โJosefโs mother grabbed for his fatherโs flailing arms, but Aaron Landau was too strong for her, thin as he was.โ
โNo.ย No!ย Theyโre coming for us,โ he said, his eyes frantic. โThe ship is slowing down. Canโt you feel it? Weโre slowing so they can turn us around, take us back to Germany!โ
Josefโs father pulled his arm away and knocked over a lamp. It fell to the floor with a crash, and the light went out.
โJosef, help me,โ his mother begged.
Josef pulled himself away from the wall and tried to grab one of his fatherโs arms while his mother went for the other. In the corner of her bed, Ruthie buried her face in Bitsyโs ears and cried.
โNo!โ Josefโs father cried. โWe have toย hide, do you hear me? We canโt stay here. We have to get off this ship!โ
Josef grabbed his fatherโs arm and held on tight. โNo, Papa. Weโre not turning around,โ Josef said. โWeโre slowing for a funeral. A funeral at sea.โ Josefโs father stopped dead, but Josef kept a tight hold on him. He hadnโt wanted to tell his father about the funeral, but now it seemed the only way
to calm him down.
Aaron Landauโs bulging, haunted eyes swept to his son. โA funeral? Whoโs died? A passenger? It was the Nazis who did it! I knew they were on board! Theyโre after us all!โ He began to thrash again, more panicked than before.
โNo, Papa, no!โ Josef said. He fought to hold on to his father. โIt was an old man. Professor Weiler. He was sick when he came aboard. Itโs not the Nazis, Papa.โ
Josef knew all about it. Ruthie had begged him to go swimming in the pool with her and Renata and Evelyne that afternoon. But Josef was a man now, not a boy. He was too old for kidsโ stuff. Heโd been walking the outside boardwalk on B-deck instead, keeping an eye out for the man from the engine room, Schiendick, and his friends, when heโd heard a cry from one of the cabin portholes. Peeking inside, he saw a woman with long, curly black hair and a white dress sobbing as she lay across the body of an old man. Captain Schroeder and the shipโs doctor were there too. The man in the bed was perfectly still, his mouth open and his eyes staring blankly at the ceiling.
He was dead. Josef had never seen a dead body so close up before. โYou there! Boy!โ
Josef had jumped. A woman walking her little dog on the boardwalk on B-deck had caught him peeping. He had sprinted away as the little dog barked at him, but not before Josef heard the shipโs doctor say that Professor Weiler had died of cancer.
In his familyโs cabin now a few hours later, Josef still clung to his fatherโs arm, trying to calm him down.
โHe was an old man, and heโd been sick for a long time already!โ Josef told his father. โTheyโre burying him at sea because weโre too far away
from Cuba.โ
Josef and his mother hung on to his father until Josefโs words finally got through. Papa stopped struggling against them and sagged, and suddenly they were holding him up off the floor.
โHe was sick already?โ Papa asked. โYes. It was the cancer,โ Josef said.
Josefโs father let them guide him to his bed, where he sat down. Mama went to Ruthie to comfort her.
โWhen is the funeral?โ Papa asked. โLate tonight,โ Josef told him.
โI want to go,โ his father said.
Josef couldnโt believe it. Papa hadnโt left the cabin in eleven days, and now he wanted to go to the funeral of someone heโd never met? In his condition? Josef looked worriedly to his mother, who held Ruthie in her lap. โI donโt think thatโs such a good idea,โ Mama said, echoing Josefโs
thoughts.
โI saw too many men die without funerals at Dachau,โ Papa said. โI will go to this one.โ
It was the first time his father had even spoken the name of the place heโd been, and it was like a winter frost covered everything in the room. It ended the conversation as quickly as it had begun.
โTake Josef with you, then,โ Mama said. โRuthie and I will stay here.โ
That night, Josef led his father to A-deck aft, where the captain and his first officer waited with a few other passengers. The passengersโ clothes looked shabby, and it was only when he heard his father tearing his shirt that Josef understoodโripping your garments was a Jewish tradition at funerals, and they had torn theirs in sympathy with Mrs. Weiler. Josef pulled on his own collar until the seam ripped. His father nodded, then led
him to the sandbox by the pool and had him take a handful of sand. Josef didnโt understand, but he did as he was told.
The elevator to A-deck arrived, and Mrs. Weiler emerged first, a candle in hand. Behind her came the rabbi and four sailors, who carried Professor Weilerโs body on a stretcher. He was bound up tight in a white sailcloth, like an Egyptian pharaoh.
โHold on there.โ The man from below decks, Schiendick, pushed through the small crowd with two fellow crew members. โIโm Otto Schiendick, the Nazi Party leader on this ship,โ he said, โand German law says that a body buried at sea must be covered with the national flag.โ Schiendick unfurled the red-and-white Nazi flag with the black swastika in the middle, and the passengers gasped.
Papa pushed his way forward. โNever! Do you hear me?ย Never!ย Itโs a sacrilege!โ He was shaking worse than ever. Josef had never seen his father this angry, and he was frightened for him. Schiendick wasnโt the kind of man you wanted to mess with.
Josef grabbed his fatherโs arm and tried to pull him away.
Papa spat at the feet of Schiendick. โThat is what I think of you and your flag!โ
Schiendick and his men surged forward to avenge the insult, but Captain Schroeder quickly intervened.
โStop this! Stop this at once, Steward!โ Captain Schroeder commanded.
Schiendick addressed his captain but never took his eyes off Josefโs father. โItโs German law. And I see no reason for an exception to be made in this case.โ
โAnd I do,โ Captain Schroeder said. โNow, take that flag and leave here, Mr. Schiendick, or I will relieve you of duty and have you confined to quarters.โ
The steward held Papaโs gaze a long moment more. His eyes shifted to Josef, giving him goose bumps, and then Schiendick turned and stormed away.
Josefโs chest heaved like heโd been running a marathon. He was so wound up he was quivering worse than his father. Sand slipped from his shaking fist.
The captain apologized profusely for the disturbance, and the funeral continued. The rabbi said a short prayer in Hebrew, and the sailors slid the body of Professor Weiler over the side of the ship.
After a moment, there was a quiet splash, and the mourners said together, โRemember, God, that we are of dust.โ One by one they stepped to the rail, where they released handfuls of sandโthe sand Josefโs father had told him to take from the sandbox. Josef joined his father at the rail, and they scattered their sand in the sea.
Captain Schroeder and his first officer put their caps back on and saluted. They touched the brims of their hats, Josef noticed, instead of giving the Hitler salute.
Without words, the funeral service broke up. Josef expected his father to return to their cabin right away, but instead he lingered at the rail, staring down into the dark waters of the Atlantic.ย What is he thinking?ย Josef wondered.ย What happened to him at Dachau that heโs now a ghost of the man he once was?
โAt least he didnโt have to be buried in the hell of the Third Reich,โ his father said.
The ship rumbled softly, and Josef knew the captain had restarted the engines. They were on their way to Cuba again. But how much time had they lost?