Margot: A Novel (16 page)

BOOK: Margot: A Novel
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01
02
03
04
Chapter Twenty
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
My first telephone call comes on Wednesday night,
15
after the ad has run for two full days. But it is not a call from
16
anyone who might join in Bryda’s lawsuit. It is a call from Ilsa.
17
“Margie,” she says right away when I pick up, and I sigh
18
with relief at the sound of her voice. Two days I’ve left work
19
early, avoiding Shelby’s questioning looks, and I’ve run home
20
to stare at the telephone, where I’ve willed it not to ring the
21
entire hour.
22
“Oh, Ilsa,” I say. “I’m glad it’s you.”
23
“My dear,” she says, and I can picture her on the other end
24
of the line, shaking her petite blond head. “Why on earth is
25
your telephone number in the
Inquirer
?”
26
“Oh.” I draw in my breath. I have not considered the pos
27
sibility that Ilsa, the one person who knows my number other
28S
than Joshua, might see the ad and find it perplexing. “Well . . .”
29N
I say, though I am not sure what I should say next. Lying is a
second skin, but it is failing me now. The first skin feels warm,
01
ripened, ready to break to the surface.
02
“Spit it out, my dear,” Ilsa says. Ilsa is not my sister, nor my
03
mother. She is the American cousin of my mother’s German
04
friend Eduard. After I told Eduard I needed to come to Amer
05
ica, he persuaded Ilsa to sponsor me and take me in. Our
06
relationship is a strange one because it is not quite a friend
07
ship. She holds a power over me, and not because she means
08
to, or necessarily even wants to. But still, she does. When Ilsa
09
asks me for the truth, sometimes I am compelled to give it.
10
“I am helping my boss with something,” I say. “With a
11
case.”
12
“Involving anti-Semitism?” she says, sounding skeptical. I
13
imagine her pulling at her earlobe a little, the way she does
14
when something her husband, Bertram, tells her makes her
15
nervous.
16
“Sort of,” I say, “But it is very top secret. He’s asked me not
17
to discuss it.”
18
She hesitates, and I hear the short sound of her breath on
19
the other end of the line. “I don’t like the sound of that,” she
20
finally says. She doesn’t say anything for a moment. “You
21
know you can always give the job up, move back in with us.”
22
“I like my job,” I say. And also, now, I cannot imagine not
23
seeing Joshua every day.
I tell you as a friend, Margie,
he’d said
24
to me.
A friend.
25
“Well, at the very least, you’ll come for dinner tomorrow,”
26
she says. “We haven’t seen you in a while. We worry about
27
you. Are you eating?”
S28
“Of course I’m eating,” I lie.
N29
01
“Well, good,” she says. “Tomorrow night. Bertram will drive
02
over to pick you up so you don’t have to take the bus.”
03
I agree, we hang up, and my phone doesn’t ring again that
04
night.
05
06
07
The next night, Ilsa’s husband, Bertram, pulls up outside the
08
sidewalk by my apartment building in his blue Ford Fairlane.
09
He honks once, and I walk outside to find him waiting for
10
me in the car. He is a tall, quiet man, who hides his face
11
behind a thick copper beard and mustache.
12
“Margie,” he says, after I slip into the passenger seat. “It’s
13
been a while.”
14
“Yes.” I nod. “It has.”
15
“Are you well?” he asks.
16
I nod. “And you?”
17
“Fine,” he says.
18
We don’t talk anymore as he drives us slowly toward the
19
home he shares with Ilsa in Levittown, Pennsylvania, United
20
States of America. But it is not because Bertram and I don’t
21
get along; it is because Bertram is a quiet man, and also
22
because I think he is used to being with Ilsa, who talks so
23
very much that it’s possible he now has nothing left to say.
24
25
26
Ilsa and Bertram live on Oak Lane, in a quiet suburban
27
neighborhood where all the houses—and the streets begin
28S
ning with the letter
O
—look nearly identical. In fact you
29N
probably could not tell Ilsa’s house from all the others on the
block from the outside alone, but on the inside, the house is
01
uniquely decorated with Ilsa’s hand-sewn curtains and dolls.
02
Ilsa is robust in every way that Bertram is not, and after
03
the quiet ride, she greets me at the door to their familiar tract
04
house with a hug, then pulls back and looks at me. “My dear,”
05
she says, shaking her head, so her blond curls tumble against
06
her shoulders. “You are too thin. Come in. Eat.”
07
Even now, when I look at Ilsa, I see the face of the woman
08
who came to pick me up in New York City, New York, just
09
after my boat arrived. Eduard had shown me a picture of her,
10
her wedding photo with Bertram. She was a tiny woman,
11
nearly childlike in size next to Bertram, who is tall and a little
12
burly. In the black-and-white photo all I could tell was that
13
her hair was lighter than Bertram’s, and that her smile was
14
enormous. In person, her hair is nearly the color of snow, and
15
her smile, it is even bigger.
16
That first time I saw her she was waiting for me at the
17
New York Harbor, her tiny arms pushing through the crowd
18
to get to me. Eduard had made sure I’d had a first-class ticket
19
from Bremerhaven, so my experience in getting off the boat
20
in America would be an easy one, so I would not be subject
21
to poking and prodding and questioning at Ellis Island. After
22
a cursory glance at me, my shoulder-length curls, the nice
23
brown dress Eduard had purchased for me for just this occa
24
sion, the doctor had signed my paper, and I’d disembarked.
25
It was warm, nearly summer, and there was a crowd. Mostly
26
men, mostly in suits. The men in tattered clothes, I imagined,
27
they waited at the exit from Ellis Island where the third-class
S28
passengers entered into America, if they were lucky.
N29
01
“Margot?” Ilsa said my name. I did not see her at first,
02
amid all the men, but once I heard her voice, I turned, and
03
there were her arms, pushing through the swarm of men. Her
04
arms reached me, and she stared at me for a moment, as if
05
she wasn’t sure it was really me, or perhaps she was wonder
06
ing if she’d made a giant mistake in agreeing to sponsor me,
07
to take me into her home.
08
“Why would she even take me?” I had said to Eduard
09
when he told me of her. “I am a perfect stranger.” Or more
10
rightly so, an imperfect one.
11
“I know my cousin,” Eduard had said. “She will take you.
12
In fact, she will love you.”
13
That first time I saw her, she put her arms on mine, and she
14
said, for the first of many times, “My dear, you are so thin. You
15
are flesh and bones. I will have to fix that, Margot.” She clung
16
to me, and her high voice rose above the din of the crowd.
17
“Margie,” I told her, when I found my voice. “Everybody
18
calls me Margie.” Nobody had ever called me Margie, except
19
for Peter. But I was in America. I was going to be Margie.
20
“Okay then, Margie,” Ilsa said. “Come. Come with me, my
21
dear. Let’s try to catch the train so we are home in time for
22
dinner. I will fatten you up in no time.”
23
In six years, not so very much has changed.
24
25
26
“So,” Ilsa says as she cuts her meat loaf into delicate pieces
27
and watches with the eyes of a hawk to see how much I am
28S
eating. “Tell me about this boss of yours who is making you
29N
take after-hours phone calls at your home.”
I shrug and chew carefully. “He’s not making me do any
01
thing,” I say. “And he’s paying me seven dollars extra a week.”
02
“A raise,” Bertram says, lifting his thick copper eyebrows.
03
“Good for you, Margie.” That’s the nice thing about Bertram—
04
when the time is right, he figures out the most decent thing
05
to say. I smile at him.
06
“Hmm,” Ilsa says as she tugs on her earlobe a little.
07
“It’s really not a big deal,” I tell her. I feel so comfortable
08
telling her this lie that it barely feels like a lie at all. “And
09
besides, no one has even called yet aside from you.”
10
She shakes her head. “Still,” she says. “I don’t like it. A
11
woman living all alone in the city with her phone number
12
published in the paper.”
13
“Illie,” Bertram says, his voice hanging lightly on his pet
14
name for his wife. “Margie is a big girl.”
15
Ilsa smiles at me. “You know I only worry out of love, my
16
dear.”
17
“I know,” I say, and I do. Ilsa and Bertram were unable to
18
have any children, and in a way, I suppose, I have helped her
19
as much as she has helped me. She told me once that before
20
I arrived, there were mornings when it was hard for her to get
21
out of bed, and that once, in the bathtub, she put her head
22
under the water and thought about not coming up. “What is
23
one’s life if she doesn’t have a purpose?” Ilsa had asked me
24
then.
25
I’d nodded as if I’d understood, though really, what I
26
understood was that American sorrows are so, so much dif
27
ferent than my own.
S28
“Just don’t take any calls from men,” she tells me now. I
N29
01
nod but she is still frowning. “And certainly, don’t give anyone
02
your address.”
03
“Of course not,” I say. “Now really, stop worrying.”
04
She relents, for now, and we eat the rest of our dinner,
05
making small talk. Bertram talks about his own job in the
06
city, where he runs an accounting firm and Ilsa talks about
07
the curtains she has decided to make for the bedroom: blue
08
lace. Before I came—and after I left—this has been Ilsa’s
09
purpose in life: decorating. I nod politely through the dinner,
10
and in a way I miss this: family, dinnertime, easy conversa

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