could not explain her life to this boy. âAll my family are dead. Iâm wasting my life.â The first part was not true, but the second part was.
âWhat work would you do in Palestine?â
She had not thought of that. âAnything.â
âItâs mostly agricultural labor.â
âThatâs fine.â
He smiled gently. He was recovering his composure. âI mean no offense, but you donât look like a farmhand.â
âIf I didnât want to change my life, I wouldnât want to go to Palestine.â
âYes.â He fiddled with his pen. âWhat work do you do now?â
âI sing, and when I canât get singing I dance, and when I canât get dancing I wait on tables.â It was more or less true. She had done all three at one time or another, although dancing was the only one she did successfully, and she was not brilliant at that. âI told you, Iâm wasting my life. Why all the questions? Is Palestine accepting only college graduates now?â
âNothing like that,â he said. âBut itâs very tough to get in. The British have imposed a quota, and all the places are taken by refugees from the Nazis.â
âWhy didnât you tell me that before?â she said angrily.
âTwo reasons. One is that we can get people in illegally. The other . . . the other takes a little longer to explain. Would you wait a minute? I must telephone someone.â
She was still angry with him for questioning her before he told her there were no places. âIâm not sure thereâs any point in my waiting.â
âThere is, I promise you. Itâs quite important. Just a minute or two.â
âVery well.â
He went into a back room to phone. Elene waited impatiently. The day was warming up, and the room was poorly ventilated. She felt a little foolish. She had come here impulsively, without thinking through the idea of emigration. Too many of her decisions were made like that. She might have guessed they would ask her questions; she could have prepared her answers. She could have come dressed in something a little less glamorous.
The young man came back. âItâs so warm,â he said. âShall we go across the street for a cold drink?â
So that was the game, she thought. She decided to put him down. She gave him an appraising look, then said: âNo. Youâre much too young for me.â
He was terribly embarrassed. âOh, please donât misunderstand me. Thereâs someone I want you to meet, thatâs all.â
She wondered whether to believe him. She had nothing to lose, and she was thirsty. âAll right.â
He held the door for her. They crossed the street, dodging the rickety carts and broken-down taxis, feeling the sudden blazing heat of the sun. They ducked under a striped awning and stepped into the cool of a café. The young man ordered lemon juice; Elene had gin and tonic.
She said: âYou can get people in illegally.â
âSometimes.â He took half his drink in one gulp. âOne reason we do it is if the person is being persecuted. Thatâs why I asked you some questions.â
âIâm not being persecuted.â
âThe other reason is if people have done a lot for the cause, some way.â
âYou mean I have to earn the right to go to Palestine?â
âLook, maybe one day all Jews will have the right to go there to live. But while there are quotas there have to be criteria.â
She was tempted to ask: Who do I have to sleep with? But she had misjudged him that way once already. All the same, she thought he wanted to use her somehow. She said: âWhat do I have to do?â
He shook his head. âI canât make a bargain with you. Egyptian Jews canât get into Palestine, except for special cases, and youâre not a special case. Thatâs all there is to it.â
âWhat are you trying to tell
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