Red Winter (47 page)

Read Red Winter Online

Authors: Dan Smith

Krukov was sitting still in the saddle, one hand on the reins, the other holding his pistol, resting on the item he had brought: a large bag, shaped like a sack but made from stout green canvas, tied with a piece of frayed cord.

‘Drop it
now
,’ said the scarred man.

‘Who are you?’ I asked him. ‘You’re not in charge.’

‘This is Stepan Ivanovich,’ said Krukov, tilting his head to the man at his left, ‘and my other comrade is Artem Andreyovich.’

‘Ryzhkov’s men?’ I asked. That’s why I had recognised them.

‘We are all of the same unit,’ Krukov replied. ‘These men volunteered to join the search for you.’ When he said the word ‘volunteered’, there was a hint of sarcasm in his voice. Krukov was not an emotional man – he gave little away in his expressions and intonation– but I had known him long enough to understand that he didn’t like Stepan Ivanovich and Artem Andreyovich. Krukov would have preferred to lead just the men he knew. Like me, he would have felt uneasy having strangers at his side, especially ones who were loyal to a man like Ryzhkov. Krukov would see them as spies in his ranks. He would not have liked having them in his unit.

‘Why didn’t you take his weapon?’ Stepan asked Krukov. ‘And where’s Koschei?’

‘Ryzhkov’s not here,’ Krukov said.

‘He’s gone ahead to the camp, you mean? That’s where he is?’ Stepan’s words made me look to Krukov.

‘Exactly. He’s taken the prisoners to the holding camp.’ Krukov spoke slowly and with emphasis.

‘So what are we waiting for?’ Stepan Ivanovich snapped the rifle tighter to his shoulder and glanced sideways at Krukov.

Neither Krukov nor I spoke.

‘You want me to get a rope,’ asked Artem Andreyovich, ‘or you want to shoot him?’

‘Wait.’ Krukov raised his left hand and made a circling motion in the air. Immediately the other riders came forward.

For a moment the approaching men were silhouettes against the sun. They moved well in the saddle as they crossed the blood frost, and like the others, I saw their faces only when they were almost upon us. They were four faces I recognised: Bukharin, Manarov, Repnin and Nevsky. Four men who had served with me for many years. Four men whom I had loved like brothers but now thought me a traitor and were bound to execute me for treason.

When they were almost upon us, they split, riding in pairs to either end of the line and moving inwards to form a semicircle round Anna and me. We were hemmed in now. No escape.

‘We have a choice to make,’ Krukov said. His voice was hoarse, as if he needed to clear it.

‘You mean bullet or rope?’ Artem Andreyovich smiled at the prospect.

‘We should wait for Koschei,’ said Stepan. ‘Or take him to the camp. He’ll want his head.’

Now Krukov took his eyes off me. He shifted in the saddle and turned first to look left along the line, then right along the line. When he faced forwards once more, he took a deep breath. ‘Koschei is dead.’

‘What?’ There was a flash of confusion in Stepan’s eyes, followed by a glint of understanding, but before he could react, Krukov raised his pistol to point directly at his chest.

As soon as he did it, the two men at either end of the line turned their weapons on Stepan and Artem.

‘What is this?’ Stepan demanded. ‘What the hell is going on?’

‘I don’t trust you men,’ Krukov said. ‘I never did. You are no longer needed in this unit.’

‘You can’t do this.’

‘Who’s going to stop me?’

Stepan tore his eyes from Krukov and looked at me along the barrel of his rifle. ‘I could kill him now. I’d be a hero.’

‘No, you’d just be a dead man,’ Krukov said. ‘Or you could ride away. Right now.’

‘And you’d just let us go?’ Artem asked.

Krukov thought for a moment. ‘No,’ he said. ‘No, I wouldn’t.’ And he shot Stepan through the heart.

 

 

 

 

45

 

 

 

 

Krukov was quick. He didn’t wait to watch Stepan’s death. As soon as he fired the first shot, he swept his pistol across his body, bringing it round to aim at Artem, who was so surprised that he’d barely moved. Without wasting a second, Krukov pulled the trigger, jolting Artem’s head back as the bullet tore into his skull.

The suddenness of the gunshots unnerved the horses. They were hardened animals, all of them accustomed to the crack of gunfire, but they still moved beneath us, forcing us to bring them under control. I didn’t want Anna to see such things, but if it bothered her, she didn’t show it. She just lowered her head so she didn’t have to look, and she concentrated on controlling Tanya’s horse.

With no living riders, Stepan and Artem’s animals bolted away from us. Stepan’s forced its way between Anna and me, racing off in the direction of the
izba
, while the other went round us, galloping off towards the forest. I didn’t turn to watch either of them go; they were of no consequence. What mattered now were the remaining soldiers.

But none of them made a move to turn his weapon on me. Each of them settled his horse as if rider and animal shared a firm bond, and when all was still, Krukov holstered his weapon and came forward.

‘I’ve been with these men a long time, just as you had. I think I know their minds well enough to speak for all of us.’ He took a folded document from his pocket and held it out to me. ‘Whatever your reasons for leaving, there isn’t one of us who would call you unpatriotic.’

‘Never,’ said Bukharin, and the others nodded in agreement.

I took the document and unfolded it to look at the identity papers I had left on a disfigured body in Ulyanov a thousand years ago.

‘I kept them for you,’ Krukov said. ‘And these belonged to Alek.’ He passed my brother’s papers to me, but I didn’t open them. That was for another time.

He took the bag from the saddle in front of him and passed it across to me. ‘Before he died, Stepan Ivanovich was good enough to tell me that a day’s ride north from here is a ruined village called Nagai,’ he said.

I took the bag and opened it to find it filled with clothing.

‘In the forest just north of Nagai, there is a holding camp for conscripts and exiles,’ Krukov went on. It was usual for Cheka units to set up temporary camps to contain prisoners before allocation to units, deportation or transportation to labour camps. There was one such labour camp near Kaluga, but this area was much further north than I had operated as a Chekist. I was unfamiliar with the camps here.

I took the first garment out of the bag.

‘It’s my thinking that a Chekist commander could go into that camp and take away anybody he wanted.’

I looked up at Krukov.

‘For any purpose,’ he said. ‘As long as he has papers and a uniform.’

I held up the uniform and studied it for a moment. When I lowered it, Krukov and the other men were watching me.

Krukov cleared his throat and spoke again. ‘When do you want to leave?’ he asked. ‘Your men are waiting for your orders, Commander Levitsky.’

 

 

 

 

46

 

 

 

 

It felt strange to be on the open road with a small company of men behind me. For so long I had kept to the forests, stealing across the country as a fugitive, but now I was a soldier again. There was no reason not to keep to the roads now, and our progress was swift as we moved from road to field, heading towards Nagai, our horses scattering the thin layer of snow and ice underfoot.

Anna rode beside me, more resilient than I could have imagined, but her manner both uplifted and saddened me. She was tough, and that would serve her well; she would not be a burden to me or the other men, but she was a child. A twelve-year-old girl who should have been playing with her friends, arguing with her mother and twisting her father round her little finger. She shouldn’t have been riding with a company of armed men.

Yet I was as proud of her as it was possible to be. I would protect her as I would protect my own child, and I was glad she had not stayed behind with Oksana and the old woman. Anna and I had been together a few days that had lasted a lifetime, and the prospect of never seeing her pale face again was one that haunted me when I allowed my mind to linger on it.

Krukov rode on the other side of me, stiff-backed in the saddle, gaunt and bearded as if I was crossing the country with Koschei the Deathless himself. But Koschei was a fairy tale. A myth. He didn’t exist; at least not in that sense.

Ryzhkov was close to the truth when he said that we were all Koschei because we were all capable of terrible things, but he had tried to take the name for himself and was now turning to ash in a nameless field. There had been nothing arcane about finding the key to his death. Ryzhkov had died like any man dies. Just as Koschei always died in the
skazkas
.

We stopped by a river at midday to eat and to rest the horses. My wife and sons were almost within reach now, but the horses were tired, and Anna was beginning to look as if she might fall asleep in the saddle.

The steppe was open in all directions, dull now that the sun was lost behind another wall of grey cloud, which threatened to bring more snow. Grass grew thick and long around the riverbank, but the ground was at a gentle slope and the water was shallow, so we led our horses to drink. It was the first time we had dismounted since meeting Krukov, and Anna positioned herself so she and I were side by side, sandwiched between our horses, and she could take the chance to speak to me alone.

‘I don’t trust them,’ she whispered. ‘And that man Krukov is more frightening than the old woman at the farm.’

‘I don’t think they mean us any harm.’ I stopped at the edge of the river and watched the current swirl and eddy. ‘They would have done something already if they were going to.’ I felt as if I was trying to persuade myself.

‘So we’re staying with them?’

‘I’ve known these men a long time – we’ve been through a lot together.’ Two of them had been at Grivino with Alek and me. Krukov and Bukharin had stood by my side.

She made a face and released her horse’s reins so it could dip its head to drink. ‘Well, it makes my back tingle, having them behind us.’

I smiled. ‘I know what you mean.’

‘So can’t we ride at the back?’

As Kashtan drank, I scanned the steppe behind for any sign of Tuzik. He had kept pace with us for a while, but he didn’t have the strength or stamina of a horse so he had soon fallen behind.

‘He’ll catch up,’ Anna told me. ‘He always does.’

I nodded. ‘You’re right.’ I squatted and dipped my hands into the icy river, downstream from the spot where the horses were drinking. I scooped the water and splashed it onto my face, rubbing away the dry blood and letting the cold numb my nose and mouth.

‘How do I look?’ I turned my face towards Anna.

‘Not good. Your lip’s fat, and you have a black eye. Your nose is bruised too.’

‘It feels worse,’ I said, standing and taking a cloth from the saddlebag to dry my face. If I left it, the water would most probably freeze.

‘So
can
we?’ she asked.

‘Hmm?’

‘Ride at the back? It would be safer for us to be behind them.’

‘The thing is, Anna . . .’ I looked about. Krukov was no more than a couple of metres away on the other side of Kashtan, so I lowered my voice further. ‘I’m their commander. They expect me to lead from the front.’

‘But
are
you, or are they lying?’

‘Well, I don’t think they’re lying. I’ve known these men a long time.’

‘But they might be. And if you’re the commander, you can do what you want.’

‘If only that were true. No, if I ride behind them, they’ll think I don’t trust them and so they won’t trust me. It’s . . . complicated.’

‘Well, I don’t like it.’

‘Then we need to remain alert and keep watching. And stay close to me. Don’t ever leave my sight. Here.’ I took Tanya’s folding knife from my satchel and held it out to her. ‘Put this somewhere handy. Just in case.’

I didn’t anticipate that she would ever need it, but it would make her feel safer, and soon, there might come a time when I would have to leave her alone with some of these men.

Anna took it without hesitation, turning it over in her hands and slipping it into her pocket.

‘You know what I was, don’t you?’ I said.

‘You mean a soldier?’

‘But you know what
kind
of soldier.’

‘Yes.’

‘But I’m not a bad person. I don’t want you to think I’m a bad person. I’ve done—’

‘I know what you are,’ Anna said. ‘You’re not a bad man. Papa liked you.’

‘That’s good,’ I said. ‘I liked him too. Very much. And thank you.’

‘For what?’

‘For what you did in the
izba
.’

‘I don’t want to talk about that,’ she said.

‘All right. I understand.’

The men had few supplies, so when we rejoined them, Anna and I shared what we had. They took the opportunity to speak with me, shaking my hand, patting me on the back and saying how good it was to have me as their commander once again.

‘But you’ve been hunting me all this time,’ I said.

‘You were in no danger,’ Bukharin said. ‘Not from us.’ He was one of the men I had known the longest – a subordinate, but with as much experience as I had. Bukharin fought in the war before the revolution, joined the people’s army rather than be conscripted. He was more a soldier than anyone I knew, but had always shown more loyalty to his unit than to Moscow. He had been a good man to have with me at Grivino.

‘You could have just let me go. Gone back to Ryzhkov to tell him I was dead.’

‘He wanted you alive,’ said Manarov. ‘Or proof that you were dead.’

‘What kind of proof?’

The men looked around at each other.

‘Your head.’

Then I understood how truly afraid my men had been of Koschei. Now there was an air of relief about them, as if a burden had been lifted from their shoulders, and I imagined them pursuing me, all the time wondering what they would do if they caught me.

‘Did you let me get ahead?’ I asked. ‘You let me escape you?’

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