‘No,’ whispered red Sasha.
‘Yes,’ Dimitri breathed back.
‘Where is Katya now?’ Sasha asked.
‘She’s a Night Witch. You’ve heard of the Night Witches?’
‘Yes!’ Pasha blurted. ‘My mother used to tell us the Night Witches would come if we…’
‘Pasha.’
‘Yes?’
‘Your mother used to frighten you a lot, didn’t she?’
‘Yes. Well… urn…’
‘Were you as bad a child as all that?’
Sasha laughed first, then Valentin and Dimitri. Pasha took a jabbing elbow from the quiet hull gunner and chuckled, too.
‘Katya’s a pilot,’ Valentin explained, ‘my sister is a night bomber.’
‘Oh.’ Pasha blushed enough to be orange in the lantern shine.
Dimitri asked, ‘Now, do you boys want to become Cossacks?’
Sasha’s eyes went wide. ‘Is that something you can do? Can you do that?’ He turned to his mate Pasha, but the thick boy shook his head, skeptical. ‘No,’ he said, ‘Dima’s playing with us again. We won’t be real Cossacks. It’s a game.’
Dimitri kept still, embedding his gaze into Pasha’s eyes.
‘It’s no game.’
Skinny Sasha jutted his nose at Dimitri. ‘Yes. Make me a Cossack.’
Dimitri waited for Pasha’s face to change. The loader looked up at his sergeant. Valentin nodded to him.
Pasha said, ‘Me, too.’
‘Listen,’ Dimitri said. ‘You’ve got to know the history first. This is the story of the Cossacks. Centuries ago, Russia was different than it is today.
Before the Soviets. In the long time of the Tsars. Russia was a collection of little kingdoms, ruled by boyars and landlords. The people were either rich aristocrats or poor peasants and serfs. But there was one place where the gentry didn’t run things. My homeland, Ukraine. Even its name tells you how free it was: ‘ Borderland.’ During this time, Ukraine was a giant and unsettled country, a wild land. There was room to roam, there were fish and grainlands, grasses for cattle and sheep and horses. The first Cossacks were criminals. These were men who wanted their freedom enough to risk their lives to get it. They were running from the law. Or they were sentries from some landlord’s army, who got tired of manning a post and fighting someone else’s battles and ran away. The first Cossack was an escaped serf. Or he might have been some highborn who screwed the wrong peasant girl or stole another lord’s land and came to avoid scandal or being hung. He might have been a Greek or a Turk looking for adventure.
Whoever he was, boys, whatever he was running from, his trouble was not going to follow him into Ukraine. He got a clean slate. And while the Russian state to the north and east was getting more and more civilized and tamed, Ukraine stayed without masters. It was a place for the common man, for bandits and fugitives, vagabonds and slaves to remake their lives. These men who skulked into Ukraine became farmers and trappers. They settled the land and raised their families. Everyone was equal.’
Pasha and Sasha watched him, spellbound; with his hands, Dimitri carved for them Ukraine out of the air, made pistols out of his fingers for the bandits, whips across the backs of the serfs, and open, clear fields with sweeps of his palm.
Sasha raised a hand like a schoolboy to ask a question.
‘How did the Cossacks learn to fight?’
‘A good question, Pashinka. The plains of Ukraine were not empty when the first Cossacks came. Hordes of Mohammedan tribesman roamed there. So the Cossacks were forced to band together. They learned from their battles with the Mohammedans, who were wonderful horsemen. The Cossacks borrowed the best of what they saw and soon became even better riders and warriors. But even when the Cossacks found themselves coming together for survival, they maintained their love for kazak, their freedom. They asked little from those who wished to join them. Only three things does a Cossack have in common with all other Cossacks. Three questions, and you have to answer yes to each. Are you ready?’
The two boys hesitated. Dimitri was tickled at the gravity he’d created in them.
‘Yes,’ both uttered.
Dimitri’s legs were tired, his knees griped. But this part of the rite had to be done standing.
‘Alright, get up.’
Valentin stayed in his place on the tank.
When Pasha and Sasha were on their feet, Dimitri asked, ‘Do you want to become Cossacks?’
Both nodded.
‘Say so,’ Dimitri prodded.
‘Yes!’ they said, a bit too loud. Dimitri kept a serious demeanor though he wanted to grin.
‘Good, good. Hold it down, lads. Next question. Will you die if you must for another member of your clan, and for your freedom?’
‘Yes.’ The two boys stood shoulder to shoulder. Dimitri watched them press closer to each other.
And last. Do you believe in God?’
The two boys Pasha and Sasha answered well. ‘Yes. I do. Yes.’
‘Good. Bend your knees. Let’s pray’
Dimitri dropped to his knees on the tank-crushed grass. Pasha and Sasha knelt with him. Dimitri did not glance up at his son. He didn’t want to know if Valentin was praying or simply watching with his Soviet disdain.
Dimitri said a silent prayer for the lives of these two youths he’d been given.
He asked God to only take them if they were greatly needed to win the battle. Let them stay Cossacks as long as they can, God, let them be free on the earth. But if You cannot, let them be free in heaven. He asked also for God to protect Valya and Katya. He did not ask for himself.
One of the boys said Amen,’ finished with his prayer. Dimitri ended his and lifted his head before he realized the Amen’ was Valentin’s. He stood, Pasha and Sasha scrambled to their feet. Dimitri stepped to his son’s perch on the General and patted Valya’s knee. Valya was maddening this way. Dimitri could never be comfortable with his frustration or his pride in the boy. He did not know Valya at all.
‘This,’ he said to the loader and the hull gunner, newly minted Cossacks, ‘is your hetman. He is your sergeant and your tank commander, but he is your Cossack leader, too. You’ll do everything he orders. Is this understood?’
Valentin slid down from the tank.
‘Are we done?’
Dimitri itched to backhand the boy for the sudden swings he caused in Dimitri’s chest.
At that moment - because, thought Dimitri, there is a God and He listens and once in a while even if you don’t ask He answers - a convoy of panel trucks rumbled up through the dark, headlamps jouncing over the ruts in the field cut by the company of heavy tanks. In the beds of the trucks, lit by the lights of the vehicles in line behind, jostled crowds of old men holding up bottles, and women. Dimitri saw fiddles, an accordion, and even a clarinet.
He recognized her voice. Just Sonya called out for him.