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They visited Friedrich's grave. It was beautiful and delicate and a wind wisped in the treetops. Henkin seemed in tune with the landscape. Leads a group of parents to Nabi Samuel. And Germanwriter, who never broke his own pattern and didn't let himself fall like that, stands for one hour every day and reads his novellas and stories to his dead son, and the beloved Jordana brings people to see the writer who reads his works at the grave of a boy who didn't want to read his father's works, and Renate waits with patience and love, maybe a little contempt, which she inherited from Hasha Masha but she understands, like Hasha Masha she understands their need to love like that after death which they could fix, if they were able to fear life less, and he stands and reads his works and the wind is pleasant in Bab-el-Wad, where they died in the wars and read stories to dead sons who will be brought from far away by the Holocaust Fund of the needleworkers in Cologne to help their bereaved brothers in Israel.

Once in Cologne, Ebenezer said, Germanwriter recalls: If Moses hadn't grown up in an Egyptian house, would he have been able to think of rebellion? A Hebrew would have thought about uprising and not of a rebellion that is a revolution. Only at a river with a king who's a god and whose divinity is geometric, tangential, and congruent with the laws of low tide and high tide, the moon and the sun, only there, in harsh strips of ripples of water, on the edge of the desert, could it have become clear finally that a mighty mechanics of water regulation in an arid desert is a kingdom, is the Lord, is God, the imprisonment of revolts, and from that root of a river came prison and slavery and uprisings and freedom. The river is geometrical freedom as well as eternal slavery. In the desert the Egyptian turned into the Jew. On Mount Sinai, they turn real and necessary tyranny into the anarchy of an arid wasteland that burns in the blood. They needed Moses and he, whose soul was embittered by revolt, of a hard speech and of a hard language, an ancient desert aristocrat, needed the grandsons of Jacob who were crazy for the wilderness, filled with bitterness and depression, the spirit of rocky ground of lost yearnings for a past they almost had.

And then he quoted the passage: Everything is foreseen and permission is given. He said that was the whole Torah in a nutshell. So Samuel boarded the ship Salvation and went to the Land of Israel, and at the same time he met Lionel and went to America. It was some fateful decision before he was born. It was known in circles of heaven that Samuel will die like that and not otherwise, so he had to board the Salvation, fight the British, be sent to Cyprus, ascend to the Land of Israel, be the wolf who learned to play seventeen different instruments. But permission was also given, and Sam is the permission given, so he rebelled against his blood.

Thus pondered Germanwriter in the glow of nightfall. Henkin and Hasha and Ebenezer and Fanya R. also sat in the room. All of them were over seventy except Fanya R., and nobody could know how old she was. There was a sense that everybody lived in that moment when Boaz sits in Samuel Lipker's room and something that can't be known is happening there, something nobody can imagine, although the meeting is more imperative than all the meetings discussed in the hundreds of Ebenezer's tapes, in the letters Henkin wrote to Germanwriter and German writer to Henkin, what could have been more imperative than that meeting, decreed by fate in another thousand years when the last offspring of Boaz and Sam will sit in a spaceship, on the way to the stars of Andromeda, bound to the world along with the last human beings on their way to the cosmic explosion that will come after, or before, and then at that moment that was, and may arrive, it was decided that that meeting will be and everything that happened before, including Renate, "Rhapsody in Blue," the inflation of the 'twenties, the fate of foreign subjects in the Ottoman Empire, all that happened so that Sam and Boaz will be imprisoned together in a room. The moon was full, they sat in Henkin's room, there was a clear feeling that every single one of them destroyed his loved ones and in burying them entered the grave standing up, like Secret Charity, and resided there with the loved ones who died by their hand, or whose fate was decreed by another accidental assignment, who knows, and it was clear that they're united in a dark connection whose thread was in the hands of a Captain, and now it was impossible to ask him anything, that everything is vague and yet there was life and there were nice moments and there were days and there were wonderful nights and nobody succeeds in loving somebody who deserves his love, but in running away to something like love, to be saved from the vengeance of death, that maybe Rebecca was right when she married Nehemiah and not Joseph, for everybody whoever married Joseph Rayna paid a price that is then not forgiven, anybody who married love begat offspring who owed something that couldn't be reformed. And then you find love split on the shore of Jaffa and you pick up Nehemiah and don't restore him to life and abandon Ebenezer and Boaz is born and kills Dana and begets Sam and ends with a son Noga carries inside her and will be the object of the great destruction that people carried from one generation to another to avenge the empty heaven for their love for a peculiar nation that was forgotten in ashes.

And it was that evening, Noga sat pressed to the window, they were gloomy, Rebecca phoned and was worried about Boaz. Henkin pondered and one of them, Sam or Boaz, slapped Licinda's face, and Lily started speaking German, and Lionel thought about a cookbook of medieval pilgrims like Shira Rabat- Batim, and Licinda, angry, hurting from the slap, got up and recited one tape on the moment when Kramer is tied to German soldier in a wheelbarrow, and Ebenezer sees Kramer and doesn't yet understand how a German can be hungry and Kramer refuses to eat or drink and Ebenezer envies him, hates him, is maybe liberated from him, at least he recites something to him, from somebody's mouth, about identities and exchanging identities, and Kramer waits, the hangman's rope will always find him ready to die a patriotic death withheld from many, Boaz will think, when Jordana looks at him with the chill hatred of a woman who once loved, and there is no hatred chillier, quieter, more malicious than the hatred of a betrayed woman, and Licinda, whom everybody lusts for, beautiful, lithe, and out of place, recites what Sam crammed into her and they listen, eager to know what they always knew, in love with her with an impossible love, getting her pregnant artificially like some Joseph impregnating women who was the father of them all, and Henkin says: Enough, enough, and she stops and bursts into tears and then suddenly Jordana smiles.