Tsezar gave him something to smoke. The captain was the only man in the squad he stuck to. He could unburden his heart to him--to no one else.
"There's a man missing from the thirty-second. From the thirty-second,"
everybody began to mutter.
The deputy squad leader of the 32nd scurried off with another young fellow to search the repair shops. And in the crowd people kept asking: Who? How? Where? Soon it reached Shukhov's ears that it was the dark little Moldavian who was missing. The Moldavian? Not the one who, it was said, had been a Rumanian spy, a real spy?
You could find up to five spies in each squad. But they were fakes, prison-made spies. They passed as spies in their dossiers, but really they were simply ex-POW's.
Shukhov himself was one of these "spies."
But the Moldavian was genuine.
The head of the escort ran his eye down the list and grew black in the face. After all, if the spy were to escape what would happen to the head of the escort?
In the crowd everybody, including Shukhov, flew into a rage. Were they going through all this for that shit, that slimy little snake, that stinking worm? The sky was already quite dark; what light there was came from the moon. You could see the stars--this meant the frost was gathering strength for the night--and that runty bastard was missing. What, haven't you had your bellyful of work, you miserable idiot? Isn't the official spell of eleven hours, dawn to dusk, long enough for you? Just you wait, the prosecutor will add something.
Odd that anyone could work so hard as to ignore the signal to knock off.
He completely forgot that he'd been working like that himself only an hour ago--that he'd been annoyed with the others for assembling at the gate too early. Now be was chilled to the bone and his fury mounted with everyone else's; were they to be kept waiting another half hour by that Moldavian? If the guards banded him over to the zeks they'd tear him apart, like wolves with a lamb.
Yes, the cold was coming into its own now. No one stood quiet. They either stamped their feet where they stood or walked two or three paces back and forth.
People were discussing whether the Moldavian could have escaped. Well, if he'd fled during the day that was one thing, but if he'd hidden and was simply waiting for the sentries to go off the watchtowers he hadn't a chance. Unless he'd left a trail through the wire the sentries wouldn't be allowed back in camp for at least three days. They'd have to go on manning the towers for a week, if necessary. That was in the regulations, as the oldtimers knew. In short, if someone escaped, the guards had had it; they were hounded, without sleep or food. Sometimes they were roused to such fury that the runaway wouldn't get back alive.
Tsezar was arguing with the captain: "For instance, when be hung his pince-nez on the ship's rigging. D'you remember?"
"Hm, yes," the captain said as he smoked.
"Or the baby carriage on the steps. Bumping down and down."
"Yes. . . . But the scenes on board are somewhat artificial."
"Well, you see, we've been spoiled by modern camera technique."
"And the maggots in the meat, they crawl about like angleworms. Surely they weren't that size?"
"What do you expect of the movies? You can't show them smaller."
"Well, if they'd bring that meat here to camp instead of the fish they feed us and dumped it straight into the kettle, we'd be only too. .
The prisoners howled.
Three small figures were bursting out of the repair shop. So they'd found the Moldavian.
"Boooo!" went the crowd at the gates. And they yelled, as the group drew nearer:
"Bastard! Shit? Idiot! Cow's twat! Lousy son-of-a-bitch!"
And Shukhov joined in: "Rat!"
It's no joke to rob five hundred men of over half an hour.
Ducking his head, the Moldavian ran like a mouse.
"Halt!" a guard shouted. And, noting down "K 460," said: "Where were you?"
He strode over to the man and turned the butt of his rifle at him.
In the crowd people were still hurling curses: "Ass! Louse! Pig!"
But others, seeing the guard make ready to swing his rifle, held their tongues.
The Moldavian could hardly keep on his feet. He backed away from the guard.
The deputy squad leader of the 32nd advanced.
"The damn fool crawled up to do some plastering. Trying to hide from me!
Warmed up there and fell asleep."
And he hit the man hard in the face and on the neck, pushing him farther from the guard.
The Moldavian reeled back, and as be did so a Hungarian, one of his own squad, leaped up at him and kicked him hard from behind.
That wasn't like spying. Any fool can spy. A spy has a clean, exciting life. But try and spend ten years in a hard-labor camp!
The guard lowered his rifle.
The head of the escort shouted: "Back from the gates. Form fives."
Another recount, the dogs. Why should they count us now that everything's clear?
The prisoners began to boo. All their anger switched from the Moldavian to the escort.
They booed and didn't move.
"W-wha-a-at?" shouted the head of the escort. "Want to sit down on the snow?
All right, I'll have you down in a minute I'll keep you here till dawn."
He was quite capable of doing it, too. He'd had them on the snow many a time.
"Down on your faces!" And, to the escort: "Release safety-catches!" The zeks knew all about that. They drew back from the gates.
"Back, back!" yelled the escort.
"What's the sense of shoving up to the gates anyhow, you crappers?" men barked from the rear at the men in front as they were shoved back.
"Form fives. First. Second. Third . . ."
Now the moon was shining full. It cast its light all around and the crimson tint had gone. It had climbed a quarter of the way up the sky. The evening was lost. That damned Moldavian. Those damned guards. This damned life.
As the prisoners in front were counted they turned and stood on tiptoe to see whether there were two men or three in the back row. It was a matter of life or death to them now.
Shukhov had the feeling that there were going to be four. He was numb with fear.
One extra. Another recount. But it turned out that Fetiukov, after cadging a butt from the captain, had been wandering around and had failed to get into his five in time. So now he'd turned up in the back row as if he were an extra.
A guard struck Fetiukov angrily on the back of the neck.
Serve him right.
So they counted three in the back row. The count had come out right, thank God.
"Back from the gates," shouted a guard at the top of his voice. But this time the zeks didn't mutter--they'd noticed soldiers coming out of the gatehouse and forming a cordon on the other side of the gates.
So they were going to be let out.
None of the foremen was in sight, nor the superintendent, so the prisoners kept their firewood.
The gates swung open. And now the head of the escort, accompanied by a checker, came and stood on the other side, near some wooden railings.
"First. Second. Third . . ."
If the numbers tallied again the sentries would be removed from the watchtowers.
But what a distance they had to tramp along the edge of the site to reach the towers at the far end of it! Only when the last prisoner had been led off the site and the numbers had been found to agree would they telephone all the towers and relieve the sentries. If the head of the escort had his wits about him he'd put the column on the move right away, for he knew the zeks had nowhere to run to and the sentries would overtake the column. But some of the guards were so foolish, they feared they didn't have enough troops to handle the zeks; so they waited.
They had one of those idiots this evening.
A whole day in that freezing cold! The zeks were already chilled to the marrow and now to stand around another shivering hour, when work was over! Yet it
wasn't so much the cold and the fact that they'd lost an evening that infuriated them; the point was, there'd be no time now to do anything of their own in the camp.
"How is it you happen to know like in the British Navy so well?" Shukhov heard someone in the next five asking.
"Well, you see, I spent nearly a month on board a British cruiser. Had my own cabin. I was attached to a convoy as liaison officer. And imagine--after the war the British admiral--only the devil could have put the idea into his head--sent me a gift, a souvenir as 'a token of gratitude,' damn him! I was absolutely hor rifled. And now here we are, all lumped together. It's pretty hard to take, being imprisoned here with Bendera's men. . . ."
Strange! Yes, a strange sight indeed: the naked steppe, the empty building site, the snow gleaming in the moonlight. And the escort guards: they'd gone to their posts, ten paces apart, guns at the ready. And the black herd of prisoners; and among them, in a black coat like all the rest, a man, S 311, who'd never imagined life without gold shoulder straps, who had hobnobbed with a British admiral and now sweated at a barrow with Fetiukov.
You can push a man this way, and you can push a man that way.
Now the escort was ready. This time without any "prayer" the head guard barked at them: "Double time! Get a move on!"
To hell with your "Get a move on!" All the other columns were ahead of them.
What sense was there in hurrying? The prisoners didn't have to be in league with one another to figure the score: You kept us back; now it's our turn. The escort too, after all, was dying for a warm corner.
"Step lively!" shouted the guard. "Step lively, you in front."
To hell with your "Step lively." The zeks marched with measured tread, hanging their heads as at a funeral. Now we've nothing to lose--we'd be the last back anyhow. He wouldn't treat us like human beings; now let him burst himself shouting.
On he went, "Step lively! Step lively!" But he realized it was futile. He couldn't order his men to shoot either. The prisoners were marching in fives, keeping in line, all correct. He had no power to hound them faster. (When they marched out to work in the morning the zeks walked slowly, to spare themselves. A man who's in a hurry won't live to see the end of his stretch--he'll tire and be done for.) So on with regular, deliberate steps. The snow crunched under their boots. Some of them talked in low voices; others walked in silence. Shukhov asked himself whether there was anything he'd left undone in the camp that morning. Ah, the dispensary. Funny, he'd forgotten all about the dispensary while he'd been working.
This must be around the consulting hour. He'd manage it if he skipped his supper.
But now somehow his back wasn't aching. And his temperature wouldn't be high enough.
A waste of thne. He'd pull through without benefit of the doctor. The only cure those docs know is to put you in your grave.
It wasn't the dispensary that appealed to him now; it was the prospect of adding something to his supper. His hopes were all pinned on that long-overdue parcel of Tsezar's.
A sudden change came over the column. It began to sway, to break out of its regular stride. The prisoners heaved forward with a buzz of excitement. And now the last five, which included Shukhov, were no longer treading on the heels of the five in front; they had to run to keep up. A few more paces, and again they were running.
When the rear of the column spilled over a rise Shukhov saw to the right, far away across the steppe, another dark column on the move, marching diagonally across their course. They, too, seemed to be forcing their pace.
It must be from the machine works, that column: there were about three hundred men in it. Mother bunch with bad luck! Must have been held up--Shukhov wondered why. To finish assembling some piece of machinery? They could be kept after work hours for that. But what did it matter to them? They worked all day in the warmth.
Who'd get in first? The men ran, just ran. Even the escort broke into a jog trot: only the head guard remembered to shout, "Don't fall back. Keep up there, you in the rear. Keep up."
Oh, shut your trap. . . . What are you yapping about? As if we wouldn't keep up!
They forgot to talk; they forgot to think; everyone in the column was obsessed by one idea: to get back first.
Things were so lumped together, the sweet and the sour, that the prisoners saw the escort itself, now, as friend rather than foe. Now the enemy was the other column.
Their
spirits
rose,
their anger passed.
"Get a move on, get a move on!" the rear shouted to the front.
Now our column bad reached the street, while the other had passed out of sight behind the blocks of houses. They'd been racing blindly.
It was easier for us now, we were running down the middle of the street. And our escort had less to stumble over at the sides. This was where we ought to gain ground.
There was another reason why we simpiy had to reach the camp gates first: the guards there were unusually slow in searching the column from the machine works. Ever since zeks had begun cutting one another's throats In the camp the authorities had arrived at one conclusion: that knives were being made at the machine works and smuggled in.
So the zeks who worked there were gone over with special thoroughness on return to the camp. In late autumn, when the earth was already cold, the guards would shout at them:
"Off with your boots, machine-works squad! Hold your boots in your hands."
And would frisk them barefoot
Or, despite the frost, they'd pick men out at random, shouting: "You there, take off your right boot. And you, take off your left!"
A zek would pull off his boot and, hopping on one foot, turn it upside down and shake out the footra& No knife, damn you!
Shukhov had heard--he didn't know whether it was true or not--that back in the summer the zeks from the machine works had brought back two poles for a volleyball net and that there the knives were, there inside them. Ten long knives in each pole. And now knives would turn up occasionally, here and there.
So it was at a jog trot that they passed the new club and the residential block and the wood-processing plant, and reached the turning that led straight on to the gates.
"Hoooooo-ooo," shouted the whole column, in unison.
That was the turning we'd aimed at reaching before the others. The rival column was a hundred and fifty paces behind, on our right.
Now we could take things easy. Everyone was elated. As elated as a rabbit when it finds it can still terrify a fro&
There lay the camp, just as we'd left it in the morning: lights were on in the zone over the thick fence, specially powerful ones in front of the gatehouse. The entire area was flooded with light; it was as bright as day. They had to have it like that when they frisked us.
But we hadn't reached the gates yet.
"Halt!" shouted a guard and, handing his machine gun to a soldier, ran up close to the column (they weren't allowed to do that with their guns). "All those on the right carrying firewood dump it to their right."
He didn't have to guess about the firewood--the zeks were carrying it quite openly. A bundle fell, a second, a third. Some would have liked to conceal a stick or two inside the column, but their neighbors objected: "Throw it down as you're told! Do you want others to lose theirs because of you?"
Who's the zek's main enemy? Another zek. If only they weren't at odds with one another--ah, what a difference that'd make!
"Double time," shouted the head guard.
They advanced toward the gates.
Here five roads converged. An hour earlier all the other columns had met here. If they were paved, these roads, this would be just the place for the main square of a future city; and then processions would meet here, just as columns of zeks did now as they poured in from every direction, with sentries and guards all about.
The guards were already warming themselves indoors. They came out and formed a cordon across the road.
"Unbutton your coats. Unbutton your
jackets."
They pulled the zeks' arms apart, the better to hug them and slap their sides. Same as in the morning, more or less.
It isn't so terrible to unbutton your coat now. We're going home.
That's what everyone used to say: "Going home."
We never had time to think of any other home.
While the head of the column was being frisked, Shukhov went over to Tsezar.
"Tsezar Markovich, I'll run straight to the parcels office and keep a place in line for you."
Tsezar turned. The fringe of his dark mustache was tipped with frost.
"Why should you do that, Ivan Denisovich? Perhaps there won't be a parcel."
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich (Signet Books) Page 12