Hitler's Niece
by Ron Hansen
List Price: $14.00
Pages: 320
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 0060932201
Publisher: HarperCollins

Linz,
1908
She was born in Linz, Austria,
on June 4, 1908, when Hitler was nineteen and floundering in Wien, a failure
at many things, and famished for food and attention. Within the month
she was christened as Angelika ("Ahn-GAY-leek-ah") Maria Raubal, in honor
of her mother, Angela, Hitler's half-sister, but the family was soon calling
the baby Geli ("Gaily"), as she was to be known all her life.
Hitler first saw
his niece at a Sunday-afternoon party after the June baptism in the Alter
Dom cathedral in Linz. Angela heard four hard knocks on the front screen
door and found Adolf on Bürgergasse in front of the Raubal house, looking
skeletal and pale in a high, starched collar and red silk bow tie and
the ill-fitting, soot-black suit he'd worn at his mother's funeral in
December; his wide, thin mustache so faint it seemed penciled on, his
hair as chestnut brown as her own and as short as a five-day beard. With
unquestioning love, Angela invited him in and hugged him, but it was like
holding wood. And then she saw that hurrying up Bürgergasse from the railway
station was his only friend, August Kubizek, whose father owned an upholstery
shop in Linz. Angela hugged him, too, saying, "We've missed you, Gustl."
"And I, you."
She called to the
kitchen, "Leo! Paula! Look who's here!"And then she noticed that her half-brother
held a silk top hat in his hand and was absurdly twirling a black, ivory-handled
cane, as if he were a gentleman of plenty. "Aunt Johanna's here, too,"she
said. "And the Monsignor."
"Oh, Lord,"Hitler
said.
Swerving out of
the kitchen with a tankard of beer was Leo Raubal, Angela's husband, a
flinty, twenty-nine-year-old junior tax inspector in Linz whose jacket
and tie were now off. Everything Hitler loathed about his dead father,
Leo Raubal professed to admire, and he seemed to be imitating the late
Alois Hitler as he said, "Why, it's Lazy himself! The bohemian! Rembrandt's
only rival! Aren't we honored to finally have you here!"
"Leo, be nice,"Angela
said.
"Who's nicer than
I? I'm Saint Nicholas! I'm a one-man charity!"
Hitler's twelve-year-old
sister, Paula, who suffered frequent trials with mental illness and would
be nicknamed "The Straggler,"hung back in the kitchen, winding string
around a fist and flirting a stare at Kubizek, whom she was fond of, until
Hitler held out a present to her. "I have a gift for you, Paula!"
She scuttled forward
in once white stockings and took the package, irresolutely staring at
a festive wrapping of tissue paper that Hitler had hand-painted.
"You can tear it,"he
said.
"But I don't want
to."
"Oh, for God's sake,
do it!"Leo Raubal said.
She tore off the
paper and found underneath it a fat and difficult novel, Don Quixote.
"You say the title how?"she asked. Hitler told her. She opened the book,
and inside, where she hoped for a sentimental note from the older brother
she worshiped, or even a "To My Dear Paula,"she instead found Hitler's
handwritten list of other books in history, biography, politics, and literature
that would possibly benefit her. Her face fractured with disappointment
as she said, "Thank you, Adolf,"and hurried to put Don Quixote
away.
"What a treat,"Raubal
told Hitler. "Girls really go for things like that."
"She's all right?"
Raubal touched his
head. "She's all wrong up here."
Aunt Johanna Pölzl,
the wealthy, hunchbacked, forty-five-year-old sister of Hitler's late
mother, walked down the hallway from a bedroom. She smiled. "I was taking
a nap with Leo Junior when I heard your voice, Adi."
"My favorite aunt!"he
said. "My sweetest darling! Are you feeling well?"
"Oh, just tired,"Aunt
Johanna said. "I'm used to it."She held out her left hand and he kissed
it, as did August Kubizek.
Angela got the baby
from a bassinet and held the tiny girl up to Hitler's face so he could
kiss her on the forehead.
Jiggling Geli's
left hand with his index finger, her uncle said, "Aren't you pretty?"She
gripped the finger in her fist. "Will the fräulein allow me the pleasure
of introducing myself? My name is Herr Adolfus Hitler."
"Your uncle, Angelika,"Angela
said, and shook the baby, trying to get her to smile, but Geli only stared
at his hair. "See? She loves you."
"And why not?"he
asked.
Leo Raubal called,
"August Kubizek! Would you like some good beer?"
Walking into the
kitchen, Kubizek said, "Clearly I have some catching up to do."
"Won't take but
a pitcher,"Raubal said.
Hitler stayed in
the front room as Angela gave Geli to Aunt Johanna and went into the kitchen
behind August in order to get out the potatoes in jackets. Canting back
into the pantry with a full stein of beer was a stout and white-haired
monsignor in rimless glasses and a pitch-black soutane with red buttons
and piping. "Welcome, Herr Kubizek!"he too loudly said. "Are you liking
the Conservatory of Music?"
"Very much, Monsignor."
"The child's a miracle
at music,"the old priest told Raubal, "You play, what, violin, viola,
piano.... What else?"
"Also trumpet and
trombone."
"Amadeus Mozart,"the
old priest said.
Angela got a braising
pan out of the oven and put it on an iron trivet on the kitchen table.
"We have potatoes in jackets here. And herring rolls in the icebox."
Raubal handed Kubizek
a stein of beer and a cold skillet of sliced kielbasa in ale, then focused
intently on his high forehead and his soft, feminine face. "And what does
our Adolf do in Wien while you study your music?"
"Oh, he works; very
hard. Even to two or three in the morning."
Raubal was astonished.
"At what?"
"Watercolors of
churches, parliament, the Belvedere Palace. Reading in Nordic and Teutonic
mythology. Writing of all kinds. And city planning. Adolf strolls around
the Ringstrasse in the afternoons, carefully observing, then redesigns
sections of it at night. Amazing . . .
Excerpted from Hitler's Niece © Copyright 2009 by Ron Hansen. Reprinted with permission by HarperCollins. All rights reserved.
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