Underground (5 page)

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Authors: Antanas Sileika

Tags: #Fiction, #Literary, #Lithuania, #FIC022000

BOOK: Underground
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If there was such a thing as heaven. Over the last few years, as his luck began to turn for the worse, he had started to doubt there was any divine plan at all.

The Red requisitions were stiff enough in 1940, when farmers were forced to sell produce to the state at very low prices, and then the German requisitions were higher still. And now the farmer had a glimpse of the future, and he didn't like what he saw.

The numbers the new regime asked of him were frightening: four hundred kilos of meat, so he had to kill two of his cows and thereby fell behind on his milk requisition; one thousand kilos of wheat, although it had been trampled in the fields by both the German and Red armies; a thousand kilos of potatoes, although there had been no farmhands available to dig them out because all the hired hands, the workers, had been drafted or fled to the forests. And maddeningly, the potatoes and wheat that he did manage to deliver were dumped in a yard and left to get wet and rot because there was no room in the warehouse.

The state policies didn't make sense. He couldn't understand why they wanted to destroy him and his farm. Wouldn't these actions destroy the Reds as well? He wished he could go crazy if only to reconcile himself to living in a madhouse. His neighbour, Javas, the one with the big mouth who couldn't learn to keep his thoughts to himself, was already in jail for failing to meet his quota. Two of the neighbouring farms were empty, gone to seed, one through deportation of the family and the other because the farmer had fled west. The farms were going back to wilderness, back to weeds and grass. Left long enough, they'd go back to the forests they'd been carved from hundreds of years before.

The new rulers were barbers, who sat you down in the chair and promised a trim but kept on clipping and clipping all the way down to the scalp, and when it looked as if there was nothing left to cut, you saw them eyeing the straight razor and you shuddered to think what might be coming next.

Regret kept the American awake while his family slept. His mind kept turning on the mystery of living in the place where he did, a place where history moved backward.

The farmers would be forced into villages again, as they had been in the times of the czar. The state paid no wages at all on collective farms. It was like going back to 1860, before emancipation of the serfs. And these were the “liberators” who had saved them from the Germans. He felt as if he was living on the wrong side of a mirror. Why did the French have all the luck and get the Americans?

This winter night on his farm, he was living in the silence he had missed while on the shop floor in Worcester, Massachusetts. Sitting by the oil lamp, he could fill the silence with his thoughts about how things might have been.

On the edge of the American's property, on the fringe of a forest, Lukas and Vincentas tried hard not to make noise as they followed the partisan guide in front of them. With each step forward, the crust of snow beneath their feet seemed to squeal like a guard dog whose tail had been stepped on.

The men cut across three kilometres of forest, and then came upon an open field. Light snow began to fall, covering their footprints. They came to a river and waded through the shallowest part, managing to get wet no higher than their knees.

At dawn they came to another forest. Their guide paused to draw a pistol from its holster and slip it up the sleeve of his sheepskin coat. He led them straight into a dense mass of pine branches, on the other side of which was a trail.

The guide held up his hand and they stopped. From somewhere a voice said “Ashes” and the guide responded “Dust.” They followed the trail, and soon there was a widening of the path and a clearing, at the end of which they could see a large campsite, the first in a series of linked sites, where a few men were moving about.

There were two long tables made of rough-hewn logs, an unlit bonfire was stacked in a deep pit, and the first clearing contained over a dozen lean-tos made of pine boughs with small fires of smokeless oak sticks burning at the ends.

This was the main camp, but as Lukas looked more deeply into the forest he saw that there was a series of clearings and the camp he stood in was only the first of several which ran one after another as far as he could see. At the other camps, some of the men were up and sitting around campfires. There were dozens of men in each of the campsites and therefore hundreds in all. A small army of irregulars was living among the pine trees.

He had never thought the Reds had undone so many. “Why all these camps?” Lukas asked.

“If we let the men stay in one big camp, they start to talk and make jokes and carouse too loudly at night, and the sound carries,” said the guide.

Just then Lukas heard a concertina begin to play quietly and some men started to sing.

His guide laughed at Lukas's astonishment. “Some of them sing a little in the mornings during the winter to keep their spirits up. We forbade it in the summer because the shepherds started to bring their flocks around here to listen to the music.”

Between the second and third camps there was a crude corral with three cows in it. The Reds were driving cattle out of the defeated part of Germany along abandoned railway lines nearby, and the partisans went shopping for meat along this highway whenever they were short of food.

In the camp where they stood, most of the men were sleeping in twos and threes in their lean-tos. They were dressed and shod. Many had no blankets beyond their wool coats. At their sides lay weapons, an assortment of Russian and German grenades, pistols and automatic rifles as well as light machine guns. A heavy machine gun stood at the edge of the clearing.

The guide left them where they stood and went across the way to speak to a man with a beard.

The air was cleaner here, and the quiet music in the distance was sweet. Most of the partisans in this first camp were still sleeping, as it was after dawn and partisans did their work by night, but three men in a knot where they'd been studying a map on the table looked up, and one of them nodded and saluted them informally by touching the brim of his hat with his finger. Lukas nodded back.

It was going to be all right.

The guide returned and led the brothers to a lean-to of their own and gave them a bundle of rags to wrap their feet in so their socks could dry by the fire as they slept. Neither of the young men had slept outside in the winter before, but they were so tired that they did so easily.

Lukas awoke in the early afternoon to the smell of barley soup. His socks were dry on their sticks by the fire. Vincentas lay beside him on his back, his mouth slightly open. Lukas studied his brother, who had been so tired he had not even taken off his eyeglasses. They lay crookedly on his nose, steaming up slightly with every breath deflected from the scarf that Vincentas had tucked up over his lips.

Since he was otherworldly, Vincentas had required care all his life. Tree roots seemed to search out his feet to trip him, doors swung shut suddenly behind him, clipping his heels, and rabid dogs had a way of finding him, hoping for salvation. Sometimes Lukas got tired of looking out for him, especially because Vincentas was not particularly grateful. His mind was on loftier matters.

Even though he'd come here for the sake of his brother, Lukas was now happier than he'd been back on the uneasy streets of Kaunas. He did not need to pretend here, to force his feelings underground.

The camp was beginning to stir. Men in old Lithuanian army uniforms, or in a mix of military and civilian clothes, were moving about, some stamping their boots to start circulation in their feet, others checking their weapons, some smoking and talking or heating water with which to shave.

The guide came to them, roused Vincentas, and took them to meet the leader of their band, a bearded forty-year-old called Flint. He was the oldest man in the group, one of a few with military training, and he kept a pipe between his teeth much of the time. He looked them up and down like the captain of a ship eyeing new sailors.

“Is Kaunas so crammed full of people that there's no room for you there?” he asked.

“That's right,” said Lukas.

“Are you sure? It would be better for you if you went back, and better for us to have a couple of young undercover men we could count on in town. This is no kind of life you're choosing, and once you're in, there's no getting out.”

“The Reds were starting to close in. They were going to come for us sooner or later.”

Vincentas was letting Lukas take the lead, eyeing the camp and the other men.

“Did either of you have military training?”

“No.”

“Know Morse code or how to use a radio?”

“Just to listen to the news,” said Vincentas suddenly.

A partisan within earshot laughed at this answer.

“I'm glad you can turn a dial,” said Flint. “But now you tell me what good you two would be to me. What do you have to offer?”

“I didn't realize we had to offer anything,” said Vincentas. “I thought it was enough that we didn't want to live like slaves.”

“What do you think this is, some kind of study group? The Cheka is looking for us now, as we speak. Or looking for me, anyway. There's a price on my head. Freedom doesn't come cheap. So what do you have to offer, if not military expertise or radio communications, or a machine gun? Do you have some inside information on a food warehouse? Or I'd love to get my hands on a small tank. Can you help me there?”

Vincentas shook his head. “I've had three years' training in the seminary. I could be your chaplain.”

To Lukas's surprise, Flint nodded at this. It made some sense. They lived in a religious country where prayers were as common as sparrows, and everyone needed to tell his troubles to someone.

“What about you?”

“Our parents were farmers. I was studying to be a teacher.”

“Can you write well?”

“Of course.”

“I mean longer pieces, articles. News. Essays.”

“That's the sort of thing I did at school, yes.”

“All right, this is better than I thought. I have a lot of men who can pull a trigger. These camps are full of farm boys, but there are damned few men who can handle a pen or a typewriter. Mind you, everyone needs to be able to fight. But I want you to be sure about what you're doing. You could hide out with your parents, you know.”

“We have another brother hiding out. Three of us would be too many.”

“I only want men who have no other choice, you understand? No patriots, no hotheads.”

“I'd rather be reading Maironis's poetry in university if I could,” said Lukas. He looked around the camp. “And I wouldn't sleep outside in the winter if I didn't have to.”

“You'll be glad enough to sleep outside after you've spent some time in a bunker. Listen, we own the countryside around here. We killed 170 Reds in a pitched battle in the Varchiai forest. The Reds stick to the main roads unless they're travelling in force. But it's hard to feed so many men at once. It puts too much strain on local farmers. We'll have to break into smaller groups eventually, and when the weather warms we'll dig some more bunkers in the earth. Are you claustrophobic?”

“No.”

“Sure? You'll be buried alive for weeks at a time.”

“But you're free here,” said Lukas.

“Yes, that's right. We're free here.”

“We want to be free too.”

“There's a price for it.”

“My brother and I are willing to pay.”

This seemed to satisfy Flint. He nodded and relit his pipe. “Either of you speak English? No? Then learn it. We need someone to listen to the BBC and type up the news. You'll both work in writing newspapers along with other duties. Get something to eat, and then we'll do your oath.”

Lukas and Vincentas walked over to one of the long log tables where the men were gathering to eat. They were served by a woman in a greatcoat. She ladled the barley soup into wooden bowls. She wore a Russian hat with flaps over her ears, but curly brown hair spilled out over her forehead and at the side of her face.

“Eat, men, eat. There's plenty where this came from. I'll be back to serve you seconds when you're done.”

“What kind of meat is in this soup?” a partisan asked.

“Beef, of course.”

“Again?”

“I'm sorry. I'll just run back to the kitchen and bring you pancakes and sour cream.”

“I miss pork.”

“Well, the Reds aren't driving the pigs out of Germany, my friend, they're driving cows. Think of yourself as an American cowboy.”

“I'll eat the beef if you promise it's been cooked with love.”

“You'll eat the beef or go hungry. And if you make any more smart remarks I'll knock your nose with my ladle.”

Vincentas and Lukas sat themselves at the table and the woman served them as well. She smiled at them, but they were too shy to speak. For all her rough banter, Lukas saw that her hands were soft and the fingernails slightly long. This was no country cook.

Other men settled around them.

“Hello,” said the man who sat beside Lukas. He was compact, with a strand of hair that stuck out from under his stocking cap, and cheeks bright red from the combination of cold and steam from the soup. From a pocket inside his greatcoat he took out a hand-carved wooden spoon as big as a ladle.

“That's quite the spoon,” said Lukas.

“Beauty, isn't it? I carved it myself. And practical! It's saved me from starvation more than once.”

“How did it do that?”

“Whenever we're short of rations, I ask for just one spoonful of soup or porridge, and then bring this thing out. It's the size of a bowl, see? My friend here, Ungurys, and I have both eaten from it more than once, tipping it from side to side. Of course, he has no trouble getting served now because his sister is visiting and she always gives him the best pieces of gristle.”

The man he pointed to was thin and dark, with bushy eyebrows and a moustache and a quiet manner. He barely looked up when his friend said his name.

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