THE rabbi knew he couldn't hope to begin on his sermon until he'd read the letter. He had been sitting at his desk in front of a blank sheet of paper for over an hour and still couldn't come up with a first sentence. Lately he had been unable to concentrate on a task he had carried out every Friday evening for the last thirty years. They must have realised by now that he was no longer up to it. He took the letter out of the envelope and slowly unfolded the pages. Then he pushed his half-‐moon spectacles up the bridge of his nose and started to read. 
My dear Father, 
"Jew boy! Jew boy! Jew boy!" were the first words I ever heard her say as I ran past her on the first lap of the race. She was standing behind the railing at the beginning of the home straight, hands cupped around her lips to be sure I couldn't miss the chant. She must have come from another school because I didn't recognise her, but it only took a fleeting glance to see that it was Greg Reynolds who was standing by her side. 
After years of having to tolerate his snide comments and bullying at school all I wanted to retaliate with was, "Nazi, Nazi, Nazi, " but you had always taught me to rise above such provocation. 
I tried to put them both out of my mind as I moved into the second lap. I had dreamed for years of winning the mile in the West Mount High School Championships, and I was determined not to let them do anything to stop me. 
As I came into the back straight a second time I took a more careful look at her. She was standing amid a cluster of friends who were wearing the scarves of Marianapolis Convent. She must have been about sixteen, and as slim as a willow. 
I wonder if you would have chastised me had l only shouted, "No breasts, no breasts, no breasts," in the hope it might at least provoke the boy standing next to her into a fight. Then I would have been able to tell you truthfully that he had thrown the first punch but the moment you had learned that it was Greg Reynolds you would have realised how little provocation I needed. 
As I reached the back straight I once again prepared myself for the chants. Chanting at track meetings had become fashionable in the late 1950s when "Zat-‐o-‐pek, Zat-‐o-‐pek, Zat-‐o-‐pek" had been roared in adulation across running stadiums around the world for the great Czech champion. Not for me was there to be the shout of "Ros-‐en-‐thal, Ros-‐en-‐thal, Ros-‐en-‐thal" as I came into earshot. 
'Jew boy! Jew boy! Jew boy!" she said, sounding like a gramophone record that had got stuck. Her friend Greg, who would nowadays be described as a preppie, began laughing. I knew he had put her up to it, and how I would have loved to have removed that smug grin from his face. I reached the half-‐mile mark in two minutes seventeen seconds, comfortably inside the pace necessary to break the school record, and I felt that was the best way to put the taunting girl and that fascist Reynolds in their place. I couldn't help thinking at the time how unfair it all was. I was a real Canadian, born and bred in this county, while she was just an  immigrant.  After  all,    you,    Father,    had  escaped  from  Hamburg  in    1937   and   started    with    nothing.    Her  parents    did    not  land    on  these  shores  until  1949,    by  which  time  you    were    a  respected  figure    in  the    community. 
I     gritted  my   teeth  and   tried  to  concentrate.    Zatopek    had  written  in  his    autobiography    that    no  runner    can  afford  to  lose    his    concentration  during  a  race.    When  I   reached  the    penultimate    bend  the  inevitable  chanting  began  again,    but  this    time  it  only    made  me  speed  up    and   even  more  determined    to    break  that  record.  Once  I  was  back  in    the  safety    of  the  home    straight  I  could  hear  some  of  my  friends  roaring,    "Come  on,    Benjamin,    you  can  do  it,"  and  the    timekeeper  called  out,    "Three  twenty-‐three,    three  twenty-‐four,    three  twenty-‐five"    as   I   passed    the    bell    to  begin  the    last    lap. 
I     knew  that    the    record  -‐four    thirty-‐two-‐    was    now  well    within  my  grasp  and  all    those    dark    nights    of    winter  training  suddenly   seemed  worthwhile.    As   I   reached  the    back    straight    I   took    the  lead,    and  even  felt  that  I  could  face  the  girl  again.  I  summoned  up  my    strength  for  one  last    effort.    A   quick   glance   over   my   shoulder   confirmed    I   was   already    yards    in   front    of    any    of    my  rivals,    so  it  was  only  me  against  the  clock.  Then  I  heard  the    chanting,    but  this  time  it  was  even  louder  than  before,    'Jew  boy!  Jew  boy!  Jew  boy!"    It   was    louder    because    the    two  of    them  were  now  working  in  unison,    and  just  as  I  came  round  the    bend  Reynolds    raised  his    arm  in  a  flagrant  Nazi   salute. 
If     I    had  only  carried  on  for    another    twenty  yards    I   would  hare    reached  the    safety  of    the    home straight  and  the  cheers  of  my  friends,    the  cup  and  the  record.  But  they  had  made  me  so angry    that  I  could    no    longer  control    myself I     shot    off  the    track    and  ran  across    the    grass    over  the    long-‐jump    pit  and   straight    towards them.    At   last  my    crazy  decision  stopped  their    chanting  because    Reynolds    lowered  his    arm and    just  stood    there  staring    pathetically    at  me  from    behind  the    small    railing  that    surrounded    the    outer    perimeter     of    the    track.    I   leaped  right    over    it   and  landed  in   front    of    my    adversary.    With  all  the  energy  I  had  saved  for  the  final  straight  I  took  an  almighty  swing  at    him.    My  fist  landed    an    inch    below   his   left   eye  and    he  buckled    and    fell    to  the    ground  by    her    side.    Quickly  she  knelt  down  and,    staring  up,    gave  me  a  look  of  such  hatred  that  no    words  could  have  matched    it.  Once  I  was  sure  Greg  wasn't  going  to  get  up,    I  walked  slowly    back    on  to   the    track    as    the  last  of    the   runners   were   coming    round   the   final   bend. 
"Last  again,    Jew  boy,    "  I  heard  her  shout  as  I  jogged  down  the  home  straight,    so  far  behind the    others    that    they  didn't    even  bother    to   record  my   time. 
How    often    since  have  you    quoted    me  those  words:  "Still    have  I  borne  it  with  a  patient  shrug,    for  sufferance    is    the    badge    of    all    our    tribe"?  Of  course  you  were  right,    but  I  was  only    seventeen  then,    and  even  after  I  had  learned  the  truth  about  Christina's  father  I  still  couldn't    understand    how    anyone  who    had    come  from  a  defeated  Germany,    a  Germany  condemned  by    the  rest  of  the  world  for  its  treatment  of  the  Jews,    could  still  behave  in  such  a  manner.  And  in    those  days  I  really  believed  her  family  were  Nazis,    but  I  remember  you  patiently  explaining  to    me    that    her    father  had  been  an  admiral  in  the  German  navy,    and  had  won  an Iron  Cross    for    sinking   Allied  ships.    Do  you   remember    me    asking  how  could  you  tolerate    such  a man,    let  alone  allow  him  to  settle  down  in  our  county? 
You    went    on  to  assure    me    that    Admiral    von    Braumer,  who  came    from  an  old  Roman    Catholic    family  and  probably  despised  the  Nazis  as  much  as  we  did,    had  acquitted  himself    honourably  as    an    of    officer  and    a    gentleman    throughout  his    life  as    a    German    sailor.    But  I    still    couldn't  accept  your  attitude,    or  didn't  want  to. It  didn't  help, Father,    that  you  always  saw  the  other  man's  point  of  view,    and  even  though    Mother  had    died    prematurely    because  of  those  bastards  you    could    still  find    it  in    you    to    forgive. 
If  you  had  been  born  a  Christian,    you  would  have  been  a  saint. 
The  rabbi   put  the  letter  down    and    rubbed    his    tired    eyes    before  he  turned    over  another  page    written    in    that  fine  script  that  he  had    taught  his    only  son    so    many  years    before.    Benjamin    had  always  learned  quickly,    everything  from  the  Hebrew  scriptures    to   a   complicated    algebraic    equation.   The    old    man    had   even   begun   to   hope   the   boy   might   become   a    rabbi. 
Do     you    remember  my    asking    you    that  evening    why    people  couldn't  understand    that  the world    had    changed?    Didn't  the  girl    realise  that  she  was    no    better  than    we  were?  I   shall    never forget  your  reply.  She  is,    you  said,    far  better  than  us,    if  the  only  way  you  can  prove  your superiority    is   to    punch    her    friend   in   the   face. 
I    returned  to  my  room  angered  by  your    weakness.    It   was    to  be    many  years    before    I understood    your  strength. When  I  wasn't  pounding  ‘round  that    track    I   rarely  had   time   for    anything  other    than    working or  a  scholarship  to  McGill,    so  it  came  as  a  surprise  that  her  path  crossed  mine  again  so  soon. 
It    must    have    been  about    a  week    later    that    I   saw  her    at    the    local    swimming    pool.    She    was    standing  at  the  deep  end,    just  under  the  diving  board,    when  I  came  in.  Her  long  fair  hair    was  dancing  on  her  shoulders,    her  bright  eyes  eagerly  taking  in  everything  going  on  around  her.    Greg    was    by    her  side.  I    was    pleased  to  notice    a   deep   purple   patch   remained    under  his    left  eye  for    all    to    see.    I    also   remember    chuckling   to    myself    because   she   really   did    have    the   flattest    chest    I    had   doer   seen   on   a   sixteen-‐year-‐old    girl,    though  I  have  to    confess  she  had  fantastic  legs.  Perhaps   she's  a  freak,    I  thought.  I  turned  to  go  in  to  the    changing  room  -‐    a  split    second  before  I  hit  the  water.    When    I  came  up    for  breath    there  was    no    sign    of    who    had    pushed    me in,    just  a  group  of  grinning  but  innocent  faces.  I  didn't  need  a  law  degree  to  work  out  who    it    must  have  been,    but  as  you  constantly  reminded  me,    Father,    without  evidence  there  is  no  proof    .    .    .   I  wouldn't  have  minded    that  much    about  being    pushed    into    the  pool    if    I  hadn't  been    wearing    my   best  suit  -‐    in  truth,    my  only  suit  with  long  trousers,    the  one  I  wore  on    days    I  was    going    to    the  synagogue. 
I    climbed  out    of    the    water    but    didn't    waste    any   time    looking  round  for    him.    I   knew    Greg  would  be  a  long  way  off  by  then.  I  walked  home  through  the  back  streets,    avoiding    taking  the    bus    in  case    someone    saw  me    and  told  you  what    a   state    I   was    in.    As    soon  as    I   got    home    I    crept  past  your  study  and  on  upstairs  to  my  room,    changing  before    you  had  the  chance  to  discover  what  had    taken    place. 
Old    Isaac  Cohen    gave  me  a    disapproving    look  when    I  turned    up    at  the  synagogue  an    hour later    wearing   a    blazer    and   jeans. I     took    the    suit    to  the    cleaners    the    next    morning.    It   cost    me    three    weeks'    pocket    money    to  be sure    that   you    were    never   aware   of   what   had   happened   at   the   swimming    pool   that    day. 
The  rabbi   picked    up    the  picture  of  his    seventeen    year-‐old    son    in    that  synagogue  suit.    He  well    remembered  Benjamin  turning    up  to  his  service    in  a  blazer    and  jeans  and  Isaac    Cohen's    outspoken  reprimand.  The  rabbi  was  thankful  that  Mr.  Atkins,    the  swimming  instructor,    had    phoned    to    warn    him  of    what    had   taken  place    that    afternoon  so  at   least   he    didn't    add    to   Mr.    Cohen's    harsh    words.    He  continued    gazing  at  the  photograph    for  a    long  time    before  he  returned  to    the    letter. 
The  next  occasion    l    saw    Christina    -‐    by  now  I   had  found  out    her    name    -‐    was  at    the    end-‐of-‐term    dance  held    in    the  school    gymnasium.     I  thought  I  looked  pretty  cool    in  my  neatly    pressed  suit    until    I  saw    Greg    standing    by    her  side  in    a    smart  new    dinner  jacket.    I  remember    wondering    at  the    time    if    I   would  ever   be    able    to  afford  a   dinner  jacket.    Greg  had    been  offered  a    place    at    McGill  and  was  announcing  the  fact  to  anyone  who  cared  to  listen,    which  made  me  all  the  more  determined    to    win    a   scholarship    there  the  following    year. I    stared  at    Christina.    She    was    wearing  a  long   red  dress    that    completely    covered    those    beautiful    legs.    A    thin    gold    belt  emphasized    her  tiny    waist  and    the  only    jewellery    she  wore    was    a    simple  gold    necklace.    I  knew    if    I  waited    a   moment  longer  I  wouldn't  have  the    courage to  go  through  with  it.  I  clenched  my  fists,    walked  over  to  where  they  were  sitting,    and  as  you had  always  taught  me,    Father,    bowed  slightly  before  I  asked,    "May  I  have  the  pleasure  of  this dance?" 
She  stared    into    my    eyes.    I  swear  if    she  had    told   me  to    go    out    and    kill    a    thousand    men    before  I dared    ask  her  again    I  would    have    done    it. She  didn't  even  speak,    but  Greg  leaned  over  her  shoulder  and  said,    "Why  don't  you  go  and    find  yourself  a  nice  Jewish  girl?"  I  thought  I  saw  her  scowl  at  his  remark,    but  I  only  blushed    like    someone  who's    been    caught   with   their   hands    in    the  cookie  jar.    I  didn't  dance    with  anyone  that  night.    I  walked   straight    out    of    the    gymnasium  and  ran  home. 
I     was    convinced  then  that    I   hated  her. 
That  last  week  of  term    I  broke  the  school    record    for  the    mile.    You   were   there   to    watch    me    but,    thank  heavens,    she  wasn't.  That  was  the    holiday  we    drove    over    to    Ottawa  for  our    summer    vacation   with   Aunt   Rebecca.   I   was   told   by   a   school    friend    that   Christina    had    spent   hers    in  Vancouver  with  a  German  family.  At  least  Greg    had  not  gone  with  her,    the  friend  assured    me. You  went  on  reminding  me  of  the  importance  of  a  good  education,    but  you  didn't  need  to, because  every    time  I  saw    Greg    it  made  me  more  determined    to    win    that  scholarship. 
I  worked  even  harder  in  the  summer  of  '65  when  you  explained  that,    for  a  Canadian,    a  place at  McGill    was    like  going    to    Harvard    or  Oxford  and    would    clear  a    path    for  the  rest  of    my    days. 
For  the  first    time    in    my    life   running   took   second  place. 
Although    I   didn't    see    much    of   Christina  that   term   she   was   often   in   my    mind.    A    classmate    told    me  that  she  and  Greg  were  no  longer  seeing  each  other,    but  could  give  me  no    reason  for  this  sudden    change   of   heart.   At   the   time    I   had   a   so-‐called    girlfriend   who    always   sat   on    the    other    side   of   the   synagogue   -‐    Naomi  Goldblatz,    you  remember  her    -‐    but    it   was    she  who    dated    me. 
As  my  exams  drew  nearer,    I  was  grateful  that  you  always  found  time  to  go  over  my  essays and    tests    after  I  had    finished    them.    What  you    couldn't  know    was    that  I  inevitably    returned    to  my     own    room    to    do    them    a    third    time.  Often    I  would    fall  asleep    at   my    desk.   When    I    woke    I would    turn    over  the  page  and    read    on. Even  you,    Father,    who  have  not  an  ounce  of  vanity  in  you,    found  it  hard  to  disguise  from  your    congregation    the    pride    you    took  in    my    eight  straight  "A’s"    and   the   award   of   a   top    scholarship    to  McGill.    I    wondered  if   Christina  was    aware    of    it.  She  mast    have  been.    My    name  was painted  up  on  the  Honours  Board  in  fresh  gold  leaf  the  following  week,    so  someone  would have  told    her. 
*      *      * 
It    must    have    been  three    months    later    I   was    in  my   first   term  at    McGill    that    I   saw    her    next.    Do  you  remember  taking  me  to  St  Joan  at  the  Centaur  Theatre?  There  she  was,    seated  a  few  rows    in   front    of    us    with  her    parents    and  a  sophomore    called  Bob    Richards.    The    admiral    and  his    wife  looked    strait-‐laced    and   very   stern   but  not    unsympathetic.    In    the  interval    I  watched    her  laughing  and  joking  with  them:  she  had    obviously    enjoyed  herself.  I  hardly  saw  St  Joan,    and    although    I  couldn't  take  my    eyes    off    Christina    she  never  once  noticed    me.    I   just   wanted   to  be    on  the    stage    playing    the    Dauphin    so  she    would  have    to  look    up  at    me. 
When  the  curtain  came  down  she  and  Bob  Richards  left  her  parents  and  headed    for  the  exit.    I    followed  the  two  of  them  out  of  the  foyer  and  into  the  car  park,    and  watched  them  get  into  a    Thunderbird.    A  Thunderbird!    I   remember    thinking  I   might    one    day  be    able    to  afford  a    dinner    jacket,    but  never  a  Thunderbird. From    that  moment  she  was    in    my    thoughts    whenever  I  trained,    whenever  I  worked  and  even    when    I  slept.    I  found    out  everything    I  could    about  Bob    Richards    and    discovered    that  he  was    liked    by   all   who    knew    him. 
For  the  first  time  in    my    life  I  hated    being    a    Jew. 
When  I  next  saw  Christina  I  dreaded  what  might  happen.  It  was  the  start  of  the  mile  against    the    University  of  Vancouver  and    as    a    freshman    I  had    been    lucky  to  be   selected  for    McGill.    When  I  came  out  on  to  the  track  to  warm    up  I  saw  her  sitting  in  the  third  row  of  the  stand    alongside  Richards.    They    were  holding    hands. 
I     was    last    off    when  the    starter's    gun   fired  but    as    we  went    into  the    back    straight    moved  up  into    fifth    position.   It    was    the   largest    crowd  I   had  ever  run  in  front  of,    and    when  I  reached  the  home  straight  I  waited    for  the  chant  'Jew    boy!  Jew    boy!  Jew    boy!"  but    nothing    happened.    I  wondered    if   she  had    failed    to    notice  that  I  was    in    the  race.    But  she    had  noticed    because  as    I  came    round   the   bend   I   could   hear   her   voice    clearly. 
"Come  on,    Benjamin,    you've  got  to  win!"  she  shouted. 
I     wanted  to  look    back    to  make    sure    it   was    Christina  who  had  called  those    words;    it    would  be    another  quarter  of    a    mile  before  I   could  pass    her   again.    By  the  time  I  did    so    I    had    moved  up  into  third  place,    and  I  could  hear  her  clearly:  "Come  on,    Benjamin,    you  can    do    it!" 
I     immediately  took    the    lead  because    all    I   wanted  to  do  was    get    back    to  her.    I    charged  on  without  thought  of    who  was  behind  me,    and  by  the  time  I  passed  her  the  third    time  I  was  several    yards    ahead   of   the   rest. 
"You're    going  to  win!"  she    shouted  as  I   ran  on  to   reach  the    bell  in  three    minutes    eight  seconds,    eleven  seconds  faster    than  I   had  ever   done    before.    I   remember    thinking    that    they  ought  to    put  something    in    those    training  manuals    about    love    being  worth    two    to   three    seconds    a    lap. I     watched  her    all    the    way  down  the    back    straight    and  when  I   came    into  the    final    bend    for    the last    time    the    crowd    rose    to   their   feet.   I  turned  to   search  for    her. 
She  was  jumping  up  and  down  shouting,    "Look  out!  Look  out!"  which  I  didn't  understand  until    I    was    overtaken    on    the  inside  by    the  Vancouver  Number  One  string    who    the  coach    had    warned    me  was    renowned    for  his    strong     finish.    I  staggered  over    the    line    a   few  yards    behind  him    in    second    place  but  went  on    running    until    I  was    safely    inside  the  changing    room.    I    sat  alone  by  my  locker.  Four  minutes  seventeen,    someone  told  me:  six  seconds  faster  than  I    had  ever    run  before.    It    didn't    help.    I   stood  in  the  shower  for  a  long  time,    tying  to  work    out  what  could    possibly    have   changed   her   attitude. 
When  I  walked  back  on  to  the  track  only  the  ground  staff    were   still   around.  I   took    one    last    look    at   the    finishing    line   before   I   strolled   over   to   the   Forsyth    Library.    I  felt    unable   to   face    the    usual    team    get-‐together,    so  I  decided  to   settle   down  to  write    an    essay  on  the    rights    of    married    women. 
The  library    was    almost  empty    that  Saturday    morning    and    I  was    well    into    my    third    page  when    I  heard  a  voice  say,    "I  hope  I'm    not  interrupting    you  but    you  didn't    come    to  Joe's.” 
I      looked    up    to    see  Christina    standing    on    the  other  side  of    the  table. 
Father,    I  didn't  know  what  to  say.  I    just    stared  up  at    the    beautiful    creature    in  her    fashionable  blue  mini-‐skirt    and   tight-‐fitting    sweater  that  emphasised  the  most  perfect  breasts,    and  said  nothing. 
"I    was    the  one  who    shouted    'Jew    boy'  when    you    were  still    at  High    School.    I've  felt  ashamed    about  it  ever    since.    I    wanted  to  apologise  to  you  on  the    night    of    the    prom  dance    but    couldn't  summon    up    the    courage   with   Greg   standing   there." 
I     nodded  my  understanding  -‐    I   couldn't    think    of    any  words  that    seemed  appropriate. 
"I     never  spoke  to  him  again,"  she  said.  "But  I  don't  suppose    you   even   remember   Greg."    I    just    smiled. 
"Care    for    coffee?"  l  asked,    trying  to  sound  as  if  I  wouldn't  mind  if  she  replied,    "I'm  very  sorry,    I    must    get    back    to  Bob." 
"I'd  like   that    very  much,"  she    said. 
I  took  her  to  the  library  coffee  shop,    which  was  about  all  I  could  afford  at  the  time.  She  never bothered    to    explain  what  had  happened  to  Bob  Richards,    and  I  never  asked. 
Christina    seemed    to    know    so    much    about  me  that  I  felt  embarrassed.  She  asked    me  to    forgive    her   for    what    she    had   shouted   on   the   track   that   day   two   years   before.    She    made    no    excuses,    placed  the  blame  on  no  one  else,    just  asked  to  be  forgiven. Christina  told  me  she  was  hoping  to  join  me  at  McGill  in  September,    to  major  in  German.      "Bit  of  a  cheek,"  she  admitted,    "as  it  is  my  native  tongue." 
We  spent  the  rest  of  that  summer  in  each  other's  company.  We  saw    St  Joan  again,    and  even    queued    for  a    film    called    Dr  No    that  was    all    the  craze  at  the  time.    We  worked  together,    we    studied    together,    we  played  together,    but  we  slept  alone. 
I  said  little  about  Christina  to  you  at  the  time,    but  I'd  bet  you  knew  already  how    much    I  loved    her;  I  could    never    hide    anything  from  you.    And  after    all  your  teaching    of    forgiveness    and    understanding    you    could    hardly    disapprove. 
The  rabbi   paused.    His    heart  ached    because  he  knew    so    much    of  what  was    still    to    come    although    he   could    not    have    foretold    what   would   happen   in   the   end.   He   had   never    thought   he  would    live  to    regret  his    Orthodox  upbringing  but  when    Mrs    Goldblatz  first  told    him    about  Christina  he  had  been  unable  to  mask  his  disapproval.  It  will  pass,    given  time,    he    told  her.  So    much  for    wisdom. 
Whenever  I  went  to  Christina's    home    I   was   always   treated    with    courtesy    but  her  family    were  unable  to    hide  their  disapproval.    They    uttered    words    they    didn't  believe  in    an    attempt    to    show    that    they    were    not   anti-‐Semitic,    and  whenever  I  brought  up    the  subject  with    Christina    she    told    me    I    was   overreacting.   We  both  knew  I  wasn't.  They  quite   simply    thought    I   was    unworthy  of  their  daughter.  They  were  right,    but  it  had  nothing  to  do  with  my    being  Jewish. 
I     shall    never    forget    the    first   time    we    made    love.    It   was    the    day  that    Christina  learned    she    had won    a    place  at  McGill. 
We  had  gone  to  my  room    at  three    o'clock  to  change    for    a  game    of    tennis.    I   took    her    in    my  arms    for  what  I  thought  would  be  a    brief    moment  and    we  didn't  part  until    the  next    morning.    Nothing    had    been    planned.   But   how   could   it  have  been,    when  it  was  the  first    time  for  both  of  us? 
I     told  her    I   would  marry  her  -‐    don't    all    men  the    first   time?  -‐    only    I  meant  it. 
Then    a   few    weeks    later    she    missed  her    period.    I  begged  her  not  to  panic,    and  we  both    waited for    another   month    because    she   was   fearful   of   going   to   see   any   doctor   in  Montreal. If  l  had  told  you  everything  then,    Father,    perhaps  my  life  would  have  taken  a  different  course.    But  I  didn't,    and  have  only  myself  to  blame. 
I     began  to  plan  for    a  marriage    that    neither    Christina's    family  nor    you  could  possibly    have    found  acceptable,    but  we  didn't  care.  Love  knows  no  parents,    and  certainly  no  religion.    When  she    missed    her    second   period   I   agreed   Christina    should   tell   her   mother.    I   asked    her    if   she    would  like  me  to  be  with  her  at  the  time,    but  she  simply  shook  her  head,    and    explained  that  she    felt    she    had   to   face   them   on   her   own. 
"I'll  wait  here    until  you  return,"  I    promised. 
She  smiled.    "I'll    be  back  even    before  you've  had    the  time  to  change    your    mind  about marrying    me." 
I     sat    in  my  room  at    McGill    all    that    afternoon  reading  and  pacing  -‐    mostly  pacing  -‐    but    she    never  came  back,    and  I  didn't  go  in  search  of  her  until  it  was  dark.  I  crept  round  to  her    home,    all    the  while  trying    to    convince  myself    there  must  be  some  simple  explanation    as    to    why    she  hadn't  returned. When  I  reached  her  road  I  could  see  a  light  on  in  her  bedroom    but  nowhere  else  in  the  house    so  I  thought  she  must  be  alone.  I  marched  through  the  gate  and  up  to  the  front  porch,    knocked    on  the    door    and    waited. Her  father  answered    the  door. 
"What  do  you  want?"  he  asked,    his  eyes  never  leaving  me  for  a  moment.  "I    love    your    daughter,"  I    told  him,    "and  I  want  to  marry  her.    " 
"She    will   never    marry  a   Jew,"  he  said    simply    and    closed    the  door.    I  remember  that    he    didn't slam  it;  he   just  closed  it,    which  made  it  somehow  far  worse. 
l  stood    outside    in    the    road   staring   up   at   her   room   for   over   an   hour   until   the    light    went   out.    Then    I  walked    home.    I  recall    there  was    a    light  drizzle  that  night  and    few    people  were  on    the    streets.  I  tried  to  work  out  what  I  should  do  next,    although  the   situation    seemed  hopeless    to  me.    I    went   to   bed   that   night   hoping   for   a   miracle.    I   had    forgotten   that    miracles    are    for   Christians,    not  Jews. 
By    the   next   morning    I    had   worked   out   a   plan.   I   phoned    Christina's    home  at  eight  and    nearly put  the  phone  down    when    I  heard    the  voice  at  the  other  end. 
"Mrs    von   Braumer,"  she    said. 
 "Is   Christina    there?"   I   asked   in   a    whisper. 
 "No,    she's  not,"  came  back  the  controlled  impersonal  reply. 
"When    are  you    expecting    her   back?"   I  asked. 
"Not    for    some    time,"  she  said,    and  then  the  phone  went  dead. 
"Not  for  some  time"  turned  out  to  be  over  a  year.  I  wrote,    telephoned,    asked  friends  from school    and   university    but    could   never   find   out   where   they   had   taken   her. 
Then    one  day,    unannounced,    she  returned  to  Montreal  accompanied    by    a    husband    and    my    child.  I  learned  the  bitter  details  from  that  font  of  all  knowledge,    Naomi  Goldblatz,    who  had    already    seen    all    three  of    them. I   received  a  short    note    from  Christina  about    a  week    later    begging   me    not   to   make    any attempt  to    contact  her. 
I     had  just    begun  my  last    year    at    McGill    and  like   some    eighteenth-‐century    gentleman    I    honoured    her  wish    to    the  letter  and    turned    all    my    energies    to    the  final    exams.    She  still    continued    to   preoccupy    my  thoughts    and  I   considered  myself    lucky  at    the    end  of    the    year    to  be  offered    a    place  at  Harvard  Law  School. I    left  Montreal  for  Boston  on  September  12th,    1968. 
You    must  have  wondered    why    I  never  came  home  once  during    those  three  years.    I  knew    of    your  disapproval.    Thanks    to    Mrs    Goldblatz    everyone  was    aware  who    the  father  of    Christina's    child    was   and    I    felt    an    enforced   absence   might    make    life   a   little   easier    for    you. 
The  rabbi   paused    as    he  remembered    Mrs    Goldblatz  letting  him    know    what  she  had considered  was  "only    her    duty". "You're  an  interfering  old  busybody,"  he  had  told  her. By    the   following    Saturday    she   had   moved   to   another   synagogue   and   let   everyone    in    the town  know  why. He  was  more  angry  with    himself  than    with    Benjamin.    He  should    have  visited    Harvard    to  let his     son    know    that  his    love  for  him    had   not  changed.  So    much    for  his    powers    of    forgiveness.  He  took  up    the  letter  once  again. 
Throughout  those  years  at  law  school  I  had  plenty  of  friends  of  both  sexes,    but  Christina  was    rarely  out    of    my  mind  for    more    than  a   few  hours    at    a   time.    I   wrote    over    forty    letters   to  her    while  I  was    in  Boston,    but  didn't  post  one  of  them.  I  even  phoned,    but  it  was    never  her  voice  that    answered.    If   it    had   been,  I'm  not    even  sure   I   would  have    said    anything.    I   just    wanted  to  hear  her. 
Were  you  ever  curious  about  the  women  in  my  life?  I  had  affairs  with  a    bright  girl    from    Radcliffe  who  was    reading  law,    history  or  science,    and  ones  with  a  shop  assistant  who  never    read  anything.    Can  you  imagine,    in  the  very  act  of  making  love,    always  thinking  of    another    woman?  I  seemed  to  be  doing  my  work  on  autopilot,    and  soon    my    passion    for  running    became    reduced    to    an    hour's    jogging    a    day. 
Long  before  the  end  of  my  last  year,    leading  law  firms  in  New    York,  Chicago  and  Toronto    were  turning    up    to    interview  us.    The    Harvard  tom-‐toms    can  be    relied  on  to  beat    across    the    world,    but  even  I  was  surprised  by  a  visit  from  the  senior  partner  of  Graham    Douglas  &  Wilkins  of  Toronto.  It's  not  a  firm  known  for  its  Jewish  partners,    but  l  liked  the    idea  of  their  letterhead  one    day   reading  "Graham  Douglas    Wilkins    &  Rosenthal".    Even    her    father    would  surely    have   been   impressed    by   that. 
At  least  if  I  lived  and  worked  in  Toronto,    I  convinced  myself,    it  would  be  far  enough  away  for me  to  forget  her,    and  perhaps    with  luck    find    someone  I   could  feel   that    way  about. Graham   Douglas   &  Wilkins    found  me    a  spacious    apartment    overlooking  the    park    and    started    me  off  at  a    handsome  salary.    In   return   I   worked   all   the   hours   God   -‐    whoever's    God  -‐    made.    If    I  thought    they  had  pushed  me    at    McGill  or  Harvard,    Father,    it    turned  out  to  be  no  more  than  a  dry  run  for  the  real  world.  I  didn't  complain.  The  work  was    exciting,    and  the  rewards  beyond  my    expectation.  Only    now    that  I  could    afford    a   Thunderbird    l  didn't  want  one. 
New  girlfriends  came,    and  went  as    soon    as    they    talked    of    marriage.    The  Jewish    ones    usually    raised  the  subject  within  a  week,    the  Gentiles,    I  found,    waited  a  little  longer.  I  even  began    living  with  one  of  them,    Rebecca  Hertz,    but  that  too  ended  -‐    on  a  Thursday. 
I     was    driving  to    the    office    that   morning    -‐    it  must  have  been  a  little  after  eight,    which  was    late  for    me    -‐    when  I  saw  Christina  on  the  other  side  of  the  busy  highway,    a  barrier  separating    us.  She  was  standing  at  a  bus  stop  holding  the  hand  of  a  little  boy,    who  must  have  been  about    five    -‐    my  son. 
The  heavy    morning    traffic    allowed    me  a    little    longer   to   stare   in   disbelief.   I    found  that    I    wanted    to    look  at  them    both    at  once.    She  wore  a    long    lightweight  coat  that  showed    she    had    not  lost  her  figure.    Her  face  was    serene  and    only    reminded    me  why    she  was    rarely    out  of    my    thoughts.    Her  son    -‐    our    son  -‐    was    wrapped  up  in  an  oversized  duffle    coat    and  his    head  was    covered    by    a    baseball   hat   that   informed    me    that   he   supported   the    Toronto    Dolphins.  Sadly,    it  really  stopped  me    seeing  what    he    looked  like.   You  can't    be    in    Toronto,    I  remember  thinking,    you're  meant  to    be  in  Montreal.  I  watched    them    both    in    my    side-‐mirror    as  they    climbed    on    to    a   bus.    That  particular  Thursday    I  must  have  been    an    appalling  counsellor   to    every  client    who   sought  my    advice. 
For  the  next  week  I  passed    by    that  bus    stop    every    morning    within    minutes    of  the  time  I  had    seen  them   standing    there    but   never   saw   them   again.   I   began   to   wonder   if   I   had    imagined    the    whole  scene.    Then    I  spotted    Christina    again    when    I  was    returning    across    the    city,    having  visited  a   client.    She    was    on  her    own  and  I   braked  hard  as    I   watched  her    entering  a  shop  on  Bloor  Street.    This    time    I   double-‐parked    the    car    and  walked  quickly    across    the    road  -‐    feeling  like    a   sleazy   private   detective   who   spends    his   life   peeping    through    keyholes. 
What  I  saw  took  me  by  surprise  -‐    not  to  find  her  in  a  beautiful  dress  shop,    but  to  discover  it was    where  she  worked. The  moment  I  saw    that  she  was    serving    a    customer  I  hurried    back  to    my    car.    Once  I  had reached  my  office    I    asked    my    secretary  if   she    knew  of    a  shop  called    "Willing's".  My    secretary    laughed. 
"You  must  pronounce  it  the  German  way,    the  W  becomes  a  V,"  she  explained,    "thus 'Villing's'.  If  you  were    married  you  would  know  that  it's  the    most  expensive    dress  shop  in town,"  she  added. 
"Do  you  know  anything    else  about  the  place?"  I  asked,    trying    to    sound  casual. 
"Not  a  lot,"  she  said.  "Only  that  it  is  owned  by  a  wealthy  German  lady  called  Mrs  Klaus    Willing  whom    they  often  write  about  in  the  women's  magazines.  " 
I     didn't    need  to  ask  my  secretary  any  more  questions  and  I  won't  trouble  you,    Father,    with    my  detective  work.  But,    armed  with  those  snippets  of  information,    it  didn't  take  me    long  to    discover  where  Christina  lived,    that  her  husband  was  an  overseas  director  with  BMW,    and    that  they  only  had  the    one    child. 
The  old  rabbi  breathed  deeply  as  he  glanced  up  at  the  clock  on  his  desk,    more  out  of  habit    than  any    desire    to  know  the    time.    He    paused  for   a    moment    before    returning    to    the    letter.   He  had    been    so    proud    of  his    lawyer  son    then;  why  hadn't  he  made  the  first    step    towards  a    reconciliation?  How  he    would  have    liked  to  have    seen  his   grandson. 
My  ultimate  decision  did  not  require  an  acute  legal  mind,    just  a  little  common  sense  -‐    although    a    lawyer  who    advises    himself    undoubtedly    has    a    fool  for  a  client.  Contact,    I  decided,    had    to    be    direct  and    a    letter  was    the  only    method    I  felt  Christina    would    find    acceptable. 
I  wrote  a  simple  message  that  Monday  morning,    then  rewrote  it  several  times  before  I    telephoned  "Fleet    Deliveries"  and  asked  them  to  hand  it   to  her    in  person  at    the    shop.    When  the  young  man  left  with  the  letter  I  wanted  to  follow  him,    just  to  be  certain  he  had  given    it  to  the    right    person.    I    can   still   repeat    it   word  for    word.   
Dear  Christina, 
You    must  know    I  live  and    work  in  Toronto.    Can    we  meet?    I  will    wait  for  you    in    the    lounge    of   the    Royal    York    Hotel   every   evening   between   six   and   seven   this    week.    If   you    don't  come  be  assured    I  will    never  trouble  you    again. 
Benjamin 
  
I     arrived  that    evening  nearly  thirty  minutes    early.    I   remember    taking  a   seat    in  a  large impersonal    lounge    just    off    the   main    hall   and   ordering    coffee.  "Will  anyone  be  joining  you,    sir?"  the  waiter  asked. 
"I  can't  be  sure,"  I  told  him.  No  one  did  join  me,    but  I  still  hung  around  until  seven  forty. 
By    Thursday   the    waiter    had    stopped    asking    if    anyone   would  be  joining    me  as    I  sat  alone    and    allowed    yet  another  cup    of    coffer  to    grow    cold.    Every    few    minutes    I  checked    my    watch.    Each    time    a  woman  with  blonde    hair    entered  the    lounge    my  heart    leaped  but    it   was    never    the    woman    I  hoped    for. 
It    was    just    before    seven  on  Friday  that    I   finally  saw  Christina  standing  in  the    doorway.    She    wore  a    smart  blue  suit  buttoned    up    almost  to    the  neck  and    a    while  blouse  that  made  her    look  as    if    she  were  on    her  way    to    a   business    conference.    Her  long    fair    hair    was    pulled    back    behind  her  ears  to  give  an  impression  of  severity,    but  however  hard  she  tried  she  could    not    be  other  than  beautiful.    I   stood  and  raised  my  arm.    She   walked  quickly  over  and    took    the  seat  beside  me.    We    didn't    kiss   or   shake   hands   and   for    some    time    didn't    even    speak. 
"Thank  you  for  coming,"  I  said. 
"I  shouldn't  have,    it  was  foolish.  " 
Some  time  passed    before  either  of    us    spoke  again.        "Can  I   pour    you  a  coffee?"    l   asked. 
"Yes,    thank  you."      "Black?" 
"Yes." 
"You  haven't    changed." 
How    banal    it  all    would    have  sounded    to    anyone  eavesdropping.    She  sipped    her  coffee. 
I     should  have    taken  her    in  my  arms    right    then  but    I    had  no  way  of    knowing  that    that    was    what  she  wanted.    For  several    minutes    we  talked  of    inconsequential    matters,    always    avoiding  each  other's  eyes,    until  I  suddenly  said,    "Do  you  realise  that  I  still  love  you?" 
Tears  filled  her  eyes  as  she  replied,    "Of  course  l  do.  And  l  still  feel    the   same    about   you    now    as   I  did  the  day  we  parted.  And  don't  forget  I  have  to  see  you  every  day,    through    Nicholas." 
She  leaned    forward    and    spoke  almost    in    a    whisper.    She  told    me  about    the  meeting    with    her    parents    that  had    taken    place  more  than    five  years    before  as    if    we  had    not  been    parted    in    between.    Her  father  had    shown    no    anger  when    he  learned    she  was    pregnant  but  the  family    still    left   for  Vancouver  the    following  morning.  There  they  had  stayed  with  the  Willings,    a    family    also   from  Munich,    who  were  old  friends  of  the  von  Braumers.  Their  son,    Klaus,    had    always    been    besotted    with    Christina    and    didn't  care  about  her  being  pregnant,    or  even  the    fact  she  felt  nothing  for  him.  He  was  confident  that,    given  time,    it  would  all  work  out  for  the    best. 
It  didn't,    because  it  couldn't.  Christina  had  always  known  it  would  never  work,    however  hard    Claus  tried.  They    even    left  Montreal  in    an   attempt    to   make    a   go   of   it.   Klaus   bought    her    the   shop  in  Toronto  and  every  luxury  that  money  could  afford,    but  it  made  no  difference.    Their  marriage  was  an    obvious  sham.  Yet  they    could    not  bring    themselves  to    distress  their    families  further    with  a    divorce    so  they  had  led   separate    lives   from  the    beginning. 
As    soon    as    Christina    finished    her  story  I   touched  her    cheek    and  she    took    my  hand  and    kissed  it.  From  that  moment  on  we  saw  each  other  every  spare  moment  that  could  be  stolen,    day    or  night.  It  was  the  happiest  year  of  my  life,    and  I  was  unable  to  hide  from  anyone  how  I    felt. 
Our  affair  -‐    for    that's    how  the    gossips    were    describing  it   -‐    inevitably  became    public.    However    discreet  we  tried  to  be,    Toronto,    I  quickly  discovered,    is  a  very  small  place,    full  of    people  who  took    pleasure    in  informing  those    whom  we    also  loved  that    we    had  been    seen  together    regularly,    even  leaving  my  home  in  the  early  hours. 
Then    quite  suddenly    we  were  left  with    no    choice  in    the  matter:  Christina    told    me  she  was pregnant  again.  Only    this    time  it  held    no    fears    for  either  of    us. 
Once  she  had    told    Klaus  the  settlement  went  through    as  quickly    as  the  best  divorce  lawyer  at    Graham  Douglas  &    Wilkins    could    negotiate.    We  were  married    only    a    few    days    after  the  final    papers    were  signed.  We    both   regretted   that   Christina's    parents   felt   unable  to    attend    the    wedding    but  I  couldn't    understand  why  you  didn't    come. 
The  rabbi   still    could    not  believe  his    own    intolerance  and    short-sightedness.    The   demands   on    an    Orthodox     Jew    should    be   waived    if  it  meant  losing  one's    only  child.    He  had    searched    the    Talmud    in    vain    for  any  passage  that  would    allow    him    to    break  his    lifelong  vows.  In   vain. 
The  only    sad    part  of  the  divorce  settlement  was    that  Klaus    was   given    custody    of  our  child.    He    also    demanded,    in  exchange  for  a  quick  divorce,    that  I  not  be  allowed    to    see  Nicholas    before    his    twenty‐first    birthday,    and  that  he  should  not  be  told  that  I  was  his  real  father.  At  the  time    it    seemed  a  hard  price  to  pay,    even  for  such  happiness.  We  both  knew  that  we  had    been    left    with    no    choice  but  to    accept  his    terms. 
I     used  to  wonder    how  each  day  could  be    so  much  better    than  the    last.    If   I   was    apart    from  Christina    for  more  than    a    few    hours  I  always  missed    her.  If  the  firm    sent  me  out    of  town    on    business    for  a    night  I  would  phone  her  two,    three,    perhaps  four  times,    and  if  it    was  for  more  than  a    night    then  she    came    with  me.    I    remember    you  once    describing    your  love    for   my    mother  and    wondering    at  the  time  if  I  could    ever  hope  to    achieve  such    happiness. 
We  began  to  make  plans  for  the  birth  of  our  child  William,    if  it  was  a  boy ‐    her    choice;    Deborah,    if  it  was  a  girl ‐    mine.  I  painted  the  spare  room  pink,    assuming  I  had  already  won. Christina  had  to  stop  me  buying  too  many  baby  clothes,    but  I  warned  her  that  it  didn't    matter  as  we  were  going  to  have  a  dozen  more  children.  Jews,    I  reminded  her,    believed  in    dynasties. 
She  attended  her  exercise  classes  regularly,    dieted  carefully,    rested  sensibly.  I  told  her  she  was    doing    far  more  than  was  required  of  a  mother,    even  of  my  daughter.    I   asked  if   I   could  be    present  when    our  child    was  born  and  her  gynaecologist  seemed  reluctant  at  first,  but  then    agreed.    By  the  time  the  ninth  month    came  the  hospital  must  have  thought  from    the  amount  of    fuss    I  was    making    they    were  preparing    for  the  birth  of    a  royal    prince. 
I  drove  Christina  into  Women’s  College  Hospital  on  the  way  to  work  last  Tuesday.  Although  I    went  on    to    the  office  I  found    it  impossible  to    concentrate.    The  hospital    rang    in    the  afternoon    to  say  they  thought    the    child  would  be    born  early    that   evening:   obviously   Deborah    did    not    wish  to  disrupt  the  working  hours  of  Graham  Douglas  &  Wilkins.  However,    I  still  arrived    at    the    hospital    far    too  early.    I   sat    on  the    end  of    Christina's    bed  until    her    contractions    started  coming    every   minute    and   then    to    my    surprise  they    asked    me  to    leave.    They    needed    to    rupture  her  membranes,    a  nurse  explained.  I  asked  her  to  remind  the    midwife  that  I  wanted  to  be    present    to  witness    the    birth. 
I  went  out  into  the  corridor  and  began  pacing  up  and  down,    the  way  expectant  fathers    do    in    B-‐movies.    Christina's  gynaecologist  arrived    about  half  an    hour  later  and    gave  me  a    huge  smile.    I   noticed   a    cigar    in    his   top   pocket,  obviously    reserved    for  expectant  fathers. 
"It's    about    to  happen,"    was    all    he    said. 
A    second   doctor    whom  I    had    never  seen    before  arrived    a   few    minutes    later  and    went    quickly    into    her    room.    He    only   gave   me    a   nod.   I    felt   like   a   man    in   the   dock    waiting   to   hear    the    jury's    verdict. It    must    have    been  at    least    another   fifteen  minutes    before    I   saw  the    unit    being  rushed    down  the    corridor    by  a   team  of    three    young  interns.    They  didn't    even  give    me    so    much    as    a   second  glance  as    they    disappeared    into    Christina's    room. 
I     heard  the    screams    that    suddenly  gave    way  to   the    plaintive    cry  of    a  new-‐born    child.    I    thanked  my  God  and  hers.    When  the    doctor    came    out    of    her    room  I   remember    noticing  that    the    cigar    had  disappeared. 
"It's    a  girl,"  he  said    quietly.    I  was    overjoyed. 
"No  need  to   repaint    the    bedroom  immediately,"    flashed  through  my    mind.  "Can  I   see    Christina  now?"    I   asked. 
He  took  me  by    the  arm    and    led    me  across    the  corridor  and    into    his    office.    "Would    you    like  to sit    down?"   he    asked.    "I'm  afraid  I   have    some    sad    news." 
 "Is    she    all    right?" 
"I  am  sorry,    so  very  sorry,    to  tell    you  that    your    wife   is   dead." 
At    first   I   didn't    believe  him,    I  refused  to  believe  him.  Why?  Why?  I  wanted  to    scream.  "We    did  warn  her,"  he  added. 
"Warn  her?  Warn  her    of    what?" 
"That    her    blood  pressure    might    not    stand  up  to  it   a   second   time." 
Christina    had    never  told    me  what  the  doctor  went  on    to    explain    -‐    that    the    birth  of    our    first    child  had  been    complicated,    and  that  the  doctors  had  advised  her  against  becoming    pregnant  again. 
"Why  hadn't  she  told    me?"  l    demanded. 
Then    I  realized    why.    She  had    risked    everything    for  me  -‐    foolish,    selfish,    thoughtless  me  -‐    and  l had    ended    up    killing    the  one  person    I  loved. They    allowed    me  to    hold    Deborah    in    my    arms    for  just  a    moment  before  they    put  her  into    an    incubator    and    told    me    it    would   be   another   twenty‐four    hours   before   she   came    off    the    danger   list. 
You    will    never  know    how    much  it  meant  to  me,    Father,    that  you  came  to  the  hospital  so    quickly.  Christina’s  parents  arrived  later  that  morning.  They  were  magnificent.  He  begged  for  my    forgiveness ‐    begged  for  my  forgiveness.  It  could  never  have  happened,    he  kept repeating,    if  he  hadn't  been    so    stupid    and    prejudiced. 
His     wife  took  my    hand    and    asked    if  she  might  be  allowed    to    see  Deborah    from    time  to    time.    Of  course  I  agreed.    They    left  just  before  midnight.  I  sat,    walked,    slept  in  that  corridor    for  the  next  twenty-‐four    hours   until   they   told    me  that  my    daughter  was    off    the  danger  list.    She  would  have  to  remain  in  the  hospital  for  a  few  more  days,    they  explained,    but  she  was    now  managing    to    suck  milk  from    a    bottle. Christina's  father  kindly    took  over  the  funeral  arrangements. 
You    must  have  wondered    why    I  didn't  appear  and    I  owe  you    an    explanation.    I  thought  I    would    just  drop    into    the  hospital    on    my    way    to    the  funeral    so    that  I  could    spend    a    few    moments  with    Deborah.  I  had    already    transferred    my    love. The  doctor  couldn’t  get  the  words  out.  It  took    a  brave    man  to  tell   me    that    her    heart    had  stopped    beating    a    few   minutes    before   my    arrival.   Even   the   senior   surgeon    was    in   tears.    When  I  left  the  hospital  the  corridors  were  empty. 
I  want  you  to  know,    Father,    that  I  love  you  with  all  my    heart,    but  I  have  no    desire  to    spend the    rest   of    my  life    without    Christina  or    Deborah. I     only  ask    to  be    buried  beside    my  wife    and  daughter    and  to  be    remembered  as    their    husband  and    father.    That  way    unthinking    people  might  learn    from    our  love.    And    when    you    finish    this    letter,    remember  only  that  I  had  such  total  happiness  when  I  was  with  her  that    death  holds  no    fears    for  me. 
Your  son,        Benjamin. 
The  old    rabbi    placed    the  letter  down    on    the  table  in    front  of  him.    He  had    read    it  every  day for    the    last   ten   years. 
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ReplyDeleteBrings back my memories of dad reading to me very slowly...
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