The Warsaw Orphan - Kelly Rimmer Page 0,74

red flags. But it would take very little time to realize that your identity card does not match a baptismal record or even a birth certificate. That would raise questions which could expose us all.”

“But, Matylda—”

“Do you still want to help?”

“I do. Of course I do! Now more than ever,” I said vehemently.

“And you will do whatever it takes?”

“Anything you ask of me, I promise.”

“Good,” she said, nodding curtly. “Then, go home to your family, and let us get back to work.”

I tried so hard to change their minds, but it was quickly obvious that neither Matylda nor Sara was willing to allow me to continue to work with the operation. Sara took me home on the tram.

“What will I tell Truda and Mateusz?”

“I’m going to handle that for you,” she said quietly. “I’m going to tell Truda that the City Council is laying off staff and that we no longer have the resources to supervise you.”

While she sat at the kitchen table to deliver the news to Truda, I went to my room and opened the top drawer of my bedside table. I riffled through the scraps of paper until I found one I had drawn weeks earlier.

I stared down at the sketch of baby Eleonora. I had thought about giving this to Roman or to Maja and Samuel, but the image was imperfect. I had drawn it in such a state of distress that it was far from my best work. At the time, I had stuffed it into my drawer, unable to bear looking at it. Now, though, looking at the sketch with fresh eyes, those minor imperfections were difficult to spot.

When Sara was preparing to leave, I walked her to the door and handed her the sketch.

“Please explain to him why I’m not there?” I asked her.

She gave me a sad look, then pulled me into a hug.

After Sara was gone, it struck me that I would never see the inside of the ghetto walls again. I felt a confused sense of relief. I would not miss how sick with fear I felt every time I passed through the checkpoints or miss coming face-to-face with the undeniable horrors of the ghetto environment.

But I was also struck by an overwhelming sense of sadness. I’d grown so fond of Roman Gorka. The thought of never seeing him again—of never even having the chance to say goodbye—was heartbreaking.

19

Roman

18 April, 1943

In the seven months since I lost my family, I had gained a whole network of brothers and sisters with one goal in common: a dignified death.

Nobody knew why the deportations stopped the previous September. The day after my parents were taken, the Jewish police and their families were deported, and then, for a while, the roundups just stopped. Those months of sudden quiet were eerie for us left behind, and they were a serious tactical error for the Germans. Those of us left behind all knew exactly where the trains led, and when the Germans announced another round of deportations in January, their calls for voluntary resettlement, as they called it, were ignored. They attempted a forced roundup, but a small group of Z·OB fighters mounted an offensive. This caught the Germans off guard, and within a few days, they abandoned attempts to deport us. They also stopped providing our rations.

I couldn’t bear to think about how close my family had come to escaping the last deportation. Sometimes that seemed brutally unfair; at other times, as food became even scarcer, it seemed like a mercy. Even Sara and her team could no longer gain access, the Germans now being past the point of pretending they were interested in keeping us healthy.

But instead of accepting our lot, those of us left behind had been encouraged by the Z·OB’s ability to stun the Germans in January, and we mobilized, turning the inevitability of our deaths into action, turning our rage and our pain into organization.

I joined Chaim and Andrzej in the Z·OB, and I spent every waking minute of the previous seven months preparing to take some measure of revenge. Chaim and I now lived in the apartment opposite the youth center, in the same place I had sheltered on the day the orphans left. We spent little time there other than to sleep because we worked day and night to prepare ourselves, and the ghetto, for all-out war.

We built bunkers and dug tunnels beneath buildings and constructed barricades on rooftops. With a little help from the Polish Home Army, we

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