‘Don’t touch,’ he said quickly.
‘It must take a lot of patience to make.’
‘Papa is building it.’ He shuffled nearer. ‘I help.’
She gazed at it, very serious. ‘It’s beautiful.’
He stared at one of the elegant wooden towers. Said nothing.
‘What bridge is it?’
‘The Forth Bridge in Scotland,’ he lied.
‘I see,’ she nodded.
‘Don’t touch,’ he repeated.
She put down the piece of wood and looked round the room.
‘You have a nice house,’ she said at last.
He wouldn’t look at her. Of course it was a nice house, the nicest in the village. A huge pechka stove provided the heart of the izba, which had good-sized rooms, a large kitchen and a handsome samovar decorated in Hohloma style. The house was light and airy and the furniture was smart and factory-bought, not hand-hewn. He glanced around proudly. It was a house fit for the director of a factory, with the best wool runners on the brown-painted floor and curtains from the Levitsky factory’s own machines. Only now did it occur to Pyotr that it might seem rather untidy to an outside eye.
‘May I have a drink?’ she asked.
He looked at her. Her cheeks were pink. Maybe she was hot. He didn’t want to give her a drink, he wanted her to go, to leave him alone but…
‘A drink?’ she repeated.
He scuttled back into the kitchen just as the cuckoo clock struck ten, and quickly he poured her a few drops of water in the bottom of the same cup he’d used. He didn’t bother washing it. But when he hurried back into the living room she was crouched down in front of the three-cornered cupboard where Papa kept his private things. In one hand was an unopened bottle of vodka, a shot glass in the other.
‘That’s Papa’s.’
‘I didn’t think it was yours.’
‘Put it back.’
She smiled at him, a very small curl of her lips. Pyotr watched her unscrew the cap and pour into the glass some of the liquid that looked like water but wasn’t. He didn’t know what to say. She carried the bottle and the untouched vodka over to the armchair and sat down in it. She raised her glass to him.
‘Za zdorovie! ’ she said solemnly.
‘That’s Papa’s chair.’
‘I know.’
‘How can you know?’
‘There are lots of things I know about your father.’
She tipped her head back and threw the shot of vodka down her throat. Her blue eyes widened and she murmured something.
‘I’m going to tell,’ he said quickly.
‘Tell what?’
‘Tell Chairman Fomenko that you’re a fugitive.’
‘I see.’
She poured herself another shot of vodka and drank it straight off. She closed her eyes and licked her lips, breathing lightly. Her eyelashes lay like threads of moonlight on her cheeks.
‘What makes you think I’m a fugitive?’ she asked without opening her eyes. ‘I was just taking a break on my journey south, resting up in the forest.’ Quietly she added, ‘You have no proof.’
He said nothing.
‘I don’t want trouble,’ she said.
‘If you don’t want trouble, why did you go to the meeting tonight?’
‘To find you.’
His stomach lurched.
‘I had no idea when I met you in the forest that you were Mikhail Pashin’s son.’
Pyotr just stared at his shoes. He’d forgotten to clean them.
‘Where is your mother?’
He shrugged. ‘She left. And never came back.’
‘I’m sorry, Pyotr. How long ago?’
‘Six years.’
‘Six years is a long time.’
He looked up at her. Her eyes were wide open now and filled with an emotion he couldn’t make out. There was a sudden shout in the street and running footsteps. Pyotr felt a desire to be out there.
‘Are you really a tractor driver?’ he asked.
‘Yes.’
‘Honestly?’
‘Yes.’ She smiled at him and he felt the sweet honey once again slide down his throat. She leaned forward, chin propped firmly on her hand. ‘Pyotr, please. We can be friends, you and I.’
He could sense the strands of her web twisting through the air towards him, so fine he couldn’t see them but he knew they were there. In her drab clothes she looked so harmless, but he recognised the determination in her, the same way he recognised the coming of thunder behind the grey skirts of a storm cloud. He turned and ran out of the house.
Elizaveta Lishnikova stood in the doorway of the schoolhouse. She watched the boy race up the street as if his shirttails were on fire and disappear into the night. A light drizzle was falling but still she stood there, tense as she listened to the shouts and cries of panic that tore through the village. Black shapes moved stealthily through the darkness and she caught sight of a fragile stick of a child creeping along the side of the fence that bordered the school. Her heart sank for the little one.
‘Anastasia,’ she called out. ‘Come here.’
The girl hesitated, eyes wide with fear. Under her arm she clutched a bundle of material.
‘Come here, child.’ Elizaveta inserted a touch of her head-mistress tone into the command.
The girl sidled through the front gate and scurried up the path, her hurried footsteps like the pitter-patter of a mouse’s tiny feet. She hunched in front of Elizaveta, her head hanging down, an expression of dismay on her narrow little face. The bundle in her arms was wrapped inside a piece of striped pillow ticking and covered in damp patches from the rain.
Dear God, are we reduced to using our children to do our dirty work?
‘What are you doing wandering around loose tonight, Anastasia?’
‘The soldiers came to our house,’ the child whispered. Her nose was running and she wiped it on her sleeve.
‘All the more reason to stay at home with your parents, I’d have thought.’
‘My father told me to… take something,’ she sniffed, ‘… and run.’
She clutched the ‘something’ closer to her bony chest and the material moved in protest. The unmistakable squawk of an angry chicken issued from it.
‘Why bring it here to the school, Anastasia?’
The top of the mousy head nodded vigorously. ‘Pyotr told me to. He said…’ Her small voice trailed away.
‘What did Pyotr say?’
‘He said the soldiers won’t search the schoolhouse for food.’
‘Did he indeed?’
‘He said it’s the safest place to be tonight.’
‘I see.’
The hopeful eyes looked up at her, wet straggles of hair stuck to her cheeks like rats’ tails.
‘Very well, Anastasia. This once you may go into the classroom. Sit there in the dark and make no sound. Keep your bundle quiet, too. Wring its damned neck if you have to.’
The pale face looked up at her with a gaze of adoration that Elizaveta knew she didn’t want or deserve. All she could think of was that a chicken was not worth the risk she was taking. A man, yes. A chicken, no. For one brief moment, her mind flitted back to a time thirty years ago when her father’s gleaming dining table would have boasted six roast chickens for one family supper alone, with the scraps thrown to the dogs at the end. Now she was risking her life for just one of the stupid creatures. The world had turned upside down.
In the street a pair of OGPU troops were forcing their way into the house opposite. Elizaveta stepped quickly back into the hallway and Anastasia popped through the door and ducked into the schoolroom. Once inside, she became suddenly livelier and held her head at a more confident angle on the stalk of her neck as she grinned up at Elizaveta.
‘Pyotr was right,’ Anastasia chirruped. ‘He’s always right.’
Elizaveta sighed and turned her attention back to the street. Chairman Fomenko was just striding into the house opposite with a sharp word on his tongue and Elizaveta felt an urge to go out there and rap her cane across his hands. What did the man think he was doing? You can’t bleed a village dry and still expect it to work for you. Yet sometimes the blasted man astonished her with his unexpected gestures of generosity, like when he personally drove one of the kolkhoz carts to take all the schoolchildren to the May Day celebrations in the next valley, or when he dug up his own vegetable plot to provide a party for the whole village on Stalin’s birthday, with soup and black bread and boiled chicken.