THE BOYS IN THE STRIPED PAJA

THE BOYS IN THE STRIPED PAJA
The Fury's



Some months earlier, just after Father received the new uniform which


mean that everyone had to call him 'Commandant' and just before Bruno


came home to find Maria packing up his things, Father came home one


evening in a state of great excitement, which was terribly unlike him, and


marched into the living room where Mother, Bruno and Gretel were sitting


reading their books.


'Thursday night, ' he announced. 'If we've any plans for Thursday night we


have to cancel them.'


'You can change your plans if you want to, ' said Mother, 'but I've made


arrangements to go to theatre with'


'The Fury has something he wants to discuss with me, ' said Father, who


was allowed to interrupt Mother even if no one else was. I just got a phone


call this afternoon's. The only time he can make it is Thursday evening and he's


invited himself to dinner.'


Mother's eyes opened wide and her mouth made the shape of an O. Bruno


starred at her and wonder where this was what he looked like when he


I was surprised about something.


'But you're not serious, ' said Mother, growing a little pale. 'He's coming


here's? To our house?'


Father nodded's. 'At seven o'clock, ' he said. 'So we'd better think about


something special for dinner.'


'Oh my, ' said Mother, her eyes moving back and forth quickly as she


starting to think of all the things that need to be done.


'Who's the Fury?' bruno Asked.


'You're pronouncing it wrong,' said Father, pronouncied it correctly for


him.


'The Fury, ' said Bruno again, trying to get it right but failing again.


'No, ' said Father, 'the Oh, never mind!'


'Well, who is he anyway?' bruno Again Asked.


Father stared at him, astonished. 'You know perfectly well who the Fury


is, ' he said.


'I don't, ' said Bruno.


He runs the country, idiot,' said Gretel, showing off as sisters tend to do.


(It was things like this that made her such a Hopeless Case.) 'Don't you ever


read a newspaper?'


'Don't call your brother an idiot, please, ' said Mother.


'Can I call him stupid?'


Td rather you didn't.'


Gretel sat down again, disappointed, but stuck her tongue out at Bruno


nonethelial.


'Is he coming alone?' asked Mother's.


'I forgot to ask, ' said Father. 'But I presume he'll be bringing her with


him.'


'Oh my, ' said Mother again, standing up and counting in her head the


number of things she had to organize before Thursday, which was only two


away evenings. The house would have to be cleaned from top to bottom, the


windows washed, the dining-room table stained and varnished, the food


ordered, the maid's and butler's uniforms washed and pressed, and the


crockery and glasses polished until they sparkled.


Somehow, despite the fact that the list seemed to grow longer and longer


all the time, Mother managed to get everything finished on time, enough she


added over and over again that the evening would be a greater success


if some people helped out a little bit more around the house.


An hour before the Fury was due to arrive Gretel and Bruno were


brought downstairs, where they received a rare invitation into Father's office.


Gretel was wearing a white dress and knee socks and her hair had been


twisted into corkscrew curls. Bruno was wearing a pair of dark brown


shorts, a plain white shirt and a dark brown tie. He had a new pair of shoes


for the occasion and was very proud of them, even though they were too


small for him and were pinching his feet and making it difficult for him to


walk. All these preparations and fine clothes seemed a little extravagant, all


the same, because Bruno and Gretel were invited to dinner; they had


eaten an hour.


'Now, children,' said Father, sitting behind his desk and looking from his


son to his daughter and back again as they stood before him. 'You know that


there is a very special evening ahead of us, don't you?'


They nodded's.


'And that it is very important for my career that tonnage goes well.' Thesy


nodded again's.


'When there is a number of ground rules which need to be set down


before we begin.' Father was a big buyever in ground rules. Whenever


was a special or important occasion in the house, more of them were created.


'Number one, ' said Father. 'When the Fury arrives you will stand in the


hall quietly and prepare to greet him. You do not speak until he speaks to you


and then you reply in a clear tone, enunciating each word precisely. Is that


understood?'


'Yes, Father, ' Mumbled Bruno.


'That's precisely the type of thing we don't want, ' said Father, referring to


mumbling. 'You open your mouth and speak like an adult. The last thing


we need is for either of you to start behaving like children. If the Fury


ignores you then you do not say anything either, but look directly ahead and


show him the respect and courtesy that such a great leader desires.'


'Of course, Father,' said Gretel in a very clear voice.


'And when Mother and I are at dinner with the Fury, you are both to


remember in your rooms very quietly. There is no running around, no


sliding down banisters'-and here he looked very liberately at Bruno-'and


no interrupting us. Is that understood? I don't want either of you causing


chaos.'


Bruno and Gretel nodded and Father stood up to indicate that this meeting


the was at an end.


'Then the ground rules are established, ' he said.


excitements. Bruno and Gretel took their places standing side by side


staircase and Mother waited beside them, wringing her hands together


nervously. Father gave them all a quick glance and nodded, looking pleased


by what he saw, and then opened the door.


Two people stood outside: a rather small man and a taller woman.


Father saluted them and used them inside, where Maria, her head


bowed even lower than usual, look their coats and the introductions were


made. They spoke to Mother first, which gave Bruno an opportunity to


at their guests and decided for himself while they deserved all the fuss being


the made of them.


The Fury was far shorter than Father and not, Bruno supposed, quite as


strong's. He had dark hair, which was cut quite short, and a tiny moustache-so


tiny in fact that Bruno wonder why he bothed with it at all or while he


had simply forgotten a piece when he was shaving. The woman standing by him, however, was quite the most beautiful woman he had ever seen


in his life's. She had blonde hair and very red lips, and while the Fury spoke to


Mother she turned and looked at Bruno and smiled, making her go red with


embarrassments.


'And these are my children, Fury, ' said Father as Gretel and Bruno


stepped forward's. 'Gretel and Bruno.'


'And which is which?' the Fury said, which made everyone laugh except


for Bruno, who thought it was perfectly obvious who was who and hardly


cause for a joke. The Fury stretched out his hand and shook theirs and Gretel


gave a careful, rehearsed curtsy. Bruno was delighted when it went wrong


she almost fell over.


'What charming children, ' said the beautiful blonde woman. 'And how old


are they, might I ask?'


'I'm twelve but he's only nine, ' said Gretel, looking at her brother with


indwelt. 'And I can speak French too, ' she added, which was not strict


speaking true, though she had learned a few phrases in school.


'Yes, but why would you want to?' asked the Fury, and this time no one


laughed; instead they shifted uncomfortably from foot to foot and Gretel


stared at him, element when he wanted an answer or not.


The matter was resolved quickly, however, as the Fury, who was the


rudest guest Bruno had ever witnessed, turned round and walked directly into


the dining room and promptly sat down at the head of the table-in Father's


seat!-without another word. A little flustered, Mother and Father followed


him inside and Mother gave instructions to Lars that he could start heating up


soup.


'I can speak French too, ' said the beautiful blonde woman, leaning down


smiling at the two children. She didn't seem to be as frightened of the


Fury as Mother and Father. 'French is a beautiful language and you are


very clever to be learning.'


'Eva,' fired the Fury from the other room, clicking his fingers as if she


were some sort of puppy dog. The woman rolled her eyes and stood up


slowly and turned round.


'I like your shoes, Bruno, but they look a little tight on you, ' she added


with a smile. 'If they are, you should tell your mother, before they cause you


to injure yourself.'


'They are a little tight, ' admitted Bruno.


'I don't normally wear my hair in curls, ' said Gretel, jealous of the


attention that her brother was getting.


'But why not?' asked the woman. 'It's so pretty that way.'


'Eva!' roared the Fury for a second time, and now she started to walk


away from them.


It was lovely to meet you both, she said, before stepping into the dining


room and sitting down on the Fury's left-hand side. Gretel walked towards


the stories but Bruno stayed rooted to the ground, watching the blonde woman


until she caught his eye again and wave at him, just as Father appeared and


closed the doors with a jerk of his head-from which Bruno understood that it


was time to go to his room, to sit quietly, and not to make anything noise and


specifically not to slide down any banisters.


The Fury and Eva stayed for the best part of two hours and next Gretel


nor Bruno were invited downstairs to say goodbye to them. Bruno watched


they leave from his bedroom window and notice that when they are stepped


towards their car, which he was impressed to see had a chauffeur, the Fury


did not open the door for his companion but instead climbed in and started


reading a newspaper, while she says goodbye once again to Mother and


thank her for the lovely dinner.


What a terrible man, thought Bruno.


Later that night Bruno overheard snippets of Mother and Father's


conversations. Certain phrases drifted through the keyhole or under the door


of Father's office and up the staircase and round the landing and under the


the Door of Bruno's bedroom. Their voices were unexpectedly loud and Bruno could


just make out a few fragments of them:


'... to leave Berlin. And for such a place...' Mother was saying.


'... no choice, at least not if we want to continue.' said Father.


'... as if it's the most natural thing in the world and it's not, it's just not...'


said Mother's.


'... what would happen is I would be taken away and treated like a.' said.


Fathers.


'... expect them to grow up in a place like.' said Mother.


'... and that's an end to the matter. I don't want to hear another word on the


subject.' said Father.


That must have been the end of the conversation because Mother left


Father's office then and Bruno fell asleep.


A couple of days later he came home from school to find Maria standing


in his bedroom, pulling all his belongings out of the wardrobe and packing


them in four large wooden crates, even the things he'd hidden at the back that


belong to him and were nobody else's business, and that is where the story is


began's.