Dan Smith - Red Winter

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Red Winter: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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It is 1920, central Russia. The Red Terror tightens its hold. Kolya has deserted his Red Army unit and returns home to bury his brother and reunite with his wife and sons. But he finds the village silent and empty. The men have been massacred in the forest. The women and children have disappeared.
In this remote, rural Russian community the folk tales mothers tell their children by candlelight take on powerful significance and the terrifying legend of Koschei, The Deathless One, begins to feel very real. Kolya sets out on a journey through dense, haunting forests and across vast plains as bitter winter sets in, in the desperate hope he will find his wife and two boys, and find them alive. But there are very dark things in Kolya’s past. And, as he strives to find his family, there’s someone or something on his trail…

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‘You can find your family.’

‘We’ll find them together.’

She lifted her fingers to my face, touching my cheek, and our eyes locked together. ‘Find them,’ she said.

They were her last words.

I sat back, turning my face to the sky and closing my eyes, but allowed myself only a moment. Other things were more important. The living had to take precedent over the dead.

I left Tanya where she lay and went to Anna.

The old woman was still outside when dawn broke. She remained at her dead son’s side, stricken despite his crimes, and the day renewed about her, unmoved by the night’s tragedy.

No more snow fell, and that which had settled became a crystalline crust that hardened on the frost and decorated everything from the frozen mud in the yard to the narrow fence tops and the field beyond. The morning light glittered in the countless angles of the flowering ice with an incongruous beauty.

Dragging the bodies from the house was hard work, but had to be done. I couldn’t leave them where they had fallen; Sergei and the old woman wouldn’t be able to move them, nor would Oksana, and I couldn’t leave them in the izba with the children.

With a frankness that saddened me, Anna offered to help, but I couldn’t allow it. If anything ever taught me that our country was hard on people, it was that a twelve-year-old girl could offer to help drag dead men from a family home. She needed to do something, though, so I pointed to the horses, who shied away from the ugly tableau, huddling at the far end of the yard, and I told her to take them back into the barn to shelter. There was hay and warmth for them there.

‘You look bad,’ she said. ‘Does it hurt?’

‘I’ll live. Go on. Take the horses inside.’

She went without question, ignoring the old woman and going to Kashtan first.

Tuzik divided his time between us, patrolling from one to the other.

‘You’re a Bolshevik.’ They were Sergei’s first words.

I was by the door, the night behind me, bent over the corpse of one of the Chekists as I struggled to pull him outside. I looked up to see the old man watching me. His beard was thick over pallid skin, and his red eyes were watery and sad.

‘What does it matter?’ I asked.

‘Were these men your brothers?’

I glanced at the body of the man who had tried to strangle me. He was stiffening now, the side of his neck plastered with drying blood. ‘These men passed beyond being anyone’s brother. They weren’t Bolsheviks. They were…’ I shook my head and looked for the right word, but I wasn’t sure what it was. ‘They weren’t Bolsheviks.’

‘What does that mean, anyway?’ he asked. ‘Perhaps it means something to the men in Moscow, but here?’

I didn’t reply.

‘Perhaps we’ve just forgotten what we’re fighting for.’

I stared at the old man and wondered what he must be feeling. His own son was a monster.

‘So what are you fighting for?’ he asked me.

‘Then? For the revolution. But now for my family.’ I remembered what Commander Orlov had said to me. ‘Nothing else matters now.’

The old man looked over at his wife mourning their son and I understood the irony of what I had just said. I could not tell him I was sorry, though. My only regret was that Ryzhkov had died before I could learn what he had done with Marianna and Misha and Pavel.

Sergei sighed, and his eyes shifted so he could see beyond the yard. He watched the sparkle of the rising sun on the field and I knew our conversation was over. He reached into his pocket to take out his pipe, and when he began to pack it with tobacco, I continued with the task at hand, dragging the body the short distance to the cart, moving it just a few paces at a time before I had to rest, and then struggling to load it on with the others.

The old woman paid me no attention, sitting beside her son with her head hung. The air was bitter and yet she hardly seemed to notice.

Taking the coat from the Chekist’s body, I draped it over her shoulders and drew it around her.

‘Stay warm, grandmother,’ I said. ‘Enough people have died here already.’ She didn’t even acknowledge I was there.

By the time I finished loading the cart, Anna had stabled the horses and remained in the barn, petting Kashtan, but she didn’t take her eyes off me. Tuzik lay in the straw by the door, head up, watching.

I went back to the old woman, touching her shoulder.

‘Time to go inside,’ I said. I had one more body to deal with, but to her, I wasn’t even there. She didn’t move, didn’t even acknowledge my presence. Nothing existed but her and her son’s body, and I think she might have stayed there until she wasted to nothing or froze in place if it hadn’t been for her husband.

The old man came out and crossed the yard, boots crunching on the ice. He reached down and took his wife’s hand in his own, then put another under her arm to help her to her feet. Now she complied as if in a daze, and the vagueness of her expression reminded me of what I had seen in Galina’s face when I had been in Belev.

‘He’s gone,’ Sergei said as she stood. ‘He’s gone now.’ He turned her round and guided her back to the house.

When they had left, I went to their son’s body and took the papers from his pocket. I checked the uniform beneath his coat and kept anything that might be of use, then I hauled him onto the back of the cart with the others, taking my time and resting often.

Piling the men like that had been a great effort and had taken me over an hour. My muscles protested, my back screamed in pain so I could hardly stand straight, and my face throbbed, but I had to keep going. I wanted to finish, so I gathered an armful of split logs from the woodpile and went to the cart, packing them around the bodies. I would not allow these men to have anything. Not even six feet of land. I would burn them and let them scatter to the wind.

When I returned for more wood, Anna was waiting for me.

‘Let me help,’ she said.

I considered for a moment, then reached out to put a hand on her shoulder. ‘Aren’t you cold? It’s warmer in the barn with Kashtan.’

Anna responded by turning to the woodpile and grasping a log in each hand. ‘This will keep me warm.’ She offered them to me.

I took the wood from her, seeing that she wanted to be with me, and I smiled at her. It was not a smile of happiness, but one of understanding and togetherness.

‘Thank you,’ I said.

So Anna lifted the wood from the pile and I took it to the cart, and when there was enough, I covered the bodies with dry straw from the barn.

With that done, Anna and I returned to Kashtan, who nickered and came to me, putting her nose against my chest. I looked into her soft brown eyes and rubbed her neck.

‘Stay with her,’ I said to Anna. ‘There’s one last thing for me to do.’

‘What is it? Can’t I come with you?’ she asked.

‘I need you to keep Kashtan company. Don’t worry. You’re safe.’

‘I don’t feel safe.’

‘I know.’ I turned to Anna and opened my arms to her and she stepped against me. I embraced her and held her tight, putting up a hand to stroke her hair. ‘But I have to bring Tanya and Lyudmila out.’

‘I don’t want to be alone.’ Her face was pressed against my coat and her voice was muffled.

‘You won’t be. I’ll be close. And Kashtan is here. Tuzik too.’

Inside, the old woman was sitting at the table, and Sergei had put water on to boil. He made tea while I took Tanya and Lyudmila into the yard, but I didn’t put them in the cart with the Chekists. They deserved better than that. They deserved the land, so I laid them on my tarpaulin, one at a time, and wrapped it round them before I returned to the barn to collect some tools.

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