by Dan Smith
‘You think we can survive out here?’
‘All you have to do is survive long enough to get to Vyriv. Keep moving, keep warm, keep to the trees and you’ll be fine. We’ll meet you and cross to Poland together.’
‘You really mean that? You’ll wait for us?’
‘For a while. But don’t tell any of the people where you’re going. Only Yuri and Dimitri.’
‘Why?’
‘Any one of them could be an informer,’ I said. ‘Any one of them could try to pass on the information.’
‘Out here?’ He looked around him.
‘Anywhere,’ I said.
‘So what do I say?’
‘Tell them you’re going to meet us – that’s enough.’
‘So what about me? What about Yuri and Dimitri? You trust us?’
‘I suppose I have to.’
30
While Evgeni and the others gathered the rifles and clothing, I prepared the horses to leave. I mounted, taking Aleksandra and Dariya, while Petro and Viktor took the second horse. We would be a heavy load for the animals, but the horses were strong and they would cope. When they grew tired we would walk for a while, give them a chance to rest.
‘What about us?’ Anatoly asked. The two soldiers were standing like abandoned children, not knowing what to do. ‘Where do we go?’
‘You can do as you please,’ I said, looking down at them. ‘But if I were you, I wouldn’t go back to Sushne. If you’re lucky, Lermentov will shoot you; maybe watch you dig your own grave first. If you’re not so lucky, maybe he’ll put you up in that bell tower for a while.’
The two soldiers looked across at Evgeni and the others preparing to leave.
‘They’ll never trust you,’ I said. ‘After what’s happened to them, they may even kill you.’ I watched them, feeling a weight in my chest. They probably had no idea how to survive alone in good weather, never mind in these conditions.
‘Please,’ Sasha said. ‘You can’t just leave us here.’ The snow was falling faster now, the flakes smaller but filling the air, covering our hats and settling on our shoulders.
‘What do you want me to do?’ I asked them.
‘Take us with you.’
‘I can’t do that.’ But I couldn’t leave them out here to die either. I closed my eyes for a moment and turned my face to the sky, feeling the cold spots on my eyelashes and lips. I had come out here to take responsibility for one small child, but now it seemed I’d collected far more along the way. Aleksandra, the refugees, and now two young soldiers who were out of their depth and afraid.
The horse was becoming restless and it shifted beneath me. I opened my eyes and leaned forward to reassure it, speaking to it, stroking the side of its neck.
‘In your shoes,’ I said to the soldiers, ‘I’d go on. Wherever you were supposed to take us, go there and hope that whoever is in charge is more forgiving than Lermentov. Maybe you can even lose yourselves at the transit prison – God knows there’ll be other prisoners and soldiers. Disappear among them. Take a train back into Russia and go home. Find your wife.’ I looked at Anatoly. ‘Go to her so that you can remember her face. It’s what I would do.’
‘And then?’
I shrugged. ‘And then find somewhere to hide. For now it’s kulaks, but soon I think there’ll be enemies of the state everywhere. Russia will suddenly be full of them, and there will be plenty of work for them all. All I can do is wish you luck.’
I turned the horse and called over to Evgeni, raising a hand to him. Evgeni nodded, lifted a hand to head height and held it there. He was still standing that way when I nudged the horse and left the road, making for the trees and the place where Viktor and Petro had left our belongings.
The horses were well-trained rugged beasts that moved without complaint. Mine worked hard beneath the extra weight, but Aleksandra and Dariya were not heavy and it walked on with little encouragement. I swayed with its movement, keeping balanced in the saddle, wedged between Dariya in front and Aleksandra behind.
There was great respite in not being on my feet, and I could feel the ache in my legs from the walking and the sting in my toes from the cold. I wanted to hurry back to Vyriv. knowing what might be happening there, but now I was back with my sons and I had found Dariya, there was a sense of relief that melted with the tiredness and the hunger and slipped around me.
‘How far?’ I asked, shaking my head and forcing myself to concentrate on following my sons. In front, the rear of the other horse moved on.
‘Not far.’ Petro turned so he could look back. I saw the profile of his head, only his nose poking between the covering of his scarves and his hat pulled low to his eyes.
‘A few minutes,’ I heard Viktor agree. ‘And we have some meat. We can make a fire, boil water, have some tea—’
‘We haven’t time for that,’ I told him. ‘We have to get home.’
‘I want to get home too,’ he said. ‘But when was the last time you ate?’
I thought back to the rabbit we’d shared and tried to remember if I had eaten since then. I could almost taste the meat now; feel something in my belly cry out for it. ‘I had some bread. Just before I left.’
‘Enough?’
‘Of course not. But we haven’t time to stop.’
‘What difference is a few minutes going to make? You need food and something hot.’
‘We need to go on,’ I said.
‘And Dariya. She needs to eat too.’
‘She can eat while we ride.’
‘She needs something warm. We all do.’
I started to protest again, but this time Aleksandra spoke from behind me. Her arms were tight around my waist, her mouth close to my ear so it sounded as if her voice was in my head.
‘You’re falling asleep,’ she said. ‘I can feel you relaxing. You’re hungry and you’re tired. And the way your face looks … Something to eat and drink will make you feel better.’
‘I feel fine.’ The blood was dried and crusted over the wounds that Lermentov had given me. My jaw hurt when I spoke, and the bruises ached when I moved.
‘Papa, you look like shit,’ Viktor said.
‘Don’t be a stubborn old man,’ Aleksandra spoke in my ear again. Then she lowered her voice. ‘Think about us. We’re depending on you. All three of us need you to be strong and fit. You’re no good to us if you’re weak and tired. Eat something. Drink something. It’ll take a few minutes, and then we’ll move on. You’ll be stronger and less likely to let us down.’
I turned to see her, look at her eyes, our faces inches apart.
‘We need you,’ she said.
I sighed and looked away. ‘All right, we’ll stop. But no more than a few minutes.’
Further into the forest we came to a place where a rotten tree had fallen, snapping low on its trunk. It lay across the ground, snow drifted against it so it formed a low wall, the perfect shelter from the wind. Viktor stopped, so I tightened my grip on the reins and halted behind him. Aleksandra slipped down as Viktor and Petro dismounted.
Petro came to me while Viktor gathered wood, breaking dry twigs from the dead tree, piling them in a pit they’d lined with stones and protected with a low wall of snow.
The way they had organised themselves was impressive. ‘You’ve done well,’ I said as Petro reached up to help Dariya from the horse.
‘We’ve only done what you taught us,’ he said, taking Dariya’s hand. ‘This is Aleksandra,’ he said to her, squatting so he was at her level. ‘I want you to stay with her for a while; can you do that?’
Dariya didn’t respond, and there was a look of sadness in Petro’s eyes.
Petro forced a smile and turned to go, but Dariya clung tight to his hand.
‘Don’t be afraid,’ he said. ‘Aleksandra is our friend. She’ll look after you.’
‘Of course I will,’ Aleksandra squatted too. ‘We’ll be like sisters.’ She reached out and took Dariya’s other hand, encouraging her towards her. ‘Come.’
Petro pulled his hand away and Aleksandra drew Dariya close to her saying, ‘We’re going to be all right now. Everything will be all right.’ But she lifted her eyes so she could look at me. ‘Luka is going to take us home. Isn’t that right?’
‘Yes,’ I said. ‘We’re all going home.’
Petro went: to the fallen tree and dusted away a covering of snow, reaching in to pull at a bundle of wood they’d leaned against it. Drawing it back, he revealed a clear area behind where they’d left the belongings they didn’t want to carry to their ambush. He removed our packs and the rifle they’d taken from the hut where the child thief lay dead.
Petro brought the rifle and handed it to me as I dismounted.
‘And the rest of his things? I asked. ‘There was a pack.’
‘We looked through it.’
‘And? What was in it?’
Petro glanced at Dariya and came closer to me, lowering his voice. ‘Old clothes, furs, a groundsheet, some dried meat—’
‘What kind?’ I was almost afraid to ask.
‘I don’t know.’
‘You didn’t eat any of it?’
‘No.’
‘Thank God.’
‘We buried everything but the rifle. There was another scalp in the pack, wrapped in cloth. Like the one we found in the tree. And there was a bottle of something that looked like blood.’
‘It explains what he left behind for us,’ I said. ‘Trophies from previous victims used as bait for new ones.’ Just like a sharpshooter wounding a man and leaving him to draw out others.
‘You think he was going to do that to the two we found?’ Petro asked.
‘Probably, but I think their father stopped him. Somehow he got them back before he could do anything more.’
‘But they were already dead.’ Petro glanced back at Dariya.
‘Maybe it was part of the game,’ I said. ‘Who knows how such a man might think. Perhaps it was another way to taunt the father. Let him see his dead children before finishing him off. Except we found him before that happened.’
‘I hope the bastard’s burning in hell.’
‘He will be’ I said. ‘You’ve done well. I’m proud of you both, Petro.’
Petro forced a smile and took the reins, hitching them to a low branch while I checked the weapon. I inspected the magazine, drew back the bolt, saw the brass casing in the breech, turned and pulled the stock firm against my shoulder. I sighted through the scope at the forest beyond. The rifle was much like the one taken by Lermentov, but this one had fired the bullet that killed Dariya’s father, and she had meted out her own punishment, taken her own revenge without knowing it. She had killed the man who murdered her father, and now she was only a shell of the little girl I had known. I was afraid she would never speak again, never see anything with the same eyes.
‘Has she said anything?’ Petro asked.
‘Not a word. She just stares.’
‘You think she’ll be all right?’
‘I don’t know. Maybe she needs her mother.’
Petro left me, going to the others, and I lowered the rifle to watch them. Aleksandra and Dariya had joined Viktor by the fire. There was a low flame among the twigs, and Viktor was laying larger pieces on it while Petro scooped snow into a tin. Aleksandra stood by, unspeaking, and Dariya clung to her hand.
‘Come and sit by the fire,’ Petro said to me as he placed the tin over the flames. ‘You look cold.’
‘I’m not cold any more.’ Feeling had returned to my feet, but the only sensation it brought was pain. My muscles ached from the hunger and the cold, and my face was sore from Lermentov’s beating.
‘Well, come and sit down anyway,’ he said. ‘Rest a moment.’
I hesitated, looking at my sons and then back out at the forest.
‘Just a short while,’ Petro said.
I was afraid to rest. I was afraid because I didn’t want to go back to that small room, or any room like it, and I didn’t want any of us to be dragged away to a Stolypin car. I wanted to keep moving, put as much distance between us and Lermentov as was possible. I had told the others that Lermentov wouldn’t come after us, that he would leave us to the weather and the wild animals, but a part of me believed that if he knew we had escaped, that two of his soldiers lay dead beneath the snow, he would send his men to find us and bring us back. He would sentence us to a life of labour so hard we would waste away in less than a year. We would be worked to death.
And there was something else I was afraid of. Something which scared me more than Lermentov and his promise of distant Gulags. I was afraid that if I stopped to rest I would lack the energy to move again.
‘We need to move on, keep watching in case they follow.’
‘You said they wouldn’t.’
‘If they do, though …’
‘We’ll watch for anyone following.’ Viktor came over to me and stood close. ‘You relax. We’re here now. Petro is warming some water; you can drink tea, wash your face.’
I put a hand to my beard and felt the places where it was matted with blood. ‘Do I look bad?’
‘You look fine, Papa.’
‘I look like a man who has been beaten,’ I said.
‘Why did they do that to you? Why did they …’ Viktor squeezed his eyes closed and shook his head. When he looked at me again, there was anger and pain and sadness in them. All of those things mixed together in a violent and poisonous brew. ‘We could go back,’ he said. ‘Go back and find the—’
‘There’s no going back,’ I told him. ‘There’s nothing good to come from that. We have to go forward. Find your mother, Lara, and then move on; get away. We can’t fight what is happening here.’
‘Maybe we should fight it. Maybe that’s what we have to do. We have to fight and show these people we won’t let them do this to us. If we just sit back and let them walk over us, we’re as good as dead. We have to stand up and show them we can’t be beaten like that.’
‘They’ve already done it, Viktor. They’ve already won.’
‘No. They’ve only won when the last of us gives up fighting them. I killed one bastard soldier today; put another ten in front of me and I’ll kill all of them too.’
‘The fighting is over. Now it’s up to us to survive. That’s all we must do. Survive.’
‘After what they’ve done to us? They take everything we own. They beat us, kill us, deport us.’
‘People are tired now, Viktor. Weak and tired.’
‘And you? You’re too tired to fight?’
‘I’m tired, yes, but too tired?’ I shook my head. ‘I don’t know. Maybe. But I’ve seen enough to know when to fight and when to get away. Now I just want to find some peace.’
‘Then we have to fight for it.’
‘No. I told you, there’s no fight we can win. What we have to do now is take care of your mother and your sister. Of Dariya over there. We have to find somewhere safe for us.’
Viktor turned to look at Dariya. ‘Why won’t she speak? She just stares and says nothing. If I have to look at her too long, I think it might drive me mad.’
‘Have some sympathy,’ I said. ‘We can’t imagine how she feels … what he must’ve done to her.’
‘I wish I’d killed him. Doing something like that to children. Cutting them and … He was a monster. I would’ve—’
‘I’ve had enough talk of killing. He’s gone now. Let’s concentrate on living.’
Viktor took a deep breath and nodded. He clenched his teeth hard, the muscles of his jaw working, and I could feel the tension in him. All the hatred.
I put my hand on him but said nothing. There are times when no words can convey feelings. Sometimes a gesture is all that can be made, a gesture that overpowers the weakness of empty words.
Viktor sniffed hard and turned away, pressing the palm of his hand against his right eye. ‘I’m sorry, Papa. I’m sorry for not coming sooner. For letting them hurt you.’
‘You didn’t let th
em do anything, Viktor. You did exactly what you had to do. What I would have done. You waited until you could win your battle, then you struck. And now I’m free, and Dariya is safe.’ I looked back at the forest. ‘All those others too. They owe you their lives.’
Viktor wiped his hand across his nose and tipped his head back to look at the treetops. He stayed like that for a while before he spoke again. ‘There’s some meat,’ he said. ‘I shot a deer yesterday and we ate well. You should have some before we leave.’
I watched him, standing silent beside me, and I wished there was something I could say to make my son feel better.
When I went to sit with them, Petro handed me a tin mug of tea, black and steaming. It was without sugar and tasted bitter, but it was good to feel its heat. It burned its way into my stomach when I swallowed and my throat stung, but it was a good sensation.
There was venison too, the thin strips of meat smoked over the fire until they were almost black. They were hard to bite into, but the flavour was unlike anything I had tasted in a long time, and I immediately felt the benefit of something good to eat. My worries about not being able to continue once I had allowed myself to rest began to subside, and I stretched my feet close to the stones surrounding the fire so the heat could dry my boots. With the hot food and the tea and the warmth, my pains were all but forgotten, and I was glad to have my sons. They had relieved some of my burden of responsibility.
‘Viktor shot the deer yesterday morning,’ Petro said. ‘He saw it through the trees and I told him to leave it, that someone in the village might hear the shot, but he was right to ignore me. He tracked it for most of the morning; let it move away before he killed it. Took what meat he could carry and brought it back.
Aleksandra and I prepared it while Viktor went back to watch the village.’
Dariya sat between Aleksandra’s legs, chewing on a strip of venison, her eyes still distant. I looked at the piece of meat she held in her small fingers and tried not to see the flesh Lermentov had unwrapped on the altar table in the church. I’d hardly even had the chance to think about the wound on her leg, I was so caught up in having found her, in keeping her with me during the march, in looking for an escape and in the arrival of my sons.