Wednesday, April 1, 2009

When Erin and Irene were ten

Erin's stomach was in knots that morning about homework gone undone, and the drive to school had thus assumed the dreadful aspect of a trip to certain doom.

I could see fear distorting her features as we traveled up Catalpa, and offered some unsolicited (what other kind is there?) fatherly advice about attacking it head-on. Go straight to the teacher, I proposed. Tell her you forgot to bring home your math book. Ask for a day's grace on the homework assignment. That's all you can do, and you'll feel better after doing it no matter what.

Maybe she took my advice, maybe she didn't. I can’t recall. But I do recall what Irene Henderson, an amiable business acquaintance, told me later that morning.

Irene, a thickset, hyperactive woman of winning disposition and grizzled hair haphazardly
piled above perpetually twinkling eyes, spoke of her childhood in Poland. ...

Of standing twice against a wall to be shot by Nazis ...

Of trudging bootless and coatless through knee-deep snow ...

Of dislocating both wrists hauling buckets on labor gangs ...

Of almost going crippled from rickets.

Then Irene pulled up a pant leg to show me the scar on her calf from a bullet that had grazed her leg when she, like Erin, was ten.

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