Page 140 of The German Wife


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Sofie

Huntsville,Alabama

1951

A few weeks had passed since the trial ended and life was returning to our new normal. Felix’s reticence toward Jürgen was a thing of the past, and he’d insisted on his papa driving him to his new kindergarten that day. Gisela and Mila liked to walk to school together now, and that meant I was at home when the mailman passed.

I ran through the house to the mailbox—just as I did every day. I’d written Laura so many times over the ten months since we’d arrived in America, but I never heard from her—not even when I wrote to let her know that Jürgen had been shot, or when I let her know he’d finally recovered. I still hoped and prayed to get a reply, but the ritual of checking that mailbox was starting to feel like I was picking a scab, preventing myself from healing.

And once again, the mailbox was empty. My heart sank, and I turned back to the front door—but to my surprise, Jürgen’s car pulled into the driveway beside me.

“What’s wrong?” I called, alarmed. He fumbled with the handle on his door, cursed, then threw it open and stumbled from the car.

“Sofie,” he said, clearly stunned. He was holding an envelope in his hand, and as he extended it toward me, I saw that he was shaking.

“Is it from Laura?” I whispered, but Jürgen shook his head. Before I could even register my disappointment, he waved the letter and laughed through tears. He ran around the car and came to my side, pressing the envelope into my hands.

“My love.Readit.”

The letter was addressed to Jürgen at Redstone Arsenal, but that wasn’t why my knees went weak.

I knew that handwriting.I’d seen it at school, when we passed notes in class. I’d seen it when she taught Georg to write his name. I’d seen it on a letter I read in Martha’s kitchen while the world went to hell around us.

I turned the envelope over slowly and there were those same scripted letters.

From Mayim Elsas (nee Nussbaum)

I had grieved her, and hope can be a dangerous thing. If I believed for a second that this letter really was from my Mayim and then I found out it was not, I’d have to grieve her all over again.

“It’s impossible,” I gasped, looking at Jürgen with frantic eyes. “It must be a trick.”

“Sofie, read it,” Jürgen said, gently taking my elbow to ease me down to sit on the step of our porch. I was grateful he did—my knees had gone completely weak.

Dearest Jürgen and Sofie,

I thought you were both dead, and I imagine you might have assumed the same about me. But you are alive! And I am alive and well and living in Washington, DC. Please call me as soon as you get this!

Love always,

Mayim

“How far is Washington, DC?” I blurted. The corners of Jürgen’s eyes crinkled as he smiled and pointed to the phone number beneath her signature.

“It’s a long way by car. No distance at all by phone.”

She answered on the first ring, and I imagined her sitting by the phone waiting, ever since she posted the letter.

“Hello?”

Her soft voice, hopeful and anxious andbeautiful. I croaked out her name in response.

“Mayim...”

“Sofie...”

“How?”

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