“Barkal,” he muttered gruffly. “Thanks.”
While he had never been exactly gushingly friendly, he now seemed to almost resent my appearance at his door. It opened no wider.
“Hussein is away.”
Away! That meant Hussein was still alive!
“Will he be back soon?” I asked, waiting at the door.
“No,” came the stone-cold reply.
“And Ussam?” I asked, referring to Hussein’s younger brother.
“In Slepsovski, on business.”
It was time to take stock of this situation.
I was back in Samashki. Hussein was alive but gone. His father was cool to cold. Other people were throwing bricks at me when not casting me the evil eye.
Something was wrong.
“Can I wait for him here?”
A moment’s pause.
“Ok,” he said at last, and I entered, having forced myself upon Hussein’s household by evoking the Law of the Mountains pertaining to persistent guests and strangers.
If the house had sustained any damage over the last eighteen months, it was not apparent. But the dwelling, sparsely furnished during the best of times, was completely empty. A single spring bed and mattress were set in the back room.
Hussein’s father stood there and studied me in silence. He did not smile.
What the hell was going on here?
I had a copy of the Rights and Wrongs broadcast tape in my bags, as well as a photocopy of a Soldier of Fortune article I had written entitled “Weapons Bizarre.” It had to do with the Chechens’ ability to create a homemade arsenal during the war, ranging from shoulder-fired surface-to-air missiles culled from downed helicopters, to things like Hussein’s gigantic land mine made from a rocket warhead.
“These are for you,” I said, offering the material to the elder man.
“Hussein,” he breathed, studying the pictures.
“Please,” I said. “They are yours to keep as a memory of those bad times.”
“Thanks,” he said, and then shuffled out the door. “Those bad times.”
“Toms.”
It was Hussein’s father, the man whose name I never knew, sitting down on my bed in the dark, candle in his hand. It was a peculiar moment, almost paternal, nearly intimate—and utterly against Chechen tradition. The Law of the Mountains did not allow elders to act in such a casual way.
“You know the situation here is bad,” he said, speaking without looking at me, staring straight ahead to the shadow of his candle dancing on the opposite wall.
“Yes,” I replied, waiting.
“The war has stopped and the Russians are gone…”
“Yes.”
“Please listen,” he said, placing his hand on my knee. “Then, you knew who the enemy was and where he stood. Now, it is much more dangerous. The enemy is all around and you do not know who he is. Do you understand me?”
“Please go on,” I said.
A queer knot was forming in my stomach, in my soul. I knew where this was heading, and did not want it to go there.
“Hussein is in Kazakhstan, and he will not be coming back.”
“Why?”
“They say he was a traitor, and brought war to Samashki.”
“Who?”
“The elders, the ones who surrendered the town when you were here.”
“But we know that…”
“Please listen,” he cut me off. “There is more.”
“I am listening,” I said, the knot in my stomach growing into a twisted lump.
“They say he was not alone in his betrayal,” said Hussein’s father, speaking about his son. “They say a KGB agent worked with him to take pictures of the town’s defenses.”
I did not even need to hear the rest. The twisted lump had turned to burning steel, exploding in my gut and sending singeing pieces of shrapnel to every nerve in my body
I was on fire.
“Toms,” he said, now looking me in the eye and patting my knee with a paternal hand. “It is very dangerous for you to be here at all.”
I was almost giddy with fear and decades away from sleep.
That KGB agent was me.
Ussam returned toward dawn and found me chain-smoking in the kitchen.
“You” he said, in a tone that made me very worried, knowing now what I did.
Then his father entered and spoke just three words.
“I told him,” said the elder man, referring to me. “Now you talk.”
The Law of the Mountains; an elder’s command. Kanun.
Ussam stared at me with malignant eyes for a moment, looked back at his father, back at me, and then sat down on the floor, back propped against the far wall, sighing.
“Talk,” said his father.
“Talk,” I asked, almost pleading.
It took hours to extract, but Ussam filled in the details.
Of course I was filming.
“After the Mothers’ March through Samashki, things got very bad, and the elders wanted to surrender the town,” Ussam related, referring to the period of time bracketed by my escape from Samashki on March 27 and the massacre of April 7. “They demanded that Hussein go with them to negotiate at the Post, and so he went. But in going to meet with the Russians, my brother lost the trust of the militants who wanted to fight no matter what. Still, the people pleaded, and so Hussein managed to convince most of the fighters to leave, because that is what the majority wanted, although he wanted to stay and fight as well.
“The elders were then told to collect a certain number of weapons to prove that the militants were gone. They did this, but then the Russian command changed their mind and demanded more and more, and said they would storm the town if those weapons were not delivered by their deadline. At this last session, someone shot at the returning party of elders. We thought it was the diehards shooting at Hussein.
“The Russians then said that all weapons had to be surrendered by a certain hour, and that all militants had to leave by a certain route. There were no more weapons to give, and because we did not trust the Russians, we all left and went into the forest via a different path. That is when the Russians attacked, and after that people started to say that Hussein was to blame, because he first brought war to Samashki by defending against the train, but then left it undefended and allowed the massacre. So Hussein left. He was forced to leave. God, I know how he did not want to go! I can never believe that my brother, my older brother, would ever betray his people.”
Ussam twiddled his thumbs.
One—left or right?—lacked the entire nail and the top quarter of the joint.
When did he lose it, I wondered but did not ask.
“It is dangerous for you here,” said Ussam. “There are people who want to kill you.”
“Kill me.”
“Yes.”
Another long shudder down a spine that was no longer mine and along nerves made of mud.
“Do not leave the house, Toms,” said Hussein’s father. “My son Ussam shall sneak you out of town in darkness, tonight!”
“No,” said Ussam, reflecting. “Perhaps if people see you on the streets, it will convince them of your true intent. If you were really a Russian agent, you would be insane to return to Samashki by yourself.”
There was a certain logic to what Ussam said.
My very presence in town would either wipe the slate clean, or rid the earth of me. And if showing my face in Samashki could serve to soften the evil attitude of many people toward my person, perhaps doing so might also ameliorate the perceived sins of Hussein. Yes. I owed it to him to risk a public lynching, or whatever might happen to me in the street.