17. All This Long Time
The war would end. Uncle Henrik had said that, and it was true.
The war ended almost two long years later. Annemarie was twelve.
Churchbells rang all over Copenhagen, early that May evening.
The Danish flag was raised everywhere. People stood in the streets
and wept as they sang the national anthem of Denmark.
Annemarie stood on the balcony of the apartment with her
parents and sister, and watched. Up and down the street, and
across on the other side, she could see flags and banners in almost
every window. She knew that many of those apartments were
empty. For nearly two years, now, neighbors had tended the plants
and dusted the furniture and polished the candlesticks for the Jews
who had fled. Her mother had done so for the Rosens.
"It is what friends do," Mama had said.
Now neighbors had entered each unoccupied, waiting
apartment, opened a window, and hung a symbol of freedom there.
This evening, Mrs. Johansen's face was wet with tears. Kirsti,
waving a small flag, sang; her blue eyes were bright. Even Kirsti
was growing up; no longer was she a lighthearted chatterbox of a
child. Now she was taller, more serious, and very thin. She looked
like the pictures of Lise at seven, in the old album.
Peter Neilsen was dead. It was a painful fact to recall on this
day when there was so much joy in Denmark. But Annemarie
forced herself to think of her redheaded almost-brother, and how
devastating the day was when they received the news that Peter had
been captured and executed by the Germans in the public square at
Ryvangen, in Copenhagen.
He had written a letter to them from prison the night before he
was shot. It had said simply that he loved them, that he was not
afraid, and that he was proud to have done what he could for his
country and for the sake of all free people. He had asked, in the
letter, to be buried beside Lise.
But even that was not to be for Peter. The Nazis refused to
return the bodies of the young men they shot at Ryvangen. They
simply buried them there where they were killed, and marked the
graves only with numbers.
Later, Annemarie had gone to the place with her parents and
they had laid flowers there, on the bleak, numbered ground. That
night, Annemarie's parents told her the truth about Lise's death at
the beginning of the war.
"She was part of the Resistance, too," Papa had explained. "Part
of the group that fought for our country in whatever ways they
could."
"We didn't know," Mama added. "She didn't tell us. Peter told
us after she died."
"Oh, Papa!" Annemarie cried. "Mama! They didn't shoot Lise,
did they? The way they did Peter, in the public square, with people
watching?" She wanted to know, wanted to know it all, but wasn't
certain that she could bear the knowledge.
But Papa shook his head. "She was with Peter and others in a
cellar where they held secret meetings to make plans. Somehow the
Nazis found out, and they raided the place that evening. They all ran
different ways, trying to escape.
"Some of them were shot," Mama told her sadly. "Peter was
shot, in the arm. Do you remember that Peter's arm was bandaged,
and in a sling, at Lise's funeral? He wore a coat over it so that no
one would notice. And a hat, to hide his red hair. The Nazis were
looking for him."
Annemarie didn't remember. She hadn't noticed. The whole day
had been a blur of grief. "But what about Lise?" she asked. "If she
wasn't shot, what happened?"
"From the military ear, they saw her running, and simply ran her
down."
"So it was true, what you said, that she was hit by a ear."
"It was true," Papa told her.
"They were all so young," Mama said, shaking her head. She
blinked, closed her eyes for a moment, and took a long, deep
breath. "So very, very young. With so much hope."
Now, remembering Lise, Annemarie looked from the balcony
down into the street. She saw that below, amid the music, singing,
and. the sound of the churchbells, people were dancing. It brought
back another memory, the memory of Lise so long ago, wearing the
yellow dress, dancing with Peter on the night that they announced
their engagement.
She turned and went to her bedroom, where the blue trunk still
stood in the corner, as it had all these years. Opening it, Annemarie
saw that the yellow dress had begun to fade; it was discolored at
the edges where it had lain so long in folds.
Carefully she spread open the skirt of the dress and found the
place where Ellen's necklace lay hidden in the pocket. The little Star
of David still gleamed gold.
"Papa?" she said, returning to the balcony, where her father was
standing with the others, watching the rejoicing crowd, She opened
her hand and showed him the necklace. "Can you fix this? I have
kept it all this long time. It was Ellen's."
Her father took it from her and examined the broken clasp.
"Yes," he said. "I can fix it. When the Rosens come home, you can
give it back to Ellen."
"Until then," Annemarie told him, "I will wear it myself."