Authors: Michele Young-Stone
PART TWO
Yes I would say Here I am I am tired I am tired of running of having to carry my life like it was a basket of eggs.
âJoe Christmas from
Light in August
by William Faulkner
5
1989
I
n Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, the Old Man swallowed his high-blood-Âpressure tablet, and like he did every morning, complained about this spoiled generation: “Nobody saves a penny.” When his pie-faced, German-Âborn wife, Inge, asked if he'd heard from their son, the Old Man grimaced. “That boy's got no sense. What's he doing with his life?” The Old Man lit a cigar and rocked back in his easy chair. “You do for your children and they do nothing for you. Get me a beer, will you, Inge?”
“I have nothing better to do with my time?”
The Old Man opened the newspaper, and before Inge had delivered his Black Label beer, he fell asleep. Inge stubbed his cigar.
Later that evening when she tried to wake him, he brushed her aside. “Leave me alone.”
“Come to bed.”
He didn't answer, and she left him in his easy chair.
With his beard on one shoulder, the Old Man dreamed. For the first time in at least a decade, he dreamed about his sisters. In the dream, the three girls held hands.
Before the war, the Old Man was called Frederick.
In his dream, Frederick was young, and he was shouting, screaming, warning his sisters about what was coming. “Audra, DanutËe, Daina! Listen to me. Run! Get out of there,” and even though they could see him in his dream, they could not hear him. Their names meant Storm, Gift from God, and Song. Daina was the baby. She was their little songbird. Everybody's favorite, and no one made it a secret. He was shouting at the three of them, but there was no sound, even as his voice strained. In the dream, he touched his throat. His sisters waved like nothing was wrong. Groundless, nowhere to stand, the Old Man kept screaming. “Get out of there!”
When he woke in a sweat, he went to the kitchen for a glass of water and steadied himself against the counter.
His sisters had been real in the dream, and just like in real life, he hadn't managed to save them.
In Bay Ridge, the Old Man finished his water and went upstairs to his wife. She looked like a girl when she slept. Her brow was unwrinkled and her mouth was pleasant, not turned down, like when he saw her at breakfast or at lunch or at dinner. Like when he saw her tidying, walking to and fro, through rooms where he wanted to sit in peace and listen to his music. Since he'd retired, she drove him crazy, talking on the phone and watching the blasted television. “Turn it down,” he complained.
“But I can't hear it then.”
“Because you're deaf. See a doctor.”
But tonight, the clock radio showing two a.m., the Old Man felt more like Frederick than an old man. He took two Benadryl to help him sleep without dreaming, and feeling scared for the first time in many yearsâthe past too close, his sisters too closeâhe climbed into bed, nuzzling Ingeburg. His chest against her back. When she startled awake, asking, “Is everything all right?” he said, “Everything's fine. Go back to sleep.”
He would never tell her that he was scared. It was enough that she was there looking like her young self.
Why can't my sisters hear me? It's
my
dream
. Then he closed his eyes and fell dreamlessly to sleep. You'd think that in forty-eight years, a man would stop grieving his family, but life doesn't work that way. Life speeds by until forty-eight years seems like one bar in one song, like one scene in one act in one opera. Like one stroke of paint on the
Mona Lisa
.
The next morning, the Old Man was nearly himself again. He shoveled eggs and fried potatoes into his mouth, sopping his plate with day-old bread, but after swallowing, he brightened and raised a finger. Ingeburg knew him well enough to know that he was going to make some point, and however trivial it might seem to her, she should feign interest, for the Old Man's benefit.
“Yes, Frederick?” she said, taking a seat at the table. Was this going to be some recounting of a story she'd already read in the newspaper? Was he going to critique
The Harvard Dictionary of Music
, as he'd done last night at dinner? Ingeburg smiled and waited.
“We have a granddaughter.”
“Yes, we do.” This was no great revelation.
“We should meet her.” His pointer finger was yellowed from cigar smoke.
Inge said, “What? We do not know her, and she is nearly grown. I wanted to go and meet her when she was born. She is not a baby, Old Man.”
“We should know her.”
“I don't even know how old she is.” Inge rose and untied her apron. “You're crazy.”
“She is the same age my sister Daina was the last time I see her. I think she has a birthday on March twenty-ninth. She is sixteen.”
Ingeburg sighed. “Freddie's daughter is not your sister.”
“She's my granddaughter.”
“She's our granddaughter.”
“I am dreaming,” he said. “Last night.”
“What were you dreaming about?”
“What do you think, Inge?”
“I don't know.”
“Of my sisters.”
She pointed her spatula at him. “How am I supposed to know what goes on in that head of yours?”
The Old Man said, “I want to meet the girl. I wonder if she looks like my mother or my sisters.”
Inge said, “The girl's name is Prudence. We have pictures from Freddie.”
“Does she look like Daina?”
“How do I know what Daina looks like? You have one old photograph. I can't tell who's who in that picture.”
“What kind of name is Prudence?”
“From the Latin, I guess. âCautious.' American now.”
“Nothing is American but the Indians, and they are dead. You'd think our son would care about his heritage, but he doesn't care. No one cares anymore.”
Ingeburg rolled her eyes. “That's not true.”
“We will meet the girl,” he said. “Before I die, I want to meet her.”
“Are you dying soon?”
“Sit down now, Inge, and let me talk at you. And you try to listen for once.”
Ingeburg rolled her eyes and, sitting down, folded her hands on her lap.
“Family is important,” the Old Man began. “Most important. After family, land is most important. In 1918, with Lithuanian independence, we had our land back. Father was so happy to have his grandfather's land back for the Vilkas family, but father's brother, Joseph, cared more for money than for land or family. You know this.”
“I know this story,” Inge said.
“Listen, woman. You don't know everything how you always think you do.”
Inge rolled her eyes.
“And don't go to sleep on me.”
“I better make a strong pot of coffee.”
“You're a funny woman, Ingeburg.” The Old Man cleared his throat while Inge put water on to boil. “So my uncle Joseph sold his half of the estate to not one but four separate families.” At this, the Old Man held up four fingers. “They were Lithuanian families, but like us, exiled from the country since the great uprising. They were good people. They later became our friends, but Father never forgave his brother for dividing the land into parcels. Father's brother, useless Joseph,” at this the Old Man made the sign of the cross, “and his wife, Lina, take a boat to America, where Joseph is going to sell men's clothes and work as a tailor. I remember Father spitting on the dirt and saying, âJuozas is dead to me,' and so Uncle Joseph was dead to all of us, and then came 1940 when the Red Army is occupying Lithuania, and then came 1941, when we are all doomed to die, and don't think we didn't have suspicion all the time that the Red Army was going to do something evil. What is wrong with people? In 1918, Lithuania was independent. But when the Red Army marched into our country, no one did anything. Not even us because the lying Soviets said that we wanted them there to protect us from Hitler. No one, except for maybe some Jews, wanted the Russians there. My neighbors, the ones who saved me, were Jewish. Did I tell you that?”
“You told me,” Inge said.
A million times!
“The Soviets told lie after lieâthat we need them to protect us from Hitler, that there will be another war, and they will keep us safe. They said that we voted and decided to become part of the Soviet Union. They were liars. All the while, they'd signed a secret pact with Germany, saying that Stalin could have Lithuania, Estonia, Latvia, and half of Poland. In exchange, the Soviets would leave Germany alone, stay out of Hitler's business, and let him have the rest of the world. When liars make contracts, no one is to be trusted. Everywhere, we see the tanks and the red stars. Everywhere, they wave their flags and banners. Everywhere, is the face of Joseph Stalin. There were two sides: evil and more evil. Even as a young boy, I remember hearing mother cry about Holodomor in Ukraine. I was eleven or twelve and Mother was telling Father that the Soviets are shooting children in wheat fields. We were never not afraid of Russians. She had read about it in the newspaper. A whole nation starving to death. Father is saying, âDon't worry, Aleksandra. We are not in Ukraine.'
“But then the Soviets are in Lithuania, and there was plenty of time for Father to telegraph or telephone Joseph in America and ask for his help. There were planes flying overhead and tanks rolling through town, and we hear about the nationalizing of the stores. We hear about the men and women disappearing in the night. We see the men in black coats. Mother said to Father, âWe can visit Joseph and Lina in America. We should go.' Father put his hands over his ears and shook his head at Mother like she was too loony for her own good. âThis is our home,' he told her. âThis is our soil.' He kneeled down and ran his fingers along the dirt. âWe don't run, Aleksandra.'
“âBut the girls,' Mother said. âAnd Frederick. I am sick with worry.' Mother was always worried about us. She wanted to protect us no matter what. She didn't even want us to know that war was coming, but we knew. You couldn't help but know.
“Father said, âFrederick and the girls will be fine. You worry too much.'
“I listened to everything they said. I don't think Father was stupid, just too optimistic. I don't know.
“Three months later in June, 1941, everyone was gone. Our house is filled with the men in black coats. The front doors are ajar. The furniture stands on the front lawn with no one sitting or playing piano. There were trucks and wagons. Our house is nationalized and then the land will be collectivized and the family is no more.
“My neighbors are alive. They are one of the families that had returned to Lithuania twenty years earlier and the men in the black coats didn't bother them like they did us. They did not own enough. Or maybe their house was not big enough. Or their land wasn't rich. Or their chickens didn't lay golden eggs. Or maybe they keep to themselves. Stalin killed randomly. They might've had a magic beanstalk. You see, Inge, it was always with no reason. You know that.”
“I know,” Inge said. “You say this every day, Old Man. As if I don't know from Stalin.”
“Mother's name was Aleksandra.”
“I know, Old Man.”
“We never say it. We always say Mother.”
“Who is we?”
“Me, Father, and my sisters. She was Mother, but she had a name.”
“Of course she had a name.” Inge yawned and filled two cups with black coffee.
“I hid in the darkness, eating the neighbor's leftovers. They were Jewish. Did I tell you that?”
Inge pulled a skein of yarn from her basket. She had to keep her hands busy even while her mind was idle.
“All the while, I was hearing the Red Army fire guns in the air. I got on my knees and prayed for my dead. Father, I knew for certain because I'd seen him die, but Nelly, my neighbor, said that my sisters' bodies were carried from the house. I asked her, âAll three?' and she said, âDo you think they would spare one?'
“âAnd Mother?' I asked. âAre you sure about Mother?'
“Nelly said, âThey took her right after your father. I saw your sister Daina. She was crying, coming back from the train station. They forced your mother onto a cattle car bound for Siberia. Your sisters were going inside to pack.'
“âDid you see them?' I asked Nelly. âDid you see my sisters?'
“âAfter they brought out Audra, I couldn't look,' she told me.”
The Old Man covered his eyes. “For a while, Inge, I really had some hope. I told you.”
“You have told me,” Ingeburg said. “You've been telling me since 1942.”
“Just listen, woman!” The Old Man banged his fist on the table. “I thought that maybe Daina and DanutËe had survived, but as the days passed and there was no sign, no word, I knew that I was being naïve. I prayed and even as I prayed, I doubted God.”
“Stop, now, Frederick,” Inge said. “This is ancient history. All of it. No more talk and no more dreams.”
“It doesn't seem so ancient, Inge.”
“Just stop it, Old Man! Our son is right about one thing: you live in the past.”
“But I have a point.”
“Then get to it! Will you?”
“Our granddaughter. She is not in the past. We are going to witness her.”
“But how? What if she doesn't want to see us?”
“We will fly to where she lives. I will call Freddie and find out where.”
“I'm not getting on an airplane.”
“It's too far a walk for you, Ingeburg. You're old.”
“Very funny. Don't call me old.” Inge sipped her coffee. “Why now, Frederick?”
“Why any time, Inge?” He puffed on his cigar. “We don't know. Only God knows.”
The Old Man wasn't feeling so old, not since his dream. The past had caught up and kicked him in the rear. He was hopeful. What if his granddaughter resembled his mother or one of his sisters? He was hell-bent on knowing her. He stifled a smile and folded his hands in his lap. He loved his Ingeburg, but sometimes she did not understand the world as good as he did.