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The Boy in the Striped Pajamas
By John Boyne
Chapter 12 Audio |
'All I
know is
this,' began
Shmuel. 'Before
we came here I
lived with
my mother
and father
and my
brother Josef in a
small flat
above the
store where
Papa makes
his watches.
Every morning
we ate
our breakfast
together at
seven o'clock
and while
we
went to
school, Papa
mended
the
watches
that
people brought
to him and made
new ones
too. I
had a
beautiful watch
that he
gave me
but I
don't have
it any
more. It
had a
golden face
and I
wound it
up every night before
I went
to sleep
and it
always told
the right time.'
'What
happened to
it?' asked
Bruno.
'They
took it
from me,'
said Shmuel. 'Who?'
'The
soldiers, of
course,' said Shmuel as if
this was
the
most obvious
thing in
the world.
'And
then one
day things
started to
change,' he
continued.
'I came
home from
school and
my mother was making armbands
for us
from a
special cloth and
drawing a
star on
each one.
Like this.'
Using his
finger
he drew
a design
in the
dusty ground
beneath
him.
*
'And every
time we
left the
house, she
told us
we
had
to wear
one of
these armbands.'
'My
father wears
one too,'
said Bruno.
'On his
uniform.
It's very
nice. It's
bright red
with a
black
and-white
design on
it.' Using his
finger he
drew another design
in the
dusty ground
on his
side of
the
fence.
*
'Yes, but
they're different, aren't they?'
said
Shmuel.
'No
one's ever
given me
an armband,'
said Bruno.
'But I
never asked
to wear
one,' said
Shmuel.
'All the
same,' said
Bruno, 'I
think I'd
quite like one.
I don't
know which
one I'd
prefer though,
your one or Father's.'
Shmuel
shook his
head and
continued with
his
story. He
didn't often
think about
these things
any
more because
remembering his
old life
above the
watch
shop made
him very
sad.
'We
wore the armbands for a
few months,'
he said.
'And then
things changed
again. I
came home
one day
and
Mama said
we couldn't
live in
our house
any
more-'
'That happened
to me too!' shouted
Bruno,
delighted that he
wasn't the
only boy
who'd been
forced
to move. 'The Fury
came for
dinner, you
see,
and
the next thing
I knew we
moved here.
And I
hate
it here,'
he added
in a
loud voice.
'Did he
come to
your
house
and do
the same
thing?'
'No,
but when
we were
told we
couldn't live
in our house
we had
to move
to a
different part
of Cracow, where
the soldiers
built a
big wall
and my
mother and
father and
my brother
and I
all had
to live
in one
room.'
'All
of you?'
asked Bruno.
'In one
room?'
'And
not just
us,' said
Shmuel. 'There
was another
family there
and the
mother and
father were
always fighting
with each
other and
one of
the sons
was bigger
than me
and he
hit me
even when
I did
nothing wrong.'
'You can't have
all lived
in the
one room,'
said Bruno,
shaking his
head. 'That
doesn't make
any sense.’
‘All of us,’
said Shmuel, nodding his head. ‘Eleven in total.’
Bruno opened
his mouth
to contradict
him again
-
he
didn't really
believe that
eleven people
could live
in
the same
room together
-
but
changed his
mind.
'We
lived there
for some
more months,'
continued Shmuel, 'all
of us
in that
one room.
There was
one small
window in
it but I
didn't like
to look
out of
it because
then I would see
the wall
and I
hated the
wall because
our real
home was
on the other
side of
it. And
this part
of town
was the
bad part
because it
was always
noisy and
it was
impossible to sleep.
And I
hated Luka,
who was
the boy
who kept
hitting me even
when I
did nothing
wrong.'
'Gretel
hits me
sometimes,' said Bruno.
'She's my
sister,' he
added. 'And
a Hopeless
Case. But
soon I'll
be bigger
and stronger
than she is
and she won't
know what's
hit her
then.'
'Then
one day
the soldiers
all came
with huge
trucks,' continued
Shmuel, who
didn't seem
all that
interested in
Gretel. 'And
everyone was
told to
leave
the houses.
Lots of
people didn't
want to
and they
hid wherever
they could
find a
place but
in the
end I
think they
caught everyone. And the
trucks
took us
to a
train and
the train
..
.' He
hesitated for
a moment
and bit
his lip.
Bruno thought
he was
going to
start crying
and couldn't
understand
why.
‘The train was horrible,’ said Shmel. ‘There were too many of us in the
carriages for one thing. And there was no air to breathe. And it smelled awful.’
‘That’s because you all
crowded onto one train,’ said Bruno, remembering the two trains he had seen at
the station
when he
left Berlin.
'When we
came here,
there was
another one
on the other
side of
the platform
but no
one seemed
to
see
it.
That
was
the one
we got.
You should
have got
on it
too.'
'I
don't think
we would
have been
allowed,' said
Shmuel, shaking
his head.
'We weren't
able to get out
of our
carriage.'
'The
doors are
at the
end,' explained
Bruno. 'There weren't any
doors,' said
Shmuel.
'Of
course there
were doors,'
said Bruno
with a
sigh. 'They're
at the end,' he
repeated. 'Just
past the
buffet section.'
'There
weren't any
doors,' insisted
Shmuel.
'If
there had
been, we
would ll
have got
off.'
Bruno
mumbled something
under his
breath along the
lines of 'Of course
there were',
but he
didn't say
it very loud
so Shmuel
didn't hear.
'When
the train
finally stopped,'
continued Shmuel,
'we were
in a
very cold
place and
we all
had to
walk here.'
'We had
a car,'
said Bruno,
out loud
now.
'And Mama
was taken
away from
us, and
Papa and
Josef and
I were
put into
the huts
over there and that’s where
we’ve been ever since.’
Shmuel looked very sad when he told this story and Bruno didn’t know why;
it didn’t seem like such a terrible thing to him, and after all much the same
thing had happened to him.
'Are
there
many
other
boys
over
there?'
asked
Bruno.
'Hundreds,' said
Shmuel.
Bruno's eyes
opened wide.
'Hundreds?' he
said,
amazed. 'That's
not fair
at all.
There's no
one to play with
on this
side of
the fence.
Not a
single person.'
'We
don't play,'
said Shmuel.
'Don't play?
Why ever
not?'
'What
would we
play?' he
asked, his
face looking
confused at
the idea
of it.
'Well,
I don't know,' said
Bruno. 'All
sorts of
things.
Football,
for
example.
Or
exploration.
What's
the
exploration like over
there anyway?
Any good?'
Shmuel
shook his
head and
didn't answer.
He looked
back towards
the huts and turned
back to
Bruno then.
He didn't
want to
ask the
next question
but the
pains in
his stomach made
him.
'You
don't
have
any
food
on
you,
do
you?'
he
asked.
'Afraid
not,'
said
Bruno.
'I
meant to
bring
some
chocolate but
I forgot.'
'Chocolate,'
said Shmuel very
slowly,
his tongue
moving out
from behind
his teeth.
'I've only
ever had
chocolate once.'
'Only
once? I
love chocolate. I
can't get
enough of
it although Mother
says it'll
rot my
teeth.'
'You
don't have
any bread,
do you?'
Bruno shook
his
head.
'Nothing
at
all,'
he
said.
'Dinner isn't served
until half
past six.
What time
do you
have yours?'
Shmuel
shrugged his
shoulders and
pulled himself
to his
feet. 'I think
I'd better
get back,'
he said.
'Perhaps
you can
come to
dinner with
us one
evening,' said
Bruno, although
he wasn't
sure it
was a
very good
idea.
'Perhaps,'
said Shmuel, although
he didn't sound convinced.
'Or
I could
come
to you,'
said
Bruno. 'Perhaps I
could come and
meet your
friends,' he
added hope
fully. He
had hoped
that Shmuel
would suggest
this himself
but there
didn't seem
to be
any sign
of that.
'You're on
the wrong side
of the fence though,'
said
Shmuel.
'I
could crawl
under,' said
Bruno, reaching
down and lifting the
wire off
the ground.
In the
centre, between the wooden
telegraph poles,
it lifted
quite easily and
a boy
as small
as Bruno
could easily
fit through.
Shmuel
watched him
do this
and backed
away nervously. 'I have
to go
back,' he
said.
'Some
other afternoon
then,' said
Bruno.
'I'm not
supposed to
be here.
If
they catch
me I'll
be
in trouble.'
He turned and
walked away
and Bruno
noticed again
just how
small and
skinny his
new friend
was. He didn't
say anything
about this
because
he
knew only too well how
unpleasant it was
being criticized
for something
as silly
as your
height, and
the last
thing he
wanted to
do was
be unkind
to Shmuel.
'I'll
come back
tomorrow,'
shouted
Bruno
to the
departing boy and
Shmuel said
nothing in
reply; in
fact he
started to
run off
back to
the camp,
leaving Bruno
all on
his own.
Bruno
decided
that
that
was
more
than
enough
exploration for one
day and
he set
off home,
excited about
what had
happened and
wanting nothing
more than
to tell
Mother and
Father and
Gretel
-
who would be
so jealous
that she
might just
explode
-
and Maria
and Cook
and Lars
all about
his adventure
that afternoon
and his
new friend
with the funny
name and the
fact that they
had the
same birthday, but the closer
he got
to his
own house,
the more
he started
to think
that that
might not
be a
good idea.
After
all, he reasoned, they
might not
want me
to be
friends with him
any more
and if
that happens
they might
stop me
coming out
here at
all. By
the time
he went through
his front
door and
smelled the
beef that
was roasting
in the oven for
dinner he
had decided that
it was
better to
keep the
whole story
to himself
for the
moment and
not breathe
a
word about
it.
It
would be
his own
secret. Well,
his and
Shmuel's.
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