In the stillness of a teacup morning in Amsterdam a crowd with yellow stars query each other, a collapse of suitcases and stuffed pillow cases huddled under a gas lamp at a corner square, while those in the stories above slowly turn away.
A few days before the yellow stars were twenty-one children with backpacks dreaming of a long field trip to Deventer. The school picture they posed for would be discovered fifty-four years later under the frame of an oil painting of the freedom monument in Dam Square.
Sieg, wandering in the fog of Bergen-Belsen his classmates part of the mound of George Rodgers well published frieze, the only one of them not camera shy, made it back to his mother and sister, forever now a New York Jew.
Before them the square hosted the frail bones of yellow star seniors, their children depositing them silently and hurriedly under the hiss of the lamp shutting off from the night watch.
Daan sewed the photo of his yellow star grootmoeder on a wooden chair staring into the sun into the lining of his jacket and felt its pressure on the day when the train arrived for him too.
The freight train to the Westbrook stockyard the stench of manure, ****, fetid hay, the old scent of cattle mingling with man, fear embedded in every board, was, as always, on time.