Alone in Berlin (Penguin Modern Classics)

57

Life in the Cell

They got used to one another and became friends, insofar as a hard, dry man like Otto Quangel could ever become friends with an open and kindly one. Their days were rigidly ordered – by Reichhardt. The doctor got up very early, washed all over with cold water, did exercises for half an hour, and then tidied the cell. After breakfast, Reichhardt would read for a couple of hours and then walk up and down the cell for a further hour, never forgetting to take off his shoes so that the other inmates would not be bothered by his continual pacing.

In the course of his morning walk, which lasted from ten to eleven, Dr Reichhardt would sing to himself. Generally he confined himself to humming softly, because a lot of warders wouldn’t allow it, and Quangel got used to listening to this humming. Whatever his poor opinion of music, he did notice its effect on him. Sometimes it made him feel strong and brave enough to endure any fate, and then Reichhardt would say, ‘Beethoven’. Sometimes it made him bafflingly lighthearted and cheerful, which he had never been in his life, and then Reichhardt would say, ‘Mozart’, and Quangel would forget all about his worries. And sometimes the sounds emanating from the doctor were dark and heavy, and Quangel would feel a pain in his chest, and it would be as though he was a little boy again sitting in church with his mother, with something grand – the whole of life – ahead of him, and then Reichhardt would say, ‘Johann Sebastian Bach’.

Yes, while continuing to think poorly of music, Quangel was unable to avoid its influence, however basic the doctor’s hummed vocal settings might be. He got accustomed to sitting on a stool and listening to him as he walked up and down, usually with eyes closed, because of course his feet knew every inch of the short narrow path. Quangel would look at him, this fine gentleman, whom he wouldn’t have known how to talk to in the outside world, and sometimes a doubt would come over him; he wondered whether he had lived the right sort of life, cutting himself off from everyone else in a voluntary self-isolation. Sometimes Dr Reichhardt would say, ‘We live not for ourselves, but for others. What we make of ourselves we make not for ourselves, but for others…’

Yes, there was no doubt: past fifty and facing death, Quangel was changing. He might not like it – he even fought it – but he noticed more and more clearly that he was changing, influenced not only by the music but also, more generally, by the man who hummed it. He, who had so many times told Anna to keep quiet, who had taken silence for the best condition, would now suddenly catch himself wishing that Dr Reichhardt would put down his book and speak to him again.

And quite often he would. Once, the doctor looked up from his reading and asked with a smile, ‘What’s going on, Quangel?’

‘Hmm, nothing, Doctor.’

‘You know you shouldn’t sit and think so much. Don’t you want to give life a chance?’

‘It’s too late for that, surely.’

‘Maybe you’re right. What did you use to do after work? You can’t just have sat around idly at home after your shift, a man like you!’

‘I wrote my postcards.’

‘And earlier, before the war?’

Quangel had to think quite hard what he had done then. ‘I suppose I used to enjoy carving things out of wood.’

The doctor said thoughtfully, ‘Well, that’s one thing they won’t allow us in here: knives. We mustn’t cheat the executioner, Quangel!’

To which Quangel hesitantly replied, ‘What’s chess like? You can play against other people too, can’t you?’

‘Yes. Would you like to learn?’

‘I think I’m probably not clever enough.’

‘Nonsense! Let’s get you started right away.’

And Dr Reichhardt shut his book.

And so Quangel learned to play chess. To his surprise, he learned very quickly and easily. And again he made the discovery that something he had thought before was completely wrong. He had always found it rather silly and childish when he’d seen two men sitting at a café table, pushing wooden figures back and forth: killing time, it was, something suitable for children at the most.

Now he learned that this back-and-forth of wooden figures could bring something like happiness, clarity in one’s mind, a deep and honest pleasure in an elegant move, the discovery that it mattered very little if you won or lost, but that the pleasure of losing a closely contested match was much greater than that of winning through a blunder on the part of his opponent.

Now, while Dr Reichhardt read, Quangel would sit opposite him, the chessboard with the black and white figures in front of him, and open next to it a little paperback, Dufresne’s Guide to Chess, and he would practise openings and endgames. Later on, he progressed to playing over famous matches in their entirety. His clear, sober brain could easily remember twenty or thirty moves, and before long the day came that he was the better player.

‘Checkmate, Doctor!’

‘You caught me again, Quangel!’ said the doctor, and he laid down his king on its side in tribute to his conqueror. ‘You could make a very good player.’

‘I sometimes think now, Doctor, about the gifts I had no idea I had. It’s only since meeting you, since coming to this death row, that I understand how much I’ve missed out on in my life.’

‘It’s like that for everyone. Everyone facing death, especially premature death, like us, will be kicking themselves about each wasted hour.’

‘But it’s different for me, Doctor. I always thought it was enough if I did my work properly and didn’t mess anything up. And now I learn that there are loads of other things I could have done: play chess, be kind to people, listen to music, go to the theatre. You know, Doctor, if I were granted one wish before my death, it would be to see you with your baton conducting a big symphony orchestra. I’m so curious to see it, and find out my reaction to it.’

‘No one can develop every side of themselves, Quangel. Life is so rich. You would only have spread yourself too thin. You did your job and were a man of integrity. When you were at liberty, Quangel, you had everything you wanted. You wrote your postcards…’

‘Yes, but they didn’t do any good, Doctor! I wished the earth would swallow me up when Inspector Escherich told me that of the 285 postcards I wrote, 267 went straight to him! Only eighteen not handed in! And those eighteen didn’t do any good, either!’

‘Who can say? At least you opposed evil. You weren’t corrupted. You and I and the many locked up here, and many more in other places of detention, and tens of thousands in concentration camps – they’re all resisting, today, tomorrow…’

‘Yes, and then they kill us, and what good did our resistance do?’

‘Well, it will have helped us to feel that we behaved decently till the end. And much more, it will have helped people everywhere, who will be saved for the righteous few among them, as it says in the Bible. Of course, Quangel, it would have been a hundred times better if we’d had someone who could have told us, such and such is what you have to do; our plan is this and this. But if there had been such a man in Germany, then Hitler would never have come to power in 1933. As it was, we all acted alone, we were caught alone, and every one of us will have to die alone. But that doesn’t mean that we are alone, Quangel, or that our deaths will be in vain. Nothing in this world is done in vain, and since we are fighting for justice against brutality, we are bound to prevail in the end.’

‘And what good will that do us, down in our graves?’

‘Quangel, I ask you! Would you rather live for an unjust cause than die for a just one? There is no choice – not for you, nor for me either. It’s because we are as we are that we have to go this way.’

For a long time there was silence.

Then Quangel began, ‘This game, chess…’

‘Yes, Quangel, what about it?’

‘I sometimes think I’m doing wrong by playing. For hours on end, I have my head full of chess, but I have a wife still, and…’

‘You think about your wife enough. You want to remain brave and strong; everything that keeps you brave and strong is good, just as everything that makes you weak and doubtful, such as brooding, is bad. What good is your brooding to your wife? What helps her is when Chaplain Lorenz is able to tell her that you’re brave and strong.’

‘But he can’t speak to her openly, now that she’s got her new cellmate. The chaplain is convinced she’s a spy.’

‘The chaplain will find a way of telling your wife that you’re doing well and are feeling strong. A nod of the head or a look will do. Lorenz can take care of himself.’

‘I wouldn’t mind giving him a letter to take to Anna,’ mused Quangel.

‘I shouldn’t, if I were you. He wouldn’t refuse, but it would put his life in danger. You know yourself that he’s under constant suspicion. It would be awful if our friend wound up in one of these cells. He risks his life every day, as it is.’

‘Well, I won’t write a letter then,’ said Otto Quangel.

And he didn’t, either, even though the chaplain brought him some terrible news the next day – terrible news in particular for Anna Quangel. The foreman begged him not to tell Anna the news just yet.

‘Please not yet, reverend!’

And the chaplain promised not to.

‘I shan’t, then. You tell me when you think it’s time, Herr Quangel.’