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Шон Хатсон: Sabres in the Snow

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Шон Хатсон Sabres in the Snow

Sabres in the Snow: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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It is winter 1943 and the once victorious armies of the Third Reich are on the retreat, burning, slaughtering and destroying everything in their path. Under the command of Captain Josef Kleiser, an SS unit massacres the villagers of Prokev. But seventeen-year-old Anatole Boniak survives, and taking refuge in the hills, he conceives a deep and brooding hatred for the SS Captain. It is an obsession that will end in a violent confrontation and colour the Russian snows with the crimson stain of blood.

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He took the knife out once more and, one by one, began shaving lumps off one end of the wooden lengths until they were all wickedly sharp. He took a length of the rabbit hide from around his wrist and bound the six ‘spears’ together so that they would be easier to carry.

By the time that task was completed he felt tired enough to lay down on the cold stone once again only this time sleep came easily.

Outside, the wind wailed mournfully and the moon was smothered by another bank of thick cloud.

Chapter Four

1

When Anatole awoke the next morning a watery sun had risen in the sky and its weak rays fell across him like spidery fingers. He sat up and yawned, shivering immediately as he felt the sting in the air. Despite the appearance of the sun, it was still just below freezing and he had nothing to wear other than the tunic in which he’d fled the day before.

He got to his feet and walked to the opening of the overhang, the bundle of sharpened sticks held by the thong of rabbit skin. Before him, the land fell away beneath a blanket of white which seemed to glow as the sun reflected off it. Ice crystals sparkled like millions of tiny diamonds and, as Anatole emerged from his hiding place, the snow crunched beneath his boots. He looked around anxiously but there was no sign of movement in any direction, animal or human. Ahead of him lay a range of low hills, masked by trees but Anatole knew that, in that craggy range there were caves and he could hide out indefinitely in one of them if the need arose. He and his father had ridden out this way many times when he was younger and he knew the countryside well.

The thought of his father suddenly seemed to tear the breath from him and he slowed his pace, pushing through the trees with less determination. He swallowed hard and thought, for a second, that he was going to cry again but the feeling passed rapidly and Anatole now found that his grief was tempered by anger and the vision of his father and mother was gradually merging as one with the figure of that black-coated bastard Kleiser.

As he walked, Anatole began to wonder just what he was going to do. If he found shelter, which he hoped too, he couldn’t remain there forever, hidden away like some kind of skulking beast. He had to find other people. His own people. The thought sruck him hard once again. He had no people of his own. His parents, his friends, even his village had been eradicated by the SS. He had nowhere to go. He wondered if he could stay hidden until the war ended. If it ever did…

He allowed the thought to trail off.

There was a road just ahead, beyond it more trees and then the first gentle slopes of the hills. Anatole ducked low in the bushes and listened for any sounds drifting through the still morning air. The tell-tale sounds of clanking equipment, the squeaking of tank tracks. He heard nothing and, cautiously, moved out a few steps, glancing both ways. The road snaked away in either direction, the snow which had covered it deeply scored by lorry wheels. Some heavy vehicles had passed along it and recently too, he guessed. He knelt and inspected the tracks momentarily then got to his feet and sprinted across into the enveloping cover of the trees beyond. Whether the tyre tracks had been made by German or Russian vehicles Anatole didn’t know, all he was concerned about was reaching the relative safety of the hills. He quickened his pace, finding that the woodland was becoming less dense the higher he climbed. Gentle slopes gradually gave way to thick outcrops of jagged rock which protruded from the hillsides like splinters. Anatole clawed his way up over them, searching for somewhere to hide.

He almost missed the cave completely.

The entrance was masked by fallen branches and driven snow and the boy had to haul the dead wood aside in order to gain entry.

As he moved slowly into the gloom of the cave he recoiled slightly from the fetid odour inside, a mixture of damp and something much stronger which grew more powerful the deeper he went. Quite how far back into the hillside the cave went he could only guess but it was becoming difficult for him to see and, twice, he fell over pieces of rock. Rubbing his knees he got to his feet and picked up the bundle of sharpened sticks, feeling the uneven ground with his boot tip as he moved.

The smell was almost overpowering by now and Anatole stopped, trying to figure out what it was. It had a vague familiarity about it but he couldn’t yet place it.

Just ahead of him he heard breathing.

The breath caught in his throat and he backed off a step.

For a moment, Anatole thought his ears were playing tricks on him, perhaps it was just the wind whistling inside the cave.

The breathing came again, low and guttural. And rhythmic. He swallowed hard and squinted into the gloom, trying to discover who his unwelcome companion in darkness was. The breathing continued and the youth tried, with shaking hands, to undo the strip of rabbit fur which bound the six sticks together. He pulled the knot and they clattered noisily to the floor of the cave. Almost moaning aloud, he dropped to his knees to retrieve one, terrified that he had disturbed the occupant of the cave. He found one of the deadly shafts and gripped it with both hands then, as his eyes gradually became accustomed to the gloom, he advanced towards the guttural rasping.

His foot touched something soft and he jumped back.

Lying before him was a bear.

It was large, perhaps as big as a man and it was sleeping, hibernating he guessed. It was the bear he had heard snoring. And the smell was suddenly identifiable. His father had killed a bear once and brought it back to the village. The animal had been skinned, its fat used to make candles, the skin cut up to make hats and gloves. Now Anatole stood over the animal and raised the sharpened stick high above his head. It was his own breath which he heard coming in gasps now.

With all his strength he drove the sharpened stake down.

It pierced the bear’s body just below the left shoulder and the youth recoiled as a huge gout of blood spurted from the wound. He wrenched it free and struck again, this time into the animal’s throat. It awoke in pain and uttered a strangled cry, one huge paw reaching for the stake which pinned its head to the ground, the other swatting at its attacker. Dazed and dying, it tried to rise, the shaft still through its throat and Anatole quickly snatched up another of the lethal spikes. He drove it into the beast’s belly, careful to say clear of the flailing claws. More blood spouted from the wounds, splattering him and he spat disgustedly as some hit him in the mouth. But, with a final despairing grunt, the bear keeled over onto its side and lay still.

Anatole kicked it with his boot tip and it moved slightly. Probably just muscular contractions but he was taking no chances. Retrieving a third stake, he drove it through the creature’s head and leaned on it for what seemed like an eternity. Spattered with blood and panting like a horse, the youth sat down beside the carcass of the bear, wiping some of the sticky crimson liquid from his face. But, he did not sit for long. There was work to be done.

2

Anatole found that by pulling more branches across the cave entrance and piling some snow around it, the hole was all but obscured from any passers-by. He stood outside his newfound ‘home’ gazing at the makeshift covering of frozen branches. As he made his way back to the cave carrying an armful of wood, he used one branch to cover his footsteps. Then, he pulled away part of the canopy and, after meticulously replacing it, made his way back to the rear of the cave. He had estimated by now that it must go for at least fifty feet into the hillside, the narrow tunnel curving to the right the deeper it went.

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