He lowered himself into the chair Kulik offered him.
“And then … What did I know about you, Kulik? Did I know where you’re from? Did I know that you came from a bourgeois background? That you were the son of a servant who worked in a Polish rectory? Was I aware that you maligned Soviet policies? And that when you were a student, you were an active member of some Ukrainian nationalist movement that planned terrorist activities against Party members and the government? I tried to explain to him that I didn’t know anything about all that, but he just sneered and said, ‘Don’t toy with me. I know you and Ivan Kulik are good friends.’ Later he warned me, ‘Just remember one thing: it’s your duty as a Soviet citizen to disclose all information on conspirators.’
“When I tried to defend you, he turned red in the face and banged the table with his fist. He glared at me and said, ‘Didn’t you hear Kulik’s speech at the conference?’ I acted as if I didn’t know what he meant. When I called him ‘Comrade Sobakin,’ he got up and came toward me. He said, ‘Comrade? I’m no comrade of yours!’
“And how right he was. I was certainly no comrade of his, how could I have been? He had a.22 caliber pistol in a holster and I stood before him defenseless. He could have done anything to me that he wanted: he could have shoved his fist in my face, bashed in my head, broken my neck. He had the authority to wipe me off the face of the earth and not give it a second thought. And what could I do? Nothing, except spit in his face.”
Sergei closed his eyes. He said quietly and seriously, “Sobakin knows you’ve been encouraging Ukrainian in the school; he accused me of supporting you. He made up charges against me: I distribute bourgeois nationalistic propaganda brochures at night; I belong to the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists, and I’ve helped its regional leader, a man by the name of Litovsky, go into hiding; I vilify Stalin publicly and I’m involved in a movement to bring him down. The list went on, and I wondered how I could be guilty of all that. He wanted to force me to admit to everything and sign a confession.
“At first I tried to tell myself that it was all a big mistake and the new regime couldn’t possibly behave like that. But I know this is their usual method of operation. The NKVD dreams up fake counterrevolutionary activities and then grabs victims everywhere and anywhere and gets them to answer for these ‘activities’. I’ve heard that wherever they find a man, the crime is not far off. A lot of people end up signing confessions just from the hopelessness of it all. I made up my mind I wasn’t going to break.
“In any case, Sobakin had three pages on me on his desk. He handed me a pen and said, ‘Now you just sit there and write out your confession. Be honest. We know everything.’ Then he left the room. He was gone maybe half an hour and when he came back he had a completely different attitude. He seemed friendly. He offered me another cigarette, and he said, ‘Forgive me for losing my temper. We’ve got so much bourgeois riffraff around here, it’s hard sometimes not to lose control. But I can see you’re different from the others. You’re bright, alert, you’re precisely what our new Soviet system needs. I want us to be friends.’ Then he looked sideways at me and said that if I agreed, it would be to my ‘advantage.’
“He stood staring at me for a long time before he went on, saying that if we were going to be friends, we would have to trust each other. And that required teamwork. If I was treated unjustly, he would come to my aid without the slightest hesitation. He would be my supporter and true friend. ‘If you happen to need money, advice, anything at all, just come to me.’ Then his eyes narrowed. ‘But, of course, friendship must be proven and more importantly, you have to prove your allegiance to the new regime. If you play your cards right, you may very well find yourself on the royal road to advancement.’
“I expected a proposition like this, but still I was thrown off guard. I said, ‘I see, comrade.’ The word comrade didn’t bother him any more. ‘Are you asking me to be an informer?’
“‘An informer?’ Sobakin burst out laughing. ‘Any idiot can be an informer. No, no, what I want from you is your loyalty, I want you to be a government official. And mark my words, there’s a big difference between informer and government official.’
“I asked him what was involved in being a government official.
“He said it’s ‘a most honorable post. You’ll have the highest level of power in your village. You’ll be its eyes and ears, its very heart. It’ll be your responsibility to protect our great socialist motherland. You’ll continue being a teacher, at least on the surface, but in reality you’ll be working hand-in-hand with the NKVD, weeding out enemies of the state. You’ll be performing an especially important task for the Party and the government.’
“He lowered his voice and leaned toward me. ‘Now about Kulik. Of course, you’ll continue your friendship with him, but it’s most important that I be given accurate accounts of your encounters with him. As you’ve probably guessed, he’s under suspicion. There are serious allegations against him. In Vilno he worked with the Polish secret police to quash the Communist Party, and during one of their attacks, four dedicated comrades lost their lives.’”
Kulik couldn’t believe what he was hearing. “Sergei, do you believe any of this?”
“Of course not. I don’t believe a word of it. And even if it was true, it would make me happy to know there would be four bastards fewer on the face of the earth. Of course, I pretended to be shocked, outraged, and luckily he bought into it. He was convinced he had found his man.
“He waved some papers in front of my nose and told me to read them carefully, and sign on the bottom when I was done. He said he believed we would work well together. There was a list of people who were under suspicion: acquaintances, friends, family members. I read everything: I was to be named ‘government official’ for Hlaby and surrounding area effective immediately, and if I performed well, I would be handsomely rewarded for my services. I was even given a quota to fill. It was all in black and white. I had to think fast. Finally I blurted out, ‘I’m afraid I can’t sign it, comrade. I’m not good at this sort of thing. I’ll give myself away in an instant. If you like, I can be an aid or assistant to you of some kind, but a government official, I could never swing it. I’m not aggressive enough and I don’t have much experience in dealing with people. Every grandmother in the village would see right through me in a minute.’
“Sobakin just stared at me with no expression while I was talking. Then he got up from behind his desk and left the room, shutting the door behind him. He was gone for several minutes, and when he came back again, he was much different, he seemed impatient. He lit a cigarette and said that all that was fine for now, but only for now. He said, ‘I strongly advise you to give this matter careful consideration.’ He said he would call me back there soon, and he was sure we’d be able to come to some sort of agreement. And one more thing — what just happened here, he said, ‘well, it didn’t really happen, if you know what I mean. Not a word, not to your family, not to your friends, not to a soul. If you tell anyone, I’ll find out, and you know what will happen when I do.’
“He led me to the door, and when he opened it, the guards came in. They grabbed me by the arms and took me to the basement, where they roughed me up in a closed-off room. Then they dragged me down a narrow hallway and threw me into a dingy corner near the stairwell. They left me there for it seemed like forever, and then a door opened across from me and they came out practically carrying a man, half-dressed, with his hands tied behind his back. His face looked swollen; he couldn’t walk, obviously. It was a horrible sight; they did it in front of me on purpose, to break me, to scare me….”