War of The Rats - A Novel of Stalingrad - [World War II 01] (32 page)

BOOK: War of The Rats - A Novel of Stalingrad - [World War II 01]
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When she straightened, her hands worked at her waist. She turned to face him: all the barriers to her body had been unlocked. Her shirt hung aside from her breasts, the points firm beneath the gray-green undershirt. Her sleeves were unbuttoned at the wrists. Her belt was undone. The zipper to her pantaloons was down and her boots flapped open.

 

Tania kicked off the boots to stand in her socks. Her face was a white moon in the lantern light. Her eyes shone at him, reflecting the lamp in twin dots turned azure.

 

Zaitsev stepped toward her; he watched his shadow climb her legs, then shade her body and face. He reached to her shoulders to push the unbuttoned shirt back. She raised her head at his touch; her hair was heavy on the backs of his hands. Her collar opened and slid away. The tunic fell back and a scent rose from her undershirt, arms, and neck. The tang of sweat mingled with the smell of soil. He thought of the sweet loam on the floor of the birch forest. The shirt fell behind her. Tania stood between the coat and the shirt in a circlet of arms and buttons.

 

She raised her hands in the air. Her breasts pushed up against the undershirt, flattening and rounding. Zaitsev laid his open palms on her to feel her nipples. He pulled the thin cotton shirt over her head and dropped it at her feet.

 

Zaitsev reached for her waist, but Tania stopped him, pushing his hands down by his sides. She reached for his waist and unlatched the brass of the Red Army belt he wore outside his coat. She tossed the belt into the shadows where it rattled on the floor. The girl’s hands moved to his chest. Her bare breasts and shoulders were ivory ovals in the hard linear shadows of the bunker. She undid the buttons of his coat and tugged the shoulders back to let the coat tumble.

 

She flipped open the buttons on his jersey. All the time, she avoided his eyes; she watched her own hands move on him.

 

The buttons freed. Zaitsev pulled his tunic and navy shirt over his head. He dropped them onto the growing heap.

 

Keeping her hands by her sides, she laid her breasts against his bare chest. She exhaled when her flesh pressed against him. Her breath was warm, full as fur against his cheek.

 

Tania locked onto his eyes. She sat on the floor before him, rolling her head back to hold his gaze. She pulled off her pants and socks and reached behind Zaitsev to gather in his coat and shirt, bunching them with her own clothes to form a mound at her back.

 

Zaitsev stepped out of his boots. He slid off his pants and dropped them to Tania, who made a show of adding them to the mix.

 

He sank to his knees on the stack of clothes. Tania pointed at his socks.

 

“Trust me,” he murmured, breaking the silence, “they’re better off where they are.”

 

Tania giggled. Zaitsev was wrapped in her laugh, feeling it heat the cool bunker floor. Her laughter was like arms that moved his chest in front of hers and pulled him down over her.

 

Tania did not collapse back onto the cushion of clothes. She pressed hard against him with her chest. Her hands and arms stayed braced against the ground. This surprised Zaitsev and excited him. He covered her mouth with his to push her down in a kiss as though setting the spring of a trap. She allowed herself to sink back bit by bit, then relaxed and flung her arms about his neck. He laid his hands in the curves of her hips, then ran them up her sides, over her ribs, and behind her neck. She moved under him in a rolling wave.

 

He pulled his hand from the soft weight of her hair and looked into his palms and at his fingers. The hand was rough, callused from months of crawling through the ruins of Stalingrad. Dried blood from the night’s murder clung beneath his nails. This is not a proper hand, he thought, to touch a woman.

 

Gently, Zaitsev pulled his other hand from beneath her neck. He rose up on an elbow.

 

“Give me your hand,” he said.

 

Looking down at her closed eyes, Zaitsev put his hand on top of hers. Slowly he guided her fingers to her breast; he felt the question in her wrist. She relaxed the hand and entrusted it to him. He worked her forefinger in a small circle over the swollen nipple. Tania inhaled in a gasp, then let go in a murmured sigh. Zaitsev slipped her hand off her breast and led it into the cleft between the two mounds, then down onto the white plain of her belly. He moved her hand in languorous circles, pressing and releasing; her hips stirred under their hands. He led her touch down between her legs, sensing no resistance. She moved with him, taking his directions; her fingers began to swirl and glide under him on their own, on her skin, into herself.

 

He looked into her face and breathed with her sighs. He no longer led her hand but rode it, going where she pleased; he was saddled to her movements.

 

Zaitsev watched Tania bring herself to a climax. In a climbing quiver, she reached up with her free hand and pulled him down to kiss his face in the rhythms of her body. She pushed her stomach higher, pressing her thighs together over their hands. Within moments, her back flexed into an arch until she lay back with a heaving chest.

 

She opened her eyes. In her stillness, he felt the attention his own body clamored for now.

 

“Vasha,” she whispered, “go with me tomorrow.”

 

He looked down her length. Her knees were up. The smoothness of her legs ached inside him, pushing to come out.

 

“That’s the way of the taiga,” he whispered. He moved above her, sliding his knees between hers.

 

“The animals mate.” He lowered himself. “Then they hunt.”

 

* * * *

 

MAMAYEV KURGAN’S SCARS SHOWED UNDER THE MORN
ING light. The snow, which had fallen until dawn, did not hide the slashes of trenches or fill the craters that gave its eastern slope the look of a moonscape. The frost glistened diamond flashes in Zaitsev’s scope while his crosshairs glided over sector six.

 

“Look at the top of the hill,” Tania said. “There’s no snow on it. I hear it’s because the ground stays so warm up there from all the shelling.”

 

Mamayev Kurgan commanded a view of the city and the Volga. Three months earlier, in August, Red soldiers standing atop the water towers on the hill’s crest first saw the dust of the German army’s advance tanks speeding over the steppe. This morning, Zaitsev knew, Nazi spotters were in command of the summit. The two armies had traded the hill several times, never keeping it for long, always attracting the worst the enemy had to dish out in order to regain the crest. The hill had been peppered with artillery shells so often and with such ferocity that the ground of Mamayev Kurgan carried within it an extra, pregnant heat.

 

Zaitsev and Tania hunkered down in a trench on the western edge of no-man’s-land. Before them was an impossible maze of broken machinery, abandoned guns, and pitted earth. Bodies lay under the hummocks of small snowdrifts.

 

Zaitsev pulled the periscope from his backpack to scan deeper into the rising field in front of them. He thought, I’ve got to make something happen. He knew the hunting would be slow on Mamayev Kurgan. The fighting had been so intense, so nonstop that anyone left alive here probably knew how to stay that way. He didn’t want to spend days with Tania helping her get her first kill as sector leader.

 

For a silent hour he peered through the periscope at the German breastworks. Tania crawled fifty meters away to look from a different angle and to avoid being conspicuous. The shadows shortened with the sun rising at their backs. The reflections from the glistening snow dulled. Twice, Zaitsev saw what might have been sniper movement. A wisp of cigarette smoke disappeared quickly; it might have been snow drifting on the wind. Moments after, near the same spot, he thought he glimpsed a helmet bobbing once, then twice, above the trench. This, too, vanished before he could focus on it.

 

Zaitsev was acquainted with waiting. But something about Chernova drove him at a faster clip. Her eager energy distracted him from his discipline, though she made no overt demands or even showed any hints of impatience with him. She has a heat, he thought, like a stove or the top of Mamayev Kurgan. Things boil up around her.

 

He set down the periscope and lit a cigarette, breaking a major rule of sniper engagement. He felt aggravated, restless.

 

Well, he thought, there’s something I’ve been wanting to try for a while. Why not this morning?

 

He shouldered his rifle and crawled to where Tania squatted below her periscope. She did not look away from the eyepiece when he approached.

 

“You’re smoking,” she said.

 

“Stay here. I’m going to get Danilov.”

 

Tania’s head snapped around. “What? Why do that? He’s no good up here. Leave him alone.”

 

“I have a plan. Stay here.” Zaitsev raised a finger at her. “And don’t shoot a fucking thing. Understand?”

 

He wagged his finger at her hard to make his point and turned to steal back to the Lazur.

 

* * * *

 

“SET IT UP RIGHT HERE.”

 

Zaitsev stacked more bricks on the two piles he’d built above the trench. He stepped out of the way for Danilov to place the loudspeaker behind the brick mound on the left. The commissar let the bell of the speaker stick out a few centimeters to the right and pointed it up the hill toward the German lines.

 

Danilov unrolled the coiled cord between the microphone and the speaker. He sat on the trench floor with an effort and clicked the trigger on the microphone twice. The speaker blared to loud, tinny life.

 

“Wait.” Zaitsev held up his hand. “Wait for my signal, as we discussed.”

 

Zaitsev crawled on all fours to Tania. She stared at him, the rifle and periscope across her lap.

 

“So?” she asked.

 

Zaitsev made a quick study of her face. Her checks were flushed with the chill. A ring from the periscope showed around her right eye. Her lips held no smile but were left sour and pouting, the remnants of her one-word question to him: so?

 

He paused, appreciating her effect on him, her combination of beauty and will. He’d left her for ninety minutes on his trek back to the Lazur for Danilov. She’d had all that time to do nothing but stare up the slope. The stove, he thought, has warmed while I was gone.

 

He whispered. “Just do what I tell you, partisan.” He glanced back at Danilov. “Our little commissar is really quite good at his job, you know. And his job is agitating. In a minute, he’s going to get on his bullhorn and read some very nasty leaflets in German his brother
politrooks
have prepared. I suspect Danilov’s German is not so good, but it’s probably good enough to make every Nazi within earshot angry as hornets. Maybe just with his pronunciation, who can tell?”

 

Zaitsev grinned at his own jest. The corners of Tania’s mouth lifted. A small blue wave broke in her eyes.

 

“My guess,” he continued, “is that we’re going to be in a shooting gallery soon after he turns it up. You go twenty meters to the left, and I’ll stay near Danilov. If there’s sniper fire, it’ll probably be in my direction. I’ll be set up for it; I’ve got a little trick I’m going to try. Anything else, machine guns probably, I think you’ll see first. Any shots you get, take them. We move one minute after the first shot, either yours or mine.”

 

“Vasha.” Tania held out her hand, palm up as if to accept a coin. “You always say a sniper must guard the secrecy of his position.” She pointed at Danilov to demand an explanation for the commissar and his loudspeaker.

 

“Exactly.” Zaitsev grinned. “And that’s why today we try the unexpected.” He reached into her lap for her periscope. He laid it across her open hand, dropping his smile with the scope. “You wanted a hunt. Let’s hunt.”

 

He crawled away to set up his subterfuge, the stuffed cotton dummy he’d carried from the Lazur. He propped the dummy up behind the second, right-hand pile of bricks, moving it forward and to the left just far enough so that its helmet would be visible only in a roughly twenty-degree span to the southwest. Finally, he stuck a pipe behind the dummy’s back to hold it in place.

 

Zaitsev had not been a frequent user of the dummies. No one in the hares was. The opposite was their specialty, as Tania had correctly cited: the hares strove to be invisible. A dummy was designed to draw attention to itself, a feint. The dummies were better for Viktor’s line of work; the bears’ style was a more confrontational one. He’d actually heard of Viktor’s boys leaping out of their shooting cells during combat and charging. Not the way snipers should work, Zaitsev thought, but he would never tell Viktor Medvedev how to hunt or what to teach. But charging and shouting were not for Zaitsev’s little, lithe assassins. Still, the dummies were always available. Their production had become an underground cottage industry for the thousand or so native Stalingrad women left in the city. Zaitsev held a mental picture of them sitting in a circle beneath a lantern in a covered shell hole or a basement, stitching dummies out of old blankets, stuffing them with mattress filling, giving the dummies names. This was how these old women fought, with needle and thread. Zaitsev was glad now to use one of their creations. He named it Pyotr and patted it on the shoulder.

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