or your God.  Marcus felt such a strong resistance, deep inside him, to this idea of God having some plan for his life without being able to have any input! If I got to sit down with God, talk over the options, and then pick one, of my own free will… that would be one thing. But that wasn’t the way Lina felt things worked. That’s what he really wanted to ask Lina, but once he poured out the beginning of his thought process, Marcus wished he could pull it back in: God forbid anyone should realize, despite his derisive tone, that these were his truest, most desperate questions.  Luckily, though, everyone around him at the table seemed to take in only his tone, and not his actual words.

            “For heaven’s sake, Marcus,” Peter said in a voice full of impatience, “Can’t you give it a rest for once?  Do you have to be telling everyone what to think every minute of the day?  You’re not in the Censorship Office any more, you know.”

            Marcus smirked and raised his hands in a gesture of surrender, while his eyes remained focused on his food. “Fine,” he said. “Have it your way.  Lay it all out for us, dear Sis.  Not another word from me,” he told them. But inside, he was eagerly awaiting the continuation of the conversation, while simultaneously feeling annoyed at Lina. Why the hell is she suddenly some expert on God?

            Lina, unperturbed, did continue.  “All right, then.  Marcus doesn’t seem to think God has any power over us. That all He can do is wish for us to do something with our free will and then sit by, powerless, and watch us.  Even if that’s true, and I, personally, don’t believe that’s all He can do – wish, that is – even if that were true, though, what would He wish for us to do?”

            “You tell us,” Marcus said, consciously adopting a self-satisfied tone. Everyone at the table except for Lina responded with frowns.

            “No,” Lina replied, “you tell me, Marcus, if you know everything.”

            “Lina, Sweetie,” her brother told her with a shrug, after wiping his mouth with his napkin, “your guess is as good as mine.  But I think even that question – what would God wish for us – is irrelevant. It’s only as relevant as asking what Mother or Father would wish for us.”  Renate drew in her breath sharply, but no one made a move to stop Marcus, so he kept on speaking.  “I mean, if God really does allow us free will, then why does he also get to have a plan for us? Why does he get to cause a bird to hurt its wing? Or Peter to get wounded? Or you to get paralyzed, Lina? That’s the real question, folks. Why do you all believe that God’s allowed to try to direct our lives? And, what’s more, that he can actually do it? Can you tell me that?” By the end of his speech, Marcus’ voice had once again acquired a taunting tone, and this pleased him: Although he really did care about the question he’d posed, he didn’t want to come off as a man who didn’t know his own mind.      Viktor, who had grown tired of the bickering between Marcus and Lina, finally spoke up.

“Marcus, give it a rest, Son.  You don’t want to talk about it? Then sit quietly and eat. Or you can take your supper out to the porch and eat there, if you want.”

            Ethel stole a look at her husband and smiled, even suppressed a laugh. His words had suddenly taken her back to when the kids were young. They would get to arguing, generally with Marcus provoking Peter and Lina for his own amusement.  Marcus knew that Peter, in particular, could be counted on to take the bait. When that happened, Viktor would always let Marcus know that he had a choice: to finish his meal in the kitchen, without antagonizing his siblings, or to eat it on the porch.

            “It’s your choice,” Viktor told Marcus and, noticing Ethel’s gaze, he allowed his lips to form a smile, too. 

            “No different now than it was when you were twelve, is it?” Ulrich put in, also smiling and leaning in Marcus’ direction. “There’s your free will for you, my boy!”

            By now everyone had fallen into gentle laughter, except for Kristina and Ingrid, who didn’t get the joke.  Marcus – at once annoyed that he was being treated as a child, by his father, no less, and also grateful that he hadn’t revealed the full depth of his spiritual questioning – sat for the rest of the meal in genuine sulky silence.

*          *          *

“I was so surprised to hear you talking about God at the table today,” Kristina told Lina later on, as they took their usual early evening stroll. 

She had gathered from Marcus’ eye-rolling and his words where he stood on the question of God’s plans for us.   But it was clear that she’d missed an important part of the conversation the day before, the part that explained why they’d begun talking about God and free will and divine plans in the first place.  That was why she asked Lina about it right away during their walk, without giving her friend the chance to deflect that conversation by talking about something else.  Lina’s mention of God at supper had genuinely surprised Kristina. Over the previous four years, they’d discussed pretty much everything about their lives, sharing their feelings and hopes with each other.  But they’d never gotten into theology. 

Lina could hear from Kristina’s voice that her friend was hurt, that what she’d not said at the end of her sentence was, “And that you never said a thing to me about this before.”  Lina sighed and stretched her hand up and back over her shoulder, reaching for Kristina’s hand.

“I’m sorry I didn’t mention any of this to you before,” she began when she felt Kristina’s hand in hers.

“So am I,” came the reply, chilly, despite the fact that Kristina had stopped pushing the wheelchair and taken Lina’s proffered hand.  After all, Kristina didn’t yet know where the conversation would lead, and whether Lina would actually reveal anything to her or not. The night before, as she laid awake in bed, struggling to fall asleep, despite repeating her mantra for what seemed like hours, she began steeling herself for a full rejection by Lina.  Why should Lina open up to me?  We’ve become friends of sorts, but we’re not family.  Better to keep the drawbridge to my heart up and locked in place. That’s what Kristina thought the previous night, as she replayed the details of her friendship with Lina, in between mantra repetitions.  Better to not risk being hurt further.  She was allowing this string of thoughts to run through her mind again now. She was almost completely convinced of Lina’s pending rejection of her, when Lina spoke.

“I’ve been wanting to talk to you about this,” Lina said, “about all of it.  It’s just that my thoughts weren’t at all clear until now… until yesterday afternoon. They just crystallized then, all of a sudden, and they burst out of me!”

Although Lina couldn’t see Kristina’s face, she guessed from the slight bob of the other woman’s hand in hers that Kristina was nodding slowly. Still, her friend said nothing.

“Would you like to hear about it all now?” Lina asked quietly.

“You don’t have to tell me,” Kristina told her, still cautious. Is she offering simply out of some feeling of guilt? Because she noticed I was hurt? She didn’t want that.

“No, but I want to,” Lina told her. “I really do.”

“All right, then.”  Kristina released Lina’s hand. “Then let me push you over to that bench by the forest.  We can talk there.”

“No, everyone can see us there,” Lina told her. “I don’t want anyone to watch us.  This is too personal.  Let’s just go a little further on.  There’s another path into the woods there.  Do you see it? Over on the left?”

Kristina pushed the wheelchair across the stubbly grass to an opening where a path led into another part of the Gassmanns’ forest.

“Really,” Lina said as Kristina came to a halt, “I wish we could go to the treehouse.  That would be a perfect place to talk, but…” she gestured at her legs. “But I can’t do that, not with these legs.  Not yet.”

Not yet? Kristina wondered.  Lina was facing into the woods. Kristina took a seat on a fallen log in front of her.  But then Lina asked Kristina to help her out of her wheelchair and maneuver her so that she, too, could sit on the log, next to her friend.

Once they’d settled next to each other, Kristina waited for Lina to begin the conversation. When Lina failed to speak, Kristina asked the question that had occurred to her during the suppertime conversation.

“So, you think God has a plan for each of us?”

Lina nodded, but didn’t yet say more.

“But that we have our own free will, too?”

“Mmmhmm.”

Kristina was beginning to get the impression that Lina didn’t want to talk about any of this after all. Irritation began rising up in her chest.

But then Lina turned to look at her and put her two hands before her and intertwined the fingers.

“And they fit together somehow,” she said, “in a way we – or at least I – can’t begin to understand.”

“You said at supper that you think God has a wish about how He wants us to use our free will.  But like your grandmother asked, why does God bother having plans for us at all, if we can just do what we want?”

Lina laughed. This struck Kristina as strange, until Lina continued.

“That’s right. Not that Marcus let us get anywhere with that discussion, did he?” She turned to Kristina, and they both smiled.  Kristina could see clearly by the look in Lina’s eyes that they were friends again.  Or still.  She relaxed.

“Really, Lina,” Kristina said, “what do you think? When bad things happen to us, is that God’s plan for us?  Or is it just that we’ve done something bad with our free will? Or that we haven’t allowed Him to guide us?  That we’re not good enough followers? And then He can’t help us get out of the mess?”  She looked intently into Lina’s eyes, hoping for an answer that would assuage her own feelings of despair and sadness about the events that had brought her to this homestead.

“That’s what we were talking about yesterday,” Lina told her. “More or less.  About whether, say, it was God’s plan for me to have my accident. Or for Peter to be wounded in the war…”

“Or for my husband to be killed at the front and for me and Ingrid to have to flee for our lives and…” Kristina left unsaid other thoughts that came to her.

Lina nodded.

“What did you decide about that?” Kristina asked softly, looking now at the dirt path that was overgrown with grass and still littered with some of the previous year’s fallen leaves.

“Not much, I’m afraid,” Lina told her. She recounted the conversation in as much detail as she could recall. She felt both that she owed this to her friend, and also that doing so would make it possible for them to continue discussing this topic which was so, so crucial for both of them.

“I guess the main thing for me,” Lina went on, “is that I believe God loves us and that He wants us to be happy.  And that He has a plan for each of us that can lead to us being happy.” 

“If we can only guess what the plan is and act according to it, to God’s wishes?  Is that what you think?” Kristina asked.

Lina nodded.

Kristina reached over and took Lina’s hand in hers. “And being happy – that means not just a feeling of happiness in our hearts… but also being healthy, yes? Is that what you think?”  She hadn’t wanted to openly mention Lina’s paralysis, but Lina intuited what she was really trying to ask.

“It is. Yes,” she replied.  Kristina squeezed her hand – whether in a show of confidence or pity, Lina didn’t know. Nor did Kristina, herself. Lina sat up straight, took in a deep breath and let it out again, nodding as she stared into the forest.  “And I believe we can learn what God wishes for us, wishes for us to do.  And then do it.”

“And then be happy,” Kristina said. 

Lina nodded.

“And whole,” Kristina added softy, moving the toe of her shoe back and forth in the dirt beneath her foot, as if wiping the spot clean.

“Yes.  I believe that’s possible.”

Kristina sat silent for a moment, her mind suddenly full of a wish of her own.  “I want to believe that, Lina.  I want to be whole again, too.”  When Lina looked over at her, a bit puzzled, she added, “Whole, instead of full of the holes made by everything I’ve lost and left, holes that fear and sorrow and despair have rushed in to fill.  Do you think God wants me to be whole?  Us to be?”  She turned her gaze hopefully to Lina and grasped her hand more tightly.

“Yes, yes!  Of course, He does,” Lina said, seeing the tears now flowing freely down Kristina’s cheeks.

“But how? How can we make His wish come true?  Our wish? And His wish for us?” She paused for a moment. “I – my whole family – we’ve gone through so much sorrow. Hearing all this, I feel like I must have done something terribly wrong.”

“Wrong?” Lina asked, a frown coming to her brow. “Why wrong?”

“Because otherwise, if I were a better follower of God, I’d have understood what He wanted me to do. And I would have tried to do it, Lina,” she cried. “I would have tried my best.”

“But you did try your best,” Lina reassured Kristina, wrapping an arm around her friend’s shoulder.

“Even if I did, it wasn’t good enough!” Kristina protested, shaking her head. “Ingrid and I went through so much… And my parents and brother, left behind…”

Lina now felt her own chest begin to heave. The two friends, leaning their heads together, sobbed in earnest.

“Kristina, I think that making God’s wish for us come true – it starts with our own wish,” Lina said finally, cautiously, as if she feared that this simple statement might leave Kristina feeling more discouraged, instead of inspired. “Like the swallow’s wish to fly free.”

Kristina nodded thoughtfully. Then she wiped her eyes and nose on the handkerchief she’d pulled from her pocket. She held the cloth out to Lina, who didn’t hesitate at all to take it.

“Do you have that wish?” Lina asked, her tone again cautious.

“Oh, yes, I do.”  Kristina squeezed Lina’s hand.  “But how, Lina? How can I know what to do? How to do things right?”

“I’m not quite sure yet.  But He’ll guide us. Somehow.”

Kristina nodded, squeezing her eyes shut tightly, so that she wouldn’t start sobbing once more. “Somehow.”

“In fact,” Lina said after a pause, “I think He already is.” Lina took the folded newspaper article from out of her apron pocket – she’d resolved to carry it with her always – and handed it to her friend.  “Here. Read this.”

*          *          *

As Kristina was settling Ingrid into bed a couple of hours later, the little girl sat back up in bed, pulling up the quilt – one of Ethel’s creations, but not the same one Viktor had slept beneath nearly thirty years earlier, when this had been his room – and wrapping her arms around her tucked-up knees.

“Mama, why was everyone arguing tonight?” Ingrid asked. She, too, had heard the shouting the day before, and her mother could tell she was uneasy that there had been more of the same this evening.  “I don’t like it.”

“I don’t like it either, Sweetheart,” Kristina said, sitting down on the bed and taking her daughter’s hand.

“What if they keep on fighting?  Will we have to leave?”

Kristina leaned over and took Ingrid in her arms. “No, Honey, no.  It’s not like that.”  But Kristina recalled how ill at ease she herself had been just the evening before, when Lina rebuffed her questions, when Marcus didn’t come out to say good night, when she concluded that there might not be a place for the two of them with this family, after all.  “This isn’t about us, Ingrid.”

Ingrid nodded, but it was clear she was not convinced.  “But the other places we stayed, Mama, along the way here – they let us stay, but they didn’t like it. Don’t you remember the way they argued about it, especially that one time…”

Of course, Kristina remembered.  The night they made it to a farmhouse after dragging themselves through frozen mud and ice all day long without eating and were taken in by the family.  But then she and Ingrid, who’d already bedded down for the night in the store room, following a grudgingly-offered meal of porridge and stale bread, heard the farmer and his wife arguing loudly.  Kristina couldn’t make out the words.  Within a few minutes, the wife came in and told them they’d have to pack up and get out – as if they had more than their rucksacks and a small suitcase that didn’t take any packing at all…

“This isn’t about us, Ingrid,” Kristina repeated softly, pulling back and looking Ingrid in the eye.  “They are very happy we’re here. Truly.”

“Then what is it?”

Kristina didn’t much want to get into the topic, but she could see that Ingrid needed the reassurance of a bit of truth at this moment. She could also see the lingering fear in her daughter’s eyes, and was reminded of the holes inside herself that she’d spoken of to Lina.

“Sweetheart, this is a very grownup thing they were talking about,” she began. “I think it was hard for you to understand what they were saying. Is that right?”

Ingrid nodded.

“Well, maybe we can think of it this way.  There’s me, your mama, and there’s you, Ingrid.  I have all sorts of wishes for you, for your life ahead. And you have your own wishes for your life.” Then, seeing that this was too abstract, she shifted her approach. “Like this: I want you to go to school every day, but sometimes you don’t want to go to school.”

Ingrid nodded.  “That’s right.”

“So, I have my wish for you, and you have your own things that you want to do, like playing or running around in the woods.”

“But what does that have to do with God?  That’s what everyone was talking about, isn’t it?”

“Yes, about God.  And about how God has His own idea of how He wants our lives to go, and we don’t always agree with that because we have our own ideas.”

“And who’s right?” Ingrid asked, frowning.

Kristina laughed.  “That’s what they were discussing, Sweetheart!  Whether God is allowed to want us to live the way He wants us to live, and to try to make us do that. And whether He even can do that.”

“The way you want me to live the way you want me to live?”

“Kind of.  Think of it like this: God loves us so much that He only wants the very best for us. But sometimes we do things He knows aren’t good for us.”

“Like Katie who poked a hole in the chicken feed bag when she got mad at her mama?”

“Yes, like that,” Kristina said with a smile.

“So Katie was wrong to spill the feed? And Katie’s mama was right to punish her by taking away her dollies for a week?”

“I can’t say, Ingrid, but sometimes we parents do think we need to punish our children.”

Ingrid thought for a moment, looked at the quilt and asked, “And so God punishes us when we do something He doesn’t like?”

“No, no, Ingrid, God doesn’t punish us.”

“But then why do the bad things happen to us, Mama? God can do everything, can’t He?”

Kristina paused, and then said, “Yes, Ingrid. I believe that He can.”

“Then why would He do something bad to us?  Is it because we’re bad?”

“That’s what folks were talking about tonight, Sweetheart.  They wonder that, too.  When something bad happens to us, is it our own fault – because we can do what we want, which means we can make mistakes – or did God somehow plan things that way so we could learn something from it?”

“But why does God plan something bad so we get hurt? Why doesn’t He keep us from getting hurt instead?”

Kristina sighed and spread her hands out before her. “See, it’s not so simple, is it?” she asked kindly.  “We don’t know what God can do and what God can’t do, or whether He can keep us from getting hurt. Some people think He can do whatever He wants.”

“But why would He want us to get hurt, Mama?” Ingrid asked, and her eyes suddenly filled with tears.  “Why would he want Daddy to get killed? Want us to have to leave Grandma and Grandpa behind and… all the rest of it?”  She paused. “Or Auntie Lina!  Why?”

Kristina took Ingrid in her arms and, as she rocked her, thought back to her conversation with Lina, about the sparrow.  “He never wants us to suffer, Ingrid.  I know that for sure.  Auntie Lina, she believes there’s a reason we go through the bad things we go through.  That it’s God’s way of trying to help us be happy.”

“I don’t like that kind of God,” Ingrid declared, pouting now, instead of crying.  “How can letting us get hurt help us?”

“I’m not sure, Honey.  But I believe in God, and I believe that He only wants to help us. That’s as much as I know.  So, let’s just ask God to help us.  Can we do that now? A little prayer?”

Ingrid shook her head.  “I don’t want to pray, if He’s only going to let us get hurt again.”

Kristine looked into Ingrid’s eyes once more, and squeezed her hands. “I’m not going to force you to pray if you don’t want to.  But tell me, what would you wish for, if you would wish for something?”

Ingrid rested her chin on her knees and looked out across the room to the wash stand and the towels hanging on pegs on the wall, then to the windows with the bright curtains.

“I wish for us to always be happy. To never have to run again.  To be safe, Mama. Safe and happy.  And for a new daddy to take care of us.”

Kristina smiled.  “All right, then. I like those wishes, too.  Now go to sleep, all right?  I’m going to go outside for a while.”

Ingrid stretched herself back out under the covers. Kristina tucked her in, fully this time, and then walked back out into the yard.

A wish.  First comes the wish, she thought.

*          *          *

            The evening was cool for late June.  The breeze that blew across grass, bushes, and gardens still moist from a strong late afternoon rain brought a chill to Kristina as she sat on the bench outside the workshop.  She couldn’t say she was cold, at least not the way she would have been had she been out here a month earlier; even so, she instinctively wrapped her arms loosely around her chest and stomach to keep the cool air out and her bodily warmth in. She could have gone back inside to get a shawl, but she didn’t move.  A holdover, she realized, from the period four years ago now, when she and Ingrid had moved across Eastern Prussia and then Poland before making their way by ship to this part of Germany.  They were never warm enough during those months, even when they wore nearly all their clothing each day as they walked, and each night as they slept. 

Kristina grew so used to the idea, back then, that she had no choice but to endure the cold, that even now, she had to consciously remind herself that she did have warmer clothes, and that she could go put them on.  Nonetheless, the habit of endurance persisted, a habit formed out of a feeling of powerlessness in regard to the elements.  Even now, some lingering feeling of helplessness and cold lingered in Kristina as she sat on the bench, rubbing her arms.

            She was so lost in recollection of that period in her life, that she didn’t notice Marcus until he sat down beside her.

            “You’re cold,” he said.  When Kristina shrugged, he took off his own sweater and laid it across her shoulders. She didn’t protest, but she did smile up at him.  She knew the sweater was a peace offering of sorts, and she felt the previous night’s anxiety begin to fade away. He came out!  He didn’t reject me after all!  He wouldn’t give me his sweater if he meant to drive me away, would he?

            “I had too much to do to come out last night,” Marcus began.  He’d been working on it all day: what to say to her about why he hadn’t come out. He was damned if he’d tell her he was sorry, even though he was.  Or that he’d been too angry at his whole family to be able to talk with her the way he wanted to. Even though this was the truth, too.  “My father and I needed to work out a plan,” he told her.  He figured she’d heard the shouting the evening before, but he hoped his words and his tone of voice now would give her the impression that he was an equal participant in deciding what was to be done, and how. Even though this was not the truth.  The truth was, that Viktor had, indeed, wanted to talk with him after supper. It hadn’t been to consult with him about the way they might make the changes, though, but to tell him how it was going to go.

            “A plan for you coming back here to work?” Kristina asked, trying to get a read on what Marcus was thinking, so that she could best support him.

            He nodded, but instead of looking at her, he stared off across the yard, past the clotheslines and the goat pen and the old outhouse.

            “So… What did you decide?” Kristina inquired finally. When Marcus turned to look at her, she could tell he’d been as far away in his thoughts as she’d been when he sat down a minute earlier.

            “I’ll be back here full-time in a month. Meanwhile, I’ll be helping with the forestry on the weekends and in the evenings a bit, too.”  He tried to keep the bitterness out of his voice.  He really wanted Kristina to believe he’d had a part in the decision, but it was all he could do to keep his frustration inside.  Why does Father have the right to tell me what to do? It’s not right. So much for free will.  This last sentence he actually said out loud.

            Kristina wasn’t surprised to hear this, since she knew Marcus was unhappy with having to give up his Civil Service position, but she hadn’t expected him to reveal his true feelings so easily.  “What do you mean?” she asked, so as to not let him know she understood his frustration. She was giving him the chance to shift the conversation, if he wanted to do so.

            Marcus looked at her, grateful, and waved his hand dismissively in the direction of the house, as if the whole family were still sitting at the supper table.  “Oh, nothing.  Just that nonsense about God’s plans and our free will.”

            Kristina had already had two conversations this evening on this topic – in addition to what she’d heard over supper. She didn’t really want to get into it again.  But, she was feeling buoyed up about the future by her discussion with Lina, hopeful, even, especially since her fears of rejection had faded into the background. So she asked Marcus, “What part of it do you think is nonsense?”

            He threw up his hands. “All of it: that God has a plan for us, that he can somehow influence us to enact, or that he can enact some of it himself – mostly the bad parts, mind you!” he said, turning to look at her again and shook his head. 

            Kristina recalled how he’d rolled his eyes at her during supper, clearly assuming that she was on his side in this matter. Now she regretted having opened the door to this topic. She wanted to shift the conversation, but Marcus was on a roll now.

            “Like I said tonight, why is God even allowed to have a plan for us, wishes for us, if we have free will? And why would we make it our goal to find out what God’s wishes are and act according to them? Why do we assume God knows what’s best for us? Aren’t we the best judges of what’s right for us to do?” 

            Kristina sat, listening in stunned silence, as Marcus sought to destroy the idea that had, just an hour earlier, given both her and Lina so much hope.  “How,” Marcus continued, “can there be a God who wants bad things to happen to us?  Kristina, I don’t get that.”

            Kristina summoned a smile now. “That’s exactly what Ingrid asked me when I was putting her to bed just now,” she replied.

            Marcus extended his index finger and snapped his hand in the air.  “Smart girl,” he said, smiling too. “Really,” he continued, assuming that Kristina’s thoughts were in line with his own, “A God who does something bad to us so we can learn something, so that we can be happy?  That doesn’t make any sense.  That God’s not for me. Why not just do something so we’ll be happy, cut straight to that part?”

            “Ingrid would agree with you,” Kristina told him, but without saying what she herself thought.

            “Like I said,” he told her, “Ingrid’s a smart girl.” He paused and adjusted his sweater around Kristina’s shoulders. “Warm enough now?” he asked, feeling calmer than he had at any point since the evening before, now that he was sitting next to Kristina. She supports me!  She’ll be an ally for me. He was certain of it.

            Kristina was relieved that Marcus let the topic go. Let him think I agree with him, Kristina thought.  At least for now.  She was still in the process of figuring out what she did believe about all of this. She had felt a new hope come into her heart while talking with Lina, a tender hope that she didn’t feel ready to share with Marcus, out of fear that he’d trample all over it. No, she needed that hope right now, needed it desperately. So she kept her opinions – and her wishes – to herself. Now she would concentrate on blocking out the doubts Marcus had tried – unintentionally – to sow in her heart. If he’d realized this was what he was doing, he would have kept his thoughts to himself.  The last thing he wanted to do was create any lack of harmony between himself and Kristina, the person on the homestead he saw as his strongest supporter.

            But since he didn’t realize that he’d misgauged Kristina’s views, Marcus was feeling happy how, happy enough to chat about something else. He asked about Ingrid and how school was going, and about what Kristina had done during the day.  He knew even without her telling him that her day was occupied with cleaning, sewing and making preparations for the canning season, plus helping Lina. Even so, he enjoyed hearing her tell about everything: She always added little details she’d noticed that intrigued him, or shared amusing moments and jokes that made him chuckle.  He imagined that her “reports” on her day consisted of whatever came to mind to her to tell him.  He didn’t know that throughout the day, Kristina was consciously taking note of this or that, committing this or that conversation or remark to memory, not for her own amusement, but so that she’d have something engaging to tell Marcus in the evening.  It was as if she was living not for herself, but for what she could share with this man she was growing steadily closer to.  And who appreciated hearing all of it, each and every day.

            He, in turn, stored up bits and pieces of his day at the office, carefully selecting the encounters and observations that would show him in the very best light – as smart, quick-witted, strong, and powerful.  He depended on these details to paint the kind of picture of himself for Kristina that he wanted her to see.  But now, as he related the latest installment, and enjoyed the sound of her laughter as she smiled at the funny parts, and the shine in her eyes as he described this or that triumph over his coworkers, he began wondering about various points, and not for the first time: How could he make her love him, or keep her loving him, if she already did, without his important position?  Would she still want him if he was just a forester?  Of course, he reminded himself when this questionrushed into his head again now, that Kristina’s husband had been a forester.  This wasn’t necessarily a comforting thought…

            With a strong effort, Marcus pushed these upsetting thoughts out by focusing his eyes on Kristina and laughing – very sincerely – as she described the way one of the nanny goats had greedily gobbled up a piece of cheese rind Kristina had offered her.  “I told her, here, back to the source! Make more milk for more cheese, please!”

            As the yard began to grow dark, Kristina removed Marcus’ sweater from around her shoulders and said, “Time for me to turn in.  Thank you for keeping me warm.” She placed the sweater back around his shoulders and laid one hand on his, leaving the other on his shoulder, where it smoothed the sweater.

            Marcus took her hand in both of his and rubbed it, as if to warm it up. “I can’t stand to see you looking cold.” He smiled and brought her hand to his lips and kissed it.  Then, surprising himself, he added, softly, “I’m sorry I didn’t come out last night.”

            Kristina looked down, blushing.  She understood that these words hadn’t come easily to Marcus, but she was so happy to hear them.  Caressing his shoulder with her free hand, she replied, equally softly, “I missed you.”  Marcus brought his free hand around her waist and pulled her gently toward him until their lips met.  The kiss was brief. It was not their first, but even so, it felt to them both that they were entering a new phase of their courtship.  For Kristina, this meant a feeling of greater confidence in Marcus’ devotion to her. Marcus, for his part, was already thinking ahead to the months to come, and worrying about whether he would be able to keep this woman’s love – if it was already his, that is.

Kristina squeezed Marcus’ hand one last time, stood up, and walked toward the doorway.  Pausing to turn in his direction, she saw that he was standing now, too, watching her. She smiled and waved, then walked inside. Marcus stood there for a minute more. Slipping his arms into his sweater, he felt her warmth clinging to it, and he was glad she’d been sitting out there too lightly dressed.

*          *          *

            As Kristina was settling herself into bed next to Ingrid, still feeling Marcus’ kiss, she heard movement on the other side of her door in the workshop and saw a thread of light flow through the space beneath her door.  At first she wondered whether Marcus had come back, but then decided that no, he wouldn’t have done that.  There were certain unspoken rules to their courtship. One of them was that he never came to her room when Ingrid was there, and really, almost never, even when Ingrid wasn’t.  Kristina listened intently for clues to who was in the workshop.  After a minute or so, she heard the scrape of a stool, and realized that Peter was back for another late evening of cabinetry work.

Peter did, indeed, pick up his project where he’d left off the previous evening.  He picked up his thinking at the same spot he’d left it, too, revisiting one of Lina’s ideas that he had been able to hold onto:  her suggestion that the painful things we go through are part of God’s plan for us.  Jesus, he had thought when she said that, and he thought it again now.  Are you out of your mind? That was just too much for him to bear. While the family was talking of this, he began feeling first agitated, and then angry. It surprised him that Marcus, too, was clearly angered by Lina’s suggestion. A rare moment of agreement between the two of them!  But Peter assumed that he and his brother were probably angry for different reasons.  He concluded that Marcus didn’t want anyone else – not other people, and not even God – telling him how to live his life, because he believed himself quite capable of figuring everything out on his own.  Which was why he felt so angry that their father had told him to come back to working at home. That was Peter’s explanation of his brother’s dissatisfaction.

Peter himself was growing angry for another reason.  Here was his own sister – his own paralyzed sister – suggesting that God allows us – no, forces us – to go through hell on earth and then wants to work with us so we can be happy.  No! Peter had felt during supper. This No! most likely arose out of Peter’s firm belief – adopted and nurtured over the nearly 26 previous years of his life, that complete responsibility and blame for every single painful thing that ever happened to him lay squarely with him and no one else. 

As Lina spoke and the others asked her questions, Peter was thinking. If all that happened to me was God’s plan… Does that mean it wasn’t all my fault? He didn’t know where to go with this possibility. He felt, without words, that certain conclusions followed from this idea, but he had absolutely no desire to explore them.  Rather, he suddenly noticed himself beginning to feel angry.  But why?  Shouldn’t he feel comforted that his suffering might not be his fault after all? All he knew was that when Lina suggested that there was a way to get free of suffering by asking God to help us, it was all he could do to keep from overturning the table and rushing out into the fresh air.  When supper was over, he was the first one out the door. 

Walking briskly into the forest, he followed the path, ignoring the nagging pain in his right leg, until he came to a grove of aspens.  Their leaves were dancing in the light evening breeze. Peter’s mood did not match their lightheartedness. All the same, he sat down heavily amongst the trees and leaned back against one of them.

Peter wanted to scream, but he knew that would bring the whole family running. So, instead, he took out the matchbox and small pack of cigarettes from his shirt pocket. He lit a cigarette. Then, holding the spent match in one hand, he held the lit cigarette to his lips with the other and took a long drag on it.  Once he’d exhaled and began feeling some measure of calm beginning to flow through his body, he carefully wiped the end of the match with a fallen leaf, still damp from the day’s rain, to make sure it was fully extinguished, and then slipped it back into the matchbox.  He toyed with the matchbox as he smoked, tossing it absentmindedly up and down in his hand.

After the second cigarette, he was no longer feeling possessed by anger.  Having wrapped the cigarette butts in another fallen leaf, he slipped them into his pocket along with the match box: He’d put them in the sand bucket outside the workshop.  Then he sat for a few more minutes, casting his eyes aimlessly about the forest that surrounded him. His gaze fell upon a fallen aspen branch that was lying within arm’s reach of where he was sitting. 

A few inches thick, its bark was still intact, and a few dead leaves still clung to one of three smaller branches radiating off from the central section.  Peter reached over and, taking the branch in his hand, placed it upright on the ground next to him.  It reached nearly to his head when he stood up next to it.  Wrapping his hand around the branch, Peter tapped it lightly on the forest floor once or twice, and then strode out the forest, using the branch in his left hand as a walking stick.

In the workshop, Peter laid the branch down flat along the rear of the workbench. Then he spread out his sketches, so that they lay between him and the branch.  Now, sitting at the workbench, doodling aimlessly on the scrap of paper before him, Peter gazed at the aspen branch. He brought his focus to the mottled bark whose task in life was to protect the delicate, living wood tissues beneath it.  This branch had recently fallen, and its bark was still tightly pressed to the pulp.  Peter took the branch in his two hands, resting it atop his open palms, and continued to gaze at it.  It seemed to him that he felt something in his hands.  A slight tingling, perhaps. 

He sometimes felt this when he was holding or touching wood he was planning to work with, but he’d rarely felt it in recent months, maybe even for a year.  Even when he did experience this sensation, it was fleeting, barely perceptible.  Now, though, the longer he held the branch, the more strongly he felt the tingling. It grew into a gentle pulsing that seemed to him to be flowing from the branch itself into his hands. Is that even possible?  he wondered, before turning his attention back to the branch, to its beautiful gray bark mottled with bumps and spots of darker gray. 

But then Peter ceased to notice the thoughts. He felt a calm come over him, as the tingling spread up into his whole hands, then up his arms.  Tears began to flow, although he stifled them, not wanting to give voice to what he was feeling, not while Kristina and Ingrid were sleeping in the the next room.   Peter closed his hands gently around the branch and raised it slightly off the bench. At the same time, he leaned his head down until it rested on the cool aspen bark.  He closed his eyes and opened his heart to the sensation of the bark against his forehead. His tears continued to fall, and without even consciously realizing he was doing so, Peter began to speak to the branch, in a soft, anguished voice. Help me.  Please. Help me.

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Above the River, Chapter 13

Chapter 13

June 25, 1949

Gassmann-Bunke homestead

            Do you remember this June day? That was the day when Lina, confined – physically, at least – to her wheelchair, and tired of her family members’ spoken and unspoken image of her as paralyzed and broken, slammed the flat of her hand down onto the table during supper.  “Enough,” she said loudly.   And sharply.  “I’ve had enough.”  And everyone looked at her, open-mouthed and surprised.

            Lina’s “I’ve had enough” cut through the stultifying haze of the one- or two-word questions her family seemed obsessed with, questions whose effect on these people’s mind had been as paralyzing as Lina’s injuries had been to her body. Her “I’ve had enough” shifted her family’s attention swiftly away from the discussion of whether her brother Marcus should continue in his Civil Service position in Varel, or come back to working in the family’s forestry business.  Lina was correct when she concluded that her father (Viktor) and grandfather (Ulrich) had decided on the answer to this particular question well before Viktor raised it at supper. So, her announcement did not in any way derail the discussion. In fact, everyone but Marcus was grateful to her for putting an end to it.

            When Lina spoke up, most everyone at the table – her parents, grandparents, and two brothers, Peter and Marcus – assumed that she was objecting to the discussion of Marcus’ work or, perhaps, to his characterization of herself and Peter as “useless cripples”.  Her mother, Ethel, for one, although she was shocked as everyone else by Lina’s outburst, was at the same time inwardly pleased that she was standing up to her brother.  Ethel herself had had enough of Marcus’ harsh words toward his siblings, but she had not had the energy to face confronting him over it. Now, however, she felt emboldened to speak up herself.

            “Yes, Marcus,” Ethel said, “Lina’s right.  It doesn’t serve any of us well for you to talk about your brother and sister like that. It’s so unkind.  They can’t help –“

            “Can’t they?” Marcus retorted, leaning forward, shoulders back, fists clenching.  He gazed fiercely at his siblings, seeing in them demons who had as good as conspired to ruin his life.  In this moment, his habitual question, So what?, which expressed his utter lack of concern for anyone else’s plight, as long as it didn’t affect him personally, fell by the wayside, replaced by a new one: Why me? But his Why me? possessed none of the spiritual subtlety contained in his brother Peter’s Why?  Marcus was not reflecting on God’s purpose in plunking him down into this family with two siblings who lacked fully-functioning legs.  No.  He was now consumed by thoughts of the injustice of it all. 

            “Why?” he shouted to all of them.  “Why do I have to suffer because they can’t pull their weight?” He pounded both fists on the table and stood up, sending his chair toppling over onto the floor behind him. 

            Viktor opened his mouth to respond, but Lina spoke first.

            “Did you not hear me, Marcus?” she asked, calmly, and yet with an edge to her voice. “I’ve had enough.  Stop talking about me as a cripple.  As paralyzed.”

            “What else are you?” Marcus shouted in reply, sneering.  He even took a step toward her, gesturing with disgust at her motionless legs.  But when Viktor stood up, too, and made to come around the other side of the table, Marcus stopped where he was.  Lina continued speaking.

            “I am not these legs!” she announced, patting her thighs.  “Did my brain and my heart become somehow less functional when that wood fell on top of me? Were they crippled, too?”

            Peter, listening to his sister’s words, was silently repeating these questions to himself, about himself. He was reflecting on his leg, torn apart by that Russian bullet at the front.  Is my heart crippled, as painful as my leg? Or is it whole?

            “It isn’t your brain or your heart we need here in the woods, or in the workshop,” Marcus went on, waving his hand first in the vague direction of the forest and then the workshop.  “It’s a working body we need!”  He stomped on the floor, in a motion so childish that Lina would have laughed, if such a response wouldn’t have enraged him even more.

            Now Viktor did take a step in Marcus’ direction. “Sit down!” he bellowed. “You’ve gone too far.  Way too far.”

            Marcus, after setting his chair upright, did return to his seat. He sat there, his hands resting on the table and his fists opening and closing, his face contorted with suppressed anger.

            “Thank you, Father,” Lina said, reaching out and laying her hand on Viktor’s arm as he sat back down. 

            Peter and Ethel and Ulrich and Renate remained silent, stunned by the display of all this emotion. Renate, true to her character, was both desperately and methodically considering what she could do to turn everything around.  This was not the way suppertime at the Gassmann household was supposed to go.  And it was clear that there were not enough tasty rolls in all the world to close the door that had just been flung open.

            It was Ethel who finally spoke first.

            “Lina, dear,” she said quietly, her hand on her daughter’s shoulder, “of course your heart is still whole. I believe it is.  Don’t you believe it?”

            Lina nodded.  “Yes, Mama. I do!  And that’s not all.” Everyone looked at her expectantly, the feelings that flowed through each of their hearts varying from person to person.

            “What, then?” Peter asked her.  He hadn’t yet come up with an answer to the question that had arisen within him, about his own heart, so he wanted to hear what Lina would say next. Maybe her words would help him find his own answer. Although she was his younger sister, she had always seemed wiser to him than the rest of them.

            Lina took in a deep breath, looked from one to the other of them, and then let the breath out in a big puff.

            “I believe that God let me have the accident – let me become paralyzed – because it’s part of His plan for me.”

            Marcus snorted and stared at her, mouth open.  “Part of his plan for you?” He shook his head, smirking, then shrugged. He decided it was better not to get into a debate with her about something he considered so obviously ridiculous – that God could have something like that in mind for anyone. But then, in spite of himself, he did respond.

            “Fine, then!”  he told Lina. “Let it be His plan for you! But why does it have to be His plan for me, too?  Eh?  That’s what I was talking about. Can’t you live out God’s plan for you without dragging me into it?”

            “Quiet, Marcus,” Ulrich told him gently. “Let her speak her piece.”

            “What do you mean, Sweetheart?” Renate asked.  But then she kept talking, without giving Lina a chance to answer.  “Certainly, God has a plan for each of us.  I accept that. But how in the world could the accident be part of it? God wants for all of us to be happy, doesn’t He?  Doesn’t He want happiness and joy for each and every child of His?”

            “Then he’s sure set things up wrong in this family!” Marcus grumbled. He was immediately shushed by both his grandparents and parents, although Viktor himself was thinking along those lines, except that in his thoughts, he added, And in this country.

            “Mama, I think so, too,” Lina said earnestly. Her voice now filled with a lightness none of them had heard in nearly five years, not since before her accident. It was a lightness that reminded Viktor of how Ethel had sounded when he’d first met her, and while they were courting.  He turned and studied his daughter’s face as she spoke.  Lina now reminded him of Ethel on the day when the two of them first climbed into the abandoned treehouse in the woods: glowing, and happy, as if she’d rediscovered a joy long buried.

            “But I have just been thinking,” Lina began telling them slowly, as if allowing the words to come to her, instead of thinking them up.  She told them about the swallow with the injured wing that she’d once seen on the river bank. “At first I thought that swallow was done for, because, well, how can a bird survive with an injured wing?  But then, it summoned strength from somewhere. I could see it happening.  Do you believe me?”  She looked around at her family members.  Everyone except Marcus was looking at her. Most everyone nodded, or at least smiled in encouragement.

“I think the strength was from God.  Or the strength was God Himself. I don’t know.” Lina waved her hand.  “But the swallow took in that power, I think, and lifted off. And after that, it soared.” Lina showed with her hand how the bird rose up.   “Just soared, in the sky, gliding above the river and swooping down over the water and the field next to it, scooping up the insects to eat.” She smiled, thinking of it, and her mother smiled, too, hearing the story.

“So what?” Marcus asked coldly, reverting to his habitual question.  “It was God’s plan for the bird to hurt its wing? Is that what you’re saying?” His tone was so derisive that Peter cringed on his sister’s behalf, although Lina’s face betrayed no hint of distress. On the contrary: she was beaming, her face a light pink. They all noticed this, but they didn’t see her slip her right hand into her apron pocket, so that she could feel the folded-up newspaper article she’d put there that morning.

“Marcus, I swear,” Ethel told him with a frown. “Let her speak, for heaven’s sake!”

“Fine,” he replied, slumping petulantly back in his chair.  “Complete nonsense,” he mumbled.

“Marcus,” Lina said defiantly. “I believe it was God’s plan for the bird to hurt its wing.”

“But how can that be?” Renate burst in, not at all unkindly, but because she genuinely wanted to understand. But then she waved a hand in Lina’s direction. “I’m sorry.  Go on.”

“I don’t know what God’s plan for that little bird was, but I fully believe He had one.  A plan,” she said, looking at her grandmother, “that would lead to its happiness.  Because I agree with you that God wants us all to be happy.”

“So why doesn’t He just make everything in the world play out so we are happy?” Viktor asked her.  His tone, although challenging, was not, unlike Marcus’, dismissive.  It was uncharacteristic of Viktor to betray any of his inner thoughts, much less any of his inner desires. But in this question he did so. It was, however, in a way that didn’t make these desires clear to anyone other than Ethel, perhaps. She sensed in his tone the deep sadness of a man whose life has not turned out happily, despite the promise of happiness that seemed so evident at certain points in that life.  But she was the only one who heard this in her husband’s voice. The others heard simply a question asked in all sincerity. This in itself was surprising enough that they would probably have stopped to think about it, had they not been hanging on Lina’s every word, waiting for her response.

“Maybe – and this is what I’ve been thinking,” Lina went on, her movements animated now, “that God’s plan doesn’t just mean that He draws up some outline for our life, some events that are fated and that we have no control over.”

“But you didn’t have control over that accident,” Peter put in, leaning forward, “any more than I had control over the bullets that went into my body.”

“No, no, of course,” Lina said, looking lovingly at her brother. “That’s not what I meant.” She paused and took another breath, collecting her thoughts or, perhaps, gathering them as they came to her.  “What if… What if some of what happens to us… specifically to us – like my accident and your wounds, Peter – what if that is fated, arranged by God, however it is that God arranges things – but that the rest is not?”

“What do you mean, ‘the rest’?” Ethel asked.  “What is ‘the rest’?”

“Yes,” Renate joined in. “What is there in our life that doesn’t happen to us?  People are always doing things that affect us.”

“But we take action, too,” Ulrich pointed out.  “To make things happen in our lives.”

“Yes,” Renate said. “Naturally! But what we do… Lina, do you think that is fated, too?  Does God determine what we do?”

“No one should get to determine what I do!” Marcus objected, frowning. “Not even God!”

The others ignored him. But Ethel did respond to her mother.

“Mama, how could that be?” she asked Renate, shaking her head. “We are thinking humans.  Didn’t God give us free will?”

“Yes, yes,” Renate agreed, tipping her head to the side in assent.  “Yes, of course.  But then how do we make sense of it? What is God’s plan, and what isn’t?  When I decide to do something, I think it’s my own idea, not God’s. But maybe that’s not right…”  For the first time in her life, Renate began to entertain the possibility that maybe she did not do absolutely everything on her own, that perhaps all her calculations and manipulations were ordained or, at least, prompted, by God.

Viktor, who had been listening in silence, spoke up again now, more forcefully this time, although still without rancor. “Again, I ask: If God wants us to be happy, why not just arrange everything so that none of us has to go through things like we’ve just gone through in this country?  How can there be a God whose plan includes war?”

“Papa, this is exactly what I am trying to say,” Lina told him.  She laid her hand gently on his once more. “I don’t think war is something God would plan for us.”

“But why not, if He plans an injured wing for a bird?”  This from Marcus. He had once again entered the conversation. This time he was hoping to discover why the hell he had ended up having to come work for his father, which, to him, was the equivalent of having a broken wing.  But, hoping to pass off his own genuine question as a taunt, he smirked, gave a little laugh, and leaned back in his chair, one elbow perched on its back.

“Everyone just be still for a bit,” Ethel pleaded. “Let Lina collect her thoughts and tell us what she means.”

“Thank you, Mama,” Lina said, slipping her right hand out of her pocket and laying it on her mother’s.  She didn’t consciously notice that she was now physically connecting her parents through her own two hands, and that the joyful energy streaming through her was beginning to flow into them, too.  

“All right,” Lina went on. “This is what occurred to me a little bit ago.  It’s all about the bird finding that strength and lifting up out of the mud.  What made that possible?  It wasn’t like it just crashed down there with an injured wing and then, suddenly, poof! and the wing was working fine again.  At least I don’t think so.”

Marcus interrupted his sister. “You said it yourself. It found the strength. Its own strength, I wager.”

Ethel was about to speak sternly to Marcus, but he fell silent of his own accord, and Lina resumed speaking.

  “I don’t think that’s quite the way it happened, Marcus. I think maybe something flowed into that bird.  Something from God. A feeling? A thought? A wish?” Here she raised her right hand briefly off of Ethel’s and pointed at her brother.  “And before you object, Marcus, yes, I do believe birds can have all of those things. You should know me well enough to realize that.” She even smiled now at her brother.  “So, now, the bird has a deep wish, deep in its little birdy soul, to be well, to be whole.  To fly. To soar!  And it wants it so much, with all its little heart.” She paused and looked at them all, smiling now. “And then God helps it. And it flies!” Lina lifted her hands, showing with them the motion a bird’s wings would make.

Marcus was silent, as they all were, each thinking his or her own private thoughts as they mulled over what Lina had said.  The first sound came from Ethel, who began to cry, quietly in the beginning. Then her gentle weeping shifted into racking sobs. She propped up her elbows on the table and took her head in her hands, her shoulders heaving as she cried and cried. 

“Oh, Mama,” Lina said to her as Viktor looked across the table at his wife, unsure whether he should get up and go over to her.  He decided against it.

“I’m sorry.  Did I upset you?”  Lina couldn’t understand what she could have said to elicit this response.  But Ethel, still crying, head in her hands, shook her head, and after a minute or two, she looked up, wiping her eyes on her apron.

“And God can help you, too.  Is that what you mean?” she asked Lina quietly.  “Because you have the wish in your heart to walk?  Is that right?  Is that what you’re trying to say?”

            Lina nodded and, wrapping her arm around her mother’s shoulder, pulled the other woman toward her. “Exactly, Mama. Exactly.”

            Marcus, who made no reply to all of this, was nonetheless mulling over what he had heard. Does God really have a plan for us? A plan we have no say in? Like a plan for that bird to hurt its wing? Or does the bird just have a plan for itself? Does it just have its own wish and the strength to make it a reality?

*          *          *

As we’ve already said, Kristina was no longer in the kitchen when Viktor announced that Marcus would have to leave his job. Sensing that an important family discussion was in the offing, she took Ingrid and went outside.  Even though she and her daughter were like family here among the Gassmann-Bunkes, they weren’t actually family, and Kristina was careful not to push that boundary.  Let them have their privacy.

Kristina didn’t have to be a mind reader to know that the discussion turned tense after she and Ingrid left the house: Out in the garden where Ingrid was helping her do some weeding, Kristina heard Marcus shouting, but she didn’t catch any words. Not wishing to make what was clearly a difficult situation more awkward, should anyone come out and see her near the house, she shuffled Ingrid inside the workshop and to their room, where she helped the girl practice writing her letters.  Thus it was that, due to her politeness and unwillingness to eavesdrop, Kristina missed one of the most consequential conversations the Gassmann-Bunkes had had in years.

It wasn’t at all the case that Kristina wasn’t curious about the discussion that played out without her inside the house.  She was quite eager to hear all about it. After all, it might affect her and Ingrid in some way… But she didn’t feel torn at all about making her exit: She knew that either Lina or Marcus or both of them would tell her all about whatever it was, probably that very evening. And, indeed, during her evening walk with Lina – by which we’re to understand that Lina was sitting in the wheelchair and Kristina was pushing her down the road in the direction of Bockhorn –  Kristina heard all the details of the conversation. In the early days of their evening walks, it had seemed awkward to both Lina and Kristina to converse in this way, without being able to look into each other’s eyes and see each other’s expressions.  But now, nearly four years into their friendship, they no longer needed to see each other’s faces as they spoke: They knew each other so well by this time, that each could picture in her mind’s eye the facial expression that accompanied this or that tone of voice.

What Lina told her tonight didn’t come as a total surprise to Kristina: Marcus had confided in her the previous week that Viktor had mentioned this very possibility to him in passing, and that Marcus had been incensed. That explained the shouting she’d heard.  She asked how Lina felt about the news and learned that she was happy that her father had made the final decision. 

“Even though that means Marcus is going to be an absolute bear to live with from now on,” Lina added, with a smile.

Kristina smiled, too.  As fond as she was of Marcus – he had been actively courting her the past couple of years – she knew the truth of Lina’s remark, too.  Marcus liked to do what he wanted, and hated it when others tried to interfere with his wishes or plans.

“But do you think it’ll help things around here?” she asked her friend.

Lina nodded.  “I know it will.  It’s been hard on Grandpa and Dad.  They’ve been falling behind with the forest since the Poles left. And since…” She gestured at her legs.

“Which is not your fault,” Kristina reminded her gently, leaning over and laying her hand on her friend’s shoulder.

Lina grimaced, an expression Kristina couldn’t see, but intuited.  “Well, if you were to hear what Marcus has to say about it –“

“I don’t care to hear.  What I care about is that with Marcus back helping out here, maybe you can stop feeling responsible for what’s not getting done.”

Lina let out a big sigh.  “I may never stop feeling responsible for that,” she said, and then added, “but I hope to be able to start helping again before too long.”

“Oh, really?” Kristina asked, puzzled.  “How? I mean…”

Lina waved her hand vaguely, and told her, “I’ll explain to you.  Just not now.  Tomorrow, maybe. Yes, tomorrow.”

Kristina could tell that Lina was tired, so she didn’t push for an answer.  But she felt left out. She had the feeling that something important had taken place in the kitchen after she and Ingrid had left, that they hadn’t talked just about Marcus’ job.  There was something Lina wasn’t telling her.  And she felt hurt by that.  If Lina had some plan for how she could start working again, why didn’t she tell her – her closest friend –  about it? 

They walked back to the house, where she helped Lina wash up and get ready for bed.  Lina really was tired. Kristina could see it.  But there was something different about her, too, something new: a lightness. A new sense of quiet happiness and calm had displaced the melancholy that so often lay like a surface layer over Lina’s presence.  And when Ethel came in to kiss Lina goodnight, she looked at her daughter with what seemed to Kristina a special tenderness.

Outside once more, Kristina put her own daughter to bed, then took a seat on the bench outside the barn. This was her routine: to spend a bit of time outside, taking in the evening air, unless it was pouring rain. Knowing her habit, Marcus would always come sit with her for a while, too, after she’d had her own quiet time. This was their chance to catch up on the day, for him to share his thoughts with her, for her to tell him about Ingrid’s experiences at school, and whatever else was on her mind.  But this evening, he did not come out. 

As she sat there alone, Kristina began feeling like even more of an outsider than she had earlier.  These four years, as she’d grown closer to all the Gassmanns and Bunkes, but especially to Lina and Marcus, she had also, in spite of her intention not to do so, come to consider herself almost a member of the family.  Not a blood member, of course, but maybe the orphan child of a distant, dead great-aunt.  Someone with at least some hereditary right to be living there. Or, in the case of Marcus, as a future wife.  This was her deepest wish, and in the two years they’d been courting, Marcus had given her the impression that this was his wish, too, even though he hadn’t yet spoken directly with her of marriage.  If it came to pass, then she would be a sister-in-law to Lina, and Ethel and Viktor’s daughter-in-law.   But in this moment, feeling rebuffed by both Lina and Marcus, the thought that had been constantly on her mind at first, but which had nearly faded away by now, came back with a sting: She was still just that refugee they’d taken pity on nearly four years earlier. They were kind, it’s true, but she didn’t really belong here. I am not one of them. I will never be one of them.

She went inside, closed the door, and climbed into bed alongside her refugee daughter. It was a long time before she fell asleep that night.  Part of the reason was that, just as she went into her room, Peter came into the adjoining workshop to continue working on plans for a cabinetry project.  It wasn’t that he was making noise, but Peter rarely worked this late into the evening. Kristina guessed that the suppertime discussion had greatly agitated him, too.  Kristina turned her back to the door, under which a thin sliver of light flowed into her room.  We are alive, she repeated over and over.  We are alive. We are safe. We are blessed. Be content with that.

*          *          *

            It was, indeed, unusual for Peter to still be out in the workshop when Kristina turned in for the night.  In fact, he didn’t strictly need to be out there tonight, either. The project he was working on could easily wait until the next day after work.  But he wanted to be alone, to have a good think.  The family’s conversation that night had really thrown him off kilter.  It had brought to the surface thoughts and feelings he had been careful to avoid since being sent home, wounded, in 1944.  Such a jumble of thoughts… He had never really confronted them. He preferred to place his focus on making it through the days and nights by working as hard as he could here in the workshop.  Working constantly, minding his own business, and keeping out of his brother’s way – that’s what had made it possible for him to manage this post-war life so far.

But he wasn’t doing a good job of managing things at the moment.  Tonight, Marcus and Lina had dragged the unwanted thoughts right up out of the depths of his heart and thrown them down on the table for him to contemplate. Not that Peter could blame Lina. She wasn’t trying to hurt him the way Marcus was.  She was just dealing with her suffering in her own way, and explaining to them all why she suddenly felt hopeful.  Peter was happy that she could feel that way – or at least he told himself he was. But he’d been unprepared for the rush of fear that rose up in him once the conversation shifted away from Marcus’ rant about his and Lina’s uselessness. 

The truth was, he’d somehow learned to cope with Marcus’ hostility toward him.  He could shut himself off from its effects in a way he didn’t quite understand.  Really, he’d been able to do this in regard to Marcus from the time they were kids. It was as if Peter just didn’t hear what Marcus said.  No, rather, it was as if he’d hear his brother speaking and know all that anger was coming toward him, but he would somehow feel he wasn’t even there across from his brother. Of course, he was there; his body was there. But at the same time, he himself didn’t seem to be totally there, as if he was simultaneously both in his own body and not in his own body.  So, he’d end up not even really hearing what Marcus said to him.  And, as a result, he never objected, didn’t fight back when Marcus shifted from verbal attacks to physical assault.  Peter learned early on to endure. Marcus would eventually run out of energy for the fight and go off somewhere else, finally leaving Peter in peace.  It was only when his parents or grandparents happened to witness Marcus’ attacks that Peter was rescued before the scene reached its natural conclusion. Marcus would then be punished – often receiving his own corporeal karmic consequences from Viktor – and this punishment would set in motion a new round of attacks on Peter, just in a more secluded location. 

Such was Peter’s childhood. And he carried this way of responding to difficulties into his adult life.  Don’t think about it. Don’t talk about it.  Don’t poke the hornet’s nest. This was his approach, whether that hornet’s nest was his brother Marcus, or the horrific war memories, the physical pain of his injury, or the feeling of humiliation that came with being discharged from the army while others were still on the battlefield defending their country. Peter worked hard to keep all of these thoughts at bay, day in and day out.  Doing the cabinetry work was an effective antidote to the disquieting thoughts and feelings: Working with his hands on a project calmed him down, as did sketching a plan for a wardrobe, or actually cutting the wood for a piece of furniture. There was something very satisfying and soothing about working with concrete objects and creating a tangible result. That helped. That is why he was in the workshop so late on this evening.

Peter sat on the edge of a tall stool at the workbench, his right foot on the stool’s lower rung, while his left extended straight, the ball of his foot on the ground. This position was the most comfortable way for him to sit, because it didn’t require him to bend his knee. The sheets of paper with the plans he was sketching for the sideboard were spread out before him, and he began studying them.  He was pondering the best way – not just from a practical point of view, but also aesthetically – to connect the top of the sideboard, with its flat back and overhanging shelf with slats for holding plates vertically, to the bottom.  Over the past couple of days, he’d tried out several different approaches, sketching them to see which he liked best.  In past projects, he had used either simple, square posts or more visually pleasing rounded, turned posts.  But neither of them felt right to him for this project, so he began doodling on a scrap piece of paper.

Peter enjoyed the creative demands that this design work placed on him.  Like his mother, Ethel, he had a keen eye for aesthetics, and he had managed to come up with graceful, yet sturdy pieces for past clients. But, also like his mother, he worked best when he was able to let go of everything around him and slip into a mental state where he was both intently focused on what he was doing, and not striving to work the design out with his conscious mind.  He seemed to have inherited his father and grandfather’s intuitive connection to the trees that served as the sources of the wood he worked with: He would hold each piece in his hand and consciously connect with it. He could never have explained how he did this, but his father and his grandfather both would have understood it, even if they couldn’t put it into words, either.  The three of them would probably have described it by talking about the presence of God in the trees and, thus, in the wood that came from it.  But Peter never thought about God being actually there in the wood. Unlike Ethel, who, as Viktor had put it, brought heaven into her quilts through her stitching, Peter never considered that he might be working with God when he was designing the furniture that their clients appreciated so much. 

In viewing his work this way, Peter was more like his grandmother, Renate, who had, until this particular day, considered that whatever she did in life, she did all on her own, rather than in some mysterious collaboration with God.  This world view, of course, has both an up side and a down side: When the clients loved a sideboard or wardrobe, Peter would feel great pride, as well as confidence in his ability to bring a spark of an idea to life in wooden form. But when the designs didn’t come so easily, or a piece turned out less than stellar, as had often been the case since he’d returned from the war, then Peter assumed all the blame himself, feeling he had misunderstood what the wood had been trying to tell him.  It was all always on him, responsibility for both the design and the result. This was especially the case these days, when he felt it was harder to tap into what the wood was trying to guide him to do.  It’s important to note that he never blamed the wood for a simply average piece of furniture, only himself.

That’s exactly what he was doing at this moment, as he sat, pencil in hand, staring at the drawings before him. He felt paralyzed.  He couldn’t let go of the thoughts swirling through his head.  Some part of his mind, of which he wasn’t consciously aware, was beginning to sense a connection between everything Lina had said that day and his own way of collaborating with the wood.  Lina had been talking about one’s life path, not about the work one does, at least not directly… But when she told that story about the swallow on the riverbank, and when she suggested that when we really want something, God can help us, work with us, guide us… something about that clicked for Peter, but just for a split second. He couldn’t hold onto what had clicked, or express it. 

*          *          *

Kristina, lying beside Ingrid on the other side of the wall, was also struggling, attempting unsuccessfully to drive away worries about what the days ahead would bring.  

Kristina had been living with the Gassmann-Bunkes since the summer of 1945, when she and Ingrid were resettled there after the end of the war. That sounds so matter-of-fact, doesn’t it?  she sometimes thought, when she found herself explaining to people she encountered in Bockhorn or Varel how she came to live so far from where she’d grown up.  The simple words she repeated over and over to each new person, “I’m a war widow, and my daughter and I were sent here from Danzig after we left East Prussia,” seemed so woefully inadequate to Kristina as an explanation of what she and Ingrid had experienced in early 1945, when push had come to shove.  How could people understand what they went through?  Then again, she reminded herself, every single person she encountered had gone through something during the war.

Although Kristina assumed that people could have no idea of what had brought her to the Gassmann-Bunke homestead, quite a lot of information about what took place when the Soviets entered East Prussia had, in fact, made its way to this opposite side of the country. Those reports, whether spurious or not, were enough to make even the most jaded listeners’ blood run cold, and their hearts open.  Thus, while Kristina shared very few details of her experiences with those she met, or even with the Gassmann-Bunkes, everyone around her had their own imaginings about what she and her daughter might have endured. There was the desperate flight across the Vistula Lagoon to Danzig, and the months spent there as they waited in terror, hoping that an escape route would open up and lead them further west before the Soviets caught up with them. 

Their escape route came in the form of resettlement, first to the Displaced Persons camp at Bergen-Belsen. Everyone here knew about Bergen-Belsen, about the atrocities committed there when the Nazis were using it as a death camp. Once Kristina landed with the Gassmann-Bunkes, she learned that if she mentioned that she and Ingrid had been in Bergen-Belsen – which she did only a few times before shifting her explanation – people looked at her with a mixture of horror, compassion, and shame. She could see them studying her features, as they tried to determine whether she was Jewish.

When conversations faltered at this point, Kristina, who was not, in fact, Jewish, hastened to reassure people that she and her daughter had ended up in the camp after it had been liberated and turned into a camp for Displaced Persons. But she suspected that people stopped hearing anything she said once they heard the words “Bergen-Belsen”. Even if they did continue to take in what she was saying, more confusing information bombarded them: Kristina and Ingrid had been assigned to the Polish section of the camp. Hearing this, her interlocutors – the ones who were still listening – began searching her face again. So they’re Polish? Kristina imagined them thinking.  And so, she would volunteer further details: that she and Ingrid had ended up in the Polish section of the camp, even though they were German. “Every bit as German as you!” Kristina would say, consciously adopting a light tone of voice.

By this point in her story, which had still not reached its end point, Kristina clearly saw the confusion in people’s eyes. For this reason, after she took to telling a greatly-abbreviated version of how she came to be living with the Gassmann-Bunkes. She skipped right over the Bergen-Belsen section and started with the next stage: when they were assigned to the refugee camp in Oldenburg. From there, she moved on to detailing the part of the whole, months-long ordeal that seemed to her a genuine gift from God: the day when she and Ingrid arrived at the Gassmann-Bunke homestead.

In fact, a gift from God it was, although the officials in charge of refugee placement made their decision based on the fact that Kristina had grown up on a farm and could thus contribute to work on the land and in the forest, too: Her husband, Artur, was a forester before he was drafted, and before he gave his life for his country’s war effort on the Russian front. Although Kristina herself did not have any forestry experience, at least the setting at the Gassmann-Bunke homestead was familiar to her. This helped her feel more at home – although such a thing seemed beyond reach in those early days. The familiar scent of the pines and the damp air of the forests were as soothing to her as they were to some of the members of the Gassmann-Bunke family, and she, like they, would often take refuge in the woods when memories of the war and her flight felt most unbearable.

The Gassmann-Bunkes saw the two refugees’ presence as an improvement over the Polish prisoners of war, who had worked on the homestead for upwards of two years, before being shipped back to Poland shortly before Kristina and Ingrid arrived.  In her early days with the Gassmann-Bunkes, Kristina more than once reflected on the fact that she had escaped from Danzig, which had now come fully under Polish control, and spent time amongst Polish displaced persons at Bergen-Belsen, only to replace Polish prisoners who had now been freed and returned to their homeland. Perhaps they were even from Danzig – Gdansk, now – or nearby.  Not that she and Ingrid were prisoners of war.  Not in the literal sense, anyway.  But it sometimes seemed to Kristina that she and Ingrid and the Poles were just chess pieces, shifting to take each other’s places, being picked up from one place and plopped down in another at the behest of some unseen force. 

This force seemed not to take into account who they were as people. In fact, it seemed not to care at all who they were, or whether they were happy where they ended up. But Kristina did her best to banish thoughts of this type from her mind, and to focus instead on seeing this force as benevolent. After all, Kristina reminded herself, it had brought her to this place, where she and Ingrid had a warm room and were able to enjoy plenty of delicious food, in a household of kind people.

Lying in bed with Ingrid of a night, she was now waking up only three times a night – for which she was grateful, since for nearly past year, she had barely slept at all. In this secure spot, Kristina’s thoughts sometimes drifted to the questions that began nagging at her as soon as she started to feel a bit safe on the homestead: How did I get here? Why did all this happen to us? Why are we still alive? But as soon as she allowed herself to step aboard this train of thought, memories of this or that detail of the journey from home in East Prussia to her new home here popped into her mind. She knew that to entertain them meant that she would not get back to sleep at all.  So, instead of going that route, she would roll over and clasp her sleeping Ingrid in her arms and silently repeat a prayer of gratitude that she used to crowd out the terrors:  We are alive. We are safe. We are blessed.

The emotional life of this family was at once hidden and transparent to Kristina.  No one talked openly about any of their feelings, but she could sense what was going on behind the curtain of reticence each of them pulled across in front of themselves.  Upon coming to live with the Gassmann-Bunkes, Kristina detected the melancholy that had pervaded the entire household since Lina’s accident the year before.  For the first several months, she assumed that she was feeling remnants of the sadness that had settled deeply into her own heart during recent years.  It was only when she began to feel more acclimated to life in the household, more at ease – when she began experiencing moments of lightness and even joy as she’d walk in the forest or hear the birds singing in the early morning as they awoke – that she realized that the melancholy was not all hers.  This conclusion was confirmed one morning when, having taken Ingrid out to the main road, where she joined the other children headed off to school, Kristina walked into the house to get started on her morning tasks.  Upon entering the kitchen door, she felt an almost palpable wall of heaviness. What’s this?  she asked herself.  I was feeling so happy walking Ingrid to meet the others, and now… She felt like all the energy was being drawn out of her.  All she wanted to do was sit down and weep.

Looking around the kitchen, she saw Renate at the sink, washing dishes with a thoughtful expression on her face, a slight frown, even.  Lina was seated at the kitchen table, her wheelchair rolled up to her usual spot at the far end. Ethel was standing behind her, silently brushing her hair, even though Lina was fully capable of doing this for herself.  A basket of laundry stood on the floor in front of the stove, waiting to be put into the huge pots of water that were heating up above, on the two front burners.

“I’ll get started on this,” Kristina told Ethel, motioning toward the basket of dirty clothes.  Ethel thanked her, and as Kristina began adding first the soap and then the laundry to the pot, she found her original happiness returning.  At the same time, though, she could feel the sadness in each of the other three women in the room, the degree and intensity of the emotion varying from one to the next. The Gassmann-Bunke women certainly didn’t talk about their feelings – at least not to Kristina.  Nor did the men.  This didn’t surprise Kristina.  Everyone seemed to want to just get on with what they were doing and not expend any of their precious energy on talk about feelings you couldn’t change anyway.

Kristina had encountered this same attitude all during the war, both back home in East Prussia, and during the migration that brought her to the other side of Germany.  She had been struck by her countrymen’s and countrywomen’s stoicism.  There was also a measure of fear in their reticence, of course.  They had all learned years earlier to keep their views to themselves, lest they be taken the wrong way.  “Be careful what you say.” It was generally better not to talk about much of anything. That’s the way it went, Kristina reflected now, as she stood at the stove, stirring shirts and pants and blouses and skirts into the steaming water. 

She recalled the way her neighbors nearly stopped talked to each other at all as the war progressed.  No one wanted to ask about absent family members, especially the men who’d gone off to fight, for fear of learning that the person in question had been lost or injured or killed.  When Kristina learned that her own husband, Artur, had died in battle, she and both sets of parents and Ingrid marked their family tragedy together, privately, at home, not wishing to force their friends or neighbors to confront yet another loss. 

When it came to discussing the war or politics, people were even more careful about what they said, but it wasn’t out of concern for others’ feelings: They knew full well that any remark about the war, especially when it began to be clear that things were going badly in the East, might be interpreted as anti-government, as unpatriotic.  Then the speaker could end up being shot outright, or sent to one of the work camps they had all heard rumors about. 

For this reason, Kristina was shocked when Artur managed to send a message to her, in the fall of 1944, through the brother of a medic from their village who was serving in Artur’s same unit. He urged her to take their parents and Ingrid and move west, because the Soviets were advancing.  He didn’t want them to be there if the Soviets broke through their ranks.  Kristina knew the danger Artur had put himself – and even them – in by sending the message.  Of course she didn’t mention the message to anyone but her parents and Artur’s, and she prayed that the medic’s brother had told no one else.  Had he even shared the information with his own family? The two of them never spoke a word about the topic once the message was delivered.  But when this young man and his whole family fled in early January of ’45, Kristina knew that they, too, had read and heeded Artur’s message.  This convinced her that it was time for her loved ones to make plans to leave, too.

At the time, Kristina didn’t give much thought to the lack of communication between the medic’s family and her own, because she knew it had to be that way. They couldn’t talk about leaving without opening themselves up to arrest: Who knew whether the medic’s family even accepted or shared Artur’s concerns? If they didn’t, and Kristina broached the subject of flight with them, they might report Kristina to the authorities for not supporting the war effort.  She couldn’t put her whole family at risk by doing that.  So, they, the Windels, made their own plans, in secret.  It was only once she and Ingrid were on the road and encountered the ever-larger groups of people fleeing the eastern part of Germany, that they began to get information from those around them. This was how they learned about what was really going on with the war, through the accounts they heard from people whose relatives had been in battle or in towns and villages already taken over by the Soviets.  Finally, people were talking to each other! 

Still, these conversations in no way constituted heartfelt sharing of the refugees’ innermost feelings.   Perhaps that was because it was all any of them could do to keep walking each day.  With almost no food, barely more than the clothes on their backs, the winter weather, and constant fear of attack from the rear, plus the fact that they were moving on foot, all day long, for as long each day as they had the strength to keep moving, there was no energy left for really getting to know each other.  Again, no one wanted to burden the strangers around them with details of their hardships and losses – or be burdened by others’ tales, either.  So, what mostly passed between them was helpful information for their trip. It was only the occasional hand on the shoulder, a kind glance from a fellow traveler, or a piece of bread offered to a child that established any emotional connection.  Those gestures said more than the words could, Kristina had often noted.

Kristina understood – in her mind – all the possible explanations for why people kept silent about every possible topic.  But in her heart, she longed to be able to talk, really talk with someone about everything that was dear and important to her. This may be who we are, we Germans, as a people, she told herself, but it’s not right. It often occurred to her that both the decision and planning for their flight would have been so much easier if they had been able to confide in others.  When Artur was still at home, they were each other’s confidants, and it was so hard not to have him to discuss the situation with. She couldn’t talk to her closest girlfriend, either.  Too much at stake.  So, she and Ingrid just left one night, after midnight, without telling anyone outside the family.  So much silent leave taking, thought Kristina one night, as she in Ingrid lay in their bed in the Gassmann-Bunkes’ workshop. 

During the months she and Ingrid spent on the road and in close quarters with people in all states of good and ill health, with all manner of handicaps or disabilities, Kristina was struck by the times when those around her had treated each other with kindness.  These moments stuck in her mind, first because she witnessed them quite rarely, but also because when she did witness them, or experience them herself, she was reminded that there really still were people in the world capable of offering kindness to another human being, a stranger.  Kristina had clung to these memories, replaying the scenes in her mind during the most challenging days, as a kind of prayer.  Dear God, please help us all be kind.

So, when she arrived at the Gassmann-Bunkes’ homestead, exhausted, with Ingrid so worn down and sick from the travelling and the refugee camp that she could barely stand, what Kristina felt first from this family was their kindness.  The awareness of the melancholy came only later.  Perhaps she sensed the kindness first because it was what she’d been missing most, after eight months of separation from everyone in her family, aside from Ingrid.  But here, even though she was not related to these people, she had a quiet, shy feeling – beneath the exhaustion and anxiety and fear – that she had landed in a family, a home, and not just a place to live.

Kristina could see these people’s love for each other, and the care with which most of them treated each other.  She didn’t know at first that she had arrived at a time of great upheaval in the family: Both Viktor and Marcus were freshly returned from their war service.  But although Kristina did notice tensions between certain of the family members, she was too focused on her own integration into the household, and on getting Ingrid back to full health, to have energy left over for sorting out all the family interactions.

Right from the start, she and Lina were thrown together.  Throughout the day, Kristina helped situate Lina in this or that spot indoors or in the yard, so that she could do as many family chores as possible. Sometimes this was peeling potatoes at the kitchen table, or mixing bread dough or chopping vegetables at a small, slightly lower table Ulrich had built for her, since the kitchen table was too high for her to work at comfortably.  Lina couldn’t hang laundry out on the line by herself, , but Renate strung a second, lower clothesline for her granddaughter.  That way, she could sit in her wheelchair and hang up socks and undershirts at the lower level while Kristina hung the longer items on the higher line.  In this and other ways, the family members devised modifications around the household that made it possible for Lina to still be active and have her own set of chores.

As we’ve seen, it took Lina a while to warm up to Kristina. Similarly, Kristina was slow in coming out of her own shell enough to be open to something that might come to resemble a friendship. But after their conversation about the sock darning, when Lina found herself laughing, the two women began enjoying each other’s company more and more.   One day a couple of months later, as they were hanging out the laundry together, on the two parallel lines, Kristina noticed herself settling into a deep calm.  She had put a basket of wet clothes on Lina’s lap in the wheelchair – Lina enjoyed being able to “haul” things around the house and yard, as she put it, even though Kristina felt uncomfortable with this procedure at the beginning. “I don’t want to treat you like a cart,” she’d said the first time, but Lina had laughed and pointed to her lap.  “Well, if I’m the cart, then you’re the horse, in reverse. You’re the one who has to push me around!”  

As the two young women methodically and rhythmically pulled socks and shirts and towels and aprons and dresses from the baskets Kristina brought out from the kitchen, Kristina grew more and more joyful.

“What a relief to be doing such a simple chore,” she told Lina.

“What do you mean?” Lina asked, looking up at Kristina, who was fastening a shoulder of one of Renate’s dresses onto the line with a clothespin.

Kristina paused and looked at the dress in her hands. “It’s such an everyday thing,” she began.  “Part of a normal life.”

“And not a wartime life?” Lina asked her. She’d stopped now, too, and was holding a damp sock in one hand, her other hand in the clothespin bag in the corner of the basket.

Kristina nodded. “This clothesline, the pins, the clothes we wash – that we have a place to wash, and fresh water and soap… To have all of that… I mean, we had that during the war, too, I guess…”

“At home?” Lina asked quietly.  “Before you left?”

“Yes. That’s what I mean.  There was a home – our farm – with clotheslines like this, and the same clothespins, and water and soap… And then suddenly it was gone. Or, rather, we had to leave it. Chose to leave it.”

“I guess there was little of that on the road?”

“None of it.  Even if there was a place to wash our clothes – a stream, say – there was no soap, and no good place to hang things to dry. Just a nearby bush, maybe, or a nail inside a barn, if we were lucky enough to have a place to sleep indoors.  Even then, I was always afraid to do laundry. If we had to pick up and leave in a hurry, maybe there’d be no time to retrieve the damp clothes.  And if they were still damp, then everything else we were carrying would get soaked, too.  Not good in winter. You can’t put your child in a damp sweater!  So, we would mostly just wear the few clothes we had over and over again.  You get a little bit used to the smell and the dirt of it.”

She looked down now at the basket of clean, damp clothes and touched the pile gently with her hand.  Lina placed her hand atop Kristina’s and squeezed it.

“No wonder you don’t mind helping with the laundry, then,” she said finally.

Kristina shook her head and, looking at Lina, she smiled, the new joy inside her peeking out through her eyes and that smile.  “No,” she replied.  “I couldn’t be happier.  If I can wash and hang clothes out to dry, that feels homey to me.  Like I’m back home, not in my old home, of course, but a home.  Where I can feel safe and know that I won’t have to take Ingrid and run off before the clothes are dry.”

“And do you feel safe here?”

“I do,” Kristina said. “I do.” She looked at Lina and smiled again, and then her eyes filled with tears, and she slipped her hand out of Lina’s to wipe her eyes. 

“I’m sorry if I upset you.”

“No, no.  You didn’t,” Kristina told her. “It’s just such a relief being here.  Thank you for your kindness, your whole family’s kindness. I, we… we’re so grateful to be here.”

“I’m glad.  I’m grateful to have you here, too,” Lina said.

Kristina looked surprised. “You are?”

“Oh, yes,” Lina went on, smiling.  “I’ve got no one my age here, and I can’t get around –“

“But Marcus and Peter, they’re closer to your age than I am, and they’re your brothers.”

“Exactly.  They’re my brothers. I never had a sister, I’m tired of all these men bickering around me, and my mother and grandmother are so busy they don’t have time to really talk with me. They treat me like a porcelain doll who’s going to break under the slightest strain.  They think they have to be gentle with me. So they never want to talk about anything important, even if there is a free moment.”

Kristina laughed, then wondered whether she shouldn’t have, but when Lina joined in, she knew it had been okay.

“So, you see,” Lina told her, “I’m grateful you’re here.  I feel we can talk.”

“Me, too,” Kristina replied.  “I was going to apologize for going on about the laundry and our journey. You don’t need to hear that. You have enough to worry about without me piling that on you.”

Here Lina laughed again and pointed to her wheelchair. “Have you forgotten? I’m the cart. Pile it on, Kristina! You said it’s a relief for you to be able to hang up laundry.  Well, it’s a relief for me to hear someone talk about what’s really on her mind, instead of doing what goes on in this family.”

“Which is what?” Kristina asked, although she knew what Lina had had in mind.

Lina rolled her eyes.  “No one wants to upset anyone else by saying anything disturbing, but everyone has his or her own ideas. So it’s all about hinting and hoping someone will read your mind and do what you want them to do.  Just come out with it, I say!”

Now Kristina laughed.  “I’m sorry to tell you this, Lina, but it’s not just your family.  It’s mine, too.” She paused and pursed her lips.  “Was, anyway. I’ve always felt the same way you do.  I’m so tired of being silent, especially about the important things.”

“Me, too,” Lina said, reaching up to take Kristina’s hand again. They stayed that way for a minute or two, looking at each other, feeling the dampness of the clothing each was holding in her other hand, but neither of them minding a bit.  There would be space and time for the laundry to dry, and for conversations between them, too. In that moment, each of them felt she had gained a sister. 

The memory of this conversation came to Kristina as she was falling asleep the night Lina first spoke about God at suppertime. Of course, Kristina didn’t yet know this was what Lina had spoken of.  But what she did know was that her dearest friend had shut her out, choosing not to confide in her about the suppertime conversation, even though it was clear that something had shifted monumentally within her family.  Judging by the shouting she’d heard, by Lina’s reticence, and by Marcus’ failure to come out and say good night to her, it seemed like at least some of the Gassmann-Bunkes had grown tired of hinting and had begun speaking their minds.  And she had missed it.

Sleep was long in coming to Kristina that night, as she lay awake in the bed, doing her best to not wake Ingrid with her restless movements. There they lay, Kristina and Ingrid, in the very same room where generations of Gassmanns and one Bunke had resided before her (plus one more Bunke – just temporarily). But she was unaware of this connection. As a result, despite her deep gratitude for her current position, Kristina felt alone on the homestead, excluded from this family she wanted to call her own.

During this nighttime reflection, Kristina never realized it, but she was by no means alone with Ingrid in the room – for Wolf Gassmann made a point of visiting the low house often. And although his exile from the log home had been self-imposed (and did not even constitute an exile, in fact!) he still felt that he had something to tell this young widow about their joint presence in this dwelling where the family had gotten its start.  There may be strong walls between us and them, he whispered, from his heart to hers, but walls can never keep our spirits apart. We all belong here on this homestead. We all belong to each other.

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Above the River: Cast of Characters

Since a couple of readers told me they’d begun creating a Gassmann-Bunke family tree, I’ve put together a list of the main characters (minor characters are indented), with details about their relationships to other characters in the novel. Enjoy!

Ulrich Gassmann (b. 1880) – Gassmann family patriarch. Wife: Renate (Walter) Gassmann. Children: Ethel and Hans Gassmann. Parents: Detlef and Iris Gassmann. Step-   mother: Claudia Gassmann. Brother: Erich Gassmann. Half-sisters: Inna and Monika Gassmann. Grandchildren: Marcus, Peter, and Lina Bunke.

            Wolf Gassmann (d. 1882) – Son: Detlef Gassmann. Grandsons: Erich and Ulrich Gassmann

            Detlef Gassmann (1854-1905) – Father: Wolf Gassmann, Sons: Ulrich and Erich Gassmann. First wife: Iris Gassmann. Second wife: Claudia Gassmann

            Iris Gassmann (d. 1882) – Husband: Detlef Gassmann. Children: Erich and Ulrich Gassmann

            Claudia Gassmann (d. 1919) – Husband: Detlef Gassmann. Step-sons: Erich and Ulrich Gassmann. Daughters: Inna and Monika Gassmann

            Erich Gassmann (d. 1918) – Parents:  Detlef and Iris Gassmann. Brother: Ulrich Gassmann. Half-sisters: Inna and Monika Gassmann.

Renate (Walter) Gassmann (b. 1880) – Gassmann family matriarch. Husband: Ulrich Gassmann. Children: Ethel and Hans Gassmann. Grandchildren: Marcus, Peter, and Lina Bunke. Sister: Lorena (Walter) Beyer. Brother: Ewald Walter

            Ewald Walter – Sisters: Renate (Walter) Gassmann and Lorena (Walter) Beyer.    

Lorena (Walter) Beyer – Sister: Renate (Walter) Gassmann. Brother: Ewald Walter. Husband: Stefan Beyer. Daughter: Brigitte

Hans Gassmann (b. 1901) – Parents: Ulrich and Renate Gassmann. Sister: Ethel Gassmann-Bunke.

Ethel (Gassmann) Bunke (b. 1904) – Parents: Ulrich and Renate. Brother: Hans Gassmann. Husband: Viktor Bunke. Children: Marcus, Peter, and Lina Bunke

Viktor Bunke (b. 1903) – Wife Ethel (Gassmann) Bunke. Children: Marcus, Peter, and Lina Bunke. Parents: Karl-Heinz and Gisela Bunke. Step-mother: Sabine Bunke. Sister: Hannelore Bunke. Half-brother: Walter Bunke.

            Karl-Heinz Bunke (d. 1917) – Children: Viktor, Hannelore, and Walter Bunke. First wife: Gisela Bunke. Second wife: Sabine Bunke .

            Gisela Bunke (d. 1906) – Husband: Karl-Heinz Bunke. Children: Viktor and Hannelore Bunke.

            Sabine Bunke (b. 1887)– Husband: Karl-Heinz Bunke. Sister: Gisela Bunke. Step- children: Viktor Bunke, Hannelore Bunke. Son: Walter Bunke

Marcus Bunke (b. 1923) – Eldest child of Viktor and Ethel Bunke Peter Bunke (b. 1924)–Middle child of Viktor and Ethel Bunke (Edeline) Lina Bunke (1928)–Youngest child of Viktor and Ethel Bunke

Kristina Windel (b. 1923)– Refugee from East Prussia. Husband (deceased): Artur Windel Ingrid Windel (b. 1939)– Parents: Kristina and Artur Windel

Historical figures who appear in the novel:

Bruno Groening (1906-1959) – Spiritual Healer active in Post-WWII Germany

Egon Arthur Schmidt – Assistant to Bruno Groening

Above the River, Chapters 9 and 10

Chapter 9

May, 1921

Gassmann family homestead

            Despite what he had promised his parents, Hans did not find it easy to give Viktor Bunke a chance.  The tall man, whose hair was sandy-colored, like Ulrich’s, but wavy rather than curly like the older man’s, walked into the Gassmanns’ yard on that day in May, not long after Hans and Ulrich had finished breakfast and headed into the workshop.  Viktor stood in the dirt driveway, a canvas pack on his back, a leather satchel in one hand, and his cap in the other.  For a May morning, it was surprisingly warm, and the dust on his boots and sweat that showed through his worn, white work shirt indicated that he had come a distance and had been walking for quite some time.

            Although two years younger than Hans, Viktor had the presence of someone much older.  Was it a confidence and ease that he’d acquired in the course of several years of wandering for employment, and of valuable experience gained as he worked with a series of masters? Or was it a tense wariness that had developed as Viktor move from place to place in his efforts to support himself? A guardedness based in certain incidents of childhood and war, that had taught him lessons just as valuable as those he learned at the side of those he toiled alongside?  In fact, it was both.  Viktor had a resoluteness to his gaze and facial expressions, and the firmness that characterized his physical body was evident also in his air.  Guarded and, at the same time, open, even somehow charismatic.

No one was out in the yard when he arrived.  This gave him the chance to survey this spot where he’d landed, unobserved by the people who had agreed to take him on and who were, as yet, a mystery to him.

            But, as he cast a glance methodically around the yard, the log home, the low house, the goats in their pen, the chickens, the woodpile, the line with its bag of clothespins awaiting today’s laundry, and the garden, the haze of mystery began to dispel for Viktor.  Good, solid people, he concluded. Everything in complete order, despite the recent war, despite the shortages.  These Gassmanns had held it all together.  A good sign, he thought.  There might be much to be gained from working and living here. Viktor breathed in and caught the mingled scent of the animals, the wood, the morning’s breakfast, and the young garden, still damp from the previous night’s rain. He felt a calm and lightness here that surprised him. He even had trouble identifying it at first, since it had been such a long, long time since he’d sensed anything like it. He felt joy, too. 

            Hearing voices coming from the low house, Viktor turned to walk in that direction.  But by then, Renate had seen him from the kitchen window. So had the brown and white dog that had emerged from the low house, tail wagging.  Dog and matriarch approached Viktor from two directions, both walking at a leisurely pace, both seemingly friendly in intent.  Viktor consciously softened his face and bearing a bit as he tipped his cap to the matriarch.

            “Mrs. Gassmann?” he asked. “I’m Viktor Bunke, come to work for Mr. Gassmann.”

            “Yes, welcome, Mr. Bunke. We’re expecting you.”  She took him in with a quick glance.  “You must have gotten out early this morning.”

            “Yes, Ma’am.  I slept overnight in Varel and then set out.”

            “Have you eaten?” 

            “A boiled egg and a roll.”

            Renate nodded, and her mouth formed something a bit reminiscent of a smile. “Well, that’s a start.” She indicated the low house with a vague motion of her arm. “Ulrich and our son, Hans, are in the workshop.  Come on, I’ll take you to them.”

            She led him through the small, side door of the workshop. Introductions were made, and all three men took stock of each other openly, but kindly, first with their eyes, and then through words.  But even as the first words were being exchanged, Viktor already felt that he would be able to work with Ulrich and Hans. He could tell that he had correctly intuited their forthrightness from his initial survey of their homestead. Their kindness was evident, too. Less so in Hans, who, though he warmly shook Viktor’s hand, held back in a way that Viktor noticed, but didn’t take personally.  A little caution is a good thing these days, he thought.  He, himself, had the habit of bringing more than a little caution to every encounter. 

            “Here’s where we work,” Ulrich said, moving further into the workshop. He led Viktor into the large, open area full of neatly-arranged and organized wood – blocks, planks, turned pieces, pieces waiting to be turned – workbenches, woodworking equipment, a stretch of wall hung with tools, and a section of counter occupied by papers stacked in piles and weighted down with stones, and two projects in progress. Viktor followed Ulrich, taking note of the workshop’s contents, and of its master, too.  Ulrich had a heaviness of spirit to him, despite being physically rail-thin, a melancholy that translated into a certain ponderousness of movement.  As if he were one of the tall pines that were his charges, rooted to the ground, but vulnerable to toppling due to shallow roots.

“Come on,” Ulrich said, once he’d completed the general tour.  “I’ll show you where to stow your gear.  He turned around and walked back past the small side door.  “That’s the store room,” he said, pointing to the room on the left, where Wolf had lived out his last years, where Ulrich had ridden the sawhorses at his grandfather’s encouragement. Ulrich opened the door of the second door at this end of the workshop and stepped through a doorway into the large, corner room.  It had one window, Viktor noted, on the outside wall that faced the yard, and a small wood stove.  He saw the simple, but solidly-built wooden bed frame with a pieced quilt and wool blanket atop a mattress that seemed soft when Viktor sat down on it later.  A pillow in an embroidered pillowcase lay propped up against the headboard.  In the corner stood a similarly plain chair and table, with a kerosene lamp and matches atop it.  On a nearby washstand: a tin basin and large water pitcher. Two towels – one narrow, short, and thin, one thicker, wider, and longer, hung from pegs protruding from the underside of the washstand’s top.  Several more pegs on the wall beneath one long shelf just inside the door completed the décor.

“Your room,” Ulrich announced.  “Pump just out your window there.  Outhouse across the yard.” 

Viktor nodded. He’d seen them both when he arrived.  “Thank you. Are you sure you can spare me this much space?”

“Unless you’d rather sleep in the hay loft, you’re welcome to it,” Ulrich replied, smiling, but still with a hint of the melancholy.

“I’m grateful,” Viktor told him.  He meant it.  This room was a great improvement over the bare-bones lodgings he’d held in his previous workplaces: drafty, unclean, and generally miniscule spaces. They often had no real bed and barely any bedding, much less bed linens.

“You’ll take your meals inside with us,” Renate told him, rising up on her tiptoes to speak to him from behind Hans’ shoulder. They were both standing in the doorway.  When she spoke, Hans turned sharply to look at her, too surprised to even try to hide his annoyance.  He said nothing, but Viktor got the message.

“I’m happy to eat out here,” he told them.  No use making ripples right at the outset.

“Nothing of the sort.  That’d be more work for us,” Renate joked.  “Bringing the food out, taking it back in. No, you’ll take your meals with us.”

She didn’t return Hans’ gaze, and he realized, when he saw his father nod, that Ulrich and Renate had come to this decision earlier, without discussing it with him or Ethel.  Okay, give him a chance, he thought to himself.  You said you would.

“That’s very kind,” Viktor said. He meant that, too.  He was, in fact, stunned by this.  As stunned as Hans was, and for a similar reason, it turns out.  Why? Hans thought.  Why would you let this stranger into our home? To sit at our family table? 

This is basically what Viktor was wondering, too.  Why be so kind to me? They don’t know me.  No reason yet for them to show such kindness.  But it was settled. 

During his first conversation with these members of the Gassmann family, Viktor noted in them varying degrees of the calm and lightness that he’d perceived upon entering the yard, but only the barest hint of the joy he’d picked up on in those first minutes. Who is the joyful one in this family?

            For the rest of the morning, Ulrich thoroughly acquainted Viktor with everything in the barn, discerning, in the process, Viktor’s knowledge of tools and methods, but all in a very gentle way.

“Not a test,” Ulrich assured him.  “Just so I’ll know what you know and what you don’t.”   

This comment astonished Viktor, although he didn’t show it in his expression. He just nodded. The men he’d formerly worked with had also wanted to figure out right away what skills he did or didn’t have. But, without exception, they had met him with gruffness and suspicion.  One told him outright, “Don’t try to put anything over on me, Son.  I’ll find out your weakness soon enough, no matter what you do. Hiding them’ll just make things harder for both of us.  Mostly for you.”  Being addressed as “Son” by a man who clearly felt no affection for him felt, for a moment, until he stuffed the hurt deep down inside, like a conscious attempt to wound him.  This conversation took place less than a year after his father, Karl-Heinz, died on the battlefield, and Viktor was still feeling that loss keenly at this point.  At least when he allowed himself to do so, which was rarely.

Ulrich knew that Viktor had worked with a variety of carpenters, both masters and journeymen, over the past three years, but not as part of any formal apprenticeship.  And that he’d also spent some time earlier, working at a factory in Oldenburg during the last year of the war, before he’d been drafted.  Nothing connected to carpentry at all, but, rather, a way to make more money for his family back in Schweiburg, since his father was gone.  That’s how Viktor had told it, although he hadn’t explained in what way his father had been “gone”.  And even though Viktor hadn’t served as an official apprentice, he had supplied Ulrich with letters from the men he’d worked for and with. They attested to his fine skills and good work ethic.  Far more than a lot of men had these days, Ulrich reasoned.  An eager and decent worker’s hard to come by. And so, Ulrich took him on.  But the only way to get a sense of what Viktor knew, was to put tools and wood into his hands and see what he did with them.  So, he’d hand Viktor this or that piece of scrap wood and ask him to plane or trim or measure and cut it for this or that purpose.

For the first time in the years he’d been working away from Schweiburg – he wouldn’t have referred to that town as “home” anymore, since he hadn’t lived there since his father’s death in 1917 – Viktor didn’t feel nervous about this process.  Something in Ulrich’s tone allowed him to take the older man’s words at face value.  Some master carpenters had said very similar words to Viktor, but they had always meant something different: It was as if they each were setting out to catch him in some kind of lie about his skills.  Pleasant words, but with a threatening intent underlying them.  Viktor had grown very skilled at ferreting out people’s true intent – the one that lay behind or beneath their words – and he had so often found that intent to be critical or even malevolent.  But with Ulrich Gassmann… Here Viktor felt that the words and the intent matched: kindness.  So, as he worked away, to show this new master what he was capable of doing with the various tools, Viktor made no effort to cover up the gaps in his knowledge or skill.  After all, he knew that at 18, he couldn’t be expected to have already mastered every instrument and technique.  He knew that, but Ulrich was the first man he’d worked for who also seemed to recognize that.  At one point, his mind drifted a bit, and he wondered, Who are these people? How did I land here? And, Now what?

Hans watched the non-examination with an eye that was just as sharp as his father’s, but more colored by a quickness to pinpoint lack of skill and criticize it. He had something more in common with Viktor’s previous employers, but, since he wasn’t actually in the position of being Viktor’s employer, or even supervisor, he tried to be as accommodating as he could see his father was being.  He didn’t utter a single word.  Give him a chance.  But, in his mind, Hans noted down Viktor’s every shortcoming (and Hans did see them as shortcomings) for future reference – as ammunition, should he decide he needed to employ it.

*          *         *

            The Gassmann men and their new helper were summoned to the mid-day meal not by the clanging of some heavy bell, but by the ringing of Ethel’s voice.  Viktor felt her presence before he saw her.  Not that he knew who she was, of course. Or at least, not in his mind.  But he recognized her in his soul, by her voice.  Viktor and Ulrich were standing at one of the workbenches, their backs to the open double door, when Ethel spoke to them ,quietly, in a lilting tone.

            “Dinner is on.” 

Three words.  Viktor didn’t need to turn around to see who was there. He knew who it was: the source of the joy and lightness that he’d felt upon arriving in this place.  This same feeling came over him so strongly again now that he didn’t want to move, lest the kindness fade.  He paused before turning around, as if continuing to study the plans Ulrich had been showing him for the wardrobe he and Hans had gotten an order for.  But really, he was just noting the feeling of that voice and continuing to take in the energy that flowed from it. A few seconds later, he began trying to picture in his mind how these features of energy and sound might be reflected in the young woman’s physical appearance.

Ulrich had already set down his pencil, and Hans was on his way toward the door.  When Viktor didn’t move and didn’t even acknowledge the announcement, Ulrich clapped him on the shoulder.

“You must be hungry. I know I am. Come on.”

Then Viktor turned.  Ethel had already started to leave, too, so he caught only her profile in the doorway. The sunlight outside illuminated the edges of the curly blonde hair she’d pulled back in a braid, and highlighted the edge of her forehead, nose, parted lips, and her chin that seemed to slightly recede.  An angel, he thought, at the sight of her hair, but not just because of the hair.  He knew for certain that he had never sensed such kindness and joy from anyone, whether directed at him or someone else.  And he was certain that only angels would be that kind to anyone who had just happened to turn up.

*          *         *

            Dinner was as satisfying and tasty as this family was congenial, in Viktor’s estimation.  Soft farm cheese and bread, pickles, boiled potatoes, sausages.  All very simply prepared. But, as Viktor had learned in the past three years, first in the army and then at the various lodgings he found during his itinerant work, simple food could be slop, or delicious, or somewhere in between.  Rarely had he experienced delicious food in the past three years.  Many of his fellow workers blamed this on the war, on the constant food shortages.  But Viktor didn’t accept this. He was convinced that when the people doing the cooking were happy, most anything they cooked was tasty, even if it was prepared with the most basic ingredients. 

He gained his first clue about this in his very own household. When his step-mother, Sabine, first came to them – back before she became his step-mother and, was, instead, just his aunt – she made the most delectable stews and breads and pastries. She had a way with half-sour pickles.  No one else’s in the neighborhood could match hers.  But after Viktor’s father went off to war, Sabine’s dinners lost their spark, almost overnight.  Near the end, they became practically inedible.  Viktor’s siblings, Hannelore and Walter, noticed it, too, but being younger than Viktor, they couldn’t see past the war shortages down to the deeper explanation that Viktor detected.  He could easily understand people in that way, see connections others didn’t.  He’d always been able to do so, from the time he was little.  He was keenly aware of what others needed and wanted, even when they themselves didn’t or couldn’t articulate this, and without even consciously trying to figure it out. He just knew.  And he gradually learned to make good use of what he was able to sense in people.

Here, in the Gassmann home, the cooks were happy.  Even if Viktor had not ever met Renate or Ethel, he would have been able to tell this from the first mouthful of boiled potatoes. Yes!  Even just boiled potatoes contained the joy he felt coming from Renate. But it was when he tasted the cheese and the bread that he sensed Ethel’s hand – and her vivaciousness – in their preparation.  But Viktor’s ruminations did not prevent him from taking part in the dinnertime conversation.  Indeed, his analyses took place on the intuitive level, while he was listening and talking with the family.

“Your father had a carpentry workshop in Schweiburg?” Hans asked him at one point, just as Renate handed Viktor the plate of sausages, and urged him to place another on his plate.

“That’s right,” Viktor replied, nodding. At the same time, he was staring at the sausages, amazed, even before he tasted them. There had been no sausages like this in the other places he’d worked.  He’d been lucky to have dry scraps of boiled meat.

“Gone now?” Hans continued.

Ethel, sitting next to him at the table, wasn’t pleased with the questioning. It wasn’t that she felt any need to protect Viktor. She certainly didn’t feel one way or the other about him yet. But she did feel it was simply bad manners to interrogate the new woodworker over what might well be his first good meal in weeks, if not months.

“Goodness, Hans!” she laughed.  “Can he at least have a bite between questions?”

She turned her gaze toward Viktor, who was sitting across from her, next to Hans.  Her father sat at one end of the table, her mother at the other end, which meant that Viktor was sitting nearest Renate. 

He put down his fork that had just moved a second sausage off the platter, raised his gaze from the food, and smiled. “Questions are fine. No problem. Maybe I’ll be able to ask some, too.”

Hans’ eyebrows went up, and then he knitted his brows. “What questions might you have?”

Viktor sliced off an end of one sausage, but waited to put it into his mouth until he’d finished speaking.  “Well, you and Mr. Gassmann have given me a good tour of the the workshop and the projects you’re working on, but I’m wondering who’s responsible for the nuts and bolts of this feast.”

Hans shook his head and suppressed a frown.  Christ.  Does the man really have to try to flatter his way into the household at the very first meal?

But Viktor had correctly surmised that both Renate and Ethel would be pleased by his sincere – if also calculated – inquiry. And he was taking the equally calculated risk of seeking to establish a good connection with them from the start, even if this ruffled Hans’ feathers a bit.  He’d make it up to Hans later, in other ways.  That wouldn’t be a problem.

“Oh, Ethel’s the baker in the family,” Renate answered.  “And I turned the cheese over to her a couple of years ago already.” 

Viktor raised a piece of bread that he’d spread with the soft cheese, as if toasting Hans’ sister.  “And you, Mrs. Gassmann, what’s your specialty?  Are the sausages yours?”

Renate nodded.  “When Ulrich brings down a boar, or my sister’s farm slaughters a pig, then I get busy.  On sausage days, it’s all hands on deck,” she explained, and Ethel nodded.

“Those days,” Ulrich joked, with a wink, “seems I’ve always got to be out in the forest with a tree that needs felling.”

Viktor saw Ulrich’s eyes lighten up when Renate spoke, and he felt his own heart lighten a bit as he witnessed this bit of family intimacy. Clearly, the parents loved each other very much.  Whatever the source of the husband’s melancholy was, it wasn’t Renate.  They were the kind of husband and wife who would manage to die within days of each other, unable to bear the separation brought about by death. He’d always heard of such loves, but had never witnessed one in his life. Aunt Sabine’s fading culinary skills were the closest he’d witnessed to such a thing.

“And you?” he asked Hans.  “You don’t mind the sausage making?”

Hans shrugged.  “Lots of carving of the meat to be done, chopping.  I like to eat ‘em, so I might as well use the ax and knives.  And I don’t have to measure twice and cut once with the pork bones!” 

The three woodworkers laughed, and the women smiled, pleased that these men were already sharing carpentry-related jokes.  With the mood now lightened, Viktor decided he could throw Hans a bone.

“You asked about my father’s shop,” he said.

Hans nodded.

“Well, you’re right. It’s gone.”  He stopped and took a bite of potato, but everyone could tell he would continue once he’d swallowed it.

“We had a plan, my father and I. From when I was a boy. He made furniture, but what he really loved, what he was really good at, was carving. Gingerbread house kind of thing.  He’d fill in with furniture-making when the other work was slow.”

He looked from Ulrich – gauging the level of the older man’s respect for that kind of work, which he could immediately see was very high – to Hans, in whose eyes he detected a certain skepticism.  He correctly surmised that Hans was trying to determine, by running through in his mind all the possibilities, whether Viktor was any good at the carvings. Whether he should feel threatened by this young man whose confidence made him seem so much older than his eighteen years.  But Viktor allayed his fears. Or, at least, those particular fears.

“I never got to learn that from him, except for the most basic of skills.  Like I said, we had a plan: I’d finish school and apprentice with him, then go off on my journeyman’s walz, learn a bigger range of skills. Then, three years and a day later, I’d come back and we’d run the shop together. Bunke and Son.”  Viktor paused, seeming to look thoughtfully at the one remaining sausage on his plate.

“And then the war happened?” Ethel asked quietly.

No one prompted Viktor further. They all turned their attention to a potato, a bit of butter, or an appealing pickle, allowing him to pick his own time to go on.

Finally, fork still poised above an edge of his plate, Viktor nodded.

“My father enlisted right at the beginning. Convinced he’d be home by Christmas.”

“Like everyone,” Ulrich said.

Viktor nodded. “Enlisted at the beginning. Killed in action, August of ’17.”

No one spoke.  The Gassmanns knew any number of similar stories about men from their area, about their own relatives. Different dates, but essentially the same outcome.

“Then I was drafted. Beginning of October, 1918.  Five weeks into boot camp when it ended.  I came home.”

Hans felt a sudden sense of relief upon hearing this.  At least this Bunke’s not some decorated war hero come to show me up with his military prowess.

“And the rest of your family?” Renate asked softly.  “Who do – did you – have?”

“Lost my mother when my sister Hannelore was born. I was three.  My mom’s sister came to help us.  Became my step-mother.  My half-brother was born two years later.”

Viktor stopped speaking without clarifying who was or was not still among the living and turned his attention back to his plate. “This is the most delicious food I’ve had in years,” he said to them all.  He meant it.  He was also happier than he could recall feeling for many years, perhaps even since he was a young boy, before his mother died.  What is it about this place? These people? He couldn’t explain it, but he could detect the joy inside him.  He had no doubt that it resided most powerfully in Ethel. That he’d already determined.  But was that all there was to it?  How could she alone infuse the entire place with such joy?  Then again, he reminded himself, as he took his last bite of her bread and cheese, She is an angel.

Follow-up questions hung in the air. How could they not?  But no one could bring themselves to ask them. Not even Hans, who was, not for the first time since the war had ended, grateful to be sitting at his own table, alive, with his living father, even though the war had left its scars on both his body and his mind. His spirit, too.   Give the man some peace, he thought.  He needs it.  We all do.

Chapter 10

May, 1921

Gassmann family homestead

Viktor woke early, happy and well-rested, with a feeling of gratitude for a comfortable bed and for the meals that had nourished him the day before.  It was a new sensation, and one he welcomed, after three years of sleeping on straw mattresses with thin, itchy blankets over thin, scratchy sheets – if there even were any sheets in the first place.

Lying on his side, he caught sight of the embroidery on the edge of the white pillowcase. He brought it into focus: a whimsical pattern of small blue flowers punctuating an undulating design of green plant tendrils and leaves.  It made him smile.  So did the quilt that had kept him warm all night, despite the spring chill.  Pieced together of mismatched scrapsof fabric of varying sizes and shapes, its design, so lacking in geometrical order, surprised him.  He’d seen so-called crazy quilts now and again, but here there was an underlying artistry he hadn’t seen before.  The quilting pattern itself seemed unusual, too. Instead of running around the edges of the pieces, or in some fixed and regular design, the white stitches that joined the quilt top to the bottom and the stuffing traced a series of spirals of seemingly random placement and size.  Viktor sat up in bed and leaned over to study the quilt, bringing this or that part of it up close to his face.  Yes, reminded him of a shallow river seen from above: rocks of various shapes clustered together, and the water swirling above and between them.  Solidity and fluidity combined.  Definitely Ethel’s creation. No wonder he’d slept so well.

*          *         *

            After breakfast, out in the workshop, Ulrich laid out the plan for the morning.

            “The Kropp family wants a sideboard. Hans is headed over there this morning to work out the final arrangements with them and get the first payment.  You go along, too. You’ll see how we do things.”

            Viktor nodded.  “This okay to wear?” he asked Ulrich, indicating his neat, but worn, white work shirt and black, bell-bottomed corduroy work pants – with the red seams inside – his one nod to the pre-war dream he had cherished of joining the ranks of the journeymen carpenters. 

Some men he’d encountered in recent years had derided him for adopting a version of the journeymen carpenters’ “uniform”, since he was, in fact, not one of them.  Why “impersonate” them – and incompetently, at that, since his “getup”, as they often called it, lacked the flat hat and vest and belt buckle emblazoned with a carpenter’s square? Not to mention the fact that his left ear lobe showed no sign of the requisite earring, in the form of a nail hammered through the ear before the journeyman set off on his travels.  But Viktor always replied that he wore these clothes to show his respect for the trade, and to express his hope of one day officially joining the ranks of his travelling fellow carpenters. 

The fact that Viktor had persisted in dressing this way for several years now, despite the flack he caught for it from actual journeymen and even from some of the masters he trained with, could have indicated stubbornness, or a lack of respect for tradition and rules in this society that so demanded that its members do what was expected.  Or even simple-mindedness.  But spend even a little time with Viktor, and you would understand that he was in no way feeble-minded. Far from it.  Certainly, there was some stubbornness, but not the type born of a simple desire to assert one’s own opinion or desires without any sense of underlying purpose or reason.  Viktor was assertive.  And goal-oriented. Was he calculating? Definitely.  But not entirely in the way you might think.  If you looked at the course of Viktor’s life, and the actions he’d taken thus far, you’d see that there was a reason for each step he took, probably even for each sentence he uttered. A desire to elicit a certain response.  But you’d be mistaken if you concluded from this that Viktor always acted with an eye solely toward self-benefit.  Or that he was always consciously aware of the reasons and desires motivating his choices.  Calculation can take place not simply on the level of the conscious mind, but also on the soul level, and on the heart level.  Thus, for a variety of reasons, both known and unknown to Viktor, both consciously understood and understood on the soul and heart levels, Viktor stuck to his habit of the white shirt and black corduroy pants of the journeymen carpenters.

            “Yes, that’ll be fine,” Ulrich replied, smiling slightly.  “We don’t dress like dandies to discuss orders. Don’t want the customers to think we’re asking too much for the job – so that we can buy fancy clothes.” Ulrich glanced at Viktor’s pants, but not to chastise him.  He recognized the trade pants and appreciated that this young man showed his pride in his profession by wearing part of the wandering tradesmen’s “uniform”, even though he had been unable to follow his intended path.  Viktor sensed Ulrich’s tolerance in his voice and his words, and appreciated this.  He’d learned, over the past few years, that a master’s response to his choice of work clothes was a good barometer of how the man would treat him going forward.

            Hans came into the barn wearing just everyday work clothes, too, albeit cleaner than Viktor’s.  Hans also recognized the traditional carpenters’ pants Viktor wore, but he, unlike his father, saw them as a sign of deception.  After all, Viktor was not a journeyman and had, in fact, barely cobbled together something only vaguely resembling an apprenticeship.  What’s he trying to make himself out to be?    There was something about Viktor’s choice of the pants, in particular, that made Hans suspicious of him. Questions for another time, he told himself.

He and Viktor were turning to head out when Renate walked in.

            “It’s laundry day,” she announced, addressing Viktor. “What do you have for me?”

            Thinking she must have been speaking to Hans, Viktor didn’t reply immediately. But then he saw clearly that she was looking at him.

            “Come on.   We haven’t got all day. The water’s already near to boiling.” And she held her hand out to him.

            Taken aback, he opened his mouth to object, but then thought the better of it.  He quickly collected his two other shirts, his socks and underwear – although he hesitated at first, to hand over the latter, out of a sense of privacy and modesty – and his spare pair of pants. All grimy from months in other peoples’ houses, where he’d had access only to small, enameled tubs and cold water for washing. 

            “Thank you,” he said simply, handing his bundle to Renate.

            “Here I do all the laundry. Don’t want anyone messing with my order, hanging things every which way on hooks in the workshop to dry.”  Her voice was strong and matter-of-fact, even a little rough, but she couldn’t disguise the kindness beneath it.  Viktor nodded and smiled.  Who are these people??

             “Wouldn’t think of messing with your order, Mrs. Gassmann,” he assured her. Which wasn’t actually true, although he never thought of his actions as messing.  They were just what he did.

*          *         *

            The client they were headed to visit – Johann Kropp, the postmaster in the small town just to their west – lived only a few miles from the Gassmanns’ place, so Hans and Viktor walked.  It was less than a quarter mile from the Gassmanns’ to the so-called “main road”, Plaggenkrugstrasse, the one Viktor had walked in along the day before, and then they headed in the opposite direction from Varel. The long expanse of woods along which they walked, looked the same to Viktor as the forest he had passed the day before:  a sea of old pines and spruce, with stands of birch nearer the stream that passed through the land. There were many beeches, too, and oaks.  These latter, through their beech nuts and acorns, along with the deer and boar that would come to feed on them, had helped sustain the Gassmann family during the war.  They’d been able to sell the acorns to neighboring farmers (or just pass them along, in the case of Renate’s family’s farm, now run by her sister Lorena and her husband) to feed the pigs. The beechnuts they sold in Varel and Bockhorn, where they were pressed for the oil. Hans told Viktor all of this as they made their way toward Bockhorn: the history of his family’s connection to this forest.

            “It’s eleven hectares,” he said, “a bit larger than most private forests around here,” he added with pride.

            “Your family’s owned it for a long time?” Viktor asked, his voice and demeanor displaying the proper level of respect and awe, which he also genuinely felt. His own family had never had any land. He didn’t know what it meant to stand on earth that belonged to your family. What must it feel like to have a sense of home like that? Viktor had never felt firmly rooted anywhere. Always a transplant, and one seemingly ever in transit. No wonder Hans is so protective of his family and their space, Viktor mused.

            Hans nodded.  “Three generations. I’m the fourth.”  And whereas his gait, when they’d first started out, had been a little slow, now, as he began speaking of the forest, his steps grew lighter and quicker. Viktor had noted that Hans’ right leg was weaker than his left, and had silently adjusted his own pace to match Hans’, not wanting to let the other man know he’d noticed it.  But he tucked the fact away for future inquiry.  The war? A forest accident?

            “Big forest, big job: keeping an eye on the trees, seeing which are sick, deciding which can be cut and turned into firewood or furniture or outbuildings.”

            Viktor, although he understood woodworking, knew little about the nature of the wood before it came to him in the form he’d use for furniture making. Certainly, his father had taught him which types of wood were most suitable for which kinds of projects, but that was the extent of it.  Now, walking these miles along the edge of the forest, he felt drawn to learn about its inhabitants.

            “And that knowledge, the forestry, I mean.  That was passed down?” he asked Hans, in a tone that kept his true, strong interest hidden and suggested that the question was purely casual.

            “Yep.  From my grandfather to my father, and from my great-grandfather to my grandfather before that. And so on,” he explained.  “And on down to me.  We all of us grew up with these trees as our many brothers and sisters.” He smiled and shook his head, as if remembering something.

            “What was that like?” Viktor inquired. He needn’t have done any prompting, though.  It was clear that Hans was happy to reminisce.

            “From the time I was a couple of years old, I’d into the forest with my dad.  That was back in the days before the war, when we had a little more help.  Things were quieter then. He’d take me through the forest, teach me all the names of the trees.  Teach me about the lichens and how the beeches decide when to put out their nuts or when to wait ‘til the next year.”

            “So you’ll be continuing the family tradition?” Viktor asked.

            Hans shrugged.  “I loved growing up with the trees. But I love the wood more.  The actual furniture making. Building something with the wood once it’s cut.”  He turned to Viktor, feeling more expansive and relaxed, now that he could see his companion’s sincere interest.

            “Just ask Ethel,” he continued.  “She’ll tell you.  By the time she was two – I was five then – I was taking her out into the woods, teaching her all the names, too.  It was kind of like a game. She’d point to a tree and I’d tell her what it was. Then I’d quiz her when we came to another one further along.  Same with the lichens and the mushrooms. The bugs, too. She’d always ask me what the bugs were. Kept me on my toes.  I didn’t know them all, of course. Christ, I was just a tyke myself!  But we’d haul a live specimen back home and ask Mama and Papa.  You can imagine how that went over!”

            Both men laughed, very genuinely, the two of them now gazing at the trees on the edge of the forest with affection (on Hans’ part) and curiosity (on Viktor’s).

            “When did you start with the carpentry?” Viktor asked.

            “Age seven, I’d say.” Then he added, “Honestly!” when Viktor raised one eyebrow.  “Not fancy furniture or anything. Lean-tos in the forest first.  Ethel would help me.  I’d tell her what size fallen branch I was looking for – ‘as long as your bed’ or ‘as big around as your ankle’ – and she’d find it and bring it to me.  We spent a lot of hours in those huts, as we called them.  We collected moss for a soft floor, more branches or a fallen tree trunk for a bench.

            “We graduated to a tree house… When?” He paused, and then stopped walking for a few moments, as he calculated.  “I think I was nine, Ethel six. Father and I built it in a beech tree. Hexagonal, with railing, and an overhanging roof of branches, with some thatch. And a rope ladder with rungs knotted every foot along its length.”  He showed with this hands the spacing of the rungs.

            “Now, Ethel, she wasn’t happy with the ladder,” he continued.  “But she loved that treehouse.  We spent hours and hours up there when we were young.”

            Viktor smiled and looked into the forest as Hans continued talking. He imagined what it would have been like to have that kind of childhood: a treehouse, and a father to teach you everything about the forest – about your family’s forest.   A sister you could have those kinds of adventures with.  In short, a happy home, a happy childhood.  Clearly, that was what Ethel and Hans had had.  Viktor barely noticed the constriction that began rising up in his chest as Hans told of his childhood – he’d grown so skilled at pushing it out of his consciousness, that it barely registered any more.  And yet, something did register: a feeling of wanting to be like these people. Joyful, in a harmonious family filled with love. This was something outside Viktor’s experience, and he sorely wanted it.  Not that he allowed that thought to take clear shape in his mind, either, but it was there, in his soul.  And this thought – this deep heart’s wish – pulled his gaze to the forest and its depths, as if he might somehow catch a glimpse of one of the long-toppled lean-tos where Ethel and Hans had played on a bed of moss, the air filled with the buzzing and chirping of the beetles and bugs whose names the two children knew.

*          *         *

The Kropps lived in a two-storey half-timber house adjacent to the post office.  Viktor wondered, when Johann Kropp opened the kitchen door and they stepped inside, whether Kropp had become postmaster out of a love of order, or whether he had acquired this trait from his work in the post office.  Either way, the man and his work seemed to Viktor a perfect match:  Even in the entranceway to the kitchen, every cap, apron, coat, boot, and glove had its own section of the wall. Gloves lay in small, shallow boxes on shelves here, while caps hung up above the shelf, each on its own peg.  Work gloves had separate boxes from ones worn to keep out the cold.  Scarves also hung on pegs, several to a peg.  Next were coats, also on individual pegs, neatly lined up, short ones to the left, longer ones to the right.  It was as if everything was arranged to be donned in order as the residents made their way out of the house: coat, scarf, cap, gloves.  Boots and shoes were lined up beneath the coat hooks. Viktor wondered which the Kropps were in the habit of putting on first: shoes or coats?  Either way, he knew that they always did it in the same order, and that someone in the household had arranged the outerwear this way out of a desire for efficiency and to avoid wasting energy thinking about such mundane concerns. This efficiency had been fine-tuned by the ordering of men’s gear on the left side of the entranceway, and women’s on the right.  There was no chance whatsoever of Mr. Kropp going out in Mrs. Kropp’s cap.

Even so, Viktor was struck by something not entirely utilitarian about the entranceway. The pegs were painted different, bright colors, and they were also color-coded: say, red for scarves, green for coats.  Surprisingly, though, the colors seemed to have been randomly assigned. And above each peg, a single flower, surrounded by leaves, had been painted on the wall as a decoration. 

Viktor was still pondering this seeming frivolity as Mr. Kropp showed the two furniture makers into the kitchen.  Here, too, Viktor was struck by the orderliness of everything that surrounded him.  Glasses on the open shelves were arranged according to height: tall on the right, shorter ones on the left, mimicking the arrangement of the coats.  Cups had their own section of shelf.  Plates were also arranged in stacks of ascending height, from left to right.  This organizational structure repeated for the pots and pans that hung on the wall beneath the shelves.  What about the dry goods?  Viktor wondered.  The organizing principle for the various sacks and crocks was unclear.  It wasn’t determined by the size or height of container.  As Kropp led them into the dining room, Viktor wondered whether they were arranged alphabetically by ingredient, or perhaps were numbered, like post office boxes, with a key to the arrangement written down on some sheet of paper tacked to the wall.  #1: Flour, #2: Sugar…

The furniture here was simple and functional, arranged for efficient use, too, like everything else Viktor had seen in the house so far.

“Please,” Kropp said, indicating chairs at the table, “Have a seat.  Coffee?”

“Thank you, yes,” Hans said, and Viktor, following suit, nodded.

Somehow Kropp’s wife Elke emerged magically and soundlessly from the kitchen a few minutes later with cups of coffee for each of them, and a plate of precisely-cut slices of pound cake.  Viktor knew that if he were to measure them with his rule, he’d find them to be of equal thickness. Did the Mrs. get it from the Mr., or the other way around?  

Napkins, their creases sharply-ironed (but with a small bunch of flowers embroidered on one corner) appeared next to small china plates with a simple floral pattern that recalled the painting in the entranceway. The Kropps were not fans of fussy designs, but neither were they total slaves to order and efficiency: Viktor took note of touches of beauty here and there, in the embroidered napkins and painted flowers; in the way the flowers were allowed to take their own shape in a vase, even if the vase itself stood exactly in the center of the table; and in the undulating pattern of the lace valance at the top of the window.  In fact, he sensed a fluidity in the midst of an orderliness that might otherwise feel stultifying.

Over cake and coffee, Hans began detailing the plans for the sideboard. He pulled a sheet of paper from his pocket and smoothed it out on the table, so that Kropp could see the diagram Hans and Ulrich had drawn up after Hans’ initial meeting with the postmaster.  As Viktor listened to Hans’ words and watched as he pointed out the proposed details of the cabinet, his gaze shifted from the drawing to the other elements of the dining room.  And he found himself speaking.

“Mr. Kropp,” he began, when Hans paused, “What if we were to add in a decorative border up here, along the top?”  He leaned over and pointed to a spot on the drawing.  “About yay high, running the length of the sideboard.”

Mr. Kropp looked up to meet his eyes, surprised and, it seemed, somewhat suspicious.  “What do you mean, a decorative border?  What kind of decoration?”

Hans, dumbfounded by Viktor’s interference in a good business deal that was already nearly signed off on, could find no words.

Viktor gestured to the valance above the window.  “That’s a lovely floral pattern in that lace,” he said.  “We could bring that pattern into a wood border.  To match the lace.  And the embroidery.” He gestured at the napkins.  “Someone here likes flowers,” he added, smiling.

Elke, who had come to check on whether any more coffee or cake might be needed, said nothing. But a slight smile appeared on her lips, and she laid a hand lightly on her husband’s shoulder.

Kropp shrugged. “That’s true. True.  But we don’t need any fancy carvings here.  It’s just a sideboard.”

Hans shifted in his chair, preparing to say something, but Viktor replied, in a relaxed tone. “Of course, you don’t need any decorations.  It’s just going to hold your dishes and so on.  But you folks clearly appreciate beauty, too.  You’re not just about keeping things in order. Otherwise you could have hired any old man with a hammer and saw and nails to build you a cupboard.”

Hans frowned.  This idiot is going to lose us this job.

But Kropp cocked his head to the side and waited to hear what Viktor would say next.

“How nice it would be if your neighbors and friends came in and could see, ‘Oh, everything here fits together!  Not just random pieces collected from here and there.  No, the Kropps thought it all through, with the lace curtains and the embroidered napkins and the carved sideboard.’”  Viktor waved his hand pointedly, but softly in the direction of each object as he spoke.

Elke nodded and smiled, more broadly now. Still, she said nothing.

“What kind of design d’you have in mind?” Kropp asked, finally.

Viktor pulled a pencil out of his pocket and directed a quick look at Hans that asked for assent.  Hans gave a curt nod. Viktor leaned over the paper and in a series of light, unhurried strokes, sketched the design that had come to him in the time he’d been sitting there.

Elke leaned over her husband’s shoulder, then glanced back and forth from the drawing to the curtains, then to the napkins.  “Johann,” she said softly, “it’s very pretty.”  Kropp leaned over the drawing, tapping his index finger lightly alongside the sketch of the sideboard. Then he finally straightened up and looked over at Viktor.

“And how much more would it cost to add that on?” he asked, narrowing his eyes a bit as he waited for the answer.

Here, Viktor deferred to Hans, who, bursting with annoyance at having to give a price on the spot – This just is not the way Father and I do things! – nonetheless managed to come up with a figure.

Kropp exchanged glances (and a wordless conversation) with Elke.  “That will be fine.”

“Now, I wonder…” Elke added, softly and tentatively, raising her gaze to meet Viktor’s.  “Could there also be some carving on the drawers?”

Viktor bent over the sketch once more.  “Something along these lines?” He sat up and swiveled the drawing so that the Kropps could examine it.

“Yes!” Elke said with delight, her reedy voice full of joy.

“And how much more for that?” Kropp asked, his voice betraying no hint of how he felt about this add-on.

Hans made a second, quick calculation in his head and named a price.

Another exchanged glance between husband and wife, and the decision was made.

“Fine.  That’ll be fine.”

*          *          *

            Hans was fuming on the way home, despite the fact that the Kropps’ advance payment in his pocket was greater than he’d expected when he’d left home that morning.  Viktor, sensing Hans’ mood, knew better than to try to return to the morning’s light-hearted conversation.  Instead, he walked silently, waiting for Hans to choose his moment to speak.  It didn’t take long.

            “What did you think you were doing back there?” he asked, finally, his whole face tense, arms bent at the elbows, hands open wide, as he leaned a bit toward Viktor.  “That’s not the way we do things.”

            “What, in particular?” Viktor replied calmly.

            Hans opened one hand out and brought it down in a chopping motion.  “Changing the plan.  And without discussing it with me.”

            “How do you do it?”

            Hans looked at him incredulously.  “My father and I draw up a plan together and sketch it out and decide, together, how much to charge.  And that’s what we present.”

            Viktor nodded. “I get it.”

            “But you don’t. Otherwise, you wouldn’t have pulled that stunt.”

            “Stunt?”

            “Jumping in with new ideas.”

            “Ideas they liked.  And were willing to pay for.” There was a slight joking edge to Viktor’s voice.

            Hans shook his head.  “Doesn’t make it right, doing it that way.”

            “How should I have done it?” Viktor asked, calmly, but in a tone that was both inquiring and subtly challenging.

            “The way we’d planned to do it.”  Hans stopped and stood opposite Viktor, his whole body tense.  “There has to be order, a plan. I mean, would you just pick up a piece of wood and start working without any plan at all?”

            “I have done.  Not much, but I’ve done it.”

            Hans snorted.  “I wouldn’t like to see how much wood you wasted doing that.”

            Ignoring that remark, Viktor said, “I could tell what the Kropps were looking for.”

            “They’d already told us what they were looking for,” Hans objected.  “And we drew up the plan accordingly.”

            “That’s what their words told you. But the atmosphere of the house and everything in it was asking for something a little different.  That’s what I picked up on.”

            “Picked up on?”  Hans didn’t get it.  He was all about words, clearly expressed.  He didn’t even know where to start with what Viktor had said. The words didn’t make sense to him.

            Viktor nodded. “I notice what people want, what they need.  Even when they don’t always know it themselves.”

            Hans still didn’t get it. It’s downright strange, he thought. Dangerous, even, maybe.  But then he remembered the larger advance in his pocket.  “How do you do that?  Pick things up?”

            “Can’t tell you,” Viktor replied with a shrug. “I mean, I can’t explain it,” he added, seeing Hans’ expression.  “I’d tell you if I understood it myself.  I felt that was what they’d want, so I suggested it.”

            “Pick it up or not. Your choice.  But don’t butt in like that again,” Hans told him, his voice stern, although it was clear even to him that he had no way of forcing Viktor to agree. After all, it was Ulrich who’d hired this man, and Ulrich who’d decide whether or not to keep him on.   Father and son did discuss individual jobs, but even then, it was still Ulrich who always approved the final design and price, despite the way Hans had explained the process to Viktor.  Hans was astute enough to guess that Viktor had probably “picked up on” that, too, even if he didn’t come right out and say it.  As he was trying to decide what tack to take in continuing the conversation, Viktor spoke first.

            “I’ve worked with different furniture makers.  Every one of them has a way of talking to a client –“

            “Which is why you came along today,” Hans broke in. “To see how we do it.  Not to do it your way.”

            “Fair enough.” Viktor nodded.  “Now I know. And now you know how I like to do it.”

            Hans fumed inside at this. Why is he pushing me? On his second day here? Does he really think he can walk in off the road and start doing things the way he wants?  In our shop?  He wanted to say, “My father will be the judge of your way.”  But that made him sound like a whiny teenager.  Damn it!  He was backed into a corner.

            “Why not see what Mr. Gassmann has to say?” Viktor offered.  His conciliatory tone placated Hans a bit, although Hans could see he was still firmly wedged into the same corner, all his own power gone.  Everything was always up to Ulrich, and Viktor had “picked up on” that, too.

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Above the River, Chapters 7 and 8

Chapter 7

June, 1949

Gassmann-Bunke homestead

It had been nearly five years since Lina’s accident, and it seemed to Lina that her brothers and parents and grandparents had come to focus even more deeply on their own areas of concern within the life of the homestead.  Ulrich was constantly in need of more help with the forestry work.  The Poles were no longer here, having been sent back to Poland in the summer of 1945, and although Viktor took the forestry and cabinetry work back up full time once he came home from the war, they still needed more helpers.  Their hired hand, Stefan, couldn’t fill all the gaps.  As before, Peter devoted his time and energy to the furniture-making business, since his compromised leg still prevented him from going out into the forest. Marcus was the only member of the family who was working full time off the homestead, at the plum Civil Service position in Varel. He seemed the least connected of all of them to life at home – except where Kristina was concerned.  He’d grown very fond of the refugee widow, and they had been courting for a couple of years now.

Kristian Windel and her 5-year-old daughter, Ingrid, arrived on the homestead early in the summer of 1945. They ended up with the Gassmann-Bunkes in the same way that thousands of other refugees fleeing the invading Soviets ended up with other families across the western part of Germany. They’d been sent there by order of authorities in Oldenburg that were resettling residents of area refugee camps who could not return to their pre-war homes. Despite whatever concerns they might have had about strangers coming onto their homestead, Renate and Ethel were overjoyed.  Just as they strived never to show Lina how tired they were from the extra work her disability required of them, now, they were careful not to openly express their eagerness for this young woman’s arrival. God forbid Lina might interpret this as a desire to pass on irksome duties to someone else. This was how Renate and Ethel thought Lina imagined they saw caring for her.  The two older women were, in fact, so used to keeping every emotion relating to Lina’s care locked inside, that they never even discussed the situation between them.  What if Lina heard us? But upon receiving the official notice about Kristina, both were filled with a deep sense of relief.  Someone to help!

During the first weeks, Kristina – her head still whirling from the months she and Ingrid had passed in uncertainty, danger, and fear – directed all her attention and energy toward fitting in with this family that had taken her in.  She knew that the Gassmanns had been forced to do so, but she didn’t feel any resentment coming from any of them.  She spent the first few months puzzling over that, every day half expecting to be thrown out, although she knew that this would have constituted a violation of law.  Even so, she put her nose to whatever grindstone she was directed to, and tried her best to keep Ingrid from causing any trouble, either.

When they’d first arrived, little Ingrid had been ill – thin and worn down from all she’d endured, and suffering from some respiratory ailment as well. She didn’t have enough energy to be a pest.  But the summer days out in the fresh air, and Renate and Ethel’s good, hearty food helped her grow stronger each day.  Before long, she was well enough that Renate and Ethel were able channel the little girl’s newly-returned energy into helping out around the house.  Ingrid was thrilled to be asked to gather the eggs in the morning and toss feed out for the chickens, to search the garden vines for beans for supper.  She helped with the baking, too: Ethel showed her how to roll fat cigars of dough with her little palms, and twist and tie them into little bundles, and how to tell when they were risen enough to go into the oven.  Renate put her to work stirring sugar into the raspberries that would soon become jam, and Lina, while sitting at the kitchen table doing mending, taught her how to darn a sock with the help of a wooden tool that looked to Ingrid like a bulbous rattle that, mysteriously, made no noise.

Although Kristina, busy with her own duties in the household, at first frequently asked the Gassmann women to let her know if Ingrid was being a bother, she rather quickly gave up doing so. She could see that they doted on Ingrid: The tasks they gave her would certainly have gone more quickly if they’d just done them themselves. But Kristina saw that Lina and her mother and grandmother found joy in Ingrid’s presence and delighted in seeing her happiness at each new activity, at being asked to take responsibility for shelling the peas or pouring the sugar, or threading a needle.  It occurred to Kristina that they were as thrilled to have a lively child in their midst as Ingrid was to be there.  There was something about having the little girl around – a happy little girl – Kristina thought, that spoke of renewal after the hard years they’d all been through. A symbol of hope.  Kristina herself felt hopeful about the future as she watched Ingrid grow stronger and come out of her shell with this family.  We are alive, she’d think to herself. We are safe. We are blessed. We have a future.

When September came, Ingrid began attending kindergarten in Bockhorn. By now, she was as carefree and healthy as she’d been as a toddler back on Kristina’s family’s farm in East Prussia.  Kristina marveled at Ingrid’s resilience, and prayed to God to feel as at ease and light as her daughter.  It did Kristina’s heart good when Ingrid, having walked the few miles home from school with the children who lived down the road, gave them a hearty wave as they parted, then met them the next morning with an eager smile. Kristina was relieved both that Ingrid had found new friends quickly, and that she was also accepted by the families, who often invited the little girl to play with their daughters.  She knew that this was certainly not always the case where war refugees were concerned.  We are blessed.

Renate, as the Gassmann matriarch, ran the household and, thus, it was she who issued Kristina her tasks. The older woman was truly grateful to have an extra hand around the house: In addition to the usual washing, cooking, sewing, gardening, and tending to the animals, there was Lina to care for. Both women were devoted to Lina and took great pains to always treat her with the love they truly felt for her.  At the same time, there were limited hours in the day, in the summer in particular, when there was so much harvesting and preserving to be done on top of the regular household chores. Renate and Ethel found themselves exhausted by the end of each day. Their fatigue was intensified by their desire not to show how tired they were, lest Lina feel she was placing an unbearable burden on them. But Lina knew her mother and grandmother well, and she could see by their weary faces the toll that her inability to walk was taking on them both. So, Lina frequently reminded them that, although she couldn’t walk, she did still have full use of her arms. She reminded Renate of “her” decision to allow Lina to help with whatever she could.  But that still meant that if she was to do something out in the yard, someone needed to roll her wheelchair outside, or fetch the cooking ingredients she couldn’t reach. And so on.

So, Kristina really was a godsend to the family.  In addition to helping Renate and Ethel with whatever Renate asked her to do, she was also Lina’s caretaker during the daytime hours.  She would make sure Lina had everything she needed and get her set up to carry out whatever work she was able to do: sewing, knitting, peeling vegetables, etc. But, “godsend” didn’t necessarily translate into “friend”, as Kristina quickly learned. She had entered the Gassmanns-Bunkes’ life at the point when Lina was just beginning to allow herself to feel the anger that was pushing itself up into her awareness.  Following Kristina’s arrival with Ingrid, Lina’s anger expanded to include not just all her family members, but this young refugee widow with the sickly child, too. 

One day during the second week, when Kristina wheeled her out into the yard, so that the two of them could sit side by side and darn socks out in the fresh air, Lina was feeling particularly angry: at her immobility, at her dependence on others, at not being able to be in the woods, and at this young woman beside her who could do all of those things and more. A young woman who, Lina had decided, was so self-centered that she couldn’t even bother to ask Lina about herself and what she’d gone through. We took her in, for heaven’s sake!  Lina’s anger flowed from her tight chest down into her arms and out her fingers, which began tugging the darning yarn with a ferocity that Kristina couldn’t help but notice.

“Looks like that sock is your enemy,” Kristina said, a slight, cautious smile coming to her lips.

Lina, who had not taken in the lightness in Kristina’s remark, turned sharply and glared at her. The anger in her face caught Kristina by surprise, and the small smile that had accompanied her words instantly faded.

“Oh, forgive me,” Kristina said quickly, anxious to turn the situation around.  Seeing that Lina was making an effort to stuff her anger back down, she added, “It just looked like you were trying to stab that poor sock to death.”

The tiniest of smiles appeared at the corners of Lina’s mouth.  She nodded and put the wounded sock down in her lap.  Staring straight ahead, she said, seriously, “I was.”  But then she looked at Kristina once more, and her smile grew a bit bigger.

Kristina barely knew Lina at this point, but she felt the younger woman’s anger the day she arrived on the homestead. Not that she consciously noted it until about a week had passed. In fact, at the start she barely registered it, because she had experienced so much anger around her during the previous eight months.  But after that first week, she began coming out of her own state of shock and started to discern more clearly who was feeling what.  The anger in the household was coming from Lina.

“So,” Kristina went on, encouraged by Lina’s slight smile, “what’d it ever do to you?  Besides get a hole in it.”

Until now, Lina had been sitting upright, her arms and shoulder and back held stiff.  Now she shrugged and leaned back in her wheelchair. “That’s precisely it. It got a hole in it. It’s ruined.” She waved her hand again at the sock.

“You’re stitching it back up, aren’t you?” Kristina protested. “It’ll be good as new.”

Lina shook her head and held the patched hole for Kristina to see.  “It’ll never be good as new.  You’ll always be able to see where it had to be reknitted.  It’s like a scar that’ll never go away.”

“What, it’s no good if it has a scar?” Kristina asked softly, grasping what Lina was really talking about.

“Maybe with one it’d be okay,” Lina replied, staring down at her lap.  “But you can only patch a sock so many times.  Too many holes, and you might as well just toss it out.  It’s no good to anyone anymore.”  She raised her gaze once more to the woman next to her, and Kristina could see that the anger in Lina’s eyes had been replaced with sorrow.  The tears were just beginning to form.

Silently, still holding Lina’s gaze, Kristina reached over and laid her hand on Lina’s. 

“You know, Lina,” she said finally, her voice full of kindness, “I have a lot of holes in my socks, too.  But here’s what I’ve come to believe these past eight months: Never give up on a sock. Even if it’s full of holes.  We just have to find the right yarn to mend it. Then we can go on.  And the sock will be stronger for the mending.”

            Lina didn’t immediately come around to this idea.  That took several years.  But after this conversation, she did come around to Kristina: She was touched by the unexpected kindness of the touch of Kristina’s hand on hers.  In that moment, something passed between them that neither could have articulated, a sense that there was something they shared, even if they didn’t yet know what it was.  The sense of it must have been enough, though, for as they began spending more and more time together, both young women grew lighter, each drawn out of her own sorrow and worries by the other, at least temporarily.  After that morning, when Renate or Ethel happened to look out the kitchen window into the yard where Lina and Kristina were hanging out the laundry, or picking berries, or simply sitting at the entrance to the forest – Lina in her wheelchair and Kristina sitting on the ground beside her, her skirt and apron spread out around her – the older women began noticing that, more and more, the girls were smiling, their heads bobbing energetically as they talked.  There were even smiles.  More and more smiles as the years went on.  Which brings us to 1949.  Late June.

*          *          *

            It had become part of Lina’s routine to sit out in the yard in the early part of each afternoon, in a sunny spot, if one was to be had, and read the newspaper.  This seemed like something of an indulgence to her. But Renate and Ethel and Kristina assured her that it was not, and that, in fact, she was helping them. “You read it for us, dear one,” Renate would tell her.  “Then tell us all the news.”  “Yes,” Ethel would chime in. “We certainly don’t have the time, but we want to know all that’s going on.” 

So, each day, Kristina wheeled Lina outside and made her cozy, with a sweater or scarf or a plaid or a sun hat, depending on the weather. Then she left her friend alone with the newspaper and some mending she could do, once she finished her reading.  This was just about Lina’s favorite part of the day. For the first time since her accident, she once again was able to take delight in spending time on her own, in silence. Reading the paper and then relating its most interesting, relevant, and suitable contents – nothing controversial, though, since these are the Gassmann-Bunkes we’re talking about! – to everyone over supper helped her feel like a productive member of the family, even if it was on just a very small scale.  As she read, she enjoyed making a mental checklist of which stories she would relate to the family, and in what order.  Seeing herself as the family’s personal journalist, she would curate each day’s news with an eye toward creating maximum narrative and dramatic effect. 

            On this particular day, June 25th, Lina was sitting with just a light shawl around her shoulders, her sun hat casting a broad enough shadow before her that she was able to read the paper without squinting.  The front page was occupied by the usual articles on national politics, stories that Lina did not usually relate over supper, because that kind of news spread easily and quickly by word of mouth.  The second page, dominated by local news of a practical nature, was always suitable, if boring: openings of some businesses, closings of others, new ordinances, etc.  Page four, with its details about prices for crops, weather reports, and overall trends in local trade, was consistently so sleep-inducing to Lina that she hardly ever even glanced at it. Besides, she knew that her father and grandfather would study this page themselves, so she left it to them to scour it for news that would affect the family’s forestry or cabinetry business.   This left page three, which was where Lina generally found the stories that served as the highlights of her daily reports: articles about new films or plays that were set to be shown or performed in the near future; notes about fashion, with accompanying photos; and, always, some bit of scintillating reporting about prominent national citizens or entertainment celebrities.

            This afternoon, then, as was her habit, Lina opened up immediately to page three and folded the paper so that she could comfortably read the articles above and then below the fold.  Her approach was to first seek out the report that would serve as the centerpiece of the day’s summary and then peruse the rest of the paper for stories to fill in around the edges.  She started, as usual, at the top of the page: Brecht’s “Mother Courage and Her Children” was to be performed in Varel that weekend. Under other circumstances, this would be big news to share, indeed. The thought of an inspirational play appealed to her. But then she recalled hearing (or maybe reading in a different article earlier in the year) that Brecht had revised the play to show how the mother had played some unsavory role in the war. None of us needs to watch that, Lina concluded. We have enough suffering of our own to contend with. Lina struck the play from her mental list. Then there was an interview with Anna Seghers, on the occasion of her new novel, The Dead Stay Young, being published. Lina recalled hearing about Seghers’ previous book, The Seventh Cross.  Didn’t Mama even read it? Lina frowned and tried to think back… Yes! All about escapees from a prison camp.  Lina remembered that her mother hadn’t been able to stomach reading about the brutalities the prisoners endured. No need to mention this, either, Lina decided. Let’s see what else we’ve got…

She flipped the paper over, but before she’d even read the title of the article that filled the whole bottom of the page, her eyes were drawn to a photo in the middle of the text: A man stood on the small second-floor balcony of a house, leaning on the  railing and looking down at a throng of people below. Some of them had stretched their hands up toward him.  Lina brought the paper up close to her face, but she couldn’t get a good sense of the man’s face, because he was shown in profile. Judging from his clothing, he seemed an ordinary man, clad in dark pants and a dark, unassuming wool coat.  But his face, at least what Lina could see of it, was both ordinary and extraordinary at the same time.  His long, thick, wavy, dark hair was brushed back from his forehead and reached down over the collar of his coat. Lina could see that the man was slightly balding at the temples. His mouth was set in a stern expression, and his jaw was strong, his cheeks a bit sunken. And although the photo was not a close-up, Lina saw clearly that he was looking at the crowd with great intensity. This so surprised her, that she found herself staring at him, from the side, as it were, and wishing he would turn to face her.

As she sat there and gazed at him, she felt an unfamiliar sensation: a tingling in her fingers. A few moments later, a wave of emotion rose up in her chest, a feeling of such calm and love that she didn’t know what to make of it.  She had felt something akin to it one time years earlier, before her accident. She’d been alone in the forest and had sensed whatever it was that flowed through the trees – from God, as she had always believed.  But why am I feeling this now? she wondered. Confused, she shifted her gaze to the caption below the photo: “Bruno Groening on the balcony at No. 7 Wilhelmsplatz, Herford, June 17”.

Holding the newspaper tight in hands that were, for some reason, trembling, Lina turned her attention to the article itself: “The Miracle of Herford”. She read both swiftly and with care, wanting to take in all the information there as quickly as possible, but without missing anything.  The article said that thousands of people had been streaming to the small town of Herford, in Westphalia, for several months now, to see this Bruno Groening, who had been dubbed “the miracle doctor”.  Was he a doctor, then?  No, it seemed he wasn’t.  They’d just started calling him that, Lina read, because dozens upon dozens of sick people who had come to see him had inexplicably gone away healed.  This man didn’t examine or diagnose anyone. He would just stand on the balcony and talk to them. 

Lina let the newspaper fall to her lap. None of this makes sense. She frowned.  How can people be healed just by listening to this man?  What can he possibly say to them? She thought back to her own visits to the doctors, to her surgery, and to the doctor’s final pronouncement four years earlier.  “You just have to get used to living like this.”  Lina picked up the newspaper again. Who are these people he supposedly healed? Probably no one with injuries like mine.  She read on, and learned that the original boy whose healing had attracted the attention of the press in the first place had suffered from muscular dystrophy. It had been so advanced that the boy could no longer even get out of bed.  But the illness had disappeared after a visit from this Groening. Entirely gone.  Just like that.  Lina read the author’s description of the scene in front of the house where Groening was speaking, the house of the healed boy:

“It was an indescribable picture of misery. There were innumerable lame people in wheel chairs, others who were carried by their relatives, blind people, deaf mutes, mothers with retarded and lame children, little old women and young men, all of them groaning and pressing together in front of the house.  Almost a hundred cars, trucks and buses were parked in the square, and they all came from far away.”

But what about these people? Lina thought. Did they get healed, like the little boy? Lina was beginning to feel dizzy now, but she kept reading.  The next section of the article reported some of what Groening said to the thousands of people who’d gathered beneath the balcony on the evening of June 17th:

“My dear seekers of healing!  Your pleas and prayers to the Lord God were not in vain.  For today the town authorities have granted me an exception and given me permission to heal.  I make you aware that healing only benefits those who carry in themselves faith in our Lord God, or are prepared to take faith in.  I hereby declare you all healthy in the name of God!” 

The journalist who wrote the article – he’d been present present in Herford that evening – went on to detail the healings that people there experienced: “A young boy paralyzed in both legs climbs out of a wheelchair and walks.  A girl with chronic headaches is suddenly free.  A blind man shouts to Groening on the balcony that now he can see.”   How is this possible?  He declares people healthy and suddenly they are? Lina knitted her brows and scrutinized the photo once more.  Then she continued reading and came to the words Groening spoke at the end of the evening, as shouts of healed people rose up from the crowd:

“I ask you not to direct your thanks for this healing to me. Thanks are due to our Lord God alone. I don’t ask anyone for a reward. But I do expect you to pray to God all your life. Life without God is no life.” 

Lina noticed that her hands were trembling so much that the newspaper was waving as if blown this way and that by a breeze.  She folded it back up neatly and sat for a long time, staring as far into the woods as she could see, noticing the odd sensations in her body, and the calm in her heart.  Then she took out the small scissors from the sewing bag on her lap, opened up the newspaper once more, and carefully cut out the article about the “Miracle Doctor of Herford”.  Then she slowly folded this cut-out section into ever smaller rectangles, until it was small enough to fit inside the pocket of her apron.  She stowed it there, patting it with her palm and noticing that the tingling in that hand increased asshe did so. What is this all about?

            Later that afternoon, the whole household was sitting around the supper table.  Ethel had prepared a rich rabbit stew, and Renate had baked a batch of the small, buttery rolls that were Ulrich’s particular favorite, but which the others gratefully devoured, too, dunking them in their bowls to soak up the stew broth.  Lina, taking up her expected role, opened the suppertime conversation with her summary of the day’s news. She began by telling about a new butcher shop that was opening in Varel to replace the one destroyed by fire a month earlier, and about a dispute among two neighboring businesses regarding the common porch their buildings shared, and which one of the business owners wanted to divide with a railing in the middle.  This elicited smiles all around the table.  “What’s their address?” Viktor joked, laughing.  “I’ll go ask them if we can bid on the job.”  Next came the story Lina had chosen as the centerpiece of her daily report: A new film, “Girls Behind Bars”, was set to be screened in Varel, but one of the local priests had taken exception to its “scandalous” subject matter and was doing his best to whip up a frenzy that would be sufficient to prevent the screening . The whole family received this story, too, with great amusement. The Gassmanns weren’t prudes, and although they attended church regularly, they were not so religiously-minded that they would immediately side with a priest on questions of morality.  So, a light-hearted discussion ensued, with the family members hazarding guesses as to what the film could possibly contain that would be so offensive.  Even Kristina, a staunch Catholic, joined in, laughing at the others’ guesses.

But while others happily explored this topic, Lina noticed that she didn’t feel her usual satisfaction at the success of her reports. Rather, she sat quietly at the end of the table, lost in thought, her hand resting against her apron pocket.   When Ulrich asked her about page four, since he hadn’t seen the paper in its usual spot on the table near the kitchen door, she answered without even looking at him.  “I’m sorry, Grandpa.  The paper slipped off my lap into the mud, and so I salvaged the first page and put the rest straight into the fire box.”  Hearing this, Kristina cast a curious glance at Lina.  She hadn’t noticed any mud outside near where Lina had been sitting, much less the newspaper in it. She had, however, seen Lina place the first page in the pile of old newspapers they used when lighting the fireplace.   

Kristina didn’t have much time to wonder what accounted for this discrepancy in what she’d witnessed and what Lina had said, though, for Renate had been waiting to share some news of her own.

“You’ll never guess who called today!” she said, and everyone at the table could see that it had been only thanks to a monumental effort that she had managed to keep whatever she was about to say to herself all day.

“Who?” Ulrich and Ethel asked at the same time.

“Hans!” Renate announced, her eyes gleaming.

Ulrich raised his eyebrows, and Ethel and Viktor exchanged glances.

“And?” Ethel asked. “I hope it’s not bad news.”

“It’s not, is it?” Viktor asked, concern registering on his face.

Renate allayed their worry with a wave of her hand.  “No, no! It’s good news!” She paused so long, to prolong the suspense, that Ethel spread her arms out.

“Mama! Tell us!”

“All right, all right,” Renate replied, with a broad smile.  “Katharina – that’s Hans’ daughter,” she said, leaning toward Kristina to explain, “is getting married! “

Ethel sat up straighter.  “Oh, my! How wonderful!  Hans didn’t mention anything in his letters about her even having a young man! Shame on him!” she said, with a laugh.

“When’s the wedding?” Ulrich asked, already feeling a slight melancholy stealing into his heart.

“October,” Renate told him.  “He said they’re mailing us an invitation, but he wanted to call.”

“To tell us in person, as it were?” Ulrich inquired.

“Not only that,” Renate replied. “He knows we won’t all be able to come, but he hopes at least two or three of us will.  And he said he would like to pay for the trip for two of us to attend.”

Hearing this, Ethel felt her heart leap. She hadn’t seen her brother in twenty-seven years, and the thought of visiting him for her niece’s wedding, of meeting his wife… She had to clasp her hands together in her lap so as not to pop up and beg to be one of the ones who would go. Of course, she told herself, if Mama and Papa want to go, that would only be right. He’s their only son, after all, and they’re getting on in years…

“He’s hoping,” Renate went on, “that we – whoever ends up going, that is – will be able to come late in the summer and stay for a good, long visit.” She was smiling so broadly that the apples of her cheeks were making her eyes crinkle.

Ulrich nodded and wiped his mouth thoughtfully with his napkin.

“That is fine news, indeed, Renate,” he said softly, and they could all hear the tenderness in his voice. “Would that we could all go.” He looked at his wife, at Ethel and Viktor, and their three children. “You three,” he said, pointing at Lina, Marcus, and Peter, “could finally meet your cousin Katharina, and your Uncle Hans and Aunt Laura.”

“What a joy that would be,” Lina said wistfully.

Ulrich nodded. “Indeed it would be, Lina, dear,” he said to his granddaughter.  “But we can’t all be away from home that long. Renate, you and I will discuss it tonight, yes?”

Renate nodded, and they all turned to discussion of how old Katharina was – twenty-three – and who her fiancé was – a young man named Karl who was a cabinet maker, like Hans. 

By and by, the rabbit stew made its way from everyone’s dishes to their stomachs, and conversation shifted from the news of the wedding to more mundane matters: the current forestry and cabinetry work, and whatever gossip Renate had gathered from her sister, Lorena, on her nearby farm.  Kristina, meanwhile, was keeping a close eye on everyone’s expressions. She’d developed the habit, early in her days with the Gassmann-Bunkes, of scanning everyone’s faces during meals, especially supper, because she learned in those first weeks, that this was the time when serious family matters were raised.  Not for discussion, mind you – because that took place behind closed doors – but simply as points of information, the way the Chancellor might inform his ministers of policy changes he planned to enact. So, Kristina had grown skillful at detecting when such moments were on the horizon. When she did, she would graciously excuse herself and Ingrid from the table and give the family their privacy.

This dance had become so formulaic that Renate and Ethel had long since given up the charade of encouraging them to stay. It was clear that, rather than being annoyed that Kristina was not going to stick around to help clean up after supper, they were, in fact, touched by her perceptiveness.  It even seemed to Kristina that the various family members had, unconsciously perhaps, begun to telegraph their intentions in a slightly exaggerated way, with frowns or silence, to make it obvious to her: Today is one of those days we want to be alone.  So, this afternoon, she took particular note of the fact that Viktor, despite the uplifting news of the cousin’s wedding, was maintaining a gloomy silence and furrowed brow. Clearly, there was something he wished to discuss with his family that he didn’t want her to be party to (even though he was quite aware that Marcus would share everything with Kristina in the end). Thus, Kristin made use of a convenient lull in the conversation to usher Ingrid outside and to their room in the workshop.

As soon as Kristina had pulled the kitchen door closed behind her, Viktor folded his napkin and placed it next to his bowl. He watched his fingers lay it down as if they were part of someone else’s hand, and continued to study those fingers, with their closely-clipped nails, as he began to speak.  This was a technique he had found useful during the war when talking with a subordinate.  Begin the conversation as if you’re not really paying attention, as if the topic were not all that important…

            “About the furniture work,” he began, noticing a nick on one knuckle of his middle finger, and touching it briefly with the index finger of his other hand.  “We need to make some changes.”  He continued to attend to the nick until the other small conversations going on between his in-laws, his wife, and his children ceased.  Then he looked up and gazed at each face in turn.

            Marcus, sitting across the table and next to Peter, was immediately on his guard.  Maybe he knew what was coming, or maybe he understood his father’s self-assuredness and calm and attempts at misdirection because he had acquired these skills himself and could recognize them in others, too. 

            “What kind of changes?” he asked, leaning forward, unconsciously sitting up taller than before.

Although Marcus spent his workdays in Varel, at his Civil Service position, he was still living at home. He preferred the freshness of the country air, he would say by way of explanation, to anyone who asked.  But the main reason he hadn’t relocated into Varel was that the current living arrangement afforded him the chance to spend time with Kristina.  At twenty-six, he for some reason considered himself the big man around the house. It wasn’t difficult to see why he had drawn the conclusion that he was superior to his brother, Peter, with his limp and limited work capability.  There was also the matter of Peter’s occasional lapses into profound and unshakeable muteness. When this happened, he would sit staring into space, his eyes wide, his jaw slack, and his hands clenching and unclenching.  No one knew what was going on inside him at those times, and no one asked. They would simply wait him out for the minutes or hours it took for him to re-enter their world.

Perhaps Marcus also sensed that his grandfather, Ulrich, at age sixty-nine, was on the decline and no match for Marcus’ own youthful vigor, despite the fact that Ulrich had retained his strength into his later years. 

Then there was his father, Viktor. Hehad gained undisputed dominance amongst the men in the household nearly as soon as he showed up to work as Ulrich’s apprentice in 1921. Undisputed until now, in Marcus’ opinion.  Perhaps he sensed that he could not compete with his father’s skill or power in the arena of physical work and had chosen to rely instead on his charisma (which nearly equaled Viktor’s) to make a name for himself by working in Varel. But there was no way Marcus would cede his position on the actual homestead by moving off it. As Marcus saw it, by living at home, he enjoyed the double benefit of being able to impress Kristina with his status, while simultaneously lording his government position over the rest of his family.

            Viktor, meanwhile, was fully aware of how Marcus saw both himself and his father.  For the two of them, regarding each other was basically the equivalent of looking in the mirror. But it was not a complete double reflection: Viktor could see certain aspects of himself in his son, although there were others he could not see, or chose not to. For his part, Marcus would not accept that his own strength and power might have their origin in this father, whom he had come to despise during those rough years of his and his siblings’ adolescence. It didn’t matter that this father of his had arranged for him to go first to the Censorship Office instead of the infantry, and then, after the war, into the Civil Service. Marcus didn’t give a damn about those wartime care packages Viktor had arranged, either. After all, Marcus hadn’t directly benefitted from them, anyway, except during his rare periods of leave from the citadel of the Censorship Office. During the war, rather than being grateful to his father for that assignment that kept him safe while others – including his own brother – fought on the battlefields, Marcus had done his best to distance himself from Viktor.  By now, in 1949, he had somehow managed to convince himself that everything he had achieved, both during the war and now, in the Civil Service, had come as a result of his own skill and intelligence. I owe you nothing. That was Marcus’ mantra, when he thought of his father.

            But Viktor saw things differently.  He made this quite clear as the suppertime conversation continued.

            “Marcus, we need you back here,” he said simply.

            Everyone remained silent, including Marcus, who could not yet gauge the best response to this threat.  He glanced at Ulrich, on whose face he could read no clue as to the old man’s position.  He didn’t bother to consult anyone else’s faces. They didn’t matter.  They had no say.

            Viktor waited, glancing at his knuckle again, but not in a way that betrayed any lack of confidence, because there certainly was none of that.  It was simply the act of a man who knew how things would end up, a man who was happy to give Marcus the chance to come to the point of acquiescing on his own. He knew life would move ahead far more smoothly if that could be achieved.       

“We’ve been over this already,” Marcus said finally, making his first move in this crucial game of chess. He was frustrated.  He certainly didn’t want to accept that the result had already been determined, but he wanted to try logic first. He’d keep a more dramatic response in reserve, until it was needed.  It might not be. “And we decided it made more sense for me to keep my position.”  We decided, he said, even though he had had no part in it.  My position. That’s what’s important.  

“That was before Frank left to go work in town,” Viktor replied. “That leaves Stefan, who, you know yourself, has no more than a schoolboy’s skill with the tools.  He can’t be trusted to work independently.”  Viktor laid this out in a patient tone, but not one that gave any impression that he felt a need to convince Marcus.  He was just stating the facts.

Marcus could already sense that things were not going his way.  He sensed the futility of his position and heard it in his father’s words and tone, although the latter’s face betrayed no annoyance, only conviction in the outcome.  Marcus’ frustration turned swiftly to anger, and he jerkily waved his right hand toward both Peter and Lina with an accusatory sharpness.

“You, two!  Damned cripples!  You – “, he burst out, actually striking Peter’s chest with the back of his hand.  “Nearly useless.  And you –”, he continued contemptuously, one arm striking out in Lina’s direction.  “Completely useless!”

Not a single one of them was surprised by this outburst. Marcus had expressed these same sentiments many times since the end of the war. Even Renate did not jump in to try to contain her grandson.  She’d given up trying to prevent or dampen his explosions years earlier, when he was a youngster. Back then, she had ceded the task of disciplining him to Viktor, who had not achieved complete success at this, either, not even when he employed corporal punishment.

This meant that Marcus became, early on, the monkey wrench in what Renate thought of as the well-oiled machinery of her family’s mealtime conversations. Even as a five-year-old, he had felt free to throw a tantrum whenever he felt something was not going his way, jumping in and protesting every perceived injustice.  And from the time he’d been five, his protests had sounded the way they sounded on this day, when he was twenty-six: angry shouting and insults. Sometimes he even physically attacked one of those around him.

Every time this happened, Renate sat helplessly by, waiting for someone else to step in.  As skilled as she was at guiding mealtime discussions, and at steering people away from potentially disastrous topics, she knew full well that she had little control over the conversation when Marcus was present. He just would not follow the unspoken rules for “public” family discussions!  Renate knew very well that once Marcus opened up his throttle, there was always a risk that one of the other family members would jump in, too. Luckily – from Renate’s point of view – Peter and Lina as children developed the habit of staying silent when Marcus flew off the handle. They did their best to remain invisible and let their father handle Marcus. 

Viktor always started with a stern glance, then followed up with a stern word or two if the glance didn’t do the trick. If the words had no effect, Viktor told Marcus to leave the table and go sit outside for the rest of the meal.  If Marcus didn’t go…  Well, then Viktor physically took the boy’s arm and led him outside. Sometimes Marcus went quietly. Sometimes he didn’t, and then Viktor had to drag him. Sometimes they had to bolt the door to keep him from coming back indoors. Sometimes they heard him yelling and throwing things outside. One time he threw a pail through the kitchen window, and shards of glass went everywhere.  Sometimes Marcus was a monkey wrench in the machinery. Sometimes he was a bomb.  You never knew which you’d get. 

Luckily for them all, when Marcus reached the age of twelve or thirteen, he decided it wasn’t worth it to keep resisting his father physically. When Marcus was a boy, Viktor used a minimum of force to gain his submission. He never hit Marcus in anger, and the whipping with belts was only strong enough to get the boy’s attention, but never brutal, Viktor explained to Ethel.  But as Marcus got older, he could see his father’s frustration when they had altercations.  The older man visibly restrained himself, refusing to get into an all-out physical fight with his son over anything. But Marcus was astute enough to sense that if he wasn’t careful, he might someday push his father too far. He also knew he would be on the losing end of that kind of situation: He couldn’t match his father’s strength.  Thus, Marcus learned, during those teenage years, to make do with being as verbally confrontational as possible when he was upset about something, but without goading his father into physical violence. This gave him some small measure of satisfaction.  But it was very small.

And so, on this day, Marcus was at it again, attacking his siblings. “You both disgust me,” he told them.  Then he looked at Viktor, challenging his father to contradict him.

But Marcus had miscalculated in thinking that he could emerge victorious by aligning himself with what he perceived his father’s position to be. Marcus had sensed his father’s frustration with two of his children’s disabilities and mistakenly assumed that Viktor despised Peter and Lina as much as he did. There was another weak point in Marcus’ thinking: He knew, as well as Viktor and everyone in the family did, that Peter was certainly pulling his weight in supporting the family in the furniture-making side of the business.  But by Marcus’ logic, if Peter were able to work with Ulrich in the forest, then he – Marcus – wouldn’t have to do that. Never mind that Peter’s skill as a woodworker had rendered him valuable both to the people in town and to the running of the family household.  Viktor himself had reminded Marcus that it hadn’t been weakness that led Peter to apply himself to developing his woodworking talents, but his devotion to the needs of the family.  That remark alone caused Marcus to chafe – the old sibling rivalry thrusting its head up once more. Marcus saw Peter’s choice not as a decision, but as the inevitable result of a failure of his – Peter’s – physical strength, and Marcus didn’t see why his own work and position should suffer because of what he perceived as his brother’s insufficiency.  The injustice of it all enraged him.

While Viktor waited silently, glancing slowly from face to face, Peter, as he always did when the conversation took this turn, pursed his lips, his face reddening.  He summoned all his strength to resist throwing his brother to the floor and initiating a physical fight he knew he’d be bound to lose. This despite the fury that now, after the war, would sometimes burst from him in a way that surprised all who had known him before wartime. 

Renate, seeing Peter’s restraint, and wondering whether this would finally be the time when he couldn’t rein himself in, exchanged glances with Ulrich, but neither said anything.  A quick glance at Lina reassured her that her granddaughter was in no danger of breaking her pattern of quiet acquiescence. She looked like she was off in her own world.  Turning back to the conversations at hand, Renate decided not to tell Viktor what she had long wanted to say to him: that Lina was not his sister Hannelore, and that he had no right to treat her as if she were. (She, like Marcus, had felt Viktor’s disdain for Lina’s crippled state.)  But she held her tongue, because it was Marcus speaking now, not Viktor.

Ulrich had, of course, discussed with Viktor the question of calling Marcus home before this suppertime announcement, and although he had his own misgivings about bringing Marcus back to work alongside them, he agreed that it would be for the best.  Ethel, like Peter, felt the blood rush to her face, and words were beginning to make their way to her tongue. But as she was taking in the breath to utter them, the conversation took a surprising turn.

            Lina saw Marcus’ outburst coming from the moment her father laid down his napkin. So, as the drama played out, she felt free to reflect on something other than the future of Marcus’ position. She spent a minute or two considering how long it would take before Kristina finally saw through her brother. But then she began to consider her own position – here in her wheelchair.

            For Lina, who had, over the past nearly five years, had more time than any of the rest of them to consider the situation, the question had always been, Why hadn’t it been worse?  Or, Why did I even survive? Like Peter, she was familiar with the idea that God has a plan for each of His children, and, up until the day of her accident, she had fully accepted this premise without considering what it might mean in practical terms in any one individual’s life.  Because, when life is going along well, more or less, despite the fact that your country is at war and your father and brothers are off defending your right to live where and how you’ve lived up to this point, why would you put your energy into ruminating about what God’s plan for you personally might be? Both the necessity and the luxury for that kind of reflection had been lacking in Lina’s life.   

            But she was quite convinced that God existed, that He was present. What Ulrich labelled the wishes of trees, what her grandmother had felt when communing with the forest spirits, and what guided her mother as she created her quilts – these things Lina considered an expression of God’s presence. These and other things, too:  the love she sensed flowing toward her equally from the trees and the beetles and the animals small and large, from the grasses and the fairies and the birds up above the river, and from the river itself, too, from its sometimes mountainous waves down to its muddy sand bottom, and from all that moved its gills or legs or leaves between surface and bed. She could feel God’s presence there, in every piece of the natural world, even if she couldn’t discern what His plan was for each of those pieces.  Because why would God have plans only for His human children?

Indeed, let’s note once again, that Lina felt no need to try to ferret out the details of God’s plan for the mushroom or the tern or the bean vine.  Wasn’t it enough to feel God’s love present in them all and, when she encountered them, flowing into her, too, back and forth between them, embracing them both as one?

Sitting at the table now, Lina recalled what Bruno Groening had said in Herford: “Life without God is no life.”  And she suddenly realized that although her faith in God’s existence hadn’t wavered, not even since her accident, her life had, in a way, become a life without God.  Not without a belief in God. But without the strong, steady connection she had felt before the day the wood fell from the wagon and doomed her to life in a wheelchair.  Only now, after reading that article this morning, could she see how being separated from the divine force of the forest had affected her: Without the opportunity to spend her days bathing in the love and calm of God’s energy, she had come to feel gradually more and more weighed down – in her spirit, as well as in her body.  Stagnant, depressed, lacking in the hope that things could be different.  True, she and Kristina had grown close, and their friendship brought them both a lot of joy. But that relationship could not give Lina what she was truly missing: the feeling she got when she was amongst the trees and felt God’s love and essence flowing from them into her. She remembered now, as she sat at supper, blocking the argument between Viktor and Marcus out of her mind, that she had gotten this very same feeling when reading the article about Bruno Groening.  It still didn’t make any sense to her, logically. But a different, spiritual meaning was beginning to come to the surface of her awareness, like a water bubble released after having been long trapped beneath a layer of mud.

True, this bubble – which we can call her exploration of the question of what might be meant by God having a plan – had begun pressing upward through the mud of Lina’s consciousness after her accident.  When she first began considering this question, she’d have expressed her understanding roughly this way: All the details of each creature’s or plant’s or human’s life are the way they are because that is what God has planned for it.  God laid it out in a certain way, and that is the way life is. We have no input.  We just live out what God puts before us.  So maybe we just have to learn to endure, to be patient? That could be a plan for us, too, couldn’t it? That’s what the doctor told me, right? To learn to live with the hand God dealt me?  That’s as far as she’d gotten these past five years, and she had let her initial questions – Why did I survive? and Why hadn’t it been worse? – fall back into the mud of her consciousness, her curiosity dulled by the overlay of pain and boredom and isolation from her beloved trees.

But today, after she read the newspaper article, a new bubble of curiosity formed deep within her and was making itself felt by exerting some slight pressure on her consciousness. She sensed now that there must be more to this idea of God’s plan. It occurred to her to ask why it was God’s plan for her body to be broken, for her to spend the rest of her life in a wheelchair. Even after Lina came in from the yard, the article tucked away stealthily in her pocket, and began peeling the potatoes for supper, part of her consciousness continued to work on this question.  At one point, as she reached for the next potato, she paused, knife in hand, and an offshoot of the Why was this God’s plan? question took shape in her mind: What if God’s plan didn’t end with the accident? 

Lina was under the impression that everyone around her assumed God’s plan had ended with the accident. It seemed to her that they all thought of it as some life’s event that existed on its own, plunked down in the middle of the dirt yard before the barn, separate from everything else in the farm or the forest or the family life and history. LINA’S ACCIDENT. Cast in stone, immovable and immutable.  Only Ethel seemed to have a different perspective. Although she never expressed this to Lina in words, it seemed to Lina that her mother saw LINA’S ACCIDENT as something more malleable, something that might change its shape and qualities over time. Lina sensed that her mother did desire and hope for this change, desperately, even.  Now, reminding herself of her mother’s quiet, unspoken hope, a thought came slowly and gently into Lina’s mind: What if God’s plan includes not just my accident, but what happens after it? And not even precisely what happens afterwards, but what she and others chose and choose to do afterwards?  (Here the granddaughter shows her connection to her grandmother, ever focused on choice and decision and assigning intention, even if Renate saw it as intention in the sense that would allow one to blame something on someone else.)

Oblivious to the duel between Marcus and Viktor, which was progressing closer and closer to its inevitable conclusion, Lina began moving eagerly toward this newly-arisen thought question. It came to her then, penetrating the dense, nearly solid, mud of her consciousness:  Of course! Of course there is more to God’s plan than just the accident.   What if God’s plan is not a simple, inexorable playing out of fate, but a life in which each player can craft his or her own role, together with God’s guidance? Lina glanced at her family members around her, but still without hearing them.   She noticed the same tingling she’d felt out in the yard, and placed her hand once more against her apron pocket. She sensed the presence of the newspaper inside it, and the new, but now familiar, calm and joy begin to fill her heart.  Her whole body began to feel lighter, even her legs.  Is there some sensation in my legs?  Maybe I’m imagining it…

  Lina suddenly felt, quite clearly, that God did not mean for her to just acquiesce and sit, inert, making no effort to turn the tide of her life.  In that moment, she recalled how she once encountered a swallow on the bank of the river, one wing flapping against the dirt, the other motionless, injured somehow.  As Lina watched, the swallow stopped flapping its good wing for a few seconds, maybe even ten or more, panting from its previous exertion with open beak.  But then, all of a sudden, it pushed off on its thin little legs and, inexplicably to Lina, managed to lift off.  A moment later, it was once again climbing, above the river.

As Lina considered that recollected scene for a bit, no one in her family noticed any outward evidence of the shift that had just occurred inside her.  No one sensed the energy that was flowing through her now and giving her the strength to sit up straight in her chair and regard each member of her squabbling family in turn. What if… Lina thought.  What if the swallow on the riverbank and God were working together to put God’s plan into action?

After silently looking at each of her family members in turn, she lifted her right hand and brought the flat of her palm down onto the table with a strength that silenced all voices and brought all eyes to her.  Even Viktor’s face registered surprise.

“Enough,” she said loudly.   And sharply.  “I’ve had enough.”

Chapter 8

May, 1921

Gassmann family homestead

            “That young man’s coming today,” Ulrich announced at breakfast, although Renate and Ethel and Hans already knew this.  Ulrich stopped speaking, his two hands pausing in the act of gently pulling apart his roll so that he could spread it with butter and a bit of Renate’s strawberry jam.  They were on the last jar of the previous summer’s stockpile, and Ulrich didn’t want to eat it absentmindedly, while talking about work. So he paused.

            “Viktor?” Hans asked his father. 

            “Yes. Viktor Bunke.” Ulrich returned his attention to the roll.

            “What do we know about him?” asked Hans, making an effort not to narrow his eyes, but aware of the edge in his voice. 

            Ulrich set the roll down on his plate.  “Well,” he began, “he’s from Schweiburg.  Apparently trained with his father in a carpentry shop they had there before the war, then…”

            Hans interrupted. “How old is he?”

            “Eighteen, I guess,” Ulrich told him.  “Said he was born in ’03. ‘Three years younger than the year.’ That’s how he put it.”

            “So why not go back and work in his father’s shop?” Hans persisted.

            Renate jumped in. “So many questions, and the young man’s not even here,” she said, tucking a strand of her dark hair behind her ear as she pointedly placed a fresh roll on Hans’ plate.  Distract the family with food.  That was her strategy for keeping the peace.  Not that there was generally any need.  Theirs was an unusually harmonious family. They were blessed by peace and by an abiding affection for each other, an affection supported by a foundation of deep love. 

            This was spring of 1921, many months before the events of 1921 that we’ve mentioned before, the events which caused Renate to adopt a much more hands-on approach to mealtime conversations.  But already many years before, Renate had become an excellent spotter of even a light gray fog of conflict on a distant horizon, and she’d adopted her own mother’s tendency to soothe and smooth over with food. As a result, Renate was skilled at shoring up the ramparts of familial peace with subtle, yet powerful culinary sandbags. It was her habit to keep the rolls and cheese coming, even when no conflicts loomed.  Today she saw no need for new sandbags, not yet, but a little adjustment of existing levees did seem in order. Hence the second roll for Hans.

            “Yes,” Ethel chimed in, her voice light and airy.  “You can tie him to the saw horse and force him to tell you everything,” she told her older brother, her eyes dancing, and her lips forming an affectionate smile.   Ethel was not the only one in her family to recognize in Hans’ words his tendency to anticipate threats where none might be present.  But she was the only one who could get away with teasing him about it. 

He was nearly 20 years old now, and she not quite 17. They had grown close in the course of their childhood, so devoted to each other that neither could ever detect the minutest ill will in any remark by the other, even when they experienced a difference of opinion. Besides, despite being the younger sister, Ethel felt herself Hans’ equal in strength.  Not physically – Hans was tall and strong, in a wiry way – but in her spirit.  Under Hans’ constant tutelage and protection, she had grown into a young woman who knew her own mind and was not shy about asserting it.  But her self-confidence was tempered with such lightness and joy, and so completely lacking in arrogance, that no one ever got cross with her for her assertiveness.  Ulrich had called her “our little angel” from the time she was tiny, because her light, curly hair looked to him like a halo.  Even now, although she braided her long hair and wore it coiled into a bun, the halo was not in the least subdued.

Hans smiled at her wryly. “You bet I will.  Who knows who he is?  There are so many men roaming around the countryside now. Men without a past, or wanting to be, making themselves out to be.”

Ulrich nodded slowly.  Of course, he’d considered that himself. Despite the fact that Ulrich handled business-related decisions and Renate was in charge of domestic concerns, this was a question that would affect them all.  So, the husband and wife had discussed it. They’d decided it would be good to take Viktor on, and had informed Hans and Ethel.  This was all according to the Gassmann family manual: Ulrich and Renate announced the decision, and then the topic turned to implementation.  Renate knew that it was to be expected that Hans would have questions. That was acceptable. He’d have to work with this Viktor, after all.  All the same, she hoped Hans would just move smoothly into the implementation phase. 

Renate felt that life on the homestead had been so much easier before Hans and Ethel came to consider themselves grown-ups.  Back then (a few short years ago!) Renate hadn’t had to contend with anyone else’s opinions about how she did things around the house.  Nor had Ulrich had to answer for his decisions about how he ran the business.  Now, though, the children seemed to have decided they could assert their own views! These days, Renate often found herself saying, at mealtimes, “Talk to me about it later, Lina.” Or “Hans, you can discuss that with your father later in the afternoon.”  It was a challenge for her to develop a strategy for maintaining control over both the way things were done and the way they were discussed, while still giving the children the impression they had a say in things…

Ulrich, too, was feeling his way through this new stage of working with his son.  His own father, Detlef, had been dead for more than fifteen years already, so Ulrich was used to making all the decisions about the forestry and cabinetry-making business entirely on his own.  Or, rather, with Renate as a sounding board, just the way she used him as a sounding board for her domestic decisions. In the current case, this was not the first time Hans had raised this particular concern about the new man, Viktor Bunke.  To his credit, Ulrich was happy to be patient with his son.  He probably realized that Hans had inherited the family propensity for repeatedly mulling over questions. Let Hans bring this up again, if that’ll help him gain comfort with the decision.  This was the way it usually went with Hans: He needed to come at a situation several times before he could see his way clear to accepting a decision. 

  “I see your point, Son,” Ulrich replied, his voice kind.  “We’re none of us going into this blind.  He’s coming on a trial basis.  He doesn’t work out, we send him along his way.”

“We need the help,” Renate reminded him.  “You have orders to fill, thank God.”

“Be that as it may,” Ulrich said, “we’ll send him off if need be.  There are others looking for work. But give him a chance to prove himself to us.”

“Okay. I can do that,” Hans said.

“I’ll say it again: no one’s giving him the keys to the barn l just yet.” This Ulrich said with a smile.

Hans laughed and scratched the back of his head, as if admitting that he could wait to meet Viktor before declaring him a thief or murderer.  “No one except Ethel, maybe,” he replied, smiling now.  “She’d give the whole house away to anyone who needed it if they looked at her the right way.”

Ethel smiled, too, topped half of her roll with a slice of cheese, and shrugged.  “But it’d have to be just the right way. And that’s not happened yet.”

* * *

            In fact, it was not just Hans’ tendency to see threats where none might exist that prompted concerns about Viktor.  Born in late 1901, Hans was called up to the army in 1917, but he never served: He suffered a bad break in his right leg during basic training, and was sent home for good. Hans was – as were Renate, Ethel, and Ulrich, who had himself had avoided military service due to nearly complete deafness in one ear – keenly aware of their family’s good fortune in emerging from those years intact.  So, he felt that the least he could do was to be on guard now, when life in their country as a whole, and their small part of it, was still unpredictable and unstable. 

            Hans was particularly protective of Ethel. His natural seriousness and vigilance served as an ever-present, but not oppressive, counterweight to her lightheartedness and the joyful way she moved through life, swirling this way and that like her blond curls.  Although it wasn’t an accurate perception, Hans believed that if he weren’t there to tether her to the earth, Ethel might well float off into the clouds. He’d seen her that way from the time she began to walk.

            As a boy, Hans was often charged with keeping Ethel company – and safe – while their mother was occupied with household tasks. On these occasions, he was the keeper of the scissors and needles that little Ethel needed to have at hand to make her little quilts from scraps of their mother’s fabrics.  In the earliest days, when he was six years old and Ethel only three, her manual dexterity was not on a par with her creative skills, and the two of them became a team.  Here’s how that came to be:

            When she was about two years old, Ethel displayed a fondness for arranging small objects into patterns, often colorful objects, but not always: A dried bean or a metal button appealed to her just as much as a fallen flower blossom or the scraps from her mother’s sewing projects.  While Renate sat sewing a dress or embroidering a towel, little Ethel would search the sitting area of the main room for small items, which she would then bring back to where her mother was working.  Ethel would sit contentedly on the floor for hours on end, fully engaged in putting her items next to each other on the wooden floor, shifting one and then another, exploring various combinations: sometimes squares or diamond shapes, but most often more fluid lines, spirals.  At some point she would declare the arrangement complete and call to her mother to admire her creation: she called them her “pictures”.

            Renate sewed nearly everything the family wore, except for Hans and Ulrich’s work pants, and, frugal German housewife that she was, no scrap of fabric was ever discarded. All unused pieces went into a basket in the house’s main room. During the winter, she would spend the evenings making small round disks from these scraps, one side flat, one side gathered in the center.  Then she’d sew them together at the edges to create coverlets to go atop their bed quilts.  Ethel always watched this process intently. Not surprisingly, it wasn’t long before the beans and buttons fell by the wayside (partly because Renate would scoop them up when Ethel wasn’t paying attention, for her own uses – it seemed frivolous to allow everything to be turned into a toy!) and Ethel began asking her mother for some of the pieces of fabric. Renate gave Ethel her pick of the scraps, a tiny bit grudgingly, at first, since they were useful, after all… Still, let the girl have her fun.  For the first few weeks, Ethel was content with simply laying out and arranging the scraps on the floor.  But the desire to push needle through thread soon arose.  Whether this wish was transmitted to Ethel by heredity, or whether she absorbed it during all the hours at her mother’s feet, we can’t say.  Whatever its origin, the desire was strong, and Ethel was insistent: “Mama, I want to sew them together,” she’d say, indicating the fabric pieces before her.  This is where Hans came in.

            Renate was not about to allow Ethel to handle a needle on her own, and besides, her own time was precious: She was so busy running the household that she couldn’t spare hours to tutor Ethel in this skill, not before she was really ready.  But Hans was old enough.  And he adored his sister.  Curiously enough, he enjoyed watching her create her “pictures”.  He sometimes brought in treasures he’d found in the woods or the yard – this in the years when Ethel was too young to be out in the yard alone with him.  Hans allowed her to use these seed pods or pebbles or feathers or acorns in her pictures, but just for that morning or afternoon: he had his own plans for them after that.

            Seeing Hans’ devotion to Ethel and his interest in the arrangements, Renate decided to teach the six-year-old boy to sew. That way, he could then be the one to stitch the fabric pieces together, under Ethel’s direction.  This would keep both children occupied, which was a very good thing. Ulrich, despite his love for Hans, often complained that the boy was underfoot, constantly asking to help with the forestry and carpentry work.  Ulrich did want the boy to learn this work, but not now.  He was too young, as of yet, to help with the main work, although Ulrich was already teaching him to saw and nail during a spare moment here and there.  Neither parent was quite sure how Hans would react to Renate’s new plan, and, indeed, Renate had quite a time convincing Ulrich that Hans would not turn out any less a man for knowing how to sew. But, in the end, Ulrich assented, and so did Hans.  Thus began a close collaboration between brother and sister that continued, in ever-shifting ways, up until about 1922. 

This early picture-making was also the point when Hans took on the role of Ethel’s protector.  Hans’ mother officially charged him only with keeping Ethel safe from being pricked by a needle. But he took to his new role so thoroughly and seriously that it naturally blossomed into a desire to protect his little sister from scissors, rose or hawthorn thorns, the edges of pieces of firewood, certain stones, and saw blades and awls…  In short, from everything sharp and pointy and potentially deadly.  

By 1921, Ethel seemed to Hans to have come into her full beauty. He anticipated that he’d now have a much harder time protecting her.  It didn’t even cross his mind – as it had Ethel’s – that she didn’t need protecting any longer. 

            But let’s go back, now, to 1907. Hans, even at 6, was a quick study.  Renate knew this, and she correctly calculated that it would take him only a matter of minutes to learn to thread the needle, knot the thread, and tie it off at the end of a seam.  She had a pair of small scissors, just right for his hands, which she gave him to use for these projects. 

            Three-year old Ethel was thoroughly delighted at being able to transform her pictures into a form she could carry around and display, instead of having to drag her father or Hans or visitors to a spot on the floor to view them.  The pictures became quilts for her doll, curtains for a chink in the wall of the workshop, and napkins for the dinner table.  Hans, proud to be able to contribute to the process, was quick to point out to all viewers that he had sewn the seams.  And Renate was pleased with the speed with which his stitches, which had, of course, started out crooked and of every which length, quickly grew even and precise.  Ulrich noted this, too, and he understood that this keen eye and attention to evenness and detail would serve his son well as he moved into helping with the woodworking.

            Now, Ethel’s creative process was such that, once she finished laying a picture on the floor and handed the sewing of the precious design over to Hans, she never went off to do something else while he stitched.   It wasn’t that she didn’t trust him to do it correctly. On the contrary, she was utterly convinced that her big brother was capable of doing whatever he set out to do. Such was the trust and confidence she had in him.  What was it, then, that drew her to sit before him, watching him sew, until he completed the very last stitch cut off the end of the thread with a triumphant snip of the scissors?  Sometimes, mesmerized by the way the needle moved through the cloth, Ethel stared at its sinuous motion, watching the tip and shaft vanish and reappear with hypnotic regularity.  Other times, it was the path of the thread that captivated her: the way it obediently trailed along behind the needle, as if needle and thread were playing “follow the leader”.  Something about watching the loose thread grow steadily shorter also filled her with joy.  Why did watching Hans sew affect her this way?  She could never explain it. But her soul inside her knew: It was that the needle and thread moved both in a straight line, toward the completion of a goal, and also in a to-and-fro pattern that wove in and out, up and down.  Ethel was a girl with goals, but she also appreciated the freedom to move a little bit outside the chosen path, while still heading toward the chosen end point.  It was the to-and-fros of Ethel’s movement through life that would bring her the most difficult moments of her life, as well as the most profoundly happy.

            But for now, Hans and Ethel were concerned only with stitching together the scraps of cloth for Ethel’s portable pictures.  It must be noted, though, that once Ethel saw that Hans knew how to use not just a needle, but scissors, too, she began asking him to cut the fabric scraps along this or that line that she would indicate with her fingers.  She’d line up her fingers next to each other to show him the pathway to follow with the scissors. And he would cut, using her fingertips as his guide. He was good enough with the scissors that he knew he’d be able to do this without nicking Ethel’s fingers.  And she knew it, too.  She was safe with him.

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Above the River, Chapters 5 and 6

Chapter 5

Summer, 1945

Gassmann-Bunke homestead

Somehow, Lina and her family did “learn to live with it”, as unlikely as that seemed to any of them on the night following the hope-slaying doctor’s visit.  Of course, what “live with it”meant for the family varied from person to person. The morning after he’d uttered his prayer, Peter tucked the disk with the bird on it into Lina’s knitting bag, in the hope that she would come across it, and that it would be of comfort to her, and perhaps even help her make her way toward Hope. He himself gained a bit of comfort from knowing she still had the bird disk close to her. Has she even realized she lost it? If she has, once she finds it, will she wonder how it made its way back into her bag? Maybe, for just a second, she’ll wonder whether the fairies found it and placed it there for her to discover. It made Peter smile to think about that.   Nurturing that thought was the main way Peter managed to “live with it”.

What about the rest of them? “The rest of them” now included the full Gassmann-Bunke extended family, plus two new residents. Within a few months of the doctor’s pronouncements, Marcus, and then Viktor, returned from their respective service. Shortly afterwards, a refugee war widow from East Prussia named Kristina was resettled to their homestead, along with her 5-year-old daughter, Ingrid. Renate and Ulrich and Ethel viewed this return of familiar faces and influx of new ones as a multi-layered blessing. 

The most immediately-recognizable blessing, in terms of the familiar faces, was that they were family faces. Having Marcus and Viktor back home was a gift, and the fact that they’d both returned home uninjured meant that everyone could breathe that much easier.  They’d already made so many adjustments to accommodate Peter and Lina’s various limitations, that it was a relief not to have to figure out what else they might need to change because someone else couldn’t use one leg or both.  And why, it had occurred to more than one of the members of this family, is it legs?  What is it with our family and legs?

Another blessing bestowed by Marcus and Viktor’s return was that now there were more people to take up the work around the homestead.  Viktor’s contribution was particularly welcomed, especially by Ulrich. Despite the disagreements that had arisen in the early thirties because of Viktor’s political leanings, Viktor and his father-in-law had always worked together in great harmony. So, Viktor returned eager to get back to tending the forest and building up the family’s cabinet-making business, which had faltered so badly during the war. For now, Marcus was toiling in the forest alongside his father and grandfather, but that wouldn’t be for long: A month or so after Viktor returned home, he announced that he’d pulled strings to get Marcus a coveted Civil Service position in nearby Varel. He’d be able to start working in a few weeks. This pleased Marcus greatly, since he’d never much enjoyed working in the forest – or with his father, for that matter.  The position in Varel, off the homestead, would give him some measure of independence, plus some prestige, too.  Ulrich would rather have had the extra help with the forestry work, but since relations between Viktor and Marcus had been tense for years, he figured it might not be such a bad idea for his grandson to work in Varel. Besides, they had Stefan working with them now, a skilled hand from Bockhorn. Between himself, Viktor, and Stefan, they should be able to make a go of things.

Viktor, too, felt no small measure of relief when all of this fell into place. Ethel had, naturally, filled him in on every detail of what had transpired in the year since their daughter’s accident, and Viktor wanted to do what he could to make things easier for her.  So, he was pleased to have been able to use his war-time connections to secure that position for Marcus. Maybe this was his attempt to make up for the disturbances their family had gone through before the war. Not that he felt himself to be at fault, but the rest of the family certainly did. And Viktor recognized how important it was to make an effort to have everything be congenial now, and also for the homestead work to run as smoothly and efficiently as possible. As good as Marcus was at the forestry tasks, having him off in Varel during the day would help keep the atmosphere at home calmer. Viktor knew that this calm was key, for everyone’s sake, but especially for Lina’s. Or maybe Viktor was thinking not so much about how Lina needed peace and quiet, as about how he needed it, after what he’d been through in the war. Most likely, he sensed both his own need andhers. But he mentioned only hers when he spoke with Ethel and his in-laws about striving for a peaceful setting. God knows, we all need it, he often thought to himself.

Just exactly why Viktor needed the calm was not something he ever discussed with Ethel.  She asked him once or twice, in a roundabout fashion, about what he’d done during the war (a question along the lines of, “Were you there the whole time, the spot you sent your messages from?”) This was her way of opening the door for him to share that with her, but without shoving him through that door. Ethel’s indirectness had its roots not solely in her natural ability to treat others with consideration. She held back also out of a tightness she sensed deep in her chest whenever she wondered what her husband might tell her if he did actually respond.

But, for better or for worse, Viktor did not walk through the door Ethel opened for him. Rather, he said only that it was better if she didn’t know.  He knew, as well as she did, that there were many ways to interpret that statement. And he liked it that way.  It really was better for her not to know. Sometimes he wished that he didn’t know, either.  All the more reason to get things into good order on the home front, he reasoned. 

With the whole family back under one roof, plus Kristina and her daughter living in the workshop, the Gassmann-Bunkes were grateful for Ulrich’s father Detlef’s eccentric approach to building a house for his family. It was thanks to him that they had plenty of room to move around in, more than any of their relatives or friends.

  Detlef built the Gassmanns’ original, one-room log cabin back in 1880, in the early years of his marriage to Ulrich’s mother, Iris.  Inspired by reading about the American pioneers’ simple houses built of logs, and mortared with mud and moss, Detlef boldly constructed one for his own family, flouting convention, which dictated a traditional low house. That’s what Detlef’s own father had built for his family: a modest, but roomy two-post low house. 

Built of timber and bricks with whitewashed walls inside, the low house was an all-purpose building: Detlef and his parents lived in it, along with all the livestock and some of the hired hands. The cattle and horses and goats lived in stalls that lined one of the house’s two, long sides nearest the large barn doors at one end. These stalls extended inward from the outer walls, ending at one of the two central rows of posts that supported the beams up above. The other side of the house, opposite the stalls, was open, and the walls were lined with workbenches and cabinets. Detlef and his father, Wolf, did their carpentry work here.

There was living space, too, at the opposite end of the house from the barn doors: one large room for the Gassmanns, and a second, smaller, room for the few hired hands who didn’t have lodging elsewhere.  A large, open space between these two rooms and the part of the building that housed the animal stalls and workbenches, provided a large kitchen area. Its large brick and stone hearth both heated the whole building and served as a stove and oven.  There was a small window on the lefthand side of the wall, if you were facing the hearth and the bedrooms behind it. Without the one window, the house would have been entirely dark inside. Even with it, the house was anything but bright, especially, when the barn and side doors were closed. Opposite this window was a side door that led out into the current day yard – the spot where the wood rounds had tumbled out of the wagon onto Lina.

It was clear to all around him that Detlef was a man of many plans. He knew exactly what he’d do after he completed the log home: He’d construct outdoor pens and lean-to stables for the livestock. Once he’d done that, there’d be plenty of space inside for Detlef, Wolf, and their helpers to work, and the low house would become a dedicated carpentry workshop (the one that still stands on the homestead today). Detlef even intended to pull the bricks out of eight of the spaces between the timbers on the stall side of the house, and installed windows, to let in more natural light. Once the entire Gassmann family moved into the log home, the forestry helpers would occupy the larger of the two rooms at the end of the workshop. Detlef intended to install a small, wood-burning stove in there to make it more bearable during the cold months.

But although Detleft managed to resettle the livestock, and install the windows and the new wood stove without interference from anyone, his grand reimagining hit a snag at the very last moment.  On moving day, just a few months before Ulrich was born, as Detlef had already begun moving the family and all their belongings into the log home, Wolf announced that he was better off staying in the low house.  This annoyed Detlef mightily, for he had other plans for the smaller room – plans of which Wolf was well aware. He intended to store the forestry and garden tools in that room, as well as saddles and harnesses, etc., for the horses.  But early in the morning of moving day, Wolf declared his allegiance to the low house. “I was born in this house, and I see no reason why I should die in that new one,” he told them. What’s more, he insisted on sleeping in the second, smaller low house room – Detlef’s intended store room. So, while Detlef and Iris’ bed, and Erich’s, too, were carried into the new log home, along with two bureaus, the hired hands carried Wolf’s bed and the washstand from the larger room into the smaller room. Then they moved all their belongings, the utilitarian beds they slept in, and the washstand from the smaller room, into the newly-vacated larger room.  Even achieving this was a struggle: Wolf initially insisted that he could just sleep in one of the hired hands’ beds and use their rickety washstand. But no one – the hired hands included – would hear of that.  So, by the night of moving day, absolutely everyone on the homestead was sleeping in a new room.  And each of them experienced at least one moment of confusion during the dead of night, when they awakened in an unfamiliar setting. Where am I? Am I where I belong?

Within a week or so, Detlef and Iris and Erich seemed to have fully adjusted to the new house. Erich, who was not quite four, and who had delighted, during the construction phase, in climbing up the logs that formed the house’s walls, continued to try to scale them even now, much to his mother’s consternation.  He would poke at the moss between the logs, and add tiny sticks and leaves to it wherever he could. “Daddy, look!”  he’d announce gleefully.  “I’m building the house!”

Wolf, meanwhile, initiated several improvement projects in the old house on his own hook. Detlef began to notice, when he was out in the low house-turned-workshop, that their equipment was gradually migrating into the small room where Wolf now lived.  Detlef first caught sight of harnesses hanging on hooks that had previously held the hired hands’ clothing and towels.  Another day, when he wondered aloud where the saddles had gone, Wolf just pointed to his room: Three saddle benches now lined the wall beneath where the harnesses hung.  Then there was the morning Detlef went into the workshop and found the long tree saws missing from the main room.  “No need for them to take up all that space out here,” Wolf had said by way of explaining why he had – evidently in the middle of the night – put up more pegs high on the wall above the harnesses to hold the long, big-toothed saws.

“But Papa,” Detlef replied, bewildered, “that’s your room, not a storage room.”

Wolf shrugged. “Felt kind of lonely with just me in there.”

Detlef opened his mouth to object. But then he realized that the saddles and saws and harnesses were just as much a part of Wolf’s life and family as were he and Iris and Erich. So he just nodded and started in on the morning’s work. 

Wolf evidently interpreted this conversation as permission to go whole hog. Over the next couple of weeks, Detlef noticed changes every morning when he came into the low house.  Within a month, “Wolf’s” room had been transformed into a model store room.  Tools, harnesses, saddles, and forester alike seemed pleased with the arrangement.  This was so much the case that, when Wolf died in 1882, it was a long, long time before Detlef could bring himself to remove his father’s bed and washstand from the room.  Wolf still belonged in there, somehow.

Ulrich, who never even lived in the low house, took the building’s transformed layout as a given.  As a toddler, though, he was always fascinated by the storage room. He loved to sit on Wolf’s bed in the evening, listening to his grandfather’s stories, until Wolf finally hustled him back off to the log home to sleep. Sometimes, if Ulrich had been especially well-behaved during the day, Wolf would seat him atop one of the saddles that were stored on the sawhorses, and they would pretend they were out on this or that adventure in the forest, in search of dragons or wolves or monsters.  Even after Wolf passed away, Ulrich would often ask to go out to “Dampa’s” room.  They couldn’t leave him alone out there, not with all those sharp implements, so his step-mother Claudia (his mother was no longer with them by then…) would go with him. Little Ulrich would sit on the bed in silence, as if listening to some voice that Claudia couldn’t hear.  Sometimes Ulrich would nod. Other times he’d just smile. Then he’d report to his father that “Dampa” had told him this or that.

Even when Ulrich grew older, that little storage room remained one of his favorite spots on the homestead.  By the time his own children were born, “Dampa’s” bed had long since been moved into the larger room, but Ulrich carried on the tradition of telling stories to Ethel and Hans out there.  And those two youngsters delighted in the evening horsey rides on the saddles in that room just as much as their father had done before them.

When they grew a bit older, Ethel and Hans asked how the storage room had come about. Why does it always feel so good in there? they wondered. Ulrich was touched that his own children clearly felt a connection to Wolf in that room, just as he always had. Nonetheless, he didn’t want to delve into the realm of sappy emotions, or controversial spiritual matters.  So, he focused on a more mundane explanation, telling Hans and Ethel how their grandfather Detlef himself had justified dedicating that room to storage, instead of to living space. “Your grandfather liked order,” he told them.  “He’d wave his hand around here in the workshop and say, ‘How could you work in here with all of that lying around all the time? I couldn’t!’” Ulrich went on to tell his children that Detlef’s construction and then, expansion, of the log home exemplified their grandfather’s philosophy of “A place for everything, and everything in its place.” Except that, when it came to the log home, that seemed to mean, “A place for everyone, and everyone in his place.” In lots of space.

The Gassmanns’ neighbors saw the original log home mainly as an eccentricity.  “What’s wrong with the low house?” they all asked, scratching their heads.  Even so, the cabin didn’t seem to offend anyone with its size: The area where Detlef slept with his wife and two sons, was larger than the room they’d shared in the low house, but not dramatically so.  This “bedroom” in the front corner of the original log home’s kitchen was first separated off from the rest of the room by curtains, and, before long, by solid walls. Then, in 1886, when Ulrich was six and his older brother, Erich, ten, Detlef built the two-storey addition onto the original log cabin. Detlef and his second wife Claudia had two daughters by then, and Claudia had begun grumbling – “Six of us in this little room!”  Knowing Detlef’s penchant for arranging just the right spot for everything, Claudia began mentioning casually that before they knew it, Erich would be married, and Ulrich wouldn’t be far behind, and that meant daughters-in-law, and grandchildren… Detlef, who immediately began dreaming of a large, harmonious family living under one roof, took the hint. The cabin’s newer section boasted two bedrooms on the ground floor and two on the second, with a central staircase connecting them.

It was when Detlef put on this two-storey addition that everyone’s jaws dropped.  A log cabin was one thing. But a log mansion?? This went beyond eccentricity, the neighbors and friends insisted. This bordered on madness. No one outside the family could understand why on earth those Gassmanns needed all that room!  Then again, none of them knew about Detlef’s dream of a large extended Gassmann family.

Ulrich’s marriage to Renate in 1900, followed by the birth of Hans in 1901, and Ethel in 1904, represented the sowing and earliest growth phases of that dream. Detlef died suddenly in 1905. But, watching from the world beyond, he saw his wish blossom beautifully when Ulrich and Renate’s daughter Ethel married Viktor Bunke in 1922, gave birth to Marcus in 1923, Peter a year later, and Lina after four more years. Even so, the blooms faded quickly on his granddaughter’s marriage, even before Lina was born. There was that period when certain events led Viktor to go back to live in Schweiburg (which we will get to in due time); when Ethel followed him there; and when they eventually returned to the Gassmann-Bunke homestead.

All of these events created fault lines in the family that weakened its emotional foundation. The log home itself, though, remained solid as ever and even underwent certain improvements associated with modernity: electrification; the installation of water pipes to the kitchen; and, finally, the so-called indoor plumbing, although the bathroom itself was added to the back of the house, on the other side of the kitchen wall.

When the opportunity arose to install this bathroom, the family had to address what turned out to be an unexpectedly thorny question: where to put it. Without really thinking it through, Ethel innocently floated the idea over supper one evening that they could use the empty first floor bedroom in the newer section of the house. Renate immediately stiffened at this suggestion, for reasons that neither Ethel nor Viktor grasped at that moment.  Ulrich, who generally sat through meals with a placid and food-focused expression, stopped in mid-bite. He’d noticed Renate’s reaction. After no more than three seconds of silence, though, Renate regained her composure.

“But just imagine how noise that will be for Papa and me,” she told Ethel and Viktor. Then, catching the puzzled looks on the grandchildren’s faces, she explained. “What with all of you traipsing to the bathroom at all hours, we’ll never get any sleep!”

“But Mama’s talking about that room,” Peter said, pointing through the door that led into the addition.

Ulrich, seeing Renate’s distress, came to her rescue. “But our bedroom here shares a wall with that room.” He leaned across the corner of the table and mimicked the noised the plumbing might make in the middle of the night. “How could a body sleep through that?”

Peter started giggling, and Marcus and Lina followed suit. This distraction provided sufficient cover for Ulrich to shoot Ethel a quick glance that conveyed, ever so clearly, “Let it be. There’s something here you don’t understand.” Ethel dropped the subject.  The children, meanwhile, amused themselves by producing all the sounds they could possibly imagine emerging from the new bathroom, and the rest of suppertime passed with the children’s levity underlain by the adults’ awkward silence.

Later that night, when everyone had headed off to bed, all four grownups pondered the situation, but silently, each without consulting any of the others. By this point, Ethel understood where she had gone wrong. Viktor, too, fully grasped the underlying issues, and there was no way he was going to step onto that shaky ground by raising the topic with his wife.  As for Ulrich and Renate, they had nothing to discuss, both having spent years living within the bubble of Detlef’s dream.

While their parents and grandparents slipped quietly into nightclothes and fitful sleep, the youngsters continued their own plumbing-related games, imagining tiptoeing into the bathroom and flushing the toilet – however it was that one did that, by the way… Neither Marcus nor Peter nor Lina had the slightest idea what the question of the bathroom placement had stirred up for their parents and grandparents.  This wasn’t surprising. First of all, let’s remember that this was a family that never discussed emotionally-charged topics if it could be avoided, which it nearly always could be. Second, the seeds of difficulty in regard to this situation had been sown by their great-grandfather, Detlef, who had, at this point, been dead for nearly thirty years.  The crux of the matter was the dream that had inspired the eccentric Gassmann patriarch to build this large home in the first place: the deep wish for his home to be filled with harmony and as many children and grandchildren and great-grandchildren (and so on) as it could hold. This wish had been expressed only in whispers from Ulrich to Renate, and then from Renate to Ethel and from Ethel Viktor. Even so, all four adults in the family knew that keeping the remaining empty bedroom free was key to protecting that dream. Its emptiness represented the future family members who would fill it. But until the question of the bathroom arose, none of them, except for Renate, had consciously realized that they, themselves, too, had fully adopted and were clinging to Detlef’s dream. Then Ethel stumbled upon this minefield of a topic – Who can blame her for forgetting to avoid it? It wasn’t as if this part of family history was on constant display…  – and each of them was forced to confront it in his or her own way, in his or her own mind.

Ulrich’s position was that he wanted whatever Renate wanted. He knew full well that peace in the household came about when his wife had free rein to direct the lives of those in the family – to the extent they’d allow her to do this, of course.  For her part, Renate felt sure that keeping the family under one roof was essential for everyone’s happiness. So, naturally, that bedroom just had to be left free for Marcus or Peter or Lina and a spouse. Ethel, too, despite how up and down things had been between her and Viktor during the previous five years, clung to the hope that everything could smooth out, that they could be the family they’d seemed on the brink of being before certain things had come to light in 1926.  That left Viktor.  Although the others might not have believed this, he, too, felt that if they could all just stay in one place, they had a chance of fighting their way back to the joy of the early days of his and Ethel’s marriage. He very much wanted that. Maybe he and Ethel could even have more children.  Thus, the future happiness of the whole Gassmann-Bunke family clearly came down to the placement of the bathroom.

Although all four of the adults agreed about the absolute necessity of building the bathroom onto the back of the existing house, instead of in the free bedroom, none of them wanted to put forth this explanation to the others. There was no way they could talk openly about such concerns. It was this even greater than usual squeamishness around touchy subjects that kept the discussion going around and around for more than a week with no resolution.

Then, one evening, Marcus, who was excited to see how the plumbing in the promised bathroom would actually function, pressed for information about when and where the new equipment would be installed. Ethel cleared her throat.

“Well, Dear,” she told her older son, “we haven’t quiet decided that yet.”

Seven-year-old Lina frowned at this. She was confused, since she had been paying attention to the suppertime talks over previous days. The question she posed now was genuinely innocent.

“Mama,” she said quietly, leaning toward Ethel, “don’t you all want the same thing?”

“What’s that?” Renate asked her granddaughter. She hadn’t heard Lina’s question, but had assumed the little girl might be feeling unwell. “Are you all right?”

“Oh, yes, Grandma,” Lina said cheerfully.

“What is it then?” Renate asked. 

“I was just saying to Mama that you all want the same thing.”

Ulrich, who had, as usual, ceded the floor to Renate, and had been observing rather than speaking, perked up now.

“What’s that you say, Lina? That we all want the same thing?”

Lina nodded.  “Grandpa, you don’t want the bathroom in here, do you?”

“No,” he admitted.

“And neither do you, Grandma, right?”

“That’s right,” Renate told her.

“And Mama and Papa don’t, either, do you?”

Both Viktor and Ethel shook their heads. Lina looked genuinely perplexed.

“Then I don’t understand what the fuss is.”

Emboldened by their sister’s successful invasion of the conversation, Peter and Marcus spoke up, too.

“Who said it had to be in the downstairs bedroom in the first place?” Marcus said bluntly.

“Right!” Peter called out brightly.  “Nobody wants it in there.”

The adults exchanged glances.  At this moment, each of them grasped that the children were giving them a way out of this impasse, one that wouldn’t require them to talk about the underlying issue at all.

“But, I thought you suggested it, Viktor,” Renate replied, cagily.

Viktor, happy to play along, shook his head. 

Renate looked at her husband.  She knew that no one would believe the plan had originated with him.

“You, then, Ethel,” she suggested, turning to her daughter. “It must have been you who suggested it in the first place.”

“No, Mama,” Ethel objected. “It wasn’t me.  I thought it was Papa.”

“Not me,” Ulrich said succinctly. He knew where this was headed and he wanted to get on with it. High time to settle this.

“Then it looks like the kids are right,” Viktor said. “We really do all agree.”

This was probably the one time any of them could remember that the youngsters’ views had been entertained at the table.  The children themselves were giddy with their newly-found power, but Renate quickly coopted the victory.

“I knew all along we’d come to an agreement!” she said firmly.  

It was clear to little Lina – and to all the rest of them – that the logic in Renate’s declaration did not hold.  But Lina was still too young to be able to comprehend that she and her brothers had been manipulated for the grownups’ gain.  Peter and Marcus, even if they did understand what was going on, knew better than to press their luck by trying to point it out. So, once Renate summed things up – “I knew all along we’d come to an agreement!” – the grownups immediately shifted their focus to discussing the layout for the new bathroom they would build onto the outside of the kitchen wall.  The unexpectedly unanimous decision to keep all the waste and dirt outside the main house, thereby leaving a clear and pristine space free for the family to grow, seemed to each of them to bode well for the future.

But a little more than ten years later, in 1944, when Viktor and Ethel had had no more children, when Peter and Marcus, and Lina had yet to marry, and Germany was mired in war – that’s when Lina had her accident, mere months after Peter came home from the war, wounded.  These events forced the family to once again confront the question of how best to use the space in the original log cabin and its addition. 

The changes began as soon as Peter came back from the hospital, unable to climb the stairs to his childhood bedroom. Ethel moved upstairs to the room Peter and Marcus had once shared, and Peter occupied his parents’ former bedroom, one of the two bedrooms on the main floor of the addition. After her accident, Lina naturally couldn’t make it to her second floor bedroom any more, either. So, they moved her into the front, kitchen bedroom, displacing Renate and Ulrich. They, in turn, settled reluctantly into the other bedroom on the main floor of the addition: the room that had been so fiercely kept free over the past years. It really was the best alternative: Now both in their 60s, Renate and Ulrich were reluctant to have to climb the stairs to reach Lina’s old upstairs room.  But there was something else about this decision that weighed heavily on them, and on Ethel, too. This musical chairs-like shifting of bedrooms’ occupants left the three of them feeling keenly disappointed. The cozy room they had guarded in their hearts as the spot for future generations conceived in love and harmony, had become, in the blink of an eye, a symbol of dashed family dreams, occupied now by the oldest, rather than the youngest, generation. 

Chapter 6

Summer, 1945

Gassmann-Bunke homestead

And this is how Viktor and Marcus found the household arranged when they returned home in the summer of 1945, a few months after Lina had received the doctor’s dire pronouncement., after the new fairy disk had been found and lost – and hope along with it.   Marcus took up residence in the second upstairs bedroom – Lina’s former room – adjacent to where his parents now slept.  He was pleased not to have to share a room with Peter any longer.  He didn’t think he could have stood that. We’re in our twenties now! We’re adults!

It’s not surprising that this shuffling of sleeping spots, which had been enacted in three separate stages, introduced its own level of instability and chaos into the life of the household.  Someone would refer to “Lina’s room”, or “Grandpa and Grandma’s room”, leaving the others to wonder whether they were talking about the old or new room assignments. They all occasionally found themselves struggling to remember who was where now. Which was, actually, the overarching question each of them faced on nearly a daily basis: Where am I? What is my place here? For, although most of them had lived all or most of their lives on this homestead, the emotional landscape had shifted gradually and profoundly over the years, with the result that each of them was now feeling out of place. There seemed to be little solid ground to cling to – despite the fact that the log home, the workshop, and their beloved forest now, in 1945, looked little different than they had a half century earlier.

It seemed natural to everyone that the refugees, Kristina and Ingrid, would feel out of place, since they were hundreds of miles from the place where they’d been born, and which they’d fled with no more than small packs on their backs.  But what’s our excuse? Renate silently asked herself one morning, as she felt in her own heart and mind the confusion and subtle despair that emanated from each of her family members. Then, since she was, after all, a Gassmann (by marriage, of course, but also emotionally), she filed this question away and returned to her attention to the pillowcase she was ironing.

As for Lina, she felt that she must be the one who reflected on this question more than any of the rest of them.  I’m the one who’s paralyzed, after all, she reasoned.   It never occurred to her that paralysis can take more forms than just being unable to move your legs.  Certainly, other members of the family – and Kristina and Ingrid, too! – were coming up against their own, individual types of paralysis.  The frequency with which the homestead inhabitants reflected on their states varied, from “not at all” to “nearly constantly”, and in the case of those who fell into the former category, the reasons for that varied, too. Some of them tended to actively avoid such contemplation (again, for various reasons).  They might notice this or that troubling thought, but then force it down or out through work or chatter. Others, though, were so paralyzed in some emotional or psychological way that they would never have taken it into their heads to reflect on their state of mind. They just lived their lives and figured everything inside them was okay.  But what everyone who lived here had in common was this: They did not talk to each other about their inner experiences. Nor did they risk asking each other the basic question, “How are you doing?”  To do that would be to open up a door that none of them wanted to open, because what lay on the other side might be too terrifying to hear.

Lina was content to observe this unspoken code, as long as it meant that she didn’t have to ask others how they were feeling.  But when this meant that no one was asking her how she was feeling… Well, that was not acceptable. She found herself thinking, They are all fine.  But I’m not. And they can all see that. Why don’t they talk to me about it?   She expected that once they got back home, Marcus and Viktor, at least, would ask her about all she’d gone through. But neither of them ever broached this topic with her.  Nor did Kristina and Ingrid. These refugees simply took in her condition without posing a single question.

It wasn’t that Lina found silence in general disquieting. No. She’d experienced many enjoyable periods of quiet in her life: when working alongside Ulrich in the forest, where she found the lack of words soothing and at the same time energizing, since not talking enabled her to connect to the trees and the stories their energies seemed to be relating to her; or in the kitchen or garden with Renate and Ethel, each of them focused on sewing or cooking or laundry or weeding or sowing.  There was a sweet sense of calm in those moments, too, as they worked separately, but were still connected to each other by a free flow of love. 

Now, though, the silence felt entirely different to Lina.  She couldn’t get out among the trees to feel their powerful energy the way she wanted to do – needed to, even – and when she was doing this or that task along with her mother and grandmother, the silence in the kitchen or garden now had a tense quality to it. Their love for each other was still there, but subtly obscured by a layer of concerns and thoughts consciously left unsaid – by all of them. Lina, too, kept quiet about her condition, sensing that no one else wanted to talk with her about it. What was there to say, after all?  They just had to do what the doctor said, and get used to living like this.

What made this all particularly upsetting to Lina was that she knew the others were talking about her when she wasn’t around.  Although she was excluded from participating in any of the conversations that centered around her, Lina sometimes caught a word or phrase. Whispers in her grandparents’ room occasionally rose above a whisper, sending words that Lina only half heard and half comprehended, through the curtained doorways and into her bedroom off the kitchen.  The tones of voice varied: Sometimes the words seemed to bear grief, sometimes despair or regret or, perhaps, desire for the situation to be different.   But if we take this last feeling – desire – well, Lina never actually heard words that confirmed her impression that her family members wanted things to be different. It made sense – rational sense – to her that they would just hunker down and find a way to cope.  This was who the Gassmann-Bunkes were. She’d grasped in the course of her life, that they were all experts at coping. No complaining.  No useless expenditure of emotion. Just do what needed to be done. So, Lina wondered, why were they talking about it at all? Here are some of the explanations that occurred to her: 

Maybe they’re just so sad that I’ll be in a wheelchair for the rest of my life.

Maybe they’re just so sad that they’ll have to take care of me for the rest of my life.

Maybe they wish they could pack me off to an institution.

Maybe they wish I’d just die in the night.

Is this about about me or about them?

All these questions ran through Lina’s mind on a repeating loop – no paralysis there!  They went on and on, until she finally came to the conclusion that if it were the first explanation – that their focus was her and her suffering – then they would most likely be saying something to her about it: “Lina, we’re so sorry.”  “Lina, I wish things were different.”  “Lina, let’s talk about what we can do to make life better for you.”  But since no one was saying anything of the sort to her, all of this must certainly be about them: how their lives were horrible now because they had to take care of her; how the rest of their lives would would be ruined because of the burden she was for them; how much trouble it would be for Marcus or Peter to take care of her once their grandparents and parents were gone; and whether there was any way around or out of the situation. That kind of thing.  Lina convinced herself that it was precisely these woes – their own, personal sadnesses – that they were all talking about when they thought she couldn’t hear them.  Once she understood this (as she saw it) obvious explanation, Lina lost all curiosity about the actual content of these secret discussions, because they didn’t concern her – in both meanings of the phrase. It’s abundantly clear that they’re only concerned with themselves! And this led to another thought: Which means I’m on my own from now on.

Lina didn’t mean this in the physical sense, because her mother and grandmother continued to help her with washing and dressing and so on, never uttering a word of reproach, never showing how tired they must really have been.  On the contrary: They showed such kindness and patience around her! Unnatural kindness and patience, it seemed to Lina.  As she explained it to herself, they had to go overboard in their displays of caring, so as not to betray the resentment they actually felt toward her, and the despair at their own ruined lives.

No, Lina did feel that her physical needs were taken care of.  And she did have a home, in the sense of a physical space to live in. But emotionally, she felt alone, lacking a firm foundation to rest against for support.  The problem was, that ever since the accident, Lina had felt like she no longer had the right to be here on the homestead. Why do I even deserve a spot here, if I can’t be a contributing member of the household? she thought. Then the doctor gave her that devastating prognosis, condemning her to existence as an invalid, and none of her loved ones thought she might like to talk with them about what this really meant for her.  For me! They spend countless hours talking about what this means for them.  They have each other to talk to. With each other they talk. With me they’re mute. But who am I supposed to talk to?  Who of them ever thinks to comfort me? Their silence (and hers, for she never posed these questions to anyone) left her feeling emotionally unsupported. As she sat, day after day, and observed the way everyone around her went about their business oblivious to her emotional state, Lina began to feel angry, but without recognizing what she was feeling as anger.

Now, her family was not an angry lot in general.  Almost without exception, they were cordial to each other, warm, actually, because theirs was, for the most part, genuinely a very loving family.  Explosions of anger did occur, but they were rare, even in the case of Marcus, who was the most vocal of them all. Instead of openly expressing any anger they did feel, the members of this family tended to keep it out of sight, holding it back and pushing it down into some inner space where they could contemplate it in quiet, personal moments. Or, conversely, they’d simply leave it unacknowledged and uncontemplated, papered over with the hope that whatever was wrong would turn out fine if only no one discussed it, out in the open, as a family. 

Lina had never been aware of experiencing any anger herself before now, aside from the short-lived anger of childhood that arose out of everyday frustrations with her siblings and parents. But even those frustrations had been few and far between for Lina.  As the younger sister, she had been spared the taunting and beatings that Peter had suffered at Marcus’ hands, and so had grown up mostly in a bubble of lightness.  She’d found her way to the forest in early childhood, really found her way there, both physically and as a human and spiritual being.  Immediately sensing the divinity and spiritual power of the trees, she had, unconsciously at first, sought to spend every free moment with them.  She spent hours sitting beneath them, or perched on their boughs, or leaning against the trunk of the big beech tree in the tree house her grandfather had built for and with Ethel and Hans. At these times, Lina entered a world beyond the physical reality of the homestead, a realm where she felt so connected with the trees and with God who had created them, that it felt to her that her blood and their sap were one.  In this, Lina was truly her parents’ child and her grandfather’s granddaughter. 

This link to the divine, through the forest, gave her a strong, stabilizing spiritual foundation for her life. Whatever might happen – whatever slight disappointment or upset – she could always find comfort and solace in the forest. Standing or sitting amongst the trees, she would feel, Ah! I’m home. All is well. Precisely because Lina learned early on to seek refuge amongst the trees when she felt anxious, or when others in the family were ill at ease, anger never became a familiar part of her emotional landscape.  She knew how to settle herself down and take comfort from the forest’s heavenliness.Lina took her sustaining spiritual connection to the trees so much for granted that she might even have referred to it as her birthright. But she’d have said so only if she’d stopped to reflect on this. This, though, was something she never did that, not until August of 1944, when it seemed to her that her birthright had suddenly and viciously been snatched from her.

Since her accident, Lina had been deprived of the opportunity to commune with the trees and soak up the solace they so eagerly offered.  Certainly, the spruces and birches and larches at the edge of the forest where the path began did their best to comfort and soothe Lina as she sat in her wheelchair. But the effect was just not the same, not strong enough to quell the disquiet and feeling of homelessness that grew within her as the months dragged on.  Lacking both communion with her beloved trees, and (as she saw it) a way to earn her position on the homestead, Lina felt untethered from both the land and her family. Like an interloper. Is this the way Kristina and Ingrid feel? Lina mused one day as she watched the refugee mother and child walk from the house to the workshop, their steps tentative, their shoulders a bit hunched.  No, Lina decided. They are lucky. This isn’t their land, but they’re earning themselves a spot here. And a cry rose up in her throat. She noted the strong emotion, without attempting to label it, then forced it back down, into the depths of her heart.

It wasn’t until sometime in the early fall– after Marcus and Viktor had returned and Kristina and Ingrid were getting settled into life on the homestead – that Lina attempted to name the unfamiliar emotion she noticed arising in her more frequently. The first feeling she recognized was what she easily labelled as frustration – her familiar discomfort at being relegated to the forest’s edge. Then she observed how her frustration gradually intensified and deepened, until it tipped over into… Anger. Yes, that’s what it is. Once she identified it, Lina was shocked. She’d never thought of herself as an angry person. She observed with horror as this anger rushed through her, gripping her more and more tightly as it went, as it supplanted God’s energy, that had previously flowed into every part of her from the trees. 

It was October of 1945 now, and some days, as she sat at the beginning of the path she couldn’t follow, Lina fell into a state of mute rage. She lost awareness of everything around her and felt only the intense pressure of her own stiff breathing and the constricted movement of her chest as it rose and fell, and her clenched jaw.  Then she suddenly came to and looked down to see her hands wrapped tightly around the wheelchair’s armrests, her arms tense and straining, while her sewing lay abandoned on her useless legs.

These incidents occurred while the rest of her family members and Kristina were going about their business.   No one noticed Lina’s distress, or if they did notice it, they didn’t mention it. That Gassmann reticence again. Or perhaps just lack of awareness?  After all, there was so much to adjust to, for all of them.  But whereas pre-accident Lina, soaked in all the heavenliness of the forest and softened by it, would have realized that each person on the homestead was going through his or her own process of coming to terms with his or her wartime experiences, post-accident Lina could see only her own suffering. Despite the chores and tasks she had taken on, she still had precious little in the way of distraction to lift her out of her earth-bound state of anger at her own helplessness and hopelessness.

What, precisely, was she so angry about?  Lina asked herself this very question the first time she found herself gripping the wheelchair’s armrests as if she were attempting to strangle them, and realized that it was anger she was feeling.  Several initial answers flowed freely into her mind: They don’t care about me. They’ve forgotten about me.  They can’t be bothered to ask me how I’m feeling. No one’s even trying to think of a solution. Because these answers were similar to the reasons she’d already come up with to explain everyone’s silence, Lina found them satisfying. There was also something else that made them appealing to her: They all implicated her family members and their heartlessness. 

For some reason, she felt a strong need to be able to pin the blame for her situation on someone.  She could have blamed God, of course. But she wasn’t particularly inclined to do so, since until a year earlier, before her accident, she had felt embraced by God’s presence every single day, had felt loved and supported by Him.  Lina didn’t like to follow this train of thought, the idea that God might be to blame. The answers to the question What am I so angry about? that ran along that track – and which were actually more questions, instead of answers – disturbed her: Why did God allow this to happen to me?  How did I disappoint God so that He did this to me?  Why did God abandon me? She certainly did feel abandoned now, and not just by God, but by her family, too. This feeling led her to wonder why everyone had abandoned her. Am I myself somehow to blame?

At this point in her ruminations, Lina suddenly recalled something her mother had said to her a few years earlier.  It was right after Peter went into the army, Lina recalled. So I’d just turned fourteen.  She and her mother and grandmother were in the kitchen. Renate was busy with dinner preparations. Lina was standing up on a chair, wearing the new skirt Ethel had sewn for her, while Ethel was kneeling behind her, pinning up the skirt’s hem. They were having the kind of light conversation that always dominated when they were working together on a project. Feeling relaxed and happy, Lina came out with a question she’d been thinking about off and on for a week or so.

“Mama, why are Marcus and Peter only a year apart, but there’s four years between Peter and me?”

Ethel made no reply at first. But Lina could feel her mother’s hands stop their rhythmical motion of folding the fabric and pinning it up. Renate, too, paused at the counter, where she was chopping carrots.

“Mama?” Lina asked again, and then turned to look back at her mother.

“Don’t fidget!” Ethel replied, the words emerging from around the straight pins she was holding in her mouth.

Lina, who had no idea about how and why children were conceived, couldn’t understand why she hadn’t been born a year after Peter. And so, she’d innocently asked her mother for an explanation.  She couldn’t see Ethel’s lips tighten around the pins. But she did notice that Renate put down her knife and wiped her hands on her apron.

 “Mama?” Lina asked once again, more quietly this time. Again, she felt Ethel’s hands stop moving. After removing the pins slowly from her mouth, Ethel finally spoke, still kneeling behind her daughter.

“Things like that aren’t always so simple,” she began, then paused.

“I’ll go see whether those sheets on the line are dry,” Renate remarked, before turning and walking out the door, into the yard.

Lina found that odd. Why’d Grandma go out right in the middle of cutting up the carrots?

  Ethel, meanwhile, was thinking about that period of her life and marriage, about the reasons for the gap Lina had asked about. Then she thought about Viktor and Marcus, who’d already been away for two years, and about Peter, who was, at that moment, heading toward who knows what battlefield. She felt her stomach tighten, and blinked away the tears that rushed to her eyes. She bowed her head for a moment, feeling grateful that Lina’s back was to her. Later, Ethel would both marvel at and regret the honesty she displayed in the next moment.

“The truth is, Lina,” she went on, finally, “that your father and I weren’t getting along very well for a few years.  I wasn’t sure whether I even wanted to live with him any more, much less have another child with him.”

Then, with no further explanation, Ethel placed the pins back into her mouth, one by one, and went back to pinning up the hem on Lina’s skirt.  Lina, for her part, stood stock still, meek and mute, moving only when her mother said, “Turn”. By the time she’d revolved enough that she was facing her mother, Lina couldn’t bring herself to look down. Had she done so, she would have seen the tears in her mother’s eyes. As it was, it was all she could do to keep her own tears from rushing down her cheeks. A few minutes later, once Lina was once again facing forward, Ethel spoke again.

“But I’m so, so glad you came to us,” she said softly. “All done,” she added, tugging on the hem of the skirt.

Lina hopped off the chair, silently and hurriedly changed back into her work pants and, without a word, fled into the forest, to the tree house. There she wrapped her arms as far around the trunk as she could reach, and just sobbed. It took more than an hour, but the old beech gradually soothed Lina’s sorrow, as her tears soaked into its bark.

*          *          *

            Although Lina managed to convince herself that none of her family members was the least bit concerned with all she was going through, the actual story was not quite that simple. Each of them had his or her own questions about what Lina had gone through, and what she was still going through.

The Why? of it.  That’s what kept nagging at Peter, tormenting him.  He was, perhaps, the most religious of all the family members, and he recalled hearing that God has a plan for each of us.  How?, he was continually asking himself, could it have been in God’s plan for me to cripple Lina?  To be the instrument of breaking her bones and consigning her to a wheelchair for the rest of her life?  What kind of heinous instrument is that to be in life?  He would pray and ask God to explain how this could possibly be a plan for him – and for Lina.  Some days he would stand in the yard and stare at the spot where the accident had occurred and look at the dirt, which he could swear was still dented in spots, still darkened by Lina’s blood.  Well, actually, there had been less blood than he would have expected, given the gravity of her injuries. Why weren’t there entire pools of blood?  Or maybe, he considered, it was just his war experience that had conditioned him to expect that wounds always released whole rivers of blood? Sometimes Peter looked at the spot with the same blank stare that came over his face whenever someone mentioned the fact that he’d been wounded in the war, an event he was incapable of remembering, despite the very real evidence that it had occurred.  Other times, he stared intently, frowning, practically willing God to answer his request for an explanation of the events of August 10, 1944.  No answer had come by the time summer of 1945. But he continued to pray. 

*          *          *

            Ulrich, as a forester, was an observant man with a love of precision. Tall, and with a grounded heaviness about him, Ulrich was also strong, like the pine trees he resembled. Even his curly, sandy-colored hair was reminiscent of the pine pollen that settled on him in the spring as he worked amongst the trees. In the world of trees and forestry, his insight and decision-making were flawless. Ulrich was skilled at quickly and accurately assessing a situation, whether that meant gauging where a tree needed to be notched so that it could fall cleanly without toppling others, or how much to charge a carpentry client, depending on the client’s current mood, his wife’s disposition, or the amount of rain his hay field had received in the past month.  So, it wasn’t the Why? of the accident which hounded Ulrich, but the How?  He just couldn’t make the calculations come out right, no matter how hard he tried.  Perhaps something else is at work here? he mused.

Ulrich knew, without a doubt, that various powerful and natural forces operated in the world. This he came to believe during his earliest days in the eleven hectares his family had owned for generations.  His belief in these forces took root bit by bit, when he heard sounds that no one could quite explain to him coming from trees, or saw a falling tree inexplicably shift its direction and avoid crushing a hedgehog.  There were a few times when he asked his father about these incidents. He asked why the trees were talking, or why that beech tree chose to veer away from the hedgehog. “Was it afraid of being pricked by the spines?” His father, Detlef, a less fanciful thinker than Ulrich (although he, as we’ve seen, defied convention in his own ways) refused to grant that trees possessed any voice or agency.  For Detlef, there was no Why? to be discussed, because he saw Ulrich’s starting premise as faulty:  Trees were trees, not actors in and of themselves. They merely took (but without any conscious choice) the direction the foresters nudged them in.

            It was Detlef who used the word “fanciful” to describe his son.  But Ulrich never understood his father’s choice of that word.  What was fanciful about these forest events that Ulrich knew to be true? How? could his father reject something so real?  However, when faced with Detlef’s resistance – despite the fact that he couldn’t understand it – Ulrich changed his tack.  Clever, but also stubbornly curious, and at the same time respectful, he took to reframing his question.  “How?” he then asked his father, “did it happen that the tree fell and didn’t crush the hedgehog?”, despite the fact that the hedgehog was padding across the very spot where Detlef intended for the tree to fall.  Even at an early age, Ulrich sensed that these types of questions placed Detlef in an untenable and undesirable position: He had to admit either that he had erred in his own calculations when felling the tree, or that some other force was at work.  But no answers were forthcoming when Ulrich posed questions of this sort. Whenever Ulrich persisted, Detlef eventually just pretended not to hear what his son was saying.

            But his father’s lack of response did not deter Ulrich from posing such questions, or from drawing his own conclusions. Over the course of the sixty-four years of his life, nearly all of them spent in the family’s forest, Ulrich came to believe that trees, along with all living beings, were permeated by the divine life force that he himself felt out amongst the trees. In other words, God’s power flowed through them all. Ulrich came to this conclusion based on his own experience of feeling peace and joy and love out in the forest. He was firmly convinced that the trees around him – and the other beings and plants who lived there – must experience this, too.  He also believed that this divine power somehow had the ability to guide them, to encourage them to act kindly towards others around them.

            But does that mean that God sent the divine power through a beech tree and thereby encouraged it to avoid crushing a hedgehog? Or did the tree make this decision on its own because it was full of the divine? Ulrich had been mulling that question over for decades now, along with this one: Can God do more than simply fill us with His power, or do we individuals make our decisions completely on our own? Or is there some collaborative process at work?

            Because this longstanding inquiry was often present in his mind, Ulrich also had the habit of wondering what part God played in global and local events alike. He reflected on God’s role in the two wars they’d lived through, in the quantity of rabbits that took up residence in the forest each year, and in the number of trees that toppled in a strong storm. He wasn’t so naïve as to assert that a human’s actions or motivations played no part in how life played out around him – that God could control every detail of one’s life.  But at the same time, neither was he comfortable relying solely on rational, measurable explanations.

            So, when it came to discussing Lina’s accident, Ulrich was desperately engaged in pinning down the How? of it: How did Lina end up beneath the mound of wood rounds, with two broken legs, a broken foot and a dislocated hip? For him, determining the How? meant studying both earthly and divine factors. When he thought about the earthly side of the situation, numerous technical questions rushed to his mind. The first involved angles, because he was always thinking about angles, and degrees of incline, and trajectories, and straight paths.  Thus, when he stood in the yard, staring at the spot where the accident occurred, Ulrich was trying to pinpoint the angle and speed at which the rounds of wood had tumbled off the wagon’s back end. If the wagon had been going a little faster, would Lina’s legs still have been crushed, or would the wood have fallen further from her?  Had the wagon’s front wheels lifted off the ground even a bit as the wagon lurched forward, thereby increasing the force they exerted upon Lina’s bones, and upon the hard-packed earth?  (Ulrich, too, saw the indentations in the ground.)  How?, precisely, in terms of angles and speed and force, had the wood fallen?

Ulrich’s next questions touched on the divine or, precisely, on the role of the divine.  How? did it come about that the horses started off in the first place? And How? was it that Peter didn’t have them fully under his control? In these questions, Ulrich saw a connection to his decades-old query about the beech tree that managed to avoid the hedgehog. One day, as he stood in the yard, studying the dented ground, he suddenly had the feeling that the divine power was somehow tied up with the accident. But he didn’t find this thought appealing.  Crossing his arms in front of his chest, he shook his head. Why would God want Lina to have this accident? That doesn’t make any sense. God’s supposed to help, not harm, isn’t He?

So, as regards this particular situation, Ulrich chose to focus on the earthly explanations. He generally found it calming and comforting to work out technical questions. Such a process enabled him to bring things into order by working out all the measurable details.  At least, this is what he experienced when dealing with wood.  But this was a very human situation, and such situations were not his strength. Nonetheless, Ulrich persisted in his attempts to calculate everything he could that related to Lina’s accident, while actively not considering what role God might have played. But since he consistently pushed aside this, the divine, side of the question, he failed to achieve the order he sought. He began to experience anguish at the lack of a satisfying explanation, and this anguish gradually settled into his spirit as a persistent sadness.       

*          *          *

            Renate also favored the question, How did it happen?, but it was not exactly the same How? as her husband’s.  It was neither angles and trajectories that filled her mind, nor the question of divine influence.  Her How? could be more precisely rendered as, Who?, as in, Who? caused her only granddaughter to be lying broken beneath wooden rubble?  Thus, a single question –  “How? did Lina end up trapped under the pile of wood?” – acquired several distinct meanings, depending on whether it came from Ulrich’s lips or Renate’s.

            Now, Renate was not a forester, and thus, could tell you nothing about the angle at which a tree would fall, or how a notch should be cut. All the same, she was no less exacting than her husband: The consistency of her pastries’ flakiness or the evenness of her quilting stitches hinted at the deep love of precision that she and her husband shared.  You only needed to see her short, solid figure at work on a meat pie, to understand that here was a woman who knew how things should be done. Even her braids, which she wove tight each morning, before pinning them up, one on each side of her head, so that they came together in a little bun at the top, reflected her fondness for order. She also shared Ulrich’s tendency to engage in what others might deem “fanciful” thinking. You could see this trait in the ornamental dough curlicues that adorned her pie crust tops, and in the whimsy of the fairy houses she used to make when she was a little girl. As a child, she, like Ulrich, became convinced of the existence of unseen forces in nature, of unseen forest beings, and of trees possessed of voices. 

We can see here the lineage of Lina’s love of the forest and its divine nature. There can be no doubt that Lina’s strong attachment to the forest, her feeling of, “Here I’m home!” had made its way resolutely down through the family line from her grandparents and settled into her more deeply than in any of the other children or grandchildren. But while Ulrich maintained his strong connection to the forest and its divinity even after he married and had children, Renate’s focus shifted as she began raising her own family. With a husband and two children to raise (Hans and Ethel), Renate’s focus shifted to the visible, tangible human world.  She felt the need to expend her mental and emotional energy on nurturing the relationships between all the family members.  Facing this monumental task, Renate decided that she no longer had time for sitting in the woods, communing with fairies and spirits, no endless hours for allowing divine creativity to guide her hands as she constructed just the right dwelling out of bark, twigs, pine cones and moss.  As Renate saw it, people were not fairies, beings you could deal with in some relaxed state of ease, with faith that all would turn out right as long as you came to the endeavor with joy and openness.  No, Renate decided early on. Running a family is serious business.

Thus, Renate approached the realm of her household’s human inhabitants with just as much precision as Ulrich approached his work in the forest, but with an ever-lessening connection to the divine. Renate used carefully-calibrated words and actions to nudge Ulrich and her children in various directions, into the shape she felt it was best for each of them to inhabit.  She did this much in the way she formed the dough for her breads, rolls, doughs, and pastries: Each had its own desired (by Renate!) form and characteristics, and none of them shaped themselves, thank you very much!  Skill, exertion, and constant vigilance were required. 

Renate’s insight into people and skill at handling them, both amazed and puzzled her husband, because he, himself, lacked these qualities. During all the years he’d lived before getting to know Renate, Ulrich always tried to understand what made the people around him tick, but without success.  He didn’t become fully aware of this weakness until he was nearly forty – when it became abundantly clear to him that he had, decades early, entirely misunderstood a certain situation.  This misunderstanding had nearly destroyed his closest friendship, and he’d never understood why, because he figured he was just as insightful as anyone else…  But early on in his acquaintance with his future wife, it became clear to him that Renate absolutely shone when it came to reading people.  This he could see. At this point, he also saw that his skill at intuiting the right placement for a wedge or the precise spot for a tree to fall had no corollary that would have enabled him to clearly discern what lay at the heart of a human matter. Ulrich knew full well that trees had their own, complex motivations and inner lives, and he could gain access to them in a way Renate never understood.  But humans mostly perplexed Ulrich.  Humans, he felt,were constantly-shifting targets.

But Renate! Renate spoke to him with such confidence about the best way to handle this person or that situation so that good relations could always be maintained. And her assessments of those around them always impressed him as self-evident once she presented them, even though he could never have come up with them himself.  As for Renate, she came to her own realization early in their acquaintance with Ulrich: she saw that he possessed an incredible gift when it came to dealing with the forest and the family business.  So, once they were married, without even discussing it, the newlyweds divided their duties according to their natural strengths: Ulrich managed the trees, and Renate managed the people. 

This didn’t mean that Ulrich and Renate never discussed domestic or forestry matters with each other. Quite the contrary! They spoke about anything and everything each evening, before they fell asleep.  Renate remarked upon this or that business development Ulrich had mentioned, and he, in turn, asked her how this or that matter was going with one of the children.  But in each case, the goal was not to have a serious back and forth that would influence or yield a decision. Rather, this was the way each of them showed the other support and love, as well as respect and the complete confidence each had in the other’s ability to handle or resolve any situation that arose.

But in 1944, when Lina was so badly injured, Ulrich and Renate’s separate areas of responsibility suddenly overlapped, leaving both husband and wife wondering where they’d made their mistake. Was it on the forestry side or the personal side? For Ulrich’s part, his anguish over his granddaughter’s accident combined with anguish over his own inability to discern the How? of it: How?  had he allowed this to happen?  Should he not have encouraged her to pursue her dream of becoming a forester?  Maybe he had supported her desire for selfish reasons. Perhaps it was because he feared that his life’s work would be all for naught if none of his grandchildren was passionate enough to carry on the forestry work in the way he desperately wanted it to be carried on?

            Although Renate seemed supremely logical to those around her, she did actually experience feelings about people and situations.  It was just that she had a long-standing habit of pushing them aside as irrelevant to decision-making about corralling her family members. However, these feelings remained close to the surface of her awareness, as a thin overlay that colored her intuition.  (She would have denied this.) 

So, when it came to Lina’s accident, it was, in fact, Renate’s tamped-down fear and anger and sadness and frustration and regret that served as the engine behind her persistent thought inquiries into the How? of the accident. She just had to figure out the mechanism of the occurrence, so that she could prevent something like this from happening again. This new situation, she was convinced, was another 1921: The events of that year had spurred her to initiate new protocols for family conversations. And, since disasters of the 1921 type had not recurred, she assumed they were effective.

Thus, looking back at her past success in this area, Renate felt she should be able to: 1) discern what actions lay at the heart of Lina’s accident, and then 2) root them out.  This would ensure that no one else in her family would go through anything similar. This focus on determining the precipitating actions originated in Renate’s belief that Lina’s accident not just an accident. Because if it were just accident, then there would be no way for her to prevent such things from happening in the future.  No. Not that Renate rejected the “accident” explanation consciously, though.  This was just her innate approach to the world: Unlike Ulrich’s father, Detlef, who disavowed the agency of trees, Renate knew perfectly well that behind every action (whether by a sentient or non-sentient being) lay a conscious decision. Not just an idea or a motivation, but a decision to act on that idea.  So, Renate put her mind to work to determine who had decided to hurt her Lina. 

            In the early months, as Lina lay physically bruised and broken, and psychologically damaged, on a day bed they’d set up for her in the kitchen, Renate spent much of her time going over and over this question in her mind.  During this period, the family noticed that the curlicues atop Renate’s pie crusts grew even more sinuous, reflecting, perhaps, the twists and turns of her thinking as she followed every possible explanation through to its conclusion.  At the same time, her stitching became ever more even. She seemed fixated on forcing the needle and thread to her do her bidding: to produce a perfectly linear and straightforward narrative of thread and fabric, one that would, she hoped, lead to an equally straightforward narrative of the accident.

            Among the possible answers to the Who? was Peter, of course.  But Renate couldn’t bring herself to accept that story. (That was the emotional overlay in her mind talking.) All logical considerations aside (the damning fact that he had been the one in charge of the wagon), he had already been through enough, hadn’t he?  (The overlay once again.) Marcus was nearly the death of him when those two were growing up, and then the Russians had tried to finish the job with those two bullets.  Peter feels responsible enough for Lina’s accident, without me heaping blame upon him, too.  Renate felt that such accusations would be as crushing and sharp as the load of wood he had failed to control.  I can’t do that to him. Her grandmother side was at work once again.

            That left the Poles. They were a convenient Who? They had loaded the wagon. They had neglected to put up the railings across the back.  Neglected!  Yes, there’s where the fault lies, Renate suddenly realized. In the Poles’ decision to neglect their duties. I’ve found it! Renate was taught, as a young girl, that neglect was not a benign act. Her father had been of the belief that one did not just “forget” or neglect to do anything. He’d had the bewildering habit of attributing every genuinely-forgotten childhood chore to a willful act of domestic rebellion and disrespect.  And although Renate herself had been on the losing end of countless such conflicts growing up, she had also unconsciously absorbed this view. As we’ve seen, she did not hesitate to make use of it, at least when it suited her.  And now was one of those times, she decided.  She found it quite convenient to blame the Poles. They claim to have “forgotten” to put up the rails. That counts as a decision, doesn’t it?

*          *          *

Now, Ethel was aware of her parents’ ruminations on the cause of the accident, and of Peter’s, too.  They all came to her with their theories – always when Lina was not in earshot, naturally.  She listened and nodded and offered a noncommittal response to family members who were so caught in their own thought processes that they would not have entertained any objections. She knew better than to bother to putting forth alternative explanations, especially to her mother.  Over the course of the first year following the accident, Ethel grew immensely frustrated that these theories’ trajectory always pointed backwards in time, seeking explanations into the past.  That approach felt irrelevant to her. What was relevant, she thought, was the Now what? of it. 

Ethel had always been the creative one in her family, or, rather, the one who did not allow her creative spark to be crushed and stalled beneath the weight of the mundane necessities of everyday life.  Whereas her mother gave her inner light the space to peek out only in the vines and leaves of dough atop her piecrusts, Ethel, from early childhood, had embraced a world of free-flowing, swirling color and form and movement. Guided by an inner voice, she fashioned fabric scraps into small quilts with wildly irregular designs. There was the time she infuriated her mother by sowing the bean seeds in a spiral, so that she’d have a labyrinth to walk in when the vines grew tall.  Unlike Renate, who carefully constructed a vision of the future and then strived to produce it by controlling those around her, Ethel delighted in stepping into the forward-moving flow of creativity and seeing where it led her.

Really, the scope of Ethel’s creative spark had already been greater than her mother’s right from the start.  It’s true that the past twenty years – fully half of her life – had challenged her ability to hold onto her lightness of vision and forward motion. She had struggled to avoid being dragged down to earth and so tightly tied down by earthly concerns, that she couldn’t lift off again. At some points, she had felt as if unseen evil spirits had thrown ropes around her ankles, so faintly connected was she to the divine creative force that had once flowed through her so freely.  But she never lost touch with it completely, and she fought to maintain this connection, although at times she even fought to maintain her belief in the divine itself.

            But Ethel and Renate were more alike than it might have appeared on the surface: They both enjoyed following threads.  It was just that Renate preferred tracing and retracing the threads she herself had already laid out clearly. Ethel, on the other hand, was enamored of the process of seeing a spool set to rolling before her and discovering where the thread before her would lead.  For her, the joy had always lain in following the threads laid out by the divine force, and trusting that they would lead to the good. Now, faced with the unexpected spool of thread that was her disabled daughter, Ethel focused her creative vision on discerning how she was being guided to follow this spool of thread that the divine had presented to her as it rolled into the future. 

The thing about being guided is that, before you can let yourself be guided, you have to be able to perceive the guide.  Ethel worked out that her answer to that as a child, at least as far as creative projects, such as sewing and gardening were concerned. The guide was God. But as she moved through life, as she married and given birth to children, she began having trouble hearing what God was saying to her in the midst all her responsibilities within the family.  Much like her father, she found it difficult to apply the gifts that she used effortlessly in one area of her life in others. Even so, all these years, she consciously persevered in seeking out divine guidance, in asking to be guided. She asked to glimpse the spool God was setting in motion for her and wanting her to follow. At this point, then, in the late summer of 1944, she fixed her gaze firmly on discerning what direction the path of the future might lead them along.  There was an openness to her thought and vision, even if both, at this point, lacked clarity. Ethel felt that there must be something that could be done to help Lina, and she was set on following this divine spool as it rolled out the thread along a path she was convinced could help them find an answer.

*          *          *

  So?  This was Marcus’ response to the news.  He was still away, in Berlin, when his mother’s letter reached him.  An officer with the Censorship Office, he was intently focused on supervising his team of censors, so that no details which might undermine troop morale could sneak through in the letters that loved ones sent to troops at the front.  When one of the young censors was in doubt about whether to strike the mention of a father’s illness or the joy of coming upon a cache of food in the woods, the final decision rested with Marcus.  Therefore, when his sharp and hardened eye read his own mother’s words about his own sister’s accident, this detail from one life among so many others elicited from him not a response, but a decision. Such was his training, and his job: Let it through or strike it out? He crumpled the letter and tossed it into the waste bin, thereby striking it from his consciousness.  So what?

*          *          *

Lina’s father, Viktor, too, was still away when Ethel wrote to inform him.   Precisely where Viktor was, Ethel did not know in 1944. The actual facts of where he’d been and what he had done did come out, quite suddenly and unexpectedly, but not until a few years later.  During the war, Ethel had a mailing address for him – which contained an acronym that meant nothing to her –  but on the two occasions when Viktor came home on leave, he told her that it was best not to send letters to him through the mail. Clearly, the love of censorship that had blossomed in the son was present also in the father. He insisted that Ethel give any notes for him to the young officer whom he sent to them every few months with provisions: cigarettes, liquor, chocolate.  These items of mysterious origin were quickly transformed into flour and cloth and meat on the black market, and Ethel knew better than to inquire of the young officer or Viktor about their source.

Ethel fully complied with her husband’s wishes. She never passed letters of casual or frivolous content (as if any letter during the war could possibly fall into that category!) along for her husband with the young officer on the return journey. She preferred instead to send simply a verbal message of her love. So, when, in the fall of 1944, this young officer handed Viktor an actual letter, in an actual envelope, Viktor muttered, brows knit in consternation, Now what?

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Above the River, Chapters 3 and 4

Chapter 3

Into Winter, and then Spring, 1945

Gassmann-Bunke homestead

On one of those pleasant fall days, three or so months after the accident, Ethel pushed Lina out into the yard and then went back to preparing meat for that supper’s stew.  After a bit, she walked over to the kitchen window to see whether Lina had begun her rounds yet. But Ethel couldn’t see her from this vantage point. So, she stepped out onto the porch, expecting to see Lina by the garden or the goat pen. But her daughter was nowhere to be seen.  Not anywhere in the yard.  Where could she be?  This worried Ethel. Nothing of this sort had ever happened before. When Ethel reported Lina’s absence to Renate, Lina’s grandmother wiped her strong hands on her apron. Then she and Ethel hurried out to the road, shading their eyes with their hands as they looked in both directions.  That’s when they saw her, about a quarter mile down the road in the direction of Bockhorn: Her arms were moving in a whir as she pushed herself quickly along.   The two older women chased her down and, over Lina’s loud remonstrations, Renate herself rolled the wheelchair and her granddaughter back to the safety of the homestead.   Had Lina been a toddler, she would have loved being pushed at such great speed, as if on a fair ride, but now, sixteen years old, and captive, she was angry.

“But I was fine, Mama,” Lina burst out, once she was sitting at the kitchen table, where Ethel was serving her tea and a roll. “I just felt restless.”

“Restless?” Ethel countered, although it wasn’t clear to anyone what she meant by this.  She began stirring sugar into Lina’s tea, but Lina grabbed the spoon from her hand.

“Yes, restless!  And I’m capable of stirring my own sugar in, Mama.  I’m not a complete invalid!”  Her voice had risen as she’d spoken and, in spite of herself, she burst into tears.  Renate, misinterpreting this display of emotion, immediately came over from where she’d been standing at the stove, bent down, and wrapped her arms around her granddaughter’s shoulders.

  “Lina, dear, I’m so sorry you’re trapped in this chair.  I know you’re sad about it –“

“I’m not sad!” Lina replied sharply, suddenly releasing her hold on the braid she held in her right hand.  “I’m angry! Don’t you understand that?” She brought the bowl of the spoon down hard against the wooden table. Some mind readers the two of you are.

Both Renate and Ethel pulled back at her outburst, and exchanged glances. Renate stood up straight, in an effort to seem taller and more imposing. Ethel, by contrast, softened her shoulders and let her arms float gently alongside her.

“Angry at us?” Ethel asked quietly.

“Well, yes,” Lina said, calmer now, as if she’d let off the steam that had been building up all day. For months, even. With her left index finger, she began tracing a design on the wooden table top.

“But why?” Renate asked, her tone of voice showing that she was genuinely bewildered.  “We’re doing everything we can to keep you quiet and comfortable, so that you don’t have to do a thing.” She looked searchingly into Lina’s gray eyes that reminded her of Ulrich’s.

Lina began nodding energetically. “Yes! That’s exactly it!  That’s what’s so hard for me!”

Her mother and grandmother were both as if paralyzed themselves, now, unsure what to say.  So they just waited. After a moment, Lina took a deep breath in, then let it out. She was looking not at them, but at her finger as it moved along the tabletop, as if doing so would help her summon her will – the will to say what she wanted to express, without being distracted or dissuaded by their glances.

“I don’t want to be kept quiet and comfortable,” she said finally. “I don’t want not to have to do a thing.” Now she looked up, first at Renate, and then at Ethel, who watched Lina’s hands close into fists, one of them clutching the teaspoon.

“I have to be able to do something.”  Lina was actually banging her fists against the table now.   Her jaw was clenched so tightly it seemed impossible that she should even be able to speak.

“Mama. Grandma.  I have to be able to help.” She pounded the spoon against the table to punctuate her words.

“Now, Lina,” Renate began, and she made the mistake of laying her hand on Lina’s shoulder, trying to calm her. Lina reached up with the fist that was holding the spoon and roughly pushed her grandmother’s hand away.  

“Lina, really!” Ethel began, but then Lina turned a fierce gaze on her, and she fell silent.

“No, Grandma!  You don’t understand!”  Lina looked at Renate now, that same, and never-before-seen ferocity in her gaze. The older woman took a step back. She has Ulrich’s eyes, all right. But Ulrich never looked at me like that. Or talked to me like that, either.

Lina was breathing hard, and she began trying to wheel herself back from the table, but her skirt became tangled in the wheel.  In her frustration, she began to tug at it.  It was only when she heard the sound of ripping fabric and saw where the skirt had torn, that she seemed to realize what she had done.  Looking back and forth now between her mother and grandmother, she was overcome by tears. She slumped forward in her chair, then rested her elbows on the table, her head in her hands.  Now she readily accepted the comforting hugs and caresses that Renate and Ethel immediately offered.

In true Gassmann fashion, once Lina calmed down, Renate and Ethel turned their attention back to the chores they’d abandoned in favor of their desperate search for her.  Renate, broad and short, stood with her back to Lina, energetically chopping something in a motion that set her skirts swaying. Ethel’s skirts moved in rhythm with her movements, too. Lina could see from their stiff body movements that both women were considering how to proceed: Will this upset blow over?  Will we have to actually talk with her about it?  Both were hoping against hope that it would be the former.  Renate remembered the scenes Ulrich’s step-mother used to make, and how Renate had finally had to put her foot down about that.  She was wondering whether Lina might have inherited the other woman’s volatility, and how best to deal with that… Then a thought occurred to her: Wait, Claudia was Ulrich’s step-mother, not his mother.  Lina couldn’t have inherited anything from her.  Meanwhile, Ethel was wondering whether the difficult years leading up to the war, and the discord over Viktor’s politics had somehow seeped into Lina and turned her angry.  But I haven’t seen any sign of that before now… As mother and grandmother reflected inwardly on what could have caused this outburst, Lina also remained silent, drinking her tea and nibbling on her roll.  Once she’d finished eating it, she spoke.

“Grandma, Mama,” she began, “I’m sorry. I shouldn’t have yelled.  I’m so sorry.”

Visibly relieved that the storm seemed to have passed, Renate wiped her hands on a dishtowel and came to sit next to her granddaughter.  Ethel came over, too, leaving the stew to simmer on the stove.

“Well, Lina, dear,” Renate told her, “Of course, things are difficult. But we’ll get through it all.  You just concentrate on getting better, and leave the rest to us.”

But Lina, her mouth open, looked at Ethel, incredulous. Did she not hear me at all? she seemed to be asking her mother.

“But Mama,” Ethel began, cautiously and quietly, “Lina has said that she wants to help out.”

“I know,” Renate replied, running a hand over her freckled cheek. “I heard what she said. What you said,” she added, turning to Lina now. “But I also know what the doctor said – that you need rest and calm.”

Lina sat up straight in her chair. She felt anxiety rising in her once more, although it wasn’t as intense as what she’d felt when they’d first wheeled her back into the kitchen after her morning “escape”. 

“Why do you automatically accept what the doctor said?” she asked, consciously keeping her voice calm.  “Why does he know what I need? Why not ask me what I need?”

Before Renate could answer, Ethel jumped in.

“What do you think you need?” she asked.

Renate was shocked that Ethel had posed this question. That’s not the way we do things! she thought, in horror.  But she said nothing.

Lina took a breath and let it out.  Move! she heard inside her. Then she spoke.

  “I think that if I have to sit here for one more day without being able to help with anything, I’ll just go out of my mind.  I’m already half out of it.” Here she managed a thin smile. This was a good thing: It put Renate and Ethel a bit more at ease.

The two older women exchanged glances, and Ethel gave Renate the floor. This was what Renate preferred, of course – having the floor – but Ethel hadn’t ceded it to her without putting her in a difficult position. 

Renate smoothed the folds in her apron with her hands. “It sounds like you feel very strongly about it.“ Renate hoped this noncommittal response would buy her some time.  She didn’t like having to make decisions this way, under everyone’s gaze, spontaneously.

“I do, Grandma. I feel like I’m about to explode!” Lina said, gripping the wheelchair’s arm rests and leaning forward, her whole upper body tensed.

Renate nodded.  “Yes, dear, I can see that.”  A back and forth conversation was playing out inside Renate’s head now: One side of her was asserting the need for order to be kept, by which she meant that she made the decisions, after consulting in private with Ulrich and, sometimes Ethel.  This same side of her felt that the doctor’s orders needed to be adhered to, too.  This was her “queen of the household” side. Her other side was her grandmother side, where she was so strongly connected to Lina through her love for her. The grandmother in her wanted to indulge her granddaughter.  That’s the way it seemed to Renate – that letting Lina decide about this would be indulging her. And this made her nervous, because she hadn’t come up with the idea herself. 

“So, if you were to do things differently, what would you want to do?” Renate asked.  She hoped her tone expressed an “I’ll take it under advisement, but it’s my decision” approach, but when she saw the smile on Lina’s face, she sensed her grandmother’s side gaining the upper hand.

“I just need to be able to do a share of the work around here,” Lina said.  Then she laughed. “To tell you the truth, I hadn’t gotten so far as to think about what, exactly.”

Ethel laughed, too, and her hazel eyes danced.  This is a big day for us Gassmann-Bunkes, she thought.  The day a youngster had a say.  She smiled at that thought.

Renate took a deep breath to fight the anxiety she was now feeling, which manifested as a tightness in her chest and throat.  Time to make it seem like it was my idea all along, she decided.

“You know, I’ve been thinking that it would be good if you could pick up some of the slack,” she said seriously.  No need to get mushy about it. Even though all she really wanted to do was to throw her arms around Lina and rock her, take care of her.  “I didn’t want to push you.  But now, it seems you’re ready.”

Lina smiled a small, closed-lipped smile, so as not to burst out laughing, and cast a sidelong glance at her mother. Ethel, too, was dumbstruck by Renate’s shift in position. But with a slight nod of her head in Lina’s direction, she confirmed what Lina had already concluded: Don’t point out Grandma’s inconsistency.  Just be grateful for this. It’s a miracle.

“That’s a wonderful idea,” Lina said simply, smiling with a feeling that she recognized as happiness. 

Ethel voiced her enthusiastic approval, too, and that was that: The matter was settled.

“Excellent,” Renate said, tapping the table like a judge rapping a gavel on his bench.  “I’ll tell everyone about this decision tonight.  In the meantime, this afternoon, the three of us can work out the details.”

And that’s exactly what happened: In a remarkable show of collaboration, Renate and Ethel and Lina sat down that before the evening meal and discussed – actually discussed! – what Lina could take on.

The menfolk were none the wiser when Renate informed them of the change that evening. Renate presented the changes as her own decision, and Ethel and Lina didn’t give her away.  So, to Ulrich and Peter, it all seemed like business as usual in the Gassmann-Bunke household, while to Ethel and Lina, it felt like an earthquake of global proportions. A new world order, even.  Lina went to bed that night feeling happier than she’d felt since before her accident, full of excitement about once again participating more fully in the life of the homestead. She even noticed, to her surprise, that the disturbing thoughts seemed to have taken the night off.  So had Move! Her enthusiasm was contagious: Ethel, too, was buoyant and light-hearted all evening.  Ulrich and Peter noticed that the atmosphere had lightened in the household, but they couldn’t for the life of them figure out why, given that Lina was now going to be put to work.  What is this all about? Ulrich wondered. Did Renate make the right decision? Even Renate was smiling more than usual that night, and Ulrich saw her face bright with love as she gazed at Lina across the table. She even took his hand with particular warmth that evening as they headed to bed.  Renate’s grandmother’s side had won out.  It feels good to let it out, she decided. Once in a while, anyway…

*          *          *

As “Renate’s” new plan was put into action, everyone’s mood began to lighten: Lina took on certain chores and tasks, just like everyone else, and this lessened her profound feeling that she had nothing to offer her family.  Now, even if it was just peeling potatoes or sewing, or rolling out dough, this still meant less work for Renate and Ethel, and Lina could tell the two of them greatly appreciated this.  This new sense of purpose carried her through the cold, dreary days of winter, when she was forced to linger indoors more than she would have liked: The snow on the ground made it much harder for her to push herself forward in the wheelchair, even along the paths that had been cleared, because ridges and ruts from the packed snow thwarted her movements.  True, her outdoor “strolls” had steadily begun to feel less and less necessary, once she’d taken up her various household chores.  The troublesome thoughts had also begun leaving her in peace for longer and longer periods of time. She slept well at night, only rarely awakening in terror, convinced that she was once again lying beneath the mountain of firewood. Long about April, she noticed that this nightmare had come to her only once in the previous month. 

Even so, Lina missed spending as much time outdoors as she’d been accustomed to doing before her accident.  It was a partly a matter of missing the smell and feel of the trees surrounding her. Sitting outside in the yard, or being pushed down the road alongside the forest helped, but it couldn’t replace the experience of standing on the soft forest floor and sensing the divine energy flowing up from the ground through the trees, to each other, to her.  She missed that so much.  Oh, to stand on her own two feet amongst the aspens and birches!  Or to climb up the rope ladder of the tree house in the old beech and sit with her back against its comforting trunk, the way she and her brothers had done, and as her mother and father had done before them, and her mother and Uncle Hans before that. 

It’s the tree house that Lina would picture in her mind’s eye on those early spring mornings or afternoons when she’d sit at the edge of the forest. She’d peer into the groves of trees, all the while knowing that her gaze could never penetrate all the way into the depths of the forest, where the old beech stood.  Peter, who knew how his sister felt about the treehouse, glimpsed her sitting quietly near the entrance to the forest path one day, and guessed where her thoughts had taken her.  He came up alongside her and laid his hand gently on her shoulder.

“I’d carry you there if I could, you know,” he said softly.

Lina rested her hand on his and nodded. “Dear Peter, I know you would,” she told him with a slight, but heartfelt, smile.  She motioned to her own legs and then to his.  “We’ve got only one good leg between the two of us!”

Peter had to lean over and look at his sister’s face to be able to tell whether it was all appropriate for him to laugh. He saw that it was, and he did.

“If only your left leg was working,” he mused, “we could tie our middle legs together and hobble in there.  The way we did those three-legged races when we were little.”

Lina smiled.  “Oh, that was fun, wasn’t it?” She turned to look up at him, and he saw a bit of lightness in her eyes that told him her smile was genuine.

He nodded. “We had so much fun when we were little, didn’t we?”

“At least when Marcus was off somewhere else,” Lina noted wryly.

Peter tipped his head in agreement and noticed his stomach muscles tightening.

“You and I seem more like siblings than Marcus and me,” he said. “Don’t know why that is.”

“It’s true, though,” Lina said.  “All our little in jokes that he didn’t get?”

“Yeah,” Peter replied.  He was silent for a moment and then asked, animatedly, “Remember when we sat in the tree house – where was he that day, anyway?? – and carved little symbols into those tiny rounds of wood with our pen knives –“

“And then we told him they were runes the fairies had carved and left up there for us to find.” Lina was showing with her hands the size of the small fairy gifts.

“Yes, yes!  Now, what was it we said the symbols meant? Do you remember?”

Lina thought for a moment, her jaw set to one side as she searched in her mind.

“No.  I just remember that Marcus said we were wrong.”

Peter burst out laughing at that, shaking his head.  “Of course he did!  Here we come with our home-made fairy runes, and he says he’s the only one who can read them.”

Lina was laughing now, too, and Peter was so happy to hear her clear, bell-like laugh. He felt like he hadn’t heard it at all since the accident.

“Yes, that was pure Marcus.  Always the expert,” Lina noted in a not-unaffectionate tone, still smiling.  But both of them felt the faint undercurrent of sadness that still clung to this memory, even many years had elapsed since the event they were recalling.

“I wonder what happened to those rune disks,” Peter mused.

“What!” Lina cried, feigning horror, and dramatically placing her hand over her heart. “You mean you don’t have yours anymore?”

Now it was Peter’s turn to look at her in shock. “No. You do?”

“Of course!” Lina said. “It’s in the bureau, with all my other valuable keepsakes.”

“Really?” Peter didn’t quite know whether to believe his or not. He had clearly not inherited the Gassmann mind-reading gift.

“Oh, yes, absolutely!  I’ll show it to you tomorrow.”

            That night, after Peter had gone to his room for the night, he found it hard to get to sleep. Why did Lina keep her rune and I didn’t keep mine? he wondered. It had happened so long ago, but once he and Lina had started talking about it earlier that day, it had been bugging him.  He’d been so proud of those runes… 

Peter had been the one to do the carving, of course: Lina had been only five years old to his nine, and she wasn’t allowed to handle those sharp tools.  But the two of them had packed everything they’d need in a little bag and took it along when they went to the treehouse that day: a little saw and an awl, a carpenter’s pencil, the pen knife that was Peter’s own, and a piece of thick paper.  As for the lettering on the runes, that had been Lina’s creation.  She didn’t know how to write yet, but neither of them cared, since the runes were to have fairy language on them! 

They put “Operation Fairy” – as they referred to it between themselves, in whispers –  into action one summer afternoon when Peter was looking after Lina. Who knows where Marcus was that day, probably off with one of his rough and tumble friends.  Peter and Lina made the most of his absence and took themselves off to the treehouse. They scampered up the rope ladder, Lina going first, so that Peter could catch her if she happened to slip.  Lina got right to work. Retrieving the paper and pencil from the cloth bag, she plopped down onto her stomach, her little girl legs stretched out along the thin but sturdy logs that formed the treehouse floor.  Wrapping her small hand around the large pencil, she began meticulously drawing out her designs. She paused now and then to hold the paper out at arm’s length in front of her to study the effect, her chin resting on the arm she’d bent to support it. 

Meanwhile, Peter knelt down a ways away from Lina and began sawing small disks off the end of the fallen branch they’d selected together.  He’d rested this branch atop another, thicker branch he’d brought up into the tree house with him, so that the saw would have room to move back and forth. This wasn’t ideal, though, and it took him several tries to get two suitable disks: On his first few attempts, either the rounds he cut started out thick and then grew thin, or some of the bark flaked off.  Finally, he managed to produce two uniform disks, each about half an inch thick and an inch in diameter.  Plenty of room for carving Lina’s fairy runes.  At least he hoped there would be…

  Lina was delighted, with both the disks and her completed designs. She held her drawings out proudly to her brother.

“How beautiful!” Peter told her, as he studied the paper. It occurred to him then that he should have cut the disks first and then traced around them on the paper, to give Lina a limited space for her runes. What she’d drawn would never fit on the disks full size.  Too late now, he thought.

            “These are perfect human size,” he said to Lina, pointing to what she’d drawn.  “Since these,” he told her, pointing to the disks, “are fairy size, though, I’ll just carve the designs smaller than you drew them.”

            By now Lina had sat up and was sitting across from him, cross-legged. “Why, of course!” she replied merrily. “No fairy could carry a rune disk this big!”  She showed with her hands how large it would have to be in order to contain her designs full size.

They both laughed.  Then Peter leaned back against the beech tree’s trunk that ran up through the middle of the treehouse and put his left knee up to support his left hand, which held the disks as he carved. 

Peter was already skilled with a pen knife back then.  Seeing he designs he’d created on the small stools he’d already made under his father’s supervision, his mother, Ethel, said that he had surely inherited Viktor’s gift for wood carving. So, even though the fairy runes required him to carve on a smaller scale than he’d ever attempted before, Peter felt he was up to the challenge.  Lina certainly believed in him completely, and that was half the battle. Indeed, once he completed his efforts, it seemed to the two of them as they studied completed disks, that no finer fairy runes had ever existed.

Now, sitting in his room, twenty years old, instead of nine, Peter remembered the glee with which he and Lina had packed up their tools and returned to the house to present their “find” to the family.  He smiled.  A good memory. He’d had few enough of those these past few years, so he held on to this one as he turned onto his left side – so that his scarred right leg would not be compressed – and scrunched up the pillow beneath his head.  No need to dig around in the past and find something upsetting.

*          *          *

The next day, when Lina, true to her word, did show her rune to Peter, he was still feeling connected to the pleasure of the memory he’d explored the night before. Lina could see how delighted he was to behold this physical reminder of that moment of shared happiness from their childhood.

“Now, what was it we told everyone this meant?” Peter asked, as he scrutinized the scratchings on one of its smooth sides.

“Somehow,” Lina said, “all I can remember is Marcus shouting us down and saying it said ‘idiots’.” Her smile faded, and she sighed.

“We can’t let Marcus have the last word, Lina,” Peter told her, his voice stern. “They’re our runes, after all. We have to remember what they really mean.”

The two of them took turns holding wooden disk, waiting to remember.

“Hope!” Peter cried suddenly. “Wasn’t that it?”

Lina took it in her hand and brought it up close to her face, as if this would help her decipher the symbols’ meaning.  “Hope,” she repeated softly. Then she pointed to one of the marks carved into the surface of the disk. “Absolutely.  Anyone could see that this is what that one says in the fairy language.” A soft smile spread across her lips and all the way to up her cheeks to her eyes.

“Hope, then,” Peter confirmed, and he reached down and closed her fingers around the disk. But Lina took his hand and placed the disk into it. 

“Here, you keep it now.  You lost yours.” She paused. “I still can’t believe you lost it!” she chided him playfully, taking his hand in hers.

Peter shrugged. “Who knew it would be so important someday?  But maybe…” he asked her, a bit haltingly.  “Maybe you should keep it?”

Lina understood his awkwardness. “Because I need hope more now?”

He nodded.

“I want you to have it, Peter.  You keep it, and you hope for me, too.”

“But what about you? It’s yours, after all.”

“Who knows…” Lina told him, sliding her hands beneath her apron so that her brother couldn’t slip the disk back into her hand.  “Maybe the fairies will make another one for me.”

Chapter 4

Spring, 1945

Gassmann-Bunke homestead

            By May, spring was in full bloom, and as the days grew longer and the sun stronger, a brighter light had begun to shine in Lina’s eyes, too.  The days grew warm enough for her to sit outside and work on her sewing near the garden’s edge. Once the mud dried up enough that she could push herself or be wheeled by Peter or her mother to the edge of the path into the forest, she’d stay there for hours, taking in the scents and sights of the awakening trees, grasses, and flowers, and the calls of the birds as they sought out their mates.

For the first time in eight months, Lina felt a bit of life flowing within her, too, here on the edge of the revitalized natural world. This was a great relief to her.  It was only as she sensed the new life force around and inside her, that she could admit to herself how much despair she had felt a few months earlier. She could see now that in the depths of the winter, cut off from her beloved woods, she had felt close to death – not so much physically, as emotionally and spiritually. 

Now, as she sat, delighting in the sight of the buds bursting forth on the trees, Lina recalled the many nights when her mind had been perpetually invaded by the words – “useless” and “euthanasia” – and the question – “Why don’t they just kill me?” Only now did she realize that the question that had actually been hovering beneath her conscious awareness was different: “Why don’t I just kill myself?” It must have penetrated only ever so slightly into her mind, but clearly this mind of hers – which had seemed so unreliable and uncontrollable to her all these months – had somehow protected her from consciously thinking this thought, and had transformed it: Instead of pondering how she could end her own life, she had been, without realizing it consciously, begging God to just take her from the earth.  That way, she could be spared what she viewed as the indignity and pain and uselessness of her current life, and her whole family could, as she saw it, be freed of the burden of caring for her.  What had not occurred to Lina, in these most difficult months, was to pray to God to help her in another way: She could have prayed for healing.  But Lina’s despair at that point was so great that this tiny, quiet thought had no chance of making it through the clouds of her pain and grief and into her clouded mind that was striving so hard to keep everything out. We can note, however, that while this quiet thought hadn’t come into Lina’s conscious awareness in words she would have recognized as a prayer for healing, the essence of this quiet thought had nonetheless come to her in a single, persistent word: Move! That word had had the strength to make its way into Lina’s mind – and to stay put.

Then came the newness of spring and, as we’ve mentioned, Lina began to see things in a more positive light, as nature came back to life around her.  Maybe, it occurred to her one early May afternoon, Maybe God did help me.  By not taking me home to Him. With this thought, a bit of hope began to creep in. A new version of Move!, perhaps?

On the particular early spring morning that concerns us now, Ulrich had already taken the Poles with him into the forest to stack and chain some spruce logs for the horses to pull back out. Peter was about to head off to Varel on an errand. Lina asked him to wheel her outdoors before he left, which he was happy to do. She picked up her knitting bag from the kitchen table and placed it on her lap. 

“How do you like this pattern?” she asked her brother, holding her knitting needles aloft for him to see as he pushed her out of the house and across the yard. “Socks for you.”

“Warm and no holes?” he asked, leaning over to inspect the beginnings of the cuff. 

Lina laughed. “Yes!” 

“Lucky for me, that’s my favorite pattern!”

“Lucky for you, indeed!” Lina told him.  She reached up to pat his hand, which was wrapped around the wheelchair handle behind her shoulder. As she did so, she felt him slip something into her hand.

“What’s this?” she asked, peering at the tiny bundle of folded-over cloth he’d given her. Whatever was inside was very light. She barely felt it in her palm.

Peter gestured at the package impatiently, a smile on his face. “Stop asking questions and just open it!”

Lina obeyed, looking up at her brother with a curious expression as she methodically unfolded the fabric covering and flattened out each layer.  Each time she did this, Peter would frown playfully and point back at the package.

“All right, all right,” Lina mumbled as she kept turning and unfolding.

When she’d made the last turn and finally revealed what lay inside, she caught her breath.  She squeezed the contents inside her palm along with the fabric and pressed the whole bundle to her chest, holding it with both hands.  Then, impatient to study it, she brought it up to her eyes so that she could see each detail of the carving. 

“When did you….” she began, turning now to gaze almost in disbelief at Peter, who had knelt down beside her.

“Find it?” he asked, his eyes bright, his smile mischievous.

“Yes,” Lina replied, playing along.

“Oh, about a week ago,” Peter told her.  “I happened to be walking in the woods –“

“Let me guess,” Lina burst in, “somewhere over by the tree house?”

“Why yes, as a matter of fact!” He was not succeeding at keeping a straight face.

“And?”

“I happened to look down, and this caught my eye, right at the base of the old beech. On a bed of moss.”

Lina’s face had lit up with a smile as she listened to his explanation. Now she went back to studying the object in her palm.  It was a small wooden disk, and carved onto one surface of it was the image of a bird, its wings poised to fly.  She took in each detail of the design and then, looking over at Peter, she said wryly, “I think the fairies’ carving skills have improved over these past ten years!”

“I should hope so!” he replied with a laugh.

“What do you think they mean by this image?” Lina asked, tracing the carving with her index finger.

Peter shrugged.  “It’s their gift to you.  I think you should decide.”

“Not Marcus?” Lina asked, and they both laughed.

“No,” Peter said. “He may be an expert on the fairy language, but this is more like a hieroglyph.  What does it mean?”

Lina grew serious now.  She wrapped her fingers around the disk and pressed her hand to her heart, eyes closed.  After a bit, she opened her eyes and looked at her brother.

“Hope,” she told him.  “I think this one means ‘hope’, too.”

“So do I,” Peter told her softly.  He leaned over and kissed Lina’s head, then took her free hand in his.

*          *          *

Lina lost track of time as she sat in her wheelchair the rest of that morning, alternately knitting and examining her fairy disk.  She felt such a feeling of calm.  Joy, even.  She was so touched by Peter’s gift. The fairies’ gift.  How had he made his way to the beech tree, with that leg of his? That alone was enough to give Lina hope.  She felt so much love in that light, wooden disk, Peter’s love for her.  She could feel that the wood contained the energy of apology, too, his regret for – as he saw it – having caused her to be in this position in the first place.  But she didn’t allow her mind to dwell on that part of the energy that filled this piece of wood.  Besides, the love in it was far stronger, both Peter’s love for her and that special divine love that ran through all the trees in the forest before her.  It’s so perfect, she thought.  He brought me a piece of the divine when I couldn’t get to it on my own.  

She turned back to her knitting, and then, amidst her happiness, a quiet voice seemed to speak to her from deep insider heart.  At first she thought she must have imagined it. Maybe it was the breeze.  Or a bird far off in the woods. It wasn’t Mama or Grandma. They’re in the house, getting some things ready for supper.  Of course, they’ll be coming outside before long, to take down the laundry they hung out earlier. It’s dried quickly, thanks to the warm, breezy day.

Still not giving any real attention to what she was feeling inside, Lina looked up from the sock cuff she was knitting, to give her eyes a break, and found herself gazing into the forest, as far into the trees as she could see. As she did nearly every day now, she took in the way the oaks and aspens and spruces looked, noted how their appearance changed, depending on the brightness of the sun and the time of day.  She imagined walking among them and laying her hands on each of their trunks, feeling its roughness or smoothness, and examining the lichens that had made their home atop the bark, or the mushrooms growing nearby on the ground, some peeking out around or from beneath fallen leaves.

As she imagined all of this, Lina felt a wish form within her, a powerful desire to be right there with her grandfather, helping him with this work she just knew God wanted her to do, too.  Then she noticed the small voice in her heart again, and it spoke so that a small thought entered her mind, so softly that she barely heard it: “Then get up and go to him.”  At first she ignored it, once again concluding that she’d imagined it. But it came again.  “Then get up!” Is it coming from inside my head, my heart? Or from outside me? Lina turned in her wheelchair to look behind her, toward the house, and then toward the barn, but no one else was outside.  I must have thought it, then, she concluded.  The thought made her happy inside, at the first instant, so happy, in fact, that she had another: Yes, why not get up and go to Grandfather?  This second thought made her smile. She made up her mind to try it. 

Taking another quick glance around to make sure there was no one there to see her try, Lina tucked her knitting inside the cloth bag she used to store it when she wasn’t knitting, and tucked the bag down beside her in the chair. She placed the carved disk Peter had given her back inside the fabric layers and tucked it inside her bodice, next to her heart, for inspiration.  Then, after placing one hand on each arm of the wheelchair for support, she began to lift herself up out of her chair, while willing her legs to move forward off the little step they were resting on.  She leaned forward and whispered, Let’s go, legs! She could feel her bottom rising off the wheelchair seat. She was convinced that her right foot was just about to move to the ground… But then she found herself tumbling forward. In the next moment, she was on the ground. After the initial shock, she took stock of her position: Her legs lay bent beneath her, motionless and numb as ever. They hadn’t moved a single inch on their own.  As she raised her torso up and supported herself on her arms, she heard herself beginning to howl in sorrow and frustration and anger.  Am I the one howling? she wondered, since it felt like she was looking down at herself from somewhere up above.

When Renate and Ethel heard her cries and rushed out to find her sprawled out on the dirt at the beginning of the path, they first comforted her and asked whether she was all right.

“Mama,” Lina replied in an angry voice, “how could I be all right?  My legs don’t work!”

Flustered, Ethel put her arms around her daughter and pulled her close.  Lina’s whole upper body was tense and rigid.  “Yes, of course, Lina. Of course.  I’m sorry.”

“But do you think you’re hurt?” Renate asked.  She was feeling Lina’s legs to check for obvious injuries, but found none.

Lina shook her head, her lips tightly compressed, and just stared at the ground, at her still legs.

“Lina, dear,” Ethel asked, pulling back to look at her again, “What happened?”

Lina didn’t reply immediately. She looked from her mother to her grandmother.  “I dropped my knitting,” she said finally. “It fell on the ground, and when I leaned over to pick it up… I fell, too.”

Renate and Ethel nodded. As the two of them lifted Lina up and brushed the dirt off her skirt, Ethel began to speak, reminding Lina that this was exactly the kind of situation when she should call for one of them to help her, that she shouldn’t try to do these things alone.  But as she and Renate were easing Lina back into the wheelchair, Ethel stopped talking: She’d caught sight of Lina’s knitting bag – not on the ground, but on the seat of the wheelchair. Renate had seen it, too, but neither woman asked about it.  Instead, Renate simply picked the bag up and, once Lina had been settled back into the chair, she silently placed it on her granddaughter’s lap.  Lina made no reply.  She was staring straight ahead and only nodded when Ethel asked whether she’d like them to take her back into the house now. She could feel that the little wooden disk had somehow slipped out of its fabric covering when she fell and had come to rest at the level of her waist, no longer safely tucked against her breast.

Renate summoned the doctor to examine Lina, just in case some injury had gone unnoticed.

“As I told you before,” the doctor said, “Lina needs calm and quiet as she goes through her healing process.”

“My healing process?” Lina asked sharply, surprising everyone around her:  She rarely spoke up during these examinations.  “What healing progress?” she went on, glaring at the doctor, Renate, and Ethel.  “What does that even mean?”

After directing a meaningful glance at Renate and Ethel, the doctor turned to Ethel and addressed her with the unnaturally tranquil tone one would use with a child.

“Lina,” he began, “it’s very important for you to remain calm.”

“Or else what?” Lina challenged, looking him straight in the eye.

“Or else… or else your healing process is unlikely to … proceed,” he answered, clearly wary of saying too much.

“But it hasn’t been proceeding at all as it is, has it?” Lina continued.

The doctor opened his mouth, looked to Renate, and remained silent.

“Doctor, please,” Lina said forcefully.  “Please tell me.  Am I healing?”

The doctor tipped his head this way and that. His gaze moved across the wall behind Lina. He paused before finally speaking once more. “You see, Lina, I had hoped that as the bones and tissues healed, you would eventually be able to walk again.”

Lina continued to look him in the eye. “Even though I don’t feel anything in my legs?”

He nodded.  “Well, I had hoped that as all the swelling went down, the sensation would come back in your legs.  We couldn’t tell whether the nerves in your legs had been damaged, but…”

“But you were hoping for the best? Is that it?” Lina snapped.  “For better ‘healing progress’?”

“Lina, please,” Ethel chided her softly.  “There’s no need to be rude to the doctor.”

“Mama, I’m not being rude. I’m just asking him to tell me what no one has told me the past eight months. Will I ever walk again?”

Renate and Ethel looked at each other and then at the doctor, who was awaiting some sign from them.  Renate nodded at him curtly.

“It seems…” the doctor began.

Lina interrupted him. “Will I walk?”

He let out a sigh.  “At this point, your bones and tissues seem to have healed satisfactorily, but you still feel no sensation in your legs, which points to nerve damage…”

“If my nerves were damaged, will they heal, if I just give them more time?” Lina’s tone had softened a bit now, as hope came into her voice.  She brought her hand up to her chest, searching for the fairy disk, but she couldn’t feel it.  A quick glance at her mother and grandmother told her everything. They both looked down at the floor.

“I’m afraid nerves don’t regenerate, Lina.” He paused a moment to let this sink in, then continued.  “If the nerves are damaged, as it seems they are, there’s nothing more we can do. I wish there were, but there isn’t.”

“So, you’re saying…” Lina began, as stinging tears began coming to her eyes, “that this is where I’ll spend the rest of my life?” She patted the arms of the wheelchair softly, in a gesture of defeat.

The doctor wouldn’t even make eye contact with her now.  He looked at Renate and Ethel instead.

  “You’d all better get used to living like this, because this is the way it’s going to be.”

And thus, the day which had, for one moment, held out so much hope – with Peter’s gift from the fairies, and the tiny voice inside, and Lina sitting poised to rise from her wheelchair and walk – had ended with two defeats: Lina’s fall, followed by the doctor’s pronouncement that condemned her to a life in a wheelchair. 

*          *          *

Lina didn’t reveal to Renate and Ethel how she had really ended up lying on the ground that day.  Why bother? she thought, since her hopes had twice been dashed within the space of two hours. When Ethel came in to get her ready for bed that night and found her sobbing in her wheelchair, Lina blamed her tears on the doctor’s prognosis.

“Lina, darling,” Ethel began, pulling a wooden chair over, so that she could sit next to her daughter, “I know it must have been awful to hear what the doctor said.”

Lina nodded.  “You can’t even imagine, Mama,” she began.  “I – I’d always thought that if I just waited long enough, my legs would finally work again.”

“That’s what we’ve all been hoping and praying for.” Ethel took one of Lina’s hands in her own and with the other, she smoothed Lina’s curls back out of her eyes. 

“But you and Grandma…” Lina said, looking over at her now. “Did you know, before today?   I mean, what the doctor said today. Did you already know that’s what he thought?”

Ethel avoided Lina’s gaze, concentrating instead on her daughter’s hair.  Picking up the hairbrush from the bed stand, she began slowly brushing Lina’s long, blond, wavy hair.

“Mama?  Did you?”

“Well, he told us as much a couple of months ago,” Ethel admitted with a sigh.

“And you didn’t tell me?  Why not?”

“Lina, I can’t brush your hair if you’re moving around like this. Look forward, please.”

“No, Mama. I want to know. Why didn’t you tell me?”

“We wanted you to…”

“To keep on hoping?  When there was no hope?” Lina’s tears had stopped now, and a note of anger had crept into her voice.  Now she knew what they’d all been talking about behind her back these past months.

“We thought, maybe there was hope.”  Ethel laid the brush in her lap and took Lina’s hand in both of hers.  “We just didn’t know, and we didn’t want you to give up if there was hope.”

“Well, now we know, and so now we can all just completely give up.” Her tone had grown cold and flat.

“Lina –“

“What other choice do we have?  You heard him.  There’s nothing he can do for me.  ‘You’d better get used to living like this.’ That’s what he said.  What a cruel-hearted man.”

“Lina, please…“

“What, do you think he really cares?  Why can’t he do more? Why can’t someone do more, Mama?”

“I don’t know, Sweetheart,” Ethel said softly.  She was running her hand lightly over the bristles of the upturned brush. 

Lina began crying again and brought her free hand down hard on the arm of the wheelchair.  “What kind of life is this?” she shouted, loudly enough that everyone in the house heard her.  “Mama, I’m only sixteen!”  She looked at her mother with such a combination of despair and anger that Ethel began crying, too, letting her own feeling of hopelessness out, just this once. She leaned forward and wrapped her arms around her daughter.  The brush fell to the floor with a thud, unnoticed by mother and daughter.

Out in the main room, Peter sat at the kitchen table, studying sketches for a furniture order he was working on. But he was unable to concentrate.  His gaze drifted to the floor, and he noticed something small lying beneath the table. Leaning over, he saw that it was the fairy disk he’d given Lina that morning. He picked it up and slipped it into his pants pocket.  She’s lost hope.

Later that night, he sat on the edge of his bed, with Lina’s original fairy disk in his right hand, and the new one in his left.  Comparing them, he noted that his carving really had grown more skillful over the years.  He had to admit that the bird on the new disk had come out beautifully. But something about Lina’s original design captivated him, drew him in to its lines and squiggles.  It’s the mystery of it, he decided.  Looking at it more closely, he tried to discern what about the image made it seem both as if it was proclaiming Hope and also telling him that the path to that hope was not obvious.  Hope was written in the language of… Fairies? That’s what he and Lina had claimed, of course.  But, he wondered now, What is the real language of hope? What do you have to know before you can decipher the letters of the word itself? Before you can comprehend the message it offers to those who manage to penetrate the unfamiliar tongue?

As Peter contemplated this, he realized that he’d always assumed that Hope was the final message itself, the destination.  Now it occurred to him that Hope was the first step, and that if you had hope, it could lead you to something else.  How to acquire that hope, though? He understood then, that he and Lina had skipped some key first step back in the treehouse, when they’d fashioned their own runes and declared – just like that! – that what was written on them was the word Hope. It seemed to him, at this moment, that they had falsely claimed to possess certain mysterious knowledge. Spiritual imposters, Peter said to himself. That’s what we were. We claimed we had hope – as if we knew what it was.  He looked down at the two disks again.  But now… Now that we need hope more than ever…Why don’t we have it any more?

This question arose because he’d become aware, just then, that he himself had lost hope, too: hope of ever being able to walk easily again, without pain.  No, that’s wrong, he thought, shaking his head. I never had hope in the first place. He knew what the doctor had told Lina that afternoon, and it made his blood run cold to think about it, because his own doctor had dashed his hopes equally firmly.  He’d suggested that Peter might be able to use his leg normally, in time, but now it had been more than a year, and he, like Lina, seemed not much better off than before. Certainly, he could, at least, walk, albeit with some residual pain.  Lina, though… Peter looked down at the two disks lying in his palms, and closed his fingers tightly around them. He brought his two hands up to his heart, the way Lina had done that morning when he’d given her the new disk. Dear God, he began, although he had never prayed sincerely in all his life, Please help us.  Please show us the way to Hope. He opened his left hand and looked at the bird he’d carved a few days earlier, then held it close to his heart once more. So we can fly.

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Above the River, Chapters 1 and 2

Starting today, I’m going to be publishing my novel, Above the River, right here on my blog feed, in serialized form. Every week or so, I’ll put up one or two chapters as a new blog post. I’m going to be continuing to put up my regular blog posts here, too. To make it easier for folks to want to keep up with the novel without having to scroll through blog posts, I’ve added a new page to this site: “Above the River”. Each time I post a new installment as a blog post, I’ll also add the new chapters to the bottom of that page. You’ll still have to scroll down to find the new chapters, but at least they’ll all be there in one place. It feels very exciting and fun to be sharing the novel with you in a serialized form. I hope you’ll enjoy reading it this way, too!

Above the River

by Sue Downing

Author’s Note: What follows is a work of fiction. All characters in this novel are fictional, with the exception of Bruno Groening (1906-1959, Germany) and his assistant, Egon Artur Schmidt. Dubbed “The Miracle Healer” by the media, Groening attracted great crowds and a large number of followers, beginning in the late 1940s.  Thousands of these people were healed of a wide variety of diseases and disorders after spending time in Groening’s presence. Groening had no medical training. Nor was he licensed as a healing practitioner. He asserted that any healing people experienced through their encounters with him was brought about not by him, but by God, whom he called “the greatest physician”. The German government initiated several legal cases against Groening, on the grounds that he had violated the Healing Practitioners Act. Although he was fined for his activities, he was never jailed. No verdict was rendered in Groening’s final trial: He passed away while it was still in progress.

            Groening appears in this novel, as does his assistant, Egon Artur Schmidt, but the novel’s characters, and the scenes depicting their interactions with Groening, are entirely fictional. However, I have used many of Groening’s own words in these scenes: extracts from lectures he gave, which were recorded, and subsequently transcribed, and translated into English. I have used boldface type in the text to indicate the phrases and sentences which are Groening’s. I am deeply grateful to the Bruno Groening Circle of Friends for granting me access to these transcribed, translated lectures, and for granting me permission to use excerpts from them in this novel.

* * *

Above the River    

Thoughts are free. Who can guess them?

They fly by like nocturnal shadows.

No person can know them, no hunter can shoot them

with powder and lead: Thoughts are free.

I think what I want, and what delights me,

Still always reticent, and as it is suitable.

My wish and desire, no one can deny me.

And so it will always be: Thoughts are free!

And if I am thrown into the darkest dungeon,

All of these are futile acts,

Because my thoughts tear apart

All gates and walls: Thoughts are free!

– From the song “Thoughts are Free”,

Hoffmann von Fallersleben

Chapter 1

August 6, 1949

Gassmann-Bunke family homestead

Near Varel, Germany

            It is time. Ethel Bunke comes into the kitchen of her family’s log home. Her hazel eyes float quickly and almost haphazardly over this small and that large object. It’s as though she wishes to slowly take in every detail of this kitchen that has formed the comforting shape of her daily life for the forty-five years she has been alive.  There’s the stove, so central and friendly that her fingertips can feel its scratches and firmness without even touching them.  A jar of flour, not quite two-thirds full, stands on the wooden counter.  This reminds her of the crock of sourdough starter in the cellar.  A sudden wish to pack it into her suitcase floods her heart.  No. No need. Mama and Kristina will use it here. And anyway, Ethel reminds herself, I’ll be back in a few months! Besides, she knows that there is plenty of flour where she’s headed. Even so, she also knows that the new and, as yet, un-breathed air, different humidity levels, and unfamiliar yeasts of the air there will create an entirely new sourdough starter.  A new starter. Their entire family desperately needs a new start. Really, Ethel thinks, I suppose we’ve already gotten our new start.  Now we each have to choose how to make use of it.

            She is moving around the kitchen, her slim body appearing to float, her arms resembling wings riding the air currents. The sunlight creates a halo around her blonde curls.

            “Lina?” she calls out to her daughter, in a what is barely even a whisper. Then, realizing how softly she’s spoken, she calls out again. “Lina?” There is more volume in her words this time, and more depth.  “Your brother’s pulling the car up.  Did you hear? Are you ready?”

            Her twenty-year-old daughter’s answer flows forth from the bedroom next to the kitchen. Her voice is light and melodious, like her mother’s, and quiet, but assured. “I heard, Mama.  I’m just about ready.”

            “Good, because the train won’t wait.”  Looking around, Ethel’s gaze falls upon her right hand. She turns her hand this way and that, contemplating the wooden ring that adorns her third finger.  The ring has been worn smoother over the past twenty-seven years, and the carved flower atop it is chipped in one spot. But it is still beautiful.  Ethel runs the fingers of her left hand over the ring, recalling the joy she’d felt on the day Viktor placed it on her finger.        

            Now she stands up, walks over to an open wooden shelf on the plaster wall to the right of the stove. She picks up the photo that is leaning there, a close-up of a man’s face. Lacking a frame, the photo, although on thick, postcard stock, has bowed slightly in the middle under the influence of humidity, and its bottom edge and corners are roughened from frequent handling. Ethel places the photo inside a largish envelope that holds her and Lina’s travelling documents, and slips the envelope into a large, brown leather handbag that she hardly ever uses.  She rarely leaves the homestead, after all, except to do this or that shopping, or to visit her great-aunt Lorena, who lives a couple of miles down the road on her own family’s farm.

            Lina, meanwhile, sits for another minute in her familiar chair. In a gesture she perfected in childhood, she wraps the end of her waist-length dishwater-blonde braid around her right wrist and lightly grasps it with her fingertips Unlike her mother, she is not casting any final glances around this room. She feels no need to seek to imprint anything here on her mind.  In the course of the past four years, she has, without even trying to, committed every sensory detail of her bedroom to her memory.  The plaster walls, stained here and there by dampness, or marred by small holes.  The scent of the air during the various seasons, the spots where her featherbed is higher or lower, firmer or softer.  The way the upholstered chair’s arms and cushion feel beneath her forearms and thighs. She knows it all by heart.

            Her left hand is lying, palm up, on her lap.  In the palm of her right hand, beneath the tuft of braid between her thumb and forefinger, there lies a small fabric pouch with a drawstring cord that is looped around Lina’s middle finger. The pouch contains something small and round and hard.

            “Just about ready,” Lina repeats softly, as she closes her hand gently over the pouch.  Shutting her eyes, she sits that way for a brief minute. Then an exuberant smile spreads across her face, and she opens her eyes. She turns in her seat to the small table that stands between her chair and the bed, and shifts her gaze to the photo that leans against the reading lamp on the table.  A close-up of a man’s face.  She looks into his eyes. He into hers. She whispers two short phrases.

            Then Lina picks up the photo and slips it into what is, essentially, a fabric envelope, and folds the flap over it, as an extra layer of protection. She leans over and picks up the large hand bag that is leaning against her chair. Opening it, she carefully slips the now-cushioned frame inside.  But the small pouch remains in Lina’s hand, as it generally does, both day and night, the object it holds thus protected. And also protective.

Ethel ethereal and yet fully human figure appears in the doorway. She smiles when she sees her daughter’s glowing face and shining gray eyes.  “Ready?”

Lina smiles back as she rises from her chair. Her mother is struck by how tall and strong she looks. And yet flexible, like a sapling that’s been replanted in a new spot, in fresh earth.

“I am now,” Lina tells her. 

Chapter 2

August 10, 1944

Gassmann-Bunke homestead

No one could quite explain what happened on that day in 1944. Not at first, anyway. Only five years later would Lina finally understand it all.

On that morning of August 10th, 1944, Lina’s older brother, Peter, was about to set off to drive over to their great-aunt Lorena’s farm with the wagon, which was over-filled with 2-foot thick slices of pine firewood. Peter – Ethel and Viktor’s middle child – was four years Lina’s senior, and a year younger than his older brother, Marcus. At this point, Peter was only five months back from the front, discharged after his right temple had been grazed by a bullet and his right thigh had been wounded by a bullet that hadn’t missed its intended target. Back in 1942, he went into the army a tall young man with sandy-colored curls.  He had his mother’s wispy build, but his father’s strength.  Constantly in motion, he had a vigilant gaze, continually observing what those around him were doing, and trying to predict what they would do next.

It was because he’d always been so observant, that Peter felt so mystified by what happened on August 10th. As a general rule, very little escaped him. But, as he was always quick to admit later on, when the subject of the accident came up, his attention at that moment had not been fully on what he was doing.  Maybe the pain distracted me, Peter sometimes suggested to himself when he considered what had happened. Since he’d been back home, he’d noticed that when his leg was really bothering him, he would sometimes lose track of what was going on around him.

This was not surprising, really, given what he went through after being wounded. The injury to his right leg was severe: a compound fracture of the femur, and massive tissue damage. He endured more than one surgery in the military hospital to push his bones into place and stitch his shredded muscles back together. He’d been “just this close” to a severed femoral artery, the doctor told him. He was lucky to be alive. He then spent two and a half months in a cast before finally being released from the hospital.  Now, at age twenty, Peter was back at home, in possession of a card that listed him officially as eighty-percent disabled.  The cast had been off for some time now, but Peter was still in strong, nearly constant, pain. By way of explanation – but certainly not encouragement – the doctor had informed him that because his muscles and bones had been so badly damaged, it was unclear whether they’d ever function fully again.  And due to the long period of time he’d spent immobilized in the hospital and nearly immobile in the cast, both of his legs were weak from lack of exercise. He still walked with a stick. 

This, combined with the chronic pain, meant that Peter struggled to do much at all around the homestead. It was impossible for him to even think about going back to the forestry work that provided the main support for the extended Gassmann-Bunke family. It had been that way since his great-great grandfather had purchased the 11-hectare forest nearly a hundred years earlier. The one saving grace in the situation was that, although Peter could no longer work in the forest, he was able to contribute to the furniture-making side of the family business. He had begun learning these skills already before the war, by working alongside his father and grandfather. Peter’s father, Viktor, was a master furniture-maker, and Peter himself had shown promise. His grandfather, Ulrich, told him he would become a good cabinet-maker in his own right someday. So, now Peter was glad to at least have the chance to hone his skills in this area. Drawing up plans for a sideboard, or planning the wood for a tabletop – which he could manage without experiencing extreme discomfort in his leg – helped him feel a bit less guilty about not being out in the forest.

If Peter’s mother, Ethel, had had her way once he returned from the war, she would have pampered him.  She wanted him to rest longer, to regain his strength, without even working on the furniture.  But she knew as well as anyone how much her father, Peter’s grandfather, Ulrich, needed help to keep the furniture-making going, even if the orders at that time were few and far between.  This was because Ulrich was terribly short-handed when it came to labor for the forestry: Peter’s brother, Marcus, was still deployed, as was Viktor, who had been Ulrich’s right hand man for most of the past twenty-three years. It was true that by the time Peter came home, Ulrich had more help out in the forest, from the Polish prisoners billeted in nearby Buckhorn who worked there each day.  These prisoners helped haul the logs from the forest and cut and stack the wood. But they didn’t have the skill to fell trees or identify which ones could be cut now, much less do any of the small scale cutting of the wood that would be used to make furniture.

That was where Lina came in. Thank goodness for Lina! Peter found himself thinking during those months when he was just getting used to being home. His younger sister, Lina had always loved the woods. Starting from the time she was a little girl, she would tag along with her father and grandfather whenever they’d allow her to.  Gradually, having grown weary of her nagging, persistent requests that they teach about the forest, they began telling her all that they themselves knew, showing her how to do this and that.  At that point, it was still Peter and his twin brother Marcus who were being groomed to take a large part in the forestry work: They were several years older than Lina, and, well, they were boys… 

But Lina had such a strong love for the trees and such a keen desire to learn forestry, that she made sure she was right in the thick of things whenever her mother and grandmother didn’t need her help in the house.  Even when they did need her, Lina could often be found in the forest instead, learning to notch a tree, or how to decide which trees in a stand should be cut down, and when.  Then the war came. First her father, and then Peter and Marcus, went off: Viktor to an undisclosed post at an undisclosed location, then Peter to the infantry, and Marcus to the Censorship Office. Back then, in 1942, Lina was only fourteen, but there was still work to be done in the forest…

Ethel wasn’t entirely in favor of Lina being involved in the forestry work. On the other hand, she had to admit, that Lina never looked happier than when she came out of the woods for supper, or at the end of the day.  She’d been telling them all since she was nine years old that she planned to become a full-fledged forester and carry on her grandfather’s work. As unconventional as Lina’s wish was, for a woman in Germany in the 1940s, it gave them all a great deal of comfort, especially Lina’s grandfather, Ulrich. So, even Ethel refrained from putting forth any objections when Lina altered some of Peter’s pants to fit her slightly smaller frame and headed off into the woods with her grandfather Ulrich. Over the next two years, she became an invaluable part of the Gassmann forestry team.

             This was especially true now, in 1944, since Marcus had never shown interest in the forest, and Peter could no longer perform that kind of work.  Although Viktor, too, was a forester and furniture-maker of nearly unparalleled skill, his behavior in the years leading up to the war had given his family members reason to wonder how committed he would be to the family’s business once the war ended and he returned home. Assuming he made it home. Despite not knowing precisely where Viktor was, Ethel had a feeling that her husband would return home safe. This feeling was somewhat irrationally based on the fact that he would regularly send them mysterious care packages with cigarettes and liquor that they could parlay into cash on the black market.  If he had access to such things, she reasoned, he must be in a position of relative importance and safety…

*          *          *

Such was the state of life on the Gassmann homestead.   So, on the morning of August 10th, 1944, despite the strong pain in his leg, which made it challenging for him to climb up onto the wagon, Peter felt determined to be of use and deliver the firewood.  It didn’t seem wise to send two of the Poles to deliver and unload it: A guard would have to go with them, and that would leave only one guard here at home.  Who knew what the Poles might take into their heads to do along the four-mile stretch between here and Lorena’s, with two horses and a wagon and firewood at hand? 

            Up until today, Lina had been the one to drive the wagon over to Lorena’s. There was always someone there to help unload it when she arrived. Besides, sending Lina gave the two women the chance to visit a bit over coffee (ersatz though it was) and cake that was still just as buttery and leavened by farm eggs as before the war, despite shortages elsewhere.

            But on this day, Lina wanted help her grandfather, Ulrich, with the felling of several pines. So, once the Poles had grudgingly rolled and shoved and, finally, hoisted the thick rounds of wood into the wagon, Lina came out of the workshop to wish her brother a good ride.  She put one foot onto the step at the front of the wagon and hopped up to plant a kiss on his cheek. She noticed as she did so that, despite all he’d been through, and all he was still going through, her brother looked as dreamily handsome as he had before the war.  She reminded him to ask Lorena to send back the length of fabric her mother needed to move ahead with an upholstery job she was doing for someone in town.

            Then she tousled her brother’s hair and hopped lightly back onto the ground. As she headed back toward the workshop, Lina noticed that the Poles had not replaced the wagon’s back railing slats.  She paused there, her left hand against the side of the wagon. That was when she caught sight of the slats lying on the ground, off to the wagon’s other side.  She stepped behind the wagon, intending to pick up the slats and put them onto the wagon. At this moment, evidently perceiving something that went unnoticed by Peter or Lina, the horses suddenly lurched forward and took two big steps. Peter now seized the reins which had, until then, been lying in his lap, in a firm hold. But it was already too late. Once the horses plunged ahead, the obedient wagon also jerked forward. This set off a cascade of wood rounds which, free to escape through the rail-less opening at the rear of the wagon, tumbled and rolled out of the wagon, and onto Lina.  Caught unawares, she was unprepared to defend herself from the sharp edges and unforgiving density of the wood blocks that now bombarded her.

            The thunderous noise of the wood hitting the ground, mixed with Lina’s cries, brought the Poles, and Ethel, and Lina’s grandmother, Renate, racing to the area in front of the workshop. Peter sprang down from his bench atop the wagon, ignoring his own pain. The scene, it struck him, looked just as it had earlier in the morning, when the pile of wood rounds had, as yet, been only half loaded onto the wagon. There was the same pile, in nearly the same configuration.  But this time, his beloved sister lay half obscured by the pile, her one, long braid flung out to the side, her gray eyes wide.  Peter noticed, as he gripped his head in horror, that it was as if only half of her was left: From her hips down, there was only wood.  He watched as she tried in vain to lift herself up. Peter began stumbling in this direction and that, pushing at one chunk of wood, then pulling at another. The Poles, too, were struggling to shift the log pieces off of Lina. Meanwhile, Renate, with her solid body and air of authority, was holding Lina’s shoulders firmly to the ground, to keep her from thrashing about. Ethel was gracefully and gently, but purposefully, moving her hands up and down Lina’s arms and across her forehead, in an attempt to calm her daughter, while speaking softly to her. Peter couldn’t make out what she was saying.  

            This was the scene that played on an endless loop in Peter’s mind from that morning on: the wagon half full, with no Lina on the ground beneath the rest of the wood that was waiting to be loaded; then the wagon fully loaded; and then the wagon only half full once again, as if a film strip had simply been run backwards, except that when it was run back, somehow Lina was under the wood. Who had suddenly inserted Lina into this movie of the mundane activities of their life in such a horrifying way? And how? And now what would they all do?

*          *          *

In the months that followed, these were the very questions that Lina’s mother and grandparents often discussed, but always only in pairs, and always only in spots where they thought Lina or Peter wouldn’t hear them: Ethel and Renate engaged in hurried chats in the kitchen while Lina was out in the yard in her wheelchair; Renate and Ulrich reviewed the situation in their bedroom at night. This was safe, they figured: They assumed that Lina must be asleep, or that, if she was still awake, she wouldn’t be able to make out what they were saying through the wall that separated their two rooms.  Peter, just like Lina, was excluded from these discussions. But he, too, knew that they were going on.

It was autumn now, and Lina knew her family members were talking behind her back. What she couldn’t understand was why.  I’m healing, right? They all know that, so why do they need to talk about it, especially in secret? Certainly, she reasoned, decisions needed to be made about how to keep the household running. But can’t we make them all together? It’s as if they think my brains were fractured in the accident, too! Lina told herself.  But, in the moments when she was clear-headed enough that this next thought could penetrate, she reminded herself: This is the way we Gassmanns and Bunkes do things. Grandpa and Grandma and Mama and Papa talk about what needs talking about. Then they present Marcus and Peter and me with their decisions. And that’s that! That was the way it had always been when Lina and her brothers were growing up.  But we’re grown now!  she thought.  Shouldn’t we have a say? She never raised the topic with Peter. The situation was painful enough for him, without her bringing it up, Lina reasoned.

But, Lina sometimes wondered: What if it isn’t these new arrangements they’re all discussing in low voices, like spies?  What could they be talking about, if it isn’t about that? 

When Lina did occasionally reflect on what else her family members might be discussing, several possible and disturbing answers would come to mind. But the one that would most often pop into her mind was this: They’re talking about how useless I am to them now. I can’t pull my weight.  They’re talking about how to get rid of me. Why else would they be so secretive?? Somebody probably went into Varel to look at one of those awful homes… If Lina had been able to think clearly, that’s how the thoughts might have been expressed.

            But she wasn’t able to think clearly.  Even now, after the initial tumult of the accident and the hospital and surgery seemed to have subsided, Lina found it difficult to follow a train of thought.Besides, these ideas were so upsetting to Lina that she didn’t even really want to think them. So, it ended up that, instead of complete thoughts, bits and pieces – sometimes just words and phrases, such as “a home” or “get rid of me” or “euthanasia” or “useless” – would fly relentlessly, uncontrollably, and unbidden into her consciousness, day after day. Even these snippets of ideas were enough to leave her distraught and frowning, the fingers of her right hand toying with the tuft of hair at the end of the braid she compulsively wrapped around her wrist and then unwrapped again. Why do I have to be at the mercy of these awful thoughts? She wondered, in desperation. If she’d had sufficient focus to be able to pray, she would have prayed to be freed of them.  But that was beyond her. One night, she did manage a brief, wordless plea in her heart, but then she instantly forgot it, as the unwanted thoughts rushed in once more. 

*          *          *

Lina knew as well as the rest of them what the doctors had told them after the wagon had been used to deliver her to the hospital in Varel instead of to haul wood to Lorena’s farm: multiple broken bones in both legs, a broken foot.  A dislocated hip. Quite possibly some nerve damage, too, from all the crushing weight.  Lina had to take her family’s word for this: She didn’t remember hearing any of it. Even though she’d been present in the room for the whole examination and discussion, she couldn’t recall a thing, no matter how hard she tried in the days and weeks that followed.  She remembered being beside the wagon and then beneath the wood, but even that last part was a hazy recollection at best. There hadn’t even been any pain, not until afterwards, when she was lying in the hospital bed. That was so strange!   How could it not have hurt to have all those bones broken? she would ask herself later, in the periods when she wasn’t experiencing the pain that followed having her bones set, and the surgery… Following those terrible and terrifying minutes with the doctors – which had seemed like hours or, rather, of indeterminable length – she would recall the pain-free time that followed the accident and wonder why she had to feel it now.

When the pain streamed through her now, Lina would comfort herself with the thought that it wasn’t as bad as it had been right before and after her surgery.  It had been worst of all before the surgery, she reminded herself. She thought back on it in a distanced kind of way, as if she were observing someone else undergoing that procedure: At first, her mother and grandmother, and Peter, too, were with her.  Then only her mother was there. The orderlies held her down by the arms and shoulders while the doctor set the bones that could be set. She remembered screaming from the pain, while her mother held her hand tightly, as tears rolled down their cheeks. She so wanted to fight them off, but she couldn’t do that, of course. Why didn’t anyone keep them from hurting me? she would wonder later. Why didn’t Mama do anything? Had they given her any pain killers before setting the bones?  It certainly hadn’t felt like it.

After the bone-setting and the surgery, the doctor told them – Lina did recall this – that what Lina needed to do now was be patient and wait for her bones and tissues to heal enough that all the swelling would go down. No casts could be put on while the swelling was so great, he said. Besides, he needed to be able to inspect the stitches on her left foot and lower leg, where he’d had to perform surgery: Her broken left fibula had ended up piercing the front of her calf, and that had had to be repaired.  She’d been lucky, the doctor assured her: The left femur and right tibia had suffered only simple breaks – one transverse, the other linear. “Only simple break”s? Lina thought indignantly whenever the pain started up.  Simple for whom?

As the doctor examined her during the several weeks she spent recuperating in the hospital, he regularly expressed his opinion, that the swelling was going down. Lina herself could see this, and she was anxious for the casts to go on, so that she could go home. The forced immobility in the hospital bed was like torture: She wanted to get up, but wasn’t allowed to do so, and there was also the pain to contend with. They gave her morphine in small doses when she most needed it, but often she just had to endure the pain, lying in her bed with nothing to distract her from her torment.  True, Ethel spent a large portion of each day sitting by her bed, tenderly rubbing her arm or brushing her hair out before rebraiding it. Ulrich and Renate and Peter came every evening and chatted with her, or brought her a piece of cake (which she rarely felt much like eating).  But even in their company, Lina felt alone: The constant series of inner battles to not give in to the pain kept her isolated from her loved ones. And although they tried to cheer her up in every way they could imagine, they could see from her strained expressions and the far-off look in her eyes, that she wasn’t fully with them.

After a few weeks of daily examinations, the doctor announced that the surgery sites were healing well.  He was happy about that.  The swelling had lessened considerably.  This pleased him, too.  The casts could go on soon. What did not please him was the fact that Lina couldn’t feel anything in her feet and legs, except pain. This seemed particularly unfair to her – and to all her family members, too.  But the doctor explained it to them, in a calm and matter-of-fact voice: “Lina can feel pain because those signals come from higher up in her nervous system, not in her legs themselves.”

Each day now, the doctor came in and pricked the bottoms of her feet with a pin and asked her to wiggle her toes.  Both Lina and the doctor looked expectantly at her toes, but they never observed even the slightest movement.  Immediately following the operation, the doctor had said that the most likely explanation for all of this was that the swollen tissues were pressing on the nerves of her legs. He kept repeating this conclusion each day for all the weeks Lina lay in the hospital bed. “We’ll see how you do when the swelling is down.”  Finally, four weeks in, Lina noticed his tight-lipped expression following one of the daily examinations. She decided to speak up.

“The swelling is down, isn’t it, Doctor?”

He nodded, but didn’t meet her gaze. “Yes.  That means we’ll be able to put the casts on in the next few days.  Then you can go home. That will be a relief, won’t it?” Now he looked up at her, straining his mouth into a tight smile. 

“But you told me that once the swelling was down, I’d be able to feel my legs again, and move them,” Lina said, knitting her brows. “But I can’t.”

The doctor patted her foot, where the stitches made the skin look like a quilt made of jagged fabric scraps.  “Not to worry, Lina.  All in good time.” Then he walked out of the room.

*          *          *

Autumn had come, and Lina was back home, with a small wheelchair to move around in. She had her casts on now, but still felt nothing in her legs or feet, aside from pain. Lina could propel her wheelchair through the house on her own, and make her way around the yard, but she still needed someone else to get her chair out of the house into the yard.  Naturally, she also depended on others to move her from bed to wheelchair to toilet. Also naturally, all of these limitations on her freedom of movement frustrated her.

She discovered early on, that when she was outside in the yard, as near to the forest as possible, her spirit would feel a bit lighter.  One of her family members would push her wheelchair outdoors, and then she’d roll herself over to where the main path into the forest began.  This was her boundary.  She could go no further. Well, that wasn’t strictly true: She could have rolled a ways down the path, which was wide enough for a wagon and a horse.  But instead of being smooth, it was scored with several sets of deep ruts made by wagons, and the spaces between the ruts were overgrown with grass and littered with rocks and twigs and even small branches.  These features, which she’d barely noticed when she’d had the use of her legs, seemed to be taunting her as they blocked her movement into her beloved forest. 

Knowing how much Lina missed being amongst the trees, Ethel tried one day to push the wheelchair along the path into the forest. But it immediately became obvious that the chair was no match for this terrain. But, perhaps more importantly, each jolt of the chair as it passed over a twig, each slight dip into a rut, sent pain surging through Lina’s legs. She begged her mother to go back to the yard.

But her grandfather, Ulrich, didn’t want to give up so easily. His first idea was to lift Lina up onto the buckboard of the wagon and drive her into the forest that way.  But, as much as Lina detested her wheelchair, she had, by this time, come to see it as a kind of protective armor. She feared that without the arms to grip and the footrests to keep her feet in place, she might just topple off the front of the wagon. Peter, Ethel, and Renate all offered to sit alongside her, to make sure she couldn’t fall, but Lina shook her head adamantly in refusal.

Ulrich’s next plan was this: They would construct a ramp out of planks, push her up into the back of the wagon in her wheelchair, and then drive her deep into the woods. Once there, they’d roll her back down again, and she could sit amongst the trees. “We can make it a picnic!” Renate even suggested. But Lina, terrified that riding in the wagon at all would bring on pain, rejected this plan, too.  She couldn’t bring herself to take the chance.

So, instead of risking going into the forest, she made it a habit to sit and stare into the trees, straining to catch sight of the old treehouse deep amongst the beeches, even though she knew it was far too distant for her to be able to glimpse.

Nearly all the time Lina was sitting outdoors – or anywhere, in fact – she experienced either physical pain or emotional and mental distress.  Over the past couple of months, Lina had come to the conclusion that these two had made a pact: One of them had to keep her company at almost all times, with only brief breaks between shifts. So, first her legs would be wracked by pain for an hour, or more, and then the pain would fade. But before Lina could even catch her breath, deep sadness and fear would flood her mind. And they’d drag the horrid words and phrases – “a home” or “euthanasia” –along with them.

On one of these typical days, Lina was sitting, as usual, at the edge of the forest, looking at the trees, and enduring yet another series of physical an emotional attacks – and then those words! In despair at having to go through this torture day after day, she heard herself cry out, “Dear God! Please take these thoughts! And the pain! Please take all the pain, too! I can’t bear this any longer!”

            Then, at some point – Lina couldn’t have said precisely when this happened – she realized that things had shifted a bit. It seemed to her that maybe a couple of weeks had passed since she had wished in her heart for respite from the awful thoughts and the pain.

What, exactly, was different now?  It wasn’t that she never heard the upsetting words any more.  No. But she noticed that a new thought had appeared, or, rather, a new word. Her mind was now racing from dawn to dusk, fueled by an agitation that manifested consistently as this one, new word. It was a command: Move!  Of course, this command from within contrasted sharply with what she was physically capable of doing. She could still not move around under her own power.  Even so, it was a new word in her head, and something about it felt positive.

Move! she heard throughout the day, no matter where she was. Sitting pushed up to the kitchen table, she’d hear it. Move!  Or as she mended clothes by lamplight in the evening. Move! And very often, after her wheelchair had been pushed to the edge of the forest and she was sitting gazing into the woods, it would come. Move! Since Lina couldn’t walk, she’d move in whatever way she could when she heard the word. During the day, she’d push herself back from the table and wheel her chair slowly across the kitchen, through the door to the other part of the house, behind and around under the staircase, and back again into the kitchen. 

Moving herself around out in the yard was easier, which was a blessing, because it was out here, in close proximity to the forest she was unable to enter, that her two pain companions were always most active.  But when she felt despair beginning to set in, or a pain deep in one of the spots where her bones had broken, then she’d heard Move! sound loudly inside her head. Move! Move! Move!  The repeated word sounded like the movement of a soft breeze. And then she’d begin her “strolls”, as she called them.  There were just as many obstacles out here as indoors: the chicken coop, the goat pen, the clotheslines’ poles, the garden.  But there were also paths of sorts that wended around and between them, and which were basically worn flat, in contrast to the forest path.  So Lina followed these paths, weaving in and out, all around the features of the yard that she’d never thought too much about, back when she’d been able to walk. She rolled and rolled and rolled, until whichever pain companion was on duty went on break.  Then she had a brief respite until its replacement’s shift began.

During these brief periods, Lina allowed her arms to rest after spinning, spinning, spinning the wheels of her wheelchair, propelling herself around her chosen obstacle course. Lina felt calm and even light in these minutes, her whole upper body energized by the exertion. Then she could think clearly – she’d finally gained the ability to do this, after weeks of mental chaos following her return from the hospital. And the thoughts that came in these moments were positive, optimistic. Every once in a while, when she saw Peter still hobbling, unable to work in the woods, instead of thinking, I’m the same as him! she quietly but forcefully repeated to herself, over and over again, I’m not Peter. I’ll be in the woods again.Lina noticed that sometimes this focused repetition would even drive the pain and the unwanted thoughts away for a time. During these minutes, parked by the path that led into the woods, she felt in her heart that it was just a matter of time before she was out of the chair, back to helping her grandfather with the work in the forest.  She closed her eyes and imagined herself out there with him, clothed in her familiar pants.  The traditional dresses and aprons she’d begun wearing again after the accident – to make it easier for her mother and grandmother to care for and dress and undress her – seemed foreign, a symbol to her of her confinement. That was why she always closed her eyes when imagining herself in the forest: so that she wouldn’t see the full skirt covering her legs.  These were happy minutes, sometimes whole half hours, when Lina was able to hold onto the good. Once this respite even lasted an hour, by Lina’s reckoning.  She thought of the strolls when this happened as her “lucky” strolls.

Then there were the “unlucky” strolls.  On those days, each landmark she rolled past served as a cruel reminder of what she was no longer able to do: the narrow dirt lanes inside the garden, where she used to sow seeds or weed; the clotheslines she could no longer reach; the henhouse where the eggs would lie, waiting for her to collect them.  At these times, when her focus shifted to what was unattainable, she was flooded with despair. She still heard Move! in her head, but the old words and phrases reasserted themselves, too. You’ll never walk. Useless cripple. They might as well just kill you. This shift signaled to Lina that her pain companions’ break had ended, and she’d struggle to hold onto the vision of herself as healthy again: Don’t go! she’d whisper frantically as she felt her calm beginning to slip away, and the optimistic thoughts along with it.  When a “stroll” turned unlucky in this way, Lina would race ahead as fast as she could, as if trying to outwit the thoughts by racing past the offending spots before her brain would notice them.  It usually did not work, and when that happened, she seemed to be hearing not Move! but Move! Or else…

Lina had to devise different strategies for moving around in the evening, as she sat with the rest of the family in the main room. With everyone there, occupying chairs and space around the table, she had no room to maneuver.  But Move! still sounded in her head.  So, she got into the habit of reaching down and slowly wrapping her hands around the metal guides that framed her chair’s wheels. Laying one finger at a time on the guides, she took in the sensation of the cool metal against her warm fingers and palms, allowing herself to feel that fully, alternately tightening and loosening her grip. Then she began moving the wheels forward and backwards, ever so slightly.  Sometimes she did this for an hour at a time.  At times, she thought the rubber tires must be wearing soft grooves in the wooden floor beneath her.

Why doesn’t anyone ever ask me why I do this? Lina often thought. They can’t not noticeDo they not care?

Although Ethel, Renate, Ulrich, and Peter did, indeed, all notice Lina’s wanderings, they acted as if they didn’t, or as if there was nothing the slightest bit unusual in her movements. As you might imagine, this was something they did discuss amongst themselves, but only in private. In secret.   Why call attention to it? they all reasoned.  They didn’t want to upset Lina by questioning her about it.  If it helped her, then it was a good thing. Let it be, they decided.

*          *          *

Although Lina’s agitated mind consistently jumped to the most upsetting possible explanations for her family’s silence, the fact that they weren’t including her in their conversations didn’t necessarily mean there was anything for her to worry about.  At sixteen, Lina was too young to know that the Gassmanns had learned “the hard way”, as Grandma Renate put it, tonot betray strong emotion about anything, and not to discuss delicate topics in public. (To them, “in public” meant during meals or where anyone who might be the subject of a third–party conversation was present.) At least that’s how Renate described the upshot of what had happened more than twenty years earlier: Renate still remembered every detail of that terrible conversation– about God and faith and healing – that had thrown her family into upheaval in 1921. She concluded that if no one had been allowed to have that discussion, what had come to a head then would never have come to a head. Nor would the subsequent events have occurred. And she wasn’t about to let that happen again, ever.  The cost might be too great.  So, Renate thought about it, and she decided that the way to avoid such calamities in the future was to make certain that the family’s conversations never strayed onto that topic again.  Or, for that matter, onto any other topics Renate herself deemed likely to cause dissent, discord, excessive displays of emotion, or rifts between family members. 

As the Gassmann-Bunke family’s self-appointed guardian of peace and harmony, Renate exercised constant vigilance during mealtimes. She was always prepared to deftly guide the conversation in a different direction if she sensed trouble looming.  She was so skilled at this, that her grandchildren never even noticed when she steered them away from what they’d been intending to talk about.  The adults, meanwhile, were thoroughly trained by the time Viktor and Ethel’s first child, Marcus, was born in 1923. Thus, they needed only a bit of nudging to keep conversations safe and on track.  Although Renate never explicitly told Lina or her brothers not to talk about the question of God and faith and healing – or other topics Renate preferred to skirt – they quickly gained an intuitive grasp of what could be talked about, and what couldn’t.  So, mealtimes among the Gassmann-Bunkes generally played out the same way day in and day out, with the identical, approved topics repeatedly coming under discussion.  Only the details varied: Which stand of trees were they were considering cutting, or who had ordered a piece of furniture, or who was Ethel making a quilt for now, or how was the cheese making coming along, etc., etc.

For this reason, no one in the household was surprised when Renate took each of them – even her own husband! – aside in August of 1944 and told them that they were to discuss Lina’s accident and her current state and what might be done about it only behind closed doors or in the depths of the forest, where Lina wouldn’t overhear them.  For Ulrich, Ethel, and Peter, who was surprised that his grandmother had approached him, too, this directive simply reinforced the message they had all long since internalized: No talking about things that might upset anyone.  But the fact that Renate had actually spoken to each of them about it, instead of relying on her usual hints or redirection, made it quite clear that this was a matter of particular seriousness for her.  She would brook no dissent and no slip-ups. In her letters to Marcus and the messages she sent to Lina’s father Viktor, she went so far as to warn them, too, not to say anything about it in Lina’s presence – even though at that point they were still away at war and far from home!  Thus, once these two remaining family members returned after the war, they reintegrated into the household without ever talking at the table about what any of them – and not just Lina, but Peter, Marcus, or Viktor, too – had gone through during the war years.

True, they each shared certain details with one or the other family member, in private.  But there was a great amount of work to be done on the homestead once the war ended. This provided all of them with a convenient excuse for focusing on day-to-day tasks instead of baring their souls to each other.  Maybe this was just as well. Every single one of them lacked the necessary words to either ask or try to answer the most burning questions they held persistently and tightly in their hearts.  And so, grandparents, parents, and children alike threw themselves headlong into those day-to-day responsibilities. It was only Renate and Ulrich who would find themselves lying in bed at night, searching for the words to express to each other what they were feeling, and discussing how they could shift things back to normal.  But what does “normal” even mean? Renate and Ulrich both asked themselves.  They both knew full well that even the years between 1921 and the start of the second war had been rocky for their family.  When Renate thought about it, she had to travel in her mind all the way back to before the fall of 1921 to find a period she could point to and hold on tight to as her ideal of family harmony.  She so wanted to get things back to how they’d been then. She dreamed of somehow transporting all of them back to that happy time before everything started going haywire.

Of course, Lina, like her brothers, knew what had happened in 1921: Her Uncle Hans and the rest of the family had had a falling out of sorts, and Hans now lived abroad. But she and Marcus and Peter didn’t know exactly what had transpired to bring it about.  This was another thing the Gassmanns and Bunkes didn’t talk about.  Although Lina did once ask both Ethel and Renate – separately, of course – to explain it to her, both said only that Uncle Hans had gone his own way.  What is that supposed to mean?? Lina wondered.

Given this family approach to dealing with disturbing or potentially disturbing topics and events, perhaps it shouldn’t seem surprising that Lina’s family wasn’t talking with her about anything in the early period of her convalescence. After all, those first months that followed the accident were a period of adjustments for every one of them. It was all they could do to figure out how to both keep Lina as comfortable as possible and do what needed to be done around the homestead. They also had to make decisions about who would carry out absolutely every task in the house and in the forest. Renate and Ethel set up a schedule between them for Lina’s personal care, and they ran themselves ragged doing both that and everything else. It didn’t even cross their minds to ask Lina to pitch in around the house.  She has her healing to do! they both thought. On top of all this, there were always more visits from the doctor, and consultations with him, too.  (This was the one time Renate and Ethel did talk about Lina’s condition in her presence.) There was physical reorganization in the house, too: Lina switched bedrooms with her grandparents, so she’d be adjacent to the kitchen and closer to the bathroom. All of these changes left everyone in the family exhausted and disoriented, as if they were continually being blown hither and thither by new tornados that seemed to materialize each and every day.

It was in the midst of this chaos that Lina was supposed to be making her way through “her healing process”.  That’s what the doctor called it the first time he visited her at home following her hospital stay. “Just make her as comfortable as possible,” he told the family.  “She needs to be comfortable and calm during her healing process.”  Then he went away, leaving them with no idea whatsoever about how they were supposed to run a household and a forestry operation and take care of Lina, too, all while she was still in pain. Comfortable?  No, that didn’t seem possible, not to Lina or her family. 

So, each time the doctor came, repeated these same sentences, then left once again, abandoning them to their whirlwind of a household, Lina slipped back into the knitting or sock darning she’d picked up over her mother’s and grandmother’s objections.  “Just relax, Lina!” they constantly told her. “Get your strength back!” They could see from her eyes that she was present in body, but in some world of her own in her mind, her brows knitted, her upper body tense, while her lower body remained slack.  She’s tired, Renate or Ethel would decide from looking at her.Or, She’s sad today.  Or, She’s in pain. Not that they ever asked Lina directly.  They preferred to intuit what her state was and to tend to and console her in actions rather than words.

That silence again, Lina often thought (about her mother and grandmother’s reticence, not her own).  And this pattern of theirs upset her, even though she somehow had the presence of mind to realize it was nothing new: Why bother asking me what I’m feeling, when you can just figure it out on your own? she observed, annoyed. These Gassmann women think they’re mind-readers!

*          *          *

When Lina’s casts came off at the end of October, it seemed to her that the silence grew even deeper.  How can what’s already silent become more so? she asked herself. But that was certainly the way it was.  Maybe what intensified the silence was that everyone, Lina included, had to work even harder to maintain it in the face of one fact: Even though the casts were off, Lina still found herself unable to walk, or even to feel any sensations in her legs. Any sensation at all. Not even pain.  Lina wasn’t able to tell the doctor when, precisely, the pain had stopped. It was after I started hearing ‘Move!’ Lina decided. I know that much, at least. (Not that she told the doctor or anyone else about “Move!”)All Lina knew was that the pain wasn’t there anymore.

Certainly, she was grateful that her unpleasant companions seemed to have decided to leave her in peace. But her initial elation at being free of pain faded quickly when she saw the look on the doctor’s face as he examined her.  His knitted brows conveyed what his words (“I cannot explain this”) did not. His face told them, “This cannot in any way be construed as a positive development.” They were left with the strong and disquieting thought that, at this point, Lina might be even further from ever walking again than she had been before the casts were put on.

The lack of serious conversation with her family members about the only thing that really mattered to her right now left Lina to converse on her own, with herself. And with her legs. It was nearly three months since she’d seem them. They’d been shrouded in plaster for that long.  Once the legs reappeared, Lina spent quite a bit of time contemplating those two parts of her as her mother dressed or undressed her. Lina even pulled her nightgown up in bed so she could study them. She was both fascinated and repelled by the sight of her legs.  She’d been so eager to see them again, but when she did, it looked to her as if she had somehow acquired dead tree trunks where her legs should have been: fallen tree trunks overgrown by thick pink lichen that was darker in some spots, and punctuated in others by white lines. These lines gave the impression that the trunks had been hit by lightning that had zigzagged from here to there before springing up and then diving down once again, into her foot, and then onward into the earth.

Lina felt compelled to make a habit of studying her tree trunk legs, although she didn’t know why. Part of her wanted never to have to see them again: They reminded her of the accident.  That’s no excuse, though, she chided herself. Just being in this chair reminds me of it every second. Even so, there was something about the spots where her skin had been broken and then stitched back together that kept attracting her attention. She seemed to think that, if only her legs could speak to her, they might reveal things to her:  how the accident happened, what the meaning of it all was.  

The white traces drew her hands to them, too.  Lina often felt the urge to trace the course of those lightning track scars with her fingers, especially the ones on her left lower leg and foot. When she lifted her nightgown in the privacy of her room, though, she could only reach the ones on her thigh and calf.  But if the light was right, she could see the tracks on her foot, and so she got into the habit of tracing the pattern in the air before her.  After a few days of this, she didn’t have to look at her foot any more to know the design of her lightning-touched foot-trunk.  She had it memorized.  From that point on, she found herself absentmindedly drawing it with her fingertip, on her coverlet, her lap, the kitchen table…  She found it soothing, somehow, this way of staying in touch with a part of her she couldn’t reach and which remained mute, whether out of desire or inability to communicate with her. My mind has so much to say to me.  Why are my legs so still?

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