The Direction of Our Fear
On
February 7th 1979, Wolfgang Gerhard went swimming. Witnesses reported that he
had entered the sea in some haste from the beach at Bertiog, near Embu das Artes, Brazil.
His corpse made landfall further down the coast,
bewildered horror frozen in its eyes.
Forgive me. I must explain. We had entertained Herr
Gerhard every night for years. Our theatre served to aid his failing memory,
for we could not permit our subject to forget.
In youth Wolfgang Gerhard showed great potential.
He achieved a doctorate in philosophy at Munich and in medicine at Frankfurt.
Early in World War Two he was a hero, saving the lives of comrades under fire,
and then power corrupted his mind and dark ideas seduced his soul. Some
generous folk say he was an aberration, a simple anomaly in facets of
personality common to us all. But you must judge for yourselves. Come back with
us.
#
The
lights grow dim. Herr Gerhard's entertainment is about to start.
'Come, Doctor, take my hand. It is time to revisit
your achievements.'
Wolfgang Gerhard rolls his eyes as if seeking
escape, but there is none. He grunts in futile protest. His heavy eyelids
droop.
#
The
monster with film star looks stands frigid, his green uniform pressed, his
black-peaked cap set at a rakish angle. He waves a baton as if conducting an
orchestra, or directing traffic in a Berlin street. To the left he swings his
white-gloved hand, then to the right. He is whistling as he conducts lives that
shuffle to the crossroads of kismet, the junction with his power. Breathing
snatches of Wagner he directs their fate, employing dark criteria known to him
alone, to the right, to the left, to death, to life. Such life, for which some
show relief, may yet make death seem kinder.
A woman pleads for her child, designated to the
alternate stream. A polished Luger pistol rises in a white-gloved hand and two
sharp shots settle the matter, leaving two spare appointments.
The conductor tosses the soiled pistol to an
underling.
'Zwillinge?
Zwillinge?' SS guards move among
the lines, seeking twins for purposes only their master understands.
#
For
the first time since they herded us aboard that train I can feel Mother's fear.
She grips my brother and me, pulling us close to her emaciated body. Father is
wracked with fits of guttural coughing but insists that he feels neither cold
nor hunger. He moves to the front. The line slows. A command, 'Schnell!' rings out and the baton waves
to the conductor's right. Father vanishes in the crush, leaving Mother softly
sobbing.
A pair of polished jackboots stands before our
down-turned eyes.
'What are you hiding?'
The crush has lessened. We are the focus of his
attention. Fingers in a spotless linen glove pass beneath my chin; lift my face
toward his. The eyes are dark, the skin swarthy, gypsy-like. The mouth forms a
smile, which the eyes do not join.
'Twins?' he says, voice lifting with anticipation.
Mother gasps, 'Is "twins" good?'
'Yes, "twins" is good,' he says, staring
for too long at my brother.
'You can help your uncle with his medical research.
Take them.' Rough hands snatch us. Mother screams.
'Be silent, Mother. Please. For all our sakes, be
silent,' I shout, too late. His face betrays irritation. He gestures to the
underling cradling his pistol.
The gun is in the good doctor's hand, aimed at
Mother's head. A pure white finger tightens on the trigger. The gun emits a
sharp metallic click. He laughs. 'Take away this shit,' he screams, sighs, and
resumes directing lives.
#
Oh,
how hard you must have worked, Doctor, in less than two years to conduct four
hundred thousand souls - such dedication. Three thousand twin children, fifteen
hundred pairs like my brother and me.
How to list your achievements? Where to start?
Your own clear vision said blue eyes were good. In
our eyes, dye injections always failed. Often they resulted in mere blindness,
though sometimes, inconveniently, death.
Once dead, you dissected us with care and pinned
our eyeballs to your office wall. We watched the doctor at his tireless toil.
If too small, or sick, or when we’d served your
scientific purpose, you cast out our worthless frames; deloused your Aryan
world of infestation. When insecticide ran out, you set light to fuel-filled
trenches. By lorry load, the living with the dead, they tipped us in, those
brave SS with poles who barred escape from one hell to another.
How proud you must be: you and your kind.
#
'Do
you remember this, Doctor? Do you still believe you were supermen as Friedrich
Nietzsche taught you?'
He slavers into his moustache, muttering.
'Look, Doctor, look here, at my wrist.'
The rheumy eyes stare at everything except my arm.
But I can wait. What is time to me? Then, as they must, his eyes converge on
that dark number. He shudders.
'Yes, you see it, your special mark for twins.'
The wizened mouth forms a clear but soundless plea.
'What was that? Forgive you?' I smile at his
naivety. 'I did that long ago. My forgiveness set me free. I am here not for
myself, but for my brother and for all the others who cannot or will not
forgive.
'Come now, Doctor, you are a cultured person. You
appreciate the music of Richard Wagner; you have read the works of Goethe. You
were once a spiritual man, brought up in the Catholic faith. You surely know
that there’s a price to pay? Keep in mind that other doctor, Johann Faustus.'
I summon up my multitude: suffering souls from
space and time, from then and now and days to come. A fitting chorus for my
closing act.
He covers his ears in a futile attempt to silence
the cacophony of wailing spirits. His aged eyes dilate with hatred turning now
to fear. He scans the open beach and empty sky. 'Why do you torment me so? Who
are you?'
'Through the ages men have named me Adrasteia or
Rhamnusia. Some have termed me Nemesis. But, Mortal, you may call me Legion for
to you I am Every Child, in whose names I bestow Hell and endless torment. Such
hubris, Doctor; you usurp my fame. For I am
the Angel of Death.'
Wolfgang Gerhard gasps, staggers and begins to run.
Slapping flat foot fast across the beach, eyes wild, hands thrown skyward, he
pitches headlong screaming into the waves.
#
According
to news reports in June 1985, forensic examination of human remains from the
grave of Wolfgang Gerhard at a cemetery in Embu das Artes, Brazil, proved they were in fact those of Josef
Mengele. Although exactly why the chronically unfit sixty-nine year old Nazi
should have gone swimming remained unclear.
In 1990, a Baptist missionary set up a home for
orphaned or abandoned children in Embu
das Artes, Brazil.
We must
travel in the direction of our fear.
John
Berryman – poet
* The Direction of Our Fear was first published by the Great Lakes Association of Horror Writers as Editor's Choice in their 'Ghostlight' magazine in 2010, and again by Verulam Writers' Circle in their anthology The Archangel and the White Hart, edited by Jonathan Pinnock, in 2011.
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