Authors: Dan Smith
The wind rushed around us, pulling at the weaknesses in our clothing, freezing the dampness and probing any unprotected area. I carried only my satchel and my rifle, both of them banging against my back as I ran. And even under the cover of the storm, I found myself dreading the singular and unmistakable sound of a gunshot. But none came.
Petro was the first into the trees, just a smudge in the blizzard
ahead of me and Viktor. His shape disappeared among the stumps, followed by that of his brother, and then we were all in safety, coming out of the worst of the weather and into the relative quiet of the woods.
We moved further in before I called to them to stop.
âWe'll make a fire,' I said. âDry out.' I put my hands on my knees, almost bent double, trying to catch my breath. There was pain in my legs and an ache in my hips, and I waited for it to ease.
âWon't he see?'
âHe won't come out in this.' My words were laboured, coming between breaths. âAnyway, it doesn't matter. We need to get dry. It's the most important thing.'
Both boys were huddling themselves with their arms, their teeth chattering. They had scarves across their mouths and noses, I could see the movement beneath, and I could see the colour of the skin that was exposed. They needed warmth, just like I did.
âFind some wood,' I told them, âbut stay close. Don't get lost.'
While they collected wood, I took my entrenching tool and used it to shovel snow into a pile in front of the place where I intended to build the fire. Petro was right to be worried about Dimitri's murderer, but not because he might follow us. I suspected he was not a man who would tackle us by coming close; experience suggested he would always look to take a shot from a distance, and that's what we had to concern ourselves with. So I built a wall high enough to hide the light from the fire, forming an arc to shield us.
The trees were not close together in this wood, and their branches were naked, but they still offered protection from the storm, allowing me to work without too much difficulty, and it was calm enough for the boys to find wood.
By the time they returned, I had dug a shallow pit and laid a small bed of tinder made from wood shavings and pieces of cotton which I kept in a tin in my satchel. I also had a handful of fire sticks I'd made earlier in the winter and always took when I was hunting. These were short tubes of thick paper packed with woodcuttings and sealed with fat. I placed one on top of the
tinder and used a knife to make shallow cuts in the driest pieces of wood the boys had brought, propping them against each other in a cone over the bed of tinder. When that was done, Petro and Viktor crouched beside me, protecting the area from the wind as I struck a match, putting it to the cotton.
Within a few seconds the flames had given enough heat to light the fire stick, which burned well and long enough to light the kindling.
The three of us sat around the fire, desperate for its warmth, willing it to succeed despite the weather. We protected it as best as we could; feeding it as it grew, developing it until we had to sit back from it so we didn't burn ourselves.
Under other circumstances we might have undressed, given our clothes time to dry, but it was unthinkable that we'd sit here without any protection, so we stayed as close to the fire as possible, offering the wettest parts of our clothing to its drying heat.
The flames rose and cut into the grey, sawing in the wind, crackling, giving the fire's lightest embers to the storm. And we held our hands to it, praying to it, begging it to keep us warm.
After a while, the three of us sitting in silence, I reached into my satchel and took out the sausage and bread that Natalia had packed for us. I had tried to wrap it back into the cotton, as she had done, but the cloth was in two pieces now and my hands had been too cold to do as I had asked them. The sausage had come loose from the cloth and it was covered with lint and dirt from the inside of the satchel. I brushed it off and cut it into three pieces. They were small, no longer than my thumb and not much thicker, but it was better than nothing. I tore the bread into three chunks and passed one to each of the boys.
âWhat now?' Viktor asked as he finished the last bite of his bread. He clapped his gloved hands to dust away the crumbs, his palms making a hollow banging sound as they came together.
âYou think he'll come after us?' Petro said.
âNo. I think he's the kind who waits.' I took a packet of cigarettes from my pocket. The card was soggy, the lid wrinkled
and ill-fitting because the weather had penetrated it. It came away in my hands when I opened it and I could see the cigarettes inside were wet. It didn't matter. I needed to smoke. I removed one glove and picked out a cigarette, fumbling with numb fingertips. The tobacco was damp and there were brown spots on the paper.
âWhat makes you think that?' Viktor asked. âThat he's the kind who waits.'
âHe works like a sharpshooter.' I took a burning stick from the fire and touched the tip to the cigarette. âWounding a man and trying to draw out his comrades was a trick we all used.'
âWe? You were a sharpshooter? You never told us that.'
âIt was never important.' I threw the stick back into the flames.
âI bet you were good, though,' Viktor said. âThe best.'
âThe Germans were the best. We were good, but their rifles were second to none. And they had scopes, like this one.' I clamped the cigarette in my mouth and lifted the rifle onto my knee. âThat man out there has to be using something like this; otherwise he could never have shot like that. Not at that range.'
âWhere would he get a rifle like that?' Petro asked.
âWhere did
you
get it from?' Viktor said.
I dragged on the cigarette. âA German.'
âYou shot him?
âYes.'
âWhere?' asked Petro.
I hesitated, then put a fingertip to the side of my head.
âNo,' he said. âI meant where were you? When was it?'
âDoes it matter?'
âI just wondered, that's all. You never say much about it.'
I ran my hands along the stock of the German rifle, feeling the smoothness of it. âIt was in Galicia in the summer of 1917,' I said. âOur final offensive against the central powers, which would make you ⦠just four years old at the time.'
âYou'd never seen us,' Petro said. âDid you even know our names?'
âI knew your names. Your mother wrote to me, and I thought about you all the time.'
âYou never thought about coming home, though?' he asked.
âSometimes. But I was a soldier; I had a duty.'
âYou must have been afraid.'
âHow was it?' Viktor said. âBeing in the army.'
âNot good. Morale was low, officers always being demoted and replaced, soldiers refusing to act without discussing everything with their committees.' I looked at Petro. âSome soldiers
did
just go home. They abandoned their posts and left their brothers to fight alone.'
âThe beginning of the revolution,' Petro said.
I smiled. âWe thought it was going to be Utopia. No more oppression, no more rich and poor.'
âSo tell us how you got the rifle,' Viktor said.
I thought for a moment, taking myself back. There had been times when these things had filled my thoughts, but the years had moved on and I had learned to put many of the memories away. I kept them behind a strong door in my mind that was rarely opened now.
âWell, when the artillery began to fire in the last days of June, we knew something big was happening. They only ever fired like that when they were going to make us push hard. They went on for two days, driving some of the men so mad they screamed and screamed.'
I shook my head to dispel the sound of those guns and took another drag on the cigarette. I watched my sons by the fire. Viktor was sitting on a small log, his forearms resting on his thighs, his body leaning forward as he listened. His eyes were alive, the flames reflected in his pupils.
âGo on, Papa.'
âOn the first morning of July we came out of the trenches and advanced on the Austro-Hungarians, driving them back. It was the first time we'd been out of our holes in many days. We were the first into the ruins of a town I don't even know the name of, a place with buildings smashed and blown apart by our shelling. We thought it was deserted, but we were wrong. Shots fired from
somewhere in the rubble took down two soldiers before the rest of us had time to find protection.'
âThe sharpshooter,' Viktor said.
âMm. The shots were well placed and both men were still alive. They lay in the open, calling for help, dying slowly while the rest of us stayed hidden.'
Petro stared at the flames as he listened. He would be remembering how Dimitri had called to us as he died.
âI was ordered to find him.'
âWhy you?' Viktor asked.
âBecause I was a sharpshooter. Three men were sent out to act as decoys while I looked for him. Three men, my brothers, all shot dead so he wouldn't see me coming, but I found him. A German, lying prone on the roof of a half-demolished building. He'd made a barrier of bricks around himself, leaving just enough room for the barrel of his rifle and the height of his scope. He was firing at us from so far away it was almost impossible to imagine how he could hit his target, but when I was close enough, I put a bullet right here.' I touched the side of my head once more. âJust one. With that rifle you've been carrying all day.'
Viktor glanced at his Russian-made Mosin-Nagant.
âThis was the first telescopic sight I ever looked through,' I said. âAnd my officer gave it to me as a reward.' I tapped the weapon on my knee and looked at my sons, seeing their different reactions. Viktor was entranced by the story, seeing the heroism and the adventure, while Petro saw the suffering and the loss of life. One story, two different interpretations. For me the events of that July were neither one thing nor another; they were just a part of my past told now so the words could evaporate by the fire.
âThis man, though,' I said, âthe one who shot at us today â I've not seen shooting like that before. And he was so well hidden. He's very dangerous.'
No one spoke. Petro and Viktor stared into the fire, dry sticks popping and crackling in the flames that rose and fell, rose and fell, snapping and twisting in the wind. Somewhere out in the
darkness a wolf howled, but none of us reacted to the sound. We had heard wolves before.
âSo what are we going to do?' Viktor asked, breaking the silence. âAre we going back?'
Both sons were watching me again, waiting for an answer.
I sighed and looked down at the cigarette in my fingers, as if I'd forgotten it was there. I wished I had something to drink. A mouthful of
horilka
to take the edge off my thoughts.
âYes,' I said.
Petro was surprised. âYes? You mean we're going to leave Dariya?'
âThat's not what I said.'
Now Petro was confused. âWhat then?'
I passed the cigarette to Viktor.
âWe can't leave her,' Petro said.
âShe's not your responsibility,' I told him. âIt's not your fault.'
Petro shook his head. âI should have brought her back with me.'
âStop feeling sorry for yourself Viktor passed him the cigarette. âNo one blames you.'
Petro snatched it from his brother without looking at him and sat for a while with it between his finger and thumb before lifting it to his mouth. âIf I hadâ'
âIf you had nothing,' Viktor told him. âPapa said it isn't your' fault and he's right. You didn't know what was going to happen. We all thought the man we found did â¦
that
to those children.'
âYou too?' I asked, looking up.
Viktor shrugged. âI didn't want to. You were so sure about him, but â¦' He searched for the words. âThere was no one else.'
âYou thought I was wrong?'
Viktor nodded. âYes, Papa.'
I smiled at that. I put my head back and laughed, releasing some tension.
âWhat's funny?' Viktor asked.
I patted his shoulder. âYou're a good boy.'
âWhy?'
âBecause you stood by me anyway. You thought I was wrong but you stood by me.' I smiled and wondered how many years, maybe months or days, it would be before Viktor would no longer trust my judgement or respect my decisions. What would it have taken for him to tell me he thought I was wrong?
Petro stood and leaned over to hand me the cigarette. I took it with cold fingers, and while Petro was leaning towards me like that, I spoke, saying, âWhat about you, Petro? What did you think?'
âI thought you were right.'
I waited for him to sit down again, put his hands towards the fire for warmth. I finished what was left of the cigarette and threw it into the flames. âI want you two to go back,' I said. âI want you to go home. I'll find Dariya.'
âAlone?' Viktor looked up.
âIt's better that way.'
âBetter?'
âSafer. It doesn't make sense for all of us to head on.'
âI want to come with you,' Petro said. âViktor can go back if he wants to, but I'm coming with you.'
âYou have nothing to prove to me, Petro. You're a good boy. A good
man
. You already make me proud.'
Petro looked away.
âI can't take you with me. Not with things as they are. That shot might have hit either of you today and I don't want to have to take that back to your mother. It'll be bad enough seeing Svetlana's face.'
Petro stared at the fire. He was listening but he didn't want to hear.
âI'm coming too,' Viktor said.
âNo. You need to get away from here. Go back to the shelter we saw. Stay there until first light, then make your way home. You know the way?'