Things have all gone so differently from what the tall man had imagined. They are a burden to the others. He can't rely on their patience, not when he can't keep up the pace, when things go black before his eyes and he needs to take a rest.
Maybe it really would have been better if he'd stayed alone with the black man. He doesn't push him to go faster, he gives him water, and shares his food. The gratitude flickers for a moment.
The Ethiopian is walking behind him now. He and the tall man are still a pair, but the distance between them is growing by the hour. The law of the group is taking over again. Their solidarity is broken; step by step, the tall man walks away from the one who saved him.
Evening. The flat land blows its cold breath over them; embers flare in a gust of wind. The black man shuffles around outside the circle; they can hear him tearing off grass for his bed. âPointless,' the boy hears the poacher say. The boy leans forward to hear him better. Some snakes sleep at night, the poacher says, but that's exactly when others come out to hunt. But the karakurt spiders, they're the dangerous ones. Their poison can kill a bull.
They went out digging for tubers and onions, but found nothing. That night, the poacher's snares remained empty as well.
The hunger makes you furious at first; but then, if it keeps on going, it makes you listless and weak. That's why the rages of Vitaly and the man from Ashkhabad have subsided, because of the hunger and the cold.
They left again before first light. Walking would drive the cold from their bones. Gradually, the day unfolded behind them. The grass was licked with frost.
At their feet, a hare bolted. A pair of partridges flew up, cackling, in front of them. That afternoon, the poacher pointed out to the boy a herd of donkeys at the furthermost edge of their vision. There was no chance of catching one. All food ran and flew away at their approach. The poacher longed for his rifle; he could have used it to shoot the hare and the partridges, as well as the geese that babbled as they plied the heavens, but his hunting rifle was hanging on the wall at home. Home â a place that seemed pleasant to him now, not poor and desperate like when he left. There was a fire in the stove, a soft bed, his warm wife.
He had been one of the last to leave. The evenings when those who remained behind had drunk away their cares at the community hall and danced till they dropped had become increasingly rare â when the men bared their chests, giving in to that mysterious urge that overpowers almost every male once he has had enough to drink.
Sometimes they went out poaching in an old all-terrain vehicle, blind drunk, chasing away every living thing with their ruckus. They shot at shadows and glimmers, at anything that moved or stood still. Each and every one of them fancied himself a sharpshooter. They guzzled homemade hooch, the empty bottles exploding in shards against the rocks. Nikolai Ribalko shot his own dog by accident. He wept and swore that he would suffer for his deed, suffer for having shot and killed his treacherous fucking dog. They were savage, their blood boiled, but they fell asleep as soon as the action petered out.
That was the life he had left behind.
On the horizon a
kurgan
rose up, a burial mound built by a people lost long ago. They had run across these before. They tended to give them a wide berth, fearing that their presence would disturb the rest of the dead. But now they lacked the energy to swerve around the mound that lay straight across their path. The boy approached it with a mixture of dread and excitement. The hill was covered in yellow prairie grass. He longed to look far in every direction. The sole of his right shoe had come loose, and flapped as he walked. He'd tried to fix it temporarily with strips of canvas that the poacher had cut for him from an old satchel.
He climbed to the top. Dizziness. And also euphoria at being liberated from the flats, as though he had been lifted by a giant hand.
But he saw no sign of life. Nowhere was there a rectangular structure to betray the hand of man. He turned slowly where he stood: waving grass, yellow sea.
The poacher and the man from Ashkhabad joined him. âNothing, right?' the man from Ashkhabad said. The boy shook his head.
The man from Ashkhabad moaned. âWe're doomed.'
âYou are. I'm not,' the poacher said quietly.
The boy was the only one who paid attention to his words. He knew the poacher was right, that he would outlive them all. He was a stone; he knew what it meant to endure.
Vitaly reached the top, out of breath. Then the woman appeared. The Ethiopian was the last one up the hill. Being around the tall man had changed him; he acted like one of them now. He looked around. There was no difference between the road they'd taken and the road they had to follow. The black man looked up, and the boy followed his gaze. A flight of geese at high altitude were flying south, the formation weaving and parting and rejoining.
What does he see? the boy wondered. What is he thinking?
As they were getting ready to descend, the black man reached out and touched Vitaly's arm. Vitaly recoiled. âKeep your hands off me, you pig.'
The black man indicated a dense patch of grass far away, and said something in his indecipherable tongue. The poacher and the man from Ashkhabad looked. There was a hint of green amid the yellow. Maybe it was a hollow where water collected during long droughts. Maybe they would find wood there, or wild onions.
Like shadows, they wander across the steppes, all skinny as a strap. It won't be long before they grow transparent and disappear. Departing from their route, they head south, towards the spot the Ethiopian showed them. When they get there they find nothing but a few bushes and tall, plumed grass. They dig like men possessed, in search of onions and wild tulip bulbs. When they leave, the ground is upturned, as though a band of nomads has dug for treasure there. They avoid each other's eyes; the blow is unbearable.
The woman weeps without tears. She falls to her knees and tosses sand over her head. The boy sees it gliding off her hair and shoulders.
âCome,' he says, âwe're falling behind.'
He grabs her arm and pulls her to her feet. She falls back on the ground, on her stomach now, and rubs her face in the sand. Her forehead, her nose, her cheeks are covered in dust. The boy pulls her up again and drags her along. She takes a sudden step towards him, he ducks too late, and the flat of her hand hits him in the face.
Then she walks away from him, after the others.
The boy remains standing. He feels each individual finger burning on his cheek.
They go back to the kurgan; the poacher thinks there may be wild animals there that will walk into his traps. In the late afternoon, they pitch camp in the hill's long shadow. The boy knows that the hill is hollow inside. The dead wander around in there. They will come to get him. That night, they will reach out their knobby hands to seize him and drag him by his feet into their underworld.
Vitaly walks over to the woman, who is sitting in the sand, and pulls her to her feet. He wants to take her to his bed for the night, but the man from Ashkhabad intervenes.
âLet go,' he says.
Vitaly snorts.
âLet go. Or do you want me to kick the shit out of you?' the man from Ashkhabad says.
The others watch. They expect Vitaly to give in. He steps back â not to retreat though, not like they think, but to jump at the other's throat. They fall and roll, panting through the dirt. Most of the blows miss their mark. The man from Ashkhabad rolls on top of Vitaly, and punches him hard â in the head, on the chest, right through the arms he's raised to protect himself. Vitaly is no longer the canny street fighter he was a while back, when he almost always won. Now, he remains lying on the ground as the man from Ashkhabad drags his prey along into the gathering darkness.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
To the ataman
The next morning, the trailer truck was empty. The slashed canvas billowed in the wind. The trucking company was informed, and sent someone to pick it up. The driver remained in custody, for having driven under the influence and resisting arrest. Sergeant Koller looked at his boss's raw knuckles, and entertained no illusions. Beg was a fine fellow, but he had his moods.
The detainee lay in his cell with his face to the wall, and didn't respond to their questions. He didn't touch his food. His lips were split; some of his teeth were broken. The doctor had come by. âBruised ribs, nothing broken,' he ruled. He didn't look at the man's teeth â they hadn't talked about teeth at medical school.
In the basement cellblock at the station house, the filth of the world piled up like flotsam against the walls of a sluice. Once a week, everything down there was cleaned with Lysol, but the smell of vomit and stale sweat drilled straight through it all.
At noon, Beg locked his office door from the inside and pulled a little address book from his desk drawer. It was an old one: lots of the names had been scratched out, and new ones were no longer added. In the same way that the rabbi wandered amid the headstones of his loved ones, Beg found himself leafing through pages containing the names of people who had once been a part of his life but had now disappeared from it. Under âU' he found his sister Eva. She had divorced that talented good-for-nothing Alexander Uspensky, but she had kept his name. The name âBeg' was too countrified for her; it had too much flatland, too much steppe to it.
He had no idea whether the number was still in service. She might have moved â people were restless, more than they used to be, blown hither and thither. Only he stayed where he was, immovable amid the wheezing heating pipes and the upstairs neighbours who tossed cigarette butts onto his balcony.
He picked up the phone, hesitated for a moment, and then dialled the number.
It rang. A man answered, without stating his name. All he said was, âYeah?'
âTo whom am I speaking?' Beg asked.
âTo whom am I speaking?'
Beg sighed. âTadeusz, is that you?'
It was quiet for a moment. âWho's asking?'
âYour uncle, Pontus.'
Silence again. âMum's not here,' he said then.
âOh.'
âSorry.'
âWhen's she coming back?'
âI don't know.'
The unwillingness at the other end was almost palpable. He had probably interrupted his nephew while he was playing some computer game â a modern-day sin against the spirit.
âWell, it was nice talking to you, Tadeusz.'
âYeah,' the boy said.
âWould you tell her I called?'
âSure.'
âI really need to talk to her.'
âI'll tell her.'
Then they hung up. Beg sank back in his chair. Tadeusz was still a teenager the last time he'd seen him. Now he'd had a young adult on the line whom he would have liked to tell that things could turn out all right, that there was no cause for such suspicion.
Whether that was true, he had no idea.
He had known Eva better than anyone; they had been the sole witnesses to each other's youths. That one day they would turn their backs on each other in bitterness had been unthinkable. Still, it had happened. They could die unnoticed, without either of them knowing that about the other. It was something you shouldn't dwell on, otherwise it would weigh you down and make you sad.
Oksana's blonde bouffant hair-do appeared above the strip of smoked glass that separated his office from the hallway. It sailed past like a ship on the horizon. With her long legs and high heels, Oksana, if she stood on tip-toes, was the only one who could look over it. Whenever she walked past she would toss a quick, almost compulsive glance inside, then turn away quickly as though she had seen nothing. Beg had thought about taping off the top section of the window, too, but never got around to it. Perhaps, he thought, he appreciated being seen by at least one person.
That afternoon, he drove to a sandy stretch outside town. After the empire's collapse, a bazaar had arisen there, a market bigger than Michailopol had ever seen. Beg had witnessed the birth of a new kind of trading place â the planned economy vanished, the bazaar shot up from the soil like a field of wildflowers in spring. Roads were built, latrines dug â replaced later by portacabins and even later by toilet blocks with running water â and there were snack bars and exchange offices. Michailopol suddenly found itself smack dab in the middle of the world, at a crossroads. The bazaar was frequented by gypsies with brown faces and scars on their scalps; traders crossed the border in their old Mercedes; farmers brought in grain and livestock; and they all returned home with pruning shears, hunting rifles, grinders, and plastic flowers for their ancestors' graves. Old women carried such heavy loads of checkered shopping bags that it was a wonder their legs didn't buckle beneath them, like old cavalry mounts. From one day to the next, everyone became a merchant. Everyone had something to sell and was champing at the bit to buy something in turn. An old man who made ice cream said the bazaar reminded him of the market at Krakow after the Great War â the riotous outburst of mercantile fever that marked life's return after the hunger and the horrors, he had seen it there, too.