Page 143 - The Book Thief
P. 143

She started to run, to Grande Strasse and the mayors house.



               Certainly, there was sweat, and the wrinkled pants of breath, stretching out in
               front of her.


               But she was reading.


               The mayors wife, having let the girl in for the fourth time, was sitting at the
               desk, simply watching the books. On the second visit, she had given permission
               for Liesel to pull one out and go through it, which led to another and another,
               until up to half a dozen books were stuck to her, either clutched beneath her arm
               or among the pile that was climbing higher in her remaining hand.


               On this occasion, as Liesel stood in the cool surrounds of the room, her stomach
               growled, but no reaction was forthcoming from the mute, damaged woman. She
               was in her bathrobe again, and although she observed the girl several times, it
               was never for very long. She usually paid more attention to what was next to her,

               to something missing. The window was opened wide, a square cool mouth, with
               occasional gusty surges.


               Liesel sat on the floor. The books were scattered around her.


               After forty minutes, she left. Every title was returned to its place.


               Goodbye, Frau Hermann. The words always came as a shock. Thank you. After
               which the woman paid her and she left. Every movement was accounted for, and
               the book thief ran home.


               As summer set in, the roomful of books became warmer, and with every pickup
               or delivery day the floor was not as painful. Liesel would sit with a small pile of

               books next to her, and shed read a few paragraphs of each, trying to memorize
               the words she didnt know, to ask Papa when she made it home. Later on, as an
               adolescent, when Liesel wrote about those books, she no longer remembered the
               titles. Not one. Perhaps had she stolen them, she would have been better
               equipped.


               What she did remember was that one of the picture books had a name written
               clumsily on the inside cover:
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