"Long fingers," she says, noticing my stare, "better for making munitions than playing Mozart, I guess. Oh, but it is good to see you, Gerta. You look well."
I laugh sardonically. "It's okay, Roza, you don't have to lie. I can't seem to gain any weight. Anyway, you must've gotten into the clothing line early. That's a pretty dress."
"The orchestra would be incomplete without the viola. It is the soul of the orchestra. You may not always be able to discern its sound, but you always know when it is missing."
belonging to or characteristic of non-Jewish peoples
"Well, you have to face it. There's a past here, but no future. In a Jewish homeland, we have both. It's the only place we can go. And if enough of us join together, we can protect each other. Our own army, our own schools, where we don't always have to convince our neighbors that we don't, in fact, poison wells or make matzo with the blood of gentile children. Where this can't possibly happen again. Haven't you ever thought about it?"
"There was a boy in my choir, Rudolf. We liked each other. A lot. He asked his parents if he could study viola with my father just so he could come to my house. He'd stand there staring stupidly at me the whole time. But just like that, he stopped coming, with no explanation. Maybe he moved on to another girl. Boys are fickle. It's like my father used to say: 'The only constant in this world is change.'"