2 - Helmut and Ernst
Schweich -- 1912-1933
In 1910, daughters of certain immigrant families, known as ‘chippies,’ were known to be ‘easy.' Before the advent of refrigeration, many lonely housewives asserted their sexuality when the iceman came.
In 1918, H. L. Mencken railed in ‘In Defense of Women’ against the sexual ‘double standard’--“What these virtuous beldames actually desire, is not that the male be reduced to chemical purity, but that the franchise of dalliance be extended to themselves.”
☼
Dietrich Schweich
was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Marge was born in Munich , Germany .
They met in Hamburg ,
while attending an engineering convention. In 1912, after a whirlwind romance,
Marge steamed to America
and they were married in the Lutheran church.
With the outbreak of World War I, the family could sense
suspicious eyes trained upon them when they traveled to more Anglican
districts. Suspicions turned to public ridicule, when the body bags returned
from the frontline trenches. Dietrich was not allowed to travel overseas.
☼
At 1:24 pm, on October 29 of 1920, Marge Schweich almost choked
to death suppressing her orgasmic scream as Al the iceman exploded into her,
almost cracking the entry door that he pressed her against.
Marge, “Oh Got! I vish Dietrich should explode like zat. Not
since Herman, my lifeguard lover in Antwerp--ten years! Where do use find such
power?”
Al, “It’s secret. I love my job. I sit on blocks of ice all
day. When my balls sense the heat of a needy woman, I go mad with lusty drive.”
Marge, “You come so forcefully, I fear I get baby.”
“Not to worry. We always do it stand up. Gravity protects us.”
☼
In Germantown, Pennsylvania, on July 31, 1921, Marge gave
Dietrich a son, Ernst.
Al had been relocated to Erie.
Dietrich had no idea that he was sterile. He adored his son. He
said he could see that his son engendered German superiority, from his large
cranium to his square shoulders. Marge never told Dietrich the truth.
☼
At the conclusion of World War I, the family moved to
Philadelphia, where Dietrich had landed a profitable position with the large
engineering firm of Pennwerks, International. Dietrich continued to make
frequent voyages to European industrial centers--often returning to Germany,
where he found a mistress, Fraulein Eva Benz.
☼
Meanwhile, Ernst was now exposed to a more diverse education.
While Marge and the German school indoctrinated him into the German high
culture, they could not escape the fact that they were living in the birthplace
of the democracy of the United
States . Even the German school offered field
trips to see the Liberty Bell, Congress in session, and the Lincoln Memorial.
Ernst developed strong identification with both the United States
and Germany.
☼
When Post-World War I resentments had cooled, Uncle Helmut
emigrated from Berlin. Helmut had recently been asked to step down as dean of
the university department of philosophy. The family never talked about why
Helmut had lost his post.
Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays Helmut instructed Ernst on his
wrathful and vengeful God. Tuesdays and Thursdays the lectures were on such
Greek philosophers as Aristotle and Plato.
☼
Dietrich spent more and more time in Germany and Helmut assumed
the role of father figure to Ernst.
☼
When the stock market crashed, Marge sold whatever she could. Helmut,
who owned a large amount of gold bullion, in an effort to ‘make amends’ for his
mysterious former life in Germany, vowed to look after his younger brother’s
family. He moved the family to Chicago .
Dietrich elected to remain in Berlin: he had worked summers, in
Norway, to raise the money for his tuition.
☼
Helmut spun yarns about copper mining near Bodö, and yarns about sardine fishing
for several days at a time in the Norwegian Sea. It was easy for him to capture
the young boy’s attention. Ernst was always asking Helmut about northern native
handicrafts and oil paintings of Norway that decorated Helmut’s room.
☼
The Crash polarized the nation. Democratic capitalism lay prone
on the altar of history. Various Fascist, Communist, and Christian movements
vied for the honor of dealing the deathblow.
☼
On October 20 of 1931, Hitler addressed a Nazi Party rally in
Bad Harzburg, Germany. He demanded the resignation of the government.
☼
Helmut joined the local German American Bund--a propaganda
machine for the Nazis.
☼
When Franklin Delano Roosevelt took the oath of office, March
4, 1933, the stock market had begun gradual recovery destined to last until 1937.
Although the masses were still broke, the Schweich family had reason to
rejoice. Marge had become accustomed to living with Helmut, who never made an
improper advance to her. Helmut dominated Ernst’s paternal life. Helmut began
to invest--ELECTRIC BOND AND SHARE, RADIO CORPORATION OF AMERICA, REMINGTON
RAND, and UNITED STATES STEEL. He also speculated in wheat and corn futures.
Helmut’s spirits rose with his profits.
☼
Roosevelt created the Civilian Conservation Corps as a device
to keep unemployed men from turning to subversive organizations.
☼
On January 31 of 1933, Hitler was installed as chancellor of
Germany.
Helmut listened to the news on his RCA radio.
Helmut’s mood became unexplainably giddy.
☼
March 3, while chinning himself on the galvanized shower
curtain rod, Ernstdie experienced his first ejaculation. One minute he was
rising to the bar--his entire body quivering. The next he was shooting a white
stream through the air.
Marge was downtown, but Helmut was home reading his favorite
zeitung.
It was a mess to clean--all sticky and smelly. Ernstdie had to take
a shower and change his shorts.
Helmut heard the noise. When Ernst finally came out of the
bathroom with a sheepish look, Helmut went in to inspect and detected his
favorite scent.
☼
The next time Marge went downtown, Helmut took Ernst aside. “I
know vat you deed in zee bat room. Eat’s alright. Eat’s normal. Eat’s part of
growing up. Vee had dat problem a lot on zee fishing boats and at zee copper
mines.”
Ernst, “How can I deal with it?”
“I vill help.”
At that, Helmut unzipped Ernstdie’s pants and mouthed the boy
to an erection. Ernstdie could not stop him because it felt so good and he did
not know it was wrong.
“Now you do me!”
Ernst reciprocated.
Helmut smiled, “Any time Momma goes away vee can do it again,
but vee must not tell her!”
☼
That evening at dinner, Marge asked about Ernstdie’s mood
change.
Helmut dismissed her. “Ach! He ease yust growing up fraulein.”
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