Authors: Stephan Collishaw
Kolya stared down into the darkness, pale faced, hair plastered to his forehead with perspiration, trembling violently from the exertion.
âThe bastard deserved it,' I said, laying my hand on Kolya's sleeve. âIf anyone ever deserved it that evil bastard did.'
Kolya nodded slowly, his eyes not leaving the coat as it slipped away into the darkness. Kneeling down, I took the bracelet from the metal box. I fingered the large amber sphere, took in the glorious inclusions. It was for this Zena died, I thought. For this she had been sold. I felt a huge wave of sorrow wash over me. Its waters encircled me, foaming around my ears. The heavy suck of its withdrawal pulled me with it. A dark clenched fist held my gut tightly in its grip.
The amber seemed to be unusually warm â my palm tingled, and when I ran it across the back of my hand the hairs rose. Vassily's words came back to me with startling clarity. I pictured him before me, sloped forwards in the armchair, the pained, weary expression on his face.
You will not hate me, when you hear the story, tovarich â comrade, you will forgive your friend?
I looked down at the bracelet.
I must be holding a fortune in my hand, I thought then. My mind spun dizzily for a few moments. The inclusions were beautiful. I had never seen such good examples. The amber was large and clear, shining even in the light of the street lamps with brilliant warmth. The metal was heavy, ornate, gold lace.
Sometimes
, Vassily had said once, and I tried to remember when,
sometimes great beauty is a terrible thing
.
As my fingers tightened around the bracelet, I felt my thoughts twisting, spiralling away from me. I glanced up at Kolya, who had turned from the railing and was looking at the jewel in my hand. There was a hungry look in his eyes. He moved towards me, his thin hand reaching out. I stepped back.
âWait,' I said.
A look of surprise crinkled Kolya's forehead, followed swiftly by annoyance.
âWhat?' he said.
My mind tried to struggle towards some sort of revelation which I felt shivering in the darkness, just eluding me.
âDid Vassily ever tell you the story about Freyja?' I asked. âAbout the Amir Timor?'
Kolya held out his hand. He shuffled forwards, grasping for the bracelet. I took another step back and found my spine pressed up against the railings. The sky had begun, barely perceptibly, to lighten. The thick darkness was dissolving and the flowing water was faintly visible. I held out my hand, suspended the bracelet over the drop.
âNo!' Kolya called frantically.
I opened my fingers and released the bracelet. It clung to my flesh, a sharp sliver of gold ornamentation snagging on my skin. Kolya jolted against me as he tried to grab it. The sudden jerk released the bracelet and it fell smoothly through the blue air, breaking the surface of the river with barely a splash, disappearing immediately, swallowed up in the darkness.
A thin howl escaped Kolya's pale lips. He hung over the edge of the railings, eyes desperately searching the water, vainly hoping it might reappear.
âIt's over, Kolya,' I said.
I felt a weight lifting from me. Kolya turned, a look of absolute fury twisting his features. He hurried away, breaking into a shambling run. Dropping from the end of the bridge, he slithered down the muddy river bank to the water's edge. I stood watching him as he rushed up and down the bank, wading knee deep in the fast-flowing water, his arms reaching out to its depths, his low moan carried up to me through the cool air of the gathering dawn.
Passing the glittering domes of the Russian Orthodox church under a dawn-flushed sky, I crossed Zverynas Bridge on to Gedimino. An elderly man swept the wide cobbled street, working his way slowly and steadily into the centre of the Old Town. A flock of pigeons broke from the square by the parliament buildings as I passed, rising up into the sharp, clear air, bursting into flame as the first rays of sun touched them.
That was what it was all about
, Kirov had said,
that was what he sold her for
.
I shook my head, ran a hand through my hair. I pictured Vassily as I had last seen him, the night before he died, frail and thin, his beard hanging limply on the blanket.
When they explained how he could pay for the bracelet, he agreed straight off.
His chest had risen and fallen in a steady, slow rhythm. His hands, punctured by drips, lay by his side on the sheet. I had taken his fingers between my own, felt the hard calloused flesh, the faint, warm pulse.
You should have seen his eyes, you would perhaps have understood then. There was madness in them. He had to have the bracelet.
Before I left, I had bent to kiss him, and smelt then the stench of approaching death above the smothering scent of disinfectant. Had it been for nothing, then, those years of friendship, that companionship which had kept me alive? Had it all been a deception? He had been my brother, my friend. He had taught me to live again.
You have a right to know
, Kirov had said.
The street cleaner looked up as I passed, resting on his broom. He watched me, unabashed. A truck stopped outside a bar. The driver jumped from the cab, whistling. He rolled up the canvas sides, revealing barrels of Danish beer.
You have a right to know.
My mind skittered over the years, skipping like a stone across water, touching and moving on. Zena. The
kishlak
. Ghazis. Vassily patiently showing me how to clip the amber on to the lathe. âThere is something you need to know,' Vassily had said, âsomething I should have told you many years ago, but didn't. Should have, but couldn't.'
Lukiskiu Square was quiet. The rising sun lit up the spire of the church behind it. Far down Gedimino, the cathedral sparkled brilliantly. A police car was drawn up at the side of the road. Inside a policeman was sleeping, his green cap pulled low over his forehead, his window half open. An elderly woman opened a window in one of the apartment blocks on February 16th and shook out a sheet.
You must not hate me.
An aching sense of loss gripped me â scraped the flesh from my heart with its fingernails. I paused on the pavement, gazed up into the sky, dizzy, as if I were standing on the edge of a precipice. The loss of his friendship. The loss of his love. The loss of his presence in my life. The loss of our lives, which he had bound together by the strength of his presence, of all that we had enjoyed, Daiva, Tanya, Vassily and myself. That life was gone now and would never be again.
I found myself crying, then, for the loss of him, as I stood at the edge of the pavement unable to cross the street. Tears slipped down my cheek. My chest rose as I gulped for breath.
âAntanas!' Tanya cried, as she opened the door of her apartment. She was sleep-ruffled, wearing one of Vassily's large old shirts, her hair tied back with a ribbon. âWhere have you been?' she demanded, taking my arm and leading me into the apartment.
âIt's a long story.' I sighed, feeling suddenly very weary.
âCome and sit down,' she said. I followed her through to the sitting room and collapsed on the sofa.
âYou look terrible,' she said, kneeling beside me.
âKolya shot Kirov,' I told her.
Her eyes widened and her hand went up to her lips. I shook my head. Already the events of the previous few hours had begun to recede and an air of unreality clung to them, as if I were waking slowly from a nightmare.
âAnd Kolya?' Tanya said. âWhat happened? Did Kolya tell you what Vassily wanted you to know? What was it all about?'
I paused before I answered. As I looked at her, it struck me with renewed force how much she resembled Zena. The short dark hair. The colour of her eyes. The animated passion in her movements. I nodded slowly.
âThere were things he told me,' I said, âabout the bracelet, about how they got it.'
I found I was reluctant to tell her, reluctant to talk about it and so, through my own words, make more real the story I had been told; to validate it with the retelling.
âWe dug up the bracelet,' I said instead.
âYou have it?'
Tanya sat up, a startled, excited expression brightening her eyes.
âI threw it in the river.'
âYou what?'
I shrugged. She gaped at me, bewildered. âIt's hard to explain,' I said. âWhen I held it in my hand, I got the strangest feeling. I thought of all those who had died because of it. I don't know. I can't explain. I saw Kolya's greed, his hunger for it, Kirov's, Zinotis's. The effect it had on Vassily. It seemed right to put an end to it.'
Tanya stared at me and I could see her struggling to grasp what had gone on, struggling to understand what I had done. What Kolya had done. And perhaps also what Vassily had done.
âI need to get out of these clothes,' I said to deflect her attention.
âOf course,' Tanya said, solicitously, getting up quickly. âGo take a shower. Freshen up.'
She looked embarrassed at having been so insistent. Putting a towel in my hand, she pushed me in the direction of the bathroom. I stood for a long time beneath the shower, enjoying the feel of the stiff jets of hot water pummelling my flesh. After I had towelled myself dry, Tanya gave me coffee and I smoked a couple of cigarettes.
âHow are you feeling?' she asked tentatively.
âBetter,' I said.
I looked across at her, curled in the armchair, legs tucked beneath her, chin resting on the palm of her hand.
âDid Vassily ever say much about Afghanistan?' I asked.
She shook her head. âHe spoke of it sometimes,' she said. âI thought we were so open with each other. When he jumped in the night hearing something, when he had his headaches and when I found him sitting alone in a room, we talked about it. He told me what was important. That is why I was so bewildered by all these secrets.'
I considered what I should tell her. I longed to talk to her, to probe her â to demand from her the answers her husband could no longer give. To ask whether she knew how much he had betrayed me.
âThere were things that happened there,' I said.
I paused. She had let her hair loose, and it fell around her face, its rich curls accentuating the rosy swell of her cheeks.
âThere was a girl I met there,' I said.
Tanya looked up, surprised. She smiled. âReally?'
âHer name was Zena.'
It was strange to hear the name on my own lips; it had been so long since last I had spoken it. When I said it, I felt my tone soften, deepen, and recognised the cadence of my younger self, felt momentarily the gentle happiness spring from my tongue, as though the very act of saying her name had the power in some tiny way to transport me back to that time.
âShe was a nurse,' I said, feeling Tanya's eyes on me. âShe was an Afghani girl. Beautiful. She had short dark hair and was full of energy, of life. She was a lot like you. In the middle of all that horror I fell in love.'
âYou never said.' Tanya leant forward and took my hand.
âWhen I first saw you, standing outside your grandparents' cottage, it was a shock. You were so like her. What I felt for you then confused me.'
Tanya was trying, I could see, to understand what had happened, what I felt.
âWhat do you mean?' she said.
I did not answer at once, struggling to find the words to explain to myself as much as to her.
âYou frightened me. Attracted me. Both at once. When it became clear Vassily was in love with you, I explained my confused feelings to myself as guilt. When I met Daiva she was so different; her coolness, her reticence. She felt safe to be with. I fell in love with what Daiva was not. I used her to defend myself.'
âI had no idea,' Tanya said, leaning back in her chair. âI mean, I knew you were attracted to me and I was flattered by that, but when you met Daiva⦠you were so in love.'
For some moments then we sat in silence.
âWhat happened to the girl? The Afghani nurse?' Tanya asked, breaking the silence.
âShe was killed.'
âTell me.'
âI know only what Kirov told me a few hours ago.'
âWhat did he tell you?' Tanya's voice shook a little, as if she was afraid, as if she knew what I was about to say.
âVassily sold her for the bracelet,' I said. âThere was a deal â they sold Zena to the KHAD, to the secret police, to buy it.'
âNo,' she whispered. She withdrew her hand from mine, wiped it across her forehead and closed her eyes.
âDo you think it is true?' I said. âDo you think Vassily could have done that?'
She opened her eyes again, looked at me, squarely.
âDo you?'
âI don't know what to believe.'
Tanya sighed. She buried her face in her hands. âI don't know what to think any more,' she said.
A little later Tanya announced that she had to go to work for a few hours. She ran her fingertips across my face, gently. âWill you be OK? It won't be for long. You can stay. There is food in the kitchen and you can sleep in the bed.'
âThat's fine,' I said.
The apartment was quiet when she had gone. I did not move from the sofa. The room ticked and sighed, exhaled into the silence. Ever since he had taken me from the New Vilnia hospital Vassily had been a friend to me. He had nursed me back to health. He had taught me how to work amber; had given me a trade, a purpose, to hold back the darkness. And yet he had never told me, never even intimated, the part he had played in the death of Zena.
Leaping up from the sofa, I kicked out at the chair he had been sitting in that last evening. âYou bastard,' I hissed through teeth clenched tight. âYou fucking bastard.' I kicked it again, harder. Felt the pain shuddering up my leg, exquisitely. âYou fucking bastard!' I shouted, feeling the blood rush to the surface of my skin, feeling the heat rise in my face. I fell upon the chair, kicking and punching it. Screaming until my throat tore and my lungs scraped for breath. The armchair overturned and I toppled with it, sprawling across the floor, the rug grazing the skin from my cheek and the palms of my hands.