The Book Thief(2)





As you might expect, someone had died.



They couldnt just leave him on the ground. For now, it wasnt such a problem, but very soon, the track ahead would be cleared and the train would need to move on.



There were two guards.



There was one mother and her daughter.



One corpse.



The mother, the girl, and the corpse remained stubborn and silent.



Well, what else do you want me to do?



The guards were tall and short. The tall one always spoke first, though he was not in charge. He looked at the smaller, rounder one. The one with the juicy red face.



Well, was the response, we cant just leave them like this, can we?



The tall one was losing patience. Why not?



And the smaller one damn near exploded. He looked up at the tall ones chin and cried, Spinnst du?! Are you stupid?! The abhorrence on his cheeks was growing thicker by the moment. His skin widened. Come on, he said, traipsing over the snow. Well carry all three of them back on if we have to. Well notify the next stop.



As for me, I had already made the most elementary of mistakes. I cant explain to you the severity of my self-disappointment. Originally, Id done everything right:



I studied the blinding, white-snow sky who stood at the window of the moving train. I practically inhaled it, but still, I wavered. I buckledI became interested. In the girl. Curiosity got the better of me, and I resigned myself to stay as long as my schedule allowed, and I watched.



Twenty-three minutes later, when the train was stopped, I climbed out with them.



A small soul was in my arms.



I stood a little to the right.



The dynamic train guard duo made their way back to the mother, the girl, and the small male corpse. I clearly remember that my breath was loud that day. Im surprised the guards didnt notice me as they walked by. The world was sagging now, under the weight of all that snow.



Perhaps ten meters to my left, the pale, empty-stomached girl was standing, frost-stricken.



Her mouth jittered.



Her cold arms were folded.



Tears were frozen to the book thiefs face.





THE ECLIPSE





Next is a signature black, to show the poles of my versatility, if you like. It was the darkest moment before the dawn.



This time, I had come for a man of perhaps twenty-four years of age. It was a beautiful thing in some ways. The plane was still coughing. Smoke was leaking from both its lungs.



When it crashed, three deep gashes were made in the earth. Its wings were now sawn-off arms. No more flapping. Not for this metallic little bird.





SOME OTHER SMALL FACTS

Sometimes I arrive too early.

I rush,

and some people cling longer

to life than expected.





After a small collection of minutes, the smoke exhausted itself. There was nothing left to give.



A boy arrived first, with cluttered breath and what appeared to be a toolbox. With great trepidation, he approached the cockpit and watched the pilot, gauging if he was alive, at which point, he still was. The book thief arrived perhaps thirty seconds later.



Years had passed, but I recognized her.



She was panting.



From the toolbox, the boy took out, of all things, a teddy bear.



He reached in through the torn windshield and placed it on the pilots chest. The smiling bear sat huddled among the crowded wreckage of the man and the blood. A few minutes later, I took my chance. The time was right.



I walked in, loosened his soul, and carried it gently away.



All that was left was the body, the dwindling smell of smoke, and the smiling teddy bear.



As the crowd arrived in full, things, of course, had changed. The horizon was beginning to charcoal. What was left of the blackness above was nothing now but a scribble, and disappearing fast.



The man, in comparison, was the color of bone. Skeleton-colored skin. A ruffled uniform. His eyes were cold and brownlike coffee stainsand the last scrawl from above formed what, to me, appeared an odd, yet familiar, shape. A signature.



The crowd did what crowds do.



As I made my way through, each person stood and played with the quietness of it. It was a small concoction of disjointed hand movements, muffled sentences, and mute, self-conscious turns.



When I glanced back at the plane, the pilots open mouth appeared to be smiling.



A final dirty joke.



Another human punch line.



He remained shrouded in his uniform as the graying light arm-wrestled the sky. As with many of the others, when I began my journey away, there seemed a quick shadow again, a final moment of eclipsethe recognition of another soul gone.



You see, to me, for just a moment, despite all of the colors that touch and grapple with what I see in this world, I will often catch an eclipse when a human dies.



Ive seen millions of them.


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