Authors: Paul Dowswell
No one came forward.
‘Come now,’ she smiled. ‘Do not be shy.’
Piotr could sense that this woman meant him no harm. He stepped forward, and addressed her in fluent German.
‘Well, you are a clever one,’ she replied in German, putting a chubby arm around his shoulder. ‘Where did you learn to speak like that?’
‘My parents, miss,’ said Piotr. ‘They both speak –’ Then he stopped and his voice faltered. ‘They both spoke German.’
The nurse hugged him harder as he fought back tears. No one had treated him this kindly at the orphanage.
‘Now who are you, mein Junge?’ she said. Between sobs he blurted out his name.
‘Pull yourself together, young Piotr,’ she whispered in German. ‘The Doktor is not the most patient fellow.’
The tall, dark-haired man Piotr had seen earlier strolled into the room. He stood close to the nurse and asked her which of the boys spoke German. ‘Just give me a moment with this one,’ she said. She turned back to Piotr and said gently, ‘Now dry those eyes. I want you to tell these children what the Doktor says.’
She pinched his cheek and Piotr stood nervously at the front of the room, waiting for the man to begin talking.
He spoke loudly, in short, clear sentences, allowing Piotr time to translate.
‘My name is Doktor Fischer . . . I have something very special to tell you . . . You boys have been chosen as candidates . . . for the honour of being reclaimed by the German National Community . . . You will undergo further examinations . . . to establish your racial value . . . and whether or not you are worthy of such an honour . . . Some of you will fail and be sent back to your own people.’
He paused, looking them over like a stern schoolteacher.
‘Those of you who are judged to be Volksdeutsche – of German blood – will be taken to the Fatherland . . . and found good German homes and German families.’
Piotr felt a glimmer of excitement, but as the other boys listened their eyes grew wide with shock. The room fell silent. Doktor Fischer turned on his heels and was gone. Then there was uproar – crying and angry shouting. Immediately, the Doktor sprang back into the room and cracked his whip against the door frame. Two soldiers stood behind him.
‘How dare you react with such ingratitude. You will assist my staff in this process,’ he yelled and the noise subsided instantly. ‘And you will not want to be one of those left behind.’
Piotr shouted out these final remarks in Polish. He was too preoccupied trying to translate this stream of words to notice an angry boy walking purposefully towards him. The boy punched him hard on the side of the head and knocked him to the floor. ‘Traitor,’ he spat, as he was dragged away by a soldier.
Ausländer
Sektion 20
The Cabinet of Curiosities
***
The Adventures of Sam Witchall
Powder Monkey
Prison Ship
Battle Fleet
Bloomsbury Publishing, London, New Delhi, New York and Sydney
First published in Great Britain in October 2012 by Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
50 Bedford Square, London, WC1B 3DP
This electronic edition published in October 2012 by Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Text copyright © Paul Dowswell 2012
The moral right of the author has been asserted
All rights reserved
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may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 9781408829783
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