This Is Not a Love Story: A Memoir (7 page)

BOOK: This Is Not a Love Story: A Memoir
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A decade and a half later, in New York, my father, already grown and married to my mother, became almost a millionaire.

My father worked hard in Brooklyn, where he and his sisters moved just as soon as they could. He rolled matzos in the bakery, cut diamonds in Manhattan, and bought houses for cheap to fix and sell. You could do this in America, he said to me, step off the plane with only the shirt on your back and become a wealthy man.

I asked my father if he had a million dollars, and he said almost, in just a little more time. I told him that I knew we were rich because Blimi had said so. She said that I was the wealthiest of the girls in my class because I had a white house three stories high, and two cars besides, one of them with doors that opened automatically. She also said that I had the biggest backyard she’d ever seen, and that only rich people had a wraparound garden like ours.

My father said that money was an important thing to have, even if it was less than a million dollars. With money, he could buy us the things he’d never had. With money, a man could repair anything, patch it up or buy it new. He could fix problems that, without money, stayed problems, like the chipped tooth in Rivky’s mouth, Yitzy’s bike that crashed into a tree, the dented car.

But then there were the things my father could not fix, not even with his money: the sunrise I’d meticulously drawn and Miri had shredded; the antique radio we had found, decades old, that would not work; and my crazy brother Nachum, now seven years old. My father paid psychologists, doctors, and special teachers, but nobody could fix the boy. They could not even figure out why or how he was broken.

Long before, when my brother was two and three, my mother had thought that he’d grow out of it, that time would fix his strange ways. But then my brother turned four and five and things only got worse, especially in school. In the end, it was his pre-1-A rebbe, Reb Gold, who called my mother. It was he who finally told her that Nachum was crazy, that the parts inside his head were undone.

Reb Gold hadn’t said it like that. He said that Nachum was different. Nachum wasn’t listening. He was throwing chairs at the other children. He said that Nachum wasn’t hearing. He had stopped speaking. He made strange noises and faces.

Reb Gold was a good man. He said all this to my mother kindly, telling her that this was more than just strange, that Nachum must be taken for testing. So my mother took my brother from doctor to doctor, and from one specialist to another. She took him to a psychiatrist, a psychologist, and a hypnotist too; it couldn’t hurt.

The specialist told my mother to put Nachum in an institution. There was nothing anyone could do for a child as odd as that. The psychiatrist said that something was definitely terribly wrong with Nachum and that it was my mother’s fault: when he was an infant, she had not cuddled him enough. The doctor said that something had almost certainly happened to Nachum during the pregnancy. Or as an infant. Or as a toddler. But he couldn’t know when or what. And the psychologist said that it was tragic, just tragic.

Finally, one day, my mother told me that my brother wasn’t crazy after all. A big doctor had said he was something else. He was ADD. The severe kind.

I told my cousin Shaindel.

“What’s ADD?” she asked.

I didn’t know.

“It’s a type of crazy,” I explained. “The severe kind.”

Shaindel chewed loudly on her taffy. “Oh.”

I asked my mother if medicine would make Nachum better. Or, if they couldn’t change his brain, could they replace it? The way they had put a different heart into Blimi’s grandmother.

“No, they can’t.”

That was all she said.

  

My father did not like that Nachum could not be fixed. He did not like what the angel had done, tap, tap, tapping on my unborn brother’s lip until he had sucked up his mind. My father did not like the special school that could not cure him, or the teachers who had no idea what to do. One evening, he and my mother had a fight in the kitchen, about Nachum and the experts and whether there was hope.

I wanted to tell them about the tapping angel, because they didn’t know. But I was scared of their yelling—I’d never heard them like this before—and instead hid deep inside my blanket. My father shouted, my mother screamed back; then she cried. She said hers was not a hopeless child. I put my hands over my ears.

The next week, after another such fight, my mother took us all to a family psychologist who said we should talk about our feelings. But my father didn’t like him either.

“So tell me how you feel,” the psychologist instructed him, after my parents had sat on the couch and my siblings and I had squished ourselves into little plastic chairs.

“Ken you fix my son?” my father asked.

The psychologist peered over his half-glasses.

“I can’t fix your son,” he said. “But I can try to fix the feelings you have about your son—”

“No, you ken’t,” said my brave father. “You ever hev such a son?”

“No,” said the psychologist. “I have not.”

My father tapped his fingers on the armrest.

“Zen you ken’t fix my feel about vat you don’ even know.”

The psychologist pushed the half-glasses up the bridge of his nose. My father stood up from the couch.

“I don’ look for change in feeling. I look only for change in son.” The psychologist shook his head and opened his mouth to say something. But my father did not wait.

“You don’ vaste my time,” he said, and walked out of the office, closing the door behind him.

I wanted to run out of the office too. I wanted to march out with my father, tall, proud, and mad. I wanted to declare to the world and the stupid psychologist that I didn’t care how I felt about my brother, and that they could not keep me, squirming and squished, in a hard little plastic chair. Nachum was the one who was broken. So why was I the one stuck here?

It was my mother who made me stay. She made me sit and say how I felt to the man and his stupid half-glasses.

 

It was December, the day after Chanukah. Outside, bare trees wrapped themselves in snow, their white-covered branches flailing frantically in the wind.

In the kitchen, the cleaning lady was polishing my father’s silver menorah, the one he had lit for eight nights. On the counter nearby stood Yitzy’s smaller menorah, the one he’d received at his birthday. My sisters and I also had menorahs, ones we had made in school, flatter, smaller, and more colorful, crusted with the wax of melting candles, from flames that had flickered at the frosted windows of our dining room.

The menorahs now stood patiently on the kitchen counter, waiting to be polished and cleaned. They waited to be carried back to the dining room to be carefully placed behind the glass panes of the closet, where they’d stand alongside the rest of the family silver until next year.

On Thursday evening, the last night of Chanukah, I had run upstairs to Kathy and given her a doughnut. It was a good doughnut from Weiss’s bakery, with frosting on top and custard inside. Kathy said that I was making her fat, but she ate the entire doughnut happily. I stayed with her for just a few minutes and then quickly ran back down, so I did not realize until the next evening, after my mother had already lit the Shabbos candles, that I’d left my schoolbag with my favorite Hello Kitty eraser and my homework sheet upstairs.

I looked carefully around me. Rivky was reading a book on the couch. My mother was in the kitchen talking with my great-aunt, who was visiting from Israel. Little Miri and Vrumi were playing in the basement. I walked quietly to the front door. Once out, I rushed upstairs and immediately back down, the only problem being the in-between, when I spoke with Kathy for a really long time.

I did not realize just how long a time. I only knew I was in trouble when I skipped merrily down the steps to the first floor and found Rivky waiting at the bottom, hand on hip, her patent leather shoe tapping righteously on the floor. It was one thing to visit a gentile on any school day, she said, but on the holy Shabbos?

Rivky pursed her lips. “We’re ready to eat,” she said loudly. “And I’m going to tell everyone exactly where you went.”

I stared at my sister in horror. I immediately explained that I had gone to get my school
parsha
sheet, the one with questions about the weekly Torah portion that I needed to review on the holy Shabbos itself.

“Oh yeah?” she said. “So where is it?”

I looked down at my empty hands. Where was the
parsha
sheet? Between the up and down and the in-between, I had completely forgotten it. Now I looked like a liar.

“It was a necessary sin,” I explained hastily. “It was all for the sake of Shabbos. I had to go up to Kathy for the
parsha
sheet but she didn’t have it because she mistakenly threw it out with my Hello Kitty eraser. So it isn’t my fault, ’cause she was looking for it and I was helping her, ’cause I didn’t want to leave a holy
parsha
sheet with a gentile. That’d be terrible for the honor of Shabbos. And anyway, I need to be friends with Kathy. She’s gonna save me when a new Holocaust comes.”

I took a deep breath. “Okay?”

Rivky looked at me without speaking. I could see in her eyes that she thought I was making it all up.

I stuck out my tongue. She spun around and marched toward the dining room. I ran after her.

“Don’t tell,” I hissed into her ear. “Don’t tell! If you do, I’ll…I’ll…I’ll—” And then I nearly crashed into my great-aunt Frieda, here for the Friday night meal.

I did not like my great-aunt Frieda. She was old and small and gave terribly wet kisses. But Aunt Frieda was the wife of Mordcha’, my grandmother’s only surviving brother, so I had no choice but to treat her nicely. She had come to America for a two-week visit, and my mother had warmly invited her for the Shabbos dinner.

Aunt Frieda loved my mother, her youngest and favorite niece.

“Esther!” she had exclaimed happily when my mother opened the door before Shabbos. “Look at you! As pretty as the day you finally became a bride!”

I stood the farthest away, but she came at me first. She held my cheeks in her hands and squeezed. She kissed me four times, twice on the right, then on the left, her stiff, curly wig scratching my skin. She patted my face, pinched my chin, and said, “What a beautiful girl! What a beautiful girl!” I wiped my face on my sleeve.

“Ahh,” Aunt Frieda said, sighing contentedly and seating herself at the head of the table. “Such beautiful children. Such beautiful children. When did they all grow up?”

She pointed at Rivky.

“Look at that face,” she announced cheerfully. “Now that’s a Jewish face!” She waved her hand emphatically. “Eh! She would never survive the Holocaust.”

She stroked Rivky’s arm to reassure her.

My mother smiled lovingly. She thought we were beautiful too, not that it mattered. Beauty was a superficial thing for the goyish world. Here, for us, there were only two kinds of faces that mattered: those that would survive the Holocaust, and those that would not. My mother, sitting across the Shabbos table, studied us one by one. She agreed that Rivky would never have made it through the war. She was all dark hair and large Jewish eyes.

“But who knows?” my aunt said enthusiastically. “Who but the one above knows? Your own mother with her dark eyes is alive and well, and her oldest brother—he looked like an Aryan thug! He was killed. Nothing remained of him.”

They looked at Rivky again. They then agreed once more that regardless of God, should the Nazis come, Rivky was doomed.

My brother Yitzy, on the other hand, would stroll right through. He and Miri, my baby sister, were blond with blue eyes and freckles. They could easily pass for German or at least a good Polish. Why, they’d barely need a place to hide.

And as for me, well…I was a puzzle, a great big puzzle.

My great-aunt observed me up close. My mother pursed her lips, pondering. I was not blond nor black-haired. I was not blue- nor brown-eyed. I was not particularly fair, but not very dark either. This left me in a confusing place, somewhere between Jewish and gentile, life and death, the right and left of Dr. Mengele’s long stick.

Aunt Frieda squinted and peered at me. I smiled hopefully. I turned sideways so she could see the one dimple I had on my right cheek. Because there was no way I was not surviving the Holocaust while my bratty little sister just skipped right through. Then, just as Aunt Frieda was to announce my final chance for life should a new Holocaust come, Nachum walked in. She turned abruptly.

“Nachum!” she said, clapping her hands. He looked up, startled.

I cleared my throat loudly, but they had already forgotten me.

It was all very annoying. Nobody ever seemed to make up their minds whether I would or would not survive a Holocaust. Just what was I to
do
when the Nazis showed up?

Well, there was always Kathy, I supposed. She could hide me. I could take shelter under her coffee table until the war was over, eating lettuce, raw potatoes, and saltless crackers. But even that was uncertain. Everyone always said that one should not trust the gentiles—any gentile; that even those who seemed to be our friends would hand us over to the Nazis for only one bottle of vodka and three bags of sugar. All gentiles were nice, my teachers said, until there was a Holocaust, and then their evilness sprouted right out.

This worried me. I tried to find the evilness and where it might sprout out from every time I went to visit Kathy, but I could not find a hint of it anywhere.

Just then my aunt laughed. “Look at that smile!” she said victoriously. “Of course he’ll survive!”

I looked up. Crazy Nachum had only smiled, and already he’d survive the next great massacre?

It was the dimples. He had two of them. My aunt had put a small prize in his hand, and he had flashed a bright smile. When Nachum smiled, a dimple appeared on each cheek that even some annoying neighbor had once said was adorable.

I could not believe it. So Nachum would survive the Holocaust, while I, of uncertain classification, would be stuck in a cramped attic apartment?

I stared woefully at my gefilte fish and kicked the table. My mother never noticed. Neither did my older sister. She was piling up the first-course plates, taking them to the kitchen. My father was teasing Miri, plucking her thumb out of her mouth every time she tried sucking on it. With his other hand, he held on to Vrumi, bouncing him on his knees. And my mother, she just laughed, was already talking about something else, a dress my great-aunt had bought two sizes too small.

Then my father and older brother sang the holy Shabbos songs and my great-aunt Frieda sang along loudly. She smiled blissfully at me, her head moving to the beat, her hands waving two silver spoons in the air, as if she were conducting an orchestra. I could hear Rivky giggling helplessly in the kitchen.

I scowled, and when my mother asked me to help clear the rest of the plates, I refused.

“Rivky said she’d do it,” I lied.

Bossy older sister. She would never have survived the Holocaust anyway. See if I cared.

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