Avi and Detective Tischler drove down to Jerusalem for their next attempt. All the buildings were made of stone — there was an ordinance that required it; at sunset, the light reflecting from the stone transformed Jerusalem into the fabled City of Gold. They found the ancient house they were looking for and knocked on the door. After a few moments a young man, perhaps thirteen years old, appeared, wearing a yarmulke and a
“Yes?” said the boy in Hebrew.
Avi smiled. “
“He’s my
“What do you want?”
“Just to speak to him, just for a moment.”
“About what?”
Avi sighed. “I’m an American—”
“No shit,” said the boy, making it clear that this had been obvious from the first syllable Avi had uttered.
“—and this man is an Israeli police officer. Show him,” said Avi, turning to Tischler. Tischler pulled out his ID and held it up for the boy to see.
The boy shook his head. “My
“We know that. We just need to talk to him for a moment.”
“Maybe you should come back when my father is home,” said the boy.
“When will that be?”
“Friday, for Shabbat. He’s on business right now, in Haifa.”
“What we want will only take a moment.” Through the doorway, Avi could see that an ancient man had appeared, oblivious of their presence, hunched over, shuffling toward the kitchen.
“Is that him?” asked Avi.
The boy didn’t have to look back. “He’s very old,” he said.
“Shlomo Malamud!” shouted Avi.
The man slowly turned around, a look of surprise on his deeply wrinkled, sun-battered face.
“Mar Malamud!” Avi shouted again. The man began to shuffle toward them.
“It’s all right,” said the boy, trying to stop his grandfather from coming nearer. “I’m taking care of everything.”
“Mar Malamud,” said Avi over the boy. “I’ve come a long way to ask you just one question, sir. I need you to look at some photographs and tell me if you recognize anyone.”
The man was moving slowly toward them, but the boy was still blocking the entrance with his body. “You’re wasting your time,” said the boy. “He’s blind.”
Avi felt his heart sinking. Not again! Damn it, why hadn’t he thought to check on this before leaving the States? How was he going to explain
The old fellow was still working his way down the corridor. “I — I’m sorry to have disturbed you,” Avi said, turning to go.
“What do you two want?” asked Malamud, his voice as dry as the desert.
“Nothing,” said Avi, and then, almost at once, thinking for a second that his Hebrew had failed him, “Did you say ‘you two?” Tischler hadn’t uttered a word since they’d arrived.
“Speak up, young man. I can hardly hear you.”
Avi wheeled on the teenager. “Is he blind, or isn’t he?”
“ ‘Course he is,” said the boy. “Well,
“Mr. Malamud, how much vision do you have left?”
“Not much.”
“If I show you a series of photographs, could you tell them apart?”
“Maybe.”
“Can we come in?”
The old man thought for a long time. “I guess,” he said at last.
The teenager, looking quite miffed at having had an end run done around him, reluctantly moved aside. Avi and Tischler followed Malamud as he moved at a snail’s pace down to the kitchen. He found a chair — whether he could actually see it, or simply knew where it would be, Avi couldn’t tell. After he’d sat down, he waved for Avi and Tischler to do the same. Avi opened up his briefcase and took out a small cassette recorder, thumbed it on, then placed it on the table near Malamud. He then took out the photo spread, unfolding it at its central masking-tape hinge and placing it in front of Malamud. The spread consisted of three rows of eight photos, twenty-four in all.
“These are modern pictures,” said Avi. “They all show men in their eighties or nineties. But we’re trying to identify someone you might have known in your youth — someone you would have known in the early 1940s.”
The old man looked up, his eyes full of hope. “You’ve found Saul?”
Avi looked at the teenager. “Who is Saul?”
“His brother,” said the boy. “He disappeared in the war. My grandfather was taken to Treblinka; Saul was taken to Chelm.”
“I’ve been looking for him ever since,” said Malamud. “And now you’ve found him!”