, boot-licking, baseness, servility, selfless love of others and total disregard for human life ... especially for those on top, human life loses all value, especially in Moscow, among those bastards who wear out the seats of their pants in HQ offices ... they do not see us as individuals, but as battalions, companies and divisions ... ... that's enough philosophizing, Sharagin, time to get back to business, the war, and not sit around meditating ... what did I start with? oh, yes - the boundless courage of Russian soldiers... No matter how hard Sharagin tried to get away from philosophical musings, he kept plunging back into thought. He turned over and started to examine the peeling green paint of the APC, the dried mud plastering its body, the thick layer of dust that covered it just as it lined his lungs. Soviet people in Afghanistan choked on dust and spat it out in thick gobs of yellow, pus-like spittle. Unexpectedly it came to him that glorification of war, romantic perception of battle begins in childhood, when a child encounters a veritable landslide of literature on the subject, when his mind is barely able to digest heroic films in which the soldier is always victorious, and where death of the enemy is a great feat. ... kids barely out of the cradle run around with wooden machine guns: bang-bang, you're dead! ... nobody ever told us what real war is like, not a single book explained that by its nature, war is an abomination ... the Great Patriotic War was idealized, made into a fetish ... yes, we won, but at what price! ... I learnt a lot from my grandfather ... but this is something that will never be published in a single book or newspaper! ... so it looks as though the loss of ten million lives is justified, and instead of condemning such monstrous losses, instead of condemning those who couldn't give a damn whether thirty or forty millions perish in the name of victory, we eulogise martial success and prepare another generation hooked on self-sacrifice ... my generation was well prepared, that's why we're here, that's why our Soviet soldiers in Afghanistan perform miracles of heroism .... Saturated with specious, sweet, superficial and erroneous images of war, boys with wooden guns dream of battle, dream of going to war, no matter where or what. ... sadly, most of them never shed these childish illusions as they grow up ... stop! cancel that! it looks as though we can't live without violent emotion, without heroics, we always need an enemy who must be destroyed ... so were we all, our whole country, only waiting for yet another war, like this one in Afghanistan? ... As soon as the sun was past the zenith, the soldiers, who had quieted down for a while, came back to life, rubbing their eyes, yawning, crawling out of their holes. With returned vigour came jokes, laughter, swearing, shouts. The day before, when the squad was moving out to its assigned position, the lads pulled a fast number to get additional food, which they hid from their commander while they were digging in and sheltering from the "afghan." The armoured military vehicles, BMPs, met a herd of goats on a narrow mountain road. The older herdsman, a sturdy man who struck Sharagin as highly suspicious, ... he's a "spook," for sure ... and he'll remain in our rear, the bastard ... and a young boy, were driving the herd toward them. The Afghans were afraid that the shuravi would run down their goats and began to mill about and fuss. Sharagin signalled a halt. At the same moment, lance-corporal Prokhorov, the wiry and daring gunner in the first BMP, opened the rear hatch and seized a young kid. Sharagin didn't notice anything, all he heard was a dull thud as the hatch slammed shut, and turned around in surprise to see a female goat butting the BMP's armour: ... stupid animal ... what on earth possessed it? ... The kid traveled on with the squad, quietly chewing into a sack of potatoes. Halfway through, it almost started on some sticks of TNT that were kept to help in digging trenches. Prokhorov and Panasyuk caught the kid devouring the short-supply potatoes and dragged it out of the vehicle, swearing profusely, to the encouraging shouts of their comrades. The poor, frightened animal plunged wildly amid a forest of legs and shadows cast by surrounding soldiery until Titov felled it to earth and slit its throat with his bayonet. Naturally, there was not enough fresh meat to go around. The younger men had to make do with boiled pearl barley, but the youngsters devoured it greedily, chomping and belching, licking their spoons and mess tins clean in their hurry to fill their bellies before their older comrades could intervene. They watched from a respectful distance how the old hands savoured their meat, sucking the bones clean and helping themselves to baked potatoes: first they would poke around in the hot ashes with a twig, roll out a potato, pull off the blackened peel, pop the white inside into their mouths, and take another bite of goat meat. "A drop of whaddya call it, port, would go down a treat now, eh Panas?" Asked lance-corporal Prokhorov, licking his greasy fingers. "Stop breaking my heart. When we get back to the Union, then we'll pull out all the stops and celebrate! As much port and vodka as you can hold!" "Shit yes, that'll be really something!" "When we get back to the company, fuck me if I get up off my bunk for anything. I won't move a finger until I'm demobbed!" Panansyuk took a bite of potato. "If it wasn't for this assignment, we'd be getting ready to go back right now..." The youngsters chewed on dry crackers, listening enviously to the old hands' fantasies. "Hey, Chiri, why are you resting your balls by that fire? Where's the tea, boy?" shouted Prokhorov. "Damn greenhorns! You'll be jerking off for a long time yet before you can think of demob!" He laughed loudly. "But the grand-daddies of the Soviet Army will be getting up to God knows what in a month's time. Lock up your daughters, people! I told you, remember, how we've got this whole female hostel right next door, a new slit every night," he went on, making things up on the spur of the moment, and believing his own lies. "I remember Panas, see, how you'd come every night to a dance, pick up a chick, and on the way back to the hostel, naturally, you'd get her into a clinch somewhere in the bushes, then take her home, and another one would be waving out the window at you, like, hell, come and hop into my cot, soldier-boy! Just think, fuck it, what a life we had!" "Who d'you think you're shitting, Prokhor?" jeered Titov. "One and a half years I've known you, and all you've done is bullshit on about that hostel, and I bet before that you hadn't so much as squeezed a tit!" "Bullshit yourself, I didn't!" roared Prokhorov, though he clearly realized that any moment now he'd be pinned down for outright lying. "With a willy like yours, even if you got to climb up on a woman she wouldn't feel a thing! It'd be like a pencil in a glass!" said Titov, quashing his friend even further. "How would you know?" challenged Prokhorov sourly. "Well, it's no great military secret, is it? We've been in the bath-house together, haven't we?" "Chiri, you mother-fucker!" Shouted lance-corporal Prokhorov, glaring at a soldier sitting nearby. "How long are we going to wait for that tea, eh? It's ready? Well, bring it here, bugger it, before I have to get up! I'll count to three ... fucking one ... fucking two ..." Thin, fair-haired Chirikov grabbed up the hot mugs with his bare hands, and just made it on the count of three. "And where's the jam, worm?" Demanded Prokhorov, pinning the hapless soldier with a merciless glare. " ? " "I'll count to one and a half! Starting now! One..." "Come off it," interrupted Panasyuk. "Dismissed, Chiri!" After the soldier retreated, he added: "You've driven the poor sod into the ground. He's just come off duty. Give him a break. Otherwise, he'll goof off on duty, fall asleep, and that will be that." "Fuck the lot of you!" Retorted Prokhorov, offended, and stumped off with his mug, muttering as he went: "Fine friends, bugger them! If I hadn't swiped that fucking goat, you'd all be sitting around sucking your balls!" "Hold it!" Shouted Panansyuk. "Let him go," interposed Titov, waving dismissively. "Five minutes, and he'll be back to normal." They sat around, slurping thick black tea, which had been overboiled on an improvised grill made out of a zinc cartridge box. The subject under discussion was how to make a cake out of biscuits and condensed milk. It was imperative to make their own demob cake. Tradition. Sweet dreams of demobilisation reflected on the faces of Panasyuk and Titov, while Prokhorov, miffed by his friends' digs, wandered around the post, sipping his tea, burning his mouth on the hot aluminum mug, and shouting at the younger soldiers. Sharagin, relaxing with an after-dinner cigarette, heard a single shot. "Find out who that was, and report back," he ordered private Myshkovsky, who had jumped at the shot, and again at the harsh tone of his commanding officer's voice. ... you'd swear someone dropped him flat on his face on some asphalt in childhood ... he's put up with the grand-dads, month after month ... never mind, Myshkovsky, we'll make a paratrooper out of you yet ... "It was lance-corporal Prokhorov shooting, comrade lieutenant," reported Myshkovsky breathlessly when he got back. "He said it was so the spooks in the village wouldn't stick their noses out. Remedial shot, he said." Prokhorov had taken up a position with a sniper's rifle, and turned to the cowed sentry: "Burkov, fuck you! Get over to the sergeant and tell him to come here." "But I'm on duty, I can't leave my post ..." "Whaaat? Lost your marbles in attack, or something? On your way -- one foot here, the other one there!" At first, they just fooled around to shape up, aiming at rocks and bushes from the top of the hill. However, this pastime soon palled. Panasyuk offered a bet to make things more interesting: "For five chits, all right? Prokhor, let's see which one of us can hit that donkey over there." Prokhorov missed, which made him even more angry. Panasyuk got the donkey with his first shot, leaned back against a rock and pulled out a packet of cigarettes, while the unlucky grand-dad, boiling with frustration, studied the village through the rifle sights, hoping that something live would appear, a domestic animal, say, or an Afghan, so that he could renew the bet and win back his five chits -- a whole FIVE -- from Panasyuk. Sharagin went for a piss after his tea and saw the grand-dads messing around with the rifle. He saw Prokhorov, pop-eyed and red-faced, pull money out of his pocket and give it to the sergeant. Buttoning up his fly as he went, Sharagin wandered over to the shooters. He wouldn't mind doing a bit of shooting himself. "Hey, Prokhor, look! An old woman's come out! No, no, a bit further to the right," prompted the sergeant. "Same conditions as before?" Asked Prokhorov, just to be sure. "Yep. There's a war on, she's got no business roaming the streets. Right, comrade lieutenant?" "I guess so." "One fucking spook about to bite the dust!" Cried Prokhorov gleefully. The sun was already low, and the veiled woman cast a long shadow, which dragged behind her along a wall, as if trying to hold her back from inevitable disaster. A 7.62 whooshed toward the village. The old woman stopped, as if struck by a sudden thought, then slid slowly to the ground, fell on her side and lay motionless. "Never cross the road on a red light," quipped one of the men who had gathered to watch the show. "Want a go, comrade lieutenant?" Offered Panansyuk. "I'll load it up with an exploding head, if you like." He retreated a few steps behind the beaming Prokhorov and returned the five chits. They stood there watching as their commanding officer settled down on a sleeping bag, and adjusted the rifle sights. "Look, look, comrade lieutenant, over on the left by the wall!" Prompted Titov, eyes glued to a pair of binoculars. "There's a spook there, see him?" "Yes, I see him..." He did not dampen the grand-dads' exhilaration, consenting silently that the village belonged to the spooks and was thus doomed to destruction, so there was no point in wasting pity on its inhabitants. He had agreed, so he, too, was now part of this "game." He lay cradling the rifle and looking through its sights at an old man who peered out from behind a wall from time to time. ... Prokhorov's right: there's a war on, they've no business showing themselves outside ... there's a war on, so it's either them or us ... all these so-called peaceful civilians, old and young, hate our guts, and given the chance, they'll wind our gizzards around a pitchfork and put them out for all to see ... they help the spooks, the bastards, going back and forth as if they're tending their fields, but at the same time, the sons of bitches are setting out trip-wires ... " Sharagin took aim, but at the same moment decided not to kill the old man, just shoot over his head, and tightened his finger on the trigger. In training, he had been the best shot in his group. It would be easy to hit the target at this range -- too easy. ... live, old man .... "Bet you he'll miss," came a whisper from behind. " ....." "No guts?" "No ... Bet you ten chits." That was Panasyuk. Sharagin aimed again. A drop of sweat trickled from his hairline past his ear, down his cheek and fell on the rifle butt. He held his breath. He couldn't understand why he had suddenly given way to doubts. His fingers felt the stiffness of the trigger, as though it was resisting him. "... taking too long to aim, fuck it, he'll miss for sure!" needled Prokhorov's voice. The shot boomed out. The old man fell away from the wall, staggered forward a few steps and fell. "Ha! Gotcha!" whooped Panasyuk. "Class shot! Right in the brain box!" Confirmed Titov, still glued to the binoculars. "Head's gone like it was never there. Just his jawbone hanging on his neck!" The armoured vehicles were like pincers around the village; moving inward, the paratroopers began combing through the village. Groups of soldiers dispersed along its dusty, crooked streets. ... the village is empty, definitely empty ... and the artillery pounded the hell out of it ... everyone must be long gone ... but, then, who knows? ... A dead donkey lay beside the last hut, distended from the heat like a barrel to which someone had tied four legs for fun. A suffocating stench of decaying flesh hung in the air for several dozen meters around. Suppressing the urge to vomit, the soldiers tried to keep as far away from it as possible, as if fearing that the rock-hard hide of the dead animal, bloated to its limits, might burst and douse them with stinking, rotten matter. Armed men filed through the winding streets, which were not wide enough for their vehicles: a BMP was bound to get stuck and become a sitting target. The new boys gazed around fearfully, creeping sideways along the walls in momentary expectation of attack, delaying the others as they pressed their backs to the blind walls of houses. Lacking experience, borne along only by the fear and excitement arising out of terror of the unknown, they could only count on the speed of their reaction, the ability to fire at once, emptying the entire magazine. The more experienced soldiers were like predators: listening, constantly evaluating their position in relation to a possible enemy, estimating the best and closest cover to dive into at the first sound of a shot. Intuitively, they sought the temper of the village, tried to catch its breath, and moved confidently ever deeper, to complete the combing and get out of this silent, malevolent and alien kingdom. The men advanced quickly but quietly, fearful of mines and trip-wires. Their eyes searched the ground. The labyrinths under the houses led to the very heart of the village. Part of the village was destroyed by artillery fire: some roofs and grey mud walls had collapsed, shattered windows were black holes in the walls of houses. Here and there, on houses that were still standing, there were small Chinese-manufactured padlocks -- a sure sign that the inhabitants had fled, expecting the worst, but hoped to return at some later time. "Check 'em out!" A door was rammed in. "Sychev, follow me!" Ordered Sharagin. "Titov, Myshkovsky! Check opposite, in the yard!" "All clear!" "The spooks have fucked off!..." Captain Morgultsev took off his hat, wiped the sweat off his brow with his sleeve, and unfolded a map on the armour. "Combing through the "greenery" is like chasing lice out of your hair with a bloody fine-tooth comb ... All right ...The Afghan units will move in from here, and here. Our orders are to move along here." He poked a finger at a green-shaded section on the map, criss-crossed by roads, like so many veins. "To hell and gone with that fucking greenery!" Chistyakov hawked and spat through his teeth, then rubbed the spittle into the ground with the toe of his boot. "Can't we do without those bloody Afghans? They'll scare off the spooks for miles around!" ... wants to take a last drink of blood, and there aren't any spooks about, nobody to kill ... guessed Sharagin. "Comrade senior lieutenant!" squeaked the political officer. "Enough of your fu ... '' he cut himself off. ''Enough of these emotional outbursts! They're our military allies!" Chistyakov bit his lip, scowled at Nemilov and burst out: "What do you fucking well want, more than anyone else?" "Bloody hell, will you stop that?!" interrupted Morgultsev. He gave the platoon leaders their instructions and ordered them to their vehicles. "I won't leave it at that," fumed the political officer. "I don't care if he's due for replacement! What kind of an example is he setting others?" "Leave him alone," advised Morgultsev. Sharagin's BMP bounced across a trench, the armour slicing through a corner of a house, and raced away from the village. They penetrated deeper into the valley and the "greenery", breathing in the unhealthy, greasy dust of deserted houses, the treads of BMPs churning up the spooks' former land holdings, driving them away and pursuing; their advance drove the spooks back from their bolt-holes, squeezed them out of the valley, pointing them toward other hunters, even though they knew that once the operation was over and the companies went back to base, the spooks who had managed to break through would return and bring others with them, return and take up residence once more, and revolutionary power would never be established in these parts. Unruly and defiant, condemned as treacherous or subversive, at times due to errors inevitable in war time, the villages were methodically pounded by Soviet air power and artillery. Heavy arms fire felled and destroyed Muslim gravestones, flags fluttering in the wind. Shells disemboweled cemeteries and homes of the heathen, cleared Afghan mountains, plains and deserts of the spooks, of the unclean, making way for the builders of a new, bright future. The shuravi hoped the time would come when they would finally wipe all treacherous villages from the face of the earth. Villages fell, burned, disintegrated, but for some reason never disappeared completely. Like scabbed-over sores they lay on mountain slopes, in the "greenery" and along roadsides -- a blind reproach, malignant and unforgiving of what was done to them, ready to wreak revenge for the cruelty with which, free from doubt and hesitation, the people from the North, the shuravi, who always did whatever they wanted, had dealt with them. A lone, stunted tree stuck out above a long, partially ruined wall, chunks missing from it like bites from an apple. The tree had lost its crown in the shelling, but it still lived. It looked out fearfully at the surrounding world after the artillery storm. ... just like that old man behind the house ... The familiar, relatively safe passage of life, accompanied by the roar of diesel engines and shuddering armour, suddenly broke off. A grenade launcher opened up on the first BMP from behind the wall. ... like a fireball ... it flew from the shelter of the wall, beside the tree, and a moment later the armour under Oleg jumped. The shell hit the vehicle's tread, blasting it off. Whee, whee, whee! Screamed wayward spook bullets on all sides. Soldiers fell flat, pressing themselves against the ground, into the dust, dived under vehicles. Everyone took whatever shelter they could. A machine gun chattered in fury and hatred, striving to kill off as many as it could of these suddenly vulnerable people, jumping off the armour to the ground. Sergeant Panasyuk was caught in mid-leap. He bounded up and fell like a sack on his back; his helmet rolled away, and his hand clenched his gun. The sergeant had no time to even shout, he just grunted almost inaudibly, as if to himself, before his long, bony body struck the ground. In the all-embracing silence before death, the sergeant was quiet and relaxed for the first time in one and a half years of war, as if he had returned home and wrapped himself in a blanket, hid his head and went to sleep. Hefty Titov crawled up and dragged him behind the BMP, pulled off his bullet-proof vest, and only then saw the reddish-brown spot on Panasyuk's shirt. The battle cut off the squad from the rest of the world, deafened it with shell-fire, blinded it with explosions; lead whizzed all around. Sharagin emptied his second magazine, replaced it and turned, wondering why the BMPs were not firing. The cannon of the nearest one was swiveling back and forth. Prokhorov, staggering, as if drunk, could not figure out where the fire was coming from and where the spooks had taken up their position. Finally he fired by guess: Kaboom! Kaboom! Kaboom! Kaboom! Kaboom! Came belated fire from the second BMP. ... serve the bastards right! ... give them another one! ... Ah, that was better. Now all guns were firing. Shattered by explosions, the village fell silent. The spooks must be retreating. But the infuriated soldiers kept raking the area with every available weapon. Eventually the barrage ceased, hot barrels cooling one after another. Death, which seemed to have come from nowhere and almost won, fell back in the face of the soldiers' desperate resistance, taking sergeant Panasyuk with it. He lay there with an expression of faint chagrin or disappointment on his face, his legs bent and doubled over like a snapped branch, pitiful, frail, shot through the side just in the spot left exposed by the bullet-proof vest. Sharagin railed, swore at the radio operator, who spluttered desperately, trying to summon a helicopter. There was not a single cloud in the sky, and not a single chopper. Time was passing, flying away uncontrolled, and together with it, with those speeding minutes that replaced one another on the liquid crystal display of the black, quartz watch in a plastic thick casing on the sergeant's wrist, hope faded. "Where the hell are they, the swine!" Shouted Sharagin, but there was nothing anyone could say. "I've got a man dying here!" He yelled into the silent airwaves. Titov, Prokhorov and others stared at the distant pass, hoping to catch sight of the choppers, then looked back at Panasyuk, seeing how he was slipping away, without a word of farewell, into another world, giving up, cornered and unable to find anything to grasp and hold on to life. The younger soldiers gaped at their dying comrade in terror, as though they could no longer recognize him, so helpless and no longer in charge of them. The men wandered around, smoking, chewing dry rations, talking in muted voices, and each one was thinking: fuck, what lousy luck ... Unable to do anything, the squad leader went through moments of despair. When the sergeant opened his eyes slightly for the last time, Sharagin thought: ... it'll be all right ... hang on, just don't die ... Even though it was obvious that the sergeant wouldn't pull through: and in that moment, in some distant corner of his mind, a hint of his own death raised its head, a hint he immediately and naturally brushed aside, unable to agree or accept such an eventuality, but at the same time, he wished that his own end would be quick and without suffering. Panasyuk died fifteen minutes before the choppers arrived. Lieutenant Sharagin sat beside the dead sergeant, exhausted, drained, for the first time in his service in Afghanistan cursing the war, cursing himself, suffering as though he could have stopped those bullets that penetrate human bodies, or dissipate the fog at the other end of the pass, so the helicopters could come sooner and get the sergeant to the hospital on time. Chapter Four. Chistyakov He saw Yepimakhov for the first time when he returned to the regiment after conducting the column, and was dragging his tired body to the barracks, thinking only of two things - to have a bath and down a glass of vodka. Zhenka had stopped in town and bought a couple of bottles. Almost as if he knew they would be needed. The new man with a lieutenant's shoulder boards was being escorted toward regimental headquarters by a soldier. He was dressed in a "Union" uniform, which nobody in Afghanistan had worn for a long time as it had been superseded by the special so-called "experimental" uniform, supposedly tailored to new field conditions. The soldier was lugging a suitcase, bending under its weight, and a carrier bag. The lieutenant, natty in a tailored military jacket with a high collar, carried a greatcoat over his left arm. .... must be Zhenka's replacement at last .... Sharagin unlocked the Chinese padlock which hung on two bent nails after they had lost the only key to the dead lock on the door and stepped into the tiny entry hall. He leaned his rifle against the wall, dropped his rucksack on the floor, gave a tired yank at his bootlaces, too lazy to undo them completely, and got his boots off by pushing the heel of one with the toe of the other foot. He flung back the curtain separating the entrance, and stepped into the main room. The platoon leaders and sergeant lived here, surrounded by family photographs and cuttings out of the "Ogonyok" magazine pinned to the walls. Standard iron bunks lined the walls, and a doorless clothes cupboard leaned crookedly. A heating pipe ran under the window with a thin, flat radiator which leaked frequently and was therefore rusted through. Wooden pegs were stuck into the radiator here and there, where the leaks were strongest. They all froze in winter, wrapped themselves in their greatcoats. Home-made heaters made no difference. A lone, naked light bulb hung from the ceiling. Greatcoats hung on nails hammered into the walls. A twin-cassette player stood on the table, surrounded by old newspapers and an ashtray made out of half of a can of imported "Si-Si" soda. ... towel, soap, clean underwear...that's all ... The burner by the bath-house was silent, cooling down. ... too damn late... Usually the gas burner hissed, throwing out a tongue of flame, heating up the steam room. Sharagin threw off his stiff uniform and underwear, which stank of sweat and diesel and which he had not changed for some time, and his socks which had a big hole on one toe and also smelled terrible and stuck to his road-weary feet. He did not throw away the socks, but washed them with the rest of his clothing. The trickle of water from the shower was lukewarm, but he gloried in it nonetheless. He stood under it for at least five minutes as if trying to soak himself through and through, rubbing his body briskly with a sponge to get rid of the accumulated dirt, simultaneously shedding the fatigue and nervousness brought on by combat, washed his cropped hair. ... maybe I should shave my head bald once more? No, once was enough ... He scraped his cheeks under the now cold shower, swore at the cheap blade which lost its edge straight after contact with the stubble of many days. ... the unit had not noticed the loss of a soldier ... they had not even had time to deal with the enemy properly ... this particular lot of spooks was very crafty, retreating from battle along mountain tracks, underground tunnels ... But Chistyakov got his way, did some shooting later ... battalion reconnaissance took three prisoners... one spook was bumped off on the way ... All these days, the simplicity and unexpectedness of Panasyuk's death haunted Sharagin and the war, which had previously given special color to the imagination, a whole spectrum of exhilarating shades and fascinating variety of sounds, now seemed bleak and almost monochrome. Earlier the war had enticed and beckoned with unlimited shooting, frightened from afar with shell explosions, warned against hidden peril with triggered mines which concussed but did not kill. Now, for the first time, war had struck a vital blow, which was serious and extremely painful. War had descended suddenly on all sides, grim, real, merciless. From now on, Death kept a sharp eye on every individual, walked in step and whispered something, its breath cold on the back of the neck. The bath-house was fast becoming cold. Sharagin splashed a few dippers on the stones, climbed on to the top bench, stretched himself, closed his eyes and relaxed. He almost fell asleep. Once something similar happened to Pashkov, who had drunk a lot, set out for a steam bath and went to sleep on the top bench. If it were not for the soldier who stood guard at the bath-house, Pashkov would have been broiled like a lobster. When he was shaken awake, he could barely move his whiskers and had no idea about where he was. He drank nothing but mineral water for a whole week after that. When Sharagin had soaked enough and washed himself clean, he felt fresh in mind and body ... like a newborn baby... He went out into the dressing room and was already standing on the plank floor, barefoot and in his underpants, when he suddenly felt a sharp surge of desire twist him up inside. Male need. In order not to embarrass himself before other officers, he bent over quickly, sat on a bench and pulled on his trousers. He had forgotten all about that in the last few months, but now, after the bath, he needed a woman. Badly. So much that he ground his teeth. ... you couldn't bend it using both hands... The meager handful of women in the company were all accounted for. Paired off, living with senior officers, no way you could approach them. Sharagin went out and lit a cigarette. ... it's easier for the "elephants" ... those who are more shy, masturbate in secret, on sentry duty, when else is a soldier alone? or in the latrine, surrounded by the stink of shit...but what am I to do? I don't know how to do it for money ... guzzling vodka is all that's left!... Zhenka manages much better, straight into battle with reconnaissance and claims victory over the latest girl...and forgets about it the next day... ... what does a man really need in wartime?.. he wondered, returning from the bath-house. -"food, medals, vodka and dames!" according to Morgultsev ....well, the food situation is bearable, there are never enough medals to go around, nor enough vodka, either, but especially women ... you'd think they'd bring in enough for everyone, so you wouldn't have to think about it! ... good thing the replacement's arrived, it will mean a drink or two! .. The orderly on duty pulled himself to attention and reported that Chistyakov's replacement had arrived , and that the company had gone off to eat. Sharagin hung out his washing, lay down on his bunk and turned his head to the wall, facing the photograph of Lena and Nastyusha. The gray cardboard was cut unevenly around the edges to palm size, because for some time he carried the photo in his pocket. Wife and daughter were frozen in unnatural, tense poses before the camera, having taken inordinate pains to look as good as possible. The tasteless provincial hairdresser had given Lena a "stylish" hairdo, hiding her beautiful long hair. For some reason she had colored her lips and eyelashes with something. Her wide-spaced, usually bright and warm eyes, high forehead and clear, touching face were immobile, as though they had frozen Lena, enchained her, frightened her. Meek and helpless, but strong in her love for him, and fearful for him, she seemed to look into the camera lens as though trying to catch a glimpse of the future, the day when he would receive this photo, in order to tell him of her love, her anxiety, about all that surrounds a woman who is left for a long time without the husband who has gone off to war. Nastyusha had huge bows of ribbon on both sides of her head, making her look like a funny toy. ... it would have been better to take the photo at home ... At the moment when "the birdie" flew out they, naturally, were thinking of Daddy, who was serving in a distant country, and their fears were involuntarily captured on film. He had never known the pulling power of photographs before. That a glance at a photograph is like a voyage in time: a moment of human life is permanently fixed on a card, so tiny that the person probably did not even notice it or attach any significance to it, it's like a trip into the past, a projection into another dimension. He closed his eyes and imagined the hairdresser's they usually went to - on the corner near the railway station, possibly the only one in town. Then - how they stood in line holding the receipt until their time came, probably going to the mirror a few times to check how they looked, tried to tune themselves up to smile and then headed back home, dressed in their Sunday best, along the pitted, dirty streets. ... I bet it was Mother's idea to have that photo taken ... He did not lie alone for long. Solitude is a great luxury in the army. The door squeaked open, and senior lieutenant Ivan Zebrev, commander of the 1st platoon entered and, in joyful anticipation of the imminent drinking spree, announced: "Chistyakov's replacement has arrived.!" and added his favorite "Ulyu-ulyu!" "I know, I saw him." "Zhenka's beside himself with joy. He's making sure not a speck of dust settles on him. You could die laughing. He even missed going to the bath-house, but took the lieutenant by the elbow and steered him off somewhere. Listen - this is what we'll do. My "elephants" - harrumph! - are on kitchen duty today, so they'll set up everything, and we'll all make tracks there after lights out. We'll have a wow of a time. It's been a long time since we got drunk. What's that you said? You sick or something?" "Just tired. Is there anything to drink right now?" "Harrumph!.." Zebrev dived under Chistyakov's bunk and emerged with a bottle in his hands. "How much d'you want?" "About a hundred grams..." It was hard to force down the industrial alcohol. Even if drunk half and half with juice or water, it gave off a tang of either kerosene or rubber, seemed to stop in your throat and, after drinking a bottle of that garbage some people broke out in red spots. "Going to eat?" "No thanks, Ivan, I won't bother if we're going to be eating later." "Right. I'm off for a wash, and then to feed my face." "There's almost no water left." "See you!" For a while longer Oleg remained alone. Relaxed by the alcohol, he pulled out and re-read his wife's last letters. Lena never complained and never would complain about any difficulties, especially in a letter. She wrote only about good things, even if they were a tiny drop once a month. She wrote that she loved him and was waiting for him. She described all the new and funny things Nastya had said, how quickly she was changing, how fascinating it is to watch a child's reactions to the surrounding world, and did not fail to mention that Nastya loves her Daddy very much and misses him. He really ought to sit down and write, but he couldn't get into the right mood. The words written down on paper became generalized, even if warm and sufficiently understandable to someone close who was far away and suffering anxiety. As a rule the tone of his letters was restrained, brief, from a desire to save the really important words for his return home. ... Lena will understand. Lena will forgive ... Distrust of the army postal service precluded putting anything secretly sentimental in a letter. Letters from home were sometimes a week late, and on the back of the envelope he had twice seen the stamp "Letter received in damaged condition." That meant that the letter had been opened, checked, possibly read. Sometimes letters did not arrive at all. It was assumed, in such cases, that some swine of a soldier on duty at the post office had opened the letter in search of money - cash was often enclosed - and then thrown the letter away instead of resealing the envelope. Suspicion also fell on the KGB personnel, and he did not want some KGB sneak finding out the thoughts of lieutenant Sharagin. In the barracks, everything went haywire whenever senior lieutenant Chistyakov appeared on the threshold. The men would report glibly, one after another. Chistyakov had trained them well, had them running on a string. Zhenka was a bit "under the weather", his face red ... he's already had a drop or two... thrusting the lieutenant in the "Union" uniform into the room. "Olly! Fuck it, why are you lying around? Reveille! It's my big day today! Look who's here - my replacement!" "Pleased to meet you. I'm Nikolai Yepimakhov, " said the newcomer, standing uncertainly between the doorframe and his big suitcase. "Come in, come in," urged Chistyakov, dragging him forward. "Take a seat, you'll soon be at home here. " "Where?" "On this chair. We need some more glasses," fussed Zhenka. He fished under his bunk for the bottle and was surprised to find it had been opened. "Shit, you're gone for half an hour, and some sonofabitch takes advantage!" "What's the matter?" asked Oleg, not understanding. "Someone's been at my vodka!" "Actually, I took a swig." "Oh.. well, in that case, all right," replied Chistyakov approvingly. "Right, mate, we'll drink later. Meantime, let's go get you some cotton clothes. It won't do to be wandering around the regiment in Union uniform.!" Chistyakov's farewell party made Oleg feel sad. Zhenka had been part of his first months of service, Zhenka had taught him how to survive in Afghanistan.