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Authors: Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

Apricot Jam: And Other Stories (27 page)

BOOK: Apricot Jam: And Other Stories
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Was it wise to move now? By the time we

ve laid down the lines something more might be happening.

 

~ * ~

 

19

 

Another half-hour passed.

 

The glow in the sky on the left and to the north had grown larger. Now there were three fires nearby and something larger a good distance away.
But no shelling—no artillery, no mortars.
Rifle fire probably wouldn

t be heard.

 

Nothing was happening on the right, where he had removed Kasyanov

s OP, but that low ground curving around gave a lot of cause for concern. Then Ostanin returned from the hollow just forward and said that there was no way he could stay there any longer. There were two or three shapes moving around on the slope opposite. He could almost certainly have picked them off but he held back.

 

~ * ~

 

He was right, most likely. With local guides, the Germans here can find every path and byway. And using the low spots in front, they could bring up a whole battalion and their sleds as well.

 

The visibility was getting poorer all the time. When you sent someone off on an errand, you could make him out—more by guesswork than anything else—for about a hundred meters; then he vanished.

 

Was that a mass of infantry out there in the darkness, not making a sound? That

s not how an attack is made on today

s battlefield; it

s impossible. Organizing such a silent attack is even more difficult than organizing a noisy one.

 

Still, in war anything is possible.

 

If the Germans have been cut off for a whole day, why wouldn

t they want to launch an attack?

 

His thoughts were whirling. Where was brigade headquarters? How could they abandon him this way?

 

He could not retreat. But he might not be able to hold out until morning either. Staying here was pointless, though. He had to save his guns.

 

Should he risk pulling back another battery? This would not be seen as just a maneuver: it was an unauthorized retreat. But for the moment, at least, he could do something: Load the binocular telescope, the radio, and any spare spools of cable on the sled. And turn the sled to face the battery. He told Myagkov:

Take the extra drums for the sub-machine guns. Issue all the grenades we

ve got.

 

And keep your voices down: noise carries across that open field.

 

The Germans could move a tank up quickly, of course. And we don

t have anything to use against a tank. Our slit trenches are tiny.

 

The signalman summoned Boyev to the phone. He was only a couple of paces farther down their trench. It was the commander of the sound-ranging battery again. He was very anxious: the Germans had captured his left listening post! All they had been able to report was

They

re trying to surround us. They

re in white camouflage.

And that was all.

 

He asked Boyev:

What

s happening over there, Pavel
Afanasych
?

 


I can

t see anything so far.

 


No one

s attacking my central station yet. But I

m bringing in my boxes—I don

t want to lose them. So you

d best keep your eyes peeled. And you can pull in your line.

 

Boyev held on to the receiver for a time, as if he was waiting to hear something more.

 

But there was only silence.

 

The battle had already begun.

 

To Myagkov he said:

Take everyone we

ve got and position them in a semicircle about two hundred meters to our front. Leave one man on the telephone and another with the sled.

 

Myagkov went off quietly to pass on the orders.

 

Setting up a protective screen was a risky move: you could find out more quickly when the Germans were advancing, but you couldn

t fire from here without hitting your own men. But if everyone stayed in one bunch they

d be caught like a flock of sheep.

 

He wasn

t agitated; his mind was working calmly and clearly. Various scenes passed through his mind: the battles near Oryol, the Desna River,
Starodub
, the battle near
Rechitsa
. Each battle was different, and each death was different. One thing he never did was to waste his shells in pointless firing.

 

There was the triumph of the Bobruisk pocket, the pursuit across Poland, the vicious bridgehead near
Pultusk
. And still, he

d come through them all.

 

. . . Just hold on until morning . . .

 

A few bursts of machine gun fire came from the northeast, about two kilometers away. Then there was silence.

 

That was roughly where Baluev had gone.

 

~ * ~

 

20

 

The shells had been stacked near the guns at Toplev

s position. But it didn

t look as if they would have to do any firing before first light. Yet the battalion commander had ordered all the gun crews to get their carbines ready. The carbines were scarcely ever needed, and the men never carried them; they were stacked in ammunition boxes. Gunners in heavy artillery weren

t expected to fight with rifles. The reconnaissance men and the headquarters platoons carried submachine guns, and they were all at the OPs.

 

There was nothing to be seen toward his front or his flanks; everything was lost in this semi-darkness.

 

Even before this, Toplev had been pacing about, alarmed and uncertain; but now, after the battalion commander

s order to distribute the carbines . . .

 

All eight guns stood in a row, as they were rarely positioned; batteries were always located separately. Toplev paced about nervously, looking very small beside this row of massive guns.

 

Not every gun had even half its crew; the others had gone to the nearby houses and were sleeping where it was warm and dry. A few of them had even managed to find some German alcohol. The drivers were all asleep somewhere.

 

He roused all four platoon commanders: Distribute the carbines and get ready to defend our position. Some jumped to follow his orders, others moved reluctantly. If only the deputy political officer, who was usually hanging around, were here: they were afraid of him, at least. But the brigade commissar had kept him with him, on duty until morning.

 

The Germans wouldn

t attack without some preliminary bombardment, though; they

d drop a few shells or mortar rounds on them and give them some warning.

 

But it was quiet. There was no sound of tanks moving about, either.

 

He kept listening, but there was nothing to be heard.

 

He should take another look around the position.

 

He went to the headquarters truck in Klein. That

s where they kept all the files. So if anything did happen ... then what? He ordered the driver to stay with the truck and the radio operator to keep trying to contact Ural. Then he went back to
Adlig
, to the guns.

 


Comrade Captain!

It was the telephone operator calling him in a muffled voice from the entryway to a house where he had made a place for himself.

It

s the battalion commander for you.

 

He took the receiver.

 

Boyev said in a steely voice:

Toplev! We

re being surrounded here! Get ready to defend yourselves!

He hadn

t put the cover back over the telephone receiver, and Toplev could hear shot after shot being fired! Then everything went silent. The connection had been lost.

 

Then Toplev felt something strange happening to him: His kneecaps began to tremble, entirely on their own and separately from his knees. They were jumping up and down.

 

Now he had no need to call out all the gun crews. The platoon commanders were rushing along the row of guns: Prepare for action! They

ve already attacked the battalion commander!

 

Now the whole place was jumping.

 

What about the headquarters truck? If anything should happen? He sent a soldier with a jerry can to pour gasoline over it.

 

If we don

t pull out, we

ll burn the truck.

 

~ * ~

 

21

 

Loyalty to his father was the key to Oleg Gusev

s character. Who can be more sacred and exalted for a young boy than his father? And how badly his father had been wronged in the 1930s (Oleg understood, though he was just ten) when, for no good reason, he was pushed out of his post as a brigade commander and demoted to colonel. They were living in a two-room communal apartment, and an informer was living in the third room. (In fact there was a reason for what had happened: someone his father had served with had been arrested, though the boy only learned about that later.) And in his teens all he wanted was to follow in his father

s footsteps. At age sixteen (these were the months of the Stalingrad battle) he got his wish: after finally getting his father

s permission, he donned a private soldier

s overcoat.

 

Loyalty to his father meant not disgracing himself here, beside his two guns, and having his father blamed for his son

s actions. It would be better to be killed. Oleg was even happy that everything had turned out this way, that they had been positioned to guard the bridge by firing over open sights, something unheard of for a 152-millimeter gun. So—let those German tanks come rumbling out of the darkness, and the sooner the better!

 

This had been an unforgettable night for him, and he was anticipating even greater things.

 

Although each gun was supposed to be allotted sixty shells, there was only half that number, even after collecting shells from the other guns in the platoon. And the gun crews had only seven men, not eight. (Yes, Lepetushin, the missing man . . .) The lieutenant didn

t take a soldier from some other crew; that would not have been right. He

d make do with what he had. Better to help them himself, with his own hands.

 

The self-propelled gun and the fierce colonel had left the area, and the guns from Six Battery stood by the bridge, protecting it. Before them was only an empty, dark expanse; none of our people seemed to be there—and then suddenly people began running toward them.

 

There were a few surveyors from the reconnaissance battalion, one limping,
another
with a bandaged shoulder. They had been sent to survey in the guns while the moon was bright, but then they were caught in the darkness. They had been waiting for the clouds to pass. Interrupting one another, the surveyors told their story: It was a strange sort of attack, the Germans simply creeping up silently; some of them carrying shovels, some even knives; they fired only a few shots. There were still a few surveyors left back there.

 

The sleds from the sound-ranging battery with their reconnaissance equipment came through; they had managed to pull back in time. They had set free the draft horses captured from the Germans; their truck had gotten stuck there and some of them were trying to pull it out.

 

So how many more people from the sound-ranging battery were still back there?

 

He asked Kandalintsev:

Pavel Petrovich, how can we fire when our own guys are still pouring in?

BOOK: Apricot Jam: And Other Stories
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