Read Winter Passing Online

Authors: Cindy Martinusen Coloma

Tags: #World War II, #1941, #Mauthausen Concentration Camp, #Nazi-occupied Austria, #Tatianna, #death-bed promise, #healing, #new love, #winter of the soul, #lost inheritance, #Christian Fiction, #Christian Historical Fiction

Winter Passing (3 page)

BOOK: Winter Passing
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And Brant had done just that. He did find the art in a small collection in the United States. He did see the joy in Frau Aldrich’s face. But he also saw the torment of the rightful owners.

It had all been an act. The Aldrichs—brother and sister, they said—had come to his office door after another newspaper account reported a victory for one of Brant’s clients, a French woman survivor. They’d told their sad story and walked from his office surely laughing at his concern and commitment to help. Not only were the Aldrichs not Jewish, nor brother and sister, Greta was actually an ex-Nazi camp guard. Her information about the art had come from one of the inmates under her guard. It was suspected that Frau Aldrich had even selected her victim for the gas chamber because of the information she’d obtained. Greta Aldrich had been unable to find the art after the war, but with Brant’s help she’d almost gotten what she wanted.

He couldn’t believe he’d been duped. Brant tore the soggy paper into several pieces and released them over the railing. The river’s ripples gathered the pieces and carried them away.

This had not been the first attempt at a fraudulent claim, especially since the opening of Swiss banks. Brant had immediately identified a recent claim as false—an American claiming to be Celia Müller. He had prided himself on the fact that he could not be deceived, and now the Aldrich story had shattered that illusion.

Angry, Brant turned away from the river. He moved quickly, suddenly aware of the cold that clutched him. When his pager sounded, he paused beneath the eaves of a weathered white-stucco building. Brant was about to turn it off when he noticed the number. Why would she be calling? There could be only one reason. He found his phone in his coat pocket and punched in the number.

“This is Brant. What happened?”

“We think he had a stroke,” the woman said.

“No.”

“You better come.”

Brant was already running.

Chapter Three

Darby saw death in Grandma Celia’s face. It wouldn’t be long. As Grandma’s breath grew more labored, Darby’s day was consumed with watching that breathing. Her mother seemed to accept that this was the end, though her expression shifted from the weariness of waiting to the clinging hope that Grandma’s life wouldn’t slip away quite yet. But Darby couldn’t accept it. She even prayed for the first time in years.
God, don’t take her, please, don’t take her.

Darby’s childhood in an all-female home had been with examples of strength in both her grandmother and mother. She tried to maintain that strength on the outside but felt herself weaken as her grandmother walked closer to death’s door.

Death is part of life
, she reminded herself throughout the week.
Everyone loses loved ones. Everyone dies. I need to be ready. But how can I prepare?

Grandma had been her cheerful self only a few short and treasured minutes. Although she continued to call Tatianna’s name in the late-night hours, there was less urgency in her voice. Yet no opportunity had arisen for Darby to ask about her grandmother’s mysterious friend.

Darby waited until her mother went grocery shopping, then found the number for her grandmother’s lawyer.

“Is she gone?” Fred asked before saying hello.

“No, not yet.”

“Oh, thank goodness. I see my share of lousy people in this profession. It’s an honor to know someone like your grandmother.”

“I agree. But I’ll get to the reason for my call.” Darby propped her elbow on the counter beside the telephone. “Grandma told me about a personal safe she has left with you.”

“Ah, yes. She brought it to me about a year ago. I don’t normally keep such things and encouraged her to get a safety deposit box, but you know her thoughts about financial institutions.”

“Yes. In high school, she’d let me leave an IOU note for every ten-dollar bill I borrowed from her mattress. Does she have her savings in the safe, or should we check under her bed?”

“Actually, I’m not at liberty to tell quite yet. Besides, I don’t know the complete contents. My instructions are to wait for her passing, then we’ll move to those details.”

“Grandma didn’t tell me anything except that you had a safe, and I’d find some information she wanted me to have inside.”

“I understand, but those were the instructions.”

“That’s all I needed to know. Take care, Fred.”

“You too, Darby. And take care of our lady.”

“I promise.” She hung up the phone and sat back in her chair. Whatever was in the safe, it wouldn’t help her at present. Soon, too soon, the safe would be opened, for her grandmother would be gone.

Darby spent the nights in Grandma’s room, in case anything happened.

The days and nights blurred until their borders appeared as one continuous fog, only distinguished by the house lights being turned on or off. In the middle of a night, a voice stirred Darby. Fatigue held her as she struggled toward the surface of consciousness. Suddenly, she sat upright, seized awake.

The voice traveled its own journey, moving backward along a near-forgotten path as Darby’s eyes sought through the dim light to where her grandmother sat up in bed.

“Perhaps in another time or place it would not have felt so intense—but we were there, in that troublesome time. People fear hard times, but challenges usually make strong bonds stronger. We found great love in the midst of turmoil.”

Darby strained forward, mesmerized by Grandma’s voice. Its rhythm was like a midnight hymn rocking her back and forth.

“Would our love have changed if given the chance to be together all these years? I’ve wondered, can’t imagine it, but we only had six months as husband and wife.” A chuckle escaped. “We cherished every moment of that time.” Her voice seemed to drift away to memory.

How welcome this dreamlike spell was compared to the coughing fits or troubled callings. Grandma Celia reached for Darby’s hand. Darby moved forward and grasped the outstretched fingers, surprised to see her grandmother’s eyes shining lucidly and full of comprehension in the reflected light. “Darby, will you open the window for me?”

“Of course.” Darby leaned awkwardly over the bed to pull the window up an inch. Cool air swam into the room, and moonlight filtered through the parted curtains.

“That box on my dresser, the one Uncle Marc made me. Bring it to me, please.”

Darby moved toward the lamp switch.

“My dear, please don’t turn on the light. The moon is bright enough. I don’t want to lose this—this magical night. I have found your grandfather in my memories here.”

“Yes, Grandma.”

Darby retrieved the miniature carved box. She turned and stopped, seeing Grandma Celia with streams of moonlight flooding the bed. She was beautiful. Her rumpled gray hair glowed like an angel’s cloak down to her shoulders.

Celia’s hand trembled as she reached for the wooden box. For a moment, Darby wondered if this was real, or if perhaps she was still asleep. Even the questions she’d been holding all week vanished while she watched her grandmother search inside the carved box.

Grandma Celia’s voice again broke the aura of silence in the room. “I haven’t spoken about him in a long time. It was easier for me, and for your mother. She wanted to know him so badly. Even when my hope had died, your mom’s continued. I had told too many stories about her daddy, though eventually her hope was crushed by reality. That’s why I quit speaking of him, since we had to leave him behind. But he’s been locked inside all these years, always near.” Grandma patted her heart.

A sharp cough interrupted the stillness. Grandma Celia placed a tissue over her mouth, then crumpled it in her bony fist. Her weak smile reappeared. “Perhaps it would have changed if your grandfather and I had been given a life together. We might have become like some couples who have grown old together. But in my mind, he’s still that wonderful man who swept me off my feet. You would have loved him, Darby. You’ve reminded me of him. You both were full of life, laughter, and adventure. Ready to tackle anything that comes along.”

Darby had never heard her grandmother talk this much about her grandfather, and for some reason, she’d never asked many questions about him. He was long dead sometime during the war, and there was little else she knew. The way her grandmother spoke of him brought such curiosity, and Grandma Celia’s voice had never sounded the way it did now. She seemed to spin memory on her lips, like she tasted each thought, kissed each moment.

The moonlight touched a tiny object Grandma withdrew from the box. “And here it is.”

Darby looked closer.

“It’s too late for the two of us in this life, but there is something that must still be done—” Another cough seized Celia. Darby leaned Celia forward, groping for the water behind her. Grandma’s thin frame jolted into slower coughs until they died away. Darby reached for the tissue over her grandmother’s mouth and offered the glass. Even in what Celia called the magical moonlight, Darby saw bright red splotches on the tissue she tossed into the trash.

“I want you to have this.” Grandma’s voice was hoarse, her hands shaking.

“A ring?”

“Only half a ring. This is the engagement part. The wedding half is gone. Do you see the diamonds on top?”

Darby saw where, in place of the usual setting, there was another ring of gold with diamonds attached around the rim.

“Your grandfather designed this ring.” Grandma cleared her throat and sat up a little more. “When joined with the w-wedding half, that circle becomes two small rings locked together, surrounded by lasting treasure.”

“It’s beautiful,” Darby whispered, looking at her grandmother’s face.
She should rest now.
But the expression on Grandma’s face, tired and weary though it appeared, held a sense of purpose. “What happened to the other half?”

Grandma Celia smiled. “So many stories I have told you, my Darby.” Her fingers caressed Darby’s cheek. “Since you were a child, so full of wonder, I have told you my tales. But I kept hidden the real stories because I didn’t want to steal the joy I saw in your eyes. When your mother was a child, I stole many moments from her because I was consumed with my own sorrow. I tried to protect you, but other forces have taken the wonder from your eyes. I see an empty place in you—one I recognize from experience. And you run from it, afraid to face your own heart.”

Darby stared at her grandmother for a long time. How had the past so quickly turned to focus on Darby’s life? “Grandma, don’t worry about me. I’m happy, very happy.”

“But you’ve lost your joy. It’s taken years for me to see it. I saw your spirit wounded as a little one when you finally understood that your father was not returning. I also don’t think you’ve ever gotten over you and Derek breaking up. I see it most clearly through your work. You hide behind the camera, where once you danced with it. Yes, I see the change most in your work.”

Darby sat back in the chair. What could she say to these words that cut so deep, even as she denied them?

Grandma squeezed her hand and breathed deeply. “Don’t be afraid. Don’t hold me so tightly. You must know that you can’t put your faith in people—they fail you, break your heart, die on you. You can love them and receive love, but don’t put all of yourself in another human—we are too imperfect of creatures.”

“So what can I do?” Darby asked. “How can I let you go?”

“I will be with you always—don’t let me go. But you need more than me inside that heart of yours. I couldn’t really find God until I lost my husband. Not that I think God wanted me to lose Gunther—I still don’t understand all the workings of God. Of course, I couldn’t. Though soon, I will know him, even as I am known.” Grandma smiled, though her voice grew raspy. “I do know that when I was weak, the Lord made me strong. People are for loving and for loving you back. But God is the place to put your heart, soul, and mind. He’ll never let you down, I promise.”

Grandma closed her eyes for a long time. Her hand weakened its hold on Darby’s. Her voice was low and labored, barely above a whisper. “This ring is part of my last story for you. And my story now becomes yours. But, my little one, I’m not going to finish it. You must.”

“Do you need your oxygen?” Darby asked while reaching for the mask on the nightstand and turning the valve on the tank.

Grandma accepted the mask and took two or three breaths before setting it on her chest. “Can’t explain now. Trust me. You’ll know when you get there.” Her eyes opened as she took several more breaths, and she smiled weakly. “You’ll discover more than I can imagine. And it becomes your life after mine—new journey, unraveling past secrets, and making injustices right.” Grandma inhaled a long, full breath. “Your future will change. I pray you will choose the right path when the time comes. I’ll go soon. I’m ready. Then you’ll find your start in the safety deposit box. Your mother has the key.”

“Grandma, I don’t understand any of this.” Darby’s body trembled.

“I know. I know, my dear.”

Darby could see her grandmother desperately needed rest. Yet there was so much she needed to know. What did her grandmother want from her? How could she finish a story she knew nothing about? And what had her grandmother meant about Tatianna needing her name?

Darby grasped her grandmother’s hand. She opened her mouth to allow the flood of questions, but Grandma Celia held up a hand to stop her.

“Not now, little one. In time. It will all be revealed in time. For now, this is all.”

“But, Grandma . . .”

“Trust me?”

“Yes.”

“Then, trust me. You will know. Step-by-step. Very soon.”

Darby wanted to argue and to stop the motion of time for just a little while—to pause this moment.

She knew they would not speak like this again.

Sometime in the morning, voices reached her. Darby awoke in her own room and tried to remember when she’d moved there. Her feet shuffled along the carpet in weary motion, stopping at her grandmother’s doorway. Her mother was holding Grandma Celia’s hands. A tear dropped from Carole’s face. Again, her mother was in tears. Darby’s legs felt like cement blocks of fear. But then she heard her grandmother’s voice—so slow and labored between breaths. Darby remembered the hospice list and “fish-out-of-water” breathing.

“I must say sorry,” Grandma Celia was saying, then a breath and a slower breath. “No matter w-what you say.”

“I love you, Mother.”

“I wish. I wish I had done better by you.” Grandma’s eyes were closed and only lifted now and then. Darby knew she should leave them alone in their moment. But her feet wouldn’t move, her hand wouldn’t release the doorway. She knew little of her mother’s childhood. What had it been like in a postwar world with an immigrant mother and a father lost across the sea? And what had later led her mother to drop college for a man who ended up dropping them?

“It took long—too long—for me to be strong,” Grandma said in a whisper. “I leaned too much on you.”

“Mother, you had to reinvent yourself. Even your language wasn’t the same.” Carole drew closer. “I wondered what you lost by giving up your native tongue. Words in English that took too long to think up. Stories that could never be translated correctly. I saw you make your change and grow into something new.”

“At your expense.”

“No, I admired you—even if it took awhile to realize it.”

“You wanted a father. And I made you hate Austria, our home.”

“You didn’t make me. I hated it because it took everything. I didn’t want to hear about alpine sunsets when all I could see was the missing face of my father and the grandparents I’d never have. It wasn’t you. It was reality that makes me still turn cold at the thought.”

“But God gave more—more than I had. Though I was very slow to find it. But you—my daughter. You don’t need to live your life that way. Embrace God, and he will help you find healing, so you may be spared some of the hardness I faced. I don’t want Darby to go through life that way, either. That’s why I’ve made the special request of her that I talked with you about. . . .” Saying the words seemed to drain all of Grandma’s energy. Darby stepped forward, but her mother saw it too. She shushed her gently.

BOOK: Winter Passing
12.03Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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