THE BOYS IN THE STRIPED PAJAMAS

THE BOYS IN THE STRIPED PAJAMAS
Bruno Makes a Discovery


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One afternoon, when Bruno came home from school, he was surprised to


find Maria, the family's maid-who always kept her head bowed and never


looked up from the carpet-standing in his bedroom, pulling all his belongings


out of the wardrobe and packing them in four large wooden crates, even the


things he'd hidden at the back that belonged to him and were nobody else's


business.


'What are you doing?' he asked in as polite a tone as he could muster, for


although he wasn't happy to come home and find someone going through his


possessions, his mother had always told him that he was to treat Maria


respectfully and not just imitate the Way Father spoke to her. 'You take your


hands off my things.'


Maria shook her head and pointed towards the staircase behind him,


where Bruno's mother had just appeared. She was a tall woman with long red


hair that she bundled into a sort of net behind her head, and she was twisting


her hands together nervously as if there was something she didn't want to


have to say or something she didn't want to have to believe.


'Mother,' said Bruno, marching towards her, 'what's going on? Why is


Maria going through my things?'


'She's packing them,' explained Mother.


'Packing them?' he asked, running quickly through the events of the


previous few days to consider whether he'd been particularly naughty or had


used those words out loud that he wasn't allowed to use and was being sent


away because of it. He couldn't think of anything though. In fact over the last


few days he had behaved in a perfectly decent manner to everyone and


couldn't remember causing any chaos at all. 'Why?' he asked then. 'What have


I done?'


Mother had walked into her own bedroom by then but Lars, the butler,


was in there, packing her things too. She sighed and threw her hands in the


air in frustration before marching back to the staircase, followed by Bruno,


who wasn't going to let the matter drop without an explanation.


'Mother,' he insisted. 'What's going on? Are we moving?'


'Come downstairs with me,' said Mother, leading the way towards the


large dining room where the Fury had been to dinner the week before. 'We'll talk down there.'


Bruno ran downstairs and even passed her out on the staircase so that he


was waiting in the dining room when she arrived. He looked at her without


saying anything for a moment and thought to himself that she couldn't have


applied her make-up correctly that morning because the rims of her eyes


were more red than usual, like his own after he'd been causing chaos and got


into trouble and ended up crying.


'Now, you don't have to worry, Bruno,' said Mother, sitting down in the


chair where the beautiful blonde woman who had come to dinner with the


Fury had sat and waved at him when Father closed the doors. 'In fact if


anything it's going to be a great adventure.'


'What is?' he asked. 'Am I being sent away?'


'No, not just you,' she said, looking as if she might smile for a moment but


thinking better of it. 'We all are. Your father and I, Gretel and you. All four of


us.'


Bruno thought about this and frowned. He wasn't particularly bothered if


Gretel was being sent away because she was a Hopeless Case and caused


nothing but trouble for him. But it seemed a little unfair that they all had to go


with her.


'But where?' he asked. 'Where are we going exactly? Why can't we stay


here?'


'Your father's job,' explained Mother. 'You know how important it is,


don't you?'


'Yes, of course,' said Bruno, nodding his head, because there were


always so many visitors to the house-men in fantastic uniforms, women with


typewriters that he had to keep his mucky hands off-and they were always


very polite to Father and told each other that he was a man to watch and that


the Fury had big things in mind for him.


'Well, sometimes when someone is very important,' continued Mother,


'the man who employs him asks him to go somewhere else because there's a

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very special job that needs doing there.'


'What kind of job?' asked Bruno, because if he was honest with himselfwhich he always tried to be-he wasn't entirely sure what job Father did.


In school they had talked about their fathers one day and Karl had said


that his father was a greengrocer, which Bruno knew to be true because he


ran the greengrocer's shop in the centre of town. And Daniel had said that his


father was a teacher, which Bruno knew to be true because he taught the big boys who it was always wise to steer clear of. And Martin had said that his


father was a chef, which Bruno knew to be true because he sometimes


collected Martin from school and when he did he always wore a white


smock and a tartan apron, as if he'd just stepped out of his kitchen.


But when they asked Bruno what his father did he opened his mouth to


tell them, then realized that he didn't know himself. All he could say was that


his father was a man to watch and that the Fury had big things in mind for


him. Oh, and that he had a fantastic uniform too.


'It's a very important job,' said Mother, hesitating for a moment. 'A job


that needs a very special man to do it. You can understand that, can't you?'


'And we all have to go too?' asked Bruno.


'Of course we do,' said Mother. 'You wouldn't want Father to go to his


new job on his own and be lonely there, would you?'


'I suppose not,' said Bruno.


'Father would miss us all terribly if we weren't with him,' she added.


'Who would he miss the most?' asked Bruno. 'Me or Gretel?'


'He would miss you both equally,' said Mother, for she was a great


believer in not playing favourites, which Bruno respected, especially since


he knew that he was her favourite really.


'But what about our house?' asked Bruno. 'Who's going to take care of it


while we're gone?'


Mother sighed and looked around the room as if she might never see it


again. It was a very beautiful house and had five floors in total, if you


included the basement, where Cook made all the food and Maria and Lars sat


at the table arguing with each other and calling each other names that you


weren't supposed to use. And if you added in the little room at the top of the


house with the slanted windows where Bruno could see right across Berlin if


'We have to close up the house for now,' said Mother. 'But we'll come


back to it someday.'


'And what about Cook?' asked Bruno. 'And Lars? And Maria? Are they


not going to live in it?'


'They're coming with us,' explained Mother. 'But that's enough questions


for now. Maybe you should go upstairs and help Maria with your packing.'


Bruno stood up from the seat but didn't go anywhere. There were just a


few more questions he needed to put to her before he could allow the matter


to be settled. 'And how far away is it?' he asked. 'The new job, I mean. Is it further than


a mile away?'


'Oh my,' said Mother with a laugh, although it was a strange kind of laugh


because she didn't look happy and turned away from Bruno as if she didn't


want him to see her face. 'Yes, Bruno,' she said. 'It's more than a mile away.


Quite a lot more than that, in fact.'


Bruno's eyes opened wide and his mouth made the shape of an O. He felt


his arms stretching out at his sides like they did whenever something


surprised him. 'You don't mean we're leaving Berlin?' he asked, gasping for


air as he got the words out.


'I'm afraid so,' said Mother, nodding her head sadly. 'Your father's job is-'


'But what about school?' said Bruno, interrupting her, a thing he knew he


was not supposed to do but which he felt he would be forgiven for on this


occasion. 'And what about Karl and Daniel and Martin? How will they know


where I am when we want to do things together?'


'You'll have to say goodbye to your friends for the time being,' said


Mother. 'Although I'm sure you'll see them again in time. And don't interrupt


your mother when she's talking, please,' she added, for although this was


strange and unpleasant news, there was certainly no need for Bruno to break


the rules of politeness which he had been taught.


'Say goodbye to them?' he asked, staring at her in surprise. 'Say goodbye


to them?' he repeated, spluttering out the words as if his mouth was full of

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biscuits that he'd munched into tiny pieces but not actually swallowed yet.


'Say goodbye to Karl and Daniel and Martin?' he continued, his voice coming


dangerously close to shouting, which, was not allowed indoors. 'But they're


my three best friends for life!'


'Oh, you'll make other friends,' said Mother, waving her hand in the air


dismissively, as if the making of a boy's three best friends for life was an


easy thing.


'But we had plans,' he protested.


'Plans?' asked Mother, raising an eyebrow. 'What sort of plans?'


'Well, that would be telling,' said Bruno, who could not reveal the exact


nature of the plans-which included causing a lot of chaos, especially in a few


weeks' time when school finished for the summer holidays and they didn't


have to spend all their time just making plans but could actually put them into


effect instead. 'I'm sorry, Bruno,' said Mother, 'but your plans are just going to have to


wait. We don't have a choice in this.'


'But, Mother!'


'Bruno, that's enough,' she said, snapping at him now and standing up to


show him that she was serious when she said that was enough. 'Honestly,


only last week you were complaining about how much things have changed


here recently'


'Well, I don't like the way we have to turn all the lights off at night now,'


he admitted.


'Everyone has to do that,' said Mother. 'It keeps us safe. And who knows,


maybe we'll be in less danger if we move away. Now, I need you to go


upstairs and help Maria with your packing. We don't have as much time to


prepare as I would have liked, thanks to some people.'


Bruno nodded and walked away sadly, knowing that 'some people' was a


grown-up's word for 'Father' and one that he wasn't supposed to use himself.


He made his way up the stairs slowly, holding onto the banister with one


hand, and wondered whether the new house in the new place where the new


job was would have as fine a banister to slide down as this one did. For the


banister in this house stretched from the very top floor-just outside the little


room where, if he stood on his tiptoes and held onto the frame of the window


tightly, he could see right across Berlin-to the ground floor, just in front of the


two enormous oak doors. And Bruno liked nothing better than to get on board


the banister at the top floor and slide his way through the house, making


whooshing sounds as he went.


Down from the top floor to the next one, where Mother and Father's room


was, and the large bathroom, and where he wasn't supposed to be in any


case.


Down to the next floor, where his own room was, and Gretel's room too,


and the smaller bathroom which he was supposed to use more often than he


really did.


Down to the ground floor, where you fell off the end of the banister and


had to land flat on your two feet or it was five points against you and you had


to start all over again.


The banister was the best thing about this house-that and the fact that


Grandfather and Grandmother lived so near by-and when he thought about


that it made him wonder whether they were coming to the new job too and he


presumed that they were because they could hardly be left behind. No one needed Gretel much because she was a Hopeless Case-it would be a lot


easier if she stayed to look after the house-but Grandfather and Grandmother?


Well, that was an entirely different matter.


Bruno went up the stairs slowly towards his room, but before going


inside he looked back down towards the ground floor and saw Mother


entering Father's office, which faced the dining room-and was Out Of Bounds


At All Times And No Exceptions-and he heard her speaking loudly to him


until Father spoke louder than Mother could and that put a stop to their


conversation. Then the door of the office closed and Bruno couldn't hear any


more so he thought it would be a good idea if he went back to his room and


took over the packing from Maria, because otherwise she might pull all his


belongings out of the wardrobe without any care or consideration, even the


things he'd hidden at the back that belonged to him and were nobody else's

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business.


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