it tomorrow.”
“We can write,” I repeat. “But what if he leaves in the meantime?”
“If he leaves, he will leave for here,” Dima says simply.
“But what if he can’t get here? Or the letter doesn’t reach him?”
“Zofia, you must be patient, but—”
“What if he needs me? What if he’s alone and needs me right now? Aunt Maja just said—”
“Who?” Dima interrupts politely.
“Aunt Maja. Just now.”
“Zofia.”
“Aunt Maja.” My voice, rising with every syllable, until it’s almost a scream. “Aunt Maja just now said the prisoners from Birkenau went to Germany. Didn’t you hear her?”
The silence in the room, the painful squeaking of a floorboard, is what makes me realize my mistake. My face reddens.
“I mean Gosia, obviously. I know that’s Gosia, not Aunt Maja.”
Quickly, I lower my head to my plate and saw off a piece of cabbage. But I can’t seem to get it to my mouth. In that moment, I did mean it. I was sitting in this dining room, and the person sitting next to me was my beautiful aunt Maja, and I lost myself again.
Next to me, Gosia looks pitying and worried; her eyes flicker briefly to Dima’s. I saw them talking earlier while I finished cooking dinner. I wonder what he told her, how they have diagnosed me.
They think I’m crazy already, so there’s no point in explaining how I was only briefly confused, by being in this apartment.
There’s also no point in explaining the sudden certainty in my heart, which began building at the mention of this place called Foehrenwald. I know that I protected Abek as best as I could. Through all the war, I could feel him with me. If I hadn’t been able to feel his presence, I wouldn’t have been able to survive. I survived, so he must be in Foehrenwald.
“I know it’s Gosia.” One more time I repeat it, more quietly this time. “Never mind.”
Gosia leaves a few hours later when her brother-in-law comes to collect her. She hugs me and says I should come to the clinic tomorrow; they can always use volunteers. Over her shoulder, Dima nods at her. It must be something they planned, an excuse to keep me occupied. “Either way, I’ll stop in tomorrow evening,” she says. “I’ll try to bring more clothing and a spare lantern.”
Now there is only one lantern in the house, and stubby candles. The apartment is shadows; Dima and Commander Kuznetsov are outlines as they talk near the door.
Dima breaks away and comes over, taking my hands. “The commander says there is room for you if you come with us. You can stay there instead of by yourself.”
“I’ll be fine here. Gosia brought me some things.”
“The floor is so hard,” he presses on. “You at least need a—” He searches for a word he doesn’t know in Polish, before mimicking unrolling something on the floor.
“A bedroll? I don’t.” The alcohol is getting to my head; it feels light and spinning. I’m still annoyed with Dima. I’ve slept on so many worse things than a clean blanket on a wooden floor.
“No, I can bring one.” He looks back to where the commander is adjusting his hat, politely trying to give us privacy. “I will walk him home and come back.”
“You can’t keep going back and forth. You’ve already been twice today.”
But he insists, and finally it seems easiest to just agree. To let him bring back a bedroll, to cluck over me like I am a figurine.
I GATHER THE DINNER PLATES, BUT THERE’S NO RUNNING water to wash them with. Gosia and I ate our plates clean. Dima and Commander Kuznetsov left scraps on theirs: a crust of bread, a few leaves of cabbage. On the commander’s plate, a piece of meat, mostly gristle, which he must have discreetly spit out.
It’s blobby and chewed there on the plate, swimming in congealed tomato. I stare at it for a minute, nauseated.
But then I’m putting those desiccated morsels into my own mouth. Scraping my finger along the tin, not even bothering to use a fork. The gristle sticks in my throat; I force it down. I am revolted by myself but also starving, or remembering what it was to be starving.
What is wrong with me? What has become of me?
In the next room, a knock at the door. I shove the plates into the dry kitchen sink, trying to put myself together.
“I’m coming,” I call to Dima as the knock gets louder. “I’m sorry, I was in the ki—”
I don’t finish, because it’s not