By Eva Eliav on Tuesday, 12 November 2024
Category: December 2024

Survivors

Don't get me started on Uncle Charlie.

Uncle Charlie was my mother's brother. Moon faced, completely bald, he'd been handsome once. And popular with the girls. So my mother said.

He married twice. His first marriage ended in divorce. He'd married again just before the War and his wife and child had been murdered in the camps. "Poor man," my mother sighed. But he seemed feisty enough when he slugged me. One moment, I was babbling on my stool, the next I was in flight, landing face down on the kitchen floor.

I remember feeling astonished, sprawled like a broken doll on the yellow tiles, my mouth leaking bright red drops. Somewhere nearby, I heard my mother shrieking. A small, silver scar on my inner lip still marks the spot where face and floor collided.

I wasn't rushed to the doctor to stitch the wound. "They'll hurt her," my mother whimpered. My father nodded.

He ordered Charlie out as my mother wept. "The war," she said, mopping her face with an apron, "the war…the war."

Uncle Charlie hurriedly packed his case of stiff brown leather and disappeared from our lives for several years. Then he was back, jovial as a Santa bearing gifts. To be precise, one gift only, a small rubber flower that sprayed water. My brother and I took turns squirting each other. Mother encouraged us to thank him profusely, but we weren't left alone with Uncle Charlie.

Except for the day he treated us to ice cream. Plump fingers grasping mine, he counted a few coins into my hand. Before I could turn away, he pulled me against him, capturing my cheek with his open mouth. He groaned deep in his chest…poor man, the war…his tongue left a trail of mucous like a snail. I didn't dare to wipe away the wetness, though it tingled on my skin all afternoon.

My brother must have blurted what he'd seen. Not long after, Charlie was gone again. He wrote once from the Y in another city. I watched my mother carefully fold his letter and slide it deep into an old black purse, long unused, kept only to store memories.

"He was a good man…before," my mother said, squeezing her eyes shut. Tears burst the fragile levees of her eyelids. My brother and I wrapped our arms around her. Innocently, we drank from the poisoned stream.

"Survivors" is one of the very short stories, flash fiction, each story ranging from 250 – 600 words, from Eva Eliav's new book entitled "Longings – Very Short Fiction". The book is 70 pages, self-published, soft-cover. Cost: NIS 50. To purchase contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., Phone: 052 422 6088

In addition - Eva has provided copies of the book to the ESRA bookshop in Raanana and she has asked that the proceeds from their sales will be a donation to ESRA

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