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(c) Copyright 1996-1999 Vyachslav Mironov
(c) Copyright 2001 translation by Alex Dokin (adokin today.com.au)
(c) Copyright 2001 translation by Konstantin S. Leskov
(c) Copyright 2001 translation by Marta Malinovskaya
(c) Copyright 2009 translation by Oleg Abramov (farmount1989 yahoo.com)
(c) Copyright 2001 translation by Oleg Petrov (siberiaforever hotmail.com)
Date: Feb-Mar 2001
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Перевод романа В.Н.Миронова "Я был на этой войне" (Грозный-1995)
Origin: http://lib.ru/MEMUARY/CHECHNYA/chechen_war.txt
Translation includes 1-5,7-9,10-15,18 parts of novel.
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Желающие поучаствовать в переводе или редактуре перевода - пишите
на адрес artofwar.ru(a)rambler.ru
If you are ready to take part in the translation and editing of
this text, please write to artofwar.ru(a)rambler.ru
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(c) Copyright 2001 translation by Alex Dokin (adokin[a]today.com.au)
Date: 7 Mar 2001
Date: 9 Mar 2001
Date: 26 May 2001 Corrected version
Date: 4 Oct 2001
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I'm running. The lungs are bursting. The damned wheeze is a murder.
Have to run a zigzag path (in our brigade we call it "run a screw").
God, help... Please help. Help keep this insane tempo. That's it, if I
ever get out of here - quit smoking. Zapp... Zapp... Sniper!!??... Get down
and crawl, crawl out of the killing zone.
Lying. All seems OK - no sniper, probably just "shul'nyak".
Alright, now catch your breath, find your way around and race ahead -
to the Central Post of our brigade's the first battalion. Just a few hours
ago they reported on catching a sniper. From the report we knew he was
Russian and, from his own words, even from Novosibirsk. F..ing compatriot.
On two APCs, along with the recon squad I set off to pick up "the clapper".
En route to the Central Train Station, the streets are crammed with
burnt and mangled hulks of "armour" and strewn with dead bodies. The bodies
of our Slavic brothers, all that's left of the Mikop Brigade, the one that
"spooks" burnt and wiped out on the New Year's Eve 95-96. God, help me...
let me out of here... They said, when the First Battalion busted the
"demons" out of the Station building, as the gunfire slacked off, one of the
grunts, having looked around, howled. From then on other grunts stayed away
from him - another crank. Now charging through the walls like spellbound,
scared of nothing. And there are enough screwballs like that in every unit,
the enemy and ours. Eh, Mother Russia, what've you done to your sons? We
thought, maybe medivac the fellow, but then again, can't even medivac the
casualties, and this one, though a crank, still fighting. Up there on "The
Continent" he'd definitely go nuts.
Literally in a few blocks we came under ferocious gunfire. The spooks
were spraying from above, madly (about 20 guns) but disorganised. With a
couple of grunts now had to leave our APCs behind and sneak our way over to
the headquarters. At least the dogfaces are more confident now, more or less
used to this, all were tested by fire. In the beginning I howled a wolf,
just like that mad grunt. The men were all "green", some rushing forward,
others still fear struck in their "armour". I had to boot and kick them out
of their APCs and foxholes. As for myself, I'm OK. Baku, Kutaisi - 90,
Tshinvali -91, Moldova - 92 and now Chechnya. Alright, just let us get the
hell out of here. But only in one piece. If crippled, I've got a little toy
in my pocket - RGD-15. Surely enough for me. I've seen enough of our
crippled post-war heroes living in peace life. They too were following
orders of their Motherland, their Party, their Government and hell knows
whom else. "Reinstating Constitutional Order" on the territory of the former
Soviet Union. And now again, we are beating our own Russian land on
somebody's hugger-mugger order...
All this sped through my mind in a few seconds. Turned around - all my
grunts are fine, prone on the ground, watching. Their faces are all black
from gunpowder, eyeballs and teeth are shining. I'm probably no better. Nod
to one, point direction to another and we are all off sprinting forward,
zigzag, "screw" and roll. Although, these coats were surely not made for
rolling. The sweat is blanketing my eyes, fatigues are steamy; the taste of
blood in my mouth is unbearable and temples are pounding heavily. Blood is
jammed with adrenaline. Short streaks forward, bits of bricks, chips of
concrete and broken glass everywhere. Carefully avoiding open spaces. Still
alive, thank God.
Zapp... zapp... again! Damn it, could it really be a sniper? Ducking
into the nearest basement, grenades on stand-by. Who or what is waiting for
us in there? Pair of corpses. Fatigues seem like ours - Slavic. Nod to one
of the grunts to secure the window, and then myself move to the doorframe.
The second grunt kneels near one of the bodies, unbuttons his coat and flank
jacket and fetches his papers and the dog tags. Same with the second corpse.
The boys wouldn't mind anymore but their families must be notified.
Otherwise smart asses in the Government won't pay them their pensions,
reasoning that soldiers are missing in action and who knows, maybe even
crossed over to the other side.
- Got the papers? - I asked.
- Got'em - answered private Semeonov, nicknamed "Semeon". - What's now?
- Now, via this basement we run across to the neighbouring street, then
to the first batt (battalion). Do we have radio contact with them? - I'm
asking my RTO (Radiotelephone operator), private Harlamov. His nickname is
"Glue". His arms are long, sticking out of his BDU, like sticks, no one size
fits. Wrists are disproportionately huge. First time you see the guy the
impression is like torn gorilla arms were sewn to a man's body. Now probably
no one could recall where his nickname "Glue" originated.
Our soldiers are Siberians and all together we are "mahra" (Russian
word for cheap tobacco). In the WWII books and movies, infantry is called
"The Queen of the battle field ". In real life, however, we are just
"mahra". And one individual infantryman is a "mahor". That's life.
- Get on the APCs too, - that's me about the left behind at the Railway
Station APCs, - ask how they're hanging.
Glue moves away from the window and a starts muttering into his
handset, calling onto the 1st Battalion's Road Post and our APCs.
- All OK, comrade Capitan, - says RTO. - "Sopka" is waiting for us,
"boxes" were fired upon and rolled back a block.
- Fine, let's go, or we'll frost down here, - I make terrible hoarse
sounds coughing. At last my normal breathing came back. I spat with green
and yellow slime - consequence of my many years of smoking. - Eh, mama told
me: "learn English"
- My mama told me: "Do NOT crawl into wells, sonny". - Picked up
Semeon.
No sign of the enemy in the window at the other side of the house and
we leapfrog, taking short streaks, stooped four times our normal hight,
towards the Central Train Station. High above in the sky, a jet fighter is
barraging the city with high explosives and shooting at somebody's positions
from an unreachable hight. Down here, there is no single front line.
Gunfights are starting everywhere sporadically and sometimes turn into some
kind of cheesecake: ragheads, us, ragheads again and so on (US Marines call
it a "cluster fuck"). All of it, in one word could be called a madhouse,
almost no interaction anywhere. Especially difficult to work with are the
Internal Forces. To be precise: all THIS is their operation, but we, mahra,
are doing their job for them. Often we storm the same objects in complete
ignorance of each other's presence. Sometimes we even point the Air Force
guys onto them and they onto us. In the dark we fire on each other and take
our own grunts prisoners.
Now we are going to the Central Train Station, where, in almost full
complement, was wiped out the Mikop Brigade. Vanished into the night.
Nothing was done before they were sent in. No reconnaissance to ascertain
the spooks' defensive structures, no artillery runs to soften them up. When
after the battle they began to fall asleep (imagine no sleep for a week,
adrenaline and Vodka for breakfast, lunch and dinner), spooks slunk up and
wasted them from a point blank range. Just the mistake Chapaev made: no
guards along perimeter. Here, though, all guards were soundly asleep or
spooks gashed them quietly. Everything was on fire, all that could burn and
even all that couldn't. It seemed like the Earth, asphalt and house walls
were ablaze from the burning fuel. People panicked in the inferno, some
tried to return fire, some helping the wounded. Some even shot themselves
not to get into the ragheads' hands. Few were trying to flee. No one of them
must be judged. What would you, my reader, do in that hell on earth? Don't
know? Ha? That's it. Then don't you dare judging them!
No one knows what exactly happened there. Their commander, with both
his legs injured; still tried to reassert control, although he could retreat
to the rear. He stayed though. God, guard their souls and our lives...
When our brigade fought its way through heavy rebel defences to help
them, our tanks had to struggle through barricades of corpses of our Slavic
brothers... When you see how tracks chop and hummer human flesh, how heavy
leading wheels coil intestines of people just like yourself... When heads
pop open with a crunch under a steel caterpillar and all around it is
sprayed with a grey and red mass of brain. Brain of a maybe unaccomplished
genius, poet, scientist or just good lad, father, brother, son, friend who
didn't chicken out and came here in this shithole of a place called Chechnya
and, may be, to his last moment, didn't even realised what the hell happened
to him. When your boots slip on the bloody mucus, then the important thing
is to think of nothing, and concentrate on only one objective: survive,
survive and save your men. Because those you'd lose will come to you in your
dreams.
As their CO you'd then have to write up their Death Notifications and
body ID reports. The job I don't even wish to my worst enemy. I'd rather
choke in an attack, blasting from my beloved AKS left, right and forward
with my eyes popping out, rather than write those horrible papers. Why all
these wars? Although, honestly, no one of us has really understood what has
transpired here. At all times only one goal in mind - survive, complete the
task and save your men. And what if you don't? They'll send more in, who,
maybe, because of your inexperience, cowardice and desire to go home, will
drop under machinegun fire and will be ripped to pieces by grenades, mines,
mortar or be captured. All THIS: because of YOU. The very thought of this
responsibility makes my stomach rumble. How about you, my reader?
Glue noticed some movement in a window of the five-story building, next
to the Station Plaza. He yelled out: "Spooks!!!" and leaped back. Semeon and
myself too hastened to take cover behind the nearest heap of rubble. From
behind his corner, Glue opened up at the window from his AK. Shivering, we
too began to load up grenades in launchers.
Eh, what a wonderful device, this launcher (Russian GP-25, under-barrel
grenade launcher for AK assault rifles, similar to M203 - grenade-launching
tube sometimes mounted under the rifle barrel of an M-16). We call it
lovingly: "podstvol'nichek", although, weight of the device could prove a
bit too much (about half a kilo). It is mounted under the rifle's barrel and
can be fired straight into the target or launch in an overhead trajectory.
It could be described as a tube (about 2.5 inches in diameter) with a
trigger and a safety pin. There is also an aiming mechanism, but since the
first days we conned it so that now easily can do without it. From a
standard issue GP-25, a grenade can easily be dropped into the smallest
window or thrown over any structure. In a straight line it delivers its
mighty punch to about 400 meters, its shrapnel (after the explosion) cover
an area of about 14 meters. A fairytale of firearms. It saved countless
lives in Grosny. How would you bust sharpshooters from upper floors in a
quick gunfight in town? There is no other way but the GP-25, believe me. You
could call for an air strike or long range artillery and then pull out or
try to contact your own "armour", which, by the way, can be easily burnt by
RPGs... On the other hand, there is an every soldier's personal launcher
that he can use to bust the ragheads by himself. The device also possesses
one other undisputed advantage: its grenades explode on impact. Imagine a
gunfight inside a block of units when a raghead is above you on the third
floor. Next, you throw a standard issue grenade with a time-delay of about 5
seconds. Now, count: fetch the safety pin and throw, then the bitch hits
something on the way up and falls right back into your lap. Only later on in
January they shipped us these mountainous grenades, or as we call them
"afghan" grenades. These babies only explode when they hit something hard.
Before then, some local "Kulibin" (famous Russian inventor of the 19th
century) guessed to slam the grenade up his heel, thus arming it, and throw
the darling as far as he could away from his persona. And, ramming an
obstacle, it burst with shrapnel, obliterating every living thing around it.
Now Semeon and I were blasting off our grenades into the window where
Glue spotted motion. Semeon hit the target from his first attempt; I made it
with my second. The first one slammed into the wall and burst, tearing off a
decently sized piece of masonry and making a huge cloud of dust.
Putting to work the results of our little skirmish, all three of us,
glinting at the dreaded house, quickly cleared the open space, then,
sprinting and sneaking, a few blocks later, at last made it to the HQ.
The silly bastards imagined we were ragheads and nearly shot us.
They escorted us to the outpost where we found our Com-batt (Battalion
Commander).
Tough chap is our Com-batt. Physically not so much a big man, but as a
commander and a person: giant. I won't hide the fact that our brigade is
blessed with battalion commanders. It'd take a while to describe each one of
them, so I'll pass on that, but to say the least - all are real men. Who
once went to war, would know what I mean.
1[[st]] battalion's HQ was situated in the
Railway Station's basement. As we walked in, the Com-batt was boldly cursing
somebody on the field radio.
- F...ing hell, where are you charging, moron? You schmuck, they are
luring you out there. And you are buying it with your dogfaces. Clean up the
area around you! To the last "spook"!!! - Com-batt was yelling into the
handset. - Pull the "boxes" out of there, let the grunts work! Yourself,
stay on the BP and don't stick your head out there.
He hung up and saw me.
- Hey man, - he smiled.
- God bless, - I said shaking his hand.
- What's new in the Group's HQ? Let's go eat, - he offered, looking at
me merrily. At war, seeing a familiar face before you is always a delight.
That means that luck not only follows you but also your comrades.
Still in the heat of the past clash, I knew that if I don't have a
drink now, I'd soon be shaking with a nervous, drumbeat-like fever or turn
hysterical and just keep gabbling ... So I accepted the man's offer with
appreciation.
Setting himself on a box from artillery rounds, Com-batt softly called:
"Ivan, we've got guests, come on eat". Then from a neighbouring basement
appeared the 1[[st]] Battalion's chief of staff
captain Ilin. Skinny fellow, the biggest volleyball aficionado in our
brigade, although, at his job, pedant and perfectionist. In peace life
always tight, in perfectly ironed and shiny uniform, now he looked barely
any different than any other man around us. Same gunpowder- parched face,
unshaven and in need of sleep.
- Hey, Slava, - he said and his eyes glinted a little. We were almost
of the same age, only I was a senior officer in the Brigade's HQ and he was
a chief of staff in the battalion. Both captains. We had a history of
friendship, so did our wives and kids.
I couldn't conceal my emotions and went straight for a hug. Slowly my
nerves were giving in and I was turning a bit hysterical after our little
adventure.
I wasn't worried for my grunts. They were all here, amongst their own,
thus will be worm and fed in no time.
- You've come for the sniper, Slava? - Asked Com-batt.
- Sure, who else, - I replied. - How did you manage to grab that son of
a bitch?
- He just wouldn't let us breath for three days, - Ivan turned grim. -
He made up a nest by the Station and plinked at us over the plaza. Knocked
down three grunts and shot our first company leader through his leg. We were
unable to medivac the wounded and had to fetch the medics over here to
operate on them.
- And how is he, - I asked. That story about the medics I've already
heard: fine job. But the company leader: would he live and walk again?
- Yeah, yeah, sure, - Com-batt confirmed merrily, - I let him rest for
now, only the problem is we're short on company leaders, you know it too
well yourself. So we have to use the two-year-termers ("civilian officers",
college graduates on the obligatory military duty, in officers ranks by
default). But this lad is rather snappy. A bit of a hotshot though: like
Chapaev on his horse, rushes to free all Chechnya by himself.
- What did the sniper have on him? - I asked. - Maybe, he wasn't even a
sniper after all. You know, could've been some daunted local, a great deal
of them bumming around town these days.
Com-batt and the CoS almost seemed upset. Ivan leapt to his feet, raced
to his niche and fetched a soviet SKS rifle. Only the scope was foreign, I
noticed that instantly, - I've seen those before. Most probably Japanese:
fine toy.
Pal Palych - com-batt - while Ivan and myself were inspecting the
carbine, was telling that the detained shooter had two boxfuls of rounds in
his pockets and in his nest they found a case of beer and two packs of
cigarettes. While recounting this, Palych was setting up the table: carving
bread, opening stewed meat cans, condensed milk containers, salads (God
knows where those came from), pickles and marinated tomatoes. And at last,
positioned a bottle of Vodka on this improvised table.
By then I counted all slashes on the carbine's butt: equalled
thirty-three. Thirty-three chopped lives. The way the snipers worked here we
all knew first hand. They met us while we were coming into town, at night,
by early WWII maps. Though we raced, crushing our heads against the walls
inside our APCs, ragging our teeth from the mad ride and damning everyone
and everything, snipers managed to shoot off dangling antennas from the
passing armoured vehicles, at night and in clouds of dust. Without intercom
they'd stop and officers sent men to check out what the hell happened, this
very moment snipers picked them out. They also had another slick idea: they
didn't always finish off their "game", but rather wounded him, shooting him
through his legs, so that he wouldn't crawl out of the killing zone and then
held back. The downed men cried out and snipers picked the speeding helpers,
just like the duck silhouettes at a shooting gallery. By now, our brigade
has lost about thirty men to this kind of sniper fire, thus adding to our
special account to be "invoiced" to "spooks" some day. Amazing that the
grunts brought this cocksucker alive.
A few days ago, grunts from the second battalion discovered a nest, by
all clues - female. All was like always: a sofa or a chair, soft drinks, a
doll and a rifle, hidden close by. The grunts spent all day stalking her
concealed, completely motionless. No piss, no shit, no smoke. Finally they
succeeded. What happened next - no one knows, but the Chechen woman took a
flight off the roof of a nine-storey building, but half way down her body
burst from a grenade explosion. Afterwards, the grunts solemnly swore that
the woman sensed the stench of their unwashed bodies and sprinted for the
roof, and from up there, dived by herself. Everyone, of coarse, showed
compassion, but still regretted that themselves couldn't help her flight.
Nobody believed, however, that for her last dive with grenade she went by
herself. Chechens never committed suicide - that is in OUR character - fear
of captivity, dishonour and torture. After this memorable event, their
com-batt declared a phrase, which was then to become our brigade's motto:
"Siberians do not surrender, and do not take prisoners".
By now Com-batt poured out Vodka and Ivan and myself settled down too.
If anybody tells you that we fought here intoxicated, - spit him in his
face. At war, people drink for disinfection. Not often you can boil your
water or wash your hands properly. Our corpsmen's motto is: "Red eyes never
go yellow". As for the drinking water, we had to get it from the Sunzha
River - a tiny river that flows thought the whole of Chechnya and, of
coarse, through the Grozny. Only no one could possible tell how many human
and animal corpses drifted in there, which meant we could forget about the
proper hygiene. I'm telling you, at war, nobody would drink to get shitfaced
- that would mean certain death. Your comrades, too, would never let you do
that kind of stuff - with firearms, who knows what's on the drunk's mind?
We lifted up our plastic glasses - lots of these we chunked at the
"North" airport - and struck them together. There was no ding, just rustle,
"so that our zampolit wouldn't hear", officers jested.
- Here is to good luck, men, - Com-batt enounced, and, having exhaled
all air from his lungs, "capsized" half a glass.
- To her, the damned, - I picked up and tipped my glass. The heat
flooded my throat, worm wave swamped my guts and halted somewhere inside the
stomach. My body suddenly relaxed. Then all of us attacked the food: who
knows when the next opportunity like this would present itself. Bread,
stewed meat, pickles, tomatoes. All vanished in our stomachs. Now, Ivan
poured out Vodka; we toped, with the usual silent rustle. Lit up some
smokes. I almost pulled out mine, from home, "TU-134", but noted Ivan's and
Com-batt's Marlboro and tossed mine back.
- Sniper's? - I inquired, reaching for one.
- Yep, - Replied Com-batt.
- How is the Second Battalion hanging? - Ivan asked, taking a deep
puff.
- Storming the hotel "Kavkaz", now we're throwing the Third Batt in to
help them and some tanks too. Ragheads are deeply entrenched there and
holding it so far. Ul'yanovtsy and marines are attempting the assault on the
Minutka Square and Dudaev's Palace. But having no luck there as yet, just
loosing men.
- All of which means that we'll be sent in to help them soon - Com-batt
broke in our conversation. - It's not as simple as a slugfest in a corner
bar; some thinking must be done beforehand. To save the men and complete the
task... I could never grasp the concept of the airborne troops: how is it so
that they, absolutely sober and voluntarily, would jump off of a perfectly
good aircraft, ha? - Palych made a joke.
- And I never understood the rangers, - picked up Ivan, - for four
years in college, they learnt how to use binoculars and tail behind a K-9...
I'm sensing with my heart: we'll be crunching on asphalt down there at that
freaking Square.
In my mind I've already made a conscious decision: the captured sniper
wouldn't make it to my HQ. He'll die on the way back, attempting an escape.
He's already told everything he knew.
In movies, agents, working with "a clapper", try to formulate the
necessity to give up the information he possesses as well as break his
ideology. Real life, however, is much simpler. Everything depends on your
imagination, rancour and time on hands. If time permits and there is a
matching desire, we can try to scrape enamel from his teeth, with a rasping
file. Or we can use our field phone. A brown box with a side-handle. Connect
your interlocutor to it with two stripped wires and spin the handle, having
asked him a few questions beforehand. But all this is fine if you're housed
comfortably and he's to stand trial afterwards. This kind of questioning
will leave no marks. Of coarse it's best to soak him in water first. As far
as the screaming is concerned, for that you fire up a heavy armoured truck
near by. But, again, all this is for aesthetes.
In the trenches it becomes even simpler. You shoot the fingers off his
feet, one by one, with your assault rifle. There is no one human being who
could take that. He'll tell you everything he knew and everything he ever
remembered. Feeling a little seek, ha? During which time, you, my reader,
celebrated New Years Eve, visited your friends, skied shitfaced from a
hilltop with your kids. You didn't come out on the Red Square demanding to
pull our soldiers out of that shithole. Neither were you collecting worm
cloths or money for those Russians who fled Chechnya. Cold soldiers in their
frozen bunkers never got so much as a cigarette from you. Therefore, do not
look away. Listen to this truth of war.
- OK, let's get the third one over with and we'll go take a look at
your shooter, - I said pouring out the remains of Vodka.
We stood silently for a few seconds, and toped without cheers. Third
glass - is the most important in the military. Civilians drink it "to love",
students: to something else, but soldiers always drink it "to the fallen",
always standing up and in silence. Every one sees before him those he has
lost. It is a chilling toast. Although, on the other hand, you know for
sure, that if you perish, regardless of how many years would pass, some
green lieutenant, in a God forsaken garrison in the Far East, or a stale
colonel in the most prestigious headquarters, will stand up and drink their
third glass to You.
We toped; I cast another piece of stew in my mouth, a few bits of
garlic and "the officers lemon" - onion. There are no vitamins at war,
although your body constantly demands them. That's why we refer to onion as
"our lemon". At war onion is a commonplace. The stench around is horrible
though, but we've no women here, so we've grown used to it by now and
wouldn't even notice anymore. Moreover, it fights the sickening odour of
decomposing human flesh that otherwise turns your stomach inside out. I've
chased the alcohol with refection, sipped condensed milk right out of its
container, fished a smoke out of the Com-bat's packet and started for the
exit. Com-bat and Ivan followed me.
In about 30 yards from the basement's entrance, grunts encircled a tank
and were having a loud discourse. I also noted that the tank's gun is
unnaturally cocked upwards. As we walked closer to the scene, we also saw
that a stretched rope was hanging from the barrel.
The grunts saw us coming and gave way. The view that opened up in front
of us was picturesque but terrible. At the end of that rope a man was
hanging. His face was swollen from beatings, his eyes half shut, his tongue
hanging out and his hands tied up behind him. Although, by now
I've seen lots of stiffs, still, can't get used to them.
Com-batt started yelling at the grunts:
- Who did this?! You sons of bitches! - I'll leave out the rest of the
names he called them. Ask any line officer, who served in the Army for 10
years or more, to swear a little and you'll greatly increase your vocabulary
with all sorts of idiomatic expressions.
Com-batt kept going at them, trying hard to beat the truth out of them,
although I somehow knew, looking at his sly face, that he's not mad at them
at all. He might've felt a bit regretful that he didn't send the bastard on
his last journey, but mostly my presence, the HQ officer, drove him to this
theatrical performance. All of us: the grunts and myself read it well. We
also realise that no one commander would ever report anything of this kind.
All this breezed through my mind while I was sucking on my cigarette. It's
funny, but these cigarette belonged to this hangman, whose limbs are now
dangling before my eyes, then to the Com-bat and now, I am smoking it while
observing this spectacle.
Tired of the circus, I asked surrounding us grunts, amongst which I
picked Semeon and Glue:
- What did he say, before he died?
Out of the clear blue sky the grunts exploded. They told, interrupting
one another, that the son of a bitch (the most delicate epithet they chose
for him) squalled that he regretted he only managed to nock off only
thirty-two of "your kind" (as he put it).
In their recount the grunts especially emphasized the words "you kind".
I gathered they were telling the truth and if he hadn't said this memorable
phrase, he might've lived a little longer.
All of a sudden, one of the grunts announced, invigorating everyone:
- He throttled himself, comrade Captain.
- With his hands trussed, he tied the rope around his neck and leaped
off the "armour", all by himself. Right? - I choked laughing.
Then I turned to the Com-batt:
- Alright, take your hangman down. Let's write in the report that he
couldn't take the torture of his guilty conscience anymore and thus ended
his life strangling himself. - I spewed the cigarette's butt and pressed it
into the mud. - His rifle, however, I'll take with me.
- Nickolaich, please, - First time the Com-batt called me by my full
name, - leave the rifle: every time I look at it, my body bends.
I glanced into his praying eyes and knew: it would be of no use to try
taking carbine away from him.
- OK, you owe me one, and you, - I turned to Ivan, - bear witness.
- Many thanks, Nikolaich, - Palych was violently shaking my hand.
- Because of this moron I had to drag my ass all the way down here,
under fire. And now I have to hoof back.
- Take him with you, if you like. Tell them he was shot during an
ambush or something, - Ivan tried to make a joke.
- Go to hell, - I jested back. - Why don't you try and drag this stiff
back. And if you ever have a misfortune taking a prisoner, drag him to the
HQ yourselves or waste him down here please. Another thing: get something
nice for the grunts that grabbed him, will you? That's it. We're off. Give
us some escort for a few blocks, OK?
We shook hands and Com-batt, sniffing, pulled out a brand new Marlboro
packet from his inner pocket. I thanked him and sent for my grunts:
- Semeon, Glue, let's go.
They came up, fixing their rifles.
- Ready? Did they feed you?
- Yep. And a few drinks along with it, - said Semeon. - Also restocked
on ammo and grenades for launchers.
- Cheers men, let's run. We have to get to the HQ before the nightfall,
- I muttered, buttoning my coat and attaching new magazine to my rifle.
I made a "royal mag" by binding two 45-round RPK machinegun clips
head-to-toe with an electric tape. This gave me 90 rounds always at the
ready. It's a pity though, the calibre is 5.45, not 7.62, like before. The
5.45 bullet has some ricochet and once fired is all over the place. The 7.62
round, on the other hand, goes straight as. There is a legend - during the
Vietnam War, American GIs had complained to the gunmakers that their M-16s
wounded too many while killing very few (our AK-47 and AKM suffers from the
same imperfection). Then, the gunsmakers came right to the trenches, studied
the problem and began experimenting on the spot. Here's what they did: they
drilled a hole through the bullet's tip and soldered a needle inside the
hole. These modifications resulted in shifting of the bullet's centre of
gravity and when it hit the target, it reeled on almost all of the target's
guts too. Although the rounds' stability suffered greatly and the bullet did
produce more ricochets than before, the end result was more enemy fatalities
after all.
Soviet Army didn't produce anything original but rather copied the
American idea and, during the Afghan Campaign, swapped all 7.62 calibre AKs
with the 5.45 ones. Maybe fine for some, but I am personally not ecstatic.
We geared up, jumped a few times to warm up and studied each other.
- God help us, - I said and turned around. The five escort grunts were
busy carrying out the same manipulations. They were getting themselves ready
to see us off.
I looked again where the strangled sniper was meant to be hanging, but
the tank's gun was back to its normal state and the rope with the dead man
on it was already gone.
- Alright, let's move, - I ordered and nodded to the escorting grunts
to go first.
Knowing the surrounding terrain much better, they didn't select the
path we had chosen coming down, but rather dived into some basement first
and then took us through piled up slabs and breaches. At some stage we even
went down underground sewage network and afterwards and had to climb back
up. I completely lost my sense of direction and could only glance at my
wrist compass at times to see whether the overall course was correct. All
seemed right though. In about 30 minutes, the sergeant, who headed our
venture, halted and lit up a cigarette. All of us did the same. Then he
enounced:
- That's it. Now, from here, it's about 7 blocks, no more, till you
reach your "boxes". Although, no more cover, only open spaces.
I finished off my cigarette and shook the sergeant's hand. Then, I
thanked every one of the escorting grunts and said:
- Good luck! We all need it, don't we?
- You guys go ahead; we'll stay here 10 more minutes. Just in case, -
said the sergeant.
- Let's move, - I ordered, turning to Semeon and Glue, pointing the
direction to them. Myself first, I popped out from the basement, tumbled,
whirled, finally coming up on one knee and scanning the surroundings in my
sights. There was nothing suspicious there and I waved to the guys the go
ahead. First, Semeon quickly popped out and then Glue emerged with his radio
transmitter.
Scurrying this way during the next forty minutes, we finally touched up
with our "boxes". As we started for the home base, furious fire came down at
us from the upper floors. I rode on the APC in the head of our convoy. The
vehicle took a spin to the left and hit the corner, then slowed down and
finally came to a complete halt. All of us, riding atop of the "box", opened
up in bursts of suppressive fire.
- Driver... You, screwed in the head mother! Get the hell out of here,
- I yelled into the hatch. Then ordered the grunts next me to start setting
up the smoke diversion.
- One of the caterpillars is torn! - The driver shouted back at me.
- F...ing hell... everyone off the "armour", now! Four of you start
pulling the track back on, the rest - secure our perimeter. I need two
GP-25s with me; second APC, load your cannon. That's all. Move it!
Again, the heat of the battle consumed me. The first feeling,
naturally, is fear. But after overcoming it, you begin to taste blood in
your mouth and suddenly find yourself feeling cool and mighty; all of your
senses sharpened. You note everything around you and your brain is like a
computer, always gives off the right decision as well as lots of other
possible options and combinations. I instantly leapfrogged off the "armour"
and hopped behind the piece of concrete wall close about. Convulsively,
trying to find the target but so far, can't find anything to fire at. OK,
now breathe... I'm ready... let's rock, men! Give them Hell! Blood is full
of adrenaline and I'm on fire again.
The grunts didn't have to be told twice. They promptly pulled the pins
out of smoke makers and our APC was wrapped up in the colourful clouds.
Russian soldier is very resourceful and, just in case, nicks off everything
that lies around unattended. After we took the Airport "North", the lads
collected all kinds of these smoke makers. In the second APC, fellows echoed
our little trick with the smokes. Actually, they did it just in time. The
"spooks", obviously, realised that it'd be too hard to blindly mow our
grunts off the "armour" and this time went for their RPGs.
What is RPG? It is a standard rocket grenade launcher. The toy has a
sister too: called "Muha", a tube-like devise (first versions were
telescopic). "Muha" is an antipersonnel weapon, whereas the RPG is for the
anti armour use. When a rocket-propelled grenade hits an obstacle (usually
an armoured plate), it blasts off thin, needle-like, piss that burns through
steel and creates a temperature of about three thousand degrees Celsius
inside the vehicle. Obviously, tank's ammunition detonates which, in turn,
rips off the tank's multi-tonne turret, tosses it off to about 30 meters and
tears to pieces bodies of the crew and infantry inside it. Many died while
they were still confined inside their mobile steel traps. In some cases,
drivers watched the road from the open hatch and were only cast out of their
vehicles by explosion, broken and muffled a little, but still alive and
mostly in one piece.
Now, these sons of bitches opened up on us from their RPGs and added
Shmels to the chorus. (AD. Shmel" (Russian word for bumblebee), is an
antipersonnel rocket Infantry flame-thrower (RPO-A, so-called bunker buster.
End of comment. AD) Although, neither they could clearly see us, nor could
we see them. In fact, the whole scene looked pretty comical. Wrapped up in
heavy, standard black smoke, from which the coloured fumes were raising,
like geysers into the sky: blue, red and yellow. They tangled in the air,
mixing up and coming apart again, diverting the ragheads' attention away
from us.
Our second APC's cannon let off a burst, firing blindly in the
direction where the spooks' rockets came from. Then suddenly, somewhere in
there something blew up. May be it was us, actually hitting something, or
their RPG gunner made a mistake in the heat of the gunfight. "Shmel", same
as "Muha", is just a pipe. For the total fuckheads, there is a direction
arrow with the description printed on it. Anyway, no one knew what happened
up there, but the God, evidently, was on our side today. As there was no
more gunfire coming from the spooks' positions, my grunts have gone
jubilant. Mostly they yelled out curses that could probably be understood by
soldiers of any army.
- Shut it! - I barked at them. - Keep pulling the track on. Second APC!
Secure our perimeter. Move it!
I rose and tried to loosen up my back and numb feet, I was still wary
and scrutinising the building where the shooting came from.
Judging from the angle: third floor. In the havoc and because of the
fumes, I never got the clear picture of what took place. Now, through the
clearing smoke, I could see a huge hole in the third floor's reinforcement,
blasted by the explosion. Thick black smoke was coming out of there.
During the whole encounter, Semeon stayed next to me and now declared,
pointing at the breach:
- Cooked the mothers! Vechaslav Nikolaevich, can we go check?
He was practically begging. It seemed like his fiance was holding it
off for him up there. I was curious myself though.
- Hold on, - I said to him and asked the crew, labouring near their
"armour", - How much longer?
- Any time now, comrade Captain, maybe 5 more minutes, - coughed up one
of the grunts, forcing the busted caterpillar onto the leading wheel.
- Semeon, Glue, Mazur, Americanets, Picasso - come with me. The rest
stays here, assisting the repairs and watching our backs. If we do not
return in half an hour, move forward, two blocks to the north. Over there,
you wait for another half an hour and then ride back to base. Gunnery
sergeant Sergeev will take over from me for the time being. All call signs
are the same.
Now to the grunts who'd come with me:
- OK, children, let's move it. Picasso leads, Glue at the rear. Semeon
- right flank, Mazur, take the left one. Have your grenades on stand-by.
- And me? - The skinny private put up his voice. The chap was a
qualified rock climber, nicknamed "Americanets" (the American). When he was
drafted, he came into the office wearing his American flag shorts.
- And you will walk by my side and watch your ass, - I replied in jest.
- Let's go clean them up.
Everyone understood perfectly what the words "clean up" meant. They
meant, "take no prisoners". "Good apache - dead apache", - Conquistadors'
motto was a close match in our case. What could we possible squeeze out of a
live spook? Nothing: no maps, no storage hides, no communication system
layouts - NO-THING. Moreover, a wounded raghead would be a major pain in the
ass. First, you'd have to pool men to guard him. Second, he'd still be
perfectly capable of pulling some kind of shit on us. Nor could he be
exchanged for anything. Finish him off on the spot and that's that. He too
would surely like it better than torture.
With caution, we came up the third floor. In two neighbouring flats the
rag-heads made up their firing nests. In the first one we found the "Shmel"
shooter, in the second - two of his unlucky comrades, with one RPK each. The
most disturbing thing was: they were just kids, most probably only about 13
to 15 years old. One of them was still alive and while unconscious was
quietly groaning. Judging from the fact that one of his legs was torn off
and he was bleeding heavily, I figured he wouldn't live for much longer. It
seemed like one of our cannon rounds dropped into the room where he was
launching his rockets from and blasted to shit his ammunition store. I
looked around, my good mood was totally gone by now. Of coarse these
rag-heads tried to blow us and all but... they're just kids for God's sake.
Damn it. I spewed and gave another order to my grunts: "Finish him off and
then sweep the block, someone might've got away." Although even I had doubts
that anyone of them could escape.
My grunts, Semeon, Glue and Picasso each let off a burst into the
disfigured body, one after another. The kid's body flexed out, bullets
ripping his chest open, some blasted his head to pieces and it sprayed the
walls in red clots of his brain. I calmly watched this murder. Then I looked
away from the corpse, still not used to this or maybe it's just normal human
reaction? Who can tell? I fetched the sniper's Marlboro packet and handed
some cigarettes to my grunts.
- Didn't you hear what I just said? "Sweep the block". Anyone not
clear? - I uttered, taking a puff. The grunts left, mumbling something.
Left alone, trying hard no to vomit, I went through the dead rag-heads'
pockets.
Wow! An Army ID tag and many of them, OK, let's see: Semeonov Aleksey
Pavlovich, born 1975. Semeonov, Semeonov, Semeonov... It suddenly clicked in
my mind. Is that the Semeonov from the engineering regiment, which went
missing after we stormed the Airport? They sent the fellow for some mine
sweeping cord and he vanished. Was that he, shooting at us? I carefully
studied the dead rag-heads' faces, matching them to the badly preserved
photo on the ID Tag; I even looked inside the breach in the wall and at the
dead "Shmel" launcher's face. No, not him, thank God. Turned a few more
pages in his ID. Shit! Yes! Our division. Our Semeonov. Your deaths saved
you a lot of trouble, assholes! Your end would've been brutal. I would've
dealt with you myself. During my adventures in the former Soviet Union, I
learnt well how to make people talk, make them last long and stay conscious
all the way.
My sadness was gone in a heartbeat. I cared about the dead boys' souls
no more. My teeth cramped in rancour. If needs be, I'll tear anybody apart
for Russian soldier. I'll crush anything just to return the youngster home
alive and in one piece.
All of a sudden somebody was screaming from upstairs:
- Comrade Captain, Comrade Captain, they found some guy up there on the
roof. I think one of ours! - Americanets was fretting.
I flew up the stairs and felt no wheeze. On the roof, nailed to the
cross, a dead soldier's body was resting, just like Jesus. His own cut off
penis stuck in his mouth. Without even looking at his dirty face, I knew: it
was he, Semeonov. I probably only saw him about 10 times before and never
even spoke to the man. But suddenly tears were in my eyes and something
pinched in my nose. Now I regretted that I never got the chance to properly
meet the lad. I think he wasn't even one of the permanent staff. Right
before the Chechen campaign, he was attached to our brigade from Abakan.
- They nailed him to the cross and put it up on the roof. The cross
collapsed from the explosion and that's probably why we didn't notice it
before. - Picasso tried to explain something to me, feeling a little awkward
that we didn't discover the body earlier.
- He's one of ours. - I pronounced, labouring to stay calm, - Semeonov,
of the sappers. Disappeared off the "North" while minesweeping. I found his
ID tag on one of the shooters.
The grunts were like lightning-struck; they fussed about Semeonov,
removing him carefully from the cross. While doing that, they tried not to
hurt him, handling his body like he was still alive, whispering not to wake
him up and tears were falling down their faces complicating this chilling
job even further. I looked away, pulled out a smoke and lit it up. Thirstily
inhaling I tried to push the clog in my throat further down, glancing at the
hustling grunts at times to see how things were moving along. When
Semeonov's body was at last removed from the cross, lads placed it on some
kind of stretchers they put together from all sorts of rubbish they could
collect around here. When it was all over I said:
- Glue, get on the "boxes". Tell them to come closer and that we are
coming with a "cargo 200"... Our "cargo 200".
I was coming down the stairs ahead of the rest, checking for anything
suspicious along the way. My grunts were carefully carrying the stretchers,
like the man on them was only wounded. At the rear, Glue was struggling
under the weight of his radio transmitter and scraps of the armoury we
discovered at the rag-heads' nest.
We loaded the body into the infantry compartment inside our APC and
started for the home. I felt that for any "spook" that tried to stick his
nose out now, this attempt would be, for sure, his last. Confirmation to my
thoughts was the empty and terrifying look in my grunts' eyes, were I could
see the reflection of my own feelings. Only the fire of vengeance was
blazing inside them and nothing else. Blood; blood; I now only craved for
blood to drown my rage, breaking their skulls with my rifle's butt, crushing
their ribs under my boots, tearing and ripping their veins with my finger
nails, looking in his, her, their eyes and asking: "Why, why did you shoot
at the Russian soldiers?"
OK, hold on motherfuckers, I'm coming. No mercy for anyone, not for the
elderly, not for the children, not for the women - NO BODY will be spared.
Ermolov and Stalin were both right - these folk are not to be re-educated,
only exterminated.
Our APCs were both speeding ahead. It seemed they were feeling our mood
too with their engines running absolutely fine now. Periodically, they
drenched us with their oily exhaust fumes, adding some kind of foppish gloss
to our black appearance. But our eyeballs were ablaze with mad fury,
demanding vengeance and there was now no place in our minds for fear.
Probably, in this state of mind, men run at machinegun nests to save others'
lives at the price of their own. Desire for vengeance suddenly grows into
care for those who are close to you and self-sacrifice for others.
Glinting at the surroundings I could feel movement inside the rubbles
with my skin. Resting AK on my elbow, I pulled out other ID tags and flicked
through a few more. Petrov Andrey Aleksandrovich - Maikop Brigade. Elizariev
Evgeniy Anatolievich - Internal Forces (they and the Rangers have their
garrison numbers marked with four digits and The Army have theirs marked
with five). Altogether, eight IDs - eight lives. Where are you boys?
Probably, no one will ever know and your mothers will be crying tears until
the end of their lives: their dead sons will have no graves. All of this is
awful. I finished off reading all of the remaining IDs, I was positive there
were no more grunts from our brigade in there. I hid them back in my inner
pocked, looked at my "cavalry" and shook my head, assuring them that none of
the remaining IDs belonged to anyone of ours. They again turned away,
watching out, racing past onetime battlefields. Demolished houses, torn down
trees, burnt and given up machinery. It was mostly tanks with torn
caterpillars and their turrets ripped off and tossed over to great
distances. APCs, with their thinner armour plates, were just blasted to
pieces. All depended on where the rockets hit and how much ammo the "boxes"
had onboard. Some drivers were lucky, others - not so much.
With pain I was looking at the trees. I like nature. Humans have a
choice. They can refuse to come here and go to jail for desertion or self
inflict an injury, thus buying themselves "the white" ticket out of here:
crafty Russians are capable of anything. But the trees and animals are
helpless. Men planted them at will; others came and wiped them out. And they
can do nothing in response. Neither trees, nor animals can flee or defend
themselves. Thus many died together with their owners on their porches. What
remain, people will eat later because of the famine. These-days people are
frequently seen tottering about like shadows amongst the rubble. Mostly
these are elderly men or middle-aged women. Everyone, who could fire weapons
and more or less think clearly, escaped into the mountains seeking
vengeance. No problem, we, in turn, will take revenge on them. Thus, closing
up this vicious circle. Every one of us thinks he's right. We all believe in
our own gods, praying them to help us and demanding retribution for deaths
of our friends and brothers. But God deals spoils and losses equally for
everyone. OK, so we'll fight. It would be pretty tough to fight the whole
nation though, as opposed to a regular army of one particular state. That's
what we've been taught to do. In an open field, busted your opponent,
occupied a town, picked up the spoils and back to the field. Here it's more
like in Afghanistan, fight the folk all you want. The whole thing is not
even a war. According to the law, all this is a piddling policing operation,
exclusive purpose of which is reinstating of the constitutional order.
However, no one knows what this order used to be like in the first place.
OK, while the "spooks" and us are mincing one another, someone in Moscow has
hit the jackpot. We've all seen a lot of that going on. For some, war is
like their mother. Not even one son of a bitch went down for all the blood
they've spilt in our spacious former Union. Not counting the Baltic States -
a couple of squealers and OMON guys went to jail, so what? They did nothing
but avenge the deaths of their friends, but those who gave them orders...
their bellies I would twitch with my bayonet, looking in their wide-open
from pain and fear eyes, listening to their deafening screams and breathing
in smell of their blood. That would be fun.
Yet here, people lived by penitentiary laws for four years. We fed them
with money, supplied with weapons and taught how to use them. Then we sent
them to fight in Osetia and Abhazia for us, - like we are not even aware of
what's going on. And when there was no longer need for them, they should've
been eliminated, but no, - we tried to domesticate the Chechen. Yeah, right!
He turned against our Moscow gang. Why, though, should the whole country
suffer? We even came here from Siberia to break up the dogs. China is closer
to us than Chechnya. Then men from ZabVO, DalVO and TOF were dragged down
here too. They can walk to the States or Japan. One thing isn't clear
though. Why is it so that the rag-heads left the oil refinery intact? We,
too, were strictly ordered not so much as touch it. Here is our Air Force,
happily bombing the city's living quarters, but as for the Staropromyslovsky
part - no way.
All of which means: the plant is somebody's property. Somebody who can
hush our Defence Minister and tell him specifically to leave it alone, - you
can level the whole town to the ground, but don't you dare ruining the
refinery. Of coarse, when Russian soldier is in rage, he's very difficult to
hold back, so too the rag-heads, not all are aware of the refinery's
importance. They naively think that they are actually fighting for their own
fucking freedom and don't get it, morons, that we are all simply taking part
in an ordinary criminal quarrel, very big though. One little baron decided
to screw The Big Daddy and start his own business. Then, Big Daddy sent his
own hood, the Russian Army, over, to bang the little fellow. But the baron
was a smart chap; he squalled with independence and sent his "bulls" in.
That's how the quarrel has begun. Now, no one can remember why the whole
thing started in the first place. The hoods are busy taking vengeance on
each other; meanwhile, their barons are making big bucks expropriating
salaries and pensions. The little one is pulling in Islamic World now, with
his cheap religious mottos. God, help us and forgive!
My APC took a sharp U-turn, which nearly cast me off the "armour".
That's right, moron, your business is to keep your teeth from clapping:
you'll break your neck one day, falling off the "armour" or a sharpshooter
snaps you. Your COs are there to think for you and supply you with the
ready-made decisions. Your objective is to survive and complete the task.
All else is shit. Take Andrei Petrov, former mortar platoon commander. He
had principles, right? He demanded that he be given two weeks to prepare his
men, considering the fact that his grunts were only drafted in November and
have only seen their rifles once before - during the oath. He was dismissed,
made an example, like a coward, a deserter. Replaced with a raw lieutenant -
two-year-termer college graduate. Where is that lieutenant now with his
mortar platoon? During the Airport assault he lost almost all of his men
and, himself, perished too. You see? They draft too many morons in The Army.
Some of them you have to stand for two years, others for twenty-five.
We tried to reason with our multi-star commanders that we are not ready
for any war, not technically, not logistically. Men are not prepared
physically. Then, in December, when the order came to load the gear onto the
locomotives and step out, the weather was freezing cold. As it is always
done in our Army, the diesel fuel, that vehicles were filled with, was of
the summer kind and rather depicted a tomato sauce. So, some smart ass from
our garrison came up with the idea to mix this "sauce" with kerosene. Yep!
You guessed it. One of the APCs blew up right in the parking lot with its
full ammo complement onboard; by some weird luck nobody was hurt. Second
burst while loading onto cars. And again God was on our side. And, as it is
customary in The Army, these events were used to write off much of the
property, just like Suvorov described in his "Saviour". According to the
official documents, those APCs had on board: not less than fifty uniform
coats, twenty-five night-vision devices, no fewer than a hundred pairs of
shoes and BDUs. When the papers were to be signed by the HQ representative,
he read that masterpiece and pronounced: "Add one more parka plus one more
BDUs, for me". Supplies XO added each of them by one and the General signed
the papers with his eyes shut.
Now this general is here somewhere. Thank God, he's just signing
papers. "Material battle losses" is probably his credo.
For now, my mind was occupied by thoughts of the dead sniper. What do I
tell at the HQ? How did it happen that he didn't make here? I knew well,
that no one would be breathing in my face with his honourable anger, only
with disappointment that they couldn't hank his guts themselves.
Particularly, the GRU and recon guys will be sad. It's their cup of tea,
just let them play with the fellow, they'd make him talk. We can do that
too, quick and simple, but they handle it gracefully. Liquor can't kill the
mastery.
Suddenly something moved in the rubble, twinkling with rays of the
setting sun. My mind hasn't even produced a thought yet, but my hands
already responded, quickly raising my AK, finger clung to the trigger. And
only then my judgement kicked in - I saw our artillery spotters, the lads
constructed their positions in one of the remaining pieces of a house by the
road. They too met us with their rifle barrels. All of us, however, managed
to keep our cool and hold fire. Moreover, they just began to wind their
"Shilka" in our direction. It is a large calibre anti-aircraft gun (ZSU)
with four barrels. It would've chopped us to chips for sure. Alright, at
least we identified each other in time. We shouted merrily something to each
other for greetings. This meant the HQ is near. Yep, there is the blazing
fire-fountain from the breached gas pipe. 200 or so yards and we're "home".
Now we can relax a little.
- Hey, radioman, - I said to Glue, - Let them know we're coming, or
they'll shoot us to hell.
Glue tattled something in his headset and nodded to me that we were OK
to go. Talking or rather shouting through roaring diesels seemed senseless
and inappropriate with the dead man onboard our APC. Everyone felt a little
guilty for some strange reason, although, on the other hand, knew well that
he, himself, could've been down there in his place.
Cars retarded a bit and, manoeuvring this way, we passed a virtual
labyrinth of remaining concrete blocks and bricks. Soldiers watched us
through their sights from behind every corner. Their faces were all covered
with dust and, from that, seemed made of stone. They all looked exhausted,
with their dog-tired red eyes. The lads greeted us with smiles and gestures,
lowering their guns. We greeted guards the same way. I knew, our officers
and men would be betting on me delivering the sniper alive and well.
Personally, I wouldn't put my money on his safe journey.
Lucky, we returned before the daybreak. Some smarty-pants in the
defence ministry invented a new password system for us. Before, everything
was nice and simple, but now, the thing is a brain surgery, without ten
years of high school or lots of liqueur, impossible to translate. For
example, before, the password was "Saratov" and the reply to it was
"Leningrad", even a moron could understand that. Some grunts can barely read
or write: outcomes of the "perestroika". The core of the new system is the
number: say thirteen. The guard, seeing a silhouette in the dark, calls out:
"Stop! Password - seven!" Now, you have to instantly take away seven out of
thirteen and quickly yell back: "Reply - six!". After all this, the guard
must add his "seven" and your "six", get "thirteen" and then let you pass.
But, if any one of you can't count well enough or has something else on his
mind, then, according to the Statute of the armed guard service, the guard
can, and will, shoot you on the spot without any further investigation. And
no one prosecutor would lift his finger to pursue this issue any further.
You, moron, should've been learning your math back in high school. Fine, if
you are not completely deaf and the grunt on duty can actually count, but
some smart asses call out fractions and negative numbers. That's when you
recall all of his relatives, and your math skills, while you're at it. For
all this, some shithead got promoted back in Moscow, or maybe, even a medal
on his chest. Those snakes are capable of anything.
Thinking this way, we stopped near the partly demolished kindergarten,
where our brigade's HQ was now situated. I jumped off the APC, rubbed my
stalled and frozen feet and started for the entrance dragging my stiff legs.
I had to see our HQ's CO, Lieutenant Colonel, Alexandr Alexandrovich Bilich
first. All of us called him San Sanych. Already on my way, I ordered my
grunts:
- Start offloading our hero, carefully.
Grunts nodded understandingly.
San Sanych was about 1.75m tall with broad shoulders and constant
sparks in his blue eyes. Or were the sparks just a fruit of our imagination?
San Sanych was somehow different from all the officers in our Brigade. He
was actually well mannered. At first, it seemed superficial, but the more
you got to know him the more you were convinced that it is really in his
nature. It seemed, he should've been born in times of chivalry, high society
and duels, definitely not in our mad century. Even now, when we are more or
less bottled in OK and started hammering our opposition, when the war, maybe
only at times for now, but has taken a proper shape of the trench warfare,
every day our lieutenant colonel Bilich has found the time for brief morning
exercises.
Every morning, if it was possible to catch any sleep at all at night,
we crawled out of our cellars shacking from the cold. Because it's winter,
may be southern, but still a winter. As a rule, there was no water, and our
old unshaven whiskers were no longer rough, but felt rather fuzzy. However,
looking at your CO, you, unwillingly, pick yourself up and find the time,
the water and the razor. Although, many officers, some superstitious or some
just plane lazy, grew beards and moustaches. Some even looked great like
that. The only one who looked exactly like a Chechen, was, our recon platoon
leader, Hlopov Roman, naturally possessing dark skin and having grown a
dense beard. This way, during the Station siege, he was nearly shot by his
own grunts. Luckily, he put on a helmet and his armoured west; otherwise,
our sporty protectors would've definitely done him. Since then, Hlopov - we
called him Hlop - developed a habit to shave every morning no matter what.
About one and a half weeks ago, when he and the reconnaissance CO broke
through to the Airport "North", the allied commander's HQ, on the way back
they ran into an ambush. Their APC was blasted by RPG fire from a point
blank range. Hlop died instantly, the CO had a bad concussion. For two days,
skirmishing along the way, their grunts were slowly sneaking home. They
brought back the Hlop's mutilated body and the severely concussed, almost
deaf and blind, reconnaissance CO, Captain Stepchenko Sergey Stanislavovich.
As they recounted afterwards, the days they spent in basements and at
nights, risking the bullet from Chechens or from us, they crept back to
their home base. They slept in turns, using parts of the poor Hlop's body as
pillows.
Maybe after his concussion or maybe after hiding in basements with the
corpse, Sereoga Stepchenko started having problems. We almost cured his
sight and hearing with liquor, but he couldn't stand closed and tight spaces
anymore. Mostly he's OK, working and fighting, but sometimes he's just
mumbling something completely out of this world. Our brigade's Commander,
Colonel Bahel Alexandr Antonovich, placed an order to dismiss Stepchenko
from his post, and watch him so he doesn't make any trouble. There was no
chance to medivac the man as even our wounded were lying in bunkers:
choppers couldn't land. He was, temporarily, replaced by senior lieutenant
Krivosheev Stepan. Bilich San Sanych was taking care of Stepchenko, not just
him though, of everyone around him. He arranged for the grunts that brought
him and the Hlop's body back, to be awarded each by the Hero Of Russia
Medal. But for now, the papers were kept in Chiefs of Staff's safe.
Out of his principles, Bilich didn't recognised physical methods during
conversations with the enemy or cursing with his own men. But the
interesting part was, I knew from my own personal experience, that if you
yell cursing at somebody, everything is done more quickly and clearly.
And now I had to explain to this gentleman that I failed to deliver the
sniper because grunts' thin patience wore off and they hung him off a tank's
barrel. Trying a few combinations in my mind that could spare San Sanych's
delicate hearing and let the Com-Batt and Ivan off the hook, I entered the
HQ. On the way in I met our Supplies XO, Kleymeonov Arkadi Nikolaevich.
Everybody was describing him with Suvorov's words: "...we can comfortably
hang any supply officer in one year time...". Looking at the well-shaped
figure of our "rear XO", you knew that the Generalissimos was absolutely
right: in his time, Kleimeonov would've being dangling off the tree by now.
His personal luggage has been growing in size by the day, regardless of the
heavy fighting.
- Ah, Slava, how was the trip? Got the sniper?
- No such luck, Arkadiy Nikolaeich, he passed away, - I made a
compassionate face, my eyes were telling a different story though and the
rear XO picked up on my game.
- Really? - Kleymeonov made a puzzled face and asked me, sounding
surprised.
- Weak heart, - I smiled, - he was wounded too, so didn't survive the
departure. Now I have to delicately explain it to San Sanych. He'll be
really sad.
- He's too busy for that now. By the way, nobody believed you'd bring
him anyway. Il'in and yourself could've thrown him harakiri over there on
the spot. It is a petty though; we had people queuing up to converse with
him, - Kleymeonov shone his teeth.
- They were betting, weren't they? - I asked.
- Sure, but mostly on your failure.
- By the way, I also brought a soldier with me, Semeonov, disappeared
during the "North" siege; my grunts are offloading him now. What else is
new?
- You were only gone for four hours. Oh, yeah, - his voice turned
gloomy, - Chief of Staff of the Second Battalion was wounded.
It seemed that the walls around us swayed.
- Sashka Pahomenko? - I asked.
- Himself. They are trying to break through to the hotel "Kavkaz".
There are as many rag-heads there as there are demons in hell, so he caught
a bullet in his chest. Medics couldn't get up there. Sargent patched him up
for now. Now we're getting a storm group ready, made of scouts. Under the
cover of dark, they'll try to get him out of there, - I could see Kleymeonov
was pretty sad, telling me all that.
Captain Pahomenko Alexandr Il'ich was loved by all in our brigade. Very
tall fellow, open-minded, he loved having fun. He knew countless gags, funny
stories and practical jokes, never malicious. The main thing about him was
his openness and honesty. It always deeply affected people who knew him.
While taking to him, in about ten minutes you felt like you had known the
man since your college years. With all that he was never a layabout or an
idler. He was always the first one where it was the hardest, always rushed
in to help everyone. Our officers and men liked him unmeasurably. He could
help with his words or action, he could also swear like hell - was a real
virtuoso in that field. He could get behind the steering wheel of an APC, in
freezing cold fix an engine or give soldiers a good lecture. Well, the very
type of officer that our information sources were always pounding us with.
Detesting his enemy, never hiding his genuine feelings, never refusing to
give a helping hand. A bit loud at times, but you get used to it in time.
That's what he's been to us, Sashka Pahomenko, who always asked to call him
"simply Il'ich". Strange, but at war, these little, long forgotten things
are suddenly surfacing in your mind. And now this young man was lying in
some basement with a hole in his chest. God help him.
- OK, Arkadiy Nikolaevich, I'm off to see San Sanych, - I nodded and
headed off along the corridor.
- He's in there with an Allied HQ representative. Bahel is out in the
Third Battalion's HQ, meanwhile this clean-cut chap is stamping Sanych's
brain. They'll probably throw us in to push somewhere, where our elite
forces shitted themselves. It's always like that, they get to receive medals
and fire at the parliament palace in Moscow and we, Siberian mahra, to
crunch asphalt in winter. For that, we get to go home and they will pose for
cameras and tell stories to girls, - he spewed and wondered off.
The corridor was full of officers and soldiers. Some were smoking, some
taking a snooz, leaning against walls riddled by bullets and shrapnel and
raising their heads time to time from close explosions.
We paid one hell of a price for this kindergarten. In his time, Dudaev
announced that Chechnya does need scientists but needs warriors. Thus, boys
should go to school for three years and girls for only one. Since women stay
at home at all times anyway, kindergartens became obsolete. Then, people,
close to his government, some with bribes, some with force, has claimed them
all. This one too was rebuilt as a villa and belonged to one of the Dudaev's
bandits. The owner and his gang fought for it with ferocity.
We were busting these snakes out of here for 12 hours straight and when
finally broke in, learnt that he maintained a pretty good live style in
here: all floors were covered in carpets, not the cheap stuff but handmade.
Design furniture, crystal and china, appliances we only ever saw in
brochures. Left around photos had all his family pictured. We lacked women
here, that's for sure, but I have never seen a pretty Chechen, not on
pictures, not in real life. All had small faces, narrow eyes, hooklike noses
and thin lips. Just like rats, if you ask me. Everyone has different tastes
though. As we say, - "there are no ugly women, there is just not enough
liquor, but I couldn't drink that much..."
Occupied by this kind of thoughts I entered the main HQ's room in the
basement. I pushed the door covered up by a raincoat-tent and felt the
warmth coming from the army camping heater in the corner. I guess these
heaters are only still alive in the Army. As long as the army exists they'll
always be there on manoeuvres and at war, to offer soldiers warmth and
comfort.
- Comrade Lieutenant Colonel, captain Mironov, reporting back to duty,
- I reported, looking at Bilich, who was leaning at the map. Next to him,
bent over the map, were my partner or, as we called each other, "henchman",
major Ryzhov Yuri Nikolaevich and some other officer.
- We've been waiting for you, Vechaslav Nikolaevich. Did you pick up
the sniper? - The Chief of staff asked me, inquisitively looking in my eyes.
- Here is your mate, - he nodded at Ryzhov, - was betting a six-pack of
cognac that you won't.
- If I had only known about the cognac, Alexandr Alexandrovich, I
would've brought back at least his head. But the dog died from his wounds
and probably from some kind of heart condition. The son of a bitch was, from
his own words, our compatriot, from Siberia. Thirty-two slashes I found on
his rifle's butt and a fine Japanese scope too.
- Where is the rifle? - Took interest in our conversation Ryzhov.
- I left it back there. They show it to the grunts for ferocity and not
a bad feed for themselves too.
- Yeah right, "feed". We all need only one feed now - air support,
probable enemy positioning and where the bustards are getting their
resupplies from. They were not ready for this war for sure and prepared
nothing: no arms, no ammunition and no food.
- That's not all, - I interrupted Bilich, - on the way back we were
fired upon and took on the rag-heads. After the counterattack, destroyed our
enemy and found these on the corpses... - I reached my hand out with the
dead soldier's ID tag. - One of ours. Semeonov.
Again a clog was stuck in my throat, making it difficult to talk or
breath. I pulled my cigarettes out. Bilich wouldn't object, realising what
state I was in, although himself was a non-smoker. After a few deep gasps I
felt the clog disappearing and continued:
- The snakes, probably, were torturing him for some time, and likely
while he was still alive, cut his penis off. Then nailed him to a cross,
like Jesus. Penis stuck in his mouth. We brought him back; my grunts are
probably offloading him now. Here is some more, - I fetched the rest of the
IDs, - them too I got off the dead "spook". No more of ours though.
San Sanych carefully listened to me, looking straight into my eyes,
then, took the ID tags, briefly flicked through them, noting only the
garrison numbers, added them up in a little pyramid and handed it to the
unfamiliar officer.
- By the way, let me introduce you, - he turned to the major, - Major
Karpov Vechaslav Viktorovich, Allied HQ representative, General Command HQ
officer. And this, - he said pointing at me, - Captain Mironov, our
Brigade's HQ senior officer, an adventurer and a warrior. Still can't get
accustomed to the fact that he is a HQ officer now not a combat company
commander, - San Sanych somewhat fatherly lectured me.
I was a bit stunned by the fact that my CO would speak of me so
heartily. I reached out and shook the major's hand.
- Vechaslav, - he introduced himself.
Namesake. We'll see, what kind of bird you are and what the hell you're
here for. I figure, one of the big boys, since was sent to us. They might
want us softened up before giving some suicidal task or maybe find out in
what state of affairs the brigade is in and then fire the CO. These fat cats
from Moscow love this kind of tricks.
I looked at him a bit more carefully this time. The face definitely
looks familiar, but where I saw him before, I, for now, couldn't recall. OK,
we'll figure that one out later. The fact that he was from Moscow and from
the General Command HQ, immediately made me, like any other line combat
officer, dislike him. All grievances come from them. They are all bastards
and voracious rats. All soldiers knew this axiom, watching them do nothing
but drink themselves stupid at every inspection and then departing for home
with generous gifts. Human garbage, from first to last. It's their fault
we're here in the first place. Moscow has planned the first and this Grozny
assaults. 25[th] of November and 1[st] of January will
both be black pages in the Russian Army's History Book.
I thought about it while I was shaking the Moscow officer's hand and
squeezing out of my face some kind of smile. Although, I think, my parched
face reflected all my thoughts pretty well. But I couldn't send this coxcomb
to hell right here, in front of San Sanych, whom I respected too much.
- Vechalsav, - I introduced myself back to this Moscow rooster.
- Major Karpov, take these IDs to the HQ please, let them work out
which regions the soldiers are from and notify their families, - San Sanych
passed the tags to him.
The rep nodded, took the IDs and without even looking or counting,
dropped them into one of his parka's outer pockets. Any normal officer
would've at least counted them respectful of the dead.
I was a bit disturbed by this and asked the son of a bitch with badly
hidden irritation:
- Aren't you going to loose them like this, my honourable man? Human
lives are behind them.
Spotting the rage in my voice, San Sanych and Ryzhov looked at the guy
like he was an enemy of the state. He must've understood his lapse, mumbled
something and placed the IDs in one of his flank jacket inner pockets,
meanwhile giving me a very expressive look, like he wanted to grind me into
dust. Alright, my boy, look all you want, I can chill a drunken soldier with
my look, as for you, dandy ass, I can bring you down to your knees. I calmly
stood the look of his watery eyes. He even seemed flimsy. About a meter
seventy in hight, may be less, skinny and with small head. All blond, like
albino, except his eyes, they weren't red, but rather colourless. His
appearance was just repulsive, and his quiff, that he was fixing constantly,
was even adding something female to it. Maybe he's gay: a funny thought
breezed through my mind. The General Command HQ Officer is a homo. That
would make a lot of noise. Well, I heard, in Moscow, it's very fashionable
these days - alternative sexual lifestyles. I don't think I'll be sleeping
next to him. Though, I think he's just lifeless, like a jellyfish. I might
offer to paint this queer orange, for fun. Would make snipers' job easier
too.
For a second, I imagined the major painted in red colour and a smile
stretched my lips. Karpov studied himself nervously - something wrong with
his dress? Having ensured that his uniform was intact and finally realising
that I'm just laughing at him, he stared at me angrily in response.
Knowing my wild character and to relieve the tension in the air, San
Sanych declared, talking to everyone at the same time:
- Let's stop plotting against each other for now and go see Semeonov's
corpse. We'll fill in the paperwork and you, Vechaslav Viktorovich, - he
looked at Karpov, - would have to take him with you to the airport and send
home.
We all moved for the exit. Officers and men were already out in the
yard. The corpse was carefully placed on the rolled out canvas, hands folded
on his chest. Nail holes in the wrists were clearly seen, his face was
thoughtfully covered with a soldiers' handkerchief. Hats off, all present
were just standing around in silence. What was on their minds could only be
read on their tight-lipped faces. Lucky for the sniper, he was dead. Here,
he would've lived a long time, to his distress.
Bilich came over to the diseased, lifted up the handkerchief, looked at
his dirty face with forever frozen mask of terror on it, sighed and, turning
toward standing next to him Kleymeonov, gave him an order:
- Arkadiy Nikolaevich, fill in the ID report and prepare the body to be
sent home. The HQ representative will take it with him.
- Sure, Alexandr Nikolaevich, - and then to the surrounding him grunts,
- Take the man inside. It's warmer in there. Call for the bookkeeper; tell
him to write up the ID Act, the death notification and whatever else is
needed.
Everyone suddenly went active. Bilich announced, talking to Ryzhov, the
Moscow dandy and me:
- Let's go eat.
I had, of coarse, nothing against throwing something in my stomach and
tipping a nip or two, but not in the company of this faceless shit, that's
why I politely refused his offer:
- Thank you so much, comrade Colonel, but I'd rather do it later. I
have to wash off the dust first and get the sniper and Semeonov's reports
out of the way. Other paperwork can't wait for too long either.
- As you wish. But at 2100, please be here at my meeting. Com-brig
should be too back by then, - carefully looking at me, said San Sanych. It
seemed that he figured out what the real reason for my refusal was.
They went inside. I watched the grunts carrying away all that remained
of Semeonov, then turned around and wandered off to my truck. Every
brigade's HQ officer had his own truck. With Yurka Ruzhov, between the two
of us, we shared GAZ-66 with a plywood cab. Although, most officers
preferred to spend those few minutes of rest in basements, we loved our cab.
We also had a personal driver, Harin Pashka, one meter and seventy tall,
with broad bone, big and always twinkly face, little eyes but red hair,
short, almost shaved, hairdo at the back, according to soldiers' fashion,
and always waving long quiff. Naturally, Pashka was a crook and a worm, but
I repeatedly observed him in gunfights: many times he pulled out the truck,
with us, from under fire, for that we cared for him and trusted him. In
peacetime Pashka was a leave abuser, bitter disciplinary offender, big
liquor fan and a womaniser. His pregnant fiance was waiting for him back
where we came from. He had another year to serve before discharge. Pashka
knew practically everything that was going on in the brigade thanks to his
friendship with the grunts from the HQ, communications hub and canteen. He
supplied us with news, some of which he found out significantly earlier than
we did, receiving his information from the comms operators. All of this gave
us more time to think about it and then come forward with good advice and
initiatives during the Sanych's or Com-brig's meetings, while others were
only chewing on the newly received information. For that our superiors
regarded us highly as competent officers. Although, we've always been on top
as it is, the head start was never a burden.
Walking up to our truck I noticed with satisfaction that Pashka managed
to fill up the sandbags and enclosed the truck with them. Now we can breath
almost freely. There was a thin puff of smoke rising from the pipe meaning
that we've got heat, hot water and dry cigarettes. I came up to the door and
called out without opening:
- Pashka! Where are you?
- I'm here, comrade Captain. Guarding.
Pashka's figure emerged from the dark; I glanced at the position, he
has chosen for his guard and noted to myself that he did it rather cleverly.
- All right, my lovechild, what've you got to make your father happy?
Did you behave? - I asked him jokingly.
- Everything's fine, Vechaslav Nikolaevich. Enclosed the truck with
sand, got some food too.
Food was a problem, same as matrasses, linen and the BDUs.
Reinforcement columns were left behind at the airport; it made no sense
dragging them down with us under fire. Only the tankers, carefully guarded,
carried over fuel for vehicles and power generators. Of coarse, every
officer and soldier had reserves in their tanks and APCs: canned stew and
meat kasha containers. But that's no real food, a paved road to stomach
ulcer. That's why everyone was constantly busy hounding for nutrition.
During the assault on this nice kindergarten, in its basements, we
found a decent supply of food and beverages. Much of that we've already
eaten and drunk, but we all knew who amassed most of it and using Pahka's
personal charm or his cheeky character, periodically expropriated some from
the comms operators.
- Sonny, - talking to Pashka, I worked my way into the cab, - What
kinds of entree and oversees brandy do you have to soften up your old and
sick father?
- Dutch ham, roasted lamb, sardines, I think French, and two bottles of
cognac, judging from the labels, also French.
- Got the hot water? - I inquired taking off my rifle, coat and other
apparel.
- Yep, full kettle, - reported Pashka, throwing the rifle behind his
back.
- Let's go, flush some on to me and then have dinner, - I have already
comfortably settled in the warm atmosphere of the cab and now unwillingly
stepped out into the night cold undressed.
I scrubbed myself slowly and carefully, huffing and spitting out dirt
and dust that clogged my nostrils and mouth. We had no steamer here so far;
for that reason we gathered a lot of fresh towels and some cheap polish
fragrance in the airport and periodically, stripping naked, rubbed ourselves
with them. Our underwear we just chucked, putting on new pairs each time.
I got back into the cab, put some cloths on and was wiping up my rifle
with a piece of cloth. Meanwhile, Pashka cut up the ham and smelly lamb ribs
and opened up a can of sardines. In the centre of the table he set up the
sealed bottle of cognac "Hennessey". I opened it and smelled the contents.
Not bad at all. Poured out some of it into plastic glasses, a bit more for
myself. I lifted the glass, looked though it at the light, shook it and
smelled once more, I definitely liked the aroma.
- So, Pavel, to good luck.
We cheered and tipped the glasses.
- Vechaslav Nikolaevich, what happened to the sniper?
- Don't you know already? Glue, Semeon, Americanets and the others
must've told you all about it by now. He died from the heart condition and
his wounds; the rest is none of your business. Now give me the news. Isn't
the war over yet?
- Not by a long shot, - pronounced Pashka, - on the contrary, the order
came through, to speed up the assault of the hotel "Kavkaz". They even
promised us air support. And then the brigade will be thrown in to storm the
Minutka Square with the Dudaev's Palace.
- That's where we'll all drop dead, because it is an obvious suicide to
attack a structure of this kind with only one brigade. What else?
- The second batt's Chief of Staff was wounded and some artist is up
there stuck with them. Shevchuk from "DDT". Ever heard of him?
- No, never heard of him before. What's he doing up there anyway?
- Nothing really. He came to Grozny for a concert and then asked for a
ride to the front line. Left all his musicians at the airport and popped up
over here. Who could predict that the second batt would be then screwed like
this? So now he's stuck there. Lads said on the radio he's pretty snappy,
not scared at all and even rushing into battle.
- Yep, now they'll throw our reserves in there to get him out and maybe
even take the hotel for once. Finally medivac all our wounded to the airport
and then go home.
- The Moscow officer was going around taking to grunts. What's up in
the brigade and how they're coping?
- You should've told him to go screw himself and that's that. They
won't send you any further than here. We've got our own zampolit to do this.
We've all seen him in action; he's not hiding behind grunts' backs and
doesn't crunch on his rations under the bed. And never throws any theatrical
shit either. OK, I'll figure out later what to do with that dick. It's
killing me that I can't remember where I saw him before, but I did for sure.
- He says he was in the Prednestrovie at some stage. Something like
this went down there. You were there too, weren't you? May be that's where
you met the man?
- May be so. Only I can tell you, Pashka, Pridnestravie of coarse was a
lot of fun, but compared to Chachnya all that was like an innocent walk in
the park. Over there, the war was more of a classic trench style, although,
Bendery and Dubosary did change hands a few times. But overall, compared to
this madhouse - boy-scout camp "Sunrise".
Now I noticed that Pashka was wearing a rifle bullet on a piece of rope
around his neck - an ancient soldiers' amulet; supposedly this very bullet
was meant for you. If it was only so! These "charms" only relax you
unnecessarily and flatten your sense of vigilance. I smirked:
- You better hang a hand-grenade there by its safety pin, and I'll
fetch it, or a mine. How about artillery round? How do you know that this
bullet was cast for you? Not shrapnel or a concrete block? Go ahead, hang
everything on your neck, it might be useful. Remember that grunt from the
tank battalion? They found him strangled by this very rope with bullet, just
like yours. It didn't save him. Thus, don't be a moron - take it off and use
the bullet as intended
Gabbing this way, I slowly wiped out the food on the table and leant
back. Lighting up a sniper's cigarette I took a puff. The packet was a bit
wet though, possibly from my sweat or humidity.
- Pashka, got dry cigarettes?
- Yep, - he handed me a packet of "Palmira", or, as we call it, "Bum in
the mountains". Because the packet depicted some kind of hobo with a stick
over his shoulder, wearing vocational panama and jellaba (just like a
"spook") and a mountain gorge on the background. - Please, Vechaslav
Nikolaevich. I've got more drying out on the heater. Give me yours; I'll fix
them up too.
I took the packet, twirled it, then lit up and stashed it in one of my
pockets.
- Give me paper, will you. I'll start on the sniper's report.
Pashka gave me paper and sat down near:
- Kozaks arrived, asking to let them fight. Even submitted letter of
recommendation from the Commander in Chief, - Pashka said softly while
cleaning up the remainders of my dinner. Meanwhile I was finishing off the
report.
- Well, if they are so anxious to fight for mother Russia - let them do
it. In Moldova they fought pretty well, even captured weapons for
themselves, - said I without raising my head.
- Bahel said the same thing and sent them to the recon guys. All five
of them.
- I suppose I should go and meet them at some stage.
All of a sudden, somewhere close by, a furious skirmish broke out. Both
of us flew out of the cab at once. Shivering, I pulled on my coat; my mag
pouch with a few extra clips was dangling on my shoulder. In case of an
attack on the HQ, every officer and soldier knew his area of responsibility.
That's why without any extra fuss we sprinted for our little foxhole, dug
about by Pahka a few days ago.
Somebody was discharging long bursts, meaning that the contact was a
close one. Someone was yelling from the dark:
- North-east, white five-story house. Discovered an infantry
detachment, about ten men in all, could be a diversion of some kind.
Not much could be seen in the settling dark, except a few blurred
silhouettes. Somebody started launching flares. Pashka too launched a
couple. Then, in about thirty yards, I noticed rag-heads, crawling toward
us. They were all dressed in nice Turkish camouflage of significantly better
pattern and quality than ours. If I catch a "spook" of my size - definitely
strip him. Back in Prednistrovie, we caught a "policeman" once, in May's
excruciating heat. My feet were boiling and this guy was wearing these
really cool boots. Back then they were a rarity, light afghan type with the
reinforced base, especially for mountaineering. So I got them off him. Back
then we didn't kill prisoners; they were kind of the same as us, fighting
because of morons politicians. Now I have been wearing them for three years,
although they lost their attractive looks but nobody makes them anymore.
Maybe, someone will pull them off me just like I did, perhaps alive or maybe
dead. God alone knows.
I touched Pashka's elbow and showed him the rag-heads.
- Let's go, - I whispered.
We opened up in short bursts. In flares' light we could see the little
geysers of mud and snow. The rag-heads realised that they have been
discovered and fired back at us. They were definitely in a worse situation
and thus were letting off long bursts, crawling backwards. Someone opened up
from his under barrel launcher cutting them off. Suddenly a machinegun fired
from behind us. Did they plan to encircle us?
No freaking way, assholes! I felt my fatigue beginning to disappear and
again, intoxicating rush of the gunfight was consuming me, the flow of blood
thrusting into my head forcing out remainders of the grogginess.
- Pashka, cover me, I'll do them from my launcher, - I yelled with
excitement, getting the weapon ready.
- Come-on my darling, don't let me down, - I muttered, shoving grenade
into its black trunk.
"Bang", said my launcher, spitting the grenade towards the rag-heads.
Too high, I noted correcting. Another one. Gotcha. The grenade burst right
in the middle of the group of crawling "spooks". Two of them whirled around,
obviously wounded; the third got up on his knees holding his head and then
dropped face down in the mud.
- That one's cooked, - I yelled in intoxication, meanwhile spotting
another target. But the rest of the reg-heads managed to hide behind the
rubble and began to gush at us from their rifles. Now, the flares worked
against us, clearly giving away our positions.
A grenade exploded right behind us. Looks like they too have the
launchers. "Issued from the same warehouse?" I thought, bitterly grinning at
my sad idea.
I switched to automatic now, trying to spot where the enemy fire was
coming from. Somebody was running at us from behind, heavily treading. We
turned around sticking our rifle barrels into the dark, ready to open up at
any moment. That was Yurka Ryzhov.
- Shit, man, you scared the devil out of us, - said I getting back to
business.
- Yep, it's definitely more fun over here than with that Moscow creep.
Ragging and ragging constantly. This is not right; that document is not
correctly filled in. Do not write down that the man was captured prisoner;
indicate that he is being unlawfully detained by the illegitimate armed
formations. He also recommended that we speed up the hotel "Kavkaz" assault,
ourselves, take it in the shortest possible time and then proceed toward the
Minutka Square and storm it on the march, - he stopped for a second and then
added: - head on.
- Stuff that. They can storm it themselves if need it so much. As for
us, we need more air support, - I yelled angrily, firing back into the
night. After the Yurka's news I went frantic and was hammering with long
bursts, - you see, I just took one out, the other two are over there
whirling, probably wounded.
Judging from the shooting, we figured the reg-heads were not leaving
just like that. Somewhere from behind our backs we heard "Shilka" talking,
the one that was set up this morning. Well, now it'll chop them up like
salad with its rapid fire and calibre. Yurka together with us, was, with
excitement, picking at the rag-heads with long bursts, keeping the bastards
from raising their heads.
- Slava, the Moscow shithead says he saw you before in Kishineov.
All of a sudden, it became crystal clear. Now I remembered everything.
When back in Kishineov, without any ID papers, we were transferred over the
front line back and forward; this degenerate was there in the Staff Office.
Then his Office was reassigned to the Moldova Republic. Although he stayed
there in the same department and rank. Our personal folders then fell into
the Moldovans' hands. At the end, all of us were pronounced war criminals. I
came to him asking to return my folder, but he bluntly refused, motivating
that I am, in fact, a war criminal and he wouldn't want to be my accomplice.
Then he suggested I leave immediately or he'd call the guards and arrest me
on the spot. The son of a bitch changed colours quickly, but apparently,
eventually had to run for his life too. In a few months, they declared an
amnesty and I am, for now, not a criminal anymore.
The rag-heads started hammering our positions with renewed energy.
Somebody screamed from behind us after the next burst. Shit, someone was
hit. We saw a flash in the dark and redirected our fire over there. In a
couple of minutes somebody in there screamed and something made a noise.
For a few more minutes, in excitement, we kept going in the enemy's
direction, but there was no response. Apparently the rag-heads retreated
having got enough. We had no particular desire to go and check the area.
We'll find out when the sun rises.
- Apparently the original owner came for his liquor, - jested Yura.
- The moron must've forgotten what Karl Marks wrote in his "Capital" on
the second page first paragraph.
- What did he write, Vechaslav Nikolaevich? - Pashka enquired from the
dark.
- A very simple phrase - was yours, now is ours. Expropriation of the
expropriators. If they hadn't screwed around, we wouldn't have come here in
the first place.
- Anything left to drink? - Ryzhov wondered.
- Sure, don't you worry; haven't you had a drink with the faceless
shit? - I replied.
- We have, but he is too fussy. We didn't offer him any cognac but
rather had Vodka. The son of a bitch wondered if we, by any chance, had any
spoils left.
- Moscow motherfucker, - I spewed into the mud, meanwhile, in complete
darkness, filling up empty magazines, feeling the rounds with my fingers. -
All seems quiet. Let's go back. I still have my report to finish and San
Sanych's meeting to attend.
- OK. Pashka you stay here and guard, if you spot anything - call out,
we'll come and rescue you form the evil Chechen, - Yura jested.
We got out of the foxhole and, shaking off the dirt from our BDUs,
started for the cab. Around us in the darkness, officers were walking, to
their trucks to prepare for the meeting.
- Hey people, who was shot? - I yelled into the night.
- The comms driver, Larionov. He's OK though. The shrapnel only
punctured the skin but the bones are fine. He is in the sickbay now. He'll
live, - a voice answered me from the dark, sounded like the Arms XO
Cherepkov Pavel Nikolaevich.
- Soon, there won't any more room in the sickbay to put the wounded. We
should try to break out the blockade and ship them all out, or we'll lose
them, - said loudly Yura, returning to the cab.
- We should look into it and discuss with our COs, - I picked up his
idea.
- Let's have a drink and then go listen to the rant of the Moscow pimp,
- said Yurka, casting his rifle in the corner, - for I am sick of doing it
alone. According to their perception, we can't fight for shit; we have to
inspire men, make them imagine that all this is the Berlin assault and the
Dudaev's Palace is the Reichstag. Bloody paranoia. If it were up to them,
these bastards would lay us down like rails for their cheap glorious
speeches, - Yurka was heating up more and more, that however didn't keep him
from pouring out Vodka and opening sardines cans.
- Alright, Yurok, stop it. Let's drink up and later on the meeting,
we'll bonk the asskisser. Don't worry too much. Whatever they cook up, we
are the ones who will be carrying it out. With the present air support and
artillery back up, we're stuffed anyway. He can go and screw himself. OK, -
I lifted the glass to my eye level and looked at the colours play, - let's
go, to us, the good guys, and death to the morons.
- Yeah right, start holding your breath, - Yurka just wouldn't cool
down and, it seemed, was boiling even more. - Fight them all you want
they'll win anyway. It looks like they are intentionally working for the
Chechens, to kill as many our men as possible.
- OK, Yura, stop yelling, we have to think of the way to get the
wounded out of here. They won't give us a break until we step out anyway.
And during the assault we'll take in more casualties for sure, now you do
the maths. If you ask me, tomorrow morning we have to fetch the recon guys
from the third battalion with whatever they still have that we can ride on,
and break out. Otherwise we'll lose shitload of men. Drink up, - I raised my
glass and toped it without cheers. Yurka too drunk his.
Since we were under our full strength during the departure, we were
complemented by one more battalion from Novosibirsk. According to the
initial plan, we had to complete all preparations by autumn and depart for
Tadzhikistan for integrating into the 201[st] division or some
peacekeeping force; anyhow, to fight for God knows what or who. So this
battalion arrived on new, experimental BMP-3s. The machine looked great,
everything seemed thought of, - however, turned out total shit. Stuffed with
electronics like your Lexus, but made in mother Russia. Thus, at first, we
coped so much shit from it. It couldn't fire its weapons on the run:
equipment failed from vibration. All its sighting systems were electronic,
thus totally useless garbage. When it did fire, it couldn't move: something
again to do with the damned computer. Well, all in one word, - very crude
system and thus terrible. In the third battalion, twenty-four men died in
the first quarter of January because of this buggered APC. Terrible
statistics, isn't it? All because this unrefined machinery was shipped to
the Army, furthermore, to the war zone. About five of them we've lost
already. We've moved them off to a safe place and, for now, use as
machinegun nests. Although the cannon jams after it fires its first shot. Or
as taxi charter in the more or less safe neighbourhoods. I wish those snakes
that accepted this weaponry dropped dead.
Having my second drink I listened to Yura telling me about my Moscow
namesake. He was on fire after I left - at war, he said, some officers let
themselves loose and do not exercise proper behaviour code towards their
superiors; the discipline is lax and so on and on. Then, having sent all
this Moscow bullshit artists to hell, we finished off the bottle and in good
mood left for the meeting. We felt like teaching the Moscow rep a lesson in
gallantry and military science, in front of all the brigade's officers. At
war, feelings towards all representatives are always the same - nobody can
send you any further than these tranches, and their official warnings are
not like clap, they'll hang out there for a while and then fall off at some
stage. By the way, my honourable reader, - clap (gonorrhoea), is "the
officers' heyfever". Back in their college years, half of the officers'
corps managed to catch it. In the Army, compared to civilian life, this
disease is not considered shameful. Shit happens.
At the meeting, every officer knew his spot. Like all HQ officers, we
were sitting close to the Chief of Staff. The meeting room was situated in
the former children's basketball court, which had become a lounge room at
the Chechen owner's villa, where he built in a beautiful fireplace, which
we, in turn, were feeding with his own furniture. By the way, red timber
burns badly, a lot of smoke and not much heat.
Our com-brig was sitting at the head of the big dinner table. As we
could see he didn't even wash up since his return. Judging from his mood, we
figured second battalion was in deep shit. Somebody was talking behind us; I
turned around - it was our Recon CO. His face was just as dirty as the
com-brig's. I figured they went together and thus asked him:
- How did you two go? How is the second battalion?
- Totally stuffed. On the way back we drove into an ambush, one APC was
hit. Driver wounded, Gusarov, you know him? First, busted the track then
wasted us at close range. Barely escaped with our lives.
- No, I don't know him. - I shook my head. - Bad wound?
- His wrists are badly burnt, shrapnel cut his shoulder and part of his
ear is gone. If they keep his hands, he'll be fine. It's a petty though, he
is a smart fellow and I wanted to make him a sergeant.
- Listen, I'll be suggesting now that before we go out and help the
second battalion, we should ship our wounded off, or they're all goners,
your driver too, by the way. For that we have to contract the third
battalion and your lads. What do you reckon?
- Sure, count me in. While we were offloading the wounded, I remembered
that there is a republican drug warehouse here near by and our corpsemen
have nothing besides aspirin and their enthusiasm.
- OK, go on, make a suggestion. We'll work on that and snatch the drugs
from the rag-heads. Otherwise addicts and marauders would bag them anyway.
- Attention please! - Chief of Staff spoke out.
The humming in the room stopped and everyone was now looking at the
COs.
- During yesterday, our brigade was participating in the following
assaults: central train station, hotel "Kavkaz" and here. Also, while
proceeding to locations of the brigade's detachments, several HQ Groups were
fired upon and became involved in short skirmishes. As a result, our brigade
has lost, - there was absolute silence in the room, - two KIA, private
Azarov - tank battalion, sergeant Harlapidi - engineering battalion. There
have been four wounded: Chief of Staff of the second battalion, senior
lieutenant Pahomenko, first battalion company commander lieutenant Krasnov,
Private Gusarov - recon company and private Larionov - communication
battalion. Also, we found a body of private Semeonov - engineering
battalion, who was earlier declared missing in action. The man died a
terrible death, - here San Sanych looked up, faced everybody in the room and
continued without the bulletin, - his was tortured, then nailed to the cross
and his penis cut off and placed into his mouth. Horrible image, I have to
tell you, gentlemen.
The room went buzzing. Officers, despite the presence of their COs and
the representative from Moscow were loudly and resentfully discussing death
of the soldier.
- Calm down, gentlemen, - Bilich resumed his speech after pausing for a
moment, - I'll continue, I am no less disturbed by this, but let us dedicate
our emotions and rancour to the enemy, right now, there is nothing we can do
about it. Next, first battalion captured a sniper, from his own words our
compatriot, from Novosibirsk. Captain Mironov was not able to bring him
over, from his words, the latter died from his wounds and heart condition.
And again the room went buzzing with noise, this time with approval.
Those, whose eyes I met, were nodding and winking to me, approving, as I was
the one who wasted the sniper. Someone from the back of the room declared:
"his guilty conscience killed him". Officers cackled with approval. The room
was scarcely lit, actually, only the table with the Com-brig, Chief of Staff
and Karpov was illuminated, the rest was all covered in darkness. That's why
those at the back were making all sorts of comments without the fear of
being recognised. Lucky bastards.
Again San Sanych had to call for order. Slowly the buzz settled. I
inwardly was watching the faces of our Com-brig and the Moscow major. If our
CO's lips were touched by a smile after the "conscience" remark, the
representative kept cheerless expression on his face with his thin lips,
displaying his negative impression of the matter. A rat is always a rat. It
would be interesting to know if he was ever a platoon leader or a company
commander. Or straight after the college he popped up on the HQ parquetry?
I've gone through all the necessary stages, neither was I ever elevated in
rank before the right time, kissing commanding asses along the way. That's
probably why I travelled all over our country's hot spots. I have no desire
for my son to serve in the military, although my father, my uncle, father in
law and myself went to the same damned military college. If I had ever
learnt English language, wouldn't have ended up in this shithole.
Now San Sanych was telling us about our future objective, which Karpov
brought with him. The latter was erupting with self-importance; it seemed
all this was his idea and we owe him everything. The officers were listening
carefully, quietly exchanging their comments at times.
Then Karpov made his speech:
- Gentlemen! Our Allied Force Head Quarters has set up an honourable
task for you: amongst the first troops, you are to spearhead the attack on
the lair of the savage and then destroy him. The Commander in Chief himself
is keeping this operation under his control. You have proven yourselves in
the past battles and therefore, as the Commander's representative, I am
confident that the Siberians will handle their challenge with honour.
And more of that boring rant, in the worst traditions of the soviet
cinematography. If he thought his listeners would explode applauding and
give him standing ovations, he was dead wrong. There was nothing in the room
besides quiet chuckles and calm remarks. Then someone from the back clearly
and loudly yelled out "Go to hell". From the construction of the phrase I
figured who that was. Only one person in the room could express himself like
that - our tank battalion commander, Mazur Sergei Mihailovich. When we came
here, we had forty-two tanks T-72, now we have twenty-six. In ten days we
have lost sixteen tanks, mostly with their crews. That's why major Mazur had
the right to send all smarty-pants from Moscow the farthest and most often.
Everyone was waiting for the response. It came swiftly:
- Who said that? I suppose it's not a smart and honourable officer and
unlikely that he would come out and say it to my face.
But Mazur rose, and pushing away officers in their chairs, came up to
the table.
- I said that, so what are you going to do? Because of fucks like you I
have lost forty-eight men and God knows how many more I will lose because of
your hallucinations. Why won't the air force and artillery beat the crap out
of this damned square with all that's still there? And the grunts would
block the approaches and take out everyone who would try to sneak off.
That's all. There won't be as many soldiers' blood spilt though and we'd
have to spend more time.
Now everyone was watching Karpov. He was obviously confused:
- The problem is that the whole world is watching what is happening
here. All major news agencies and television stations have been registered
at the Head Quarters. If we use air force and artillery on a square of this
kind, the world community might not take it well. As you correctly mentioned
that it would take more time, but our government needs this conflict to stop
as soon as possible. Local opposition, which is on our side, would also be
against using air force and artillery to solve this problem. Maybe somebody
would wish to surrender? Moreover, we had received authentic information
that a group of well-known human rights activists headed by the Duma
politician Krylov is in one of the Dudaev's basements. Krylov is the
guarantor of Dudaev's personal safety. As a result of a massive air strike
they might get hurt.
- Screw them!
- I'll become an artillery spotter, so that the lads wouldn't miss!
- Hang the bitch!
The well-known human rights activist Krylov was called many
unflattering names. This madhouse would've gone on for a while, if the
Com-brig hadn't barked:
- That's enough! Please comment only on the subject. Orders are not to
be discussed - they are to be carried out. Other details like air and
artillery support, time frames and interactions with other units would be
discussed later on. I am listening. Please note that the hotel must be taken
within the next three days. Any suggestions?
I raised my hand.
- May I? Comrade Colonel, - the CO nodded to me and I went on, - If we
are to face an assault like that it is possible to expect that we will take
more casualties. Our wounded, however, are cramped in the sickbay as it is.
We are also running out of medicaments. Therefore, I suggest the following:
tomorrow, with the strength of the third battalion, support of the recon
company and chemical defence company we would break away to the "North"
airport and medivac all our wounded out of here. Then, in our immediate
proximity, we have the republican medical warehouse. Medicaments definitely
wouldn't hurt to have at this stage.
- This warehouse is for the local population only! - The moron moscvich
gave off a remark. - We must never do that, it would set the locals against
us!
- Keep quiet, major, - cut him off Com-brig, - we've already given you
an opportunity to speak up. This war has already set them against us. There
is no way back. Mironov, continue.
- I'm pretty much done here. If my plan is approved, I offer to
personally head the convoy. Other than that we have to notify the battalions
so that they ship their wounded over at the HQ as early as possible. We
should be under way at about 9.30 and if everything goes according to my
plan, we could be back by about 17.00, leaving us enough time to start on
the medical warehouse.
- What about the hotel "Kavkaz" and the Square?
- I suggest, that during evacuation of the wounded, myself, or someone
else, would contact our front command office and discuss all available
options. If somebody is willing to take over the train station from us, the
first and second battalions could easily bust the rag-heads out of the
hotel. We can also give them the third battalion for support and clean up
operations. If we could also move the self-propelled howitzers a bit closer,
we might be able to complete the task within the previously mentioned time
frame. Only if our friends from the "North" don't shell us again, as it has
happened many times before, - I couldn't help myself and again kicked the HQ
rep.
The discussion of all "for" and "against" arguments of my plan took a
while after that. In about half an hour, our CO approved it overall. He made
a decision to personally head the convoy to the "North". He was also taking
several officers with him: myself with Ryzhov, recon CO, medical CO, third
battalion CO and Supplies XO. After brief calculation, it turned out we had
one hundred and twenty-two wounded to transfer, including all from the
battalions. Many of them refused to medivac. It's strange though, for them
this war was over, they didn't chicken out or self-inflict their wounds,
many of them were even about to be awarded medals, some could be discharged
before their term after this. But even the badly wounded refused to be
shipped out. Their COs yelled at them, some ordering, some trying to
convince them to go.
A lot of grunts were broken down crying, like they were unjustly
punished or something. A few didn't want to go because of the soldiers'
brotherhood, the real one not the imaginary kind. Some were frankly saying
that their thirst for blood isn't quenched yet for their fallen comrades.
Looking at their faces and their madly blazing eyes, you begin to understand
that these men could easily give up their own lives for their comrades. No
looking back, no bargaining with death or enemy, just stand in the path
between the bullet and his comrade without making demands for rewards or
medals. I asked myself a question that I haven't yet been able to answer,
maybe that's what this superior spirit of the Russian Soldier is, that no
army could ever break? Despite the fact, that every government in Russia
hated and dreaded its own army, trying tirelessly to break its backbone,
something that no enemy could ever do. But the Russian mahor, regardless of
his superiors' scams, has always sunk his teeth into his enemy's throat, in
spite of his furious resistance, avenging the deaths of his brothers,
himself died but killing his foe. The death of one would cause desire for
vengeance in the others and this would go on to the last soldier. The
government, knowing this phenomena, periodically makes new opponents,
because when the obvious enemies are dead, you, having tasted their blood,
can't stop any more and start looking back.
And if you did look back, you'd understand, my reader, that while you
were fighting here, at someone's obscure order, life in your country calmly
went on. Somebody even made a little fortune from this war, someone else
transferred money overseas. But your comrade, whose mutilated body you were
dragging out of the killing zone, under fire, yourself soaking in blood and
sweat, he now receives a pension from the government, for both his legs that
he lost out there, 300 rubles.
When after the third toast, he'll grab your hand and, looking into your
eyes, ask you in breaking voice: "why the hell did you pull me out of there,
why?" You will feel sick and ashamed that you saved his life. This very act,
that you were so proud of and maybe even rewarded, - will be the most
shameful and bitter act of your life.
Because your government sent you into this butchery and then, chucked
you out, the still living ones as well as all the dead. It has bedamned and
forgotten you. There was nothing there. All this was your paranoid
hallucination caused by the posttraumatic syndrome and multiple concussions.
But don't you worry. We'll fix you up in the mental home in about five
years, come on in. Whatever remains of the army, we'll disperse and
downsize, so that they don't tell anybody anything and debate our actions.
Same as witnesses after a crime, they'll remove the military after each of
their "salvaging operations". Like they did after Afghanistan, Germany, and
so on. Because they knew for sure, the Army can turn around and see that the
real enemy is right here in Moscow.
Thus, when they throw you out or lock in a God forsaken garrison, you'd
look back at your life and realise that the brightest, most memorable
moments and impressions, the taste and price of life you experienced back
there at some war. Your whole life will be now divided in two parts:
"before" and "after" that war.
Here you will be put before the choice, the infinite Russian question:
"what do I do now?"
You can try and live you life like everyone else, but you know that you
won't get far. You can try and enter the police force. By the way, they are
not ecstatic to see us there, they say we are all psychos. We can become
contract killers, our familiar business and the money's good too. To kill,
not as many people, not for some principles or vengeance but for money.
Would you do it? Does it make you sick? Some go for it.
There is a third path however - mercenary. It's true though you'd be
fighting side by side with those you were shooting at not so long ago, but
that's OK. Money doesn't smell and who knows, you might even like it and
take vengeance on the locals for your fallen friend who used to be your
enemy.
All our wounded grunts knew it only too well. Some knew; some sensed it
with their skins that all this is what a man lives for, and if they leave
now, they would never again experience it. That's why they hung in to every
opportunity to stay. To some their COs plainly lied, telling them that they
are only going out there to accompany the column and would then come back
here again. Some of them believed it while others wanted to believe, hoping
that the convoy won't be able to break out and would have to return. Some
grunts anticipated that before the medivac they would, for one last time,
fight and send a few more true believers to see their Allah for themselves.
They do like squalling "Allah akbar, Allah akbar", - so what? We too
know that he's "akbar", but they, for some reason, don't rush to meet him.
That's no good. Moreover, they are promised a heaven for the holy war with
the kafirs. Therefore, we are actually doing them a favour, sending them to
paradise, but they are resisting it like blind puppies.
This night at the HQ was pretty much sleepless. All of us, Yurka,
myself, Chief of Staff, recon CO and other officers were working on the
details for the medivac convoy. We talked to all the neighbouring units,
arranging the safe passage through their territory and interaction in case
of an ambush. Mechanics were busy getting their vehicles ready for the
transit and gunsmiths tried to adjust BMP-3s. There was enough work to go
around for everybody.
When all arrangements were made and all questions answered, only the HQ
officers were left in the room. Now the head of the Operational Department
initiated the meeting. We now were discussing our options for the Minutka
Square complex assault. At first we said everything we had on our minds
about the Allied Command and Moscow smart asses, but gradually we cooled
down and the meeting went along a calm path.
All of us came to the conclusion, that a head-on assault of the square
would be a sure suicide. But first, we had to take the bridge over the
Sunzha River overlooking the square. There, marching our men under the
deadly close range fire, we could lose them all. This bridge was right in
our path and could not possibly be avoided, unless we took a detour over
half of the city.
Suddenly, chief of the guards barged into the room.
- Comrade Lieutenant Colonel, - he started anxiously, addressing our
Chief of Staff, - the Moscow rep just left.
- What? - San Sanych couldn't grasp it at first.
- Got on to his BRDM, said that he was called in and left.
- When?
- About fifteen minutes ago. I called him on the radio, he says that he
must be at the "North" before the sunrise.
- What a moron? He'll die himself and lose his men. He should've been
riding with the convoy tomorrow morning. Idiot, nutcase, - the head of the
operational department, major Ozerov was furious.
We all knew too well what that meant - riding alone, in the dark,
through a besieged town on a light armoured APC. The end result is almost
always same - be captured by the rag-heads or catch a bullet from your own.
Every soldier knew that, not mentioning the officers. It can't be that this
screwed in the head even considered that his rank would save him!
Martial law in Grozny was in full swing, which meant that sometimes we
couldn't even medivac our worst wounded to the better-equipped hospital at
the "North".
And now this bonehead, this pimple on our asses, endangering the lives
of the grunts escorting him, just vanished into the night.
Immediately we called on the "North" and told them about their
knucklehead. It's likely he did it on impulse, trying to get to the Command
HQ before any news from here could reach them, and report that we dared to
openly debate orders of our superiors. He actually had the poor Semeonov's
body with him too. There is just no peace for him. Forgive us, private.
In the "North" they all went nuts. I can only imagine - an officer has
gone missing. An officer, who knew about, maybe only parts of, but still,
plans of the General Command. Moreover, the allied HQ staff member. Looks
like Karpov actually knew quite a bit, because a search party was organised
to look for him in the middle of the night. The radio traffic was red hot.
All detachments were reporting that the BRDM with the rep has not yet passed
through their roadblocks. Down here, we were prepared to face the music of
future allegations that we deliberately sent him away in the middle of the
night. Thus, instead of catching at least a tiny bit of sleep, we were busy
making up reports that we were never here and there or never did this and
that, and all that bullshit. God forbid for you to be accused of sabotage
towards your superiors. You can make a wooden souvenir out of your opponent,
but don't you dare giving looks to your COs. Well, there are many morons for
us to face in this life. Although, we do, feel petty for the bastard. He's
our blood, Russian. So could the grunts in his escort, get hurt for nothing.
For some reason everyone was convinced that, if the units along his route
keep silent, he is a goner. Probably a captive now, in the rag-heads' hands.
God, let him be captured dead, otherwise, a lot of our plans would have to
be changed.
Sometime about eight in the morning we received information that the
BRDM with Karpov drove into one of the OMON roadblocks that was set up right
before the dusk. As we have predicted he tried to wave his rank into their
faces. The OMON lads, of coarse, didn't give a shit about some General
Command HQ together with their major Karpov. At first, they really mistook
him for a spy. For the rest of the night they kept kicking the crap out of
him and the grunts. Before the sunrise they put him before the firing squad
a few times, hoping he makes a confession. A couple of times they even fired
a few shots over his head. In the morning everything became clear. Airborne
fellows arrived, threw a few punches around for their grunts, picked up
knocked out Karpov and the remains of Semeonov's body and left for the
"North". Karpov went back to Mozdok with the first available flight and from
there probably to Moscow. It's likely he'll be awarded a medal of some sort
and later would be, on TV or in his memoirs, recounting how he, alone, rode
through half of the whole Chechnya, or something like that. Well, good luck
to him.
At 8.00 in the morning we began loading our wounded onto cars and
lining up the convoy. Earlier, clashing along the way, armoured vehicles
from the first and second battalions broke through to us with their dead and
wounded. Since there was not enough room in the yard for everyone, only the
worst ones were loaded up there. The rest, who were relatively OK: in clear
mind, were squashed into armoured trucks using stretchers, crutches and
whatever else could be utilised. All who could fire weapons rode on top of
APCs. Everyone knew well, that those inside armoured carriers would
inevitably die in case of a direct grenade hit or a mine explosion. Thus,
responsibility for them rested heavily on shoulders of those riding atop of
the "armour". The convoy turned out bigger than expected. In all:
fifteen APCs. Wheeled trucks were dropped in favour of the armoured APCs
since even a rifle bullet could easily penetrate their cabs, not mentioning
cumulative grenades and mines.
Luckily (or may be not), a heavy fog came down on the city. The winter
here sucks. It's cold but there is no snow; the mud is not even mud, but
rather a thick layer of muck that just swallows your boots. To free them you
have to apply loads of pressure and they come out with huge pieces of filthy
sludge on them. Vehicles had the same problem. What will it be like here in
spring? During the night, surface has been covered with a little crust of
ice and thus, we thought we could try and slip away quietly and quickly,
using the fog and frozen soil. Comms operators radioed every one of our
neighbours and the "North" that our convoy is about to leave.
One paradox was that all army units, regardless of the kind, have been
using the same radio frequencies and call signs that they did when they came
into Grozny. All of which meant that if you try to scan the radio traffic
within the range of 3 to 30 MHz, during the day, you could easily find out
where each unit is located and what exactly it is doing there. Moreover you
would know the names of the unit's leader, radio operator and all sorts of
other useful and not so useful information. By the way, our opponents were
not much smarter, keeping their frequencies and call signs unchanged for
weeks at a time. Well, we kind of, matched each other over there. Services
of the radio traffic interception and disinformation of both sides were on
top at all times. However, chechens had one unquestionable advantage - they
could speak Russian and therefore deceive us; we, on the other hand, could
not speak Chechen and thus were helpless trying to fool them.
More often than not, during clashes as well as during the breaks
between them, aborigines, having set up radio contact with our units, tried
to make propaganda conversations and of coarse threats. Since the first
clashes they started calling us "dogs". Another example would be
the Train Station assault. Back then, "spooks" fooled our
neighbouring artillery regiment, and the lads, thinking they had spoken to
us, for about 30 minutes, were thoroughly shelling us. Unfortunately these
cases were not unique. With time, through the system of codes and passwords,
we slowly stopped walking into chechen traps. After many of our men have
already been killed or injured. And no matter what, our brigade, and those
units that worked together with us, kept using old frequencies and call
signs, right to the very time of our withdrawal. Army stupidity. What can
you do? Unfortunately it was everywhere. Any suggestions from the lower
levels of the power pyramid were met with resentment.
Considering all this, we knew for sure, that our convoy's departure was
not only known to the General Command in the "North", but also
wasn't a secret to half of the rebels in town. Nevertheless, even if it was
a probable suicide, we stood by our decision. Without the proper medical
attention, men could simply die out here; moreover, they tied everybody
else's hands with their presence. They have become a burden and an extra
target. Besides, considering our next objective, we had to free up room for
future casualties. Thus, after a short hesitation, we turned our faiths over
to the good fortune and started our journey. Our path lied along the streets
of a demolished city that, with its ruins, rather depicted the old
chronicles of Stalingrad half a century ago. Death watched us from every
basement and every window. A sniper could be hiding in there or an RPG
launcher. He could've gone to the same military college as us. Or may be
fought with us side-by-side in Afghanistan, Angola or here in one of our
country's hot spots.
According to the well-developed tactics, the first and the last
vehicles in the convoy are destroyed first. Then, the rest of the column is
methodically eliminated. Reliable tactics. Very few ever escape.
- Let's move! - The instruction came from our Com-brig. He rode on the
second APC.
Recon guys were riding on their two carriers in front of the convoy.
For ten minutes everything was fine. In a couple of days after we arrived in
Grozny, our General Command ordered us to clearly mark our vehicles. For
example, our cars had letter "S" painted on their sides, meaning
Sebirian Military District.
A bitter taste suddenly appeared in my mouth, although, there was no
nervous rush as yet. That will come later. I knew that, all of us did. We
all experienced the same feelings all over again. Suddenly a popular song
motive played in my mind: "I want so much to crash into this
town!" Yep, that's right, I really do want that. Or better crash into
Mozdok, where our General Command is, which in turn, was heading our
directional command. Nobody really knew why the hell we needed them in the
first place. They always wanted to control separate detachments, over their
COs' heads, which always ended up badly for the latter.The most interesting
part was that they, in Mozdok, enjoyed the same allowances as we had over
here. There weren't many of them, but still, at least we earned them. For
instance, one day here counted as three and we'd get paid double time when
we came home; that's pretty much it. And you, my reader, thought that we
would be enjoying all the privileges of soldiers in a war zone. Yeah, right!
There is no war in Chechnya. All this is the fruit of your TV's rich
imagination.
Although occupied by these thoughts, I didn't forget to constantly look
around. So much we've destroyed here and we'll destroy yet even more.
Demolishing is not the same as building. I carefully looked at my grunts'
faces. All covered in dust, burnt by local winds, parched by the gunpowder
from frequent shooting and grenade explosions. I noticed a grunt, sitting at
the back, in his burnt through tank crew uniform and patched up head. I
looked at him again more carefully this time. Wow, this guy is one hell of a
lucky bustard. He was a driver-mechanic with the surname of German or Jewish
origin - Goldstein.
We had people of all sorts of nationalities in our brigade including
even uzbeks and tadzhiks. This tanker was driving his tank through the
Grozny entrance and the infantry were taking cover behind it. Back then, no
one of the grunts knew that you must walk <i>in front</i> of the
tank and only then it will save you. Now they know. It was a very expensive
learning curve. Since they were entering the town at night, this guy was
driving in the position "on manoeuvre", sticking his head out of
the hatchway.God knows why some sniper didn't snatch him. Others they picked
on the fly, this one was just plain lucky. He was lucky again when a rocket
slammed into his tank's right side. Goldstein was propelled out of the tank
like a cork, about fifteen meters up high and landed on a tree branch. I
thought he was gone. But he's alive, only patched up a little meaning
everything else is intact. Probably had a bad concussion. I wouldn't worry:
They'll fix him up quickly in his historical homeland. I can remember when
the conscripts arrived six months ago, he was begging not to be assigned
anywhere to do with secrets*. If it weren't for the Army, he'd be with his
relatives by now. His parents have left already, but he was still finishing
up his graduate university diploma and didn't complete it in time. In any
case he'll be discharged now and would be treated like a human being for
once.
* AD. Until recently, Jews in Russia (or anybody else) could be refused
travelling visa to leave the country if they served in the military units
that looked after classified technology. It was of particular importance to
Jews, rather that to any other nationality, as this was the time of their
mass migration to Israel. In this case, the man was drafted in the Army,
while his parents have already immigrated. Serving in the strategic forces,
for example, could've held him back in Russia for three or more years after
his discharge. End of comment. AD
That artist, who was stuck with the second battalion, is also here with
us, riding on the fifth carrier. He came over with the wounded Chief of
Staff and their three injured grunts. Some snappy fellow he turned out to
be. Everyone expected him to be untouchable and star-like, but he is
actually an easygoing chap, having been stuck in the basement for three
days, under constant fire and counterattacks, according to the witnesses, he
didn't hide at all. He acted like a real man, even attending to the wounded.
They didn't give him a weapon though - he's pretty shortsighted, God forbid
for him to get hurt. Other than that, first class fellow. When the rag-heads
offered the battalion to surrender, the grunts told them that Shevchuk was
with them. The "spooks" didn't believe it at first. The grunts let
them listen to him on the radio and chechens offered to let him out, even
guaranteed his safe passage. He refused though. He also promised (and soon
we found out that he actually kept his promise) to send wounded grunts to a
hospital in Germany. Not only from our brigade but others too, paying for
that from his own pocket and his friends'. He was purchasing them wheel
chairs and artificial limbs without the usual hype. There was no reporters
or news conferences. He organised everything nicely and quietly, like a man.
The recon guys radioed that they were fired upon and are now full time
engaged in a skirmish. Estimated opponents' force - about 20 guns. Nobody
used "Shmels" so far, only personal launchers and rifles.
We made our decision - press forward. Because of the fog we couldn't
see our enemy, they too can't see us for sure, thus firing pretty much
blindly. The Com-brig ordered to put up the smoke covers and we added black
smoke to the fog, just like crude oil in a milk container.
Coming close, our trucks fired their cannons at the reported positions.
Then BMP-3s opened up from their machineguns. Finally, we too, like in a
well-schooled orchestra, lined up with our rifles and grenades. Great
panorama, I'd tell you. From the thick black cloud of smoke, about a
kilometre wide, the spirts of tracers were gushing everywhere, grenades were
flying, leaving smoking tails behind them. A scene, that could be worthy of
an artist's effort. Emotions were running hight too. We couldn't know if our
path was clear - may be a wall along the way collapsed by itself or somebody
helped it. Or may be an antitank mine is hidden somewhere in the piles of
trash. But there was no fear, in my mind or in the eyes of the grunts that
surrounded me here. We all knew that if we fail, our wounded comrades would
die. Our decision was to go to the end: to the death or victory.
So far we were definitely lucky, the engines roared on high revs,
adding their semi-processed fuel exhausts to the thick smoke cover. Although
the convoy stretched along a wide area, Com-brig decided not to break it
down into small mobile units but still carry on as one column.
Going past this neighbourhood, we kept our speed as high as we could
squeeze out of our darling APCs. Finally we cleared it, surprisingly enough,
without any friendly fire accidents. Maybe the rag-heads retreated or for
some other reason, but nobody was shooting at us any more or chasing us. But
all of us knew that it was still too early to relax. We had to keep going
and survive.
Recognisance party ahead of us, radioed in that they reached first of
our neighbouring roadblocks. That's better. Now the airborne units will walk
us through their territory. They are OK soldiers, but not persistent enough
and too cocky. They can't tenaciously assault the same target for a long
time. They push furiously at first, but gradually, run out of steam. They
act well as a supporting force, but on their own, of not much use. They have
been trained to storm a structure, destroy it and get out of there. They are
not prepared for these long and backbreaking battles. But our mahra is a
different thing all together. In excruciating heat, rain or snowstorm, we'll
carry on anywhere: in the arctic, deserts or swamps. We'll die but complete
the objective.
On the roadblock, airborne guys were waving us and smiled, showing
their teeth on the same parched faces as ours. It was a delight to see that
we are not alone here in this hostile land.
Their com-bat promised to send a party to sweep the area where we were
ambushed.
In case they'd find spooks there, he'll register them as his kills, we,
in turn, would write them down as ours, indicating the approximate number of
the enemy infantry destroyed. Some funny guy at the "North"
managed to calculate how many of the enemy we have knocked down here in
Chechnya. Turned out that during the 10 days of fighting we have wiped out
the entire Chechen population twice around. It's strange, it's only been 10
days, but seems like not less than six months. If you believe reports of the
Red Army commanders during the Second World War, the army of the Wermacht
was destroyed about 100 times. As for us, we don't have to free half of
Europe this time, but according to the reports we are ahead of any army.
Thus, my reader, listening to the news bulletins, multiply our losses by
three and divide enemy losses by two, then, you'd have a more or less clear
picture of what is going on.
The airborne lads tried to offload their wounded onto us, but we could
hardly squeeze our own asses on the "armour". Inside the vehicles
our own wounded were piled up like logs. If they wanted to come with us, no
problem, but they'd have to use their own trucks and their own escort. We
won't be waiting for them either as every second is counting. What are you
saying? We're bustards? Fine, we're bustards, but you still medivac your own
men. We have neither the time nor desire to argue with you. We understand
you perfectly. If we start arguing now, you might even convince us or
prepare your own cars. You should've thought about it beforehand. You had
all night for that. Cheers men, good-bye. No, don't bother trying. Where did
you send us? OK, stand still, we'll be coming back, talk to you then.
We watched our Com-brig talking to their com-bat. Of coarse we couldn't
hear anything, but we could observe the gestures they were using in their
conversation, thus reading who sent who and where. When they were done
myself and the grunts cackled simultaneously. But no one dared to yell
anything upsetting or make a gesture of that kind. We understood what
position they were in, but your wounded you medivac yourself. We're all a
bit foxy, like the Jews, enjoy solving our problems with somebody else's
help, but not the problems of this magnitude.
We cleared the airborne zone of responsibility and now entered the area
where for about ten blocks we would be moving along the zone for which the
spooks were responsible. And they were obviously controlling it. OK,
mutherfuckers, we'll medivac our wounded and take care of you. Let's
concentrate on the medivac for now. I raise my hand and the grunts start
carefully watching surrounding us rubble. Talking, screaming or instructing
makes no point - the roar, fumes and dust from the carriers in front of us
are making any attempt bound for failure. If you open your mouth trying,
it'll be crammed with turd. Another beauty of riding atop of APC is that it
is shaking violently as it moves and if you relax your jaws for a second you
can lose your teeth or bite your own tongue off. There was a gag that some
dumb ass, not from our garrison of coarse, bit his tongue's tip off like
that, but the corpsemen sewed it back. He was discharged afterwards. I've
heard so many of these gags during my commission that I can write a book
now. Especially I like that fact that nothing ever happens in our garrison,
but our neighbours - are a constant mess. But they are of the exact same
opinion about us.
The grunt next to me shouted something, pointing his finger at the top
floor of a building near by and firing his rifle in that direction. My
reflexes kicked in at once. My rifle let off a few bursts before I
consciously stopped and actually looked there. A pair of binoculars that lay
on the window frame was blasted to pieces. If you want to live, you shoot
first and then think and look. Everyone finds out this formula after his
first gunfight. I'm yelling out and waving to stop the shooting. Gradually
it fades out. I'm not angry at the grunt. In our line of business it's
better to overcook than undercook.
The carriers are speeding forward without slowing down. Recon party
radios in to report they are again taking fire. This time from three
directions simultaneously. Now, they are waiting for our approach, as they
can't handle the clash on their own. Com-brig called the neighbours for
assistance to try and hammer the rag-heads in the rear, meanwhile we are
speeding ahead to help out our scouts.
The last APCs in line have retarded a bit so that in case of an ambush
we don't become completely trapped. As we approached the intersection, the
avenue, where our recon party took their turn, was barricaded with bricks,
two neighbouring streets were also blocked, and thus we are either to break
through or to retreat. If we do decide to retreat, there is no insurance
that we wouldn't walk into another trap. Com-brig has made his decision:
break through. Ryzhov and myself both completely upheld his choice.
Those who could fire weapons leapt off the "armour" and the
carriers rolled back covering us. First, we wanted to push the spooks inside
the block and then, under fire, try and dismantle the barricade. Hiding
behind the piles of trash we shot back. Both sides exchanged fire furiously.
Suddenly a grenade exploded somewhere close to me - pieces of a blasted
grunt flipped into the air and landed 5 meters away from me with dull sound.
In a couple of seconds another soldier died the same terrible death. In the
heat of the gunfight I had no time to look who that was. Next to the second
body, three other grunts were whirling on the asphalt, screaming with pain
and pressing fingers against their wounds. Their coats were soaking in
blood. We thought at first that somebody was using a launcher, but then
another grunt shifted a brick and noticed an F-1 grenade, lying under a pile
of rubbish without its safety pin. Now everything was clear.
Smart sons of bitches the spooks turned out to be. They cleverly chose
the spot for their ambush and also considered that we would dismount and
confront them. Our future positions, imposed by them, they booby-trapped
with hand-grenades. In a gunfight you have to move around a lot: tumble,
spin and hide behind the rubble. That's where they placed these nice toys -
F-1 grenades without safety pins. You shift the brick on top of it, its
guard lever flies off and here you go, in 6 seconds it bursts. Shrapnel
cover an area of about 200 meters. No one mine will have the same effect.
Now we had to solve this dilemma -either pull back or try and
counterattack to bust the rag-heads out of the apartment block. Not much
choice. Neighbours radioed that they are on their way and called for air
support. That is exactly what we don't want. A soldier has many enemies at
war, but one of the biggest is his own air force. Doubtfully they'll ever
get the rag-heads, but to drop a few bombs on their own positions is a done
deal. That's why we asked our rushing reinforcements to call off the
"sky raiders". They'll stuff it up anyway. Instructions to storm
the building were passed along the chain. We also told the "boxes"
to open up from everything they have, keep going like that for 10 minutes
and then cease fire and wait for further instructions.
Every grunt and officer has his personal first aid kit, which contains
an ordinary set of medications, like painkillers, anti-radiation pills and
the likes. There are also drinking water tablets that can be used in any
water except the seawater. Drop it into a puddle if you like, it'll roil for
a second or two and you can drink it now without fear of catching some
disease. It'd have a chlorine stench though.
Every detachment has so called anti-fear tablets. When soldiers are
dog-tired and can't move their feet any more, not mentioning attacks, their
will is paralysed. Then their CO gives the order to hand out these tablets.
The grunts eat them, rest for a while and spring to their feet. No one knows
where the strength comes from and where the fear goes.
Now we didn't have those tablets as well as the need for them. After a
few gunfights, where the spooks were prevailing in every aspect and every
little thing we gained was paid for dearly in efforts and losses, now men
were experienced and confident and the rag-heads were getting a decent
response for once. They no longer bullied carelessly, doped and squalling
something about their Allah. First time it's actually quite scary, charging
like spellbound, unafraid of bullets.
At last our carriers opened up. Cracking salvos of their cannons and
machineguns, at first, muffled short barking bursts of BMP-3s, but they
caught up quickly with the old well-proven two-s. We also didn't fall behind
with our rifles and launchers.
APCs hit hard for ten minutes and then stopped as was agreed. The high
pitched ding from the shooting was still in our ears, but now we had to
attack. Our opponents had a lot more problems with their sense of dimension.
Our shells were bursting in their tight nests, causing them to go crazy with
terror. They were also still in awe from the air strikes. Now was the right
time for the final move.
This time nobody raised the grunts off the ground with his own example,
like it used to be here during the first days. Every one of them sprung up
by himself, some with the ancient "hoorah" other just yelling out
from fear and excess of adrenalin, all were running ahead like one. When you
plunge into attack like this, something medieval wakes up inside you. It
seems you are watching yourself from aside, observing the gunfight, noticing
every little thing. May be the common grudge and fear at this moment bear
this collective ability?
While we were clearing the open space of about 100 meters, we were met
with rare and disorganised gunfire. No one of our men was hit, but the
grunts, on the run and from the waist, were discharging long bursts at the
broken windows where the deadly gush of lead was coming from.
At last we crash into the doorway of this once apartment block, others
are storming the remaining four entrances of the "khruschevka".
Human reflexes are such that you always notice what's on your
right-hand side first and then move to the left. Spooks made a good use of
this fact and when we barged into a block they always stood to the left of
the entrance. While we were automatically checking out everything on the
right-hand side, they had a few seconds to shoot us in the back. Some time
has passed before we learnt to toss a hand-grenade before walking inside and
looked first to the left of the doorway.
The sunlight started to break through the fog but here inside the
building it was still dark from the shooting. Dust, mixed with gunpowder and
some other chemicals hung in the air, abstracting the view.
Together with some fifteen grunts we ran into the block. I glanced at
the grunts with my side-vision. Looks like there are no cowards amongst
them. All experienced. Two flats on the first floor, meaning that we should
expect the same structure further up. Three grunts took guard on the
staircase between the first and second floors, covering us from possible
attacks from above. The rest are fetching safety pins from their
hand-grenades. "Ready". Nocking down the door, it's not even
locked but blasted by explosions, barely hanging off the frame. Our boots
ram it down completely this time. I yell out: "Let's go!!!"
We move out from the doorways, hiding behind the concrete walls. In
three flats, grenades detonated almost simultaneously, probably about eight
of them. My head feels like a church bell, smoke and dust is coming out of
the blasted doorways. Move, move and don't stop now. Checking left, now
right. Tonnes of dust in the air, can't see shit. Squeezing off two long
bursts from the waist. We don't need no prisoners, not enough food for
ourselves. Move! Move! Kitchen: nobody there; bathroom: the door is slightly
open, screw it, another two bursts from the waist, the bathtub could be a
nice hide from the shrapnel. I node to the grunt next to me, covering my
rear. He jerks the door open and I pull the trigger slowly moving my rifle's
barrel sidewards. It is convulsing in my arms like a living organism and
flushing the bathtub with a deadly flow. The smashed off pieces from the tub
are flipping in the air. Meanwhile other grunts are firing into next rooms
dark with dust and smoke. Built-in wardrobes and shelves are also checked
thoroughly. That's all with this two bedroom flat. Let's move on to the
upper floors.
The grunts guarding the staircase, indicate that they have just spotted
some movement in one of the second floor apartments. Other grunts come out
of their flats and join us. Those who guarded the staircase move up one more
floor. I don't have to give out any instructions here, every grunt knows his
manoeuvre too well. No need to yell at anybody. All of us work together like
a well-tuned mechanism. Everyone covers everybody else's back.
We repeat the same process on the second floor. We barge into the room
tripping on a dead body ripped apart from a grenade explosion. That one's
cooked. Moving along. There's nobody here. Three more levels to go, rooftop
and the basement. Move! Move!
Grunts report they discovered two more stiffs in the neighbouring flat.
Screw them. Moving along. I look at my watch: it took us seven minutes to
check two floors, we have to speed this whole thing up.
On the third floor, when we knock the doors down, somebody inside the
flat yells out without accent: "Don't shoot, don't shoot!" I raise
my fist. Grunts hold back. I shout: "Come out slowly, hands behind your
head".
Wauling, a filthy chap is coming out, bristling with hand-grenades and
a chechen knife (dagger welded together with stiletto), looks Russian.
Smearing dirty tears on his face and weeping he's squalling that he was just
drafted, he's just an ordinary con and nothing else, never killed anyone of
ours. I notice some five personal dog-tags hanging around his neck. Earlier,
they were only given out to officers, now, since we arrived in Chechnya,
everyone gets a set. It looks like a little metal plate shaped like oval,
about five santimeters in length and three wide. Along its length the plate
is broken in two parts, upper part has "VS SSSR" stamped on it,
the lower one has a letter and a six-digit code. Every soldier has his own
code. The plate is cast from a stainless alloy. First they started using
these plates after an experimental rocket fell down onto some committee and
burnt it completely. At war every soldier wears it, jut like American GIs,
except they also have their names and blood type printed there.
I noticed that this "ordinary con" wore these dog-tags around
his neck. There were a lot of scumbags bumming around Chechnya, which were
surely due for jail time in Russia. Here they were like brothers to the
local bandits. As locals told us, to prove their loyalty they tortured
soldiers even worse than the chechens themselves. I grabbed him by the
dog-tag chains, coiled them onto my fist and twitched the shaking con
towards me. Grunts knew well what was going to follow. Some spooks collected
personal numbers of soldiers they have killed.
- What is this, asshole? - I asked him and kept pulling the chains.
- I found them, I swear. I didn't kill nobody. They forced me to, - he
squalled weeping.
I shoved my rifle in his chest and pulled the trigger. Bullets ripped
it open smearing my pants with his blood. The body jerked backwards, the
neck snapped but it was still hanging by the dog-tag chains. It seemed the
souls of the dead soldiers wouldn't let their murderer go free. Barrel still
stuck in the con's chest I asked the grunt next to me:
- Cut the chains, will you.
He stripped the knife from the dead con and sliced the chains with one
quick move. The no longer hanging body dropped to the ground with a thud.
Grunt reached his hand out with the dagger offering it to me. I shook my
head and he stashed it in his boot. I rose, put the dog-tags into one of my
pockets and gave an order:
- Get your hand-grenades ready and let's move.
Again explosions roared and we barged inside other flats. There we
found five more dead bodies. Without any further ado we squeezed off a few
bursts into each one of them just in case. One of the "deceased"
suddenly came alive and tried to draw his rifle - cross fire coming from
three directions simultaneously nearly chopped him to pieces.
All of a sudden we heard a grenade explosion and a rifle burst. We
quickly finished off checking the apartment and popped outside. The gunfight
there was in full swing. Rag-heads from the upper floors were attempting to
break through to downstairs. Three grunts were keeping them up there; two
more soldiers, covering the basement entrance, hustled up to help them. We
too quickly got into the skirmish. Here on the narrow staircases we were too
crowded. To add to the confusion, spooks started throwing hand-grenades
down. Huddled down here together we couldn't possibly hide from them. Thank
God, the morons threw them at the very moment they were pulling safety pins
out, thus giving us time to push them away onto the lower floors.
We also returned fire as best as we could. Two of the grunts were
blasting off grenades from their under-barrels, the other four spraying the
spooks from their rifles, keeping them at bay. Meanwhile something blew up
there with a terrible boom. Ceiling collapsed in one of the kitchens on the
third floor. Five grunts quickly dived into the breach and now the gunfight
shifted to the fourth level. Coming up, from the point blank range, we
wasted the rag-heads in the back. We were afraid of coarse to waist our own
grunts, but this time we were lucky. After the clean up, twelve more bodies
were left up on the fourth floor. Not bad at all, if according to the
Regulation the ratio should be one defender to three or four members of the
assaulting team. On the fifth floor nobody greeted us except for two dead
bodies. With caution with we came up the roof. There is nobody there too,
meaning that we are the first ones up here and have to help out other storm
groups in the neighbouring blocks. I split my men, myself choosing the block
Ryzhov went into. Walking on the roof we could here the gunfire in every
block.
Carefully we are opening the hatchway. Judging from the noise, the
shootout is in between the first and second floors. We are starting the
clean up from the fifth floor down. Voices and gunfire are coming from the
two-bedroom flat, apparently the shooting comes from the inside. OK,
assholes, let's roll. Hand-grenades at stand-by, at the nod of my head, the
door is smashed open, we throw the grenades in and take cover. Burst; move,
move; one of the grunts stays here guarding the staircase, I turn left:
burst into an empty corner and burst dead ahead. The grunt on my right
already checked the right hand side discharging a burst into the right
corner. We finish off two wounded by the window. Next to them lies an RPG-7
rocket grenade launcher, fine toy. We take the launcher and the seven
remaining rounds for it with us.
Downstairs, the spooks apparently realised what happened and doubled
their efforts attempting to fight their way out of the trap. Our grunts on
the other side also figured that the help is near and pressed with renewed
energy. We came down to the forth floor. Shooting off the doors and tossing
in grenades. In two flats we discover a few more of the rag-heads' stiffs.
No idea whose job that was, someone else's or ours, but what does it matter
anyway. Move, move, downstairs, tempo, tempo. Hold on fellows, we're close.
The spooks disparately tried to move upstairs and blow us off. No way,
I'm yelling out:
- Yurka, stay down, I'll meet them up here.
We hear the treading and fire from the RPG and the under-barrels,
ducking behind the concrete to cover from shrapnel. One of the grunts
screams with pain. A shrapnel piece ricocheted in his arm. Two men stayed
behind to give him first aid. The remaining grunts and myself fire into the
dense blur of smoke and dust after the explosion. No one is shooting back.
- Slava, don't shoot, we're coming up.
- Let's move, boys, slowly. May be some son of a bitch is still there,
- I yell to my grunts.
We're slowly moving downstairs, ready to open up at even a slightest
suspicion of movement. On the staircase between the forth and the third
floors we stumble on the torn apart bodies of our resent foe. The BDUs on
some are still burning. Nostrils are tingling from the stench of parched
human flesh, cotton and something else, terribly stinky. I'm labouring not
to vomit. Suddenly, from the dark, grunts' faces are emerging from the
downstairs. We're all happy and hugging.
- Still alive, demon? - We couldn't get enough of each other, like
lovers after a long break-up.
- How did we bust the shitheads, ha? Hammered the crap out of them! -
Yurka was wound up. Despite the cold, everybody was steaming hot.
- I grabbed some scumbag back in there. Squalled he was just a con, but
had dog-tags dangling round his neck. Here they are, - I pulled a bunch of
dog-tags out of my pocket, - I sent him off to meet his victims.
- You did the right thing. They dug in well in here. With machinegun
and all. Not even one approach. But thanks to you
- OK, let's go. You owe me a drink. - I fetched a packet of cigarettes,
my home ones, "TU-134", the sniper's smokes were long gone. It's a
petty, they were really nice, - have some, the NATO threat.
Happily chatting this way, though still in the heat of the gunfight, we
walked out on the street. Following us, grunts helped my wounded lad out. He
walks by himself though, his arm patched tightly, meaning that he'll live.
Out here, the clash was also over. Apparently, the spooks retreated
from their other positions, realising that we would've taken care of them
too if they hadn't. The barricade was also nearly dismantled. From that
direction our neighbours were coming up.
- Slava, look. What the hell is that? - The approaching grunts had some
tanks, they wore like backpacks, carrying metal pipes in their hands
attached to the tanks by rubber hoses.
- I think it's flame-throwers. I've never seen them live, but heard
that some units got them off the emergency reserves and dragged them over
here. Probably a marvellous tool.
Meanwhile all our grunts left the building and the newly arrived
soldiers, with jokes, approached the basement windows and having tossed a
pair of hand-grenades in there first, started pouring from their
backpack-type flamethrowers, which these devices did turn out to be. Bravo.
Streams of flame, human hand sized and about 10 meters in length, widening
as they left the pipes were flowing into the basements. At once we felt the
stench of burnt kerosene and something else of the kind.
- First class gadget. I wish we had more of them. We'd smoke the snakes
out for sure. We should throw the idea at our commander to ask for them in
the "North". Since they are sending us to storm "The
Minutka", might as well give us these, - I said, watching with
admiration as grunts having finished off our building are preparing to fry
some other structure.
- I've heard, in Afghan, there was a flame-throwing tank, but turned
out useless in the mountains and was taken off the production line, - Yura
said climbing our APC.
- Such morons, ha? They could've figured that we'd have to take towns
at some stage instead of clashing in the mountains or in the open all the
time. Bloody Moskovites; what can you possibly get from them, except a urine
sample, and that one will be hopeless too, - I spewed and tried to settle
comfortably on top of the "armour".
- Attention! All ready?- Then the order came through, - Move! On the
march!
As we set off, APC underneath me jerked sharply trying to shake us off
the "armour", but clinging to each other and to every extending
part on the APC's surface, we held on. Internal forces are lucky in that
respect: they have the BTR-80s. Very smooth piece of machinery, moving fast
and soft. We, on the other hand, have bulldozers.
As we approached the flame-throwers' roadblock, we again greeted each
other shouting.
The rest of the journey was pretty uneventful, although we were
prepared for any surprise. Now first outposts and roadblocks of the
"North" airport were coming into view along the way. Whole
regiment guarded the airport. When rumours came that spooks planned to
assault it, another airborne battalion was fetched to help the defences.
- One battle is over and another one begins, the longer and harder one
and more important too, - I said to Yura.
The mood was changing from the merry, since we came back all OK, to
more grim and serious. We had to attend the briefing with the High Command
representatives. The latter were itching to send us to our deaths.
- Regardless of the briefing's outcome I'll drink myself stupid
tonight, - my good mood was totally gone by now and I was grimly watching
the airport sentry. They have already managed to wash up and some even
changed into brand spanking new BDUs.
I looked at my blood-splattered pants, my filthy coat, burnt and even
twice shot through by shrapnel. In peace life, a first police patrol would
pick me up for sure dressed like this. A total tramp.
- I agree Slavian, we should get wasted today. Moreover, I owe you one,
- Yurka, on the contrary, was in a fabulous mood.
- Where are you planning to get the liqueur? From under the bench? - I
and Ryzhov, before the Grozny campaign, chipped in and bought three boxes of
Vodka as well as seven litres of pure ethanol that I swapped for a
camouflage set from the comms operators in commemoration of our old
friendship. Thus, I would be very surprised if he found alcohol in any other
place.
- Where else? Spooks closed their stashes and our Voentorg never comes
out beyond the "North"
- Listen, near the field hospital, there is a Voentorg trading spot.
Let's try to get some beer down there (fallen off the truck of coarse). What
do you think? - Beer was a terrible temptation. Right now, right here, I
even imagined its tight, bubbly, cool flow streaming down my throat and
heavily bumping against my stomach walls on its way down. And I would drink
it right from the bottle, no glasses, hate them. May be it's my unfit family
upbringing, but I just like it like that and there is nothing I can do about
it.
- Good idea. We've got about twenty minutes, while they are offloading
the wounded. The problem is if they actually have beer and if we've got
enough dough? - He said, dumping everything from his pockets, including the
useless here money and counted it.
- I've got some more, - said I, pulling out some crumpled paper nodes,
- get cigarettes too, preferably something nice.
- Like a rich life, don't you? - Ryzhov sneered.
- Yeah, rich life, sure. When right before your eyes people live like
moguls, - I looked at "the royal court" regiment's HQ with a sigh.
- Wait until we walk into the hospital with all its women, - Yurka was
clearly tormenting me.
- I'd either rape ten of them at once or put a bullet in my head.
The hospital was situated in the airport's left wing, in the
ex-restaurant building. Rumours had it that this restaurant used to belong
to some relative of Dudaev's. Along the way we met some doctors and actually
female nurses. At war, any woman is a goddess.It's not just about sexual
deprivation. Looking or simply talking to them you don't harden up as fast.
That thin wire that connects you back to the "normal" life doesn't
break as quickly. We have no women in our brigade, maybe that's probably why
we are so drawn to them. But first desire, of coarse, is purely sexual. Why
don't we have mobile brothels with us? In the past wars were gradual and
rigidly positioned. People had respect for their opponent. They had fine
moving canteens, mobile brothels, champagne and whites. How times have
changed? Not for the better, if you ask me, although, medical science is
definitely on top. So far none of the incoming wounded here has died.
- We're home! - Com-brig first leapt off his carrier.
Everybody else followed him, warming up their numb legs and bums.
Surgeons and nurses ran over and started offloading our wounded and dead.
The latter are to be placed in wooden and then in zinc coffins, soldered in,
meshed, to make it more comfortable to carry, and sent home to their parents
as "Cargo-200". With the coffins, parents will also receive death
notifications and thanking notes for their sons' wonderful upbringing.
That's about it. After the funerals they'll have commemorative salvo fired
into the air in their honour, with dummy rounds, by military college
students or young soldiers. Both types are potential candidates for the same
"elegant" burial in the nearest future. The God of War demands new
sacrifices and opposing sides supply them in full.
Then parents or wife of the dead soldier will be paid ten-year salary:
the whole five million rubles. During the next six-month they'll have
visitors and after that, as it is customary, they'll be left to themselves.
When mother or wife comes to the authorities for help (no matter which,
military or civilian), first, they'll nicely talk to her and then tell her
that there is no money or prospects for help at this stage. And if she
persists, they'd state the following: we, personally, did not send your son
(or husband) to this war. Go ask for help those who did and please do not
come here again because people who sent your son to his death must've
forgotten to allocate money for your pension, your licking roof, telephone
and so on. You can, my reader, complain all you want; there will be nothing
done. The power hungry would say about you: "This is that woman who
lost her son (or husband) in that war". That will be said jokingly, so
that you weep, my reader, and run away never to come back here again. Even
if they throw something at you for the New Years Eve or The Army Day. Now
think if it's worth sending your son into that butchery because of some sick
old Head Commander. Think well. By the way, during the Chechen campaign, he
had a grandson of the drafting age, but for some reason, I have never seen
him there, even on civilian visits.
Meanwhile our wounded were being offloaded and carried into the
hospital rooms. We followed them. Nobody was paying any attention to us.
Ryzhov and I were staring at the women. No point in flirting anyway, they
have already been shared and allocated long ago. Our appearances also didn't
help. We were searching for the semi-legal Voentorg trading spot or any
local crook that can sell us liqueur and cigarettes. History of the war
shows that there have always been some niggling criminals who make money
reselling small wanted goods. Nothing really law-breaking, on the contrary,
they are doing more good supplying men with those little things from the
"normal" life that they are deprived of. The problem is money. For
some it's war, for others it's their darling mother. May be that is what it
should be? No, I don't think so; my upbringing and poor life experience
wouldn't let me do this.
We were hanging around the hospital asking grunts where we could get
some beer and cigarettes. But since this was a medivac hospital, as a rule,
soldiers never stayed here for longer than a day and thus knew nothing. But
suddenly we noticed a corporal, with a mug, wider than two of ours put
together. He wore new camouflage fatigues and standing next to the window
was leisurely puffing a ciggi. That mug expressed vanity and
self-indulgence. It seemed nothing around concerned him. He did not look
wounded at all.
I pushed Yurka in the ribs when he was flat out staring at a nurse
rushing to attend to some matter and fortunate enough to walk past us.
Judging by the hungry expression on his face, he's already raped her about
ten times and kept going.
- OK, that's enough. We are here with a peacekeeping mission. Remember?
You better look at that panorama, - I showed him the mighty worrier, - I
think his body can be used to plug ten machinegun nests at the same time. It
seems he represents the whole might of Russia's armed forces. What do you
think Yura?
I deliberately talked in loud voice for the grunt to hear us. Yurka
read my plot and kept going.
- Yeah man. You're right. We lack lads like this one in the recon unit.
They need some kind of human shield. Or better yet in the storm group,
pulling wounded out of the killing zone.
The soldier slowly moved his eyes onto us without even turning his
head. We didn't wear any insignia, like many other officers. Snipers have
this bad habit of picking officers first. Some kind of sad hatred they have
for us. Well, everyone has his own thing and for them it's professional and
even well paid.
- Sonny, - politely and smoothly started Yura, - what would you say if
we invited you down for a visit, so that you, prick, could see the war for
yourself? Otherwise, you'll just come home with a metal thingy on your
chest, having actually never seen it.
All of this Yurka was telling quietly, thus passing surgeons didn't
even pay attention to us. Some fellow soldiers are standing here, chatting
peacefully, no trouble.
- Get stuffed, - the grunt mumbled leisurely without his head even
moving. There was so much scorn in his voice that it made me sick.
Momentarily the grudge inside me was alive. I know that in moments like this
I exercise very little control and can do a lot of stupid things, but the
thoughts come to me later.
- Turn around, scum, when a line officer is talking to you, and
apologise immediately, - I too tried to keep my voice down, but the words
were boiling inside. No one soldier ever dared to insult me, no matter what
state they were in. In my being a green lieutenant I had to calm down a
drunken sentry once. And here, this supply sergeant piece of shit dared to
offend two of us.
The fat skunk turned his head and jokingly stared at us in silence,
with his appearance obviously laughing at us. Both of us figured that words
here were useless and we had to act. There was a niche near by, where
hospital personnel kept their cleaning gear. From two sides simultaneously,
we fast picked up the young man under his arms and shoved him into the dark
and humid closet. At once I grabbed him by the throat to keep him from
screaming and Yurka thrust his rifle in the guy's belly and pressed it real
hard. Even in this meagre lighting we could see that the lad went pale. His
eyes were popping out and screams were bursting out of his throat, but I was
holding them tight in there, squeezing his throat stiffer, only allowing him
to breath. I leaned over to his ear and whispered:
- I will now let go my hand a little, if you, scumbag, promise to be a
good boy and give us your apologies quietly. Beer and cigarettes too, I'm
sure you've got some. If you agree, blink once, if not, I'll just strangle
you right here and my friend will shoot your balls off. I'm sure no one
would care, we'll write you off as a battle loss. And if you try to move a
muscle, we'll keep our promise with the neck and balls. Or we can load you
up on the truck and exchange with the rag-heads for beer and cigarettes.
Besides, you freak, we are offering you the same deal anyway. Get it,
asshole? - I squeezed his throat harder and Yurka pushed his AK a little
more in.
The grunt's eyelashes were flipping like butterflies near a light bulb:
- I'm sorry, please forgive me, sirs my mistake I promise won't happen
again, I'm giving you my word, - tears were falling down his face but I kept
my grip on his fat throat.
- What about the second part? - Asked Yurka, hinting at the beer and
cigarettes.
- No problem, right away, - The soldier hustled up and reached his
hands somewhere behind his head and produced a six-pack of
"Holsten" and a pack of "LM" or as we called it -
"Cop's love".
At last, we let the punk breath freely. I slapped him leniently on his
cheek, pulled crumpled five thousand rubles from my pocket and shoved it in
the weeping grunt's hand:
- Do not ever be rude, young men, and maybe you'll even live through
all this. There is the money for your goods, so that you don't tell anybody
that we are thugs. By the way, lend us a few bags for the groceries, will
you?
The grunt turned around and again in the dark started searching for
something in the buckets. Nice hide he's got here. Something banged inside
buckets, something metal, like a pistol. Is he really planning a trick? I
drew my rifle and pressed it hard against the junction of his scull and
backbone. There is pain spot there and if you hit it, a person can collapse
unconscious. In a moment Yurka too thrust his rifle against the man's
kidneys.
- Sonny, stop this, - I again spoke in a smooth voice, - or you,
scumbag, decided to die like a hero. If that's the case, then go ahead, try.
With my left hand I fetched my narrow stiletto and set it on his
throat. Cold blade, for some reason produced more result than my
Kalashnikov. Something metal banged in there again, he must've dropped it
back in the bucket. Removing the stiletto I jerked him towards me and
pressed the barrel under his chin. The grunt put his hands up, and his left
one he was holding a bag off some equipment. With my left hand I searched
behind his head and found a pistol. Wow! Makarov with a silencer! Bravo!
Probably swiped it from some wounded scout or a Special Forces guy. I
punched him in the nose with the pistol grip. He fell on the floor in a
rumpled heap. We left him there, picked up our bags and walked away.
Out on the street, the unloading was almost over and the Com-brig was
gathering up our officers to go to the briefing. We stashed the bags inside
our APC and told the driver that if we come back and they're gone he'll be
castrated and left out here to die. The grunt nodded and carried on
undressing passing women with his eyes. Walking behind our CO, we were
slowly puffing good cigarettes and discussing our arguments against the
head-on frontal assault of the bloody square.
- Let's do this: first - airforce, then artillery, tanks, rockets and
after they're all done, mahra goes in, what do you reckon? - Asked Yurka,
enjoying his cigarette and observing all the almost peaceful life around
here.
- And better yet: napalm bombs, so that everything would burn alive and
loud disco music for the spooks to sacrifice their lives to Allah with happy
thoughts, - I was experiencing peace of mind and almost sexual satisfaction
from the surrounding atmosphere and my cigarette. How little do we actually
need? Good smoke, tranquillity and women walking past.
Suddenly, we saw an officer whose face we instantly recognised. We were
taking the airport together. His regiment was then left here to guard it.
Lucky bustards.
- Yura, Slava, you're alive! What a delight! We've heard about your
deeds here and about Karpov too. We thought you guys wasted him, but all was
then cleared. He's surely an idiot. He is to receive The Order of Fortitude.
- So, you thought we killed the mother?
- No, not really, but here everybody knows he is a rat.
Yurka and I cackled loudly:
- Sasha, we saw him for the first time and gave him exactly that
nickname. Rat is rat. You better tell what the HQ has in store for the
Minutka Square and us.
- Fellows, listen to this: marines and some airborne units tried to
take it on the fly, then lost about thirty men and backed off. Now is your
turn.
- Get out of here!
- Yeah, that freaking peacemaker is there too. Radios to us all the
time with statements. Listen to the joke: he's up there, inside one of the
Dudaev's bunkers with his delegation committee and everybody has just
forgotten about them. No food, no water, no nothing. They start to wander
what to do. Suddenly he makes a suggestion: "Let's all convert to
Islam". His friends ask him: "Would it help?" He says:
"Not really, but we could make a soup out of the shreds!" -Sashka
cracked up.
We grinned at his joke and the news.
- Guys, I work here in supplies now, come on over at some stage. Now
I've got to run; somebody beat the shit out one of the grunts in the
hospital.
With our jaws dropped from surprise about Sashka's new appointment, we
picked up our pace to catch up with the rest of our group. We cared not for
the hospital grunt's health. I bet his skull is fine. Nosebleed is nothing,
probably tripped over something in the dark. Could anybody possibly punch
such a wonderful young lad? I don't think so. As for the officers: he
must've dreamt them while splayed out dazed. With his excess weight and high
blood pressure it all could've been much worse. He must go on a strict diet,
dear doctors. Or better yet, give him to us for a week. You won't recognise
the fellow then.
Some officer came out and said that General Rolin is busy at this stage
and will be free to meet with us in about ten to twenty minutes. They are on
the telephone with the Defence Minister. Fine, let them talk. I'm pretty
sure, nothing good will come out of that conversation. Meanwhile our
Com-brig left to radio the brigade's HQ to see how they are hanging.
We saw Sashka returning and called him:
- How is the busted up grunt, Sasha?
- He's telling some bullshit that two officers beat him up. He wet his
pants while unconscious. His description, - he stared at us with suspicion,
- sounds like you two.
- Sashok, you don't seriously think that we could bust up the soldier.
Personally, I only squeeze throats, - I started.
- And I usually shoot nuts off. You know us too well, - supported me
Yurka.
We gazed at him upset, as to demand that all accusations be dropped at
once.
- I sure do. Mad cranks. I've seen a lot of you two. You wouldn't care,
for yourselves or for anybody else. So, did you bust him?
- Sasha, - I again spoke in the smooth voice, half-hugging him, - my
dear man. Please explain to us, as you have put it, "mad cranks",
what for did you run back to the hospital? We never noticed anything
merciful about you. Even when we brought over our casualties, you,
apparently, were so busy, that had totally forgotten to come and greet your
friends.
- Which, by the way, came to your rescue when the ragheads pinned you
down badly at the edge of the airfield, - continued Yurka, - and (somehow I
don't feel comfortable reminding you this) you swore by all saints that you
will never forget about your saviours.
- And now, my dear friend, you are about to sell off your guarding
angels like bad meat at a discount price. - I picked up from Yura. - We, on
the contrary, never even mentioned the fact that your lad was dropping
liqueur at sky-high prices, and, son of a bitch, even tried to threaten us
with a pistol. So, Alexander? I reckon your guy just hit his mug against
something, a?
- What did you do him for?
- He told me bluntly to get stuffed, and didn't apologise. Get that.
- I'll teach the bustard manners.
- Sasha, since we have found common ground, I could now make you an
offer to get us some of that humanitarian aid.
- But you've snapped it already.
- Shameless lies, false allegations and groundless attacks, - Yurka
stated with style, - we never stole anything, we bought it for five bucks.
Or five thousand rubles. It was dark in there, rubles or dollars, all in the
same pocket. Is that true Slava?
- It's the truth. I've paid him off myself. I reckon that your sidekick
is trying to hide some of that illegally made profit from you. By the way,
we only bought one piddling six-pack of itsy-bitsy beer cans, you know, and
a pack of cigarettes, and you, after all this, refuse to gear us up
properly.
- Just imagine, - Yura was unstoppable, - if we were killed in action
(God forbid of course) you would naturally be sad. Because you never gave us
three sticks of good salami, Vodka of the well-known Moscow brand
"Crystal", a few bottles of good cognac, surely some cheese for it
and a few more bits and pieces. And we will visit you in your dreams
reaching our hands out to you and yell, - we started grabbing him like
vampires, - "you, cheap bastard!"
- Yeah, Sasha, - I interrupted, - I might survive without a pair of
beer packs and good cigarettes, but it would be nice of you to throw in some
dry fish for the beer and
- That's enough. Please give me some water, ma'am, cause I'm so hungry
and have no roof for tonight, - Sasha copycatted us. - If you two hadn't
saved my life, you would've been eating free food in the brick by now.
- That's why, during that gunfight I said to Slava: "Hey, look at
that officer dying there for nothing. Let's save him and he, when highly
appointed, will be feeding us for the rest of the war." Slava, confirm
please.
- God, strike me by lightning if it's not true. Hey, that would be
cool, for a week or two, to rest up in the brick. Food three times a day,
clean sheets, steam-room. - I closed my eyes stargazing. - Nirvana! Sasha,
could you send us to that prison of yours and your scumbag will change his
confession in exactly two weeks from now. Let's say he mistook us for
somebody else and they'll let us free. By then the war could too be over.
Think about it Sasha. I'll buy you a drink for that.
- You're naturally delirious. Spooks don't call you "dogs"
for nothing. You are obviously mad and dangerous.
- We are about to go and see our Commander in Chief now, listen to him
trying to talk us into the Minutka assault. So, I'm thinking to suggest that
he takes his own regiment off the airport guard duty and throw it at the
Square. Meanwhile we would pull security here. Then, after you guys take the
Square, we might move on. How about that, Sash? By the way, have you tasted
all the girls around here?
- No, they are all taken. No chance.
- Don't be stingy and give us one. We'll return her, don't you worry!
- You are mad, mad I tell you!
A deputy assistant emerged from the HQ and called us in.
- Sasha, we'll be there for about forty minutes, so, don't forget that
humanitarian aid, we talked about or we'll come to you in your dreams. Tell
your lad that if he's ever rude to us again, he won't get off this easily.
Wait for us and we'll be back, you'll see, -- I cited a line off a
well-known poem. - And dear, don't forget the beer, the rest is a must.
Yura even blew him a kiss.
- We'll meet again, darling!
Sashka, spewed aside, clearly showing his attitude towards our giddy
behaviour. Passing grunts were watching this whole scene with surprise.
We walked into the airport tailing the rest of the group, hurriedly
finishing off our cigarettes and chucking off the butts. At war we usually
smoke, concealing cigarette in the fist. That way sniper wouldn't see the
flash. This habit worked around the clock, night and day. It makes cense
like this. If your habits are different throughout the day, it is easy to
make that one fatal mistake.
All of us walked into the boardroom where we met the Commander in
Chief, General Rolin and our general Zaharin. In the past his surname was of
Armenian origin, but after the fall of the Union it was suggested to him
that he change it. That's how he turned from Avakian to Zaharin (his wife's
surname).
Sandbags plugged all windows in the meeting room. The poor light didn't
reach the corners where all people looked like shadows: Comms officers,
deputies and the rest of the General's aid as well as a few of those who
couldn't miss the opportunity to kiss his ass.
- Please be seated, gentlemen, - Rolin rose and shook Bahel's hand then
simply nodded to the rest of us.
- I have just spoken to the Defence Minister Grachin. At the high
level, - Rolin emphasised the words "high level", - we came to the
decision to assault the Minutka Square structure. I was appointed head of
the operation and you would be carrying out this complex and demanding task.
At the end of the speech his voice turned exultant. I wonder if he and
Karpov had the same teacher in the academy, although, he's not from Moscow.
Hell knows "who is who" in their HQ.
- Our operative group, together with the General Headquarters, has
devised a plan, which was successfully signed off by the Defence Minister.
General Zaharin has just familiarised himself with it. I'm also asking you
to listen carefully here. Correct completion of this task will allow us to
eliminate the rebel forces, led by Dudaev, in the shortest possible time.
They are all now concentrated in the Government Bank Building and in the
so-called Dudaev's Palace, - he pointed his finger at the map laid out on
the table. (Judging from the expression on Zaharin's face, he was not overly
impressed by this plan), - The rest of the buildings, around the assaulted
area, are not important and of not particular interest to us.
It was amazing that a military officer, planning such a blood bath,
treated structures surrounding the assault area with such neglect.
Obviously, the rebels would defend those houses not mentioning the two
bridges, which are for sure fortified and densely mined.
In the Army, we've got three objectives: immediate, next and major. We
always start at the immediate one, then, come to the next and after that
arrive at the main. If people start with the main target, moreover,
mentioning names such as Dudaev's, that is politics. Politics means death to
soldiers. Because these morons never think of people's lives and
consequences, all they're interested in is the result and the timeframe,
regardless of the cost. Jesuitical axiom.
We all stared hard at the map. It turns out that we had to cross both
bridges in almost parade style. What if we didn't make it over? Or only
parts of the assaulting force would cross. The spooks will for sure blow up
the bridges. What's then? Then, those who did make it across, the quicker
ones, ragheads will slaughter like sheep before our own eyes. No one of us
liked this adventure. We are professional soldiers and learnt to risk our
own lives and lives of our men back in college. But to perish foolishly like
this - please, let me out of here. All faces in the room turned grim.
Everyone understood that if we don't stand up for ourselves now, gloomy end
of the Micop Brigade would soon seem like an innocent walk in the park. This
was not even the Central Train Station. This was their President's Palace,
symbol of their national pride. The only solution seemed a nuclear bomb drop
or a long and laborious air assault.
From inside the shadows, emerged the so-called Chief of Staff of the
allied HQ, Colonel Sedov. No one knew much of him, but wars often promote
great men as well as losers to the top of the military ladder. I,
personally, couldn't hold anything against Sedov, but if it was he, who
devised this plan in the first place, he wasn't a loser then, he was a
criminal in ranks. Sedov began to speak. His conduct was well schooled. He
didn't seem threatened by Rolin at all and it probably wasn't his first time
in a company like this. Judging from his parched face and military posture,
I figured he was a line officer. OK, let's see what he's got to say.
- General and gentlemen, - started Sedov, - our opponent concentrated
his chief forces in the Minutka Square area.
"Tell me something new" - I thought to myself.
- That's why to finally break his resistance, demoralise him and flush
out of town, you are to carry out plan, signed off by the Defence Minister
and approved by the Commander in Chief, - now it seemed like Sedov was
admiring himself in the mirror. His was irrupting with pride,
self-importance and the fact that this plan was his idea - now all doubts
about the authorship were gone - he did it.
- You are to quickly capture the bridges over the Sunzha River on the
run and dash through the square, then, capture and destroy enemy infantry
inside the Bank building and Dudaev's residence, so-called Palace, - Sedov
continued to sing.
"Hello my baby, how are you today?" - breezed through my
mind.
- To carry out this assault, several airborne elements, marines and the
Leningrad regiment will complement your brigade. You will also have
artillery and air back up.
The most interesting part was that no one indicated unit numbers of the
supporting force and the amount of back up we would supposedly receive.
Would that be one air-wing or an artillery division? Altogether, the plan
seemed raw and superficial. In case of failure, we would obviously take the
full blame. Nice future!
- The time for the assault was designated two days from now. During
these two days you are to promptly take hotel "Kavkaz", then
reassign it (to whom!?) and move out to the Square, - Sedov, it seemed, had
it all figured out nicely and naturally we should've too, thus right now
scooting out of here and capture the Square. Absolute foolishness!
- General, gentlemen, I'm finished. Any questions please? - Judging
from his tone, he must've thought that only degenerates and morons could ask
questions - what can you possibly expect from siberian mahra?
- What are the estimates of the enemy force at the Minutka complex?
Their armament, mine fields around the square and bridges? - Quietly but
sharply asked our Com-brig, emerging from the shadows.
- The amount of the rebel force does not exceed three to four thousand
men (I like the precision. Who cares? One less thousand or one more
thousand). Their armament consists of standard issue small arms plus GP-25s,
RPG-7 grenade launchers and light company mortars. (How about darting around
a flat square under the shower of mortars?)
- What about the bridges?
- We do not have any precise information whether the bridges are mined
or not. All approaches are heavily defended with nests and blocks without
any possibility for proper reconnaissance at this stage. However, we are
constantly working on it. Also our local supporters constantly inform us.
We all smiled at this statement. A chechen would rarely sell another
chechen, but to bust a non-believer is always a delight.
- You are all laughing vainly, - Sedov turned nervous, - recently in
Moscow a question was raised from the local opposition's initiative, whether
this invasion and senselessly violent actions have caused this republic an
irreparable economic damage and set its people against us. Partisan movement
is growing stronger by the day (really?). Because of that, there is a
notion, that we under no circumstance kill the rebels but only disarm them
and let go home. In their majority they are only frightened peasants. The
spring is coming so is their crop season. Otherwise they'll all die of
famine.
- So the hell with them! - I let it out in the mortal silence. Everyone
instantly burst laughing and I attracted attention of both Rolin and Sedov.
Yurka nudged me, but it was too late by then.
- You must've missed the point, comrade - Sedov looked at my shoulder
flashes and seeing no stars continued, - By the way, why aren't you wearing
your proper insignia?
- Scared of snipers, comrade colonel, - I replied modestly, although
was close to making a huge scene.
- It's all horseshit. Do you think that snipers are interested in your
stars? I don't think so. How would you lead your men if you don't have your
insignia?
I was just about to burst into a long and unflattering speech about
shoulder stars and my opinion about his lousy plan. I am no hero, but at
war, you figure out quickly that there is no deeper shit than this, well,
may be only if you're wounded. Other than that - screw them all. You want to
fire me - be my guests!
But Bahel outpaced me; he must've guessed what is going to follow and
thus quickly spoke:
- Comrade general, we'll work out later why captain Mironov is not
wearing his stars. That was me who allowed my officers to take them off. I
am for now more worried about the forthcoming operation. The timeframes you
have set for us would not allow our brigade, which has been engaged in heavy
fighting for weeks, to rapidly, without proper preparation, redeploy and
carry out your assignment (Bahel emphasised the word "your"). I
recommend you immediately give the order to commence sustained air and
artillery strikes at the square network. That must continue on until the
time comes for us to move into the area. Two hours before the assault,
airborne reconnaissance units must capture the bridges and keep all attempts
to blow them up at bay. By the way, could you tell us exactly which airborne
units would act as our aid? In my opinion, frontal assault of the Minutka
Square is a senseless suicide. I will not follow orders, which would
literally mean running my men past a firing squad.
- Do you understand what you are saying, colonel? - Rolin was furious.
- I will make a phone call to Grachin and have you court-martialed! I will
have you arrested on the spot! You'll be on the first plane to Moscow! You
know how many men would want to take up your spot?
- If it would save my men from slaughter I volunteer to write my letter
of resignation immediately! - Now Bahel was enraged. -You are afraid to
blast the shit out of this f...ing square from the air, but at the same time
you are OK to drown in blood a few thousand soldiers! You better think of
that first before you think of your public image
- Shut you mouth, traitor! - Rolin erupted. - You are out of your god
damned mind, colonel. You're a coward. I'll grind you into powder in five
seconds. And you What are you all looking at? Get the hell out of here!
No way, general, we'll tear up anybody for our commander if he only
tells us to.
- We uphold our CO's opinion that this is a sheer suicide to storm the
square without preparatory air and artillery runs, - somebody from our group
summarised the situation.
- Does everyone think like that? - Rolin squinted and looked around
heavily. - Out! Get out! Guards! Get them all out of here! Disarm them!
Convoy the traitors to the brick!
We only huddled closer in response. Silence set about the room. Mortal
Silence The door opened and two privates and an officer entered, ready to
carry out any order their commander gives them. All of us prepared for the
worst possible outcome. General Zaharin suddenly interrupted the silence -
what a brave man.
- Let's all not make any rush decisions. We will let the officers go
breath some fresh air for now and ourselves stay in here and discuss
possible solutions to fix this situation. Let's keep our cool and not make
any sudden moves. We all understand that a frontal assault would be
dangerous, but together we must find the ultimate solution, - and now
addressing us, - go gentlemen, wait outside, nothing is going to happen; I'm
giving you my word.
- Go, - The Com-brig told us dryly.
We left the room. All of us were quivering. The guards were following
us closely. Someone grabbed their chief and whispered:
- If you bitch, even think about arresting our commander, I'll kill
you. Get it?
- What about my orders? - He asked in scare. His grunts kept away by
the walls.
- You want to live?
- Yes!
- If you are given the order to arrest him, we'll ambush you. During
the ambush you'd give him up quietly. Understood? This way we'll let you and
your grunts live. Did you understand everything I just said?
- Yes!
- We'll now move our vehicles up a little closer. Don't panic. When our
CO comes out with your general, we'll get in the cars and leave. We don't
want your blood, but if you stand in the way, we'll kill you. Understand?
You know who we are?
- I do, you are "the dogs". I understood.
- You don't know anything. We're no dogs we are mahra. We'll tear you
up if our commander is in danger. That's all.Now go. And if you or any of
your grunts make a peep, you'll all die. You like that?
- No I don't.
- That's right. We are here to fight chechens, not each other. They
want us to storm Minutka head-on. Basically they want us dead. But we don't
want to die. That's why Rolin is angry. Go and don't make any trouble.
- OK, I've got it. I've heard you guys are real madmen; but to jump at
Rolin like that, is beyond everyone's expectations. You guys are total nuts!
- Chief of the guards has already recovered from his shock and was walking
with us towards the exit. His face expressed both admiration and distrust at
the same time.
All of us came out steaming hot. Everyone lit up and was inhaling
hungrily, digesting the newly received information. Since he was the
youngest one of all, our recon unit leader was sent to move the armour
closer to the airport. Chief of the guards was told to give the order to
allow that.
- Are you nuts, men? I'll go down for this! This is crazy!
- Do we have to tie you up or what?
- Tie me up, kill me, do what you want. I can't give that order. Full
stop.
- OK, chill out. We won't move the cars beyond your posts. Are you
happy with that?
- Fine by me. But if you move in, I'll have to open up.
- OK, fine.
We all knew perfectly well what disobeying an order could lead to.
Especially in a war-zone, it could result in anything up to the firing squad
without court-martial or even an investigation. The Military Law states
clearly: "An order must be carried out undisputedly, entirely and in
time. After the order has been carried out it can then be challenged."
Who can then challenge that order after our entire brigade will be
slaughtered on this fing Square? Whoever lives through, we'll be permanent
mental home clients.
Yep, this looked like an armed rebellion. What else our open refusal to
carry out an order could be called?
- Slava, what do think about leaving, ah? Like the
battleship"Poteomkin". Yurka asked, inhaling hungrily. - How about
Turkey?
- With our APC, via the Black Sea bottom. I'd say not such a bad idea.
Don't be silly. We haven't done anything illegal as yet. There is a statute
in the Military Law that if you consider that a given order violates The
Constitution Laws, you have the right not to follow it*. To lead your men
out there now means death. Take Chekhoslovakia for instance. Maybe just a
bit bigger then Chechnya but back then preparations took six months. Over
here, it was thrown together ad hoc. Because over there it was considered
overseas, here, on the other hand, inside the boarders, the bustards can put
down a million soldiers on both sides, no one would notice. I chucked off my
cigarette and pulled out another one. Unaccustomed to the weaker tobacco I
just couldn't get enough. - Look, Sashka is coming over with help!
Next to the walking, with important look on his face, Sashka, was
dragging his feet under a weight of two heavy boxes, our old acquaintance -
corporal from the hospital with a patch across his nose and two black eyes.
- We told you to watch your manners, sonny! - Yurka and I were smiling.
- You brought it on yourself.
- Don't be so ill mannered, young men, or you'll die before your
discharge. - I added. - If had punched you a little higher, could've crushed
your skull. You are a lucky lad, my friend, we could've held on until you
make your move with a pistol and cut you open right there without a hint of
anaesthetics.
Sashka came just in time. For once, his appearance distracted us from
our bitter thoughts. I had no desire to become a criminal while I am a
patriot in my heart. Nor did I want to lose all my men at the square and
then shoot myself. I don't think, as an officer, I could live on with such a
heavy weight on my shoulders. What I did want was to get totally shitfaced.
Those two boxes contained liqueur that would, at least for a short while,
let me avoid making this horrible choice. However, we can't do it here and
right now. Or they for sure would accuse us of drinking on the job. All
present knew it well.
- Did you guys just declare a rebellion? - Sashka was alarmed. - You
stirred up some havoc. People are talking about your capture.
- No, we just said that you have expressed desire to lead your company
ahead of us at machineguns on the square, but he turned stubborn. Just
wouldn't let you go full stop. He says that he would never allow his beloved
captain to die like this. But you bastards, says he to us, I don't give a
shit about. Go, perish, the whole brigade of yours with Colonel and General.
I'll throw a medal in every one of your coffins, - I was again filling up
with rage. I knew that neither Sashka nor the grunt had anything to do with
it. I just needed to take it on somebody.
- Or Sasha, you could donate this scumbag to us. We'd write up the
request for transfer and he'd sign it at the gunpoint of his own pistol. In
fact I think he'd sign anything. Nobody would notice the gunshot. As for the
body, we'll stash it somewhere far in the debris. What do you scum think
about that?
I was waiting for anyone of them to reply, at least with a gesture of
some kind. But they were both speechless. My mood was gloomy and ferocious.
All my feelings and thoughts were now motionless, bound into a tightened
spring, ready to pop open with a gigantic charge of energy. But they were
still speechless.
- Sasha, did you load up everything we talked about? - I was gradually
getting the grip on myself. But the spring was tightening stiffer and
stiffer, sharpening all my senses already sharp as it is. - Let's go load it
up.
We wondered off to our APC. I walked ahead, then corporal and Sashka at
the tail of the procession. Thick mud was everywhere and the sun already
started to set. I opened the infantry hatch and the grunt began to load
Sashka's gifts inside the compartment. Sashka finally came over. I booted
the grunt's ass, he disappeared inside the vehicle's belly and I slammed the
hatch behind him. Then I grabbed Sashka by his vest, pressed him against
APC's wall and drew my pistol. He face turned white and eyes widened. He
looked at me then at the gun.
- Now tell me who gave the order to encircle us. Hurry up, you know
we'll either die now or later anyway.Hurry up, bitch, tell me all.
Yurka came up behind me.
- The ring is getting tighter. It'd be pretty difficult now to make our
way into the building. They've dragged in there about a company of men, no
fewer than that.RPG gunners are in there too. The range is damned close. -
Yurka was absolutely deadpan and ready for action.
He said to Sashka:
- Come on, man, tell us who said what and what's the order?
- Sedov came out after you left and ordered not to let out of the
airport area. The passwords are already changed. The building has also been
secured. If you make an attempt to fight your way out or inside the
building, we are to open fire without warning. He said you're planning to
change sides. I was given the order of distracting you, get you drunk or
something. That's all. Let go me. Still, you're madmen. What are you going
to do with the grunt? - Sashka was rubbing his neck.
- Take him. He must've shitted his pants by now. What's the password?
- I don't know. They only told me to get you drunk and get out quick.
What do I tell Sedov?
- The truth. The grunt will confirm. So, they'll start the onslaught
soon since you've been told to promptly get out. OK Sasha, go. Good bye.
- Slava, Yura, everything's going to be fine. They'll come to an
agreement, you'll see. I'll approach Sedov and Rolin and ask them to leave
you alone. Let's come with me and when it's all over I'll let you out. Come
on guys.
He said "whet it's all over". It could only be over after the
firing squad is done shooting. Because I knew now, that I would not return
fire. They are like us, how could I shoot back? In their eyes, however, we
are traitors.
- Thank you Sasha, but no. Just tell them we're not traitors, OK? Even
if we die here today, we're still not. Good bye.
I opened the hatch and the grunt hopped back.
- It's OK. Get out. You've heard everything?
- Yes.
- When asked, tell the truth, - when they wondered off, I couldn't help
myself and yelled out: - Don't be rude to strangers!
The grunt cramped like from a punch.
- So, Slava, let us go?
All the way back we walked in silence. There was emptiness in my mind
and talking seemed pointless. Absolutely nothing was up to us anymore. We
knew what to do. All that was left was to await the slaughter, like sheep.
All our officers herded together and talked about something. The grunts
were all atop of APCs. Engines were all started and many guns were wheeled
towards the airport building. We came closer to the crowd of officers. It
seemed that every one of them was talking at the same time, but no one was
listening to anybody:
- They're really going to shoot?
- What would you do?
- We fought together before, how could they? Sons of bitches, freaks,
mothers
- Sold mother Russia and now trying to screw us!
- Hey, who'd go to Moscow now?
- My father was right, your worst enemy is in Moscow. He wants you dead
first. Then comes your Air Force and only then the Germans!
- Yura, Slava, what did you decide? - The discussion halted and
everyone was staring at us now.
- I, personally, - I emphasised "personally", - will not
shoot at my own people. Supplies captain said Sedov ordered not to let us
out of the area and inside the building. The password has been changed.
There is about a company-sized element inside the building. Now maybe even
more. I'd say, we're in deep shit.
- So, you say we just stand there and let them shoot us like ducks?
Nice attitude, man!
- If I wanted to leave, I would've left by now. It's only a hundred
meters to the gates. Sedov told them we want to change sides and thus refuse
to assault Minutka.
Everyone went nuts. It would be impossible to describe the monologues
since I could only leave dots and comas. If you, my reader, can replicate
the mood like that, you can yourself make up a speech or two. I can only say
that politicians from the past as well as the ones presently in charge, ours
as well as foreign, were all mentioned, so were their parents and other
close and distant relatives.
Officers of the security regiment were all standing on the airport's
porch, also herded together. So to say: our "likely opponents",
who were, not so long ago, our comrades in arms. Our lives now depended on
them. If they believe Sedov's lies, we're doomed. Whatever they decide to
do, I will not fire back at you guys. I felt sad; if they could only shoot
me dead instantly. Or maybe I'll just shoot myself now? No, not yet, not all
has been done; that I can do any time - it's never too late to put a bullet
in my head.
Meanwhile, behind those closed doors our fates were being decided. Much
depends on the final decision. The fates of Russia and Chechnya are now in
the hands of four men, who are now trying madly to prove each other wrong.
Or maybe our CO is already under arrest with the general. It would be pretty
foolish to just waist a military commander and a general without a
court-martial. We, on the contrary, can easily be all hosed from a pair of
machineguns now. Investigations can be done later. Yep, if you want to go
home at some stage, you shoot first and ask questions later. I keep along
that route myself when meet with the ragheads and now feel quite
uncomfortable acting as target. Occupied by these thoughts I didn't even
notice that I only had left one cigarette. The taste in my mouth was bitter
from tabacco and the stupid situation we were in. I pulled the last smoke
from the packet and a thought stung through my mind: is this my last
cigarette? I started puffing it slowly, striving to enjoy every bit of smoke
I breathed in. Allright, boys, I'm ready for anything now. With every breath
came calm and confidence. I'm no sheep, waiting to be throttled; I am a man,
having consciously made up his mind. I watched a small group of officers who
probably felt just as uneasy. Perhaps, they were trying to make some sort of
decision, to fire on us or not to fire at all: to kill or not to kill.
---------------------------------------------------------------
(c) Copyright 2001 translation by Alex Dokin (adokin[a]today.com.au)
---------------------------------------------------------------
Anybody needs help? - Doctor, captain of the medical squad, Zhenya
Ivanov, came up to the grunts. A very bright fellow, smart, intelligent,
toll and skinny, with his head shaved, bushy moustache and glasses he
reminded me of a very popular bard Rosenboum. The grunts flipped away from
him.
- No, nobody needs nothing! - Pliers tried to get away, but the doc,
like any other corpseman, quickly grabbed him and pulled over:
- Stand still, patient, and don't make any sudden movements or I'll
break you something by mistake. OK, your bones are fine and the rest seems
in place. You'll live for now. After your untimely death an autopsy will
reveal the reason why such a young and pretty creature passed away.
- Let's go, shell we? - Asked Zubastik surrounding him officers.
- Yep.
I gave the order and pointed my finger at Pliers, Badalov and the
diggers:
- You go ahead, we'll cover your rear. And make it snappy, will ya.
Don't worry if you see lots of mines, we only need one go at it, move in and
quickly back out. Is our medical team ready?
- Yes chief! - Doc Zhenya answered for all.
We set off one by one, glinting around and covering each other's backs,
ready to scatter off and take security around perimeter at any moment. From
where we left our carriers we could hear nothing besides their running
engines.
- Zhenya, - I caught up with the doc, - Yurka asked for some tablets
against booze.
- There is one very radical thing against booze. You know which one?
- Not to drink?
- Bingo! You knew, didn't you?
- No, just a lucky guess.
- Amazing. Usually people buy it. You couldn't have guessed, could you?
- You see, Zhenya, being just as cynical as you are, I am trying not to
take things the hard way. Because if I did I'd go nuts. The rest is all up
to the Man.
- It's a mystery how you can still maintain your sense of humour.
- It's simple, really. Turks have this wonderful expression "kysmet"
which means "destiny", that's what I use to stay afloat. If your fate were
to live this long and die from a grenade burst at such particular moment,
you would, trust me. Regardless of how cool you are and how many bodyguards
you have, your guts will be dangling off a tree eventually. Same goes for
the rest in life.
- You seriously believe in all this?
- Yes Zhenya, I do. For example. In your medical practise, have you
ever had cases when your patient, according to all signs, must've been
already dead by now, but he's still hanging there, against all odds? You can
reject all laws, but he's still here, according to the law of fate. Have
you? Don't try telling me that his immune system turned out much stronger
than you previously thought. You have to agree that there is something
mysterious in many medical cases.
- I agree, especially there are lots of cases like that here, in
extreme circumstances, so to say.
- That's right. What about when men drop all around but one soldier is
like spellbound, like bullets bounce off the guy.
- Yeah, I've seen something like that. Remember platoon from the first
battalion got lost and walked straight into an ambush?
- I sure remember that one. They were all wasted from close range.
- Three of them did survive though. Two wounded and one without a
scratch on him. Everyone thought the guy was hiding behind the others' backs
and nearly killed him in the rush. But the wounded confirmed that they only
lived because of him. He pulled the burning track from under fire and only
having made sure that all others were dead picked up the casualties and
drove off. Thus, I think you might be right. What about you? Aren't you
afraid of death?
- Of coarse I am, Zhenya. But maybe, I'm just prepared for this, you
know. But more than the death herself I'm scared of becoming crippled.
Promise me Zhenya, that if I ever get onto your operating table without a
limb or some other crippling wound, you would serve me the chance to leave
this world peacefully. I understand you can't do it yourself, but please
give me that chance.
- OK, slow down. First, I think you are heading straight for a nervous
breakdown and all this is just shock talking. I've heard, you know, what
happened at the "North". I also know that you guys were first to refuse to
return fire. It was your buddy the airport chief, who straightened it all
out with our ex-allies and practically forced them come to the same
decision. Therefore, take my advice, have a drink, or come to me and I'll
give you some tablets. By the way, that's what we are here for. Only do not
take too many of them. As for the death, everyone is free to do with his
life whatever he wants. There are no "no choice" situations. There is always
a choice and a way. Maybe, it's not the choice we would prefer, but it is
still a choice. People create problems and people solve them.
- You just don't get it, do you? - I wearily waved my hand, - I'm not a
schoolgirl, hysterical over her boyfriend, and it's no breakdown. It's much
worse for those guys at the frontline. I am just scared of being crippled,
that's all. I have a huge respect for people like that Meresjev guy,
clutching for every little thing in life, even when disabled, despite all
the obstacles and shit they are faced with, but I don't think I've the
character. I'd rather use the "toy" and let my guts fly free than live like
that. OK, let's just drop it, shell we? Or we might bring the bad luck.
- Look Slava, the sappers are signalling, they must've finished over
there. Let's go, shell we. We'll continue our little talk some other time,
accompanied by a bottle of good cognac and cards.
- Fine, let's move. However, you, bastard, still haven't promised me
anything. For now just think about it, would you?
- OK. I'll think about it if you buzz off. I can consider it, but I
don't have to do it. Understood?
- Understood. Let's go.
- Found anything? - I asked the sappers, coming over.
- Not much, comrade Captain. A booby-trapped grenade at the entrance
and that's about it, - they reported merrily, happy at the fact that there
wasn't much to do for them out there.
- OK, go check around the territory. When done, come back and help us
load up.
As the grunts heard about the loading up business, they were gone
before I could finish my speech. Now, try to find an idiot to carry heavy
boxes, even for a good reason like this one.
I looked around. Republican medical warehouses were made up of several
big hangars and two administrative single-storey buildings. I turned to our
surgeons:
- Well, gentlemen, where do you think we should start from? It's a lot
of buildings out there. I suggest we split up in small groups and search the
docks. If you find anything of use, we carry it outside and then load onto
trucks. Any questions, doubts or proposals I shell accept in written form in
no less than three printed copies.
Some sneers came back instead and we all walked off.
- Zhenya, - I asked Ivanov, - do you even know what you're looking for?
- I sure do, - he pulled out a piece of paper with a decent list on it.
I took a glance but couldn't work out any of it since it was all written in
Latin, - Don't bother, you couldn't read any of it.
- What about you, can you understand this? It's not really your
writing.
- I'll work it out. We have to look for tranquillisers, anti-shock
stuff, anti-burns, breath relief, cardio medications, things like that.
We came to the gates of the nearest hangar. They were locked up so I
nodded to the private:
- Go for it! Just watch for the ricochet, allright?
Everyone moved behind the soldier and he smashed both locks with a
short burst. We walked into the semi-dark dock. Long shelves with packages
were stretching for as far as we could see.
- Hey doc, watch for the expiry dates. You might have to feed this
stuff to us.
- It is as darks as in a nigger's ass in there, put some light on it,
will ya.
- It's good to know you've been places, doc, - I noted sarcastically
and everybody cackled.
- Zhenya, is it really that gloomy in there? - A voice came from the
dark and again everyone gaggled.
- As soon as I catch one I'll shove you bastards one by one up his ass
and you'll see it for yourselves, - The doctor came back swiftly.
- What if we catch a female one? Could we do an extensive checkup on
her?
- Mulatto girls are much prettier.
- They say Korean women are nice too.
- Even a girl from Rjasan' would do it for me these days.
- Fellows, women of Europe are all horrible. No one is better than our
Siberians.
Gabbing this way about this and that, we moved along the endless rows
of shelves.
- Help me up, will ya, - Zhenya climbed up a shelf. Up there he opened
up a package and helping himself with a torch, started digging into a bunch
of little boxes. - OK, take them down. Watch it, they ampoules.
- Found something useful?
- Yes, cerebrolisin.
- What kind of disease is that?
- It's not a disease, you moron, it's a medication, helps against
concussion.
- Which means it's only any good for the young soldiers. We, officers,
don't need that because we have no brains no more. What we have is one big
strong bone instead. - I was in the mood for lyrics. After the shakedown at
the "North" and preceding it briefing I just wished I could relax a little.
- Sometime during my third year in college, - I continued, - we had one
funny little incident. Those days we already lived in the student hostel and
rules were not as tough as they used to be during the first years. So it was
in April, we get up in the morning, going to the toilet but sergeants are
kicking us out for the morning jog. It's bloody cold outside though. We
rarely did any jogging as it is, but now, God knows why, they started
kicking us out in the cold. May be an inspection of some sort arrived or
something else happened, I can't remember. Anyway, one of the students,
named Popov, decided to bugger it. He said stuff it, I won't go and that's
that. Our unit leader was not all too happy with such attitude, so he grabs
Popov and starts yelling at the guy. Popov, though, tells the unit leader to
go screw himself. As the one who gave an order, the unit commander, as the
law states, must see that the order is carried out and otherwise enforce it
by any practical means so he punches Popov in the face. Popov, by the way,
was returning from a trip to the bathroom and had a big carafe with water in
his hand. Remember those huge, thick glass carafes in the army back then?
Anyway, Popov turns around and hits his unit leader with that carafe right
on the head. The carafe breaks into thousand little pieces, blood mixed with
water is running down the leader's face. He tumbles like a sack of shit, we
think that's it, the guy's dead. Popov, scared shitless, drops carafe's
neck, which he was still clutching, and splits off via the corridor. All of
us kneel near the leader, assuming the worst, but he pushes everyone off,
jumps up and, like cougar, sprints after Popov. Then he catches up with him
and starts kicking the living shit out of the fellow. We barely managed to
tear him off the guy. We thought the leader was in shock or something and
that's why he couldn't feel the pain. The blood was still streaming out from
his most probably broken skull. Finally we called for a nurse. She gave the
guy a checkup and a x-ray. After all this his skull was absolutely intact,
without a single crack. She couldn't even find any signs of concussion. And
now tell me if you think he had brains. A civilian would've been most likely
dead, a first year student seriously hurt, but a military college graduate
was absolutely fine.
- Yep, that's right, servicemen' skulls are tough.
- Doc, you've seen a lot of skulls. Which ones are tougher?
- Airborne, for sure. They hit their heads constantly against the edge
of the plane's hatch and land on their heads sometimes too, - the hangar
shook with the thunderous laugh this time, - I'm kidding, I'm kidding,
everyone's skull is different. Unfortunately, they don't get any stronger
with careers. Imagine if that was true, how thick colonels' and generals'
skulls would be.
- Yeah, that's funny, imagine, fellows, how thick must be Rolin's
skull! I say it could take a direct hit from a tank cannon.
- He probably wouldn't even need a helmet.
- Hey, help me up over here. There's more here of interest, - Zhenya
again started to climb another rack. - Yeah, exactly what we need! Take it
carefully.
We took down a box from him with cardiamin and some other stuff.
- It's for treating heart failure, - he explained, leaping down and
dusting himself off.
He climbed up a few more racks in this fashion, selected more boxes and
passed them down to us. We, in turn, stockpiled them outside and left them
all there in guards' possession.
After that we visited a few more hangars, smaller than the first one,
where we picked up all sorts of stuff. Everyone's pockets were full of
vitamin tablets and soldiers were carrying huge cans with them. All of us
were already crunching on the tablets and some were even chewing
anti-nicotine chewing gum, hoping to quit smoking right about now. I loaded
up on vitamins too as well as nicotine patches, zhen-shen balsam, tablets
for Yura and some other stuff.
Everyone was in fabulous mood. I looked at my watch and thought that I
might even make it to the briefing. At the thought of the briefing I knew
that relaxation time was nearly over. We must go back.
- Let's move it boys! The sun is setting.
It's true, the noon was almost over.
- Hurry up, will ya. Get the boxes. I'm not in the mood to spend the
night out here.
Suddenly, the noise of sporadic gunfire came over from where we left
our armour.
- What the hell!? I thought, for once we could do something without
interruption. Go, go, fellows! - I sprinted forward, carrying a package with
heavy drugs, given to me by Zhenya.
To get everything out we had to bust a little armoured door. For some
strange reason no one has yet managed to snatch the drugs or may be we were
just lucky. We've got the rare medicines and I had a feeling we'd soon need
them.
The gunfire soon died away which was very strange to say the least.
Perhaps our drivers got it mixed up or maybe, they were not the winners.
- Come on! Move it fellows.
- Go! Go!
- Hold on, guys!
- We'll fry the motherfuckers!
- Let's just hope the carriers are fine!
Kicking and screaming like that we scooted ahead via the school rubble.
The school's upper floors at the rear have all collapsed, having made a
virtual hill with its debris, all the way down to the warehouses. Coming
down was easy enough, but running uphill, stumbling on chips of bricks and
concrete, was no fun at all. A funny kids rhyme suddenly popped in my mind:
"...what a hard work that would be, to pull a hippo from a swamp...".
Breathing heavily, falling down and getting back up again, tearing skin off
our hands and faces and busting ampoules with medicine, we ran up the
school's second floor and dashed down the opposite hill. Since I had the
smallest box, I overtook everyone and was the first to see that our
mechanics were peacefully chatting with some other unfamiliar soldiers next
to the armoured tracks. I stood still in the shadow and carefully looked at
the panorama.
Everything seemed calm. Nobody seemed to be hiding or slinking about.
Haven it was. I caught my breath and spewed with green and yellow slime
again. Damn it. I've got to quit smoking. Others came up. All of us, with
rifles braced, started to come down slowly. Those guys could be deserters or
may be again, escaped cons. OK, we'll see when we get there.
Coming closer, we saw that the guests were like us, "the saviours",
"members of the southern adventure force". Having noticed our arrival, my
mechanic leapfrogged over to me and jerked his hand up to his helmet in
salute and reported:
- Comrade Captain, during your absence nothing particular happened,
with the exception... we mistook our neighbours for ragheads and opened fire
at them...
- And the number of casualties is...
- None, we quickly worked it out.
- That's good. Imagine, if you were better shooters you might've killed
each other.
- Comrade Captain, I am a platoon leader of the 125st artillery
regiment, lieutenant Krikov! -Junior officer, barely any older than his
subordinates, came up to me and saluted.
"Krikov - Kryukov", it rhymed inside my head. Strangely enough, I was
thinking of Kryukov this morning and now see Krikov. It's all too funny.
- When did you graduate? - Someone asked from the back.
- This year, - proudly answered lieutenant.
- Right, - I whistled, - Lucky you didn't kill each other. What the
hell are you doing out here anyway?
- We were getting some water for the division. When we walked down,
there were no one here, but returning we stumbled upon your backup. We've
not enough people and too many heavy water tanks. We had no choice but to do
the run without reconnaissance since every one was carrying water.
Lieutenant was saying "us", like the decisions he was making were based
on his and his men "chinese parliament", which was most probably true. He is
very "green". I had the urge to give him a lecture, but held it in. He won't
learn anything anyway until he steps into his own shit. That shit though
could be his last. Thinking of this I spewed again. What a moron, ha? He'll
die and his men would perish too. I could hold it in no more:
- Next time, lieutenant, take either more men or fewer flasks.
Otherwise, an ambush is out there waiting for you. Get it? - I told him in
low voice.
The man cringed under my look and most probably would say something
daring in response but in the end changed his mind. So very "green" he was
that all his thoughts could easily be read on his face. He thought it over
for a while and then asked:
- Comrade Captain, could you give us a ride for a few blocks to the
regiment, I wouldn't want to tab all the way back. Spooks are always a
problem too, wouldn't want to meet them either.
- Sure, get in. Where do you get your water? - Stupid question, really,
in this situation. Where else but Sunzha?
- From Sunzha, of course. Twice someone shot at us. - Lieutenant was
bragging.
- If they wanted you dead, they would've left one good sniper there and
we wouldn't be having this conversation right now. Where abouts? - I rolled
out the map while we walked back to the carriers.
- Here, - Krikov pointed at the spot, five blocks away from the school.
- And here is the nest the shots came from.
- OK, I wouldn't venture for water out here anymore, tomorrow they'll
be waiting for us up there for sure. Did you at least shoot back?
- Of course.
- Fine, get in the trucks.
We loaded up on the armour and set off. In a few blocks lieutenant
asked to pull over.
I gave the order to stop and APCs halted. Lieutenant and his men leapt
off, waved us good by and walked off to the regiment quarters, crooked under
the heavy weight of their tanks and flasks. Another half an hour and we were
back at our base. Instantly Corpsemen hurried off to their tents to sort out
the spoils. I was off to my cab too where Pashka was feeding firewood to our
stove.
- Tell me news, - I asked him taking off my gear.
- No news. Everyone is at the briefing. Is that true we'll have a go at
Minutka soon?
- Yeah. - I said dryly, - long briefing?
- It's been going on for about hour and a half. They've been calling
for you a few times.
- No shit, - I walked out and lit up on the way to briefing room.
Making my way through the mud, I came over to the HQ. Crowd of officers
and men near the entrance were having a lively discussion. I neither wanted
to put off my sweet cigarette or get in there and continue on discussing
those suicidal plans. The question now was how many hundreds of us will die
out there. The "enemy" at the "North" and Moscow has finally rejected our
appeal for air and artillery support and tightened the time frames. What we
now had to discuss was which battalion was to go in first. Officers tried to
tell me something but I wasn't listening to anybody. In my head, I was
struggling to come up with the right arguments in favour of my plan, which I
haven't even finished composing yet, but some details were already beginning
to build up. There was, it seemed, a small chance to reduce the number of
casualties. Having read my state of mind, the officers left me alone. I
nodded to them in appreciation and tossed off my cigarette, which fell into
the mud in an arc-like trajectory. Just like the life itself, isn't it? As
soon as gets atop, it slams right back down. I was thinking how many lives
would tomorrow fall without even reaching the top. Old men invented the war.
They are already infertile but still lack wisdom and surely have enough
ambitions for all the young ones put together. Their Power lets them push
the youth to die for their old ideals and, after having satisfied their
thirst for blood, they'd be stealing again left, right and forward
whatever's left there. We, officers, the witnesses to their madness, are
pretty much done too. They'll do to us what they did to the veterans of the
afghan campaign. They'll portray us as idols, and then would demote us to
the status of drunks and drug junkies. Those vets are now officially
murderers that had gashed off peaceful afghan population unable to take on a
decent force. Now they're shut out, blamed for everything. Their official
diagnosis - the "afghan syndrome". Jesus, how many more of those "syndromes"
they've forgotten to mention. Every hotspot is another "syndrome". Too many,
if ask me, even for such large state like Russia.
I was just "winding up" myself. It is better to walk in already pissed
off and "wound up" than do it in there. Everybody's already tired of endless
useless arguments and constant dead-end conversations and you are barging
in, aggressive, ready to tear to pieces every one in your way. Your opinion
at this stage is a breath of fresh air.
My ideas have already begun to take shape of a final plan. We depended
heavily though on our captured men not being in that palace, because I was
afraid we could knock them out too.
There is a device that sappers use for pushing mines out. It would work
for us beautifully. The thing consists of a rocket with three jet engines,
one for the flight and two initial boosters. When it takes off it drags
behind it a thick hose stuffed with C4 and only flies in one particular
direction. When that hose (or gut) unwinds all the way, the rocket slumps
and in a few seconds the gut's C4 detonates, making a ditch about four
meters wide. This "dragon" is employed to make ways for infantry inside
minefields. Those mines that do not explode, after the detonation would
surely be pushed out on the surface anyway. Depending on a type of terrain,
the width of the ditch could vary from one meter to four.
Therefore, if we got close to that fricking palace, we could launch a
few of these "dragons" toward it. After that not much of that whorehouse
will be left standing. The most important task would be to destroy the lower
floors. The rest would fall soon after, burying them all in there. But
again, it only worked well in case only the spooks were inside. Anyway, I
walked up to the entrance, moved my AK behind my back, and pushed the door
open.
- May I come in, comrade Colonel? - I interrupted Bahel in the middle
of his explanation.
All battalion commanders, their chiefs, com-brig's XOs and other HQ
officers were looking at the map. A few more men were smoking near the
window breach barricaded with sandbags.
- Come in, Mironov. How was the trip?
- Very well, comrade Colonel.
- Please take a seat and do not interrupt us. Whatever you have missed
you can find out later.
He turned to the map again and moved his pen across it, using it as
pointer. Judging from the spot he was at, we were now storming the State
Bank. Which in turn meant that we have already taken over (on the map that
is) the bridges and successfully moved across the open space under the hail
of gunfire. I should probably ask them afterwards how they did it. For now
I'll just seat here quietly and listen. The time will come for me to stand
up and express my point of view, like any other present here. First, the
lowest ranking officers will speak, then, all the way up the pyramid. It is
done deliberately, so that the opinion of the higher-ranking officers wasn't
weighing on their shoulders. At the end, com-brig will do the summing up.
He, the brigade's commander, is the one responsible for every single thing,
he is to oversee the state of affairs, make decisions, give out orders and
control the way they are carried out. His chief of staff could sometimes get
a piece of the pie, but mostly it is up to him to do all those things. Same
order is in the trenches. Battalion, company or platoon commander is always
responsible for his unit. He is the one who would get all the blame if his
men didn't achieve the objective. Tribunal would be swift, it won't drag on,
I'd vouch for that. Best case scenario, he'll lose his ranks, get kicked out
of the army and go back to farming. Worst case: court martial, dishonourable
discharge, his medals taken away and then jail.
In our country, the most fearful prefix to your status is "ex-". If
they could have a go at the ex-president, an ex-military commander's rank is
no cover for sure. If they found out you were at war, hold on to your pants,
my friend, you are as good as dead. You're now a war criminal. The blood of
innocent civilians is most definitely on your hands. We, law-abiding
citizens killed no one. If any of our countrymen are being slaughtered
somewhere in the south, so be it. What else would you like, Mr President,
maybe send more of our children to the next bloodbath? No problem, sir! We
voted for you so how can you possibly be wrong or lie to us? Not a chance!
Did you, my reader, think like that? Or maybe still thinking?
Chehov once said that one must squeeze a slave out of oneself, drop by
drop. It must be added that our rulers should be daily squeezing big bosses
out.
Just look at the map. How can possibly a republic, so small that it's
marked on the map as dot, be threatening Russia's sovereignty? Unless, you
feed and support this motley general, encouraging his fiery speeches. Come
on, he's nothing but a little Fuhrer with the chechen accent. When they
needed Lev Trozhki dead, he was slain like a street dog, in Mexico, with an
ice picker and without any guided missiles. I refuse to believe that this ex
soviet pilot was so smart as to get away.
For a reward, they'll serve you his head on a plate with salad and
mayonnaise. Every one is worth money. If you can't buy a guy, put a hit on
him. That's tricky though, because he might know the key combination to your
bank account in Zurich, or maybe some other dirt on you.
We, like all fine-bred sheep, would again go to the voting tables and
vote for those who'd send us to another bloody "hood wrangle", send our
children to slaughter and force veterans of the Great Patriotic War fetch
empty cans from the rubbish bins.
It's not about communists, democrats, socialists and other masters of
jabbering. These guys are only after our bread and butter. The purpose of
war is to redirect our attention from that stealfest.
Meanwhile the briefing went on, the plan was drafted and presented. The
time has come for us to speak up. Suddenly, San Sanych was called by an RTO
to take an important phone call. All of us kept silent, may be the whole
thing was called off. He came back to the table horrified and sat down with
a helpless look on his face. Com-brig could no longer hold it:
- Just tell us, will you.
- We are receiving intelligence reports, confirmed by the opposition,
that all our captured wounded are being brought up into the palace. We are
to be extremely careful during the assault. Air support was refused, no
"Grads" or "Uhragans" would be provided either and we are to use only our
own artillery.
Complete silence now hung in the room. The only ones to break it were
the sounds of heavy breathing, moving chairs and a sudden loud crunch of
com-brig's pencil. It seemed he didn't even notice that he broke it. He was
still holding the pieces and staring at the wall. Everyone went into stupor.
- We can't go in without artillery or air support, full stop. - Broke
the silence commander of the first battalion.
- We can't use them either. The hostages will die. But they'd die
regardless whether we have support or not - Continued commander of the tank
battalion.
- Either the spooks will finish them off or we'd stop their sufferings
with an accidental burst, grenade or mortar shrapnel. Same difference. I
wouldn't want to be their murderer in a million years. It's a dead-end
situation. - Third battalion's commander was thinking and talking at the
same time.
- We don't stand a chance in a world to even try and save the
prisoners. But attempting to do so we could lose a lot more of our men.
Neither can we ignore the possibility of counterattacks. - Continued
Com-brig's artillery XO.
Before the pause got too long, Com-brig tossed away pieces of his
pencil:
- Take a ten-minute break. Your men are to be told nothing! After the
break everyone has three minutes to express his opinion on the subject.
All of us poured outside to breathe in some fresh air, take a leak and
have a smoke. While at it, we talked about all the previously mentioned
without the commander.
- We're totally screwed!
- What the hell are they thinking?
- Now, for sure, we'd have to climb those walls like pirates with
knives.
- OK, we've got to think men. - It seemed that the tank battalion
commander was not at all concerned with all this hype. He spoke to the art
battalion commanders and the com-brig's XO. Would you be able to get your
howitzers a little closer to the palace?
- I don't think so. The bridges won't handle the load. My
self-propelled cannons are too heavy, too slow and the on-board ammunition
stocks are too small. They'd have to be resupplied constantly. We'd have to
be somewhere close, but not too close, dug in position. Then, we'd shell
over your heads and houses right where you'd want us.
But the tankers' com-batt wasn't listening to him anymore. He was
mumbling something to himself:
- Small stocks... too slow... Revolver! We should pull a "revolver", a
carousel that is. First, infantry goes in, then, our tanks open up. No APCs
though, their calibre's too small.
He called for his chief of staff and they began to draw something. The
time was up and we all went back to the briefing. When everyone was back in
their chairs, com-brig said:
- Gentlemen, all of us understand the present situation. We cannot
attack like this but we cannot also not to attack. I've made calls to Rolin
and our support units. They are giving us the carte blanche. We are to take
the palace at any cost. Please say what you have to say:
Silence hung about the room. The "chief tanker" took the opportunity:
- As I understand it, we cannot use air force and artillery since our
POWs are in the building. Is my notion correct?
- Yes, it is, - confirmed Com-brig.
- How very observant, - Someone giggled at the back.
- Our APCs on the other hand have too smaller calibre weapons and not
enough armour protection, thus are unable to effectively support us from the
required distance. Correct?
- Yes, - Com-brig again confirmed, still however puzzled by the
com-bat's speech.
- Our tanks, although properly armoured and have large enough calibre
weapons, lack ammunition stocks, thus would still be ineffective since they
would run out of ammo relatively quickly. So, as you can see, the problem
here is how to restock them rapidly. Reloading tanks under enemy fire is
surely a suicide; therefore I propose that the tanks do it themselves. I
also suggest a "tank roundabout" to maintain constant bombardment.
- What roundabout?
- Hey, he's got something there!
- Great idea, man!
Almost everyone grasped the general intent proposed by the tanker. He
walked up to the map and began to tell about his plan:
- First, over here, two tanks roll out across the bridge. One of them
maintains rapid fire; the other backs the first one with rare salvos but
mostly is keeping quiet. The third one stands by in the middle of the bridge
and is waiting for his turn. Meanwhile, on our side of the river, at the
bridge's entrance, the forth tank is awaiting action and finally, the fifth
one is reloading back up here. While, having spent all its ammo, the first
tank is returning to our bank of the river to be reloaded, the one on stand
by, on the middle of the bridge, moves in position and opens up. At the same
time the third one, that was at the bridge's entrance moves forward to the
middle. During all these moves, the tank that was stationary and kept silent
now opens fire to keep the pressure on the enemy and prevent them from
destroying the retreating empty tanks. This way we are able to maintain
constant the required density and precision of bombardment and, at the same
time support our infantry. We'd be acting as artillery, so to say. Although
they usually aim at plazas, we, on the other hand, could aim at windows, -
He finished off his speech on this funny note.
- This is bloody great!
- Thank you, - Com-brig shook his hand.
- I also have an idea, - Third battalion's commander stepped forward. -
I suggest we use sewage network to get into the palace.
- Not a bad idea.
- That way we could save our men and maybe even free the hostages.
- What if they set up an ambush? We'd all be dead before we knew it.
- Not bad, but too risky.
- It's a pretty good idea, but we don't really know where the pipes
could lead us. This and the fact that chechens are already actively using
them as the means of approach and retreat while setting up ambushes.
Therefore, there is a good chance that if we do decide to use the sewer
network we could walk into a trap. Thanks for the idea though. I think we
have to blow them up anyway so that the spooks wouldn't pop up at our rear.
Agreed?
- Agreed. - Com-bat said with a sigh of disappointment and settled back
into his chair.
- Any more suggestions, anyone?
More people spoke but no one could propose anything more radical than
the tankers' "roundabout". Storming hotel "Kavkaz" today was already out of
the question and it was agreed with the "North" that we would transfer the
task to the marines. We also came to the decision to pull our men closer to
the HQ and let them rest as much as possible for now. Equipment had to be
readied too. In conclusion, our HR officer, lieutenant colonel Sergey
Nikolaevich Kazarzhev took the opportunity to speak to us.
He was a short fellow (about a meter and sixty-five centimetres tall),
not skinny though but rather muscular. He took part in the Afghan campaign
some years ago back. He wasn't like the rest of the ex Political Officers
brotherhood. He wasn't nasty to other people, nor was he bugging his
superiors with ludicrous stuff, he was just doing his job. He made every
effort to find common ground with men and was widely respected not just for
his Afghan past but also for his people skills.
- Gentlemen, I have just received a phone call from the "North". Two
Moscow commercial banks are about to celebrate their anniversaries. The
money that they saved up for the festivities, they decided to spend on
supplies aid for the military personnel in Chechnya. So, tomorrow we have to
send a truck to the "North" for the packages. Every one of them contains a
track suite, snickers, toiletries, pack of cigarettes, two cans of beer for
offices, two cans of cola for men and some other stuff.
- Not bad!
- Beer...
- Freebee!
- Lucky for those who'll be distributing that aid.
- Take more, for wounded and KIAs too!
- Yeah, get more.
- Need a hand?
- Which banks?
- "Menatep" and "In-com", - shouting through the noise answered
Kazanzhev.
- "Menatep", hmmm, sounds like NATO.
- Cigarettes!
- Hey, who is non-smoker? I'll buy them off you.
- Hold on. May be they're "Astra" or "Bum in the mountains".
- Right, they can swap the good ones in the "North".
- Yeah, those guys can swipe anything.
- No, they wouldn't, dare.
- Why would they care? They'd rather start distributing after the
assault; more would be left for themselves.
- Quite! - Com-brig barked through the roar.
The noise suddenly abated.
- Quite! - Repeated Com-brig. - We've all got lots to do. Let's not
waste time, shall we. Questions?
Everyone had many questions, but most of them were rhetorical. Knowing,
that answers most probably would be to "get stuffed" and "go away" no one
ventured to ask any. Everybody walked away discussing the freebees.
Yurka and I came up to Kazanzhev:
- Serega, you won't forget about us when you'll be dealing the
packages, won't you? The most important thing is the cigarettes. May be some
people don't smoke, you know.
- Guys, you're not the first and you're not the last to ask me that.
Give me a break, will you, have conscience.
- Yura, what's he talking about?
- Conscience.
- What's that?
- No idea. I know kidney, stomach, liver, but what conscience is I
don't know. How about you?
- Never heard of it.
- Serge, we have an almost absolute monopoly on alcohol around here and
we are, by the way, your neighbours. You can't just tell us off and that's
it. It's not neighbourly.
- Imagine how in good neighbourly spirit we'll be urinating on your
car's tyres and dumping on your porch. Get the picture?
- For the whole duration of this war.
- And we'll keep going like that after the war too. We'll be shitting
on your porch constantly.
- Just imagine, Serge, you're coming out to go to work in the morning
and tumble having slipped on our deifications. All dressed up in sparkling
whites and covered in crap. Wouldn't that be a bummer?
- And all of this because of some pissy cigarettes.
- Idiots.
- Slava, I thing we've heard that one before.
- By the way, while you're at the North, find their airport chief,
Sashka, and tell him we said "hi". Also remind him to put more cigarettes in
and something nice. Let him surprise us.
- I don't think he even remembers you.
- Oh, yes he does.
- So, what's it gonna be?
- About what?
- OK, so you choose to skate on shit till you retire. Or may be you'd
just give us more cigarettes and we'll leave you alone. We don't fight
elderly, you know.
- Get stuffed...
- Yura, he has chosen the shit path.
- Obviously. We're starting tonight, immediately. Pashka will be
crapping too.
- I wonder if it was the blind chance that brought the three of you
together from the whole SibVO and stuck you in one cab?
- Why? Not just SibVO, but also UZN and Yurka, for example, is from
SKVO. It's fate you see. Therefore, you, Srgei Nikolayevich, cannot avert
your destiny too.
- Slipping on crap, every day of the week. But all that could've been
avoided...
- If you had only agreed to give us more cigarettes.
- And if you did, we'd always be happy to see you.
- And we'd tell our kids how wonderful you are. But if you didn't, we'd
also tell them... what an asshole you turned out to be.
- Idiots.
- He's obviously not ready to commit yet.
- Don't worry, he'll fall a few times, he'll commit.
- So?
- OK, we'll talk tomorrow.
- Oh, you should've said so straight away.
- Wonderful! Good night, Serge.
While walking over to the cab I suddenly realised how tired I was. At
"home" Pashka was all smiles at the dinner table. Having pilled off mud from
our boots (it made them look like ski boots), we barged into the cab.
- And what are you so happy about? Won a prize or something? - Yura
asked him. I was silent though, some thoughts, pretty important, as it
turned out, were circling in my head.
- I heard what you did at the "North"...
- Shut up. Shut up and never tell anybody. Got it? Nothing happened up
there. You understand? - I dryly interrupted him. I had the desire to
neither recall nor discuss the events. - Put out what we've got in your
little stash. We'll go wash our hands.
We left the rifles in the cab and popped out with a pot of warm water.
Hosing ourselves, we washed up thoroughly until the skin could finally
breathe again. We sat down on the porch to light up, letting the night
breeze caress our faces. I had the desire to just sit like this forever and
think of nothing. Just sit and smoke with the heat from my cigarette
stinging my fingers. Serenity it was. Yurka interrupted my jolly mood:
- What was that about?
- So that he doesn't go around blabbering everybody everything.
Whatever happened is now in the past. No use now to jump about, especially
for a grunt. Imagine if we told him what happened, he'd be running around
telling everyone at the HQ. Just let him be sad but silent. I think when
it's all over (God help us to get through), we'll yet stand before a jury of
some kind. You'll see. What is it you sons of bitches were thinking about? A
revolt? So I suggest you shut up too.
- Am I supposed to be scared? Cause I'm not.
- We are not, my young friend, taking part in the Great Patriotic War.
This fight is for somebody else's property. So the owner might one day ask
us if we didn't try to turn his own weapons, people and equipment, entrusted
to us for a while, against himself. Yura, we are participants in such cheap
show that we could just laugh outloud if it wasn't so scary. Do you, by any
chance, know why all THIS is?
- Drop it, Slava. You'll go nuts.
- Too late. If I'm asking these questions, I'm already nuts. - I fished
another cigarette out of the packet, lit it from the butt and tossed it off
into the mud.
- We shall be tossed out just like that butt when the time comes and it
will come, trust me, may be even earlier than we all think. They'll wipe the
floor with us and toss out. And just like you spit after you smoke they'll
spit on us. Don't you forget it. If we could now show our teeth to the
general, we could do it again, could we? And may be even jump at his throat
some day. We're too used to blood and death by now. I, for example, cannot
sleep in silence anymore. But if you fired up artillery or air bombardment,
I'll be asleep in a second.
- Yeah, me too. - Quietly noted Yura.
- Just answer me this simple dumb question. What is nationality?
- What do you mean? - Yura couldn't catch my drift. - You're born with
it. God has given it to you, if you will.
- But if, for example, a chechen infant were brought to France. All his
life his parents would hide the fact that he's chechen from him. They would
give him their surname, good education, first in a good school and later in
a university. All cultured up in their little French surroundings. So who is
he? OK, if it's easier for you, imagine it was a Russian child. (Pity it
wasn't me). So Yura, what do think, WHO is he?
- French, I guess, - Yura wasn't particularly confident.
- So, you see - nationality is not biological, it is a rather social
concept. Evidently, people invented this problem, this national criterion so
that they can tell other people apart and now they are using it to bump us
against each other. Remember the romans: "divide and conquer"? Do you also
remember the soviet times, when they proclaimed everyone equal? They also
sent Russians to serve their term in the military at the outskirts of the
empire, whereas Muslims would always get to do theirs in one of the Baltic
republics and Baltic people always went to Ukraine and Moldova? That was
done for a purpose, so that if a revolt breaks out they wouldn't hesitate to
shoot at strangers. And political officers would keep that fire burning at
all times.
- What about patriotism? Loyalty to your motherland?
- Motherland?
- Yes, motherland, - Yurka was jubilant. The question was in fact a
tough one.
- What is motherland, Yura? - I calmly asked him. - I'm not a Jew or a
gipsy, or some nomad. Explain to me what motherland is. What do YOU mean by
that? Once before, our soldiers called out: "for God, Tsar and the
country!", then "for Motherland and Stalin!" and now what, "for Motherland
and President!" or "Motherland and Grachin!". - I spewed. - May be in about
twenty years from now they'll make a movie how grunts march at machinegun
nests with that idiotic cry. As Grachin once said: "the boys died smiling".
I'd like to pump a 7.62 in his belly and see how he would smile to me. So,
what is it, motherland? Is it the president, who fucked it al up and then
dipped us into this burning shit? I don't even have a word in my file about
this. Would motherland that loves her sons send them to their deaths?
Couldn't they kill the bustards from a distance? You know? Of course they
could. And all of us, with the whole world, would applaud at the precision
of that surgical operation. They could do anything but this. Unless you're
on the same team with Dudaev. Patriotism? Hah. Oscar Wild once said that
patriotism is the bastard's last sanctuary. The paradox is that I really
love Russia. I love the country but I hate the government. So this paradox
bears hatred for the whole meaning of the word "motherland". It's tough to
live in a country that you hate.
- So why do you fight? And, I think, you're pretty good at it too.
- Stop kissing my ass, will you. I don't know. Maybe I'm defending my
motherland. God knows why. It's paradox or a mental case. You see it's just
too easy here, like black and white. Like Indians and confederate soldiers.
We're defending our homeland that they are trying to tear apart. I don't
know, I think I'm going nuts. You know this joke when a general arrives at
the barracks to inspect them. He's walking around, checking things out and
stuff. Then suddenly he says to the barracks' commander: "It's too gloomy
around here, could you paint the fence in all colours of the spectrum?" The
commander: "Yes sir!" So they walk further. General goes again: "And arrange
the beds in a chess order, I think it's kinda happier looking that way." The
commander again: "yes sir, general sir!" So the general's finally saying to
him: "Do you have your own opinion on anything at all? To every single
bullshit I propose all you can say is yes sir." But commander suddenly
answers: "I do have my own opinion but I don't have enough years in the
service, otherwise I would've told you to shove your orders up your ass, sir
general sir!" The story of my life, Yura. Not enough years in the service to
happily retire. Otherwise I wouldn't have had this split personality.
- Maybe you have to go see a shrink or something?
- Yeah, and he's going to explain to me what the word "motherland"
means and why exactly I'm here. And while he's at it, he can also try and
explain to me why we cannot blow the shit out of the oil refinery. But
hands, my hands, Yura, are shaking with desire. Just in spite. To pull some
pretty ugly joke on someone. The problem is that I don't think they'll be
restoring it out of their own pockets. Most probably out of the state's
budget. By the way, Yura, are you aware of the fact that our air force,
first and foremost, bombed the shit out of the local finance ministry?
- I am aware of that. So what?
- I can bet you that at this very moment they are bombing not the
palace, not the spooks' barracks, not their ammo depots, but the Chechen
state bank.
- Very unlikely. - Yura wasn't sure, - However, they could, you know.
First the ministry and then bank. Logically, they are letting the reg-heads
know about the assault. Bastards!
- That's exactly what I'm talking about. So, Yura, what is motherland?
- Get stuffed. You bloody sophist. You should've become a political
officer.
- My dad was an ex-serviceman. Therefore I have this unshakable
antipathy for political officers. But sometimes, you know, there can be
descent people amongst them. Rarely though.
- OK, let's go eat. Shall we get pissed tonight?
- I'd be happy to, but I don't think I can. Moreover, it was a crazy
day. Remember we had about 500 grams of liqueur each, with only some chicken
to chase it with, and it had no effect on any of us.
- Yep, - Yurka grimly spewed. - What a life, hah? You want to get drunk
but you can't. When I come home, I'll get totally shitfaced and dive
facedown in salad.
- Yep, salad it is. Up to your ears. Just watch the air supply.
So we laughed. When you ask yourself questions that you cannot possibly
answer, all you can do is relax, go with flow and hold on to your partner.
As we made our way inside the cab, Pashka has already set up the table and
placed an open bottle of vodka in the middle.
- Any more cognac left?
- Yes.
- So put it out, will ya. Cheer up, man.
Yurka looked at me reproachfully. It was pretty clear - no one could
tell if we ever get another chance to drink it later, but his look was
articulate enough to blame me for having a go at the fellow for my own
rotten thoughts.
Pashka left the Vodka where it was and pulled out the cognac. I opened
the bottle and poured it out into almost full glasses. I had a raging desire
to get drunk.
- Let's go! - I lifted my plastic cup.
Others followed my example and bumped their "cups" together. They
rustled and the dark liquid inside them waved when we cheered. I capsized my
glass and heavy syrupy liquid streamed down my stomach and spread out in
there with worm sensation. I closed my eyes for a moment. The next moment we
started eating. This meal was a silent one. There was nothing we could say
or do. Everything was already decided and signed off. So what's the point? I
could probably draw a request for discharge but the thought of that never
even occurred to me at that stage.
We were chewing quickly and when the warmth inside my stomach began to
disappear I poured out whatever was left of cognac. Yurka quickly grabbed
his cup:
- Are we just having a drunken orgy or we actually have a reason? Any
toasts anyone?
- No, we are just having a meal, but if you feel like saying something,
be my guest. But please make it short, I don't usually like to have my
cognac warm or vodka for that matter.
- I would like to make a toast, - began Yura, - to God. He's been on
our side so far and I think I'm speaking for everyone at this table when I
say that I hope he won't leave us now and that we somehow make it out of
this shithole...
- So that in a few years we could get ourselves into a new one... - I
barged in the middle of his toast and continued for him.
- May be we will, but we're here now and maybe tomorrow will have to
storm Minutka, so I ask God to give us strength and bring us luck. To good
fortune!
- Yura, do you realise that you're in the army now?
- Yeah, so?
- So, so. In the army we have this thing called subordination. But you,
over your commander's head, are speaking directly to God. That might go on
your permanent record.
- Get stuffed idiot! - Yurka exhaled air from his lungs and pumped in
the cognac.
Both, Pashka and myself did the same. Something moved inside my head.
Am I really getting pissed?! What a wonderful feeling. I was afraid I could
spook this delicate state away and was thus just sitting there motionless.
The alcohol was actually having effect on me and it was growing too.
- Slava, are you alright?
- Yeah, yeah, I'm fine - I opened my eyes, - Bastard, you scared it
off.
My head was back to normal by now:
- Shit, man!
- Scared what off? - My partner asked me stupefied.
- The grogginess, you moron. I'm sitting there, enjoying myself and now
you've destroyed it.
- I just saw you with that thousand mile look in your eyes, I though
you choked or something. Sorry, man, won't happen again. You might still
catch it, you know.
- Yeah, you try to catch it, - I was really annoyed, - But I can surely
try again.
I picked up the bottle of vodka that Pashka left on the table and
poured it out in cups. Yurka and I weren't chasing it with food anymore. May
be now, mixing the two, I could get a little pissed. I stood up holding the
cup in front of me.
- The third one.
- The third one, - said Yurka.
- The third, - echoed us Pashka.
Having stood like this for a while we drunk the vodka in silence and
almost simultaneously sat back in our chairs and started slowly getting back
into the meal.
- Is that true we'll have to take Minutka head-on? - Pashka asked with
his mouth full.
- Yes, sonny boy, it is, - I answered. I knew he couldn't stand when we
called him "sonny". And sure enough it enraged him this time:
- I'm not your sonny boy! I'm about to have my own sonny.
Then he added:
- Or maybe daughter. So please don't call me "sonny boy".
- You don't have to have a genius IQ to make one, Pasha, it's a ten
minute job, but a lifetime of heavy labour afterwards. Look at you, for
example, we tried really hard to make a person out of you, but yet achieved
nothing.
- Why is it nothing? - Pashka was getting furious.
- You drink too much; respect for elders is a bit of a problem too. And
we treat you like family, you know. I think we should try and be stricter
from now on. What do you think Slava?
- Yep, I guess we should use something more radical this time. Why did
you get the sentry all drunk back on the train? A pissed guard with an
assault rifle is a criminal. Which makes you, my friend, an accessary.
- Accessary to what?
- To a criminal act, dummy. Back in 1937 you would've been charged with
sabotage and next step would've been the firing squad. All nice and quick,
according to the martial law. ...A lead stamp in the back of the head, 9 mm
in diameter. - I touched his occiput, which executioners usually aimed at
and Pashka twitched.
- That is a really dumb joke, Vechaslav Nikolaevich.
I lit up. Yurka and Pashka followed my example.
- Right, Pasha, - I started, - while we're absent...
- And where would you go? - Interrupted me Pavel.
- Down the basement, to hide, - I came back at him. - Don't interrupt
senior citizens, would you. We'll most probably go with the battalions. You,
son of a bitch, are responsible for the cab and everything inside it. You
guard it with you life. If anything happens, you... - I stopped him, already
opening his mouth, with a gesture, - You will return all of it to our
families. You've got it? As for the cab, if anything happens to it, I'll
screw your head off and make it look like you were born like this. Did you
understand everything I just said?
- Yeah, yeah. It's a hundredth time you're telling me all this. By the
way, there isn't much to guard in there besides your dirty socks.
- By the way you might want to wash them then.
- Yeah, right, - Pashka snorted.
- You will, I'm telling you. You'll be washing them and crying while
doing it.
- Even if I do cry, it will be because the stench from them is
unbearable.
- Pasha, - Yura interrupted his speech, - we now have this ritual:
whenever we've got to go about our dangerous business, we tell you what to
do with our dirty stuff. But since you're not so keen on taking on the task
of washing it, you might as well be busily praying God so that he guides us
through successfully, so that you, in turn, wouldn't have to wash the stuff
in case something happens. By the way, have you forgotten what they smell
like, our socks?
- Yeah, like I ever knew! When I was "green", I'd never wash the
"vet's" socks. I'm not about to start now. - Pashka was boiling.
His anger only encouraged us.
- Pasha, you know when a person is dying; his last will is the law. You
might've heard about it.
- Yeah, so?
- So, - my tone turned declamatory. - Our last will, when we die, you
must wash our socks, press them and return to our families. One pair from
each of us you may keep for yourself. As a memory. You might want to hang
them on the wall above you bed.
- But you're not dying yet.
- But what if...
- I'm not going to wash nothing! - Pashka turned grim.
- OK, OK, we're joking, man. Don't be sad. Better yet pour out the
remains, will ya.
He thoroughly poured out last of the vodka equally amongst three cups.
We patiently waited until last drops fell into his glass. We were actually
counting them.
- Twenty-two, - said Yura, breaking the silence.
- I've heard somewhere that it is possible to squeeze out thirty-three
drops from any bottle. - I added to the conversation.
We picked up our plastic cups.
- Welcome to the brand new day. What's it going to be? - Asked us Yura.
- Fuck knows. - Pashka answered for everyone.
- Whatever happens let it be. And let's drink to that, shall we. To
good fortune and her majesty fate! - I said the toast.
- That's right! - Yura supported me, - To fate and fortune.
Then he added, almost to himself, but we all heard him clearly:
- We must be prepared for death. Although, let us hope to avoid it, -
and drank his share.
- What you just said is right. We must be prepared so that the death is
not fully unexpected. We must finish the deeds we have started and not make
any big debts so that our families don't end up having to pay them off. Let
us hope to avoid all this, - I repeated his words and finished off my cup.
Pashka drank his too and we ate some more out of the almost empty
plates and cans in silence. Then we lit up again but now in a definitely
better mood than before. The coming day did not seem so dark anymore.
- What was it you were talking about, the deeds and stuff? - Pashka
asked me, taking a deep puff out of his cigarette.
- Jesus said it right before his death, talking to his father. He knew
he was about to die and he was scared. So just in case he asked him not to
do it. - I explained to him. - When you've got time, read The Bible, Pasha.
You'll find a lot of interesting stuff in there.
- Ah, a book... - stretched Pashka.
- Read, Pasha, read. Wisdom of centuries of generations is in books
like that. You see, you can't just live according to your own experiences.
What would you teach your son? Which life examples are you going to tell him
about? Whose life? Yours? But you haven't seen much besides the constant
booze. Is that what you'd teach him? How to drink? Or how to get a sentry
pissed? - Yurka obviously had a philosophical twirl up his ass.
- Yura, don't twist his brain, - I interrupted his lecture. - At least
he won't become a schizophrenic.
- Why is that?
- Back in the military college I had a girlfriend, she was majoring in
medicine. So she told me once that on a psychology lecture she heard that if
a person does not read books, it is very unlikely that he or she would ever
suffer from schizophrenia. Because when you read a book you do in your mind
everything the characters do. You suffer, love, hate, and fight like they
do. This way his or her personality is replicated onto yourself and then you
have got your personality also deviated. Then something else happens which I
can't remember because it was all medical terms.
- Hmmm, you're right, you know. Pashka is certainly unlikely to suffer
from schizophrenia. But alcohol poisoning is definitely a possibility. -
Yura signed off on his resume.
- If, while we're absent, they'll be dispensing the aid, you come to
the brigade's political officer, lieutenant colonel Kazartsev and tell him
we sent you. Then you pick up the aid for yourself and us. If we come back
and you, bastard, drank our beer, you'd better hang yourself. You know our
sizes, don't you? I'll write them down once again, just in case. The most
important thing is the cigarettes, he should give you more of those. If he
forgets, remind him that he promised them to us. Understood?
- Yep. How much more cigarettes?
- I don't know, but we hope a lot. Don't worry, you'd be smoking them
too. Have we ever deprived you of anything?
- Nope, never.
- You see. We're struggling to feed you and you, bastardo, don't even
want to wash our socks! - Yura started the "socks" talk again.
- I'm not going to wash your socks! - Pashka exploded.
- Don't you yell at officers or I might want to mess up that pretty
little face of yours. - Said Yura to his rage. - We'll pop out for a leak.
You clean up in here, will ya, and think about the socks. Air out the cab so
that we could get some sleep, I can't see the palm of my hand.
- I'm not going to wash your socks! - Not as loud as before, but still
as angry, Pashka said through his teeth.
- Why are you winding him up? - I asked Yura, lighting up and standing
next to him.
- Bored, - simply said Yura.
- No, it seems something is eating you on the inside.
- Nothing is eating me on the inside. I just can't get that speech of
yours about the motherland out of my head. What's motherland?
- Oh, so you've got it now too. So what is motherland?
- As I said before, get stuffed!
- No, no, no. Don't tell me to get stuffed. You answer the question.
- You should've asked about the meaning of life.
- No Yura. Nobody knows that for sure, but you should know about the
motherland.
- You're right about one thing though. Motherland and government are
two totally different things.
- No, motherland and state.
- Yeah, it's OK when your country is of only one culture, like Israel,
for example.
- But what about the States. It's like a bloody Babylon in there and
they're all fine, all understand each other. No one wants to create an
independent state on the territory of, say, Texas. Why? Because they have
work over there. If you're not a bum, you live like a human being.
- That's right. By comparison, we're like walking backwards.
- OK, let's just drop this subject shall we. No use would come out of
it anyway and Pashka's already gone bananas.
- Yeah, that's for sure. Let's shoot? - Yura pulled a few signal
rockets out of his pocket.
- Let's do it! - I took a couple from him.
Having split up, we walked some distance away from each other, then
lifted the rockets and fired them, jerking the trigger cords. Almost
simultaneously two claps boomed in the air and the hissing rockets raced
into the night skies. Once at the end of their journeys they popped open
with lights and slowly started their descend back down to earth. The guards
also periodically launched these rockets, thus everything around here was
illuminated by this dead artificial light. All things had unusual, funny
looking sharp shadows. When you fire those rockets it seems like Christmas
back home. Every time, on the New Year's eve, I brought home some of these
rockets from the garrison and after the midnight we all came out of the
house and launched them. We were so happy, me and my son. The same feeling
of happiness for some reason overwhelmed me right now. I chucked off the
empty shell and picked up another rocket. Without waiting for Yura I fired
it into skies again. Heavy smell of the burnt gunpowder hung in the air.
Yura was catching up fast.
- Let's go get some sleep? - I asked Yura after the last rockets faded.
- Let's have the last cigarette and that's it for today. - My partner
said back to me.
We lit up and just sat there in silence.
- You think they'll send us together? - Yura broke the silence.
- I don't know. Maybe. Who knows.
- They might stick us into the second battalion until they find a
replacement for their chief of operations.
- Nah, they've got plenty of good company commanders there. Really,
there is no shortage of people in our brigade, who would like to become a
chief of Ops.
- Not really, but not many of them have enough experience to be one.
- You think they'll let you command the Ops?
- Maybe. It won't be you, that's for sure. You are the interaction
officer.
- Yep, we'll see.
- Imagine the guys in battalions are now busting their balls, getting
equipment and people ready. Verifying the details of the operation, people
and ammunition. Isn't it wonderful we no longer have to do this? The worst
position in the army is a company commander. They are running around like
crazy dogs.
- That's right. There is a good joke about it. Only it's about the
Navy, but still pretty relevant. They summon this old submarine captain to
the HQ of submarine operations and tell him: "We would like to introduce new
privileges to the sub crew members. What do you think about that?" The
captain, old sea dog, says "Fine, I think it's about time". So the HQ chief
again says "we would like to increase you wages, housing quota, holidays and
family leave. We are thinking when the shore-based servicemen find out about
it, they'll die of jealousy. What do you think?" The captain says: "Yeah,
that's right, but still, when the first one of them dies, could you put me
in his spot." Same goes for us, whatever privileges they promise company or
platoon leaders, we must stay away from these posts.
- OK, let's go. Tomorrow is going to be a hard day.
- Yeah, who knows when we'd be able to catch a descent sleep. You know,
Slava, you're such a bastard.
- Why is that?
- With your dumb motherland questions. My head is spinning.
- But I've let it all out and feel much better now. Let the others
suffer. You, for example.
- That's what I said, bastard.
- Don't worry about it too much. Take it easy and forget for now. If
we'll live through, we'll talk afterwards. In the nearest future, I think we
might have to lay off such conversations. Let the reflexes work for now.
- True, let the nerve system labour. I feel for the boys though. Lots
of them will probably stay here forever.
- "Nineteen year olds forever", like Baklanov wrote.
- OK. Let's go or you'll start it again.
We came up to the cab, tossed the butts out and walked in. While we
were out, Pashka cleaned up and was already in bed.
- You're not on the guard duty tonight?
- No. I'm on tomorrow during the day.
- Wow, what a fluke? Who's going to guard my sleep tonight?
- It's your sleep, so you guard it.
- You're being an asshole again, Pasha. I guess we should make you dig
a foxhole... for your horse and you together.
- Together?
- Yep, that's right. You let your tongue run free too often these days.
- How big would the horse's hole be?
- Three meters high.
- Three meters? There are no such horses.
- Sure there are. Have you been to Moscow? There is statue of Yuriy
Dolgorukiy there. His horse is about that big. So you'll be digging a
foxhole for his horse and himself if you don't keep your mouth shut.
Understood?
- Yeah, sure. - Grumbled Pashka, turning away. He knew we could make
him do it if he got to us.
All we took off was our boots and socks. The rest we kept on and only
loosened our belts a little. My AK was on the floor, next to my bed, Yurka
hung his on the wall above his head. A few hand-grenades went under my
pillow. I chambered a round in my captured suppressed Makarov, put it back
on "safety" and stashed it under the matrass on the same level as my waist.
Now we can try and catch some sleep. Pity, I didn't get pissed tonight.
Yurka, bastard, got in the way, but I'll get back at him tomorrow. I
unscrewed the light bulb above my head and everything sank into darkness. To
sum it all up for today I declared:
- At ease, boys.
So one more long day of this war was over. God and fate allowed me to
stay alive this one more day. Let's hope they won't change their minds
later. All my life in the past didn't mean much any more because tomorrow we
would have to go and try that suicidal assault at the Minutka. God, please
give me guidance! After this appeal to God I finally fell asleep.
---------------------------------------------------------------
(c) Copyright 2001 translation by Marta Malinovskaya and Konstantin Leskov
---------------------------------------------------------------
We split a bottle of vodka among all the officers including companies'
commanders, gobbled some ice-frozen canned beef. Meanwhile, our artillery
finished pounding Chechen positions. The roar of bombers ceased two minutes
later. Silence fell interrupted only by an occasional riffle cracking and
machine gun fire.
"Comrade lieutenant-colonel!" A soldier emerged from the battalion
commander's APC. "Order from the "twenty second" (it was the brigade
commander's code): five-five-five".
"Tell him: understood!" Battalion commander ran to his vehicle. We
followed him. Tank crews and officers of the second battalion also rushed to
their armored vehicles. A block before Minutka square our reconnaissance
unit soldiers stopped us and told that they succeeded in pushing the "dukhs"
from the bridge on our side, but the Chechens consolidated their position in
the middle of the bridge and on the other bank. It seemed like the bridge
was not mined, but I would not bet on it. Infantry jumped from the APCs and
waited for a command hiding behind the vehicles and ruins. Tanks had
arrived. It was agreed that infantry would go ahead with tanks following
fifty meters behind.
The Battalion Commander was in the head of his advancing unit, breaking
all instructions to stay behind during the attack. My buddy Yura and I had
no choice but to follow him. Sneaking through destroyed buildings, covering
short distances in each run, we reached the bridge. Our scouts were barely
holding the violent push of the "dukhs". A fortified stockade made of
concrete blocks had been erected in the middle of the bridge. "Dukhs" were
pouring our bank heavily with lead from behind of it not allowing us to
raise a head. Chechen mortars started covering us with shells. At first they
fired randomly, shells went into water, but after some corrections they
started to explode closer and closer and hit our bank. In addition "dukhs"
began shooting at us from grenade launchers. Reverberation was unbearable.
The bellow of mortar shells increased. Bullets were constantly knocking at
concrete blocks, which served us as a cover.
There were first casualties. In the first company, where Yura and I
were, a shell exploded very close to us, and a large fragment of it tore a
half of soldier's head off. The body was lying belly down, a half of the
neck was absent and another half bent to the right under the weight of what
was left of the head. Blood was gushing from the devastated artery staining
the wall red. Another soldier crawled to the dead, not to help, but to take
off a chain with his personal number from the torn neck and to pull
documents from the inner pocket of the uniform. When this guy turned the
dead on his back, corpse's hands trembled grasping his assault rifle as if
he did not want to part with it.
I switched my attention back to "dukhs". Chechens accumulated more
force on their side. An APC arrived to support them. We heard clanging and
engine roar from the back. It was ours tanks. They could have come earlier.
The front tank spat out a shell without good aiming. The projectile flew far
above "dukh's" heads and exploded somewhere behind them. Second shot came
closer. It scattered a crowd of "dukhs". Several bodies remained still on
the ground. Few more were screaming and squirming in pain. Mortar shelling
ceased, as well as automatic rifle fire. Battalion commander ordered:
"Second company! Podstwolniks ready! Fire! First and third companies
forward!" He jumped out of his hiding place and, ushering other people, ran
ahead being bent almost to the ground. We followed him screaming and cursing
on top of our lungs. Yurka and I blended with this rushing wave. Grenades
from the podstwolniks rustled over our heads. Shrapnel from the exploded
grenades clicked and banged on the bridge and on the other bank of the
river. Tank cannons thundered behind us. Their shells dispersed Chechen
infantry. "Dukhs" backed up from the bridge and hid behind a burned tank.
Mortar shelling resumed. The howl of flying missiles drove me crazy even
more then the noise from explosions. It I felt the air vibrating, hitting my
eardrums, already callous from explosions. My will was paralyzed. The howl
of falling shells made me feel that I knew which one was sent to hound me. I
could almost imagine it falling down on me and tearing me into hundreds of
pieces and scattering them around. I forced myself back to reality.
The second company pulled closer to us. Radio told us that the first
and the third battalions arrived and were ready to support us with fire
during the bridge takeover. A minute later, the cannons of BMPs which
belonged to two fresh battalions joined the chorus of tanks and
Kalashnikovs. Rifle's voices of the first battalion sounded like dogs'
barking, accompanied by more substantial large caliber shots of the third.
"Dukhs" almost stopped responding. The opposite bank was cloaked in
dust from shell and grenade explosions. It seamed as if we could feel this
thick air with our hands. Teeth were grinding dust. My throat was sore from
the gas from burned explosives and some other crap in the air. My eyes were
watered. But horror of the first minutes of the battle started to pass away.
Blood was pounding in my temples, sweat was dropping from under the helmet.
I unbuttoned my coat and weakened the buckle of the armored vest. Then I
rolled over to my back, fished out a pack of cigarettes, matches and lit the
cigarette. Yurka, who was next to me, reached out his hand asking for a
smoke. I shared my cigarette with him. Talking in this hellish roar was
absolutely impossible. I inhaled cigarette smoke and did not feel its taste;
just bitterness mixed with gunpowder gases and nicotine. My experience told
me that in five-ten minutes this cacophony would end and we would have to
attack running, crawling on that bridge. I don't want to! I want to lie down
and stare at the sky. A fragment of a prayer came up to my mind. I could not
remember it all. The most important - go onward and survive. Following our
Battalion Commander's order, the fire shifted deeper into the "dukh's"
defensive line. BMPs calmed down to avoid hitting us. Chief shouted,
"Forward! Hurraaah!" People sprinted forward from their hiding places. I ran
too. "dukhs" opened fire. Someone screamed on my right. Ahead of me a
soldier stumbled on invisible obstacle and was thrown back with his arms
wide spread. His Kalashnikov fell under my feet, I stepped on it and almost
slipped. Passing I glanced on the body. The groin was torn. Pants swelled
from blood, open eyes were looking at the sky without blinking. "Gone", a
thought flew in my brain. I felt terror again. A taste of blood in my mouth
returned. Dreadful, very dreadful. My legs felt as if were made of cotton. I
screamed something unintelligible. Yelled, screamed from horror. Lord God,
help! Help me to survive!
We were not too far from the bridge. Here it is, littered with
fragments of concrete, bricks, wrapped in barbed wire. Thirty men ahead of
us got out on the bridge. The other side opened heavy fire. First ten people
fell down, two of them were still moving, trying to crawl back. The rest
backed up and hid behind the ruins of the former "dukh's" stockade.
I flopped down too and crept behind a piece of concrete, stuck out my
automatic and gave a short burst in the direction of "dukh's" bank, then
looked back. All other officers were slightly behind. That meant that I
would be in charge here. Trying to over cry thunder of the battle, I yelled
that someone should drag the wounded back from the bridge. Soldiers ahead of
me nodded showing that they understood. Two of them crawled forward and the
rest opened fire to cover them. Seeing that the help is coming, the wounded
tried to crawl in our direction, but seemingly, were not able to move well.
Battalion commander appeared from behind and wheezed in my ear,
"You are a good runner, Slava."
"I would run back even faster", I answered.
"Isn't it creepier than it was at the airport of Severny here?"
"Exactly. I only wish not to let them blow up the bridge."
"For that, Slavyan, we need to take over it as soon as possible," and
he shouted again. "Forward! Forward, guys!"
Soldiers started getting out of their hiding holes despite the danger
of being killed by bombs. Battalion commander jumped from behind of a
concrete slab and ran forward. I followed him. The advance guard got on the
bridge again. Those who were retrieving the wounded rose and joined the
others. I got on the bridge, it was whistling and roaring around. "Dukhs"
shifted the mortar fire. Strong thunder came. I fell then sat up examining
myself. Everything was fine, except I couldn't hear a thing. I flapped at
one ear with open palm as if knocking the water out. It didn't help. Deaf
curtain separated me from the world. It had to be a concussion. A strong air
wave whipped my eardrums and popped them outside in, nothing terrible. It
would pass over. I looked where the shell exploded. I remembered four people
running ahead of me. Where were they? Right there. Devastated bodies of four
soldiers were lying on the bridge. Apparently, they had taken all shrapnel
as if they guarded me from it, at least so far. I felt sick and through up
partially from the concussion, partially from the view of mutilated bodies.
My fear contributed to it. I spat some bail out.
Surprisingly, deafness passed over with vomit. I started to hear
sounds. People ran by me. Some fell and moved no more. I was sitting like a
fool by the puddle of my own puke feeling good. I was alive! I had nasty
bitter taste in my mouth and was thirsty. I found my flask and took a sip. I
spat it out immediately because me friend Pashka had filled it with brandy.
I exhaled and made another sip. Head slowly cleared. All right, let's get
out of here. I could not leave the battle field with concussion, that would
be dishonest. I looked again at the remains of the soldiers, who took my
shrapnel.
Forward! Forward! Thoughts were mixed up still. I got up as if
breaching through a thick cotton pad . It was difficult to keep upright. But
I kept telling myself that everything was fine. It would pass over in an
hour. It was not my first concussion. You cure it with shameless vodka
drinking. Everything would be all right. Forward! I stubbornly made several
steps then stopped and looked around. Soldiers were lying down ahead of me,
in the middle of the bridge. Like a scarecrow, I was standing behind them
and shaking. It was my luck that I still had not been shot. I found a spot
where I could stand upright without problem. Then on half-bent, still infirm
legs, I ran toward my comrades. Forward. Forward... About ten meters short
from them I flopped down and started to crawl. After reaching ours
positions, I leaned against a concrete fragment. Soldiers, who were just
ahead of me, looked back and shouted something, but my brain refused to
comprehend. Judging by their approving and encouraging gestures, it was
something good. They figured that my hearing was impaired and lifted their
thumbs up. I nodded and yelled back:
"It's just a concussion"
Tanks began to shoot above our heads. Hostile fire faded and we went
forward again. Now I was dragging myself somewhere in the middle of the
attack group. I was afraid of firing because I could shoot our own guys.
Soldiers of the first battalion had already taken over the bridge. It was
ours at last. From now on, the main task was to keep it. I looked back.
"Dukhs" employed strong mortar fire to force the first battalion to move
back. There were only soldiers from our battalion on the enemy's bank. The
bridge was covered with corpses, I counted about fifty . Fifty died for
hundred and fifty meters of bridge. It was a horrible math. Companies of the
first battalion took the wounded with them.
"Dukhs" continued pounding bridge with shells and, at the same time,
started to shoot at us. They released a smoke-screen, which was a sign of
their coming attack. There was enough smoke even without it. Chief's order
was spread: "Get podstwolniks ready. Fire!" We started to shoot at the
swelling black cloud with grenades. Some soldiers, who did not have
podstwolniks, sprayed the smoke with long bursts from their semiautomatic
weapons. I heard screaming of wounded coming from the cloud as well as from
the our side. They were followed by clanging of tracks from behind the
smoke-screen. It was either a tank or a BMP. It began to pound our
positions. Random rocks and concrete fragments provided bad cover from
shells. Roar came from the above. Those were our planes. It looked as if the
sky opened and poured down bombs. Have you ever been under bombing? No? God
blessed you. Bombs, five hundred kilos of metal and explosives each, are
approaching the ground with debilitating howl. The roar of mortar shells is
a sweet serenade in comparison with it. Aviation bomb howl paralyzes the
body with horror, makes every cell of your body resonate. Thoughts go away
and you are lying just like a piece of meat, trembling from fear and
awaiting your death. Everything human leaves your body, you become a
trembling beast. People said that many of our soldiers had been killed by
our own aviation, but I myself had not been under friendly fire yet. First
bomb exploded far ahead. Apparently, it induced panic among Chechens,
because their fire from behind the smoke-screen stopped. A shook wave came
from the explosion. It engulfed us with horrible thunder and hot air. It
felt as if this roaring atmosphere was going to rip off my uniform, break my
ribcage, tear my mouth and cheeks. Eardrums would collapse. Blood was
already dripping out of my ears. A hail of small stones descended on us.
Someone was yelling. I looked there. A soldier was rolling on the ground,
holding hands on his eye. Blood was streaming between the fingers. A
paramedic was crawling toward him. Soldiers who were next to the wounded
grabbed the unfortunate and pressed strongly against the ground. One gave
him a water bottle, another ripped his uniform to bare a forearm. Then he
took a tube with painkiller from a medical kit and made an injection. I did
not watch the rest. Judging by the noise, pilots were about to make a second
barrage. That terrible, paralyzing howl started again. It was increasing.
Following my instincts, I squeezed myself into earth and listened the
silence that followed. Everybody was waiting where, whose chance would be to
meet with Madam Death.
An explosion happened unexpectedly close, on the left flank of our
battalion. A hail of stones showered us again. It was strange, but after all
these blasts, my hearing restored. The world of sounds rushed into my brain.
A buzz in my head had not passed yet, but I tried not to pay any attention
to it. I looked in the direction of the explosion. There was a huge crater,
about ten meters in diameter. Around it... Scattered around it were body
parts of our soldiers who happened to be close to epicenter. Smoke was
rising from the crater. There was an acrid smell, a mixture of explosives,
charred meat and burned wool. It made me sick again. Like a wave, nausea
came and rolled back. I tried to remember how many people were there. It
turned out that at least a platoon and a half. About fifty people. Oh, my
God! We had lost hundred people already and still had not strengthened our
grip on this bank! I heard Battalion Commander shouting obscenities into a
radio set. He was not using any code names, screw the discipline! He was
simply yelling into the microphone: "Recall those plains! Recall those
Goddamn plains, you whore! These faggots killed half of my battalion! Recall
immediately! I cannot hold it with my people! Why? Ask those bastards who
don't give a shit where they drop their bombs! Thank them for me! Recall
those perverts! I need support! I'm starting to dig in. Dukhs will attack in
a moment. Did you recall the plains? Good job! I'm not sure, but I think I
have more than a hundred "two-hundredths" and about sixty "hundredths". What
am I to do with them? Get me some help! I need paramedics and evacuators.
Some of my wounded are non-transportable. If no help comes, I'm out of here.
Get me some support and not like this one from the air, you jerk. The real
support! They promised vaunted paratroopers and marines! Where are those
scoundrels? Ask Severny where they are! Ask Khankala. I'm done talking. Fuck
off! Come here and you'll see why I've got no time to waist on you!"
"Dukhs" opened massive dense fire at us and at the opposite bank.
Mortars and BMP cannons hit us again. Their podstwolniks, Kalashnikovs and
machine guns did not idle either. With infuriating noise, bullets and
shrapnel plunged continuously into asphalt in front of our weak shelter
grinding bricks and concrete fragments. Squeaking of ricocheting bullets was
exasperatingly loud. The air became hot from the amount of metal bodies in
it. I heard again the shouts and moaning of freshly wounded.
Mechanic clanging came from behind. We looked back. Two our tanks drove
on the bridge and started shooting. "Dukhs" cut their zeal and transferred
all fire on them. Now it was our turn to attack. Chief ordered again:
"Forward!" We left our wounded waiting for assistance and rushed ahead. It
was so smoky that we could not see a thing on that square. We spread in a
chain, shooting randomly from hips into the smoke. Eyes were watery from
gunpowder gases. Forward! Only forward! I was screaming together with
others. Some were shouting "Hurrah!" some cursing, "Sons of the bitches!
Death to sons of the bitches!" I simply screamed with my mouth wide open
"Aaaaah!" It helped to stay cool. Adrenaline was raging in blood. I could
have head the world record in running beaten. Suddenly an automatic fire
came from the behind of the smoke screen. Chechens shot the same way as we
were doing, long bursts from hips. Apparently, they had allowed us to come
closer deliberately. We dropped down. It was suicidal to lie on the open
square. I rolled over, then again. Aha, here was a chunk of some wall. I
flattened myself against it bruising my shoulder. Then I began firing back.
The distance between us and the enemy was no more than fifteen meters,
but they had unquestionable advantage. They were hidden behind the walls
whereas we were with butts up in the middle of the square. My assault rifle
clicked and shut up, it was out of ammunition at a wrong time as usual. The
attached clips were empty too. I raised the barrel of my Kalashnikov and put
a grenade into the launcher. It would be better to shoot from the knee, but
I had no choice. I pressed the trigger with my left hand finger. Detonator
exploded and grenade flew toward the enemy. It went too far. I corrected the
aiming. Another grenade went into the launcher and the trigger was pulled.
While the grenade was flying, I swiftly detached the empty clip and pushed
the paired new one in. Thunder came from the behind. I looked back. Fuck!
"Dukhs" hit both our tanks. They were engulfed in flames. Cartridges were
cracking. Soon shells would explode. Yes, a moment later, deafening
explosion thundered, followed by another one. Tanks' towers flew off. Almost
synchronously, they slowly, very slowly went up in the air and, turning over
and over, flew in the opposite directions. The first tower fell into the
water with a loud splash, the second dropped on our side of the river. What
was left of tanks continued to burn. The body of the first one split right
in the middle. Cartridges were still bursting in flames.
Rabid from their victory, "dukhs" switched their attention and fire to
us. Mortar shells started to gather their crop again. Soldiers had to dig in
under this hurricane fire. The luckiest ones appeared to be those who found
themselves spots with asphalt destroyed by tanks' or BMP's tracks. There was
mud there, in which a soldier would dig in up to his ears. Our ranks were
dwindling with every second. Many were wounded. Sun could not break through
the dense smoke. I was hoping to hear shooting from the other side of the
square where, according to commanders' plan, paratroopers and marines were
supposed to attack. But there was nothing going on there. So it was just us,
a pity handful, no more than a hundred and fifty people, battling on the
open space with well-fortified enemy. Shouts and bursts of automatic fire
came from behind again. I turned back and saw first battalion trying to
cross the bridge. With doubled efforts, we began to pour bullets and
grenades on "dukhs". But the guys did not succeed in their attack and rolled
back once more. Our ranks shivered. The feeling of emptiness and futility of
our efforts enveloped us and crushed our will. Fear, dark fear smashed under
its immense weight everything human in our souls. The instinct of
self-preservation worked. Without any order, we began to retreat. Not to
run, but to retreat, snapping back with bursts of automatic fire and sparse
shots from the launchers, carrying our wounded, leaving our dead. Leaving
them, however we knew that if we did not pick them up by tonight, "dukhs"
would come and mutilate their bodies, would dismember them. They would cut
off noses, ears, and private parts and would throw them, together with the
body remains into the Sunzha River to feed fish. Please, forgive us, guys!
We retreated to our former positions, where our own aviation bombed us.
Suddenly we heard a shout: "Daddy is wounded!" Everybody turned and saw
Battalion Commander to a shelter, his left arm hanging like a piece of rope.
His left foot stampeded, he fell on his side. Soldiers ran to him and pulled
him out from under the fire into a temporary shelter. Officers of the
battalion began to show up, crawling and rolling on the ground. I hurried
too. I saw my buddy Yura among them. Alive! I had lost him from my sight
since the beginning of the fight. Major Ivan Genrihovich Kugel, a battalion
commander deputy came as well.
A paramedic was trying to stop Chief's hemorrhaging using rubber band
and sterile bandage. Battalion commander was intermittently losing and
gaining consciousness. He breathed hard. Something was croaking in his chest
impeding ventilation. He was pale, big drops of sweat were constantly
rolling down his face leaving gray traces on his dusty skin.
"Why did you drag your butts up here?" he asked after opening his eyes.
"Go, work. Don't leave people. Fuck off. While I'm here, my deputy is Kugel.
Get out! Work, you shitheads, work!" He closed his eyes again and passed
out. We turned to the paramedic.
"How's he? Will he make it out?"
"Leg arteries are punctured. Large blood loss is dangerous. I don't
know, I need to get him to the hospital."
"Save him! Listen you! Save the Chief or I'll make holes in you!" Vanya
Kugel yelled at the guy.
"Don't swear at him, Ivan! Let's carry him out," Commander of the first
company said.
"Take him and try to break through! We'll cover you up!" Ivan said. "
Try! Carry Daddy out!" And then loudly to cover the roar of fight, "Listen
to my order! I'm in command while Battalion Commander is incapacitated!
First company has to break through and carry him out. We all will cover
them! Dig in and fight until the last one! Radio operator, where the hell
are you?"
"There's no operator, the guy's killed, " one of the soldiers shouted.
"Tune companies' transmitters on brigade's frequency and tell that in
five minutes we'll try to carry our Chief out. Tell them to meet us and
cover with fire. Is it clear? Forward! Forward!"
First company went back under terrible fire, directed at the exposed
bridge. They were carrying Battalion Commander, who was unconscious and
three other wounded. They could not take any more with them. Only
thirty-three men were left of the company, slightly more than a platoon. We
were shooting, shooting, changing clips and shooting again. I looked over my
shoulder. Five men from the first company lay still on the bridge adding
their bodies to already so many fallen. The luckier ones had reached the
middle. Just a little bit more, guys! Press forward! "Dukhs" were furiously
shooting at us and at the first company. I hoped we had enough munitions to
respond. Don't worry, sons of the bitches, we'll talk to you in a little
while, you damn bastards!
Suddenly my soul calmed down in peace. It happens when the decision has
been made and you understand that this it is the final one. There is only an
end of the story ahead and, unfortunately, you have no influence to change
it. All you have to do is to sell your body and soul as high as possible. I
did not want to die, but I had no fear of death any more, just absolute
calmness. My head was clear. Thoughts were precise. Reflexes were sharp.
Some kind of invigorating sense came, similar to that of gambling. Who would
win? We were the good guys and they were the bad. Everything was simple. I
remembered our boot camp song:
We have everything we need,
Frozen vodka goes with meet.
Our girlfriends are the best,
So is my AKMS!
Let's make war, bastards!
---------------------------------------------------------------
(c) Copyright 2001 translation by Konstantin S. Leskov
---------------------------------------------------------------
Everybody around me was slowly digging in. That's right. An infantry
soldier will bite asphalt, but hold the position. I did not have a sapper's
spade. A dead man was lying three meters from me. A spade in a slipcase was
attached to his belt. I rolled to him and tried to unfasten the case. It did
not work out. Bullet whistled close to me. Instinctively, I ducked. However
it is known that the bullet, which you can hear, is not yours, I duck
anyway. With a jerk, I turned the body over, unbuckled and pulled off the
belt. Rolled back to my place. As soon as I found cover, a bullet pierced
the dead body and made it shiver. They could have hit me, fucking souls.
Explored my site. Asphalt was crashed in several places. I started to scoop
its pieces out with a spade and put them in front of me. Here is earth mixed
with stones. Not paying attention to my ground to blood fingers, I was
continuing digging and building a parapet. Soil was cold. My chest and belly
had already been in a small trench. Head and legs were still on the surface.
I was completely dirty, ripped off the skullcap from under the helmet. Head
was steaming. Hot, very hot.
Heard clanging and roar from behind again. Looked back. Tanks had roped
their burnt colleagues with wire hawsers and tried to pull them aside.
"dukhs" began to shot at them with mortars and grenade launchers over our
heads. We stopped digging and opened fire at the Chechen fortifications.
With dread I heard dry click of my Kalashnikov. Shit, no ammo whatsoever.
Only seven grenades were left for the launcher. Kaput! A water bottle and a
clip bag were hanging from the dead soldier's belt. I weighted the bag. Oho!
Heavy. We'll live for a while then. I pulled out three clips and examined
them. Full. Three clips thirty shots each - ninety. Not too much, but it's
the best we have. When there is no fish, even a dick is meat. I loaded the
automatic, took an aim, and gave a short burst at barely visible shadow. It
disappeared. Might be hit, might be not. Switched to single shots just in
case. Started to dig in again.
Suddenly, piercing screams of "dukhs" came from ahead. They cannot talk
quietly even in normal life, on the war they scream so that ears get
blocked. I heard a familiar clang. A tank and a BMP rolled out. Very nice.
Retreating was impossible because of risk being shot in the back and a
success of advance was also futile. It is very uncomfortable wrestle with a
tank on the open square. Different weight categories. Ivan Kugel shouted
something, but, because of distance and shooting, I could not hear anything.
I only heard the result: popping of our launchers. It's hard to get a tank
with a small launcher grenade, especially when it is coated in "active"
armor. It's a good thing for tanks, the "active" armor. A number of square
boxes are lain next to each other on the hull. There is a
high-temperature-activated explosive inside each of them. When a cumulative
shell or a "Mukha" grenade hits a tank, it produces a narrow stream of heat,
which normally penetrates steel shields. When "active" armor is used,
explosive blasts and breaks the direction of the stream. The tank remains
intact.
The enemy tank, which was moving in our direction, was decorated with
those boxes like a Christmas tree. The bastards came prepared to meet us. A
grenade launcher shot popped on the left flank. Judging by the sound,
someone used "Mukha". Cumulative grenade precisely hit the junction between
hull and tower. Explosion thundered. Smoke went up from the tank. Then
flame. Deafening blast came next. Tower was ripped off and thrown back. It
fell on "dukh's" positions. A wall collapsed in a cloud of dust. We heard
yells. Flame was raging in the tank. Ammunition was cracking inside it's
belly.
We ourselves exploded with joyful exclamations and shouts. Aha,
bitches, you have seen! What a shot! What a great shooter! I wouldn't spare
a Star of Hero for such a shot! Great job!
"Dukh's" BMP rolled back and began shelling us. Projectiles blasted in
front of us, then behind our backs. Shrapnel hit several soldiers, but did
not kill them, just wounded. To our luck, their crew was bad at aiming. An
anti-aircraft cannon, installed on the BMP might have tear our humble
fortifications into pieces.
Two our tanks stopped at the beginning of the bridge ready to open
fire. The third one was moving to our, or "dukh's", bank shooting randomly.
Infantrymen were hiding behind it. They were launching grenades into the
enemy over the tank and our heads. Great! "Dukh's" BMP retreated far back
and disappeared from the view. Our tank came closer, stopped and shot
"dukh's" positions at almost point-blank. Infantry ran from behind it. It
was our first company, which returned, and a part of the first battalion.
More infantry was running on the bridge. Those were first and third
battalions. They told that Combat died. Unconscious, he kept shouting out
orders, was restless, then calmed down and passed away. All soldiers and
officers were shaken by the news. Alexander Petrovich had been an embodiment
of courage, a colossus, something eternal and unshakable. He had been an
axle of the battalion, and he was not with us anymore. It was hard to
believe it had happened. We had used to losing close friends on the war, but
him... No I could not believe it. I did not want to believe. Everybody
around looked devastated. Petrovich was not only a commander, but for his
soldiers and officers he was a teacher, big brother, "Batya", "Papa". Sad,
too sad.
The arrived brought more ammo. It was quickly distributed and loaded
into empty clips, grenade bags, leaving the "novices" the pleasure of
shooting at the "dukhs" and digging trenches for themselves. Shelling the
enemy positions, tank backed up without turning the tower. Another one
started from "our" bank its cannon firing as it was moving toward us. Its
place was immediately occupied by the third one. Tank "carousel" was
working. The fun was about to begin. Adrenalin raged in blood again. Steam
was rising from skin. Excitement of battle came back. I looked at the
nearest soldiers. The same effect. Only half an hour ago all of thought how
to sell our lives as dear as possible, now everybody seemed to have the same
hunter's heat. Cornered rabbits, we turned into mature wolves. No! Not
wolves. Chechens are wolves. They have a wolf under the Moon on their flag.
They call us dogs. We ARE rabid dogs. Hold on, dirty wolves, we are coming!
Tear you apart, bitches! Rip your guts off for everybody! For Combat! For
those kids, who left on the bridge and for those who lay on this shitty
square. For our horror and for the bombing. For everything!
The commander of the first battalion was in charge. He was talking on a
radio for long time and then started to loudly give away orders. The roar of
the battle did not allow to hear him, soldiers conveyed his commands by
chain. The order was that after two tanks finish shooting, we would break
through. The object of attack is the building of the State Bank. He had also
said that on the other side of the square Marines, Paratroopers and
motorized infantry from St. Petersburg were ready to attack. Let's make a
stalingrad to "dukhs"! Everybody felt good. It is much better to fight as a
mob, especially when somebody else will hit the enemy in the back. We
increased small arm fire. "Dukhs" snapped back. They understood that our
attack was imminent. Their tank had been burnt, BMP was a toy against our
tanks. Now they were shaking in terror. It was their turn to sweat!
One tank finished, another rolled in. We saw a fresh inscription on its
cannon, "Catch!" People laughed over the crew's joke. Nobody knew how many
shells the tank had, everybody was counting.
"Ready!" command came. We put ourselves together, took weapons in the
ready. Pockets were full with loaded clips, heavy launcher's grenade bag was
bouncing against the leg. The order "Onward! Storm!" sounded like a song.
With the last shot of tank we charged from our trenches and ran forward.
Thunder roared behind. Bridge was invisible behind a dense cloud of shots
and exhaust gases. Our tanks and BMPs were driving across to our side of the
river. That meant that stuff was also pulling close to its battalions,
which, bunched together without knowing who where, were charging toward the
enemy's positions with shouts and bellowing.
We were not met with flowers. Long automatic bursts streamed on us.
Mortar shelling resumed. However, their aiming was wrong, or may be we were
running too fast, and the shells were falling far behind without inflicting
any damage. From the covered behind a wall BMP, a machine gun opened fire at
us. Soldiers fell. Front ranks backed up. The rear ones pressed from behind
pushing them under the bullets. We reached our first goal - a barricade of
blocks, concrete slabs and bricks. It was five meters high and fifty meters
long. It must have taken a lot of time to bring all this construction junk
here. It was solid. Direct hit of a tank shell would not destroy it. But we
were infantrymen! We climbed those slabs, encircled the structure from the
flanks. The fire contact was so dense that we and "dukhs" were shooting each
other point blank in long bursts, which interrupted only when a clip was
empty or when the owner of the gun was killed.
I ran, sweat was pouring down. Right in front of me, in an improvised
gun port, a dushman popped up, his face distorted from fear and rage. He
fired from his automatic at us. Still running, I raised my Kalashnikov and
gave short burst in his direction. He noticed new danger and transferred
fire on me. I ducked. A momentum of running body pushed me on my right side.
From this hellishly uncomfortable position, I shot at the "dukh".
Apparently, I got him, since he disappeared and did not show up any more. It
is a very rare situation in such a fight when you see the face of your foe.
I could not look closer. Shot means dead, fuck off. The most important was
to survive and take this fucking square.
"Dukhs" intensified their fire from behind the barricade. The pace of
attack slowed down. Mortar shells and grenades began to explode among us. By
radio we demanded tank's support. They hit "dukh's" structure with direct
shots and "dukh's" rear with plunging fire using high-explosive shells. In
contrast to the conventional shells, these fougasse projectiles explode not
at the moment when they hit the ground, but a short time after. When it
happens, shrapnel consists not only of the metallic parts of the shell
itself, but also of stones and other sediment particles, which penetrate the
body and kill just like the metal fragments. These shells are good to
destroy enemy's fortifications mowing down everything inside. We rolled
back. Shrapnel and brick fragments were flying on us, gathering their part
of death crop to the God of War. Medics carried the wounded and killed from
the square. Those beside them helped to evacuate their comrades. "Mukha"
grenades flew in our direction from behind the barricade. Feeling that we
had stampeded, "dukhs" tried to counter attack. Under the cover of their
grenade launchers, they charged from their shelters, squeezed out from
narrow slots, made by our tanks' shells. With screams
"Allah akbar!" they rushed on us. Many had green bands on their
foreheads. I had been told that those were suicide fighters or something. I
had not asked "dukhs" themselves about it. If I catch one, I would
definitely ask, if I would have enough time, of course...
With these thoughts I rolled to the left and climbed into a small
crater left from a tank cannon shell. Ground was still slightly warm and
unbearably smell with acid - burnt explosives. I rose a bit and gave a short
burst at the "dukhs". To check myself, so to say. Quickly looked around. The
others were also in haste looking for shelters to get ready for the oncoming
fight. Looked at the advancing "dukhs". About two hundred showed up and were
trying to attack. About two companies. Not too many, guys. With you, whores,
we finish up soon. Screaming from horror and frenzy, "dukhs" ran on us,
desperately shooting from Kalashnikovs. Some were throwing grenades. Not
allowing them to come closer, we met their wave with automatic fire. A
machine gun started "talking" on the right. Another one a second later, then
one more, then a couple. Trying to muffle their fear, soldiers were yelling
too. In most cases they were shouting obscenities, not virtuous, but short
like an automatic shots. Someone on the left flank was giving a short burst
at the enemy after each yell. Apparently, he was remembering his killed
friends.
"For Fyodor!" - burst.
"For Vaska!" - burst.
"For Pashka!" - burst.
"For Senya!" - burst.
He had had a special account with the "dukhs". Inadvertently, I
adjusted to his curses. When he was giving short, two-three bullets, burst,
I was giving it too. When he was quiet, my automatic also was silent. I
waited until he shouted the next name and whispered it too. Burst.
"For Mishka!" - burst.
Chose a dark silhouette of a "dukh", who was hurrying to his death.
Pulled the trigger. "Dukh" fell as if he had been cut down. I checked
whether he was moving. No. Finished. Burnt out. A voice again, "For Sashka!"
Repeated the name silently. Chose the next "dukh". A green band on the
forehead. He was shooting with Kalashnikov, taking aim carefully. Bitch! A
soldier screamed on the left.
Inhale, exhale, on the half-exhale, stopped breathing and placed an
aiming slot, a foresight and a dark spot of the "dukh" on the same line.
Beast! He was not standing in one place. Wounded soldier moaned on the left.
Just a moment, just a moment, brother, I'll knock down this pederast and
help you. Wait a little bit! Aha! Here is this bastard! Not taking any aim
gave a short burst. "Dukh" fell and screamed. Wounded. No problem. I'll
finish him later.
I rolled to the left. To suppress fear, made a couple of short bursts.
Here was the soldier. His face was pale, large droplets of sweat were
pouring down from under his dirty cap. Left shoulder was devastated. Coat
swelled from blood around the wound. Using his right hand, he had tried to
tighten a rubber band to stop bleeding. It did not work. I unbuttoned his
coat to expose the wound. The soldier creased from pain and yelled right in
my ear. Unwillingly, I started back.
"Don't yell, brother!" I tried to take the coat off him. He grimaced.
Painful, very painful. He reached his breast pocket with his right hand,
pulled out an individual medical kit and gave it to me. I opened it. A
syringe tube with anaesthetic was in place. It was good. I put it aside.
Unsheathed a trophy stiletto and carefully cut his coat on the shoulder. Wet
from blood, fabric and cotton insulation was not yielding easily. Fountains
of dust rose around us. I heard abhorrent screaming sounds of ricocheting
bullets. Bastards! Don't you see that I am tending a wounded? I left the
soldier, rose on my knee and poured the approaching "dukhs" with lead. They
fell and shot back. I shouted to our soldiers nearby, "Hey, men, cover me
up! I'll deal with wounded. Then help me to evacuate him."
"All right, we'll do!"
"Let's bury them!"
Shooting rose around. I looked at the "dukhs". They tried to snap back
at first, but then did not even dare to raise their heads. You earned that,
bastards! I lay on my side by the wounded and continued to saw his bloody
outfit. Whenever I pressed it, blood poured out, rolled down the knife,
fingers and flowed into my sleeve. It looked as if I was cutting not fabric,
but a living being and it was heavily bleeding. Too much blood. I had to
hurry. I did not want to lose this guy. He was bravely endured all pushes. I
cut off a collar, a sleeve and a piece of coat on the wounded shoulder.
Then, working together, not rising from the ground, we took off the rest. I
made a long cut on the right sleeve of his shirt exposing skin. Took an
anaesthetic syringe from the kit. Twisted off a cap, punctured small
plastics bag and punched the needle into soldier's arm.
"Hold on, man! I hate injections my self. It'll be better now." I
plunged. The liquid came out from the tube. I pulled the needle out and
massaged his arm.
"What's your name?"
"Sasha", the soldier pushed the word out of him.
"Everything will be all right, Sasha! I'll take care of your arm." He
nodded agreeably. He must have felt too bad if it were painful for him to
talk.
"Hold on, brother, I'll be done soon." I examined the wound. Smashed
bones were seen. "Make a deep inhale, I'll tighten the band." Wounded
soldier obediently inhaled and held the breath. I swiftly threw the rubber
band around the arm near the base of the neck, pulled it under the shoulder
and tightened it on the chest. Guy's irises dilated from pain, but he only
moaned silently, afraid of letting air out. I patted his cheek.
"That's all, son. Now breath. Inhale often and deep, but make sure not
to get dizzy, understood?"
"Yes," he whispered.
"Don't speak, man. Save your energy. Everything will be fine. Now I'll
bandage you and then we'll carry you to the medics. They'll patch you up.
Don't be afraid. We'll break through!" I yelled all this into his face and
winked encouragingly. My grimace might have terrified a normal person. Dirty
face smeared with blood. But the soldier understood me right and smiled
weakly in response. Meanwhile, I took his Kalashnikov, took a bandaging bag
from the foldable butt, and tore its rubber package and yellow paper. Took
out a pin and cotton tampons and, trying not to touch their inside parts,
applied them to the wound. One tampon to the inlet hole, another on the
outlet. Then, clumsy, lying on one side bandaged the shoulder. From time to
time, I looked in soldier's face whether he was alive. Alive. With healthy
hand, he began too search for something in his pockets. Wanted to shoot
himself?
"What are you doing?" I asked alarmed.
"Want to smoke, cannot find. Do you have some?" he half-whispered,
half-rustled.
"You could not find better time to smoke!" I was glad I had been wrong.
"If you want to smoke, you'll live!"
I took out cigarettes, inserted one into his lips, stroke a match and
lightened up.
Don't inhale the smoke too deeply or you'll get dizzy!" I warned him. I
finished bandaging him. It did not look nice, but it covered the wound
completely. I was steaming.
"Hey, men! I've done, carry the wounded away, I'll cover!" I lay on the
back, took a cigarette and smoked looking at the sky. My soul felt good. I
had not made too many good deeds in my life. Now I had probably saved man's
life. Good! Great! I turned and saw three soldiers rolling toward us. Then
looked at "my" wounded. I was almost in love with him. I had saved his life.
He would live. It was great! I felt myself such a good man, that I became
proud of myself. Good job, Slava! I turned to my belly, grabbed automatic
and looked around still holding a cigarette between my teeth.
While I was saving the soldier, "dukhs" attack was stopped. They lay
down and were shooting at us. No problem. We'll break through! I joined the
cacophony of the fight with three short bursts at the places where "dukhs"
were crawled about.
Soldiers came, took the wounded, dragged, carried him to the bridge.
Good luck to you, Sashka!
I gave a long burst. Rifle's lock clicked dryly. Pulled Sashka's belt
with a foot. It had a clip bag, bayonet, a spade and a water bottle. Took
one clip, inserted into my automatic, put the rest into the pockets and
opened fire again. "Dukhs" became agitated and started to retreat. Aha,
wetted your pants! We rose and charged forward.
Onward! Bear's roar came out from my chest. Lion's roar. Onward,
hounds! Let's corner the wolves! Tear them apart like a flock of dogs kills
a wolf. Hurrah! Kill the bastards! You are not wolves! Puppies! I rushed
forward together with the rest. There was no command to storm. Everybody was
running in the same heat. Nobody needed to be hurried. Nobody needed to be
sworn at or kicked pulled by collar to be risen from the ground. Shut the
bastards down! Hurrah! Aaaah!
Blood was pounding again. Mind left me, only instincts remained. Let
them work. There was a task, an extreme wish to survive. Mind would be of no
help here. Only forward! Zigzagging, twisting, rolling, you name it, but
only forward! Stop meant death! Forward! Hurrah! Kalashnikov at my shoulder,
I made few shots. Threw myself to the left, rolled, shot at the barricade
standing on one knee. Rolled to the right, one more roll. Burst while lying.
Jumped, made ten steps forward with another burst. While approaching the
"dukh's" stockade, our bursts became longer. We shot randomly. Shot at a
sound, a shadow, and a flash. Shot without thinking.
Mind, get out! Blood is storming. A taste of blood in my mouth. I
wanted to smell "dukh's" blood with my nostrils, to see how it was streaming
out of wounds, to feel how warmness left his body. Go away, mind! You cannot
endure all this. Let a Neanderthal possess the body and the brain
completely. Let him command. Only then, mind, you and I will survive and
come back in one piece. Let the Neanderthal take us out of this! Hurrah!
Aaaah! And the mind left me.
Power came instead. Arteries, veins swelled. Mouth was open wide, there
was not enough oxygen. I felt as if I was observing everything from aside.
Soldiers and officers ran to the barricade like a single organism. Some
climbed it, throwing down wounded and dead "dukhs". Some squeezed through
slots and holes in the wall. The enemy ran. Get them! Take! Strangle! Tear
them into pieces!
The clip emptied. Right hand detached it, threw aside and started to
pull out the next one from the pocket. A "dukh" rose suddenly from behind a
pile of trash, bristled up and raised an assault rifle to the hip level. It
was too late to insert new clip and cock the lock. "No time," flashed in my
mind. A Neanderthal talked again. I made a long launch forward with my right
foot. The barrel of my Kalashnikov thrust into soft "dukh's" belly. My mouth
was open. I bellowed with inhuman voice. It was a roar of victory. My own
eardrums barely survived it. "Dukh" tried to make a shot from his gun.
Ha-ha-ha! Won't work! I grabbed and easily snatched the weapon from him.
Threw it far away. His pupils became dilated from terror and pain. I pulled
the barrel out. "Dukh" fell and clutched his devastated belly with left
hand. His right hand was searching for something on his belt. I did not know
why, but I knew exactly that he was looking for a grenade. He knew he would
not survive and was determined to take me with him. Poor bastard! Bestial
smile bared my teeth. I jumped as high as I could and landed on the chest of
lying "dukh". I directed all weight of my body on the heels of my heavy
boots. I clearly heard, felt how enemy's ribcage crackled. I jumped again
and fell on my knees. I heard the ribs shattering again. Not rising from
broken flesh, I looked into enemy's eyes. Blood was fountaining from his
mouth and streaming from ears. His body jerked, bent and stilled. Open eyes
stared at the sky. Pupils reflected icy, slow winter clouds.
Are you sick of my story, dear reader? Unfortunately, it is not show
off. It happened with me in real life. I am neither a superman, no a crazy
maniac. Simply, if you want to come back alive and in one piece, you must
become an animal in its worst. The monster of war gives birth to monsters in
the brains of its participants. Those monsters will come out on the streets
and take what, in their opinion, belongs to them. Belongs by the law of war.
We do not know any other law.
Forward! Forward! See, mind, there is nothing to do for you. You will
not be able to endure this. You will escape the reality, you will flee and I
will lose you. Hurrraaa! Tear them apart! Chew them down! What for? For my
friend's and my own lives!
We did not notice how we appeared on the other side of barricade. A
building of the State Bank of Republic of Ichkeria, pox on it, was
blackening fifty meters ahead. With wild yells and howls, we rushed toward
it. Hidden by a cloud of exhaust gases, tanks and BMPs flowed around the
stockade and took a position behind us. "Dukhs" hit us from the Bank
building. They were shooting from small arms. Although the distance was
large and nothing could be seen because of smoke, their bursts were long
like in close combat. It indicated that the "wolf puppies" were panicking.
Long bursts decrease the precision of fire. I wanted blood. Only blood and
nothing else. I liked the experience of "dukh's" abdominal cavity dissection
without anesthesia. I was drunk with fight. Drunk without wine. Onward,
Neanderthal! Blood and life! Aaaaaaa! Nevertheless, the first ranks lay
down. Somebody had stopped moving already. Somebody, howling, squeezing his
wound, was rolling on asphalt covered with construction trash. Their
comrades, fellows were hurrying to help them. We'll kill for every "one
hundredth" and "two hundredth".
Whatever genes were roaring in me, I decided not to make a hero out of
myself and fell on the dirty asphalt like all the others. Dusk had fallen on
us already. Those fools, our Mister Constitution Guarantee and his Defense
Minister, started the war in winter. It would be much easier in summer. Warm
and dry. Long day. No need in carrying heavy sweaty coat and in worrying
about firewood. There would be no problem in sleeping right on the ground.
Now was different. Winter darkness came down. Cold penetrated my body. Wind
drove sparse clouds away. The full Moon illuminated us like bright lamps in
a theatre lighten the scene. Thank you, Comrade Rolin, for your support from
the air and from the other side of the square. If they did not engage the
enemy during the daylight, they would certainly abandon us like dogs to die
in this crappy place. Why? Who knows. It's warm now in the Kremlin, in the
Government House, in the State Duma, in the Federal Council and Defense
Ministry. I was thinking that bankers, for whom we were earning big money
while breaking our necks, were not shivering from cold. If we did not go
forward within two hours, we would start dying from hypothermia. Many
soldiers' hearts would not withstand abrupt temperature drop. Alcohol,
brandy, vodka, hot food and hot tea were in immediate need. Otherwise, we
would not see any luck. All Siberians, we understood well that unless we had
hot food, we would not be able to take Dudaev's Palace that night. I had
some brandy, but others... By the way, I indeed had brandy! It would not be
enough, of course, for the whole brigade, but I could share it with
two-three soldiers. No problem.
Fire never interrupted. Two soldiers ahead of me next to each other
jerked and lay motionless. Arms and legs were bent in unnatural ways, heads
thrown back. Wounded do not lie like that. One of the men next to me tried
to crawl to them, but was caught by other soldiers.
"Idiot? Where're you going? They'll shoot you not asking your last
name. Lie still."
"You son of a bitch, you want to leave them like that?"
"They are done. Sniper killed them."
"Get off me, you cowards! There's a fellow from the same town as I am.
We're from the same apartment building. I don't believe you! Let me
go!" The soldier was shouting trying to break loose from his friends. One of
those holding him lost patience and released the guy. Using the moment, the
soldier tried to run to the dead, but the same man who had let him go hit
his nose strongly with elbow. The soldier passed out. Two others grabbed him
under arms and gently carried the guy to the rear. Voices followed them.
"Why did you punch him like that?"
"He was in a hurry to get under a sniper, I just calmed him down. Don't
worry, he'll be all right, even thank me for that."
"Exactly. He'll be very grateful!"
"He'll be in the Med Company soon. It's warm over there. They'll
bandage his nose. He'll spend a couple of days there. Not too bad!"
"Come over, I'll smash your mug and then tow to the medics. Come on!"
"Get off."
"Hey men, I would not refuse half a bottle of vodka, uh?"
"Shut up, motherfucker!"
"If no alcohol, we'll have to attack."
"Right, see the Moon is coming up."
""We've got to either roll back and gobble alcohol or forward. It'll
lighten everything in a minute like a train station."
"What're we gonna do?"
"Who knows. There are commanders. Let them have a headache."
"Oh, a shish-kebab would be just right, " someone said dreamy in the
Darkness and snapped at "dukh's" direction with automatic fire. Tanks
began shooting behind us. After several correcting shots, shells started to
hit the target more or less precisely. We met every good shot with cheering
yells. It became too cold to lie on the ground. I pulled out my bottle with
brandy, untwisted the cap and made a large gulp. Immediately, I felt warmer
and cozier. At this moment, the mind of a twentieth century man got along
well with a gloomy ancestor from cold caves, who was ready to take over and
fight enemy with his claws and teeth. Apparently, they both liked the
brandy. I made one more gulp.
Hot air waves from explosions were rolling over our bodies raffling our
clothing. Good! It slightly warmed us up. The State Bank building caught
fire. We cheered. Snow had melted under us and we all were lying in muddy
puddles. An order was spread by chain, "Get ready for assault!" Based on my
previous combat experience, I had a big doubt in the necessity, rationality
and effectiveness of this kind of night assaults, but I should have argued
about it on the command point. Here, on the square, I had to follow the
order. In two minutes the order for assault came. Tanks were still shooting.
Shells flew right above our heads. After a ten meter run under friendly fire
our pace slowed down, because we were afraid of getting hit by our own
shrapnel.
Mind left me again. I did not comprehend what was happening to me. Here
was the building. Dark craters from aviation bombs punctured the square
around it. The building stand solid. It was old. At that time they used to
build well. "Dukhs" were intensively pouring lead on us. Apparently, they
also had snipers hidden somewhere.
Our first ranks... About twenty people were killed or wounded. Men from
the second row tried to drag their comrades our of fire range. Many fell
too. Some were just writhing, others, squeezing their wounds, were rolling
with terrible scream and howl on muddy and bloody asphalt. Some made
attempts to escape on their own. But many... Many men lay motionless.
The whole scenery was illuminated by the fire of burning Bank,
permanently hanging in the air torch rockets and by the Moon, which was
indifferent to everything. Descended night was pierced by bursts of tracking
bullets from the tank-mounted machine guns. The thunder of battle, howl of
shrapnel and ricocheting bullets, their disgusting whacks whenever they hit
dead bodies created a nightmarish acoustic picture, which paralyzed my
brain. Not thinking was the most important. Otherwise, psychosis was
guaranteed. Work, work! Forward, only forward! Ten more minutes of sitting
in one place and we are finished. Dear parents, sweet wife, here is a zinc
box with the body of your beloved warrior-liberator, the re-installer of
Constitutional Order. Don't forget to sign here, here and here. Please don't
vilify us. We did not send your beloved there. Who knows who sent him.
That's all. Please accept our sincere condolences. Good bye! No. We can not
stay here. We have three more "parcels" of this kind to deliver. Go to the
military commissariat and social security office after funeral, fill out an
application for aid and pension. Don't forget to bring twenty five memos
with you. Make sure they are all originals, otherwise we won't give you
anything. Have a nice life.
F... you! You won't bring me back in this shitty box, unless I kill
myself after a wound. Forward! Come on, infantry, move your asses! Move you
stomachs! May be, there are still money in the Bank. Huraah! Dengi, money,
babki, cabbage! Since this is the State Bank, there may be even dollars in
it. May be there are, but they won't wait for you! Forward! Move! Don't push
me with your Kalashnikov, idiot, it can shoot.
The dirty-gray mass of our brigade came to life again. We ran, ran,
ran. Tanks stopped firing to let us in. The Bank was so close. But what is
it?
From the darkness of our flanks we heard roar and clanging of tracks.
Is it help coming? Hurrah! Push! We'll bury "dukhs" in a moment!
Tanks indeed drove out from darkness. They were T-64s. Ours were T-72s.
These old tanks began to shoot us point blank. Infantry was hiding behind
them. Not our infantry. "Dukhs" had used the moment when in the rush of
battle we started our assault. They hit our rear from both flanks. Nobody
figured how many enemy tanks had been there. They hatched into our ranks,
their tracks grinding and threshing our soldiers' bodies. Arms, legs,
intestines, clothes were being wound on the wheels and gears. At the same
time, they shoot at the tanks at our rear. Again, at our tanks. Those could
not fight back, because of the danger of killing our infantry. They were
sitting ducks. "Dukh's" tanks were shooting them like targets on a training
ground. We were herded on a small patch in front of the Bank where "dukhs"
were shooting us at point blank range from three sides, leaving us not a
slight chance to escape the ambush. Our tanks could not help us and we could
not get out to give them a chance. We were rushing about like a frightened
herd of sheep.
Someone succeeded in putting out one "dukh's" tank. It caught flame.
While its ammo cache was exploding, we made an attempt to break out. By that
time, our tanks were all burning bringing additional light to the blinding
picture of the square. I did not feel anything but horror. It ousted all
other emotions from me. Neither Capitain, no citizen Mironov had existed by
then. Instead, a shivering clot of shit wanted only one thing - survive.
That was all. Simply, survive. No long forgotten prayers came to my mind, I
was just running into darkness. Stumbled, flew down, did not feel any pain
from bruises and cuts. Nothing, except freezing terror. Flocks of bullets
followed us. Yells of rage and pain, screams of wounded men. No way of going
back to help them. Panic and horror smeared me on the asphalt, forced me to
run in straight line like a rabid dog. Despite the speed, I felt that I was
staying in place. I was running on the square, which I had been taking just
several hours ago fighting for every centimeter. The place is littered with
bodies of our soldiers, as well as "dukhs". I stampeded on one of them,
fell, jumped up and ran forward. Corpses of my friends had not provoked any
emotions already. There was no passion for revenge. I only felt irritation
that they were obstacles for my run. What the hell are they doing on my way
when I do not have any strength left? I slowed my pace down. Many our people
were running around me. Bulged inhuman eyes, mouths open wide in soundless
screams, same as mine. Nobody yelled. Nobody shouted obscenities. Everybody
was saving power for the run. "Dukhs" were reluctant to come closer to us.
Apparently, they were afraid of us striking back. Do not corner mouse, it
becomes more vicious and aggressive than a cat.
We lost our direction in the dark. Now we were already running not
toward the bridge, but to Dudaev's Palace. Flares rose up in the sky and
illuminated running herd. Those were we. There was nothing human in our
faces, eyes, breath and stares. Kalashnikovs and machine guns fired. First
row was mowed down. The rest tried to turn back still running. Those in the
rear pressed them, shoved on the ground, fell themselves, rose and ran again
into darkness. I saw sparkles from fatigue in my eyes. Nobody helped nobody.
Wounded were shooting themselves. Some were making attempts to crawl into
obscurity, farther from the light of the flare rockets. Moon the traitor,
bitch, f... thing was lighting stronger than those flares through the
curtain of smoke. I had almost had no strength left. Lord God! Not the
captivity! Better death than that! Help me, Lord! Save me!
I switched to trot. I was out of breath. I wanted to rip off the
armored vest and the coat, to fall on the bloodied asphalt with open chest
and lie. Lie still, hyperventilating, restoring breath. No! "Dukhs" would
come over and then - captivity. I tried to run again. Blood was pounding
inside my skull like a Siberian river on the falls. It felt like the skull
might explode from extensive pressure. I could not hear anything from
exhaustion, except for blood pounding in my ears. I slowed down my pace.
Hanged the Kalashnikov on my neck and put my arms on it. It was hard not
only to run but also simply to move the feet. A soldier came from the right.
Without saying a word, he grabbed me and dragged along. After several meters
I understood, that I only impeded his own run. A barely heard voice broke
through my torn bronchi and nicotine plugs.
"Go. Go. I'm not of a help to you."
"What about you?" yelled the soldier into my ear.
"Go. I'm on my own..." It was hard to talk.
"I won't leave you!" Desperation was heard in his voice.
"Get off me! Save yourself, I'll follow you." Gathering my last
strength, I pushed the soldier with both hands. We flew in opposite
directions. He disappeared. That last push consumed what was left of my
energy. I sat on the ground breathing hard. Spat out viscous saliva. Heart
was pounding fast. From my studies in the military college I knew that it
was bad to sit right after run. Heart valves might close and not open back.
When dancing sparkles in the eyes went away, I looked around, my stare heavy
and bleak. My gun was still hanging from my neck. No energy was left to take
it off or to simply move a hand. Not far from me, silhouettes of people were
sitting and lying. Most of them were officers. It was understandable. Their
age and physical shape were far from the best. Civilians sometimes complain
that the military retire earlier. If there had been anybody older than forty
five among us, they would have not been found alive later. Some were sitting
on the dead bodies. May be it was comfortable, but I had not come into that
state yet when I would not be able to perceive nothing. People were sitting
and looking in the direction of the enemy. Somebody was about to resume the
run, but many, including myself, were ready to accept the last battle. Mind
awoke, horror subsided. Rage began to speak up and it was good. Healthy
anger meant that I had not yet become an animal. It was time to figure out
how to get out of there and save my skin. Soul was the last thing to think
about. I remembered God as a powerful benefactor, whom I used to rely on.
I coughed. A clog of nicotine mucus was painfully and slowly making its
way out of my bronchi. Need to quit smoking or cigarettes won't allow me to
reach the sanctuary of a stone, a bump or a hole. Spat out a wet shniblet of
mucus. Felt a taste of my own blood. A piece of bronchi came out too. I took
a deep breath. Chest pain knifed me again. Another suffocating seizure of
cough. The only desire was to tear my chest apart and let fresh air in. I
was too tired to run long distances. I would rather do something simple,
short and quiet. "Learn English!" my Mommy always told me.
---------------------------------------------------------------
(c) Copyright 2009 translation by Oleg Abramov
Date: Nov 2009
---------------------------------------------------------------
Meantime the resting ones, having caught the breath, began to come
closer to each other. Approximate expectation gave us the figure of about
fifty people to be her. Mostly the officers, but there were good few the
soldiers and the warrant officers. Many ones had already thrown the armor
vests off to enable running. The faces were confused. Everybody actively
started to discuss the happning hushfully. After the strongest shock, after
indignity, stress everybody wished to get a load off his mind. Everybody had
a thought that the brigade had made everything according to it.
- They kicked the shit out of us.
- Stronzos, they lost all the brigade!
- Lousy, lost. Many ones got out the firing limits.
- Prick! Did not get out! Did you see the land battleships burning?
- Saw. Everybody saw. About seven-eight ships were shot down sure!
- And why didn't our ones shoot?
- Don't understand? We would have been laid resting at that place!
- To be laid resting is better then funky fleeing.
- Thus why did you rush? Could have stayed there. Would be granted the
hero posthumously.
- Aha, would be overtaken and granted more!
- These stronzos from Moscow and Khankala will never bring thanks.
- If there were no those gorks with their wreched plan of head-on
attack of fucking square, we wouldn't bunk now, as the Sweden near Poltava!
- Schnooks!
- Sodding fugs!
- Rolin for certain did not put thr other troops in force intentionally
to let the "dukhs" crush our brigade deadly!
- Exectly, he can not forgive us for our mutiny at the Airport "North"!
- Where's this goon?
- He should be here. i would look at him!
- Bullshit, we will be blamed about unsuccessful assault.
- Blow it out...
- You'll see. They'll say the plan was magnificent but we had been
against it from the beginning and that's why we refused to execute it.
- May be they'll also blame us to have affection to Dudaev.
- Fuck away with your Dudaev.
- He's as mine as yours.
- I would see him in coffin in white slippers!
- It's still him who tries to put us into coffin.
- Sweet F. A.
- Half of brigade has been already put.
- Exactly, may be will get to us also.
- We should scarper away!
- Where to?
- To our waterside. Did the brigade tech go there?
- May be "dukhs" made entrapment there?
- Everything's possible but we shouldn't prop up here.
- Correct! Must go.
- The sooner the better.
- Wouldn't they arrest us?
- What for?
- For not executing of the order!
- All the brigade they would not arrest.
- It's not a thirty seventh year now!
- And not a forty first when the retreat-bloking detachments were put
behind.
- Correct!
- There was no order "no step back" as the one of Stalin!
- There was the only order!
- Which one?
- Should not bother the refinery.
- Stronzos, sooterkins, dog faces, scoundrels, cruds, crums, rubbers,
fags, traitors! Have framed us!
- Don't vociferate! "Dukhs" will hear.
- Fuck'em. Let'em listen.
- Want to be the "twohundredth"? Welcome! But not with us. Go. "Dukhs"
are waiting over there.
- Stop shooting the carp. Have to go.
- Correct.
- Go quickly.
- What about entrapment?
- We'll fight, what else?
- Has anybody radioset?
- I have, - the fighter stepped out of the darkness haveing the large
radioset pickback. Why didn't he cast it away when "cross-racing" - unknown.
- Call for ours, - the voice seems to be of the first battalion
com-bat.
Radiop started buzzing in the phone breastplate. In about five minutes
they answered. Radiop gave the breastplate to somebody and that one started
speaking. Everybody has quikened.
- "Nipple-25", i'm - "Uran-5"! Read me good? Read You good also. Where
are we? - and he asked us from the darkness:
- And where are we, guys?
- At the south-eastern end of the square. About tree hundred meters
from the bridge. Ask wether they ready to assist us with fire if "dukhs"
shoot during the breakthrough.
- Hallo, "Nipple"! We're at the south-east of the square, nearly tree
hundred meters from the bridge! If force - will assist us firing! Why you're
not there? Where are you? And what about us? Understand. To force to the old
brigade command center. Is that all? What? Who was hurt? And where is he?
And San Sanych? - com-bat broke all the possible traffic rules but everybody
didn't care at all. Any one liking that not could try to come and arrest.
Everybody followed the traffic attentivly.
- And what should we do? That is what i can advise me myself. Where to
are you going? Are they following you? Many our "boxes" are burnt? Cricky!
And what shall we do? Yes i understand we should go close to the old
commander center. And did you report to tool Rolin? And what did he say
about reinforcing? Nothing? Dork! Domino. Pulldown. Over.
- How does it go?
- Tell, don't tip toe.
- Hist. Hush. Let him speak.
- Thus, guys, - it was audible it was hard to speak, - the first point
- Bahel was hurt...
- Hurt?
- Is he alife?
- Where's he? - the vexed voices were heard.
- Don't break, let me speak all and you can ask!
- Don't stew us, speak!
- Bahel was heart in the laeg, at thigh. The heart is bad.
- He stays alife?
- Shut your face, dork! - the vexed hollo was heard.
- Stop shouting. You dork.
- Will come now to break you dull head. Shut up, jerk!
- You jerk! - the kickers were not seen in the darkness. The moon and
the paraflares starting up far away produced the shadows but unclear, vague,
breaking ones.
- Sod it! Will you give it a rest or not?
- Will stand up now and cool you out! - the voice of the first troop
and the second battalion was heard. He's alife, smoky!
- Once more for unique dull repeating: the commander of brigade was
heart in the leg. At thigh. The heart is bad. Being unconscious he was
brought to the "North". Domino. Thaat's the first.
- What else is heard about tha commander?
- Sod it, why are you so dull?
- Let the man to speak first and you can ask your stupid questions!
- Talk.
- No any more news about commander. It's known only he was brought to
the "North" but they were not able to fight their way - "dukhs" made a
block. Tehy fought the way to Khankala, will bring by "spinner" from it to
the "North", after the first surgery.
- Well, gloria Tibi...
- Will you shut up, cow, or not?
- Keep on!
- The brigade is commanded by Bilich temporary.
- San Sanych?
- But who else? Have we many Biliches?
- Bilich commands the brigade, - repeated com-bat, - they have left,
fought the way to the south. The tech went through the bridge but it's not
at that place now...
- Fucking fiasco of brigade!
- Exectly. Have broken, crashed... - the hysterical note were heard in
the voice of the speaker.
- Shut up, hysteric!
- What's on?
- They burnt, annihilated five our battleships, three infantry
carriers...
- Five battleships?
- Sure, fucking fiasco of the brigade!
- Will you shut up at all or not?
- They offered to fight the way to the former point of the old command
center by ourselves and to wait there for the others to comem closer. That
was all from me now!
- And where have they gone to?
- They have "dukhs" on the tail. They steped in the entrapments couple
times. Lost about five more men and now having parted at the small groups
will concentrate at the former command center.
- Jollily!
- We were crashed as the Germans in the Great Patriotic near Kursk.
- But shut up you, ugly creature!
- And why do you writhe to be heros!
- We should go to "dukhs" and surrender. About just the first
battleships convoy on the last year november they just gave back the ones
who they had let to be alife!
- They'll give you fuck all!
- Have you forgotten what they had made with our captives?
- And we're also so good ourselves...
- Yes, our arms are bloody up to the neck.
- There will be no mercy.
- That's fact.
- So, what shall we do?
- Where? To fight the way to the ours.
- As a first step to reach any unit and after that to go to the former
command center.
- And how can we go to it?
- Someone knows fuck all/
- Let's look at map.
- The map is of forty seventh year edition, it's the same as to look at
the "Belomor" package.
- Ye-a-ah. We should come closer to the ours.
- Let's start with leaving from this sodding square.
- "Let's start". It's easy to say "let's start". And where to should we
go? What is the direction? Through the bridge?
- Will try through the bridge sure some of the soldiers have gone
through the bridge. Kinda strong fire duel was not heard.
- And would you, at the "dukhs" place, let the bridge be without
protection when having reconquered us?
- No-o-o-o, definitely.
- That's what it is. We and they graduated from the same military
colleges. So that means we and they think identically.
- They do not think. They are "pakies"!
- If they were "pakies" we would not be sitting here and quake with
fear!
- That's exact!
- We have to leave by the same way - to the south-east, and from that
place maybe we're able to get across to that waterside.
- Sodding Bastards!
- Who about are you?
- About everybody! And about the moscowers and the wiseheads form the
General Staff, and the dorts from Khankala and Mozdok. And about Warrantor
of our Constitution and minister of defense, and about shitty "dukhs"! Why
the devil gave me this hole - Chechnia?
- Don't belch!
- I belch? I want to live! Understand? I want to live!
- Well, live, so we do not impede you.
- You do not impede but the moscow sooterkins do impede.
- They impede all the Russia. And what?
- Why whaat? Let's go to Moscow!
- Just from here?
- You sould get out of this square at first, and after that collect the
troops to march agains Moscow!
- Eh, we have no leader, headman!
- The headmen are only amoung the Indians and tribes.
- Cut the cackle! Leave.
- Where to?
- To the south-east, there's no other way.
- But maybe will risk through the bridge?
- Go to risk.
- Are there volunteers to check the bridge?
The silence broken by the bursts near Gosbank and screeches of
chechens.
- Nobody. So, we go trough south-east. Will look around in the daytime,
shelter us, call for ours. Let's go.
- Let's go.
- But may be actually through the bridge?
- Go. Nobody stops you. Go.
We had started. Having spread at the distance of about 30 meters as
lengthwise as breadthways. Slowly walking. Attentively minding our steps,
listening to the every rustle. The moon was being at the very zenith,
lighting us the way and us also.
"Dukhi" did not think about following us up. They either were afraid or
did not want bother themselve with following up. In the times of the naval
battles when there was Katharina the Second the fleeing enemy was not
followed up. It was named "to build the golden bridge". Refined freak.
Ushakov, having become later admiral, was the first one who broke that
tradition and laid in the turkish of those days with might and main.
The mouse should not be backed into corner and malcted the rescuing
hopes. We were similar to those mice. May frightened, coursed, but if we
were forced into mousetrap, we would fight as fated. Nobody raced to rescue
us. Nobody organized rescuing expeditions. Would not wonder that, if we're
able to wrest out of this "cul-de-sac", it will turn out there is already no
our brigade anymore. Disestblished in the likeness of reduction of budgets.
Ye-e-eh, that's not America. They had sent whole the fleet for rescuing
of some lost in Yugoslavia pilot. And sure he was rescued! In the impassable
forests they found him and evacuated. What about us? As the classic told:
"Blamed and forgotten!"
Eh, Motherland, you're not mother for us but the fremd aunt! Do not
want my son to serve in your Military forces. In order to shoot as me into
his own people because the talantless whim and poitical impotence of th
ekremlin alcoholics having gone gaga.
When you are in shit up to eteballs, unknown if you're able to swim out
of, you will damn everybody and everything. All the world except yourself is
guilty about everything. But when analyzing existing situation it turns out
that there's no my fault in it. No also any fault of the ones walking with
me. There is only the endless political ambitions. If the canons are
speaking the diplomats should cushion.
Such thoughts aggregating floundered in my head while we were getting
out of the square carefully and trying not to make any noise. Attentively
passed over, overstepped the dead bodies. Alternately there were liing our
fighters and officers and the chechen militants. Everybody realized that our
guys will already not be buried, nobody will send their bodies to
Motherland. Ministry of Defence will economize awfully at the buriing of its
own soldiers. It is allowed not to make five years payment, medical
insurance for death, not to outprocess the pension. Why? He's gone for a
burton and that's all. Yes, we're searching for him but understand us, there
no money, there were the hard combats, communal graves and other bullshit.
Lord forbid me to lie nyself in such way. I'm not a kind Christian. No!
Merely do not want to leave my family without means of sustenance even after
my death. So, the result comes that the one should to die in our country in
hte way that his mortal remains would be identified, brought to the
relatives and earth with funeral blizzard. Madhouse, no less than madhouse.
And the lads, overstepped by me feeling no usual qualms, will already not be
brought back. Niether brought back nor sent at home. Niether alife nor dead.
The furious appealing of the wag-lawmakers in the sharp polemic will not
assist. The sermons in the churches will not assist also. Interesting, but
why the Orthodox Church does not impede such madness as this war? Damn
interesting. Haven't seen any priests here. The only one is here, they say,
the prior of the local temple. But in the troops or near them i haven't seen
anyone with cassock on. And nowadays the local russians - who were
slaughtered as the sheeps by chechens at first, and after that we boned
downwith the air bombs, artillery, mines, fusilladed their houses, knowing
not that there are ours inside - need both the medical and psychological
assistance and also the God's word. Where are these Lord's servants, take'em
devil?
There's nobody. The manycenturies war of the government against the own
people is going on. The church aside as always. And the worse circumstance
is that it provide the criminal war. The history comes back but on the new
higher quality turn of spiral. What for, what for, Lord, did it fall to my
lot to be born in this just damned by You country?!
Paradox is that i love and it and hate it equally deep. I can give my
life for my loved-hated Motherland. But only for the Motherland and not for
its governors.
Nowadays a word "collegiality" has become popular again. I spent much
time to realize its sense. And the sense is that this eternal drem, faith of
the russian people into the kind good tsar. There will come master, master
will judje us. Ukh! No one of the tsars, governors of Russia, including the
today's, never cared for the people. The people is an enemy, and even more
awful then the enemies' agents and other abroad evel spirits for the
governors. Nobody had any thoughts about well-being of the people NEVER! The
dead people - the good people. It's very comfortable to put against two
tribes of the own country. Meanwhile they are fighting nobody never will
reember why do they live so bad. Why does not somebody pay'em the earned
money? Where are the pensions? Where are the payments? Where are the
scholarships? What where? The ugly chechens are guilty in everything.
Everything is spent on the war against foe. As soon as we win him, as soon
as we restore everything destroyed in Chechnia, you immediately get back
your honestly earned thing. And inflation? What's that got to do with it?
The war, why aren't you able to understand that because of the war we had to
increase the prices a bit, to print the money a bit. Nothing at all serious.
We do not just talk you will never get'em. Will, will get! Just tolerance a
bit. Sure at the Great Patriotic war, they say, did not pay money at all.
Everything for the front, everything for the victory! And what is the
difference now? Doesn't matter that we attacked Chechnia but not they did
us? Shut up and sniff through the two holes. Or we have many republics, if
you clamour - we'll start the war against'em, but exectly you will sure see
neither money nor your children!
I haven't seen neither today during the combat, nor earlier both
Jirinovskii's falcons and blackshirts, making the hand up as a fascist
greeting. And they were the ones who shrieked about patriotism, great power
statehood, orthodoxy, christianity and other trifle most of all in the
ninety third.
"The Russian people - chosen by God!" Ukh! Codswallop. Paranoia! Only a
hundred years ago one orthodox was allowed to change another orthodox for
the well-bred whelp without doubts, to lay the one in deadly only following
his own whim, shoot the one. Torture with strappado is spoken to be our
native invention. To say truth the other peoples had the things alike but
they went out of fashion quickly. For example the "bootikin". But tortures
and prisons took roots at our places in the aincent times. So, it turns out
that the third of population is imprisoned, the third works at the producing
where at the conditions differ from the penal colony ones only a bit, and
the third secures and guards in the penal colony and searches at the
producing for the candidates to be sent to the colony.
Kinda social formation has changed but the customs, system, minds are
the same ones. As the nomenclature ruled us as it makes it now. Many ones
decided they are really allowed to discuss the decisions of Clan, Family, so
that the last ones decided to divert attantion to the unfit object. And by
the way to plunder something, to decrease the population. Not necessarily to
feed, to teach. So that - gone for a burton, bullshit. This is not a Rio de
Janeiro, this is worse much. And there are here only the soldiers walking
with the white trousers on and only before turn-in. No enough trousers for
all of them...
Futher and futher on we were going from the tommygun crackle and
explosions, from the victorious guttural shrieks of the local aborigens made
for us the classical battleships entrapment. The guys learnt the technique
in the colleges good. They annihilated the superior enemy with the small
forces, and still consider in the march column. Well no matter, uglies,
we'll come back, we will come back certainly. And we'll hold you, bitches,
wholly, with percents, accountable for that shame and panic we had felt half
an hour before. We'll only sort out the relationships about the promosed
reinforcement with the boors from Khankala and the "North" and we'll come
back. Will come back maybe pushing by bayonets the thick-fleshed colonels in
front of us. And even better - will skulk behind their bodies. We regret
only the guys, the real tough men, who are liing under our feet and whose
bodies we being tired can not pass aside but merely step over them, they'll
not see that. There will be victory, certainly will be. Let it be even
Pyrrhic victory. But it will be. Much blood. We won't leave from here. Not
because we do not want but because we're dangerous. There will be yet many
assaults, and the more of us stay here on the dirty overspit blood asphalt
the better will fill the old alcoholics of the former CPSU Central
Committee.
Maybe some of the parents of the liing here soldiers had a work at the
defense factory producing the rounds, missiles, mines. And who knows maybe
that bullet, frag, missile, mine killed their son. And the wages are not
paid the parents yet for the produced output. Nightmare! No, Slava, your lid
flips indeed, and flips hard. such fantasies and associations can not come
into the normal brains.
I pawed over my belt. Something was guggling in the flask. Definitely
the half-swallow of congac, but i like drink water. I quickened pace and
touched the next one in front of me. Can not see in darkness if it was a
soldier or officer. "Everything was messed in the house of Oblonsii..."
- Man, have you some water?
He turned back. It was a soldier from the second battalion. When
running through the bridge he was next to me. Apparently he was able to
recognize me also and smiled and showd at the ears. In the moonlight i did
not notice that there were the thick bloody crusts cloded around his ears.
Contusion. Very hard contusion. The break of the eardrums. My contusion is a
baby talk on the lawn comparing to his one. I indicated i was thirsty. The
fighter nutated agreeing and not stopping unbuckled the flask from the belt.
I made a couple of swallows. He drank it all after getting flask back.
Buckled it the empty one on.
I took out mine and, having flept myself at the throat, showd that
alcohol was still in the flask and gave it him. He made a swallow and gave
it back me. I indicated he was able to drink it bottom up. He made that with
gratitude. I did not grudged about cognac. He needed more. When having
contusion, contrary to all the docktors' admonitions, the militarie drink
hard and bate by that way the pain feelings and easier come round.
Wanted devilishly and awful to smoke. But nobody risked to make any
fire. Everybody drrew in the quiet silence. Only some spalls cracked under
somebody's heel, and that's all. Did not wnt to speak and it was senseless.
Everybody was crushed by the happening.
Firstly, by the shameful our fleeing, by the loosing of the guys. Here
there were many of them, left and necessary for nobody, behind our backs.
And not possible to take'em away, to bury'em.
Secondly, the brigade is disseminated, knocked out, is lost in fact.
Thirdly, the commander is heart and will not come back to us. San Snych
is, of course, a good executive officer but what is he as a commander? They
can send to us some undesirable outsider at all. Whome our brigade is as the
stop-signal for the hare. He will come to get advancement, to get the
rewards, and will relate to us absolutely not better then our President does
to his people. Wait and see. If stay alife, of course.
Fourthly, well, - sheerest personal uncertainty. What will be about me
personnaly in this beef up, about the ones who are walking near me? Nobody
was able neither to say anything nor even to make any thought of it.
Now of the two aims which were standing before me earlier, and namely
to execute the aim and to survive, only the one exists - to survive, to
scramble! Anf after that we'll see who's guilty in our triumphal shame. The
President is far away but the "dukhs" are near now. Now we're bunking from
them but every dog has his day.
But after all it is a pity, sincerely pity, that we can't reach the
Warrantor of the Constitution. Sincerely pity. Well, no matter, the
elections are soon. Will vote in another way. Not for the
prostituts-communists and not for the hysterical Jirinovskii, no! We'll hope
that maybe some good head will be found, which will not make the war against
the own people with such primitive, barbarian methods.
Eh, dreams, dreams. The dreams of the russian idiot that it's possible
to put the good tsar in power. The tsar who will not despoil the people,
will not bring the people's possession "over the hill", and will not put the
money on his abroad accounts. Eh, the dreams of idiot! The intellect can not
inderstand Russia! Russia can be only believed at. In other words she is so
capricious hysteric woman, schiz that it's impossible to communicate to her
on the normal language of logics? It results so. Who's guilty in that? The
governors guess that the people is. The people guesses that the talntless
governors are. And when there is no consent in the comrads, the good music
will noever come. Marasmus, marasmus. For which sins, God, for which sins
did you let me be born in this country?
And here one seditious thought had come into my head. And may be there
are no neither hell, nor paradise meaning the sense which the "reverend"
church fathers hammered in us. If we suppose that we have lived somewhen in
another dimension but it is exactly this place where the hell is situated.
And the sinners, in other words the ones living nowadays on this planet are
sent to be reeducated. If you were able to manage worthy all the fallen to
the lot of you assays, having not violated ten commandments of the Christ,
or how many of them has Mohammed and other "tru" religious teachers, - then
following the results you will be taken to the paradise or returned to the
normal life. Well as the there are in life always more the scums then the
normal men, so that is why they send the cattles, hangmen and similary ones.
This terrritory is the huge one. And the ones who sined less - they are sent
to the higher civilized countries. So, in the former life i've made a lot of
dirts, and in this one, seems, even more.
I smiled about that balderdash to myself involuntarily. If it had been
so easy! Meantime, and when reasoning the time and the distance had passed
quickly, we trooped off the square far away enough. There were the destroyed
houses ahead, aside. Even not the houses but the ruins. They were taken from
hand to hand for many times. And many ones were merely destroyed, the others
were staying without the highest floors, mottled by the frags, bullets,
castaway, abandoned, left by the people. Stalingrad and indeed! All this was
seen unrealistic in the illusive moonlight. The head was buzzing, the body
was craving the resting, the colored spheres were floating in the eyes
because of the weariness. No any thought had already stayed in the head. The
feet were merely bringing my body nechanically somewhere forwards. Not a
human kind in all the sense of the word, but a wordless animal. Even of the
"dukhs" attacked now then scarcely anybody were able to maintain smart
resistance.
The first ranks had come to some beforetime prestigious hous and came
in to inspect its remains. Sure it was situated almost in the city center.
The flats were certainly the ones of the most expansive and now nobody would
give for them even a half-coin.
The second small group had left for inspecting of the near-standing
building. Even being tired we realized well that it's impossible to hide in
the only ratty corner. It's dangerous. That's why we took two corners. We'll
be the iron rats, gnawing through the concreet floors.
The first group returned back at first and giving a hand's wave offered
to take the night lodging and rest in the basement of the nearest house.
Nobody was commanding. Merely the ones who wanted to enter that building
left for it. I went with the second group. Why? Don't know. Went - that's
all. About thirty men wnet into the second building, rather in it's
basement. But they did not stay in one room - they had dispersed in all
directions. Benefit that the basement was large. There were six ones having
stayed with me. It was dark in this lodgement. We began to strike the
matches, lighters lighting our temporary lodgement. The room was a sqare
lodgement of five per five meters size. There were two windows to the
street. About tem meters to the exit door.
When the matches were fired the rats sprang in the diverse directions.
Many rats. I feel calmly about different poultry. The main thing is that it
would not bite you and not try to gorge you.
We had set the sentries and, having cuddled together closer, as it's
warmer, drop into the uneasy slumber. Wanted to eat and to drink very much.
There were no such possibilities. So, we had to forget ourselves with the
heavy night fantasies, waking up after every suspicious rustle and because
of the near shooting.
Regularly waking up to change for the other side or trying to draw the
chill wet legs in, hugging each other, whisking the muzzling us rats off, we
had slept not more then three hours. The dream did not bring us relief. The
feeling of despair was increased by the hunger and thirsty sharpening. The
radioset stayed in the first building, so we stayed being unknowing
absolutely what was happening. Slowly, heavy waking up the people smoked,
made the "visits" to the fighters and officers in the next lodgement. The
darkness in the street had not passed yet when the smell of the smoke and
baked meat came from the futher corner. Sure meat. That unearthly smell
could have been impossiblly confused with anything! But where is the meat
from?
All the crowd moved to the smoke and baked meat smell. And it tickled
the nostrils, fogged the heads, provoked the sicky cramps of the stomach,
inspired the hope for the best, arouse the memories about the home, about
the picnics with shashliks. God, what was this smell! I have felt such an
unearthy smell never in my life.
When the hungry crowd had come, flown to the impromptu fire made of the
remains of the funiture and papers they saw two soldiers were baking the
small piecws of the fresh meat on the selfmade spits. The pieces were
trickling, the blood was dropping from'em, the bree was bubbling. The view
was unforgetable! Naturally, the first question from everybody came out:
- Where is the meat from?
- Where have you taken it?
- Have you some more?
- Isn't it a man?
- No, it's not a man! - the soldiers laughed, continuing baking their
shashlik.
- So, where from have you taken the meat?
The impatience and hunger invaded the people. The fighters, baking,
faltered, clearly wishing not to tell their culinary skills' secret. The
pause was sure too long. The strain grew up. The crowd of the weaponed,
uptight close to the border hungry males was able to cook the slum-burners
to be shashlik. Finally one of them mumbled:
- The rat.
- Rat?!
- Yes, it's rat, - the fighters confirmed.
- Are you mad? - many ones were shocked.
The stomach was cramping - not from the hunger, from the sickness. If
there were anything inside, certainly would go outside. Many ones felt the
same reaction. But nearly half of us, having no any emotions, came closer
and began to wonder about the hunting and culinary secrets of the "chefs".
As quickly as possible i went to have fresh air. "Gourmand's" particular
retorts were being heard after me, the exoticism lovers:
- Have you tasted it?
- No, but look - very fat!
- Exactly, how much blood, fat! M-m-m-m! Wow!
- Is it the one rat or two?
- One.
- Look, how large.
- There are many of them here - enough for everybody!
- I read and was taught in the school that the rats are the contagion
carriers, including plague.
- We were taught many things in school, what's the sense?
- Don't like - don't eat! - somebody answered with the iron logics.
- Nothing will happen!
- Correct. Noting will happen, we've only to bake the meat better.
- Well baking is baking, but not to dry the meat, not to make it dry,
fragile and untasty.
- Look, the crast has already baked.
- Exactly! Classy crast!
- Men, let me tast the small piece? A?
- Ouh, we need not much.
- If like it will catch rats.
- Pity that thedogs are not here, there is more meat.
- There's so much in the man. Why don't you eat?
- Blow you out with jokes. You eat.
- I was not able to bear these talking, went out and started inspecting
the flats' remains. The smell, smoke, blown out of the basement, rose up the
ladder, hunting me literally upon my heels. I started smoking, trying to
send away the importunate smell. The stomach was cramped because of now the
hunger then the thought that i feel the toasted rat's smell. Br-r-r-r!
From the former experience i know that the hunger feeling will leave me
on about the fourth day of not eating. There will be only the dull weariness
but there will not be hunger at all. The thoughts will roll over slower and
slower, and not about the matter but about the meal.
When on nintyth year we entered Baku, then we were brought to the
Saliansie kasernes, and after that moved to the fourth microdistrict as a
commandant unit. We were responsible for the law order keeping and for the
closing time in that houses block. Our com-bat was not a fool and that's why
he organised the battalion command center in the large supermarket. When we
wnet doen into the basemments there was thick meal on the ground. There was
only the bread dearth. As in that anecdote when the butter should have been
spread on the sausage. But it seems as if i repeat. The thoughts are hung up
about the meal. Instead of the meal i jobed the bitter smoke inside myself.
Some fuss rose up below. Stop, listen to. "Dukhs"? No. The hazardous shrieks
were coming from the basement:
- Come-on, come-on!
- Chevy'em on me!
- But where to do you chevy'em, idiot!
- Let-s start again.
- There, they ran in that corner.
- Go round, go round.
- Come-on, chevy'em.
- Pity, we can't shoot.
- You'll shoot! "Dukhs" will hear.
- Beat'em! Beat!
- Not with barrel, fool!
- Beat with butt!
- That's not a club! Beat with butt end.
- But he'll be all bloody!
- No matter, will wash!
- Why, you don't want gorge?
- Got it!!!
- Many?
- Three ones beaten dead.
- Little, need more. There's nice stable.
- Let'em beat themselves.
- Stop talking. Enough rats for all.
- Fat!
- Normal.
- Beat fat ones.
- Can't see if they're fat or not.
- Go round, now we'll chevy again.
Stopping the sickness urges i went out to the street not to hear the
dying rat's cheep. The nightfall has already passed away. Have stopped.
Watched the street long while. Can see sort of no activiy. The shooting was
heard from the "Minutka" side occasionally. But the sound showed that it was
not a combat. Most probably, these were the sentries shooting the sectors of
responsibility. Running, bent in two, i crossed the street at diagonal and
rushed into the hous entrence where at the first group had hidden. When
entering the two sentries met me cautiously.
- Hi, bros! - i addressed'em.
Having seen me to be ours they eased and smiled.
- Good morning, comrad capitan, - one smiled widely. Showing thirty two
teeth.
- What's news?
- Nothing. And what's the noise have you there?
- "Dukhs"? - the second chorused.
- No. Those are the wisemen happened who had opened the season of
hunting for rats.
- For rats? - the amazement of the one was genuine.
- For rats? - the second one was, contra, thoughtful. As if he rolled
off the thought of the baked rat. His eyes were covered with the dreaming
shroud.
- Yes, rats. the fighters brakfasted with the baked rats in the
morning, so the others wished also.
- Did you taste? - the second fighter asked. The first one felt sick
himself having only the thought about the rat.
- No. Did not taste. And don't mant, - i confessed honestly. - Where
are the fathers-commanders?
- Over there, - the first fighter amorphously waved with hand showing
to the ladder leading into the basement.
I went downwards, not hurrying, smoking while walking through the
ladder covered with the stone frags and rubbish, into the basement
lodgement. About ten people were sitting there inside. Futher, about
ten-fifteen ones were sitting and liing in the next room. I marked the
dreaming Yourka amoung them. Came close. Kicked his hip easily.
- Stand up. Will oversleep the Kingdom of God.
Yourka opened his eyes quickly. And having seen me, jumped up. We embraced.
- Alife? - he was sincerely glad.
- Alife. Where to will i leave.
- And i thought unwittingly that's all now...
- Sod all!
- Well, give tell what good about you, - Yourka clearly was not able to
find the place.
- Why the news? - i wonderd. - All the same as about you. If you want,
can go to my basement, the fighters have beaten five rats just now and are
cooking breakfast now.
I told hem shortly the "rats" epic. He was amused. And did not hide his
stomach to be horrified when getting the only thought about the rat-fleshy.
- Did you eat yourself? - he asked, managing hardly the sickness urge.
- No. Not touched the bottom yet.
- But the rat?
- But why are you wondering? The Chinese say that everything growing
and moving is eatable. But only the one should be able to cook according to
the prorated manner. No matter, Youra, will want eat, will gorge not only a
rat.
- Necessary to go away from here qwicker or loos half mind.
- That point is correct, bro. If we'll sit more, all the fuck-up for us
will be provided.
The sitting nearby ones listened to our talk ans opened the discussion
about the problems of nutrition from the expedients. We did not interfere,
stepped aside.
- What the center says? Have you connected already?
- Have connected. Ugh! - Yourks spet. - Nothing good. The brigade
remains are trying to fight the way to the old center. The headquarter,
rather all the remains of it got circled and fights. The paratroopers are
cast to assist. Don't know will they fight to them or not. Bullshit is all
that.
- You haven't brought a new mind of the bullshit. Will we make
anything?
- Is there any plane yet?
- No any plan. Sitting. Read fortune at coffee grouts.
- We should scarper, before cleanup is not started. They're sure not
fools also.
- I've already told... - Yourka hopelessly waved with the hand. - They
say it's necessary to sit, to watch around. I just tell bullshit.
- Let's go and try to speak. We're indeed the quarter officers.
- Let's go but there will be a little sense.
But hving not we made coming to the first battalion commander yet as
rushed in one of the sentries, securing the entrence in the house, and
shouted in half-wisper:
- "Dukhs" are going!
- How far away?
- In a couple ouses from here. Making cleanup.
---------------------------------------------------------------
(c) Copyright 2009 translation by Oleg Abramov
Date: Nov 2009
---------------------------------------------------------------
Meantime the resting ones, having caught the breath, began to come
closer to each other. Approximate expectation gave us the figure of about
fifty people to be her. Mostly the officers, but there were good few the
soldiers and the warrant officers. Many ones had already thrown the armor
vests off to enable running. The faces were confused. Everybody actively
started to discuss the happning hushfully. After the strongest shock, after
indignity, stress everybody wished to get a load off his mind. Everybody had
a thought that the brigade had made everything according to it.
- They kicked the shit out of us.
- Stronzos, they lost all the brigade!
- Lousy, lost. Many ones got out the firing limits.
- Prick! Did not get out! Did you see the land battleships burning?
- Saw. Everybody saw. About seven-eight ships were shot down sure!
- And why didn't our ones shoot?
- Don't understand? We would have been laid resting at that place!
- To be laid resting is better then funky fleeing.
- Thus why did you rush? Could have stayed there. Would be granted the
hero posthumously.
- Aha, would be overtaken and granted more!
- These stronzos from Moscow and Khankala will never bring thanks.
- If there were no those gorks with their wreched plan of head-on
attack of fucking square, we wouldn't bunk now, as the Sweden near Poltava!
- Schnooks!
- Sodding fugs!
- Rolin for certain did not put thr other troops in force intentionally
to let the "dukhs" crush our brigade deadly!
- Exectly, he can not forgive us for our mutiny at the Airport "North"!
- Where's this goon?
- He should be here. i would look at him!
- Bullshit, we will be blamed about unsuccessful assault.
- Blow it out...
- You'll see. They'll say the plan was magnificent but we had been
against it from the beginning and that's why we refused to execute it.
- May be they'll also blame us to have affection to Dudaev.
- Fuck away with your Dudaev.
- He's as mine as yours.
- I would see him in coffin in white slippers!
- It's still him who tries to put us into coffin.
- Sweet F. A.
- Half of brigade has been already put.
- Exactly, may be will get to us also.
- We should scarper away!
- Where to?
- To our waterside. Did the brigade tech go there?
- May be "dukhs" made entrapment there?
- Everything's possible but we shouldn't prop up here.
- Correct! Must go.
- The sooner the better.
- Wouldn't they arrest us?
- What for?
- For not executing of the order!
- All the brigade they would not arrest.
- It's not a thirty seventh year now!
- And not a forty first when the retreat-bloking detachments were put
behind.
- Correct!
- There was no order "no step back" as the one of Stalin!
- There was the only order!
- Which one?
- Should not bother the refinery.
- Stronzos, sooterkins, dog faces, scoundrels, cruds, crums, rubbers,
fags, traitors! Have framed us!
- Don't vociferate! "Dukhs" will hear.
- Fuck'em. Let'em listen.
- Want to be the "twohundredth"? Welcome! But not with us. Go. "Dukhs"
are waiting over there.
- Stop shooting the carp. Have to go.
- Correct.
- Go quickly.
- What about entrapment?
- We'll fight, what else?
- Has anybody radioset?
- I have, - the fighter stepped out of the darkness haveing the large
radioset pickback. Why didn't he cast it away when "cross-racing" - unknown.
- Call for ours, - the voice seems to be of the first battalion
com-bat.
Radiop started buzzing in the phone breastplate. In about five minutes
they answered. Radiop gave the breastplate to somebody and that one started
speaking. Everybody has quikened.
- "Nipple-25", i'm - "Uran-5"! Read me good? Read You good also. Where
are we? - and he asked us from the darkness:
- And where are we, guys?
- At the south-eastern end of the square. About tree hundred meters
from the bridge. Ask wether they ready to assist us with fire if "dukhs"
shoot during the breakthrough.
- Hallo, "Nipple"! We're at the south-east of the square, nearly tree
hundred meters from the bridge! If force - will assist us firing! Why you're
not there? Where are you? And what about us? Understand. To force to the old
brigade command center. Is that all? What? Who was hurt? And where is he?
And San Sanych? - com-bat broke all the possible traffic rules but everybody
didn't care at all. Any one liking that not could try to come and arrest.
Everybody followed the traffic attentivly.
- And what should we do? That is what i can advise me myself. Where to
are you going? Are they following you? Many our "boxes" are burnt? Cricky!
And what shall we do? Yes i understand we should go close to the old
commander center. And did you report to tool Rolin? And what did he say
about reinforcing? Nothing? Dork! Domino. Pulldown. Over.
- How does it go?
- Tell, don't tip toe.
- Hist. Hush. Let him speak.
- Thus, guys, - it was audible it was hard to speak, - the first point
- Bahel was hurt...
- Hurt?
- Is he alife?
- Where's he? - the vexed voices were heard.
- Don't break, let me speak all and you can ask!
- Don't stew us, speak!
- Bahel was heart in the laeg, at thigh. The heart is bad.
- He stays alife?
- Shut your face, dork! - the vexed hollo was heard.
- Stop shouting. You dork.
- Will come now to break you dull head. Shut up, jerk!
- You jerk! - the kickers were not seen in the darkness. The moon and
the paraflares starting up far away produced the shadows but unclear, vague,
breaking ones.
- Sod it! Will you give it a rest or not?
- Will stand up now and cool you out! - the voice of the first troop
and the second battalion was heard. He's alife, smoky!
- Once more for unique dull repeating: the commander of brigade was
heart in the leg. At thigh. The heart is bad. Being unconscious he was
brought to the "North". Domino. Thaat's the first.
- What else is heard about tha commander?
- Sod it, why are you so dull?
- Let the man to speak first and you can ask your stupid questions!
- Talk.
- No any more news about commander. It's known only he was brought to
the "North" but they were not able to fight their way - "dukhs" made a
block. Tehy fought the way to Khankala, will bring by "spinner" from it to
the "North", after the first surgery.
- Well, gloria Tibi...
- Will you shut up, cow, or not?
- Keep on!
- The brigade is commanded by Bilich temporary.
- San Sanych?
- But who else? Have we many Biliches?
- Bilich commands the brigade, - repeated com-bat, - they have left,
fought the way to the south. The tech went through the bridge but it's not
at that place now...
- Fucking fiasco of brigade!
- Exectly. Have broken, crashed... - the hysterical note were heard in
the voice of the speaker.
- Shut up, hysteric!
- What's on?
- They burnt, annihilated five our battleships, three infantry
carriers...
- Five battleships?
- Sure, fucking fiasco of the brigade!
- Will you shut up at all or not?
- They offered to fight the way to the former point of the old command
center by ourselves and to wait there for the others to comem closer. That
was all from me now!
- And where have they gone to?
- They have "dukhs" on the tail. They steped in the entrapments couple
times. Lost about five more men and now having parted at the small groups
will concentrate at the former command center.
- Jollily!
- We were crashed as the Germans in the Great Patriotic near Kursk.
- But shut up you, ugly creature!
- And why do you writhe to be heros!
- We should go to "dukhs" and surrender. About just the first
battleships convoy on the last year november they just gave back the ones
who they had let to be alife!
- They'll give you fuck all!
- Have you forgotten what they had made with our captives?
- And we're also so good ourselves...
- Yes, our arms are bloody up to the neck.
- There will be no mercy.
- That's fact.
- So, what shall we do?
- Where? To fight the way to the ours.
- As a first step to reach any unit and after that to go to the former
command center.
- And how can we go to it?
- Someone knows fuck all/
- Let's look at map.
- The map is of forty seventh year edition, it's the same as to look at
the "Belomor" package.
- Ye-a-ah. We should come closer to the ours.
- Let's start with leaving from this sodding square.
- "Let's start". It's easy to say "let's start". And where to should we
go? What is the direction? Through the bridge?
- Will try through the bridge sure some of the soldiers have gone
through the bridge. Kinda strong fire duel was not heard.
- And would you, at the "dukhs" place, let the bridge be without
protection when having reconquered us?
- No-o-o-o, definitely.
- That's what it is. We and they graduated from the same military
colleges. So that means we and they think identically.
- They do not think. They are "pakies"!
- If they were "pakies" we would not be sitting here and quake with
fear!
- That's exact!
- We have to leave by the same way - to the south-east, and from that
place maybe we're able to get across to that waterside.
- Sodding Bastards!
- Who about are you?
- About everybody! And about the moscowers and the wiseheads form the
General Staff, and the dorts from Khankala and Mozdok. And about Warrantor
of our Constitution and minister of defense, and about shitty "dukhs"! Why
the devil gave me this hole - Chechnia?
- Don't belch!
- I belch? I want to live! Understand? I want to live!
- Well, live, so we do not impede you.
- You do not impede but the moscow sooterkins do impede.
- They impede all the Russia. And what?
- Why whaat? Let's go to Moscow!
- Just from here?
- You sould get out of this square at first, and after that collect the
troops to march agains Moscow!
- Eh, we have no leader, headman!
- The headmen are only amoung the Indians and tribes.
- Cut the cackle! Leave.
- Where to?
- To the south-east, there's no other way.
- But maybe will risk through the bridge?
- Go to risk.
- Are there volunteers to check the bridge?
The silence broken by the bursts near Gosbank and screeches of
chechens.
- Nobody. So, we go trough south-east. Will look around in the daytime,
shelter us, call for ours. Let's go.
- Let's go.
- But may be actually through the bridge?
- Go. Nobody stops you. Go.
We had started. Having spread at the distance of about 30 meters as
lengthwise as breadthways. Slowly walking. Attentively minding our steps,
listening to the every rustle. The moon was being at the very zenith,
lighting us the way and us also.
"Dukhi" did not think about following us up. They either were afraid or
did not want bother themselve with following up. In the times of the naval
battles when there was Katharina the Second the fleeing enemy was not
followed up. It was named "to build the golden bridge". Refined freak.
Ushakov, having become later admiral, was the first one who broke that
tradition and laid in the turkish of those days with might and main.
The mouse should not be backed into corner and malcted the rescuing
hopes. We were similar to those mice. May frightened, coursed, but if we
were forced into mousetrap, we would fight as fated. Nobody raced to rescue
us. Nobody organized rescuing expeditions. Would not wonder that, if we're
able to wrest out of this "cul-de-sac", it will turn out there is already no
our brigade anymore. Disestblished in the likeness of reduction of budgets.
Ye-e-eh, that's not America. They had sent whole the fleet for rescuing
of some lost in Yugoslavia pilot. And sure he was rescued! In the impassable
forests they found him and evacuated. What about us? As the classic told:
"Blamed and forgotten!"
Eh, Motherland, you're not mother for us but the fremd aunt! Do not
want my son to serve in your Military forces. In order to shoot as me into
his own people because the talantless whim and poitical impotence of th
ekremlin alcoholics having gone gaga.
When you are in shit up to eteballs, unknown if you're able to swim out
of, you will damn everybody and everything. All the world except yourself is
guilty about everything. But when analyzing existing situation it turns out
that there's no my fault in it. No also any fault of the ones walking with
me. There is only the endless political ambitions. If the canons are
speaking the diplomats should cushion.
Such thoughts aggregating floundered in my head while we were getting
out of the square carefully and trying not to make any noise. Attentively
passed over, overstepped the dead bodies. Alternately there were liing our
fighters and officers and the chechen militants. Everybody realized that our
guys will already not be buried, nobody will send their bodies to
Motherland. Ministry of Defence will economize awfully at the buriing of its
own soldiers. It is allowed not to make five years payment, medical
insurance for death, not to outprocess the pension. Why? He's gone for a
burton and that's all. Yes, we're searching for him but understand us, there
no money, there were the hard combats, communal graves and other bullshit.
Lord forbid me to lie nyself in such way. I'm not a kind Christian. No!
Merely do not want to leave my family without means of sustenance even after
my death. So, the result comes that the one should to die in our country in
hte way that his mortal remains would be identified, brought to the
relatives and earth with funeral blizzard. Madhouse, no less than madhouse.
And the lads, overstepped by me feeling no usual qualms, will already not be
brought back. Niether brought back nor sent at home. Niether alife nor dead.
The furious appealing of the wag-lawmakers in the sharp polemic will not
assist. The sermons in the churches will not assist also. Interesting, but
why the Orthodox Church does not impede such madness as this war? Damn
interesting. Haven't seen any priests here. The only one is here, they say,
the prior of the local temple. But in the troops or near them i haven't seen
anyone with cassock on. And nowadays the local russians - who were
slaughtered as the sheeps by chechens at first, and after that we boned
downwith the air bombs, artillery, mines, fusilladed their houses, knowing
not that there are ours inside - need both the medical and psychological
assistance and also the God's word. Where are these Lord's servants, take'em
devil?
There's nobody. The manycenturies war of the government against the own
people is going on. The church aside as always. And the worse circumstance
is that it provide the criminal war. The history comes back but on the new
higher quality turn of spiral. What for, what for, Lord, did it fall to my
lot to be born in this just damned by You country?!
Paradox is that i love and it and hate it equally deep. I can give my
life for my loved-hated Motherland. But only for the Motherland and not for
its governors.
Nowadays a word "collegiality" has become popular again. I spent much
time to realize its sense. And the sense is that this eternal drem, faith of
the russian people into the kind good tsar. There will come master, master
will judje us. Ukh! No one of the tsars, governors of Russia, including the
today's, never cared for the people. The people is an enemy, and even more
awful then the enemies' agents and other abroad evel spirits for the
governors. Nobody had any thoughts about well-being of the people NEVER! The
dead people - the good people. It's very comfortable to put against two
tribes of the own country. Meanwhile they are fighting nobody never will
reember why do they live so bad. Why does not somebody pay'em the earned
money? Where are the pensions? Where are the payments? Where are the
scholarships? What where? The ugly chechens are guilty in everything.
Everything is spent on the war against foe. As soon as we win him, as soon
as we restore everything destroyed in Chechnia, you immediately get back
your honestly earned thing. And inflation? What's that got to do with it?
The war, why aren't you able to understand that because of the war we had to
increase the prices a bit, to print the money a bit. Nothing at all serious.
We do not just talk you will never get'em. Will, will get! Just tolerance a
bit. Sure at the Great Patriotic war, they say, did not pay money at all.
Everything for the front, everything for the victory! And what is the
difference now? Doesn't matter that we attacked Chechnia but not they did
us? Shut up and sniff through the two holes. Or we have many republics, if
you clamour - we'll start the war against'em, but exectly you will sure see
neither money nor your children!
I haven't seen neither today during the combat, nor earlier both
Jirinovskii's falcons and blackshirts, making the hand up as a fascist
greeting. And they were the ones who shrieked about patriotism, great power
statehood, orthodoxy, christianity and other trifle most of all in the
ninety third.
"The Russian people - chosen by God!" Ukh! Codswallop. Paranoia! Only a
hundred years ago one orthodox was allowed to change another orthodox for
the well-bred whelp without doubts, to lay the one in deadly only following
his own whim, shoot the one. Torture with strappado is spoken to be our
native invention. To say truth the other peoples had the things alike but
they went out of fashion quickly. For example the "bootikin". But tortures
and prisons took roots at our places in the aincent times. So, it turns out
that the third of population is imprisoned, the third works at the producing
where at the conditions differ from the penal colony ones only a bit, and
the third secures and guards in the penal colony and searches at the
producing for the candidates to be sent to the colony.
Kinda social formation has changed but the customs, system, minds are
the same ones. As the nomenclature ruled us as it makes it now. Many ones
decided they are really allowed to discuss the decisions of Clan, Family, so
that the last ones decided to divert attantion to the unfit object. And by
the way to plunder something, to decrease the population. Not necessarily to
feed, to teach. So that - gone for a burton, bullshit. This is not a Rio de
Janeiro, this is worse much. And there are here only the soldiers walking
with the white trousers on and only before turn-in. No enough trousers for
all of them...
Futher and futher on we were going from the tommygun crackle and
explosions, from the victorious guttural shrieks of the local aborigens made
for us the classical battleships entrapment. The guys learnt the technique
in the colleges good. They annihilated the superior enemy with the small
forces, and still consider in the march column. Well no matter, uglies,
we'll come back, we will come back certainly. And we'll hold you, bitches,
wholly, with percents, accountable for that shame and panic we had felt half
an hour before. We'll only sort out the relationships about the promosed
reinforcement with the boors from Khankala and the "North" and we'll come
back. Will come back maybe pushing by bayonets the thick-fleshed colonels in
front of us. And even better - will skulk behind their bodies. We regret
only the guys, the real tough men, who are liing under our feet and whose
bodies we being tired can not pass aside but merely step over them, they'll
not see that. There will be victory, certainly will be. Let it be even
Pyrrhic victory. But it will be. Much blood. We won't leave from here. Not
because we do not want but because we're dangerous. There will be yet many
assaults, and the more of us stay here on the dirty overspit blood asphalt
the better will fill the old alcoholics of the former CPSU Central
Committee.
Maybe some of the parents of the liing here soldiers had a work at the
defense factory producing the rounds, missiles, mines. And who knows maybe
that bullet, frag, missile, mine killed their son. And the wages are not
paid the parents yet for the produced output. Nightmare! No, Slava, your lid
flips indeed, and flips hard. such fantasies and associations can not come
into the normal brains.
I pawed over my belt. Something was guggling in the flask. Definitely
the half-swallow of congac, but i like drink water. I quickened pace and
touched the next one in front of me. Can not see in darkness if it was a
soldier or officer. "Everything was messed in the house of Oblonsii..."
- Man, have you some water?
He turned back. It was a soldier from the second battalion. When
running through the bridge he was next to me. Apparently he was able to
recognize me also and smiled and showd at the ears. In the moonlight i did
not notice that there were the thick bloody crusts cloded around his ears.
Contusion. Very hard contusion. The break of the eardrums. My contusion is a
baby talk on the lawn comparing to his one. I indicated i was thirsty. The
fighter nutated agreeing and not stopping unbuckled the flask from the belt.
I made a couple of swallows. He drank it all after getting flask back.
Buckled it the empty one on.
I took out mine and, having flept myself at the throat, showd that
alcohol was still in the flask and gave it him. He made a swallow and gave
it back me. I indicated he was able to drink it bottom up. He made that with
gratitude. I did not grudged about cognac. He needed more. When having
contusion, contrary to all the docktors' admonitions, the militarie drink
hard and bate by that way the pain feelings and easier come round.
Wanted devilishly and awful to smoke. But nobody risked to make any
fire. Everybody drrew in the quiet silence. Only some spalls cracked under
somebody's heel, and that's all. Did not wnt to speak and it was senseless.
Everybody was crushed by the happening.
Firstly, by the shameful our fleeing, by the loosing of the guys. Here
there were many of them, left and necessary for nobody, behind our backs.
And not possible to take'em away, to bury'em.
Secondly, the brigade is disseminated, knocked out, is lost in fact.
Thirdly, the commander is heart and will not come back to us. San Snych
is, of course, a good executive officer but what is he as a commander? They
can send to us some undesirable outsider at all. Whome our brigade is as the
stop-signal for the hare. He will come to get advancement, to get the
rewards, and will relate to us absolutely not better then our President does
to his people. Wait and see. If stay alife, of course.
Fourthly, well, - sheerest personal uncertainty. What will be about me
personnaly in this beef up, about the ones who are walking near me? Nobody
was able neither to say anything nor even to make any thought of it.
Now of the two aims which were standing before me earlier, and namely
to execute the aim and to survive, only the one exists - to survive, to
scramble! Anf after that we'll see who's guilty in our triumphal shame. The
President is far away but the "dukhs" are near now. Now we're bunking from
them but every dog has his day.
But after all it is a pity, sincerely pity, that we can't reach the
Warrantor of the Constitution. Sincerely pity. Well, no matter, the
elections are soon. Will vote in another way. Not for the
prostituts-communists and not for the hysterical Jirinovskii, no! We'll hope
that maybe some good head will be found, which will not make the war against
the own people with such primitive, barbarian methods.
Eh, dreams, dreams. The dreams of the russian idiot that it's possible
to put the good tsar in power. The tsar who will not despoil the people,
will not bring the people's possession "over the hill", and will not put the
money on his abroad accounts. Eh, the dreams of idiot! The intellect can not
inderstand Russia! Russia can be only believed at. In other words she is so
capricious hysteric woman, schiz that it's impossible to communicate to her
on the normal language of logics? It results so. Who's guilty in that? The
governors guess that the people is. The people guesses that the talntless
governors are. And when there is no consent in the comrads, the good music
will noever come. Marasmus, marasmus. For which sins, God, for which sins
did you let me be born in this country?
And here one seditious thought had come into my head. And may be there
are no neither hell, nor paradise meaning the sense which the "reverend"
church fathers hammered in us. If we suppose that we have lived somewhen in
another dimension but it is exactly this place where the hell is situated.
And the sinners, in other words the ones living nowadays on this planet are
sent to be reeducated. If you were able to manage worthy all the fallen to
the lot of you assays, having not violated ten commandments of the Christ,
or how many of them has Mohammed and other "tru" religious teachers, - then
following the results you will be taken to the paradise or returned to the
normal life. Well as the there are in life always more the scums then the
normal men, so that is why they send the cattles, hangmen and similary ones.
This terrritory is the huge one. And the ones who sined less - they are sent
to the higher civilized countries. So, in the former life i've made a lot of
dirts, and in this one, seems, even more.
I smiled about that balderdash to myself involuntarily. If it had been
so easy! Meantime, and when reasoning the time and the distance had passed
quickly, we trooped off the square far away enough. There were the destroyed
houses ahead, aside. Even not the houses but the ruins. They were taken from
hand to hand for many times. And many ones were merely destroyed, the others
were staying without the highest floors, mottled by the frags, bullets,
castaway, abandoned, left by the people. Stalingrad and indeed! All this was
seen unrealistic in the illusive moonlight. The head was buzzing, the body
was craving the resting, the colored spheres were floating in the eyes
because of the weariness. No any thought had already stayed in the head. The
feet were merely bringing my body nechanically somewhere forwards. Not a
human kind in all the sense of the word, but a wordless animal. Even of the
"dukhs" attacked now then scarcely anybody were able to maintain smart
resistance.
The first ranks had come to some beforetime prestigious hous and came
in to inspect its remains. Sure it was situated almost in the city center.
The flats were certainly the ones of the most expansive and now nobody would
give for them even a half-coin.
The second small group had left for inspecting of the near-standing
building. Even being tired we realized well that it's impossible to hide in
the only ratty corner. It's dangerous. That's why we took two corners. We'll
be the iron rats, gnawing through the concreet floors.
The first group returned back at first and giving a hand's wave offered
to take the night lodging and rest in the basement of the nearest house.
Nobody was commanding. Merely the ones who wanted to enter that building
left for it. I went with the second group. Why? Don't know. Went - that's
all. About thirty men wnet into the second building, rather in it's
basement. But they did not stay in one room - they had dispersed in all
directions. Benefit that the basement was large. There were six ones having
stayed with me. It was dark in this lodgement. We began to strike the
matches, lighters lighting our temporary lodgement. The room was a sqare
lodgement of five per five meters size. There were two windows to the
street. About tem meters to the exit door.
When the matches were fired the rats sprang in the diverse directions.
Many rats. I feel calmly about different poultry. The main thing is that it
would not bite you and not try to gorge you.
We had set the sentries and, having cuddled together closer, as it's
warmer, drop into the uneasy slumber. Wanted to eat and to drink very much.
There were no such possibilities. So, we had to forget ourselves with the
heavy night fantasies, waking up after every suspicious rustle and because
of the near shooting.
Regularly waking up to change for the other side or trying to draw the
chill wet legs in, hugging each other, whisking the muzzling us rats off, we
had slept not more then three hours. The dream did not bring us relief. The
feeling of despair was increased by the hunger and thirsty sharpening. The
radioset stayed in the first building, so we stayed being unknowing
absolutely what was happening. Slowly, heavy waking up the people smoked,
made the "visits" to the fighters and officers in the next lodgement. The
darkness in the street had not passed yet when the smell of the smoke and
baked meat came from the futher corner. Sure meat. That unearthly smell
could have been impossiblly confused with anything! But where is the meat
from?
All the crowd moved to the smoke and baked meat smell. And it tickled
the nostrils, fogged the heads, provoked the sicky cramps of the stomach,
inspired the hope for the best, arouse the memories about the home, about
the picnics with shashliks. God, what was this smell! I have felt such an
unearthy smell never in my life.
When the hungry crowd had come, flown to the impromptu fire made of the
remains of the funiture and papers they saw two soldiers were baking the
small piecws of the fresh meat on the selfmade spits. The pieces were
trickling, the blood was dropping from'em, the bree was bubbling. The view
was unforgetable! Naturally, the first question from everybody came out:
- Where is the meat from?
- Where have you taken it?
- Have you some more?
- Isn't it a man?
- No, it's not a man! - the soldiers laughed, continuing baking their
shashlik.
- So, where from have you taken the meat?
The impatience and hunger invaded the people. The fighters, baking,
faltered, clearly wishing not to tell their culinary skills' secret. The
pause was sure too long. The strain grew up. The crowd of the weaponed,
uptight close to the border hungry males was able to cook the slum-burners
to be shashlik. Finally one of them mumbled:
- The rat.
- Rat?!
- Yes, it's rat, - the fighters confirmed.
- Are you mad? - many ones were shocked.
The stomach was cramping - not from the hunger, from the sickness. If
there were anything inside, certainly would go outside. Many ones felt the
same reaction. But nearly half of us, having no any emotions, came closer
and began to wonder about the hunting and culinary secrets of the "chefs".
As quickly as possible i went to have fresh air. "Gourmand's" particular
retorts were being heard after me, the exoticism lovers:
- Have you tasted it?
- No, but look - very fat!
- Exactly, how much blood, fat! M-m-m-m! Wow!
- Is it the one rat or two?
- One.
- Look, how large.
- There are many of them here - enough for everybody!
- I read and was taught in the school that the rats are the contagion
carriers, including plague.
- We were taught many things in school, what's the sense?
- Don't like - don't eat! - somebody answered with the iron logics.
- Nothing will happen!
- Correct. Noting will happen, we've only to bake the meat better.
- Well baking is baking, but not to dry the meat, not to make it dry,
fragile and untasty.
- Look, the crast has already baked.
- Exactly! Classy crast!
- Men, let me tast the small piece? A?
- Ouh, we need not much.
- If like it will catch rats.
- Pity that thedogs are not here, there is more meat.
- There's so much in the man. Why don't you eat?
- Blow you out with jokes. You eat.
- I was not able to bear these talking, went out and started inspecting
the flats' remains. The smell, smoke, blown out of the basement, rose up the
ladder, hunting me literally upon my heels. I started smoking, trying to
send away the importunate smell. The stomach was cramped because of now the
hunger then the thought that i feel the toasted rat's smell. Br-r-r-r!
From the former experience i know that the hunger feeling will leave me
on about the fourth day of not eating. There will be only the dull weariness
but there will not be hunger at all. The thoughts will roll over slower and
slower, and not about the matter but about the meal.
When on nintyth year we entered Baku, then we were brought to the
Saliansie kasernes, and after that moved to the fourth microdistrict as a
commandant unit. We were responsible for the law order keeping and for the
closing time in that houses block. Our com-bat was not a fool and that's why
he organised the battalion command center in the large supermarket. When we
wnet doen into the basemments there was thick meal on the ground. There was
only the bread dearth. As in that anecdote when the butter should have been
spread on the sausage. But it seems as if i repeat. The thoughts are hung up
about the meal. Instead of the meal i jobed the bitter smoke inside myself.
Some fuss rose up below. Stop, listen to. "Dukhs"? No. The hazardous shrieks
were coming from the basement:
- Come-on, come-on!
- Chevy'em on me!
- But where to do you chevy'em, idiot!
- Let-s start again.
- There, they ran in that corner.
- Go round, go round.
- Come-on, chevy'em.
- Pity, we can't shoot.
- You'll shoot! "Dukhs" will hear.
- Beat'em! Beat!
- Not with barrel, fool!
- Beat with butt!
- That's not a club! Beat with butt end.
- But he'll be all bloody!
- No matter, will wash!
- Why, you don't want gorge?
- Got it!!!
- Many?
- Three ones beaten dead.
- Little, need more. There's nice stable.
- Let'em beat themselves.
- Stop talking. Enough rats for all.
- Fat!
- Normal.
- Beat fat ones.
- Can't see if they're fat or not.
- Go round, now we'll chevy again.
Stopping the sickness urges i went out to the street not to hear the
dying rat's cheep. The nightfall has already passed away. Have stopped.
Watched the street long while. Can see sort of no activiy. The shooting was
heard from the "Minutka" side occasionally. But the sound showed that it was
not a combat. Most probably, these were the sentries shooting the sectors of
responsibility. Running, bent in two, i crossed the street at diagonal and
rushed into the hous entrence where at the first group had hidden. When
entering the two sentries met me cautiously.
- Hi, bros! - i addressed'em.
Having seen me to be ours they eased and smiled.
- Good morning, comrad capitan, - one smiled widely. Showing thirty two
teeth.
- What's news?
- Nothing. And what's the noise have you there?
- "Dukhs"? - the second chorused.
- No. Those are the wisemen happened who had opened the season of
hunting for rats.
- For rats? - the amazement of the one was genuine.
- For rats? - the second one was, contra, thoughtful. As if he rolled
off the thought of the baked rat. His eyes were covered with the dreaming
shroud.
- Yes, rats. the fighters brakfasted with the baked rats in the
morning, so the others wished also.
- Did you taste? - the second fighter asked. The first one felt sick
himself having only the thought about the rat.
- No. Did not taste. And don't mant, - i confessed honestly. - Where
are the fathers-commanders?
- Over there, - the first fighter amorphously waved with hand showing
to the ladder leading into the basement.
I went downwards, not hurrying, smoking while walking through the
ladder covered with the stone frags and rubbish, into the basement
lodgement. About ten people were sitting there inside. Futher, about
ten-fifteen ones were sitting and liing in the next room. I marked the
dreaming Yourka amoung them. Came close. Kicked his hip easily.
- Stand up. Will oversleep the Kingdom of God.
Yourka opened his eyes quickly. And having seen me, jumped up. We embraced.
- Alife? - he was sincerely glad.
- Alife. Where to will i leave.
- And i thought unwittingly that's all now...
- Sod all!
- Well, give tell what good about you, - Yourka clearly was not able to
find the place.
- Why the news? - i wonderd. - All the same as about you. If you want,
can go to my basement, the fighters have beaten five rats just now and are
cooking breakfast now.
I told hem shortly the "rats" epic. He was amused. And did not hide his
stomach to be horrified when getting the only thought about the rat-fleshy.
- Did you eat yourself? - he asked, managing hardly the sickness urge.
- No. Not touched the bottom yet.
- But the rat?
- But why are you wondering? The Chinese say that everything growing
and moving is eatable. But only the one should be able to cook according to
the prorated manner. No matter, Youra, will want eat, will gorge not only a
rat.
- Necessary to go away from here qwicker or loos half mind.
- That point is correct, bro. If we'll sit more, all the fuck-up for us
will be provided.
The sitting nearby ones listened to our talk ans opened the discussion
about the problems of nutrition from the expedients. We did not interfere,
stepped aside.
- What the center says? Have you connected already?
- Have connected. Ugh! - Yourks spet. - Nothing good. The brigade
remains are trying to fight the way to the old center. The headquarter,
rather all the remains of it got circled and fights. The paratroopers are
cast to assist. Don't know will they fight to them or not. Bullshit is all
that.
- You haven't brought a new mind of the bullshit. Will we make
anything?
- Is there any plane yet?
- No any plan. Sitting. Read fortune at coffee grouts.
- We should scarper, before cleanup is not started. They're sure not
fools also.
- I've already told... - Yourka hopelessly waved with the hand. - They
say it's necessary to sit, to watch around. I just tell bullshit.
- Let's go and try to speak. We're indeed the quarter officers.
- Let's go but there will be a little sense.
But hving not we made coming to the first battalion commander yet as
rushed in one of the sentries, securing the entrence in the house, and
shouted in half-wisper:
- "Dukhs" are going!
- How far away?
- In a couple ouses from here. Making cleanup.
---------------------------------------------------------------
(c) Copyright 2009 translation by Oleg Abramov
Date: Nov 2009
---------------------------------------------------------------
- Headquarters, you're really something, again drinking. As if you were
not able when mousetrapped!
- Come in, Serega, come in, dear!
- Pashka! A cup and a fork to be offered!
- No, men, i won't drink.
- Forget rotting about. Won't you drink for our returning back?
- Allright but drop only a bit.
- We'll drink now the third toast now and you have only the first one.
Catch up!
- No. I'll drink the third one with you.
- As you like it. Pasha, pour into! Less.
- so, men, the third?
- Yes, the third!
- For the ones who have left.
- Silence.
- Ok.
Stood up and quietly, not chin-chinning, after the second silence,
everyone drank. Again attacted the meal, drinking the bear after. Whether
meal was fat or some other reason made it but the drunkenness started to
leave us. The brains almost cleared up. The first one breaking the quietness
was deputy political officer.
- So, tell us, hreos, how were you able to step in so hard.
- If you speak to us in such a mood i'll break your snoot, - i warned
him. - You should have been with us.
- Should have been but the heads had sent me for the humanitarian aid
to the "North". Have brought. I hold your part. Haven't given for that
loafer, - Sergey pointed at Pashka, - not to eat and not to drink.
- And cigaretts?
- I've taken cigaretts and beer for you and your paisano
Sashka-commandant sent you the bow with the hi. Will give in the morning.
So, tell.
Thus, what, Serega, tell. In general terms you know everything without
extra talks.
- Know but tell nevertheless.
Briefly, interrupting each other, we told all that we had to
experience. Did not mask anything, did not whitewashed. The impressions are
yet too fresh, the memory again and again brought us into that nightmar
which from we succeeded to go out. We did but the other guys didn't.
- There's no our guilty, Serega, that we've gone out but the men stayed
there. No.
- Don't be nervous. All have already known that - no. Have reported
already to Moslow, to the minister and to all the other ragtag. Reported, to
say truth, after Rolin, that one presented all as if there had been our
guilty in everything. As it happens, only we had to go assaulting, at least
they say that in Khankala. And the others had to assist in supporting fire
only.
- There was no any assist. The "dukhs" had made so classy entrapment
for us that we stept in it as the blind kitties, - i pronounced darkly.
- There were more "dukhs" then us, - Yourka confirmed.
- Had thrown us to dye, stronzos of Moscow.
- What about the new commander? - i asked.
- Nothing about! He turns to be the sidekick of the minister of defense
Grachin. So he was stuck through that old boy network.
- It is from the reduced to cadre medical rejiment to the combative
brigade?
- Yes. To our brigade.
- Fucking disaster!
- We have discussed it here already. He's far from drawing only map, no
reading even it. During the official meetings there is nothing to be heard
but the only dirty words. And when Bilich starts to report and uses the
military terms then Bulatov drops asleep.
- Why asleep? - Youra didn't understand.
- Very easy - starts sleeping. Hang the head on his own breast and
sniff. He is nil.
- Doesn't he want to get Hero?
- It is not clear yet but the manner he lead the main office convoy to
the old command center - that was fucking desaster, men. Absolute ignorance.
If Sanych would not take the leading in his hands we would not reach it.
When there was a rapid fire at the convoy, may be some kiddo was shooting,
that boneheadordered: " Stop! Accept the combat!" And when we stuck into the
entrapment he ordered: "Go not reducing the speed!' And the obstruction was
ahead. Shortly - fool.
- Nightmare! We will have a hell of a time with him!
- Yes, we will. We'll attack Minutka tomorrow evening again!
- Why attack?
- The order from Moscow. But this time we're not only ones. To say
truth, the same route.
- Again through the bridge?
- Yes, guys, again through the bridge.
- Pour into or the lid will flip.
- Exactly, Slava, we'll not see it without a bottle. We didn't take it
with Bahel and now we'll do with tthis medic... Ukh!
- Pour into, Pashka! Make the half-cup.
- For the fortune, for the fortune do not leave us! - we drank without
chin-chining. The recieved information dazed us. We were sitting quietly,
without biting.
- What about Bahel, what about the second com-bat? - asked Yourka,
smelling the bread crust.
- Bahel is in Moscow. The leg was saved. In the hospital by the name
Burdenko. And com-bat... - Serega sithed hardly. - Ne's not alife. He was
sent to Rostov and by board from it to the wife.
- Yes, he was a good man. Memory eternal to him, let the ground be
smooth for him.
- Have we left many ours...there? - the lump appeared in my throat when
i remembered com-bat.
- Many, very many. Many ones were lost. Maybe they're sitting in the
basements, maybe they're captured. But they're returning back, sending the
messages. Somebodies are making war in the other units. Cannot fight through
to us. Thus the number of exactly died, in other words affirmed, is hundred,
gone missing and maybe alife yet - about sixty-seventy men. Not a few tanks
were singed also. Shortly, we should be sent to parking and form ranks but
we're sent to thick again tomorrow. Madhous!
- Madhous - that is even, Serega, softly named. Seemingly they want to
knock us down. So that only the name and the banner would have been about
us.
- Exactly, the same as about Maikop brigade. Fags! Foul fags!
- Don't be on the boil, Slava, There's nothing reasoning by us. Let's
better drink!
- Let's drink. Bugger all is depending on us. Pour into. A bit for me.
Have drunk. Quietly, without toast, not chin-chining.
- Serega, you bring to us only the ugly news. As before the first
assault as now. Maybe all the evil is in you? - Yourka watched point-blank
at guilty of nothing Kazartsev.
- Well gun me down, will see if it will change anything, - Serega was
cool.
- What the hell we're sent again in this thick? - i continued being on
the boil.
Stupor had gone. The rage had possessed me again. I restrained myself
being own man hardly. To blow off steam somehow i was cussing out:
- Jiggered stronzos, bitches, scoundrels, wanked off douches, foul
fags, brainless dorks. Beating's little for'em. On thirty seventh such
stronzos would have been put up against the wall and got a control lead in
napes.
- You would have been put first up against the wall yourself for such
talking, - Youra countered cool.
- You're right. But what degenerates are they!
- Calm down, Slava. Everything's passed. Everything's onward. If you
are on the boil we'll piss you.
- Allright, - i abated. - Serega and what about Yourka and me?
- Don't know, ther was no talk about you. But the other administrative
ones will be recollected amoung the battalions. I'll be sent to the second
battalion. You'll stay at the main quarter.
- I'll not stay with that fucking commander, - i began shouting again,
- i'll go to the second one with you. I wish i could paint town from my
heart.
- Correct, Slava, let's go together! - Yourka poured vodka into again.
He made little drinks, for a swallow.
- When we'll start?
- On seventeen according to plan. Will come by ninteen. That convoy
will be large, yes, maybe entrapment also. Well, there will be again "tanks'
carrousel" and... And again with the naked ass on the frits, - finished
deputy political officer.
- We'll have time to sleep!
- Exactly. Now the last cups - and slumber. Pashka! Do not awake, do
not turn around, when fire bring out first of all! Allright, come-on! - we'd
drunk and having left Pashka to clean in the box went in the street to
smoke.
- Did not want to tell into the fighter's face, - Serega started, - but
the question was investigated absolutely seriously whether Bahel specially
killed the men.
- Fucking mad!
- Are you seriously?
- Even more seriously. Rolin had memorized you, Slava, they thought
that you were saboteur and so... - Serega stuck.
- Keep on speaking! That i deserted? Did you want to say that?
- Yes. Namely that you fled.
I fevered. Felt myself becoming bloodshot. The rage woke up. Wanted
immediatly to crash somebody's snoot. Preferrably that it would be Rolin or
Sedov. The small fry from the mlitary attorney departament would have been
of use. Or as we named'em - "prokuriata". I wished the "dukhs" had come now.
- Jolly cinema. And what now i'll be court-martialed?
- No. San Sanych has fought blame off you. The faighters and officers
having returned earlier then you, confirmed that you had not put tail
between legs, had not shot to the ours, fought as all the others. applied a
dressing at the wounded ones.
- Listen, Serega, there was somebody who had shot the "dukh's" tank in
the combat with the first shooting from the grenade dispenser. It was all
covered with the active defense shields but that sniper had socked at the
tank turret foundation. For such things the one should be revarded woth the
Hero. But what's the name of that guy - do not know. Would you enquire?
- Exactly, Sergey, we started the attack after that classy shot. Many
lives were saved by that shot.
- You, men, are not the first who has spoken about this. Have known
already the name of the fighter. Was wounded, after that died. That is exact
already.
- So, he should at least be posthumously revarded with Hero of Russia.
The boyo had merited that.
- The many ones have been offered to be revarded ut those stronzos from
Khankala say that something like the square had not been taken but the
revarding papers were sent ot them. Fags!
- It is not the word, Youra. We've given to the dead and wounded ones
the finger. The ones who had died or had already stopped their war. And
these dorks do not want even to listen to us. "Nothing fucking for" - they
say.
- Oh, stronzos.
- Stronzos, - agreed Serega. - Khankala is secured by the battalion of
paratroopers, rejiment of "makhra" and the detachment of special forces.
They were taken from the firing line. Our next units were taken off. Now we
stand the racket both for us and for that guy. Should have seen maybe there
are less the block-posts?
- We haven't seen them at all.
- That's what it is. The number of the brigade has shortened but the
zone of responsibility has grown up.
- The hotel of "Caucasus" has been taken? - took the interest Yourka,
staarting smoking the new cigarette from the stub.
- Who will take it? There was also the battalion of the troopers taken
from and thrown to Khankala.
- So, they there want us to be the only ones to make the war against
the "dukhs"?
- They are sitting pritty! I like it!
- Well, men, take it easy. Go having rest. I'll say not to disturb you.
Catch up on sleep. And we'll speak tomorrow about all the other things.
- Fail to return humanitarian aid borrowed!
- But men, are you thinking i'm a rat?
- It remains not to be seen, but you never can tell...Good night!
- Good night, bullies!
- You are the one! - we shouted with one accord into the darkness on
the heels of Serega.
- What do you think, Slava, on that subject? - Yourka asked when we
went to the box van.
- I think nothing. If only not to be court-martialed as a deserter.
That is what i'm thinking about, i grumbled.
- And on the tomorrow action?
- Honestly?
- Honestly of course.
- If we are thrown again as the whelps, the only ones, there will stay
alife about ten-twenty of us who will be sent either to the nut hospital or
to the prison as deserters, saboteurs not to have a loose toungue.
- In my opinion you have already told that.
- Yes, i've told and keep the same mind about that. If we would be able
to get out of it alife and not to come to nut hospital and not to come to a
prison, then i wouldn't need any bertter commendation. That's all. And what
do you thinks, Youra?
- Most probably it will happen so.
- Youra, do you hear that anybody's bombing "Minutka" now? State bankk,
Palace of the fucking Dudaev?
- No, i don't.
- So, that's again as before the first assault. Can you remember we had
spoken about that?
- I can remember. Allright, let's go to sleep. Let's go, Youra, it's
late. Tomorrow the new turn of the nut hous will start.
We entered the box van. Took off the dress quickly. Spit at possible
attack. The skin, the body were tired about clothing wearing. Wnanted to
take a rest. We fell down quickly. I switched off the light and disappeared
in the deep sleep.
I saw the nightmares. War, war, war. Nothing except the war. But a
couple times i saw a public prosecutor who was making some blamings but i
shot him and the body threw to "dukhs". That was nothing but nightmare!
Woke up because of Pashka was shaking my shoulder.
- Comrade capitan, comrade capitan, wake up! Viacheslav Nikolaevich!
Get up wlready.
- Ah, what, "dukhs"?! - still speeping convulsively i started searching
for the tommy-gun.
- No, not "dukhs", but it's already three o'clock now. It's time to get
up.
- Bugger it? - i did not understand clearly after sleeping.
- We'll start at five o'clock. Have you forgotten?
- Have forgotten. Where's Ryzhov?
- Have already got up. Washing himself.
- Have we breakfast, so, i wnated to say lunch?
- Everything is ready. The executive officer expect you to come in
forty minutes.
- Understand.
We've washed us quickly, shaved, ate the breakfast. And went, smoking,
slowly with unhusting gait to the main office. The officers greeted us by
the way jolily. We answered in the same manner. At the dorrstep of the main
office-kindergarden we stoppt to smoke down calm. The rumble and the
aircraft ululation was heard from the "Minutka" direction. Not bad, not so
bad. I liked all that cacaphony. They'd better to put exactly but they can
shovel up the holes in all the radius, and you'd creep over them and
stumble. "The pilot flyes high, gets much money. Mummy, i love the pilot!" -
i was able to refresh the memory about one childish, vulgar song. Had smoked
down, threw the stubs and grinded'em out and went to the executive officer.
San Sanych was situated in the same room. And the table was set in the
same position as it had been before. It seemed that nothing has changed. But
at the place of Bahel there was sitting Bulatov. Where to will you lead us,
commander? Haveing entered we stayed near the door. San Sanych lifted his
head and, observed us, invited:
- Come in, come in. Don't hesitate! Why are you hovering at the
treshold as the fosters.
- But may be we've been already deleted from the unit lists, - I joked.
- Oh yeah. You'll be deleted, - San Sanych accepted the joke and
answered in the same mood. - What's about the feeling? Maybe you'd better
meanwhile to go to the baggage or to the docktors?
- What for? - Youri asked perplexedly.
- Maybe, you're tired. To heal. Will you have some rest?
- That's allright, - i answered.
- And maybe you don't trust us? - that was Youra yet going to provoke.
- No, no. How were you able to think about that?!
- But we ewre told as somebody wanted to put all the fault on us, -
Youra started to act flaky.
I was able to keep myself well in hand but hardly. Although realized
that Sanych was innocent. And the huge gratitude is for him getting me off
the court-matial hook. In other case i would roll to the prisoner transport.
- Youra don't wind up. The executive officer has made all possible to
take all the suspicions off us.
- And why do you know that?
- So, the people in the brigade told, - Youra answered evasively,
stepping aside from his anger flash.
- All of us have the nervs not good. It's better for us to cool.
- They talk too much in the brigade. The tongues should be cut off, -
Bulatov made a word.
- I've asked for you to offer the choice where would you be situated
during the assault. I need the clear heads in the main office. So, i offer
to stay here, - San Sanych watche at us with the tired eyes.
We could see that it was difficult for him physically, and it was
evident there was no any contact with the new commander of the brigade yet.
- Thanks for the offer, - i've started, - but i'd be better sent to the
second batallion.
- I'd better also to the second batallion. There is not many
experienced officers and i guess that we'd be more necessary there then
here, in the main office, - Youra tried to speak also politely and tuff.
The executive officer, evidently, did not expect from us any other
answer and lifted his hands in dismay. But the com-brig watched at us in
supprise. Evidently, had not yet seen such bullies. "Look, look. Accustom
yourself, - i thought malevontely. - We hav many ones of such kind - the
whole brigade. And weather would you be accepted by our "court"? We'll see!"
The pause had lasted way too long. If there were not that new one we
would speak to the executive officer a little bit more. And to this one -
no! The first one who had broken the silence was San Sanych. He had sent us
to get ready for the expected march and for the coming combat.
All the ones who were able to fight went for assault. The car drivers,
some of the radio-operators, the repairing-restoring battalion, supplying
battalion were the ones who stayed. The docktorsalso followed the troops.
There were the ones who would receive and operate at the place staying at
the medical company. If anybody would be evacuated. Save and Protect. God
Speed.
On seventeen twenty the convoy of the brigade was formed up and started
going to the "Minutka". There was a nois of the combat heard from there. The
third batallion and the scouts had taken and protected the bridge. The
damned bridge! They had already passed it and were making the defending
combat at that side. It was not an easy work - "to draw the hippopotmus from
the bog. Take it easy, guys, we're combng!
The comvoy was the huge if to estimate it by the war time measures. In
full length of about five kilometers. Nobody liked that. Espacially in the
city. No any goo thing. We were the exellent targets.
The "dukhs" had the same mind. They hit when the head carrier had gone
only the four kilometers. There was no ane obstruction no mines. But simply
hit with the dispensers from above and bunt two first carriers of the first
batallion. At the same moment they hit into the middle of it and into the
tail of the convoy. It was not the combat but the shooting of the convoy.
The convoy having been the one several moments before started to break,
tear. The drivers mechanics, leading form the shootibg their carriers throw
them into the side streets, courts, passes, crashed the shabby remains of
the near ruins with their head armours of their armoured girl-friends. Somr
of them were not able to break away of the heaps. They were finished off by
the "dukhs" there instantly. It was no any word about any planned qualifyed
stand against. The omes who were able leaft. There was no ane sole command.
The convoy was too large for any boody to come to assist it. No any radio
connection, no any commands. There was a panic. Again it was a panic.
Everybody for himself. In the fire hell where at the carriers, tanks were
burning, exploding, the splashed fuel was burning, the burning people were
rushing about. The alife torchws were falling on the land, rolling trying to
blow out the fire. If there was anybody he tried to come to assist. At times
covered himself the one who was burning with his body, stiopping the fire.
But it happened sometimes that when stopping the fire of the burning,
sopping with the diesel jacket, the fire exchanged for the saver. That one
also started burning and died.
The commander carrier was going at the fifth position of the convoy.
Everybody was waiting for the orders. Any ones but orders - to attack, to
step-back, to take the combat at the place. But the orders were not given.
The carrier of the new com-brig was the first one braking the line and
crashing the chippings went to some side turn. The radio kept the silence. A
bit later the commanding was taken by the executive officer, but it was too
late yet. The chaos had started in the convoy and in the souls of the people
being left by the commander were caught by the panic. Everybody's for
himself. All who's able should rescue!
The battalion, companies, platoons commanders tried to organize the
getting of the ptple from the shooting, to force the "dukhs'" attack off.
Thus, it was abut our second battalion. The first company commander assigned
at the position of the died battalion commander (the mates, exdept the
political affairs deputy commmander, died or were lost) capitan Borovikh
Andrey Anatolievich gasped quickly and yelled:
- The cannons at the five-floored house! Landmark - poplar! Fire! The
infantery dismounts and try to force out the "dukhs"! Go on! Fire! Fire!
He jumped off the armor first and started the tommy-gun showering at
the enemy. There was a fighter with the radiostation liing near him. Andrey
made a coordination of his leadees and we were able to force the "dukhs"
from their positions. That was the first success, that was a victory. Let it
was a small victory but the people believed in their new commfnder.
Unfortunately the other commanders did not instantly orientate themselves
and the second battalion and Youra and me had leave also. It so happened
that Youra was on the head carrier of the battalion and he lead the getting
of the battalion from the shooting. By some courts, passes, by-streets we
were able to get to "Minutka". The order for the assault start was abolished
by nobody. And that's why we were not allowed to initiate any personal will.
Although we had moved to our startung positions but did not hurry to enter
the combat. Were standing and assidted our third battalion with the running
fire of the carriers and ANGMs.
Now they have created the ANGMs of the forth generation. Good toy, but
there are too little of them in the army because it's too expensive, so
little.
Thus, we force-fed the "dukhs" with such "gifts". At first we started
working about the fortification that they created of the building rubbish.
Sadder but wiser, we did not want to loos the men while assaulting of that
memorial of the architecture and history of the absurd war. We comtacted by
the raioset constantly to the remains of the convoy. Com-brig kapt silence,
we thought already that he had died. The command over the brigade was taken
by the executive officer. Two more tanks were lost by the tankmen. The first
battalion - four infantry carriers. The signalers - three conneection
devices. Many men were lost - twenty three ones. And how many went missing,
it was unknown. The docktors, when they rushed from the Command post to give
the aid, also went missing. It is spoken they did not turn in the correct
point. Senior leutenant of the medical service Zonnov Eugine went missing
also. Wise lad. Real man. Regret, so much.
Gradually the remains of the tankmen and the first battalion started
coming to that shitty square. Approximately by three o'clock a. m. the
remains of the brigade concentrated in the near streets, courts, siding to
the square. At the same moment the place and houses around were "cleaned
up". So that no any "dukh's" cattle was not able to impede us. Have changed
the the third battalion and the scouts selekted of all the brigade. The
tankmen started to move on their "carrousel". But there was neither any wish
nor hazard to start assault in the night.
By vive o'clock a. m. the executive offiver had come, he was also
acting as a commander of the brigade. At five fifteen we had come to the
talk. The talk was combined with the meal. There was no time. In abou two
hours, maximal in two and a half, the daybreak will begin and we'll have to
start assault. So, when we'll have any time to meal!
Khankala also did not hurry to stadt the talk. They waited for us.
Having reported about destruction of the convoy, we did not hurried to
report about us being ready for assault. It would be the ideal variant if
our troops at that side of the square shephered the "dukhs" at us and we
would meet them here yet. But alas, we realizes that it would not happen and
we'll have to beat the horn against, to loos all the bones but to conquer
that square. The gossips were circling that Dudaev isn't situated there for
a long time, but our strategists both in Moscow and Khankala, comparing
probably that Palace with Reichstag, wanted to conwuer it. May ge those
gaffers fancied that after that the war would stop? It is no any fucking
stop. The bushwalkers movtment will bt so mighty that it will be no any
resilt but the only one from the scortched-earth tactics. If of course they
have enough bravenss. Or it will be as in Afgfn - weak going on the position
war. Yeah! What will be? Who knows.
And we're facing the only aim - the square woth the complex of the
buildings. There it is liing ahead of me. All is digged up by the shell and
ait-bombs craters and enlaces with the badbes wires, lightes with the
cannons' lighting shells, the same mines, rockets. They are hanging under
the parachites and flooding everything with the unreal white-blue light.
There is almost no shades.
When i had seen again that square and memorized again as i was creeping
on my pounch, grounded myself and ran after that from it, the fear blew
again, the coffin coldness. With the effort of will, as clasping the teeth
ristling, made myself to btcome cool.
Was smoking the cigaretts, one after another, and feeling not their
taste, was not able to tear off the glance. And even the thought flashed
that if there is no new com-brig, i can come to San Sanich and to ask him
for letting ne staying at the staff while the combat, but in the same moment
forced it away.
We'll battle through! Certaynly battle through! Awoke myself the spite
inside me. And gradually the spite forced away the fear. There was only now
the spite about mystlf, about the "dikhs", about Moscow, about Khankala,
"North", about all the peaceful life. The spite about everything. The only
ones who about i felt no any spitewere the men around myself. I'll go with
them in stveral hours on that "frying pan" whereat all of us regardless the
grades and ranks, the mtrrits before the Fatherland and Motherland,
regardless the family status, will be the aims to be fryed. I drew my breath
deeply. All the fear had gone out, the compassion to myself and to the
others had also gome away. I'm cool. I'm trying to be cool. So, being in
such a condition i went for the tolk to the execurive officer.
---------------------------------------------------------------
(c) Copyright 2011 translation by Oleg Abramov
Date: Jul 2011
---------------------------------------------------------------
All the commanders and the ones on the duties have come together.
Everyone has brought a bottle -- of vodka or something else, what God could
let us, the same thing about the meal but mostly it were the tins with the
meat. The tins of different calibre and sorts. And of course, "the officers'
lemon" - say onion, garlic and many different things.
We have headquartered temporalily in the basement. The table was also
set there. It was made of the boxes shifted together, the ones for the
shells, and covered with the papers. We were sitting on the every possible
thing. Some furniture, the moved camp-chairs, the boxes.
We have sat at the table. San Sanych as a master. We have opend quickly
the tins warmed on the heating-radiators, unseald the vodka, cut the bread,
onion, garlic, the unexpected sausage. We've spoken a little. Everything was
clear. The losses -- in the men and technique -- were huge. Not ready,
according to the all military skill canons, we're not ready to take so
reinforced object as this square.
It was sensless to discuss with San Sanych. It's not his fault. The
attack on the convoy hard morally. The fate of the lost is unknown also. Not
funny. Because of the alkohol and of the tanks' cannons crash, and also
artillery, which we have not seen already a long time, the mood was better.
We're alife. So then we'll live.
Started talking. It was mostly about the shooting at the our convoy. We
had in fact nobody aside. The reconnaissance has not checked the ways, as it
was arranged for the bridges. The avant-guarde was also not sent for the
check. Such a bullshit. And we're also idiots as we have not persuaded this
new cuttle with the colonel's shoulderstraps.
Having discussed the overgone shame enough, we started to examine the
activity plan for the assault of the square. Hier spoke more San Sanych. The
meal and frink were moved aside. The decision was that the tankers work at
the square and we go assaulting as the next ones. As it was sensless to
devide the uncomplete batallions on the smaller units, the aim was given to
all the ones and at once.
The nearest aim -- to go through the bridge and to fix on the other
side of "Minutka".
The following aim is the barricade. If there will not be any "dukhs",
then next is the State bank. The tanks and the armoured cars defence our
flanks not to let again the last situation and also shooting over our heads
make the way clean. The infantery, knocking out the granade throwers,
defences the technique.
The main aim -- the Palace of Dudaev.
NOT TO WAIT any reinforcement from the other side of the square. To be
supposed only to ours forces. NOBODY HAS ANY INTEREST ABOUT US -- that was
the sense of our conference. We'll fight by ourselves! We've no reserve, no
fresh forces. All the technique and all the men -- on the square. It is our
last and decisive combat! Entirely as in a popular recently hit of the
season.
The combat of the desperate men. The combat of the Sibiriaks, who in
the forty first have rescued Moscow, and it meant - all the Russia. Now we
had ahead something like that. As soon as we understood WHAT is ahead, we'd
lost all the words. The responsibility hung over. A speaking is one thing,
to hear that there will no any help is quite another thing. And it's unknown
when your "allies" start the attacking on the oppposite side. And may be as
it was at the last time, they do not begin it, but will observe the going og
events and "assist morally".
After that all have gone and started to prepare the men. To explain
what is ahead. We must to take care of the men. To take care of each other.
But we can not send the technique forward, that was enogh with the
experiments at the last time, as we enterd Grozni. It seems that all the
life has passed. So many things have passed, a man can not remember
everything...
I've gone to look for Yourka. He was smoking near the tank, has talked
peacfully with the fighters-tankees. I've given them cigaretts. The talking
was about nothing. It was simple fluttering to send the urgent problems
away. They produced the usual military flannelettes. But now comes the order
for the crew to be ready. The tanks turning the "merry-go-round" have bekome
overheating of the barrels and therefore they should be changed now. The
tank with all ammunitions darted from the point and having stoppt before the
bridge, tepping on the gas, was waiting for the turn. Youri and I have come
nearer. And now tank, having shot the last shell, has lifted the barrel
according to the habit of the peacful life high in to the sky up and started
to roll back. The next has taken the position and started the furious
shooting at the barricade. It was clear that there could be nobody now. All
the remains of the barricade were the heaps of the brickcrump. That's good,
we'll have not so much to do. I like it when such a work will be made bz
somebody but not me. Don't know why but i like it.
I've looked at the whatch. In twenty minutes starts the assault. It was
sensless to say anything during this crash. I've touched Youra's sleeve and
knockt with the finger at the watchdial. He nodded his head and we've gone
to the second batallion. The shooting over the square became more intensive.
Our two army divisions have compressed the fire and changed for the deep
square. The building of the State bank was not seen any more. Only the smoke
and the cloud of the dust were always hanging over it. That's also good.
Youra and i have come to the remains of the second batallion. Have
looked at the slowly rummaging men. Have set on some stone. Have begun to
smoke. Have arranged not to loos each other from the view and help each
other. Have remembered Pashka. Have laught that we've made him again furious
with our dirty underware. Have remembered that we have not taken yaet our
art of "gumanitarka". That's good, if the one goes to attack and has still
some matter: the sure sign -- a man will come back to make it ready.
Have looked at the watches. Five-minutes readiness All the emotins
aside! Breathin in and out, stop breathing. Now man must start up. Malice,
fury are again boiling inn the blood. Adrehnalinjumps out of controll and is
brought with the blood through all the body. And now the signal by radio.
And come on, come on, come on!!! Ahead! Only ahead! To work, to work! To go
over, to jump over this fucking bridge before the "dukhi" can it see! Uhra!
A-a-a-a!
The breathing is breaking. The bag with the launcher granades is
beating badly at the leg with the steps tact, it's a bit disturbig the
running. But I'm already at the condition not to pay any attantion to it.
Ahead, only ahead! Nothing is following me, only Russia, it helps us with
nothing. There's no reserve, the technique followes a bit later. And it wil
be last technique in our brigade. And therefore must work a man. To think
and ahead. But Adrehnalin disturbs thinking. And again the aincent man wakes
up in subcortex.
There is a durty-green jackets mass ahead already stepping on the
bridge. Nobody's shooting at them. And WHY is nobody shooting at them? I'm
also with them and We're being not shot!!! And having yet no belive at the
fortune we as a thick crowd run through this fucking bridge, on which so
many our men left at the last time. The reconnoiters spoke, that there were
no corpses as they took the bridge. That means they were sent to feed the
fishes by these parasites or were somewhere dragged off. All right swines,
i'll askyou now where to have you our men taken. Now, bastards! Foul slinks!
I'm shooting. It seemd somebody was moving at the barricade. The ones ahead
me are also shooting. We continue racing in mad tempo. The following ranks
having understood that there was no shooting ran quicker.
Now already the following ranks pushed the front ones. Hier is the tank
shooting at the position of "dukhi". But it's not clear where are the
"dukhi", but it's good, the shooting. We can't see them however. Have hid
yourselves, bitches! Beat 'em, reptiles! Come on, guys! Quick!!! Tempo!
Tempo!!! Run as soon as no shooting!
Am running quietly, widely open my mouth. Were I not skoming, could I
have catch breathing.
But now my side's already breaking. So can catch a man the shooting of
"dukhi". You're, swines, aren't able to throw us off from the bridge and to
drown us down, we're already on the square! Tempo, tempo, men. To keep the
forces. Only forward. It's a nuisance, direct on the way yawns the large
crater. Either round runnging or direct over it. Pity that the breathing
will breake absolute.
And now as if my thoughts were heard they started shooting. The
shooting was from the State bank side. Unsure burst with the machine-gun has
cut the fontaines of dust and the sparkles out from asphalt and stones
before us. But the distance was large and the "dukh" evidently felt
semselves not goot because of the tank shooting, the aiming was wrong. Muff!
Now well teach you, black mug, how to shoot. Ahead! I'm shooting from
the shoulder. I fire allmost without aiming. All around are shooting.
Somebody's hot cartridge burns my cheek -- I'm rubbing it and look sideways,
what a swine throws me the cartridges away? Wow! That's Yourka! Has so
concentrated face. Is running one meter aside from me and is shooting also.
For any case pull the granade in the black predatory muzzle of the launcher.
The "dukhis" have evidently recovered and started the fire at us. I've
droppt, rolled away. Rolling, one more rolling. Have droppt, broke into my
shoulder badly. A small crater. Why haven't I noticed it at once. The crater
is fresh, there's no water yet -- either from the night or made today with
the shell. Not important. The fire from "dukhi" becomes thicker. I've
looked. Have bursted at the "dukhis" and looked back. Three fighter have
been carriing one heurt back. At the moment it's Ok. No killed. Unbelievable
luck. Not to speak too soon! Euphobia. We've gone, run about fifty meters
through the open area and there's no one killed!
I've throsted myself again and started to watch more intelligently the
positions of the enemy. The breathing allowed me yet not to aim correctly.
The blood mixed with the hormons and still hot because of the running
disturbed the effective fight against the "dukhi". All right, the bastards
tribe, if i can not while shoot aiming, then i can cover you good with the
granade-launcher. I've measured the distance, made the corretion for the
wind and havig open the mouth pulled the shooting hook of the launcher. The
granade as a potato have raushed to the "dukhi's" positions. I'm watching
attantively. Am seeing the explosion of my crumb-granade and a cloud of the
dust and smoke. Something turned fleetlingly. Looked like an arm. Have i
really hit? Exactly. Somebody is turning, moving, evidently somebody is
rushing to help the heurt one. And now inconprihanciblly the slot-machine
will be good. Am changing the aiming slat for 300 meters, making the
fire-controller for the single-fire. Breath in and out, at the
half-breathing out stop the breathing and move the bead together with the
rear sight at the cloudy stirring spot. Smoothly, very smoothly take off the
looseness -- the free moving of the shooting hook. Am not breathing. The
subgun and I are the united thing. It is the part of me. Or i am a part ot
it. I'm pushing the shooting hook same smoothly. Am concentrated. Nothing
exists but my subgun and the indistinct swarming spot. I could even not
understand and not feel that there was a shooting. Continuing the
hook-moving I could not notice as it was at a stop, and i continue to push.
My eyes, no - all my being watches at the place where to i have just shot.
The spot died away and moved left. Got it! One more "dukh" is away. I'm a
sniper!
And again the mortar plastering begins. Everything's as at the last
time. But now we'll not run back. The revenge feeling for the killed ones,
whom i had left hier becaouse of you, bastards, lets me not to be afraid.
Prick you, gits! The one can all the war in this stinking crater lie. It
will not be so.
I sping out of the crater and rolling, short crossing strive to hit
behind the barricade fragments. When it's about ten meters distance, I run
not bending down to this hill of the splinters and rubbish. I killed
somewhere hier "dukh" having not control over the emotions. And am not
ashamed about my act. Yes, have killed. Yes it was cruel. But what sould man
do? No choice. Almost no choice.
I've realized excellently, that the "dukhs" are now triing to come to
this barricade using this mortar plastering and next shoot us. No chance!
I'm the first!
I'd no time to watch around, but could see as the "dukhs" were running
from the State bank side. I could now manage the cunning. I've changed the
magazine. There were the rounds but too little. What for to run risks and
fret while reloading. We need it not. The one must carefully prepare to meet
with the enemies. So, nearer, whores, nearer!!! There are so many of you,
and Slava ia alone. And how many men are there? I've re-counted and found uo
to halfhundred mujahideens. Am choosing the aiming, push the shoooting hook.
The subgun jerks, move the barrel left and right! Aha, monsters, you're
cought! We'll organize for you now a Crystal Maze! I'm happy, i'm besoted.
Was never so happy. There is no combat crash around. No mines' explosions
behind. There are me with the subgun and the "dukhs". Many "dukhs". "Dukhs",
who do not like us. "Dukhs", who mock at the captives, who nail our guys to
the crosses. Get now, choke over. I must change my position. Rollimg, one
more. A couple meters on the knees. Changed magazine again. Have chosen the
position. Watch now. Aha, degenerates, you're flogging at my old position.
There's no me any more. I'm hier, bastards! Have given shooting from the
knee. There are many, now very many "dukhs", liing without moving on
asphalt. The same oure kids were liing without moving on asphalt some days
ago. Where to have you, shitheads, 'em taken? The other "dukhs" have also
laid down. Everithing was the same as earlier, but exect on the contrary.
I'm shouting, I'm rejoicing. They"ve laid down. But it's Ok, we'll take
'em also. No problem!
The subgun shooting resounds also asid. Am turning my head, the men
already have come running and help to hollow the "dukhs". Come on, men,
there's enough for all! I'm not greed. I need no rewards. Hier is my reward!
Thank You, my Lord, for the happyness given to me. Teh blood is ranging in
srtherias. There's not enough place for it. I undo my jacket, have no body
armour on. Have had no time to get the new one. Doesn't matter. There are so
many "dukhs" liing with the armours. Have a choice as in supermarkt! I
change for the granade launcher.
Yeah, the "dukhs" are liing with the asses upside but can also yap. So,
a man schould not show himself. Let now the granade launcher to work. Push
the shooting hook and watch where to flys the granade. I make the correction
and push once more. Swine, where are you going! As i was reloading this
scoundrel have rolled away, again miss. Spite and excitement are playing in
me. Youra is and spitting aside. Is breathing as the exhausted military
hourse.
It's smoking, Youra, yes?
Aha, let's stop smoking as we get out.
Then i'll have no shortages. Wife can part from so positive one, - joke
i back and shoot at the "dukhs".
They with their rolling have pestered me. Hier the one, who i all the
time hunted at, has jerked and loosing the subgun started to roll about.
Youra has shot him just with the first attempt. I looked at him
reproachfully. That was my "dukh"!
So as he do not suffer, - joked Youra.
And i'm looking, but can't see you, - continued he, - i'm looking and
you're running already topsy-turvy as an ape along the embankment, shouting,
shooting and happy as on the holyday.
But it is a holyday. Loo, how many "dukhs" have we knocked down. Isn't
it a Happyness? Beat the Tschetschenen, rescue Russia! To say truth, onlt
Devil knows, from whom.. There are sll the chances it willl be neccessary
from You and meto rescue !
We've top-class workt. They had no effective using thier mortar
plastering. Good made, Slavka!
I know, - have i commented modestly.
Meanwhiles our tanks tried to suppress the mortar battery, but they
could not make it good. Evidently the battery was on a closed positione and
has us with an assistance of the aimer. It would be good to find this cattle
and "pinch off his tail".
The "dukhs" meanwhiles tried to steap back, but were not successful All
the "dukchs" who were on the square under our stormy fire have staied there
to lie. Perfect work!
But we had to force through. The technique could not to come following
us as we were liing and could not were not able to go on becaus of the
bombs. But now some groups of our men have started to go on with the short
crosses. The martar battery made nothing in the meanwhile. And therefore
more fighters followed bravly the first ones.
Come on! Come on, Slava, Come on, ahead! I've darted. Ahead, over the
remains of the barricade. The feet are getting stuck in the sand and small
cruashed stones. The eyes're looking ahead, diesn't matter what's for the
feet. Again my blood's beating in the head. The feet're getting deeper
stuck. It's more and more difficult to pull 'em out of the sticky traps. I
drop aside specially and roll. Am holding the subgun near me fastly and
lolling. Can hear the crackle of the tearing matelial. Fucking end of my
jacket! Doesn't matter. No biggie! Forward -- that's important, away from
this barricade, away from this mark for the moratar-aimer. Am hitting with
head badly at some stone. The red circles in the eyes. My poor head! In
spite of the nonstopping ache do continue the rolling on the ground. Hier's
asphalt at last. Am jumping on the feet and running ahead. Can't see plainly
who and what are ahead. Only forwad. The head's breking with the pain.
Everything will be Ok. "Everything will be Ok and my turn will come..." - in
my head rose the wordes of some old song. Fuck you! Do not come! I do not
give up. Not now at least! Forward! Only forward.
My eyes come in norm slowly. Our guys are hier liing down. That means
forward to 'em. It was our brigade liing and firing back. The "dukhs"
entrenched themselves near the halfdestroyed State bank and on the higher
floors of it. Meaning the fire from it man can say there are quite a lot of
'em. Pity! And how was it good, our crossing through half of the square!
Would be good the next half to cross the same good! Well, monsters, you've
invited us. Am falling between the fighters. The smoke hanging over the
State bank let the one not to see plainly. The "dukhs" are covered with the
smole. And according to the their thick fire there are a lot of these swines
entrenche there. Am watching the firing-points. Aha! Can see as in the smoke
a shooting refletion glimpsed. Without thinknig cast the subgun up and shoot
shortly there. Once more. Am watching. There are no more reflections
apparently. May be he's rolled aside, but may be I've aimed. It's senseless
to shoot with a subgun. Am standing on the knee, taking the granade for the
launcher. Ans wait. The thick shooting is around me. Everybody's using all
the possibilities to shoot. But where are the tanks? We've steppt forward.
What do they need more? Spite, despair are overfilling me. Were all the
victims, all the guys who have stayed to lie hier after the first assault,
for nothing and senseless? Where are you, tankists? Swines, bastards! Am
pushing the shooting hook and the granade is flying to the "dukhs'"
direction. Am not watching where was the explosion, push the new one in the
launcher and am shooting again. You do not do it! It will not be such a
humiliating shame, that i've felt, any more. Will not be! I'll be hier up to
the end. Where are you shitty tankees?
The mortar bombing has started again. The bombs are dropping and
exploising somewhere far beheind us. But we can feel the experience of the
aimer. Every salvo is nearer and nearer. We may not stay hier. May not. But
is it possible to hide, to cover four hundred men in the rear and undeep
craters, digged into the plate-square? No fucking chance! Not possible!
The nervs are exploding. The bombs wailing, which i'd ignored at first,
steps with every bomb into the soul more an more forcefully. Every new wail
of this fucking bomb is vibrating as the tight string and every cell of the
body, of unhappy brain is also trambling, vibrating. I keep myself from the
deep wish to close the ears and to drop on the ground. I perceive every new
bomb explosion as a relief. It means, not you, not at you, it means, not
your fate yet. And again the new salvo makes the one to tighten, to shrivel,
to breake the teeth clenching the jaw with the crackle in the cheek-bones.
And to suppress the fear and my powerless, to try the playing against the
fate, you're running from place to place, shooting at the hardly seen in the
clouds of smoke enemy. Am repeating continually that i'm not afraid. To
refresh myself, try to remember the view of the recent fleeing and the last
look at the square, covered with the corpses of our former colleagues, our
friends... It helps. You realize the reality. A kind of the soul balance
comes. If we may not stay hier, we must go forward. Even if it seems to be a
madness, there's no other way. There's no way back. There will be no
reserves and no reinforcements. There are only two things staying in the
mind. There are we -- "the rabid dogs" and there are "dukhs". Who winns?
That's all clear and simple. Maximal clear and simple.
It means forward, only forward. During an interval in the bombs wailing
i make the rush forward. With a short crossing to the next undeep crater.
Have droppt into the slash. Screw it. It dries and drops away. Look back.
The fighters are also crossing. Leaving the former positions. Our tanks have
started to shoot. Sod it! Where were you, monsters before. It's about
hundred - hundred thirty meters up to the bank.
We can see the "dukhs" better and they can see us also. But owing to
the wise shooting of our tankees "dukhs" had to restrain thier energy. With
exactly wise shooting, but not the well-aimed one, our tankees made the
mujahideens to shut up a bit.
The bursts of the shells were in a fan direction, bringing the high
floors down. We know that there are the mighty basements, so there will be
the problems. I sighed. Ok, will manage the problem, we need only to reach
them. And there it wil be "cleaned". While the "dukhs" have a bit shut up we
must go forward. This thought was not only in my head. The fighters around
were also going up and running forward.
There was a rumour in the brigade that they didn't succeed to evacuate
money and currency from the State bank. And that's why in the eyes of the
all brigade could man read not only the fighting fervour but also the
passion of the winner. Although I didn't believe that the money were not
brought away but the light of greed burnt my nerve cells also. It woulf be
good to make my finansial situation by this way. Almost legal way, therefore
-- forward, only forward. Fear, passion, greed and with the help of our
tanks -- are the good stimulating forces. Everybody wants to be the first
one bursting in the money depository. I've seen the bank basements only in
the films. And if there is a gold? I've smiled about my thoughts in the
meanwhile desperate shooting at the second floor. There is a wooden cock but
the golden hills. All the golden reserve of the SU, Russia, of this petty
Ichkeria are situated somewhere on the Kaiman islands. And the passion of
the treasure-hunter eats me away and forces me forward. But we had again to
lay down. The "dukhs" started to yap in spite of the firing. And now, kids,
your mortar can noto reach us. Now we can train in exact shooting. I put the
subgun to my cheek. Wht have you as a blind kittens seize the State bank?
You've robbed enough, lat now others to make it. Have you forgotten the law
of socialism and gangs - "Rob the loot!"? Not good! You must share! We are
also trambling with the gold-fever! Am shooting at the "dukhs" with the
short bursts, they are appearing rear over the ruins. And oftenly they put
the subgun out and burst over shooting somewhere.
It was the first time as the gold-fever cought me when i was in a fifth
class at school. We lived at that time in a nice city at Volga -- the old
name Kostroma. Before the Soviets it was a merchant city. Very many
churches. Many of them remained in the pristine form all the days. The first
Romanov was anointed to be the Tsar exactly there. In the Ipatiev monastery.
And the last one was executed in the Ipatiev hous in Ekaterinburg. It's an
interesting connection, isn't it? The beginning and the end. So, there was
usual for that place dry sommer. And it was a usage that exactly in that
sommer by the different excavations, for a gatage or for a cellar, a man
could find treasure or sometimes some interesting things. The friends of my
father repaired a cellar in their hous and have found a bottle of vodka from
the tsar time. The throut was pressed with a sealing-wax. There were the
pressed eagles on the galss. The lable has decayed of course, but it was no
problem for the men. They've opened and drunk. They liked it. They say it
was an amazing vodka. At that time i did not drink yet. So, it was not
especially interesing for me. But when the father of my friend, digging the
worms for the fishing, had run into the the crystal jug from the time of
Peter the first filled with the golden coins and for the legel premium has
cought a car, then my friend and I got a fever. Got a deep gold-fever. That
was a hard situation. We, kiddos, could not think about anything but this.
All the thoughts, intentions, deeds were aimed only to find the treasure.
Could man hide the treasure somewhere but in the church? Since the first
class it would be knocked into our heads, that the priests are the
bloodsuckers. And also that they have taken all the savings with the
stupefiing from the simple people away and have diggen them in the
thiftboxes (may be nowadays happens something like this also). And our
school was situated on the former Lazarevskoe cemetery. The cemetery, as it
become the old soviet custom, was abolished, diggen again. The small chapel,
that was standing in the cemetery, was worn out completely and the school
was built on chapel's old basement. They have built something extra of
course but the school is there up to nowadays. It was a bit symbolic,
everything as it was in the standstill epoch of 70th years. A secondary
school instead of the cemetery chapel where the the deceased were in the
funeral service. And so we, a group of the juvenile hooligans hooligans,
have researched the basement of the school. We've discovered suspicious
niche of one square meter size. The niche bottom was covered with the
bricks. What could have been there? Of course the treasures, by all means!
We'd arranged to take it in the night. The watchman was old, liked to
hit some bottle. We'd told parents that we went fishing and in fact it was
"hunting" the tresures. Following all the possible rules to save us, paying
attention to any rustle we had sawn the grating of the basement's window in
two, and had taken the frame off. We'd got through. Shining with the torches
we began to break the bricklaying. It was difficult. And what does the
teenagers' strength mean? But nevertheless changing each other we could
break this laying. There was nothing behind it of course. There was only a
cruxifiction fo stone. Evidently the builders were not able to break the
stony picture of Jesus and decided to make the laying over. They did not
take the sinn on themselves and kept the innocence of the statue. We were
upset and returned back. And in the morning there were the milicioners
standing at the school and noting something, measuring, photographing. It
turned out that we had "worked" under the school director's room and there
were money in his safe. The wages as i remember. Of course we were afraid.
Since that time the treasure-fever has never touched me, but now comes
relapce may be. It's funny for me to watch my own activity. But it's better
to become the attacks of such a fever then to become the attacks of the
fear, chilling the soul and paralysing the will.
The liing and the time marking were tiring. The tanks were the same
keeping the "dukhs" in the trap, but they were not able to make larger
destroyings. To make it thez had to aim lower, but they could also touch us.
And we could not also to step forward. The "dukhs" let us not go.
And the greed instead of the cowardice yearned. Money, money. Needs a
man any fucking patriotism on the war?! A man needs some money. The one
who's the first becomes everything. If the labor of the soldier is a slave
labor, then you can take the people who will make this work more
professionally, skilly, with a little blood, with the minimal losses, but
you must pay these people. And these ladies, who have learnt to fight three
weeks ago with the blood, with the experience of their killed, injured,
missed in action friends, they have only the greedy shine in the eyes.
Grasping shine, based on the deep fear.
The subgun's barrel is already hot. I've changed again for the launcher
but it was not effective. The one should go ahead or to roll back so, that
our tanks could destroy this all this huge hous finally. The shining eyes
off my colleagues proove that we want to go ahead so much, but after the
next tanks salvo there will be scarcely any coin.
The tankees are also our simple russian fellows. Are following the
russian principle for all the ages -- 'if it's not for me, then it's not for
anybody". And therefore they wanted to plaster this hut absolutely, and
nobody becomes the sweet money. Passion, passion. What can man do? The gold
steers the world. Everything's old as the earth.
The radio brought the news and the soldiers repeated that now the
assault from the other side was starting now. That's also not bad. At the
last time we were also promised that the assault would be started and as a
result there was a shamy fleeing. We'll see. Everybody was now more alive
and listening to the happenings. And the shooting tempo was made also
slower. The waiting was too long. The "dukhs" on the contrary took our
waiting to be the unsureness and started to fire more. The slash bursting
started to near me. And the most nastiest sounds of the bound shots. These
sounds make the one to drawl instinktively the head in the shoulders, to
stop the heartbeating and to drop the heart into the feet, bursting the
extra adrenaline into the blood. I am overfilled with it as i see and now
the new stimulation.
Fhui, fhui. Again the slashy bursting comes before me. Sod it! I can't
to move my head due to these shooters. Can't bear it and crawl back, begin
to shoot. Can't see where from comes the shooting at me and am shooting at
random at the positions of the "dukhs". There is a "dukh", exactly his head.
Roughly, without aiming am shooting with the short burst at the foul noddle.
It has dissapeared too quickly after the shooting. That's good!
The sound of the aeroplane is comming from the hight. They want again
to plaster us? No, that was enough! The fear as a cold band crawls inside.
I'm tightening. The sweat is running on my face. Am moving the legs to the
stomach. Everything inside me is rolling up into the tight spring. Am ready
to rush forward, behind, somewhere, but not under this awful air-bombing. Do
not want to hear wailing of our airbombs, which our pilots are dropping on
me. Sod it! It's better to run, i'm ready to run on the positions of "dukhs"
but not to lie and wait when you will be smashed with the direct bombing or
the fragments of the bomb will tear you on thousand shreds. Do not want. Now
i'm ready to rush. Both we and "dukhs" are watching in the sky. Niether ones
nor others are feeling any special joy. What will be the aim of bombing?
Everybody is liing stiil. The plane -- transport one or may be bomber -- is
soaring lazy on the unreachable hight and after the little hook aside begins
sharp loss of the height. Nobody's shooting already. The heart is beating as
a hare paw, it's hot, very hot. The sweat is streamming over all the body.
The steam is flying off from the head, from the face. So, what is the aim?
What is it?
Instinct of selfpreservation demands that i rush somewhere instantly
but far away from this terrible place. Or that i dig myseslf. I'm trying to
think about something other but the plane. Now diving and again taking of
the height: he's frightening or wanting to bomb exactly. Our forward side
gives some rose smokes. May be these pilotes-killers notice our signal and
the horrlible fate goes aside? Am trying to fly away with the thoughts.
Can remember one case when ensign Nikolaev during the vacation was
picking up the mushrooms near the firing field. He didn't notice as he
strolled at this field. Later he told that he'd heard as the bulets sinking
in the trees trunks. At once has he not understood and when it was clear, he
started to entrench himself. He had only the small knife as a weaponry. And
with this knife and the hands, tearing off the finger-nails, he was able to
dig a trench in a five seconds and it was enough to hide absolutely. He waws
sitting there in it and it was yet about halfmeter depth over his head. Plus
a breastwork with an earth, which he had thrown over. And he had tied his
shirt to the stick, which he used to shovel the leaves away for the
mushrooms-searching. He had put out the stick and began to wave with it.
They've noticed him and stoppt the shooting. Have run to him and taken out.
And after it they wondered very much how was the one able to dig the trench
during so short time. If a man wants to survive, he can make hard things. A
historical fact: during the Great Patriotic War a torpedo was brought with
the wave on the ship's deck. There was not explosion at once. A deckie,
usual deckie, has run to it grabbed with the hands nad thrown over board.
And it has exploded there. The ship was safe. When they have asked deckie
how was he able it to make, he answerded that he did not know himself.
And I was ready to show the untstanding results as a runner during the
bombing, or even to dig myself in three meter depth in the ground during a
couple minutes.
And the demned plane seemed to be not hurrying with the bombing and
made only some mockery. We saw the bursts flying from the earth at it Many
bullets were tracer, therefore the lighting traces were seen sure.
Now the plane started to dive and before the nearest point the black
dark smudge parted from it and droppt down. But it did not look as a bomb.
Now the parachute opened and the load was slowly falling down on the earth.
Where to and to for whom was it, we could not see that behind the bank's
building. But because of the happy squeal of "dukhs" a man could suppose
that it dopped to them. I was also emigma for us for whom was assigned this
container initially. Can be that for the "dukhs". Reconnoiters have told us
earlier that some paarcels are sent to the "dukhs". I didn't believe. And
now it happened that I have seen with my eyes. Some ons are fighting but the
other ones are making money...
The "dukhs" have started again the fire and now we've heard the
cannonade on the opposite side. Have our guys really beagun the real
assault? The "dukhs" began bustling. Don't know, monsters, where should they
shoot. And now we have attacked. We've attacked with an inspiration, with a
fevour. That was great! The "dukhs" were tossing as the mice in the
mousetrap. A bit more, men, and we this trap will be closed. Bash them,
bastards! The subgun got again alive in my hands. There was a panik among
the "dukhs". They were tossing, changes the positions. Were shooting now at
our direction, now at the direction of their tail.
The mesege by the words was that "makhra" and paratrooper have started
assault of the bank from the opposite side. This was the radioinformation
from San Snaych. Now it was our turn to yell joily. We had stood up and ran.
At first a assumed that it will be the usual transference but in some time
all our brigade spontaneously went to assault. "Dukhs" have noticed their
blunder too late and therefore have not reacted instantly.
Forward, only forward. Assaulting. Hura! Am running. I want to run with
the short crosses habitually, carefully, accurately. But it wasn't possible!
Teh fighters were as if halfmad, invited the troubles. Now the first ones
have reached the building, hier are two survived doorways. And machine-gun
fired from it. Three or four our soldiers fell as if they were cut off. If
it is a machine-gun and at the short idstance, then the armour-jacket cannot
help...It cannnot stop the bullet of such calibre with such a speed. Now i
have appeared almoust near the doorway. Am running and instantly dropping,
then rolling, i pulled convulsive at the lock of the bag with
launcher-granades. Have taken granade. Teh fingers are as if of the wood, i
can't bind them. Tear off and through away the gloves. They were disturbing.
It seems that i'm making all very slowly.
I don't look at my subgun. My hands are making everything
automatically. Terrible slowly. And I, as the enchanted one, am looking iat
the black doorway of the State bank. Only the light of the enemey's
machine-gun can be seen there. It's seen as the bullets mow down our
"makhra", as the men running, with all the body forward, are rushing to this
doorway but the line of the bullets crosses them stomaches, shoulders, legs
out. An the fountains of the red, very red blood are bursting back, and the
guys having stumbled are falling on the ground. Some of them are rushing
forward with the body's inertia, the others in contra are stoppt with the
speed of the bullet, pushes backward -- it's seen as their heads are
knocking on the dirty asphalt. The arms are thrown about, the weapons are
flying off far aside. Some of them are holding the subgans convulsively and
it shoots all the bullets, hitting the other ones. It turns slowly, very
slowly in my eyes. And my hands are pushing the granade into the launcher
bottomless barrel may be even slower. Got it! The well-known incouraging
flick comes into my brain, explaining that the granade is set at the correct
position. The eyes are watching continuously as the machine-gun's bust is
comming to my side. And at the places, where it catches no victims, the
fontains of the slash, dust, earth, asphalt, metall rubbish, sometimes the
sparkles are being cut out. Out of the all bunt weapones left hier since the
first assault. It seems for me that I can see the flights fo the bullets and
they are being carried slowly into the space. I know where do they hit. I
feel the machine-gunner and hie terrible weapone. I am he. Just now, in one
and half second these heavy bullets hit me!
---------------------------------------------------------------
(c) Copyright 2011 translation by Oleg Abramov
Date: Jul 2011
---------------------------------------------------------------
The granade is fixed! I'm jumping on one knee and am shooting at the
black hollwo of the doorway with the right, but not with the left as says
the rules, hand. The shot. I'm looking not at the door but at the
machine-gun's line. Now it is in about 20 cantimeters from me and i hear the
dim explosion and the line stays still and after that dies away. I raise up
my head. The smoke is flying off from the basement. Something's burning
there.
And now again the sounds' world bursts in. It's a strangeful feeling
that the eternity's passed but not only some seconds. No discussions! Am
alive ans Ok. So then that wsa my fortune! Forward! Only forward. I've
jumped and rushed to the direction of "my" doorway. And although i had to
race about twenty meters I have looked to the side of the second doorway.
There were the fighters on the our side throwing the hand grenades the black
hollow. Way to show 'em, men! No pardon anybody! Forward! Forward! We're
bursting into the doorway. There is liing on the floor char, halfbroken
corpse of the machine-gunner with smouldering, sick-stinking clothing. And
the murdering tool is also there, mangled. My work! Running I jump over it
and can see all the details of my "masterpiace". I forced the grenade before
his nose. Exactly in a halfmeter before. There was no head. Something like
indefinite medley of brown-grey colour. The arms, rather the remains of the
arms are spread out, the jacket is smouldering. It's stinking with the burnt
wadding.
We're bursting into the first floor. A large room with the colomns
raising up into the darkness under the ceiling. There is a mess of the dust
and shooting smoke hanging in the air. We can see the remains of the
camp-fires. There are some rags in the corner. Where to should we run? No
light, and much dust, we can't see anything. We're starting to check the
room. There are already about fifteen menof us. And the men are always
comming. We go through the room quickly with chasse steps guarding each
other. Subgun is at the shoulder, everyody is tightened. Nobody was able
after the racing to catch the breathing yet. The heavy breathing and short
retorts and exclamations are heard. It was so that three standing near me
fighters and should to research behind the stntion. We're peeping. Theer was
somthing liing in the darkniss. A foghter comes carefully, holding the
subgun ready. Touches with the boot's tow. After that binds and turns it
over. It's dark. Very dark. It's difficult to breathe because of the dust,
stench, smoke.
-- What's there? - i can't wait any more. - But quickly. There's no
time.
-- Ours, - answers the fighter, returning to us.
-- Who?
-- Ours. Too dark. Can't see.
-- Alive?
-- Was killed long ago. May be he's left from the first assault.
-- Ok. Let's go. Will take him later.
The men are coming. The shouts and wails are heard. The shooting in the
street and over our heads becomes more and more hard. The russian shouts,
foul language are going during the guttural chechen wails. Man can not catch
who and what are crying. Everything in the head is simple mixing to be one
wail. The thick walls muffle the shooting somehow. But it's already so loud,
that it lashes the ears badly. The "dukhs" understand that the way to step
back is forbidden and are fighting becoming enraged. Correct, fucking
monsters, we accept nobody to be captured alive.
Now the shooting was heard. In the near, completely in the near. And
somewhere from the left end of the building the crowd bursts in. The shouts
and clattering. Everybody's listening. The foul words. The swearing is
without accent. Ours!!!That means they were also successful! We're not
alone. We'll se now what's on, when we come up to you and all together as a
united collective start to kill you! The jolly passion fulfills us, we're
going, running to meet us. Are shouting joyfully.
-- Ours!
-- Men, don't shoot! Ours!
-- Hello, "makhra"!
-- Hurrah! Ours!
-- So long time!
Nobody's listening to each other. Everybody's simple speaking. There
are no officers, no soldiers. We're shaking hands, hugging and kissing one
another. Ours! Our "makhra", our paratroopers. The word "ours" is rolling in
the mouthes! Am ready again and again to spell it loudly and to repeat in my
mind. We're stepping aside. More and more men are being comming. Ours are
running, forcing in. And the paratroopers are comming alternately with
unknown "makhra". The joyfull-raising mood is touching everybody:
-- "Dukhs" get fuck-up!
-- Now, sure!
-- And do you know how we were smashed here during the first assault?
-- Have heard!
-- They've heard. And why haven't you come to help us?
-- There was no oder.
-- Now we're taking this bank and part the money.
-- Sure, no other way.
So talks and the others were in the air. Nobody was hurriing to go up.
Near the stairs, there were the fighters and made the "dukhs" back in the
higher floors with the shooting and bursting. Now all of us go up and
belabour these bastards. Let 'em be mad of spite. All were fulfilled with
the happy lirical mood. Many ones have started to smoke, adding to the all
smoke tabacco's smell. Somebody wanted to find a countryman. Somebody was
simply discussing already made things and the coming assault of the
Dudajev's Palace. The assault of the bank was in the mind as already made
thing. Many ones were joking that they will part the gold and dollars
hiddden in the basement.
Suddenly the tellible crash comes. As if the ceiling is dropping on
you. And now the men's wails. In a couple seconds one more explosion and
crashing. Nothing can be seen. The wall of the dust is hanging in the air.
And only the shouts and the groans of the injured ones. In the seiling,
where the left corner was situated, there was a void yawning. What has
happened? The rinning hangs in the ears. The Chechen wails are heard louder
and louder. Teh shooting is more hard. Somebody has caused the wall to fall.
May be some tankee has shot? That's scarcely. The shell could not creat such
thing. That means, the "dukhs" have sowd mines. They wanted to make a mass
grave for us. Have waited to let more of us to crowd in the room and made
the explosion. Such monsters, bastards, fucking bitches! They and their
perverted psychology have really got to me! I've come to the fallen corner.
Dust and smoke are penetrating into the lungs. Everybody's coughing.
All the stairwell has fallen. About ten men were under the heap. Many
ones were absolutely smashed. Teh heads, stomaches are broken. The insides
are smashed out. Many meters of the white-blue guts were being moved through
the dirt, dust following their owners, who were taken form under the ruins.
Someones have lost the extremities. The smashed hands, arms, feet with the
boots on were liing just near me. The alive ones were walking as the sleepy
ones because of the view's mpression, kicked the torn parts of their
friends. Some fighter was bound to the corpse and tried to make the fallen
out insides back. No success. As a dough insides went out. And he was tired
of it and took the knife and cut off the spare ones. He pressed the ends
into the broken body. When he had taken the hands off, they got dirty with a
blood, bile and with something slimy and mushy. The fighter had squeamishly
wiped up the hands with the jacket of the corpse. I was able to stop the
sickniss urges.
The injured ones were sitting near. They were being bandaged. The torn
off hands' stumps of two of them were being bandaged. The injured was being
smoking with the healthy hand and was being asking excitedly the others
around him: "Will they sew on my hand? Well, men, don't keep silent, really,
they'll sow it on?" The others around him turned away bashfully and kept
silent.
One got his leg being bandaged and tighten. He was unconscious. The
shiny white bone was being protruding and over it the black-red blood was
streaming out continuously. The leg was already tighten with tourniquets in
some places but the blood was being gushing unendly.
Someones were being shouting blood-curdling, others were being dirty
swearing. Someone spoke loudly something like a prayer. Three or four men,
all in the dust and unrecognizable, were shouting in their radio sets
disturbing esch other:
-- We're blocked up!
-- Have gotten the dead and injured!
-- Fuck you with your "twohundreds" - "threehundreds"! I've told --
dead and injured!
-- Don't know how many ours. There are all of 'em ours!
-- Don't know!
-- The docktors!
-- Immediately docktors!
-- We've the heavy ones! Cannot bring 'em with the hands!
-- Yes! Send the technique!
-- To beat off the "dukhs"?
It has passed not a minute from the moment of the explosion and almost
all the victims were already taken from under the ruins. There were some
more ones but it wsa impossible to take them without crane. There were
nobody alive under this terrible concret flag-stone.
Everybody realized that due to the "dukhs" on the roof and on the first
floor we can't become the technique to evacuate the injured and dead ones.
We must beat 'em out. And now the shouts were made:
-- Attack 'em!
-- Let's beat the bastards!
-- I'll cut off a hundred for this explosion!
-- Hurrah! Assault!
-- Forward!
-- Upwards!
There were niether commander nor commands. All were runnung to the only
stairsway leading to the first floor. There were the swears and wails heard
over there. What were the shouts of the "dukhs", it was unclear. The first
ones have started to shoot with the launchers uowards. The grenades' busrts
sound was waving through the rooms, painly whipping the ear membranes. The
others, due to the narrow way, had to stand waiting for the possibility. And
now the forward fighters and officeres have made one more launches' salvo
and steppt upwards. Step -- salvo, after that two more steps and again a
salvo. And now the're running shooting with the subguns forward. All others
are also running upwards. Jostling each other pushing the forwards with the
magazines, pushing out with the hands everybody was dashing on the second
floor. The remains of the second floor and a part if the roof. There were
more then six hundred men downwards, as i guess. I was afraid that the
stairs would not bear such a heavyness and falls down completely. It had not
fallen.
I'm running in the thick crowd. Am pushing the forward one badly with
the subgun. I'm also pushed. After that someone kicked me into the bottom to
force me forward. There were already the bursts of the grenades and subgund
upwards heard. Forward! Forward! Oh, god, why is this large bottom ahead me
moving so slowly?! Go ahead, you! Quicker, quicker! Aren't you, monster,
able to move your feet? Can keep myself hardly not to prick him with the
knife.
Now we've left the first stairs platform. Upwards. Upwards! There's
something mild under the feet. I look down -- the remains od a "dukh". At
least hundred men have steppt over 'em. The feet are sliding aside in
something slippery and sticky. I must not think that it was a man somewhen.
Forward! Upwards! Was it really a man? That was a "dukh". And that explains
everything! Do not start any discussions. Forward! This bottom ahead has got
to me so much! Go quicker! Can't you? Push the on before you. You're making
it badly. Force him surely! Bastards' traibe! All the "dukhs" will be killed
when we come.
The spite, the furious are catching my throut. Am listening to nobody.
Everybody's talking only about the quiqest reaching upper floor. The spite
against the thick bottom, that can not move ahead quicker, the spite about
the idiot, who pushes me into my back always. Can't he see that I am not
able to go fast due to some fat guy. I know that i'm not a slimy, but if you
could look at this one before me, then i would be a walking-stick.
Now we can see a the roof. The tempo is accelerating. Everbody's
running through the stairs overload with the rubbish. The feet seem almost
to break away so that i could fall. Fuck You! I will not fall. I've set the
teeth and bend the body. Forward! Am forcing onto the roof, running on the
right. There are the fighters liing and aren't able to beat off some "dukhs"
staying on the second floor. The first floor has remained almsot all intact,
but the second floor has remained as only one corner. And the roof has
remained almost all. It is as a portico hanging over us on the seven meters
height. The "dukhs" are partly hidden partly on the remained corner of the
second floor. And partly they are have climbed on the roof. All of them were
higher then we were and sparing no bullets and grenades sent them at us. The
killed and injured ours were already pulled back. Hier a body of the "dukh"
has droppt from upwards. It was not touched, only kicked with the feet
further as a disturbing thing.
The positions of "dukhs" and our ones were practically the same
invulnerable for both the enemies. We were sending the lead our enemy the
best of us but there was no any sense. All my nature strived for
retribution. I've come to the fighters:
-- Who has explosive?
-- Don't know.
-- Who has explosive?! - I shouted trying to overtake the combat nois.
They have brought about 50 gramm of plastit. Too little. Icalled for
the rado operator of our brigade:
-- Call for ours, say that they bring us about kilogram of plastit and
electro-fuses. Got it?
-- Got it. - the fightrer noddid his head and happily bered his teeth.
-- Don't dry the teeth, call!
-- Yes, sir!
The spite was still inside, demanded some exit. I saw in the mind the
picture with the smashed bodies. I've cast up my subgun and made up a burst
with all my heart. We had to force them a bit back, they didn't let us to
sow the explosive. I've explained the next ones shortly my plan. They have
understood and we started shooting at the "dukhs". Have tried to throw the
grenades and to hollow 'em with the launchers and "flys". It seemed to be
effective. They've steppt back, rolled back. Gold may be easily told!
And at once our brigade miner have come. They've brought the large
piece of the yellow plastit and the fuses with the wire. We'll have fun now!
- Men! Make, plese, not too much, not to ruin all the building with us!
-- Don't worry!
-- There's not much hier. We'll pich up the "dukhs" now as the apples
under the tree.
-- Let's fry these cattle!
-- It's pity that we've no flame gun!
-- Once more, men, let's force the "dukhs" back!
-- Come on! Fire!
And everybody started shooting the sitting on the higher floor "dukhs"
in the furious tempo. The bullets were bouncing, going upwards. The hand
grenade, thrown upwards, hit and came off back. It droppt on the square.
Nobody of ours was injured.
-- What are you doing, fucking bonehead?
-- It was not on a purpose!
-- Fuck you, on a purpose or not. Almost wrecked me. Idiot!
-- Take the grenade for the launcher, hit it to the heel and then
throw.
-- Won't it explode in the hand?
-- Don't worry, try it!
That one tried. Was able to make it. The others also began to shoot
"their" "dukhs" using our idea and forcing them further back. Our miners
were working quickly. They have tied with the wide black electrical tape the
blocks of the eplosive to the remained columns, stuck the fuses in, for
every one more spare for any case, and ran back. And the moment has come.
The Judgement Day has come. Pray your Allah, bastard tribe. The miner has
fixed the ends of the wires in his "infernal machine" and started to roll
the handle. And after that he pushed quickly the small black button.
The deqfening explosion resounded and the brick laying has fallen down.
We could hear the short absolutely horrible human shouts when the explosion
resounded. Under these bricks the "dukhs" have found their death. So must it
be. Eye for eye! There were the "dukhs" in the remains of the roof. The
miners worked also about it. And now they've draged their "machine" to that
corner.
-- Won't the roof fall?
-- Don't know.
-- Let's get far away
The commands were heard and the crown flooded back and let the corner
be clear. Teh miners have also steppt away. Again they have rolled quickly
the handle, pushed the button and explosion crashed out. Now the roof bended
and was falling not on the first floor but on the street. Teh "dukhs" were
the first ones dropping from the roof and after them the roof fell, having
covered them. The heit of the dropping was about twelwe meters and the
concrete ceilings were over it also... That's good, i have even not come to
the edge to look it. But the people have come.
-- Can't see anything!
-- Now the dust will subside.
-- Don't shoot, it's enough a hanging dust.
-- And what if there is somebody alive?
-- Are you out of your wits? So high...
-- And abotu ten tons over. No, scarcely.
-- Look, the same as downstairs the ours were covered.
-- Aha, nad the guts are the same rolled out. They had not to explode
the ceiling over us, then they would die as the men.
-- TfuiA dog's death for a dog!
-- Let's go!
-- Let's go to part the money!
-- Everybody gets the equal part!
-- Keep dreaming! Equal! He-he!
-- All who have taken this shitty bank, become the prize.
-- But nobody else!
-- Fuck 'em! Let 'em go feet first!
-- Downstairs! In the basement! Quickly! Everybody has a hard breathing
feeling the possibility to be reach. It's strangeful bit the ones, who have
stayed down, did not go to look and to rob the basements. Although there
were about fifty people with the injured ones. They were staying shooting
down. And downstairs in the basements it was dark as in the soul of the
siiner. We made of the jackets left by the dead and injured something like
the flares, dipped them into the diesel fuel of the come infantry combat
vehicle and started the fire.
On the stairs leading in the dungeon the disfigured with the tortures
corpses of our soldiers and offisers were liing. Of the ones who injured or
shell-shocked were captured by the "dukhs" during the first assault. Many
ones had in the open mouthes packs of the money. Some ones had the stomaches
cut and instead the insides there were the money. Much money. But the money
were old. These ones were changed in Russia in the year 93, but in the free
Ichkeria they were in the use up to our entrance. It was clever of you,
bastards. The people, population teh funny money were given, the money which
had no any meaning anywhere but in this chitty hole, and you got dollars for
the oil, weapons, narcotics. Fucking bastards. Although they acted according
to the principle of the unforgetable kommunist party. When our "wooden"
roubles would nowhere but in the Soviet Union accepted. I'm not sure that
they would be now somewhere accepted.
Everybody got at ones the gold fever off. The corpses were brought away
on the street. Teh paratroopers and strange "makhra" have gone to their
units. We've stayed at the place, went into the basements.
The basements of the State bank of the independent Republik Ichkeria
were situated under all the building. At one place the basement was of "two
floors". Lighting up our way with the selfmade flares we went down. We were
going slowly. The "dukhs" could have left any surprize for us, any meanness.
They are able. Man can see everywhere the traces of the hasty fleeing. The
left broken drawers, boxes, where from the money of the year 1991 model were
halfspilled. The empty and the fulfilled bill collector's bags. The forward
going shouted happily and started rummaging in a box. Everybody has come to
him. The packs of the dollars, re-tied with the paper and elastic bands were
sticking out of two partly torn boxes. In the dull unsure light of the
flares these two boxes seemed something as an unbelievable fortune. Dollars,
dollars! This is comfort life, thiare the apartaments, the cars, the good
university for the children. Dollars, dollars!
Instantly it was crowdy near the boxes. Jostling each other sverybody
has come running to these boxes and started seizing on. They took on, two
packs. Pulled out the banknotes, tried to watch them exactly in the bad
light the clear space, worked them up, pressed and smeled them. Dollars!
That's why the one should be on the war! This is as s prize for every born
thing. The prize was deserved. And we need niether any rewards nor medals.
Hier is our reward. Everybody was excited. Hier oer heward! Everybody was
excites. But now one fo the soldierd shouted:
-- Men, but they stain!
-- Coo? What a fantasy!
-- Indeed, stain! My fingers are green!
-- You have 'em for real dirty!
-- You've dirty! Spit at the banknote and rub it!
-- Really stain! Phew, heh..
-- Good gravy! So, I've open my mouth too wide. I thought that now
there is a fortune and I'll live as a man. Fack! Phew! Facking chechens
could have left a couple boxes aith the real bucks!
-- Monsters!
-- What shall we do with it?
-- I know, we'll use it in WC.
-- Bottom will be green.
-- So, we'll burn 'em. Bugger 'em!
-- But may be we can something make with 'em? - some timid voice
resounded in the darkness.
-- Yes, you can, but for five years in prison.
-- So, well, burning?
-- Let's make it, homy, burning!
-- Let's check, may be there are some real bucks?
-- Let's check!
And we've begun to tear the boxes, to break the packs, to touch, to
slabber the banknotes.
The only thing, that we did not make, was to lick them. If it were of
some sense, then we would bite them as it was made earlier to check. The
checked fals packs flew in the common pile. And now this pile of fals
dollars started with the flare to burn slowly. Slowly, with the fumes and
crackle, spreading the stench of the burniing papier and paints, the pile
cought wit fire. There was no one real dollar in these boxs.
It was strangeful really, only seven-ten years ago i trained myself for
the war against the country, where at the dollars are the national currency,
and now I'm ready to get them joyfully. So, what for do I fight hier? For
some dollars? For the idea? For the Motherland? Do not know. But it's a real
fact that we've lost the third world war. We've lost it without any combats.
We were won with the help of exact this dollar. It is our God, our Main
Commander, and due to it this war has started. And no any tank could us
help, they can cover the area equal the territory of may be all France. The
rockets with the nuclear heads did not help us also. Our governors are
trying to move just this dollar abroad. And this means that Russia, the
great, the mighty, the indivisible one is of no sense for them. Having got
their part of the "greeny" they are ready to leave. Their kinder are being
also taught abroad, ant we drop on the earth in this cold, damp with the
shooting and wind everywhere Chechnya! What for, my Lord! What for?
While looking at the burning down pack of the false dollars as if at
the burning down our hopes the fighters brought the six sacks with the
fifty-thousand banknotes. And again with the hope but now already without
any former zeal we have started to watch them. But unfortunately even by the
first look we could see that the paper, used o print these false notes,
could bear no any control-check. I had a feeling that the "dukhs" were not
able to find any paper but this wrapper to make this money. And again the
next portion of our hopes and expectations comes into the fire. The fire
flares up and the fire is burning bright and shiny.
-- Look, the ours are burning better then the bucks!
-- But they are "wooden"!
-- Exactly, wooden!
-- Ok, let's go ahead.
-- Let's go and see why ours have bombed down the local Ministry of
finance and what a hell was about the bombing of the State bank.
-- Don't you understand? To burn the documents about the machinations.
-- Have you seen any document in this building?
-- No. Only the clear blanks.
-- That's why. The "dukhs" have taken off all the documents, i'm not
sure if they were able to make such a joke about the Minfin, but i guess
they will further long blackmail our governors. And we'll as the dogs beat
the "dukhs" off everywhere only to find these documents.
-- It seems to be so. And what should we do?
-- And who lives now good?
-- What is this?
-- Money. What did you want to find in the State bank?
-- Sure. Money. But the old money. The ones of the ninety first year
emission. What shall we do with them?
-- What?! Let's gather and use to bake the ovens. We must further sleep
in this building. So, we'll warm ourselves near the fire made of the
millions! Have you ever warmed yourselves near the fire made of the
millions?
-- No.
-- And me too. So, we'll warm ourselves!
-- I'd like it.
-- Of course!
All the present liked this idea. We carried the sacks with the invalid
money to the exit. Now everybody will be not the real but the sham
millionaires. We could let us to warm ourselves near the fire of the burning
money. By the way the one can dream, get away from the realities.
And realities were the next ones: during the assault of the State bank
we've lost about fifty men. The killed ones, the injured and missed ones.
Together with the first assault of "Minutka", with the unfortunate
transition and taking of the bank it gave a figure of about three hundred
men. A very expansive price. Many unclear things. The place of the new
commander was unknown, he had left off us. Many fighters were missed and
nobody tried to search for them. There were no forces, no means. The furious
tiredness covered us. There were no wishes. There was one wish - to eat and
to fall asleep.
If the meal was brought for us, then the second question was a
difficulty. The battallion of the food provision sent us the meal ration of
NATO. It was a kind of a cardboard rectangular box. There were the soldered
tins with the meal inside, the largest one - with the meat and vegetables,
the next one - with a kind of jelly, chocolate, soluble coffee, the tablets
to disinfect the water, the hygienic napkins, the chewing tablets. They were
of double function. On one side they served for the cleaning of the mouth
cavity after the meal, on the other side there was a kind of the caffeine in
them and when the one was tired, fatigue they were refreshing and
reinforcing.
We've began to warn the tinned meat with the vegetables on the fire
made of the money and the furniture fragments. It turned that it could be
eaten also not warmed. The meat was not fat. The vegetables were tasty. We
concluded that our injured fighter would not be able to open the tin of meat
and would die because of the hunger. There were the fighters and the
officers of the battalion of the material provision turning about us.
-- Where from have you got such a luxury, men?
-- It was sent to Russia as a humane assistence. It is from the
Germans. The remains of the "humanitarka" were sent to you.
-- Our enemeys are fed good!
-- No doubts!
-- Better not to talk about that.
-- Yes. Have the rearsoldiers brought any spirit?
-- There is a bit. About fifty gramm per head.
-- A bit really. They could have given for the State bank some more.
-- Wait a bit, tomorrow we're going on the fucking palace, and you'll
drink a bit more.
-- What's the news, by the way?
-- Nothing new. Ours are running hier and there. That's all.
-- Must again something take.
-- And you'd like something other on the war?
-- I'm sick of it!
-- You can hang yourself.
-- Fuck you.
-- Fuck you!
In four hours after the taking of the State bank the euphoria of the
victory was changed to be the deep tiredness. We could see from the
building's roof as our troops tried to force to the Palace, but the massive
fireing made them again to step back. The troops were sent to assault again
and again with the dull stubbornness of the doomed ones, but every time they
steppt back from the covered with the smoke building leaving on the square
the killed ones. Everybody was aware of the fact that tomorrow we will also
in the same way go forward under the mighty shooting. The aircrafts were
flying somewhere high in the sky shooting sometimes eith the guns to the
building. Not numerous tanks tried the best of them but it was no result. My
throat was dry because of the view: the uselessness and futility of the
assault attemts. The wish to become deep drunk has come. Annoyance,
indignation against the senseless butchery changed to be the deep tiredness.
It was everything indifferently. And even the fact that just near to us
under the ruins our comrads are liing brought already no any emotions up.
Everything was absolutly indifferent. "To hell with it!" - that mind about
the events was prevailing. The thoughts were rolling in the head as the
heavy large stiones. Yura had come. His inflamed eyes and tired appearance
proved that it was not good with him. He set near me. To say correctly, he
did not set, he fell down, his back partly coming down by the wall.
- How are you? - i've asked him.
-- I don't give a damn. - he waved the hand tiredly.
-- Have you a drink?
-- A bit. Let's jolt the rearguys.
-- Have no power. It would be better that they bring us a drink, so
could it be. I haven't any idea...
-- What are the men making now in the cellar?
-- Are pillaging the shelvings with the old money. Would you like also
some?
-- What for?
-- And i say the same. For the baking, for the playing cards -- we'll
find something ourselves.
-- What make we tomorrow? - I've asked getting a light.
-- Have no demned idea. I'm somehow tired in the last time.
-- We're old, Yurka, alreadt for these games. It's absolutly
indifferent now for me. The one can come and take me only with the hands.
It's all the same at all.
-- The same about me. Shall we sleep?
-- Of course. But where?
-- Let's go to the cellar, it's cold hier. It will be cold in the night
and the draughts will bother us.
-- Ok. let's go.
We had rose slowly, lazy, dragged ourselves smoking meanwhile. When we
were near the stairs leading to the cellar, we could meet the rearguys and
the signallers carriing the fulfilled sacks of the money.
-- Why do you need this rubbish, men?
-- We'll use it somehow! - answered us someone cheerfully.
-- They will use everything, - commented i tiredly and started to go
down into the cellar, holding on the wall.
-- The battlefield after the battle is in the competence of the
pillagers, - answered Yura philosophicaly.
He was already not seen in the darkness and only the light of his
cigarette showed the lacation. There were the flares lighting ahead.
-- Let's go to the light. We'll set there.
-- Yes, they'll have pillaged enough and get away.
-- They have no time. They need ten lorries to take the money.
-- I can't understand what for do they carry this rubbish themselves?
It would be better to organiz a couple of cranes and to take the men form
under the ruins.
-- Aha, don't be so naive. These bastards will never do that!
-- There is an old military anecdote about that thems. The two ones --
Ivan-fighter and Abraham-rearguy -- are meeting after the war. Ivan has a
lot of injures, dragging himself on foot, but Abraham is halting on the
splendid car near him. Ivan says, where from has you, Abrasha, so splendid
"wheelbarrow"? And Abaraham answers -- do not envy, i have been enviing you
all the war that you have your tank.
-- Yes, these ones will later on TV talk as they fought just
first-class. Fucking militamnts. Phew!
-- You should only see, they can manage it so good. The ones are
raking, the others are carriing to the exit, the third ones are bringing to
the lorries. Hard workers!
-- Fuck 'em.
-- Yes, fuck 'em.
-- Let's go and find the dry and the silent corner and sleep.
-- Let's do that. But we'd better to inform that bastards' tribe that
they arouse us when there wil be something to eat and to drink.
-- Hey, pillagers! We'll be sleeping hier. You must awake us when the
food comes! See?
-- See. Ok. - was the answer of the "money manpower", packing the next
sack with the banknotes.
-- Look, it's tough to sleep, - we were fidgetting triing to squeeze us
on the concrete cellar floor. Cold, tough, uncosy.
-- Let's gather the sacks and sleep on 'em.
-- A good idea. Let's go, - we came to the shelvings and started to
grab silently the fulfilled with the money sacks.
-- Are you demnd crasy? - the men were nervose.
-- Who has told? - Yura and me were looking at these nonentity
scoundrels as two experienced hungery tired wolves were looking at the
sheeps' herd, daring to bleat something.
The rats! The very real rats. The oblique set flares made the uneven
ghosts and the dirty face features of all of them were distorted. The pause
hanged in the air. The matte was really that for Yura and me it was
absolutly indifferent. We, namely we, were the ones who were running risks
with our hindquarters a couple hours ago knocking the "dukhs" out. And
looking now at these fresh made splended guys a felt not them to be the
humans, to be my brothers-Slavs, to be my regimentmates, to be "makhra".
They were even lower then the "dukhs'" level. Those ones fought and died for
some idea at least. For the mythical independence, for the illusory freedom,
even let it be the freedom to follow the criminal lifestyle. These ones, the
bitches' tribe, staying now before us, they even were not fighting, they
were present at the war. I could see no any reason to let them alive. There
was no any inducing motive to avoid the shooting at them. We needed only the
occasion. A tiny occasion to catch the subgun hanging on the shoulder with
the barrel down, to release the safety device and to send the magazine in
this swines' herd. My hands were even trembling when i imagined this sweet
oicture. The silence was hanging in the air. Evidently feeling our
superiority and the circumstance, that their subguns were standing near the
wall -- the subguns were of course disturbing their resultative work -- they
were keeping silance. The couple of them had the holsters with the pistols.
Heh, dupes! As he is convulsively with the trembling hands break the
fastenings, I can five times to shoot him. We had taken two more sacks and
went slowly into the darkness. I was going and listening whether someone
says any filth in our backs. But they were keeping quiet. Pity! I feel hurt.
The rats! Pfew!
---------------------------------------------------------------
(c) Copyright 2011 translation by Oleg Abramov
Date: Jul 2011
---------------------------------------------------------------
In some time i noticed about me that comparing the "dukhs" with these
nobodies -- pillagers -- i started to respect the "dukhs". I hate them
sometimes and sometimes i respect them. Yeah, i can beome ma by this way!
Meanwhile we had silently come to the nice corner and begun to settle
down. We've drop the sacks with the oney. Some of them as the mattresses,
some of them a sthe pillows. Having nestled us todether up we put the other
sacks over us. The smell of the money was going from them. The smell of the
paint, of the sweat, of the fat, of the oil and of something more else.
-- You know, Yura, it's indifferent for me at all now to know how much
money have i under my back.
-- The same about me. Good night! But wait a second. I'll unlace the
boots. Would you also?
-- I've already made that. Don't disturb my sleeping. Good night. How
do you think will these pillagers make some filth against us?
-- But they're cowards. The worst thing from their side can be only a
whispering in the corneres. And they can also "forget" to wake us up for
thegetting the food. That's all, we can sleep.
-- Ring off for the communication troops.
-- So, one more day is over, - started Yura an old military joke.
-- Forget that damned day, - finished I.
And we've fallen asleep. I fell asleep somehow inctantly, without
turning, have only closed the eyes and was sleeping. There were no any
dreams. No war, no combat, only the darkness. I've opened the eyes because
somebody was shaking my shoulder. Again darkness. There ia a combat going on
somewhere. Being sleepy i could not realize at once where am I, and
inctantly i've cought the subgun. And now the voic from the darkness:
-- Quiet, quiet. Ours. You asked to awake you for the dinner.
-- Yura! - I have jostled Yurka in the flank unceremoniously. - Let's
go to eat.
-- What eat? We've just started to sleep.
-- What time is it now?
-- It's already one o'clock p. m. The dinner is already hier.
-- Hey, fighter, are you crazy? What a dinner. We've eaten recently.
-- No, you've slept 24 hours.
-- Twenty four?
-- Yes. I had twice come to wake you up, but you did not wake up. I've
reported. I've thought that your were dead. The doctor had come and looked
at you. Had told that you were sleeeping.
-- You're telling lie! What a doctor?
-- I don't know his name. Looks to be not a Rosenbaum.
-- Certainly, Eugeny.
-- Ok. let's go to dinner.
We followed by touch the fighter. Was it possible indeed to contrive
twenty four hours sleeping? It was somehow unbelievable but the stomach
hunger cramps prooved the truth. An interesting cinema! But may be it's
drawn game? On the exit form the cellar the bright light sharply beat at the
eyes. The combat din was growing. There were the soldiers and officers
sitting on the ground floor of the bank and eating. They greeted us
joyfully:
-- Hello, sleeping kingdom!
-- You are able to sleep well, men!
-- You can oversleep all the war.
And now we realized that we had slept really all the twenty four hours.
We've coem to ensign, who was giving out the NATO-portions, took for us and
went aside.
-- So, what do you think, Slava?
-- What can i think, we have overslept, that's so. The nerves are at
the border, we're at the border. It's good that we were not forgotten at
all. In this case we could have been counted as the lost ones, as the missed
ones, that's all.
-- That could have been really, - accepted Yura. - They are so ones.
-- And where is San Snaych? - i asked the officer from the battalion of
communicatoins.
-- San Sanych will be in an hour. We were sent to assist the assaulting
ones but we've sent 'em far away. Have no commander. No headquarters chef,
without 'em we can not go assaulting.
-- That's also correct, - I've nodded. - And is there any news about
the new commaner?
-- He was a couple times on the radioset contact. Told us that could
not force through, the "dukhs" were too active in the city. The troops were
not let to the square direction.
-- It means that we're surrounded.
-- Surrounded, - accepted the officer.
-- We're not surrounded, we're in the anus, - summarized Yura.
-- Yura, we've been being there since the beginning of the military
college.
-- That's truth, - nodded Yura.
-- What else do they tell about the assault?
-- We're going assaulting. There were no yet any attacks from our side.
From the other three sides there were already the attaempts but they have
last the teeth and steppt back. The recons have already checked the
building, we've a gloomy situation. The "dukhs" have set in the windows
ourd, the dead and the injured ones. Many oones are still alive, are
attached to the windows' frames. The "dukhs" use 'em to hide behind.
-- I see. "Alive" shield. Bastards. - Yurka was changing angry.
-- That means no any "tank merry-go-round" can be used.
-- What "merry-go-round". Only to attack. And they, swines, prematures,
will slaughter ours.
-- They will not slaughter 'em, they are as the guarantee for 'em. The
last insurance.
-- We'll see. When is assault, what do they say?
-- We're going as soon as San Sanych comes. Khankala has already killed
all the nerves with the orders to go on the Palace. At first we had refused
'em and now we don't answer 'em.
-- Correct. We're waiting for the lord to be judjed.
-- And is the territory shot through?
-- Everything is as on the plate. The technique can not be sent.
Hundred fifty meters of the square, the open area.
-- Phew! Shit.
-- We'll lay down the men again.
-- We'll spit the blood, we'll spit.
-- Are the men taken from under the flag-stone?
-- No. Nobody tried.
-- How many men are there under it?
-- We've defined. There should be two fightera from the first
battalion.
-- Listen to me, yesterday the pillagers from the battalion of
communications and from the rear were carriing the money. Where are these
sacks with the treasures?
-- They are in the rear. It was hier a real funny thing. Meanwhile we
were breaking hier our navels and taking the State bank, these militants
were smashing the private garages. They were shooting, bursting the cars.
They have gathered as many spare details for their personal cars, as the the
mushrooms in the forest. And Kulebiakins, the father and the son have made a
real trick. They have taken a mink fur coat from one woman, so she was
running following the APC through three blocks. She was asking to give it
back.
-- Have they given back?
-- No, of corse.
-- Phew! Fucking militants. To fight against the woman!
-- By the war some ones fail the health, but the other ones bail the
wealth.
-- They have also gathered the hunting guns. Not so many carabins but
about twenty guns.
-- How will they register them?
-- No fucking idea. They're planning something.
-- The rats are the rats even in Africa.
-- We could let them before us when we go on the Palace, and we'll be
the block detachment. And as in the year forty first -- no any step back.
We'll se as they are tossing and turning betweenn the two fires.
-- You're dreamer. They will be rather the block detachment behind our
backs.
-- Yes Motherland knows her heros.
-- Man, have you something to drink?
-- Spirit.
-- Entertain.
-- Hold, - he sent us a flask with spirit. Approximately full of it, a
heavy flask.
-- Not bad. I'll look for the mugs and water.
Yura went and brought three glasses and some water. We poured the
spirit in and diluted it with the water. The water was muddy. We decided to
wait when the mud subsides but it ws senseless. Eh, the eyes do not see, the
stomach does not suffer. We clinked the galasses and drank. The sand
squeaked on the teeth. The taste was as if the rotten thing was mixed with
the spirit. But nevertheless it was warm in the stomach. All'right. We'd
poured the second drink. The same effect. Nonsense. The red eyes do not
become the yellow ones. The most terrible possible result of it can be only
some diarrhoea. We poured some spirit in our flasks. Have gathered the
cartriges and filled into our half-empty magazines. We took also the
grenades for the launcher and the hand ones. My "cherish" one were liing in
my pocket. Such a peculiar talisman. Lord, let me not to use it! The roaring
of the engine and the clang of the caterpillars on the asphalt were heard.
Somebody had come.
The boots tramp and the familiar voice resounded. San Sanych
accomponied by the officers appiared. There was almost nothing of his
foppish view. The undercollar was black as if it was used to brash the
shoes. As everybody he was smoked through, not shaved. All the face was
covered with the small cuts and the scratches. It seemed to be injured by
the small stonies and the glass fragments. The uniform was torn in many
places. It ws seen that he had a hard time also.
The officers of the headquarter and of the brigade administration
followed him. Everybody greeted each other. The brigade is still alive.
There was also Serega Kazartsev among the arrived ones. He came to us. We
embraced us.
-- Hey, men!
-- Hello, Sereja, hello, dear.
-- How are you there?
-- Bullshit, full bullshit.
-- They say, Khankala sends us to assault the Palace. And we don't
hurry up.
-- We've scarcely forced through from this fuckin Khankaa. "Dukhs" make
everywhere the ambushes. Almost all the ways to the square are cut off.
There are as lot of the "dukhs", as slash in the autumn. They don't let us
to the square and we don't let 'em also. A flaky cake, in a word.
-- What are the news about the commander?
-- The new one or the old one?
-- About both of 'em.
-- About the old one is the only news that he's in Moscow, in hospital
by name of Burdenko, there were two operations. Say, Ok. Phew, phew, phew.
Not to put the evel eye on. And about the new one the news is that he was on
Khankala and after that was lost. Was on the radio a couple times. That's
all. Nd what's about you?
-- No news. Have taken this fucking Sstate bank. There were no money.
No gold. The currency was false. But there was much money of the old
emission. Paper. The rearguys and the signalers have pillaged and brought
somewhere.
-- What for was this rubbish?
-- No demned answer, Sereja, what for was this rubbish.
-- The pillagers have thier own psychology. The normal humans can not
understand.
-- Rats
-- We told the same thigs. Yura and me had laid us yesterday to sleep.
And were sleeping twenty four hours.
-- No problem, men, you had the hard work. Are the losses large?
-- Fucking large. There are still two guys liing under the flag-stone.
Nobody knows when can we 'em take off.
-- Yeah, we've only the remains of the brigade. Without the
paratroopers and "makhra" we would stay hier for ever.
-- Now we're going to help 'em.
-- We've got the order from Khankala to go on assaulting. And how can
we go through the square?
-- There are still our fighters staying in the windows. Some of 'em
alive, some of 'em dead. The tanks and artillery can not be used, and no
aircrafts. So it will be the toil for us. That's not good. Absolutely not
good!
-- And can they take it without us?
-- They tried it. As in the First World war -- racing hier and there
and they steppt back.
-- Now it our turn to race. What will be the remain of our brigade?
-- Nobody has demned interest.
-- Exaclty. Nobody but we has any troubles.
-- Have you seen Pashka?
-- I have. He's alive, parasite. Is sitting by the rearguys. I told
that he should drink no cognac and no vodka and should not eat our
portionen. He had not to touch the cigarettes also. I've brought the
cigarttes for you by the way. Not many but something.
-- Thanks, dear. What's more spoken in Khankala?
-- Moscow is pressing 'em to take the Palace as soon as possible.
Dudaev is announced to be a criminal. It's allowed to take him not alive.
-- They want to hide their business. The accomplises should be dead.
-- Quarreling, simple quarreling.
-- Will they help us?
-- No. No real plan. Manage that thing at once. Connect to the next
units, mean the situation. Our general was almost fighting against Rolin.
They were able to part 'em at the last moment. Otherwise there could have
been a battle.
-- Crazy hous.
-- I would bet on our general. He is higher, the arms are longer, the
weight is heavyer.
-- Look, we're invited to the consulting.
-- Let's go.
All the officers around were collected. The ones were staying, the
others sitting on the boxes, the others were settled on the floor. Someones
were sitting on the sacks with the money. We, three of us, were staying.
Wanted not into the first ranks. Everything was already clear earlier yet.
Now they will contact the next units and we'll go forward. The best they can
make -- to set the smokes. And if they make it not, we'll have to gnaw
asphalt nd lose the men. There are already not many of us.
-- Well, men, - San Sanych had startedd, - the bank is oures, well
done! It cost much our blood. We've left there many our good fellows. We're
demanded also to help in taking of the Palace. Palace of the Government.
We're given no plan as usual. There's the only order -- forward! We've no
reserves. I've ordered that the rearmen and the signallers gave us the men
and we're going forward. Now we connect to the side units, arrange the
moment of the offensive beginning and are to go. If there is good wind,
we'll set the smoke veil. If there's no good wind, the God will help us.
Have you the questions?
The officers started to ask the questions. Yurka, Serega and me had no
questions. But the only one -- how can we use the tanks and APC?
-- Comrad colonel, what about the tanks and APCs? - somebody was
quicker then me.
-- Allowed to use according to the opportunities. Everybody knows that
there are our fighters, officers, chained to the windows' frames. We'd like
to rescue them. At least would not be guilty at their death.
I na word the desision to attack was made. To attack in spite of
anything. Everything was the same as usual. Toi execute the order and to
survive if possible. The order is for the Motherland, party and government,
to survive is for ourselves. My God, I'm so tired! But to relax must not a
man. If although anyone could explain me, convince me that this war is
necessary, that i'm defending my familly. Or that there were the guarantees
that on the case of my death my son, my wife will become enough guaranteed
provision. That the son has guaratee to get the higher education, the wife
will be engaged. And up to their lives end they will become the good
pension. And now I know that they have guarantee to get the beggarly
existence. Nobody will help them and they will have to turn. On one sie to
measure my hatred and the wish to execute the order, to cconfirming to your
familly not to die because of the hunger becoming the beggarly benefit on
the lose of the bread-winner. And it was no illusion about the hard work
going on. The situation was complicate also because the "tank
merry-go-round" was not possible. I'm depressed deeply. Am depressed and am
longing. Am not afraid, but namely am longing. I can understand that i can't
get off from this hell work, i wish to save the men, not to lose my head, in
a word, to get the pleasure and to be innocent. I wish i could be drunken up
to the green snot!May be the same feeling had Jesus, when was being
announced about his fate. He was being at least awaited by the
high-magisterial daddy, and we're awaited by nobody there. Although the one
cannot die twice and if the one has no destiny to die in this swiny combat,
then anyway the one will get his lead portion in his mortal body. Forgive
me, Lord, if i have hurt You anyhow by my reasoning! You should understand
me: the fear, the spite, the offence, the longing. So, help me.
Yurka, serega and me have gone aside to smoke. Have gone up to look at
the square, where through we should now jump as the injured ape. Hundred
fifty meters of the flat, clear, perfectly shot through space. The asphalt
of the square was dug up by the craters of the bombs and shells. To hide in
them was impossible. They are shot through perfectly from the Palace. So
that means we'll make it not. The only hope is the speed. The ones can of
course to take attantion and the others would attack, but as it is spoken
this tactics is not for thi situation. The "dukhs" are now already trained
to wage. And they are thinking the same, unfortunately.
Such a distance can be crossed by five-six men secretly. But when about
four hundred men are running and stamping, only the blind one will not
notice it. And a man can not hide or shelter in the craters. That's not
good, not good.
Some of the fighters will not run, will be afraid, and that means the
one should to pull them out with the kicks. By the way, i've no armoured
jacket. I should to search the one. I've asked Serega:
-- Politmate, have you to take care about the staff?
-- What do you want, scoundrel? - Serega pricked up his ears.
-- You know, I need an armoured jacket! Where can i get it?
-- The fools are fortunate. There was one on the floor of the APC, by
which we were going.
-- I guess, it had holes?
-- I've not checked. Let it be with the holes, that's not absolutely
nothing.
-- We'll keep together?
-- We have to.
-- You, Serega, makes always the promises that you will be together,
but at the ast moment you're bsent.
-- That happens somehow.
-- Aha, somehow. You step side probably.
-- I?! Step aside?!
-- But who then? - we started to anger Serega. A good fellow and in
spite of the age difference we took him as an our friend.
-- But i... - Sergey started to rage. - can you remember the
"Severniy"?!
-- We can remember, Sergey, of course. We're joking. Don't cockwork.
-- We're joking, Serega, Let's better looke for the "armory". Or I'll
attack again "naked", don't want that. Although it does not rescue but it
warms somehow the soul and it will protect against the incidental splinters.
-- It will protect against the splinters, but hardly against the direct
bullet.
-- I know, we've tested it so many times. Per five-seven plates the
only one can repulse, the others are crashed.
And in this manner, discussing the pluses of some armoured jackets
against the others, we had come to the three APCs, y which San sanych and
his team have come. Serega knocked with the barrel of the subgun at the
armour. A head of the fighter appiared. His crumpled physiognomy prooved
that he had been sleeping.
-- You'll oversleep all the God Kingdom, warrior! - greeted him
Sserega. - There was the armoured jacket liing in the landing force section,
i put it on the armour under the hindquarters. Whose is it?
-- Nobody's, - the fighter started to wake up.
- Give it to capitain. He wants not to go "naked" on the Palace.
-- Just a moment, - the fighter jumpt on the earth, opened the landing
section and having rummaged a bit took from the darkness the jacket.
-- It was dirty, greasy, burnt through in some places, with the brown
patches like the ones from the blood. But as i saw it was intact.
-- Where from is it? - i asked the soldier.
-- We carried the injured one during the assault of the "Severniy",
that was his one.
-- Where at was he injured?
-- At the head. The patches are from that injure. But it's intact.
Dirty, yeah, but intact. I used it myself a couple times. I've lost my one
somewhere. So i used it untill i was able to find the cevlar one, - the
fighter showd us the cevlar armoured jacket proudly. That looked to be
import one.
-- Where from?
-- Trophy.
-- Well done! - we were watching, admired, at the fine light thing.
-- Have you got something in it?
-- Only splinters.
-- And how was it?
-- Ok, it bears 'em.
-- And the bullets?
-- The god let no one at me.
-- They say the ribs would be broken.
-- Shall we change?
-- No. The thing is trophy. I've got it personnaly.
-- Well done. Thanks for this one, - I started to set the "armoury" to
my jacket, Serega and Yura were assisting me.
I could not order the fighter to give me his trophy. I could not also
simply take it away. It was his thing. He ran his life risks to get it.
That's his proud. The object to be silently wished by the friends. And I
will not be impudent. That has no sense.
I've put the armoured jacket on. It set down good. It did not protrude,
did not hang down, did not hinder while going, did not inhibit the motions.
We began to smoke again. It's strangeful, there was only some building of
the State bank between us and the Palace, but it seemed to be the distance
of more then a thousand kilometers.
-- Do you know what's the name for us at Khankala? - asked Sergey.
-- For whom concretly?
-- For us all. The whole grouping.
-- What?
-- The angels-destroyers. A kind of printing stamp to make the divine
halo for our devilish mission.
-- We should be better named the idiots-kamikadzes.
-- Sure.
-- That's said good.
-- Do the fighters still fly by the catapults?
-- They do. There are still enough idiots. They sit in the aeroplane,
pull the lever of the catapult, the powder accelerators are atarting. And
that's all. Someone was too cuuning, tried to pull the lever having not set
in the chair. The arm was torn off.
-- We've already heard all these stories many times, was there anything
new?
-- No. I've heard nothing about the new things.
-- Look, they're waving to us.
-- Do they want to attack? And why you, the headquarter's officers do
not participate in the wirking out of the operation?
-- What an operation, Sergey?
-- That's only suiside.
-- No planning. As in the Civil war. Forward and that's all. That is
all the operation. The one should not graduate from the academy for such
thing. As Gaidar. To capture as many enemies asa possible. And to force 'em
under the ice. Haven't you read the book of Soloukhin "The saulty lake"?
-- No.
-- I recommend you. Read about the grandfather of our nowadays
vice-prime forced his enemies under the ice. If you get not crazy, then
that's Ok. That would mean that you have already become crazy.
-- I guess that after such hell-fire, if we can get out, then i can be
not amased at all and not frighten at all.
-- You're right probably. Let's go and listen to.
-- Let's go.
-- Look, there's a red flag set up by somebody on the roof of the State
bank, - wundered I, there was a red width flapping there.
-- But haven't you seen?
-- No. We've explained you that we'd slept all the twenty four hours.
-- You're strong, men.
-- Sure! The flag is just as the one on the Reichstag.
-- Yes.
-- I'm interested why didn't they take the Russian flag?
-- First, we've no one. Secondly, the nowadays Russian flag in the
eyes, in the mind of the fighters is still not blowd by the great military
victories, thierdly, the laddies, brought up in the childhood on the heroism
of The Great Ptriotic War, want to touch the victories of their
grandfathers. They fought however under the red banner.
-- You're right. The communist ideas are not the reasons.
-- Ok, let's go and listen what shall we do.
-- No good thing, have no gramm of any doubts abut that.
-- You're right as always. Let's go.
We'd entered the building again. There were the officers around San
Sanych, he explained them something. The sense of the attack was the same.
The side units, having been already beaten, offered us to act first to take
attantion on us. And after that they go on. San Sanych told them that will
not be so. He offered them the next idea:
-- The sense is that in an hour we start the attacking. Everybody, no
exclusions, are going. All the ones who can fight. All the rearmen, miners,
signallers, repaires, the tank crews. I'll go personally. If we stay
there... - San Sanych kept silent a bit, - then no any signallers, no any
rearmen will be necessary. Just as in the song of the communists: "That's
our last and decisive combat..." Have you the questions?
- How shall we go -- billow, one torrent?
-- Yes, to reak the forces is of no sense. We've to little forces.
-- May be in the night?
-- Then they make the lighting rockets and it will be worse for us,
they will be in the darkness.
-- And the smokes?
-- Now the wind goes into our face. If it changes, we'll try to do
that. And now it's of no sense. And remember, please, that there are in the
windows our guys.
-- That's bad. Otherwise we could ruin the "duhs" with their building,
but we must now to be careful!
-- They will die anyway! - someone of the young platoon's commander
shouted. The usual thing -- hysterics before the combat.
-- And were you in their situation, what would it be? - asked Serega.
-- I would shoot myself.
-- Aha, with the chained hands. You're hero. Would you be able to live
after that realizing the death of the fellows were due to you?
-- Well, you'll quarrel in the other place, - San Sanych stoppt the
discussion. - There is about one hour for the preparing, after that forward.
Everybody can have the free time.
We dispersed to the corners of the building, somebody went on the roof
to look once more on the square, through which we'll have to race in an
hour. Somebody got a hysterics, he had psychosis, was being nerved, the
others started to wright convulsively the letters to home. They sweared in
love to the wives and odered the children to be good in these letters. Who
knows may be this letter will come with the one who had written it. In a
complex.
Many ones discussed rapidly where and which unit will go. Nobody wanted
to go himself with his men through the craters of the bombs and shells,
these one could not shelter from the shooting of the "dukhs". Finally we
decided to lot the fate. The matches have decided who goes to the real death
and who becomes the deferment. The chance and the God have steered these
matches. The fate. "Kysmet" (?). Everybody gets his own destiny.
Neither me, nor Yurka had any mood to discuss, to wright the letters.
We wanted simple to order the thoughts, to abate. To rest morally. May be to
drink about fifty gramm but when we remembered the disgusting taste of the
watered spirit, the wish disappeared. And reaction can let down as well as
the stomach also. Yura and me went out in the street, laid on the stones and
were silently smoking watching the clouds. How devilish little need a man to
be happy. The normal family, the work, this sky, the nature. A man should
not race following the illusory good fortune of the bank notes. There are
only the problems due to them. And sometimes to watch this eternal nature.
If you comes to a prison, phew, phew, phew, due to soem idiot or due to the
money, then you'll be deprived of this beauty this happiness during some
time. But if you're killed in some hours, minutes. Meters, you will be
deprived forever of this pleasure to watch the nature. You'll change to be a
pert of the nature.
The clouds were sailing in the blue winter sky, were majesticly
bringing their splendid bodies to the North. To Russia. To the Motherland.
And a thousand years ago they were flying the same splendid forward, and in
one thousand years they will be flying the same. And nobody will remember.
The interesting was that I was not feeling sorry for myself, i was feeling
sorry for the thing that i had not made so many things. Although on the
other side I have made my small sign on the earth. I've executed my mission
partly. The mainist was my son. My son. My continuer of the kin, of the
surname. The only thing was to bring him up as a human. But that can come
true due to the will of the only God. Even if I die, my son will be not
ashamed for his father. He would have died but was not a coward. He did not
make off. Save him, God, and me too by the opportunity.
A fighter ran out from the building and shouted that we should be
ready. We went to the subdivisions. We've already decided to go with the
remains of the second battalion. If they had taken us from that hell-fire,
then we would go together further. The first battalion was settled down on
the right side. The headquarter's cheif, Vania Il'in waved me with the hand.
I nswered him back.
-- Slava, come to us!
-- No, Ivan, the horses are not ot be changed on the ford.
-- As you like it. Good luck!
-- Thanks. Good luck to you also!
The nearer the square comes, the quicker flows the blood, that's
already hot. I've taken off the gloves, put them under the armoured jacket.
Checked the subgun. Released the safty device, sent the cartridge into the
cartridge load. Checked whether the "lucky" grenade on the place is. Had
crossed myself watching into the sky. The clouds were on the place and were
the same continuing their slow voyage. It's hot. I'd moved the black
underhelmet onto the headback. The blood was raging in my body. There was
the smack of the blood in the mouth. Adrenalin had started its game again.
Now the main thing was that our father-commanders would not overkeep us
hier, otherwise adrenalin would burn all the energy and we would be as the
squeezed out lemons. We know that, we've experienced that. And now the order
"555" came at the radio set.
Assault. Assault. Assault. Go on, rabid dogs, go on! And we went on. We
rushed out from the State bank's shelter. There are hundred fifty meters of
the square now just before us. Everything is as on the plate. A man can not
find a shelter, can not hide. Only forward. The "dukhs" started shooting
almost at once. The first seconds it was slack, but after some moments
become thick, got the might and strong. Having run not yet even fifteen
meters, we had to start somersaulting, rolling, the moving on with the short
crossings. Many ones were being disturbing each other by this movings. We
clashed, dropt on the earth, sweared each other.
By the irony of the fate namely the second battalion had to run through
the senter of the square, just through the plot where the most of the
grooves and craters were situated and which was being shot through.
We can see almost nothing, the sweaat flows over the eyes, corrodes
them. Rolling, one more rolling. Step far aside from the fountains raising
the dust near the head. The face breaks into the stones, into the slash. Not
a problem at all. Instinctively want to get into the crater. Is not allowed.
The holes from the bullets say that they have shot them good. The bag with
the grenades for the launcher disturbs. Is dangaling. While rolling breaks
into asphalt and stones. Hopefully the grenades will not explode and tear me
in the peaces. It would be not about me only, some more men could have
accompony me by this case. I'll be more accurate.
Apparently i have rolled enough far away. Panting I started to choose
the aims for shooting.
I did not notice from the State bank, but having run, rolled about
seventy meters, I was able to see clearly, that in the windows of the Palace
there were ours standing, hanging, being tied, nailed to the frames. Ours.
Russians. Slavs.The dead ones were disdressed and their yellow bodies were
hanging. The arms were upwards, the knees were bended. Some ones were on the
window-sill so that the impression came, that they were sitting and making
the mute prayer on the knees, holding the arms upwards to the sky. The
others were hanging as if in the air, the third ones had their legs hanging
from the window-sill inside or outside. The hands were being nailed or tied
and did not let the bodies to fall down.
Many ones were being still alive. Were crying, weeping. Someones were
crying that they should be killed to stop their torments. The others on the
contrary were entreating to rescue them. The "dukhs", hiding behind the
bodies fo the alive and of the dead ones, were shooting at us. The rare ones
had no shelter of the russian soldier or officer. I realized suddenly and
with the horror that i was not able to shoot. Was not sure that i hit no one
of the ours. The dead or alive one. WAS NOT ABLE!
The snipera were shielded behind the bodies of our brothers. They did
not almost hide theselves. Their optical sights were blinking in the sun. It
was impossible to smash these swines with the laucher. Nothing could have
been done! Nothing!
Only forward, forward under the stormy shooting and there close to beat
off the scoundrels. The Germans, the fascists during the assault on Berlin
were not able to imagine the taking of the captives from the concentration
camps and the setting them as the alive shield before themselves. But these
ones...
They were alive, worn out, beaten up, with the cracked on the wind and
frost dirty swellt up faces -- they were crying. Someones were simple
mooing. The other ones opened the mouth with a mute shouting. All this
provoked the bouquet of the contradictory feelings. There was a lump rolling
up in my throat. I wished i could sob full loudly as in the childhood
without shame for the tears. To weep because of the pity to the ones who
were suffering now innocently and because of the realizing that I could not
assist them plainly. What for, Lord, what for? What for do they get such
sufferings? All of them were the putils just some monthes ago. One-two years
ago they sat at the school table, wrote the notes for the girls, smoked
secretly in some corners. They are not guilty!
Lord, why don't You punish the ones who had sent them to die so
brutally? Why? Answer me! What is their fault? Is it only the fact that they
were unfortunately born in Russia?
Instead of the racing forward now when there was no shooting at me I
let my subgun down on my arm and started straining the eyes to watch the
faces and bodies of the ones who were the alive shields for the "dukhs".
Many ones seemed me to be acquainted, I didn't know their names and
origin but i saw them in the subdivisions of the brigade. Because of the
straining or because of the other reason the tears were dropping from my
eyes, it was difficult to breath. The lump was standing in my throat, it was
stuffy, i tore off my underhelmet. On the second floor of the Palace there
was a fighter who was liing near me under the bullets during the first
assault. He was disdressed over the waist, dead, the legs were hanging out
and the hands were nailed to the frames. As if somebody had thrown him out
from the window but he was able to catch the window block with the last
effort. There was something balck aside him on the right. It was a face of
"dukh".
---------------------------------------------------------------
(c) Copyright 2001 translation by Oleg Petrov, siberiaforever[a]hotmail.com
Editor: Dan Ray
---------------------------------------------------------------
"Hey, easy, you sadistic moron! That hurts!"
"Sure, and that's the good news."
"Easy, you bastard, you can tear it off!"
"Not to worry, I will sew it back."
He checked each of my ears twice with a metal pipe, and then inspected
the insides of my mouth and nose. Now what, Papa Doc?
"The eardrums are OK, just some inflammation."
"Say it again in Russian, and louder, please."
"You will survive."
"What about hearing?"
"That will recover later. I'll give you some eardrops. Stay away from
cold. And-take care of yourself."
"They keep you really busy here, don't they?"
"You bet! It has been slow for a while, but all through the night and
morning we were getting so many wounded we almost panicked. A lot of
shrapnel wounds, broken bones, stomach wounds...Many died right in the hands
of paramedics, some on their way here. Overall, thirty men did not make it."
"Oh, shit!"
"Yeah, this sucks."
"Do you have enough supplies?"
"Well, we got enough for now, but my colleagues from other units are
completely out of medications. The Ministry of Emergencies has some, but
they won't share their stock with us or Interior Ministry troops. They say
their supplies are for the local civilians."
"What a bunch of dickheads! They would rather let their own kin die!"
"Sorry, Slava, but I got work to do. Come see me, if you have any
problems."
"I'd rather have you visiting me."
"I'm too busy, and if I get a break, I just drop dead asleep. I have no
time even to take a shot of vodka, only the cigarettes keep me going. The
dukhi will keep us busy tonight for sure, so I need to get ready for that.
What about you? A couple of days rest in the hospital won't hurt you."
"Forget it. Remember our talk?"
"You mean, the life and death stuff?"
"Yes. If it comes to that, you will help me."
"You're such a bloody fool, Slava."
"Look, I feel really dumb right now because I'm deaf, but I guess that
won't last for too long, and I'll get back in shape soon. But...if some day
you find me passed out here, will you please make sure that I won't regain
my consciousness back, OK?"
"No way and I don't even want to talk about that." Zhenya rubbed his
eyes that were -- red from fatigue and constant lack of sleep. "I will go
now. I really have too much work to do. And you need some rest. You guys
won't take that shithouse tonight anyway. I am also tired of shouting into
your ear at the top of my lungs. Take a good nap. Good luck to you, and here
are your eardrops."
He took a plastic batch of some tablets out of his pocket and held it
out to me.
"What's that?"
"This will take care of fatigue and stimulate your cardiovascular
system. It's sort of like doping. They used to give this to athletes, like
marathon runners. This will keep you awake and you will stay cool when the
shit hits the fan. I even take this stuff myself sometimes. But do not take
too many of them at once. Hey, take these vitamins too. Some vitamin C,
don't forget to take it."
"Thanks, Zhenya."
"Good luck!"
"Good luck to you too!"
When he left, I felt how tired I was. The fatigue hit me hard. Part of
the hard, dangerous job was done, but there was too much to be done yet, and
the end was nowhere to be seen. Only in the movies is everyone bright-eyed
and bushy-tailed in between the fighting, where they take every chance to
start dancing.
Well, maybe that's what it used to be, but now it looks very different.
Everyone is just dead tired. It gets you when you keep fighting non-stop for
too long. Your emotions, senses, even instincts are silenced, your reaction
gets too slow. And that is bad for you. When your instincts become numb, you
are dead. You will stick your head out in the wrong moment, or become
negligent with your weapons. So, you better forget your feelings. On one
hand, your numbed emotions won't let you go crazy, on the other hand, you
need to keep your reaction fast and your senses sharp. For that you need
some relaxation and rest. Vodka can relax you, and slumber is the best
possible rest. Killing a couple of dukhi is also an excellent way of
relaxing, and will relieve your stress completely. Those who have hand
grenades or other explosives at hand, but no dukhi around, can use a loud
explosion for the recovery. I used to do that too, it helps. But a couple of
dukhi would work much better. The chopper pilots, as I've been told, have
dropped some dukhi down over enemy's territory, with an awesome
psychological effect. The dukhi got their will paralyzed, and the chopper
pilots got some stress relief in turn. I won't bet that this was for real,
but I liked the idea. I heard this tale even before the troops entered
Grozny; of how 2-3 dukhi were taken up into the skies in a chopper. One of
them knew some important stuff, but, being an idiot or just a tough SOB,
won't talk. And for some obscure reason torture was out of question. So,
they put some psychological pressure on him, by throwing his friends out of
the chopper. He saw that, and when they kicked him to the door, he started
talking. Here, everything goes.
That is why I felt so tired, not depressed, just tired. I took a couple
of vitamin tablets and put the unknown stimulant into my pocket. I got the
whole night ahead of me to experiment with those. I took a good look at
myself: I was as dirty, as a pig. My overcoat and pants were covered with
mud, clay, and blood, and got torn and holed in several spots. My boots were
also covered with mud. I sighed. Luckily, major Zemtzov, my mentor in the
Academy, could not see me in such poor condition! When it came to uniforms,
he was a perfectionist, and tried to bring us up the same way. Any given
moment might look as the most brutal time of your life ever, but when you
look back later, things that you took for hardship earlier can only make you
laugh. It would actually be fun to recall your high school problems later,
when you become a college student or an Academy cadet. Likewise, it would be
fun to tell your kids of your hardships at the exams in the Academy. Also,
you will laugh with your friends at a party at how being in charge of a
platoon for the first time was really a big deal for you. After you had lost
some hair and your face got all wrinkled, you would recall just how shy you
used to be when it came to dating girls; how excited you were when getting
ready for your first date, and romantic stuff like that. Yeah, if only that
young cadet Slava Mironov had my experience! Now, when I meet a girl younger
than myself, I do not get as excited as I used to. I am getting old, I
guess, my blood is getting colder. This idea made me grin. Some dating right
now sure would be fun. Hey, how about Christmas, did it already pass? What
date is it today, anyway? Maybe, I should go and ask someone. Oh well, just
forget about it. Who cares? Let's forget that my birthday is coming up in
January, thinking of it won't do me any good. All I need to do is to fulfill
my duty and survive. That's it. The rest, including those who remained on
the Big Land, can go to hell. Me and my boys, we don't give a shit about
you, just like you don't give a shit about us. But we will be back!
I looked around. Everyone seemed tired and moved slowly, their faces
dull, with sharp, pointed features; their deep-fallen eyes turned into red,
like those of albinos. All signs of corpulence in these folks were gone by
now. That's a great diet, I thought. If anyone is interested in loosing some
weight, just come here and success is guaranteed.
Previously, anticipation of a fight would have caused some excitement;
now everyone was just plain tired. If we must fight, so be it and to hell
with all that. Your nerves must have learned the trick of self-preservation
by avoiding unnecessary waste of any emotional energy before the event
itself comes. But when it comes, the adrenalin will start rushing and I will
get my reaction back. The human organism is a pretty smart device...
Yuri showed up, looking jumpy.
"So, what's new?
"Have you seen the Doc?"
"Cut the crap, will you? I have asked you a question."
"Well, I've been to the HQ. No good news. They are under lots of
pressure from Hankala. Our neighbors shat their pants, so we will bear the
brunt. That's it."
"That will be our last and decisive battle, right?"
"Sure. You don't seem to be interested, are you?"
"That's not the right word, Yuri. I don't give a fuck. Whatever."
"You are just depressed."
"I am calm. I am so absolutely calm. I did not feel that peaceful for
God knows how long. I'm totally cool, and nothing else matters anymore. No
regrets, no remorse. No fear, nor vigilance, no other feelings. Everything
looks parallel."
"You look as if you made some kind of decision. You don't have any
suicidal ideas, I hope? Like, assaulting a machine-gun nest with your own
body?"
"No, I am just mortally tired of this madness. So, let them decide
anything they want. I will go anywhere, except for the hospital. I will just
stay here, the way I am, just doing my job."
"Hey, you did not lose your appetite for life, did you?"
"Don't worry about that. I'm fine. When do they plan to attack, at
night?"
"No, they changed the plan, as usual. We are to begin in two hours. The
neighbors will start, and we will join them in 20 minutes."
"I wish there were 2 hours instead.
"Oh, sure. Unlike the elite troops, Siberian makhra never complain. We
just keep on fighting till we die, as usual."
"Stop talking like that. We are just fine, your highness! You better
help me."
"Like what?"
"I need a first aid kit and body armor, if you can find any. If not,
that's OK too."
"I'll see what I can do. Take it easy!"
"I'm fine. I repeat: I am just cool, you moron. That's all."
He left and came back in about 20 minutes, carrying brand new body
armor.
"Where did you get that?"
"They just got some in Battalion 3, and that's their gift. Zhenya
Ivanov asked me to give you the eardrops. He said that's his last batch.
Take it, and here is the first aid kit, too."
"Thanks, Yuri. What am I going to do without you?"
"Nothing. You would just spend the night with no body armor, that's
all."
"Right. Can you help me adjusting it? Careful, my ear hurts."
"What's the big deal? You are deaf anyway, right?"
"Doesn't matter, it still hurts."
"Patience, I'm loosening the belts."
"This shit is so heavy. I've spent a half day without body armor, and I
felt like flying."
"Get down to Earth. San Sanytch wants you to stay at the HQ during the
assault."
"Are you kidding me?"
"Yeah, he knows about your ears."
"Was it you who told him?"
"No. The whole brigade already knows that you brought a dead soldier
back. The same thing happened in Battalion 1, and their platoon leader had
just gone mad. That's why San Sanytch and Sergei Kazartsev are worried about
your mental health. You better stay, Slava. One just can't go into night
fighting in a state of mind like yours."
"Back off, I'm fine. I'm just cool. I feel really good. Never felt this
good before. Well, maybe that's my reaction to the night before. But I want
to go and I will go into this night fighting. And to hell with the orders, I
don't need any sympathy. So, guys, I do respect you and I love you, but you
can go and screw yourselves."
And even saying that, I was calm as a python. No emotion, just a sober
mind.
We spent the rest of the break shooting alcohol, trying to stay low on
snacks. Yuri was tired of shouting into my ears, so he did not talk much.
And I did not want to turn the evening into a one-actor performance. I had
no intention of pushing the fragile piece of my soul off balance by talking
too much.
So, time passed in silence. I was neither thinking, nor dreaming or
recollecting, I just kept my eye on what was going on around me. I picked up
some ammo, filled my canteen with water, and off I went.
This time we went along with the remains of the 1[st]
Battalion. Sergei Kazartzev was walking next to us. The neighbors attacked
first and engaged with the enemy, but the dukhi were not dumb and they were
waiting for us. Ten minutes after the fighting started we had received
Budalov's order to attack.
The dukhi opened up with tremendous fire. Some of the 2[nd]
Battalion troops could not hold on and turned back, searching for cover near
the State Bank building. For a moment, it seemed the whole Brigade was going
to retreat. But something stopped folks from turning their backs on the
enemy. The troops hesitated, but they did not run back this time.
Running made me sweat, but I stayed calm and collected. I tried to stay
away from corpses and to avoid the point where I had stayed the night
before. My body armor remained there, as was the corpse of that private who
rushed to help me out. It still lay there in the same pose. I just caught
this picture with the corner of my eye, but I had no intention of going
through all that again. I could not resurrect him, but I will remember him
until I die.
The Brigade charged ahead like an avalanche. The dukhi were under
attack from all sides. Ahead, charge ahead! Soon we were under the walls of
the Palace. The dukhi blew up the entrance into the Palace, so it was not
easy to get inside. They were shooting at us from above. Our tanks, hiding
behind the Gosbank building, began firing at their nests in the Palace. The
dukhi returned the fire, shooting back at the Gosbank area. A large piece of
the Gosbank wall collapsed, and some soldiers, who could not hold the
enemy's fire and have turned back in the first minutes of the battle, were
now crouching behind the fallen wall, terrified. They were shooting
chaotically at the Palace, and that attracted more and more of the dukhi's
fire. At that moment, Sergei Kazartzev did what later had became the subject
of many discussions in the Brigade. He rushed toward them and, with kicks
and curses, he managed to rise them up and lead them toward the Palace. It
was sheer madness.
We were just stunned by his courage, and tried to cover him with fire.
But for the dukhi this was just like sports hunting. They were shooting at
him first, then at his group when they charged forward. My heart sank when I
watched this mad racing. I did not breath, all my feelings were with these
guys. Even when I was not looking their way and was shooting up at the
dukhi, I could sense with the back of my head where they were at the moment.
I tried to distract the enemy's attention by keeping up firing, and only
when I changed the mag I glanced at the running men. They seemed close
enough, but still had a lot of space to cover. I could not shoot a bomb up
into the dukhi's nest because it was way too steep. So we just kept shooting
long bursts at them, trying to distract their attention or draw them away
from the windows. And the dukhi also began shooting wildly with long bursts
at the square. Run faster, guys! Faster! Just fucking run! I know you can
make it! Come on, Sergei!
The Gods must have been on our side that night. The guys had made it
safely through the wall of bullets and joined us successfully. They just
could not believe their luck and looked around themselves in dizziness. They
shouted something and we patted them on their shoulders, saying some words
of encouragement. But Sergei, of course, was the real hero. From now on, we
would respect him in a new way. He was rather short and skinny, and I was
always skeptical of the abilities of political officers, but occasionally
you could come across a worthy officer even among their big crowd. He was
sweating, his warm breath clouding, and he drank the whole canteen of water
that somebody gave him. Everyone was trying to greet him. Earlier, in Soviet
times, he would get a Star of a Hero for that, but now only the soldier's
mothers could appreciate his courage. He would never hear them, though. So,
pray, you mothers, for Sergei Kazartzev, a man with a big soul. Wish him
good health.
Meanwhile, the dukhi started putting pressure on us, dropping down some
hand grenades. That did not cause us any damage and we managed to shoot down
a couple of dukhi. One went down with a scream. Others, already dead, fell
down silently. The grunts did not bother to search their dead bodies. Step
by step, we moved on, shooting up at the dukhi above. My neck and shoulders
became stiff from looking up and the gun smoke was getting into my eyes and
lungs. It would be great to stop, bend down and cough this crap out. So, I
had to breath slowly, through my nose. OK, we had reached the walls of the
Palace.
The first group climbed the wall and got inside. I screamed to overcome
my fear, as I tried to jump up the wall. A window nearby was blocked with
sandbags. The bags were made of heavy-duty glossy paper and were packed
densely with sand and soil. My fingers slid on those sandbags, unable to cut
through the surface. My body armor and the AK were pulling me down with
their weight. So I stuck to those sandbags, like snot on a mirror, listening
to the battle raging inside. I felt I could not hold on. In a second I would
have fallen down, but anger at my own clumsiness gave me some extra strength
and I managed to climb up a little. I found an opening between the bags,
with some dirt and some traces of recent shooting. This must have been a
good machine gun nest over here.
When I felt I could hold on, I shifted my AK forward to my chest and
peered inside. I was lucky to spot a small group of the enemy from behind.
Four of the dukhi with their backs turned toward me were shooting at the
grunts that were inside the building.
Almost without aiming, I gave a long burst at their backs. Two of them
fell down, howling; the other two ran away. I saw some grunts bursting into
the room and cried for help. They dragged me in and we ran. No words were
said between us.
The hall at the first floor was rather typical for a large
administrative building. The ceiling was high and numerous columns and
niches provided the defenders with many opportunities to hide, to set up an
ambush or booby-trap the place. Darkness did not help us either. The air was
dense with smoke and dust. I felt how the gunk that accumulated in my lungs
was trying to get out of there.
Surprisingly enough, I was still calm, despite the adrenaline rush that
I just had. My mind was clear and worked like a calculator.
The dukhi were fighting for every inch of the hall, and we kept pushing
them out. We kept shooting, aiming at muzzle flairs, at noises, or simply
intuitively. Some furious gunfire erupted to my left, followed by a
tremendous explosion. Just as it happened before, my hearing had somewhat
improved after the concussion. It was great to hear all the sounds of battle
again. I felt rage and a wild desire to live. My tranquility and numbness
were gone. Charge ahead and kill them all!
The blast had opened a breach in the wall and in rushed our neighbors,
who were also makhra, judging by their uniforms. They were eager to join us.
Some of the dukhi, who made it to the upper floor, were now trying to throw
down hand grenades, but most of the enemy were cut off and cornered in the
end of the hall. They were fighting vigorously, but we were too strong for
them. We kept firing our grenade launchers, and the small fragments from the
bombs killed everything in the closed space.
More troops came in. Siberian makhra, Volga area makhra, some
paratroopers, and even some Interior Ministry troops were all mixed now.
Naturally, there was no one in command and no plan. There was just an
overwhelming desire to destroy the enemy, to dump these jackals down from
the Palace's roof. Charge ahead!
I was out of breath again. Nobody listened to anyone anymore. Shooting
at the enemy, everyone was shouting something of their own, like names of
those friends who were killed in action, pressing the trigger with every
name. We were right in the enemy's den! We lost too many of our comrades on
the damned Square. We cried when we saw our comrades hanged in the windows
of this building. Though now, at the turn of the century, there is a general
cry for kindness and forgiveness in our world, there will be no mercy for
you, dukhi! For using our boys as human shields, death to you all! The
Judgment Day has come!
I kept shooting, excited by the battle again. I put a long burst into
the shadow that jerked ahead of me. I was shouting something, too, like
everybody else, but I don't remember, what. So that is our Reichstag, at
last! We have finally done it! I will remember this moment for the rest of
my life.
Somebody pat me on the shoulder. Whoa, this is it's Yuri! He was also
very excited, his eyes shining with joy. We smile to each other: we are
alive, and if we had survived all that, we will live forever. I tried to
tell him, that I got my hearing back, but the noise was just too terrible.
We moved on together.
Part of our ragtag force went down into the basement. There was no
shooting down there, so the basement must have been clean. In our direction,
it was also clear, and all the surviving dukhi were pushed upstairs. I had
no intention of going upstairs at the moment. It was getting really dark
now. The grunts were throwing some bloodied rags out through the windows. We
did not want to spend the night here with whatever was left of the first
floor defenders.
There was some excitement at the basement entrance, and I saw a group
of makhra with burning torches carrying out corpses of our soldiers from the
basement. Some were carried on improvised stretchers, some were just carried
on hands. Some bodies were still dressed in uniforms, and some were naked.
Many bodies were mutilated and clearly had signs of torture. Many corpses
had their throats slashed, which was a typical style of execution by the
dukhi. Some had eyes poked out, fingers crashed into the bloody mess, and
two corpses had their feet cut off. We screamed in anger. From now on, there
will be no mercy for the enemy!
In that same basement, where the world-known blabber Korolev had spent
some time with his team, our soldiers were tortured to death. They were his
countrymen, his kin. So, what right did he have to talk about our "cruelty"
and " civilian abuse"? He is the same kind of pervert as everyone who
defended this building!
We kept watching, in silence now. Those who had their helmets or wool
caps on, took them off, and watched in great sorrow. Dear friends, forgive
us, for we were too late and failed to rescue you.
They kept carrying the bodies out. No one kept count, but there were no
less than 50. When the sad line stretched outside the building, the dukhi
opened fire. Someone screamed, as only a wounded can scream.
We were suddenly overwhelmed with a thirst for revenge. Forward, and
up!
Nobody gave an order, but we rushed toward the two stairways to the
second floor. The dukhi tried to stop us with a hail of bullets, but we
overpowered them with our grenade launchers. This time we fought in silence.
There were no victorious shouts and that sheer delight of battle we felt
earlier was gone. Only one feeling was left, Revenge! They cannot be left
alive.
Step by step, we moved upstairs. Dead militants were lying on the
steps. We walked right over them. These were not human beings any more, just
some stuff under the feet. All attention was concentrated on aiming. I step
on something soft; it's a militant's corpse. My foot sinks in some soft and
disgusting stuff. Without looking down, I kick it away. The visibility is
very poor, only the wind blows through the shattered windows. It is too dark
to see the enemy. Now the game of who's going to lose his nerve first
begins. Whoever makes the first shot will reveal his position and die. None
of us smoked or talked, we just kept walking very carefully. One of the
grunts picked up an empty can and threw it ahead. At once, three bursts of
automatic fire erupted from different sites. We locked onto those muzzle
flashes and fired back. Those of us who used the other stairway opened up
too. There were more flashes in front of us. We just kept spraying the
second floor with long bursts of fire. Bullets ricocheted from the columns
with terrible noise. It was too dangerous to stay where we were, so we
dispersed.
I shot from kneeling a position, then dodged forward, rolled over and
shot again, then rushed ahead. It was hard to breathe; I was sweating like a
pig again. My feet slipped on broken glass and spent cases. But to stop
meant to die, so we kept moving on. I could hear the steps of the soldiers
behind my back. The open area of the first floor was easier to take. Here
there were plenty of offices, there were pillars and doorways in the
corridor. Inch by inch, cutting the dukhi away from the exits and elevator
shafts we kept moving inside. We reached the office area and began mopping
up cleaning it: one or two hand grenades were thrown inside, then a spray of
gunfire. Most of the doors were gone, so we did not have to kick through the
doors down. Someone screamed to the left of me and cursed loudly in Russian.
I figured, the guy was wounded by the fragments of his own hand grenade. I
could tell from the noise that he was taken downstairs. The dukhi were also
throwing grenades and shooting bombs. More and more often the fallen
soldiers were carried away. Some would become "Cargo 200", and some would
become "Cargo 300"...
But that was not on my mind then: ahead, charge ahead! Again, I had the
salty taste of blood in my mouth; again, adrenaline rushed in my veins. Fear
and excitement are the feelings that motivate men in the battle. When these
two feelings mix, an explosive is formed that can blast with a tremendous
amount of energy.
We got to another office. A couple of hand grenades were thrown in and
we took cover behind the pillars. As two explosions thunder inside the
office, we heard more explosions echoing in the far end of the corridor. We
jumped through the doorway and sprayed the inside of the office with
bullets. Looks like no one was inside. We turn our backs and at once a burst
of fire comes from the inside. Luckily, no one gets hurt. We throw grenades
again, shoot bombs and the AK's. Altogether, about six bombs explode inside,
one by one. We keep shooting the automatics and move inside slowly, stumping
on a corpse of a militant, badly torn by explosions. It's too dark to
inspect the body and we just check his pockets. When we get out of the
office again, we find that the rest of our group had gone far ahead. The
corridor is dark; only some muzzle flashes and grenade explosions, so
deafening when inside the building, light the darkness. Slowly, everything
quiets down. The second floor is taken!
I can feel my sympathy for the militants vanishing with every action. I
felt some remorse initially, that we had come here as conquerors, and I was
tortured by guilt of being an occupant, maybe even a murderer. Now, I do not
give a shit. This is all just about revenge, and nothing else. Everything is
just black and white. We are the good guys, they are the bad guys.
Gradually, the delight of the battle is fading away, and I felt tired and
drowsy. The soldiers around me were chatting in excitement, interrupting
each other, telling the most remembered moments of the fight. Two soldiers
came from the first floor. I figured, one of them had a shoulder wound. The
medics kept operating heavily wounded in the basement.
The soldiers pulled some cotton out from their padded coats to make
improvised torches. A sympathetic crowd gathered at once. The wounded
soldier took his coat off, and we saw that his shoulder was messed up.
Someone gave him a canteen with vodka, or maybe alcohol, and he took a good
drink of it. Then they began cleaning his wound. The wounded clutched a
leather belt between his teeth. And just bit it harder with every touch,
that made his body shiver. He wiped sweat and drops of saliva rolling down
his chin with the back of his hand. Others kept talking, trying to distract
him from pain. Someone offered him a shot of painkiller, but he refused.
His friend was working with his bayonet, and a stiletto, widening the
wound, trying to get to the fragment. When he finally cleared his way to the
piece of metal, he attached the sheath to the bayonet, the way it is
normally done to turn the bayonet into scissors to cut the barbed wire. Only
this time the device would be used as forceps. We already knew that the
fragment must be pulled out quickly, or the patient could lose his
conciousness, or even die from pain shock. The war had turned us into fairly
good medics. Such skills are always valuable here. The helpers held him
tight now. He stiffened, shut his eyes and bit the belt harder, waiting for
the shock to come. His friend carefully reached the fragment inside the
wound with his improvised forceps, and then pulled it out abruptly. The
wounded soldier groaned, jerked backward, then forward. Blood streamed out
of the wound. The soldiers nearby opened the packs of bandages and tried to
stop the bleeding, but it did not work. The blood quickly soaked all
bandages and streamed down his back. Either an artery was cut, or this guy's
blood did not clot fast enough. We realized he could eventually die from
bleeding. Someone took the mag off his assault rifle and quickly took out
several catridges. There was no other way to stop bleeding, but to use this
barbaric approach. We often dusted small scratches with cigarette ashes, and
more serious wounds were treated with gunpowder.
A soldier came forward with two opened cases in his hand. The bandages
were removed at once and he quickly poured the gunpowder from the cases into
the wound. One of the guys touched it with his torch and the powder burned
with a flash that blinded us for a second. The wounded soldier jumped up,
but we saw that the bleeding had stopped. Cries of relief roared through the
group. The shoulder was finally bandaged; the fragment was washed with vodka
and given to the wounded as a souvenir. Then he drank whatever vodka was
left in the canteen. The operation was over. We were facing another long,
cold winter night in Chechnya.
My partner took something out of his pocket and showed it to me. It was
too dark to see the object, so I bent down and in the dim red light of my
cigarette I saw that he was holding a hand grenade, and a fuse. So, he also
kept one in his pocket! Our time has not come yet.
"I see, you did not use it."
"Not yet. Where have you been? I was going to stay with you, but I lost
you somewhere."
"Fuck knows where. I just ran with the pack. I was hoping they were
after some beer, but they had led me here instead."
"There would be a line to get beer. So, how are you doing?"
"Fine. Even my ears can hear something. Just fine."
"Well, just fine?" His voice was skeptical.
"Aren't we both alive? Yes! Unhurt? More or less so. We are on the
second floor of their Reichstag. What else do you need?"
"A shot of vodka and some chow."
"Why don't you go upstairs and ask?"
"Yeah, right. They will give me some. How are we going to spend the
night?"
"I have no idea, Yuri. Let us figure out something. We can't go down to
the basement, cause the medics work down there. How can they operate, I
can't even imagine."
"Well, they got some torches, just like us here."
"Shit! This is the end of the Twentieth Century, and they still operate
in torchlight. It's good to know that the wounds are not treated with snake
oil and witchcraft."
"When you fight with your own people, you end up treating wounds with
witchcraft. What did you expect?"
"Nothing. Can we sneak out of the building?"
"No way! No one could break through, either here or back. That is it,
we are sealed up!"
"Bastards!"
"Who?"
"Not us. Dukhi, of course!"
"Stop that. If you need some action, there are more stories above you.
They will wear us down. We won't hold for long without food, water, ammo and
evacuation of the wounded. So, we have no choice but move up."
"Just wait till they surprise us by blowing up a ceiling right above
our heads, the way they did it in Gosbank. That will be really funny!"
"They won't do that."
"Why not?"
"Cause the upper floors could collapse."
"Big deal. When Muslims fight with unbelievers, they can sacrifice
their lives."
"Everybody wants to live."
"True, but there can always be a couple of fanatics among them, who
don't give a shit. And these could light the fuse. There are enough fools
everywhere."
"I like your optimism. When one needs to hear some encouragement, we
can always bet on you, Slava. You are always there to boost our morale!"
"I am just being realistic. Let's go and find some place to take a
nap."
"We will need to build a fire. Maybe the dukhi left us some firewood."
We slowly walked along the corridor, searching for some firewood in the
offices. We picked up whatever we could find: pieces of broken furniture,
doors and window frames. We carried all that into one of the offices, where
we built a fire with the help of some office paper we found there. The
office furniture was not as good as firewood. It burned slowly, with the
remnants of polish bubbling and blackening. We sat shoulder to shoulder, our
backs to the wall, watching the flames in silence. Soon, our thoughts
drifted far away from reality and from everything that happened today.
The warmth of the fire made us drowsy, and despite hunger and thirst,
we fell asleep. One more day in my life had ended; one more day of war...
We did not sleep comfortably. The limbs became numb every now and then,
and I even got cramps in my leg. Then the fire almost died and I felt really
cold, so I had to stay half awake, keeping an eye on the fire. We woke up
before the dawn and threw the remaining firewood into the fire, then warmed
up doing some squats, jumping jacks and push-ups. We finally warmed up, but
without hot meals and vodka we would not hold out for long. The dukhi would
not let us out, and they will keep the reinforcements away. But we also
would not let them out, no way!
Meanwhile, some shooting began on the square. Carefully, we looked
outside. A large formation the size of a regiment, was trying to break
through into the palace. Judging by their uniforms, they were a mix of
marines and internal ministry troops.
The dukhi were shooting from the upper floors. Only then we had
realized the brutality of what we had managed to fulfill by breaking across
the square earlier. Even in the morning dusk the whole square was clearly
seen from the palace. And the soldiers down there, who were trying to find
cover behind the broken armor and in ditches, were just perfect targets for
shooting practice.
I heard some explosions and small arms fire back in the corridor. We
rushed out of the office. On the second stairway the soldiers were slowly
retreating under the attack of the militants from above. So, the bastards
are trying to break out! Forget about it, you won't!
There was also shooting on the first stairway now. The dukhi were
desperately trying to break out from the trap. Next to me, Yuri launched a
grenade. I knew that he was good in that -- a lot better than I am. I just
lack imagination needed to predict the trajectory of the round. And on many
occasions I was stunned by his ability to shoot a grenade from some kinky
position. It would fly by some unbelievable arc and inevitably hit the
target. And he would always hit it with the very first shot. So now he kept
shooting grenades, staying cool. But I knew that his stony face concealed a
lot of excitement.
The enemy also switched to launching bombs and throwing hand grenades,
and that kept both sides well apart from each other. That grenade duel went
on for a while.
For a second, I thought it would be great if we evacuated the building
and just blew it up with all the dukhi inside, but the brass, of course,
would not go for such radical solution. They need victorious press releases,
with snapshots of the captured Palace on the cover of some hot magazine.
Maybe, with a banner on top, the way it was on the Reichstag building in May
of 1945. They will rush more troops across the square now, and maybe a third
would not make it. They'd gather no less than a division inside the Palace,
and most of them would die there.
Comments:
dukhi a nickname for the Chechen rebels
makhra a nickname for the Russian infantry
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