Authors: Dan Smith
Dariya's eyes were ringed red and her hair was tangled about her small face. Her sheepskin coat hung open, and beneath it she wore the same dress she had been wearing when I last saw her, but now it was dirty and torn in more than one place. There were rusty patches where the child thief's blood had dried on the material, and when the snow fell away from her woollen boots, I could see dark stains there too. She stared ahead of her as if she saw nothing. Like a blind child being led into the room.
Anatoly did not hold her hand; instead he had one hand on the
top of her head as if to make her move in the right direction, but that was all. He brought her close to the table and I started to stand, but Lermentov prodded me with the crucifix once more and I stayed where I was.
âSo this is your daughter?'
âYes. Let me go to her.'
Lermentov turned to Dariya standing at his side. She looked so small and empty, and it filled me with despair. âIs this your father?'
Dariya offered no response. Nothing. She didn't move her lips. She only blinked, but it was not in response to his question.
The policeman shook his head. âShe doesn't recognise you.'
âWhat have you done to her?'
âWhat have
we
done to her? We don't harm people, we protect them. She was like this when she arrived. Well. Not quite like this. She had blood on her hands and face, but one of the women has washed it away. At first I thought maybe it was her blood, but she seemed unharmed.'
âThank God.'
âThere is no God.'
âOf course. I just meant ⦠I'm glad she's unharmed.'
âShe isn't. I thought she was, but when we looked further â¦' He leaned to one side and lifted the hem of Dariya's dress.
She remained still as he drew it up her leg so I could see a rough bandage wrapped around her right thigh. Lermentov took one end of it between his fingers and pulled it away to reveal the wound where a piece of flesh had been cut away from her leg. It was an area about the size of a cigarette packet, dry and well tended. It looked as if it had been treated as soon as it had been done. Cauterised, perhaps, with something hot, but done so perfectly and so completely that in only a few places did it look raw, and there was almost no weeping of blood or fluid from the wound.
I turned away, remembering the screams I'd heard in the night. I didn't know if the child thief had mutilated Dariya like this for his amusement, his hunger or just to frighten his pursuers with
her terrible screams. I was sorry for her in ways I could barely understand.
When the policeman spoke again, his words were slow and considered, and with those words came an awful understanding.
âWhy did you do this to her?' he asked.
I turned to meet his stare. Thoughts and feelings confused themselves into a terrible jumble as I realised what Lermentov was saying. âWhat? No. I â¦' But I didn't know what to say. Nothing would convince the policeman.
âShe's not your daughter, is she?' Lermentov almost curled his lip. The interrogation about the missing prisoners was just a lead into this. Before it had been routine, mundane, but something in Lermentov's expression and intonation felt personal. As if Dariya's condition meant something to him.
I looked at the man across the table and wondered what I could tell him. I had lied about Dariya being my daughter because I thought it would make them more sympathetic, make them hand her over. But now they thought I'd done something to harm her. The only people who could confirm who I was were the people from Vyriv, but I couldn't risk exposing them. Perhaps it was time to change my story. Give them more of the truth. Let them think they had beaten it out of me.
âShe wasn't lost.' I hung my head. âShe was taken from me. That's why I had my rifle. I was hunting for the man who took her.'
âWhy didn't you tell me this before?'
âWould you have believed me?'
âNo.' Lermentov carefully reset the bandage and dropped the hem of Dariya's dress, letting the cloth fall over the wound. âAnd I don't believe you now, either. You're lying.'
âNo.'
âYou're lying to me again. This girl isn't your daughter any more than she's mine. You did this to her. You hurt her like this. You're an animal.'
âNo. Please. She
is
my daughter.' I looked at Dariya, my eyes
filling with tears, my nose streaming. âTell him, Dariya. Tell him who I am.'
But Dariya just stood and stared ahead of her as if none of us was even there. The man standing beside her, with the farmer's clothes and the hands of a man who worked the fields, looked away at the far wall of the church.
The policeman pulled my satchel towards him, dragging it across the surface of the table. I had forgotten about it. I had barely even looked at it since my interrogation had begun, but now I stared at it as Lermentov opened the fastening and put his hand inside.
A couple of cartridges rolled out when he removed the aluminium water bottle, and he took out the bottle I had brought from the cabin where Dariya had killed the child thief.
âThis yours?' Lermentov asked, placing the bottle upright on the table.
âYes.'
He considered the clear, unlabelled bottle for a moment, then looked across at one of the soldiers. âOpen it.'
The soldier came round to Lermentov's side of the table and took the bottle, biting on the cork and pulling hard. After a few seconds the cork eased from the bottle with a quiet pop and the soldier put it on the table, pushing it towards the policeman, who nodded once. The soldier returned to his post behind me.
The OGPU man sniffed at the open bottle and looked at me. âVodka?'
â
Horilka
.'
He nodded and raised the bottle, saying, âYour health.' He took a sip, tasting, before smiling and taking a deeper drink. He wiped his mouth with the back of his sleeve. âIt's good.' He took another drink and put the bottle aside.
âShe is not your daughter, is she?'
âShe is.' I turned to Dariya once again. âPlease. Tell him. Tell him who I am.' I looked at the OGPU man again. âI swear it. She
is
myâ'
âThen explain this.'
Lermentov reached into my satchel once more and removed the waxed paper parcel I had taken from the shepherd's hut. He put it on the table, pushing the satchel away.
And I knew. Before Lermentov unwrapped it, I knew what it would contain. Even in death the child thief had won his game. From his grave he had found a way of killing me.
The OGPU officer took the edges of the paper in his fingers and pulled them apart, opening them out and smoothing them against the surface of the table. Then he turned the open package around and pushed it a little closer so I could see the piece of meat it contained.
When I had first taken it from the cabin, I had expected
salo
. Salted pork fat that I had intended to share with my sons to stave off the hunger. But this was not pork fat. This flesh was from a different animal altogether.
My world stopped. Nothing was real any more.
Dariya was not my daughter, but I had said it so many times, tried hard to believe my own story, that now I felt as if I truly were her father. After all, she had no other father to protect her, for her own lay dead beneath the snow. Somehow she had managed to do what I â and who knew how many men before me â had failed to do. She had killed the child thief. She had pierced his throat with steel and taken his life, and now she had stumbled from one nightmare into another and her child's mind was unable to cope with it. She had receded into her own head and I found myself envying her. Right now I wanted to do the same thing, but my mind was stronger and I was conditioned to withstand atrocity. I was hardened to the things around me, just like all those who had grown to maturity in those godless times. From the Great War to the revolution and the civil war and the following hardships, we were all conditioned to a life of struggle. But this child before me, not even nine years old, she knew none of those things. She had lived apart from those things, but now they had entered her life, and they had turned her inwards and broken her.
I wanted to reach out to her. I wanted to hold her. This poor girl with no one to help her. No one to protect her.
I stood and took a step towards her, wanting to pull her close and let her bury her face in the folds of my shirt. I wanted her to know that she wasn't alone, to whisper in her ear and tell her I would keep her safe. And for a moment she was Lara, standing there on the cold stones, looking at me, asking me to bring back her friend.
âI promised,' I said. âI promised.'
âYou child-hating bastard.' Lermentov spat his words into the cold church and the blow from the crucifix was like none that had come before it. The old wood cracked into the side of my head hard enough to knock me off my feet. I fell against the chair, forcing it away from me, my face smashing against the seat before I was on the floor.
From my prone position I looked up at the policeman standing over me, the crucifix in his hands. The bearded man from the village was looking at me now, his lips pursed, a slight shake in his head. Beside him Dariya continued to stare ahead.
Then I closed my eyes.
24
When I woke, I was in darkness. For a second I thought I was blind and there was a brief moment of panic before I saw the faint light sliding beneath the door. There were voices too, quiet but insistent, and someone's hands were on me, but they weren't there to inflict pain.
âHe's waking up, I think.' It sounded like Kostya, the man who was imprisoned for making a joke about our great leader.
âI' m fine,' I said, pushing the hand away, sitting up and moving back to lean against the wall. âLeave me.'
âYou've been asleep for a while.'
âHow long?'
âIt's hard to say.'
âHours? A day?'
âMuch of the day. At least I think it's day. They brought food a while ago, and I think that usually comes in the morning.'
I touched the side of my face, feeling the split in the skin, the hardened crust of blood. There was a graze across my forehead that was rough and dry, and my head was pounding like I'd drunk a whole bottle of
horilka
myself.
âHere.' I felt a hand on my own and I tried to pull away, but the grip tightened.
âPlease,' Kostya said. âTake this.'
I remained tense for a second, untrusting, then relaxed and allowed Kostya to take my hand, open my fingers and touch something to them. Something metallic.
âDrink it,' he said.
I took hold of the cup and lifted it to my nose to sniff it.
âWater,' Kostya said. âIt's a little stale, but it's water.'
âWhere â¦' I began to ask, but my mouth was dry and my tongue was swollen. My lips were thick and fat from where the policeman had hit me.
âThey give us water once a day,' said Dimitri Markovich. âWe all save a mouthful to make it last. There's a little bread too. Take it.'
âThis is all of it,' Kostya said.
âI can'tâ'
âDrink,' he said, and I felt his hands touching me again, finding the cup and pushing it towards my mouth. âYou need it.'
I put the metal cup to my lips and tipped it, the warm liquid moistening my mouth. I kept it there, savouring the feeling, then took it away, not wanting to drink it all at once. There wasn't much more than a drop left.
I fumbled the crust of bread that Kostya pressed into my hand, feeling its hard edges, the softer interior, and I remembered I hadn't eaten for a long time. I'd taken the child thief's parcel, thinking it would be my next meal, but the thought of it now filled me with revulsion. That small piece of meat wrapped in paper.
âEat,' Kostya said, touching my hand. âEat.'
I pushed aside the image that dirtied my thoughts. I pictured not the flesh nor the wound, but the girl. Dariya was safe and she was alive; that's what was important. And if I was to have any chance of helping her I needed to be strong. I needed to eat.
I bit off a small piece of bread with my front teeth and tried not to feel the guilt of taking the last of the food and water.
I wanted to see the faces of the men who had given me everything they had. Men who knew nothing about me and yet offered everything. And it struck me that in these hard times there were small moments of kindness which lifted us above the filth and the death. With these tiny acts, we were still human, still
able to have faith in one another. There was still something good left in the world.
âThank you,' I said to the darkness. I drank again and somewhere outside I heard a
garmoshka
begin to play. The music went on for a few bars, a melancholy tune, and then someone began to sing. A deep voice, the words sung in Russian.
âAlways this song,' said Dimitri. âHe always plays this song.'
âTo stop us from sleeping,' said Kostya.
âHis awful Russian songs.'
âRussians. They're all drunkards and thieves,' said Yuri.
I let the water slip down my throat and I leaned my head back on the wall and listened to the song. A Russian folk song, about a man imprisoned for telling the truth. He escapes his prison one dark night and comes to Lake Baikal, where he takes a fisherman's boat and sings a sad song as he crosses the lake to his mother. When he reaches the furthest shore he embraces his mother and asks for his father and his brother. But his father is long dead and buried beneath the damp earth, and his brother is in chains in Siberia.
When it was finished there was silence for just a few moments, probably for someone to take a drink of vodka, and then the music began again, this time a faster tune, someone clapping along.
Inside our prison a quiet voice began to sing âUkraine Has Not Yet Perished' â the anthem of what was, for a short time after the revolution, the Ukrainian People's Republic. The song had been banned ten years before by the Soviet regime, but many still knew it by heart. Evgeni's voice was weak and hoarse and almost drowned by the Russian song outside, but I heard the words: âUkraine has not yet perished. The glory and the freedom.'