Erich informed me that his aunt's farm was just a few more hours away. He was ecstatic, giddy with the thought of companionship, and frequently told me so. I was thrilled as well, but it had been so long since I had last felt joy, I could not fully break free from my melancholy state of mind. My heart alternately raced with excitement and terror at my decision. I could find little comfort except in the calming nature of Erich's smile. Each time his face split into a grin I admired the accompanying twinkle in his eye, and was warmed as if by the sun.
We spent the remainder of the journey talking together in the compartment. I told him something of my lifeβmy happy childhood, my decision to attend school only to be called back home when my grandmother fell ill, and my determination to become a nurse after I heard news that Germany had declared war. I told him of the eighteen months of strenuous medical training that I had undergone, and of my eventual placement with the Convent of Saint Nicholas. I told him of the verbal abuse I had endured from the nuns, and of the licentiousness of the patients. By the time I had finished divulging my story, he was speechless. He shook his head and promised that I would not have to return to such a life.
As the day wore on, I was reassured by the constancy of his company. We sometimes sat quietly together, other times we exchanged stories, and every so often, he turned to kiss me. I had been kissed by others, but Erich's kisses were something beyond what I had experienced in my school days. His lips were soft, and the short whiskers on his cheeks and chin scratched against my face. He held me firmly, but his touch was tender. For the first time I felt as though I was with a man, not a boy.