e latter - to the commander of the division. Then comes the commander of the army. Commanders of the 40th army changed every couple of years. Therefore it would be wrong to single out any particular individual. One brought in troops, another took them out, yet another built and fought and so on. Each had his own pluses and minuses, but irrespective of anything, every commander was the viceroy of the distant great power, the master of an estate on which, beyond any doubt, Soviet directives and laws were in force. The viceroy was assisted by party and political structures that kept an eagle eye on the men to ensure that everyone prayed to one God only - the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, that not a shadow of doubt crossed their minds concerning the correctness of the choice made by their grandparents. For some of the men the horizon is determined by the battalion, for others - the regiment, others think within the framework of a division, and very few who serve in headquarters think in terms of an army comprised of hundreds of thousands. For those close to headquarters, the commander was always a mere mortal. The lower army ranks had no time to wonder or discuss where this or that general lives, with whom he lives, what car he uses to drive to work, what he eats for dinner and which bath house he patronizes. For them, the level of the commander is inaccessible. The people at the bottom of the ladder, whose feet supported the weight of the entire army machine, know that it is not done to criticize their commanders, - history would laugh at them later if they were inadequate or foolish, - these people at the top of the iceberg must be cared for and nurtured, they must be objects of pride, because their resonant names were more likely to go down in history than the names of those who served in the same battalion, and some five or ten years later it would be nice to recall that one served under such and such a commander, stress that he would visit once, regiment frequently, that we knew him, saw him in combat more than once and that he was one hell of a guy! The commander of the 40th army had returned from the battle command center where he had taken early morning reports, and was now engaged on urgent matters concerning the imminent large operation. He was concluding a telephone conversation with someone and gestured the advisor and the general to come in and sit down. Sorokin made a mental note that the commander was once again acting in a not too friendly manner, for all that they used the familiar "you" form of address. Furthermore, twice in the past few days the commander had not called Sorokin "Alyosha", but "Alexei Glebovich" indicating clearly that no particular buddy stuff was to be expected. His rise had been too swift in recent years, he had become too far removed from his old comrades in arms. Still, Sorokin hoped that during his stay in Kabul there would be a chance to share a bottle, just the two of them, and indulge in some nostalgic reminiscences about those early years. Then everything would get back to normal. "Over here, please," said the commander, wanting to get rid of his visitors as quickly as possible. "Viktor Konstantinovich, and you too, Alexei Glebovich. Come and take a look." He led them over to the window and pulled back the white tulle curtains, allowing a view of a summer house with a pointed roof. Right behind it was a swimming pool with sky-blue water, covered completely by camouflage netting. Some home-made deckchairs stood to the left, behind the pine trees. A fat man in striped trunks lay sunning himself, while a second man swam in the pool, pushing himself strongly away from the sides. A small table was covered with various kinds of bottles. "Don't lose any time, Viktor Konstantinovich, go down to the pool, I'll have my adjutant escort you there. I'm really sorry, but there's no way I can go there myself today. I'm absolutely snowed under with work." After saying his good-byes to the commander and the advisor, Sorokin made his way to the party commission chairman and went inside. "Alexei Glebovich! Do sit down! I want to copy some Afghan songs. I could make you a copy too, if you like?" "Why not?" The stout colonel who issued coupons for imported technology and 'Adidas' track suits unsealed a block of "Sony" tapes purchased in an Afghan shop, and began to put stickers on every cassette to indicate sides A and B, and on which one could write the name of the content. "Yes, I'll certainly manage that!" It was impossible to refuse a request for coupons from a general, let alone a general from an operative group of the Ministry of Defense, but the chairman, sly fox that he was, managed to give the conversation such a turn that Sorokin found himself in the role of a supplicant. "Come in any time, comrade general. Always happy to be of service," invited the chairman in parting. Ask a trifling favor, and find yourself indebted, thought Sorokin angrily. That sonofabitch will call in the favor, you can bet on that. "There goes the younger generation," said the duty officer in the main vestibule to his partner, following Sorokin with his eyes. "Some sharp dresser! Thinks a lot of himself." He waited until the general got into his car. "Before, generals were all five minutes to their retirement date. Nowadays it's all different, Yura. They barely have time to put on their colonel's shoulder boards before placing an order for those of a general. That's all due to Afghanistan, pal. If it weren't for the war, where would the army get new blood? You have to think here, run risks, but those old farts at the top couldn't handle it, this is no office job, or paper shuffling or spending a weekend with the grandchildren at their dacha. You mark my words, Yura, those elders in the Kremlin will soon feel the pressure of new forces, they're already being squeezed with perestroikas and accelerations. How can they speed themselves up? There were two roads leading to Kabul from staff headquarters. The first was meant for the higher ranks and served as a kind of parade entrance to the HQ of the 40th. It started from the front of the Amin palace, passed the residence where the operative group of the Ministry of Defense worked and where Fyodor Konstantinovich, the personal representative of the Minister of Defense and for whom a cow plus a milkmaid had been flown in on a special freight run, lived. The road came to an asphalt-surfaced square surrounding the Afghan Ministry of Defense. Another road came out on this square, too, one that was virtually unknown to the army brass because generals, like lords and masters of old, did not like to travel along dusty, uneven roads, they did not look at the rear entrance which was designated for lesser beings, the insignificant, the servants. However, the general opted for this particular road, which began between the officers' houses, the commissary and the cafe, and was manned by two checkpoints. They passed the first checkpoint, the thin chimneys of the boiler house which protruded like matches above the single-storey barrackss, the sports field, then the second checkpoint and took the downward slope, leaving behind the shoddy museum of the Afghan armed forces, filled with obsolete, disintegrating Soviet military technology, covered with a thick layer of green paint. A sort of crossroads popularly referred to simply as "the cross" was directly behind the museum. To the left of it lay a road leading to two regiments - the paratroops and the motorized infantry - and the goods depot with its enormous storage hangars. A long line of military vehicles had passed through here early in the morning. Now they were replaced by numerous Kamaz trucks, which raised clouds of dust in their wake. A swarm of bare-legged urchins "attacked" the trucks. The more agile would seize the tailboards, pull back the canvas cover and throw out everything they could reach. Others ran behind the truck, catching whatever they could and disappearing into alleyways. "Just look at them! Look what they're doing, the rotten little beggars!" cried Sorokin. "The cheek!-" Such pirate raids by Afghan kids were carried out frequently on Soviet columns, and were accomplished so swiftly that the truck drivers did not have time to react in most cases. Sashka couldn't care less at the moment, even though he dutifully made noises indicating agreement. Sashka was thinking his own soldier's thoughts about the load hidden in the boot and caught himself on the thought that those kids must be making a bundle and maybe he, since he had already been dragged into this shady matter, should demand a cut, even a tiny one, for the risk he was running, instead of a mere "thanks!" You can't spread "thanks" on a piece of bread, after all. A handful of modest container-shops on wheels clustered around the "cross" selling the traditional selection of shawls, "stone-washed" jeans outfits, pens to suit every taste, sunglasses and "biters", nail clippers which were a favorite gift back home; you could buy a bottle of vodka at the "cross" at any time of the day or night. The shops were decorated with notices in mutilated Russian such as "Mischa-empori-shope", posters depicting black-browed Indian beauties or heroes of American action movies such as Rambo, with mountainous biceps, streamlined torsos and cartridge belts slung across their chests. Several more container shops stood behind the Coca-Cola factory with its yard full of hundreds of cases of empty bottles. The road at this point was particularly bad, the general's car and the trucks bouncing along the uneven surface. They slowed down in order not to wreck their suspension, crawling past the military traffic police post lurking behind a wall. It was here that the dust they had raised caught up with the trucks and hung in a thick pall inside their cabins. From time to time the shop owners would come out with shovels and throw some water on the road from surrounding puddles in an effort to damp down the yellow, choking dust. The general's "Volga" came out by the Afghan Ministry of Defense, drove around its perimeter and sped along the tree-lined Dar-ul-Aman, the lengthy strip of asphalt leading to the center of Kabul. Various ministries and other official buildings, schools, shops and bakeries and private villas flashed by. Sashka glanced at the general in the rear view mirror from time to time. Sorokin looked about forty years of age. He was in good shape, but had aged early, gray-haired and with red veins on and around his nose. The general was puffing on a cigarette and speaking in a slightly hoarse voice, more to himself than the river: "There's another road parallel to this one, a bit narrower, that leads to the Institute of Polytechnics. .. ever driven down it?" "Of course I know it, comrade general, " replied Sashka. "It's called "the 'spooker'. We're not allowed to use it." "-.'spooker,, hmmm-we almost got burned alive there in '80-" They passed the fork where soldiers from the Tsarandoi, the Afghan militia, stopped and searched vehicles. One soldier made a move to flag down the "Volga", but noticed the uniformed Soviet driver behind the wheel just in time. They drove past villas, then the Soviet embassy with its two-meter high walls. A lone ancient armored car with the hood up stood in a vacant lot near the embassy - Afghan soldiers on guard duty. There were some shops to the left of the embassy, and Sashka caught a few glimpses of jeans hung out for sale. They passed the bridge over the small Kabul River, which crossed the capital in a murky, brownish-green stream. Local women washed clothing along the banks of the half-dry riverbed, bathed children, rinsed dishes, people cleaned cars and if the natives had refrained from urinating in the river, it would certainly have dried completely by now. At the end of the street, where it entered the city square, a huge portrait-poster of the start of the century Afghan king, Amanullah Khan, was prominently displayed. He had luxuriant whiskers, was dressed in a field jacket with red tabs. Soviet military men and civilians working in Kabul would argue as to who it was really - hero of the Russian civil war Blucher or Beria, and were honestly puzzled why the Afghans had such a reverent attitude to Soviet leaders of the Stalin era. By the end of the discussion they usually agreed that the Afghan people, just like Soviet citizens, respect strong personalities and an iron hand, and sadly miss those times when order reigned supreme. Sorokin smoked all the way to the airport, immersed in recollections about the introduction of the armed forces, about a lieutenant-colonel's life. ...They had been pushing a division down long wintry roads through the tunnel towards the Salang pass, choking from diesel and petrol fumes. The winding road was made even narrower by snowdrifts along its sides, the vehicles skidded on the icy surface. The column of tanks and APCs got stuck. They pushed a broken down truck off the road into the precipice. Sorokin remembered how he had been driving through unfamiliar Kabul and wanted nothing so much as to eat some mandarins. On every corner there were rough wooden two-wheeled carts full of crates of mandarins. He told the driver of the APC to stop, hopped out and approached one of the vendors. All he had in his pocket were Soviet rubles. He offered the man five rubles. The vendor turned the unknown blue note around in his hands, handed it back. Sorokin offered ten rubles, with the same result. Damn you, he thought, pulling out a twenty five ruble note from the bottom of his pocket. The seller shook his head again . Then there was that time when he had gone into town in a new UAZ jeep, and was stopped by a crowd of girls, several hundred of them, near Kabul University. They dragged him out of the jeep, smeared him and his driver with some kind of paint and threw rotten tomatoes and eggs at them. When you talked about it, everything was crystal clear: international aid, defense of the southern borders. The party said one thing, but the reality was quite different, and one had to live with this ambiguity. Almost got burned alive- It was in February, on the eve of Soviet Army Day. He was then a member of the Military Council and had been in conference. They were returning late to the division, it was already dark, and they decided to take a short cut along the 'spooker' as Sashka called it: straight for the Institute of Polytechnics, then left to the grain silo and down, along the fringes of Kabul and straight to the division, the "Teply Stan" (Warm Haven) district as it had been named by the Soviets. The 'spooker' was quite empty, not a single oncoming car. All the streets were empty, the shops closed even though at that time they were usually open, and shafts of light from kerosene lamps speared out into the dark street. Sorokin rode the armor, legs dangling down into the open hatch, eyes half-shut against the bitter wind. The APC took a sharp bend and began to brake - ahead of them, about a hundred meters away, a crowd of Afghans blocked the road. "Is it some holiday of theirs, or what?" called Sorokin down the hatch to the lieutenant who sat in the command seat inside the APC. "Slow down as much as possible, easy does it. They'll move!" The crowd engulfed the APC and would not let it pass any further. What an idiotic situation! For a few moments, Sorokin lost his composure. He tried to smile in a friendly manner, waved his hand, but the response was frankly hostile. Suddenly, the crowd boiled into motion, like a stormy sea, roaring its hatred of the Soviet military. "Allah akbar! Allah akbar!" screamed the crowd. Sorokin seized the machine gun hanging on the open hatch, slipped off the safety catch, pulled the breech and fired a shot in the air. Something struck him on the back of the head, felt like a stick, just as well he was wearing a fur hat, it absorbed the blow. Rocks flew. He fired a few more warning shots into the air. The crowd continued to press in on the APC. Quickly and therefore clumsily, Sorokin scrambled down into the vehicle - for a moment he panicked, thinking he was stuck - to hide from the rocks and seal the hatch. Noses pressed to the triplex, they waited tensely. Dull blows sounded all around. The crowd was attacking the APC with stones, shovels, hoes. Someone jumped on top of the vehicle, pounding his heel against the closed hatch. The homogenous, infuriated mob, faces distorted with hate, ringed the APC on all sides. About five minutes went by. The lieutenant was first of the three to break the silence: "They're coming with torches!" Someone from the mob threw a bottle of either kerosene or petrol at the APC, then the flaming torch. The armor burst into flame on top, the fire running swiftly along the streaks of inflammable liquid. The mob retreated from the vehicle. A smell of smoke penetrated the cabin. The lieutenant awaited orders. Rivulets of sweat ran down the lieutenant-colonel's face. "We'll burn, comrade colonel," warned the lieutenant finally "Take your choice, son," said Sorokin to the driver mechanic. "Either we roast alive, or we go forward." Wisps of smoke appeared in the cabin. The lieutenant began to cough. The engine roared into life and the APC lurched forward. There was a shout, then another and another. The vehicle gathered speed and velocity, bouncing over human bodies like ruts on a country road. About two hundred meters further along they broke out and raced full speed, banging into and overturning oncoming cars, through the dark city. Once on the territory of the division, the soldier driver clambered out of the cabin and made his way directly to the barracks, forgetting to switch off the engine. It seemed to Sorokin that the young man had gone gray all of a sudden-. The "Volga" stopped on one of the central streets, making way for an open-bodied "Toyota." The car was filled to the brim with chunks of butchered camels. A Khazara boy aged about nine lay on the mountain of bloody carcasses. He was incredibly dirty and clad in a much-mended blue nylon jacket. The meat must have still been warm, and he laughed happily, waving at passers-by and calling out something. Choppers filled the air above the landing strip, affording cover to a descending Il-76. The plane was spiraling down, weaving through the sky and leaving a trail of curlicues behind it - trails of decoys, like the ones being released from the choppers. The guard on the gates of the airport looked questioningly at the "Volga" with its Afghan number plates. One of the paratroopers remained standing by the gates with their welded-on red star, the other approached the car lazily and peered in from under his helmet. "What's taking you so long?" barked Sashka. 'Where's the car from?" " It's general Sorokin's car from army HQ. C'mon, open those gates-" "I can't admit a car with Afghan plates." "See this pass?" demanded Sashka, thrusting a cardboard square under the guard's nose. "Another one's needed for entry to the airdrome." "Will you quit stalling?!" "Wait a moment, I'll have to report -" "Idiots!" muttered Sashka, who was accustomed to more respect from guards. "I'm sorry, comrade general," said the guard returning from his post, "but I can't let the car through." "Never mind." Sorokin got out of the car. "I'll let you know when to pick me up, I think I'll be back in three or four days. See you then! Take care!" "Don't worry comrade general, Alexei Glebovich, everything will be in order. I'll go straight back to HQ now." Sashka did not look at the general when he uttered those final words. He had trouble with barefaced lying. What if they catch me? Worried Sashka. I'll go to the shop, and what if there's a patrol nearby, or the Afghans report on me? What will I tell the general? He trusts me. All right, he decided finally. I'll go just this once, never again. Just deliver this stuff. But if they make me take stolen goods from HQ again-.No, let them take me off driving duty, let them beat me up, but I'm not taking anything again. And I don't need any money! Sorokin made his way towards a single-storey wooden building next to landing place. "Comrade general, we take off in twenty minutes." "Fine." While he waited, another two Il-76s landed, rolled forward to park on the concrete apron and disgorged their passengers. Two UAZ jeeps carrying senior officers drew up. The officers saluted the general respectfully and came up to greet him. They stood there smoking. "We were coming back from Jalalabad once," said a colonel, "and had a monkey with us for the divisional commander. A birthday present. We had it in a bag, but it managed to get out somehow. Well, I thought, there's nowhere it can go, the doors are shut. We took off, and that damned monkey shot off and got through to the pilot's cabin. There it was, over the pilots' heads, grabbing everything in sight and flipping switches. Can you imagine it? There you are, flying along, and this blasted ape goes and switches off the engines or something. Mind you, the first pilot kept his head, grabbed the monkey and tossed it to hell and gone out of the window. Two more choppers were brought up, Sorokin entered the first and took a soft seat by the window. The senior pilot greeted Sorokin, saluted smartly and introduced himself as major Mitrofanov. Sorokin nodded. "Put on your parachute, please, general." "I fly without a parachute. If they knock us down, it's not likely to help." "Sorry, sir, but otherwise we can't take off." "Very well, then," agreed Sorokin, fumbling with the straps. "Show me how to get this thing on!" The choppers passed over the villages clinging to the outskirts of Kabul, swept above the hills. A couple of Mi-24s flew in front, providing cover, greenish-brown-gray camouflaged "crocodiles." They soon caught up with the column, followed the road. Peering out of the window, the general watched the rails snaking through the valley, interrupted in places by groups of cars. Everything reminded him of those first years in Afghanistan, but at the same time, it all looked different, somehow more orderly and better planned. Its a good army, thought the general, only you need to get everything properly organized. We had it a hundred times harder because when we came in there was nothing. Yes, today's 40th is completely different. Strong, experienced, with sound rear services. Look at the way they equip operations now, they know everything, reconnaissance is reliable, the Spetsnaz is active, there is cooperation with Afghan special structures, all is taken into account. We've certainly learned a lot! The only bad thing is that the political situation hasn't changed, it's getting worse. The rebels have grown in strength in these years, too. If the West wasn't helping them with arms, money and military advisors, we would have crushed this blasted counter-revolution long ago with our strength! The way it works out is that victory seems to be a mere step away, but you still can't see the end of the war. How long is it going to take? We've learned to fight them in the mountains, too, but can we be certain of a final victory? So a year, two, three will pass. Then what? Then the Afghans will have to learn to defend their revolution themselves. We'll help them build up a strong army, and then let them go at it! It looks as though we'll have to pull out anyway. We can't stay here forever! This isn't Germany, or Poland or Hungary The general's thoughts turned to inadequacies. Specifically inadequacies. There were and could be no problems in the Soviet Army. Sorokin realized this as soon as he was promoted to colonel. If you've got problems, you're no good as a political officer. There were problems in companies, battalions, regiments. It was permissible now to discuss only matters that still needed perfecting. Why do we worry most about the men's outward appearance, the neatness of the paths in the compound, bright tents with portraits of Lenin and quotes from party congresses instead of the essence of the matter, wondered the general. However, despite knowing the deficiencies of the army, occasionally criticizing them in his own mind or in a circle of very close friends, the general had no intention - and he did not conceal this - of trying to right any wrongs, stupidities and window-dressing. He hadn't worked his way up to general only to wreck his career by an open display of dissatisfaction. He criticized mentally, noted numerous lapses, and was proud that he, unlike the aging generals back home, understood and was concerned by the fact that not everything was ideal in the Soviet army. He comforted himself with the hope that the time would come when he would climb a bit higher up the hierarchical ladder, and then get down to the business of putting things to rights. In fact, though, the general contradicted his own thoughts on the spot, has there ever been a time when EVERYTHING we had was ideal? Is it possible to correct EVERYTHING? That takes a great deal of time and effort. If I were, say, head of the Chief Political Directorate, maybe I could try to improve EVERYTHING, or at least a great deal. And anyway, not EVERYTHING is all that bad even now. The officers at the command post looked like fantastic spotted creatures flecked by rings of sunlight under the canopy of the camouflage netting. Sorokin was told that the column from Kabul was making good time, more than twenty vehicles had broken down on the way, two soldiers died in an accident - their APC fell into a precipice - and a major was almost crushed by two APCs when he stood smoking between them: he had been taken to hospital in a critical condition. It was also reported that the main force was expected to arrive by evening. There were still a few days to go before the operation: all the forces committed to it had to be brought up, concentrated in the necessary areas according to the approved plans, regrouped if need be, reconnaissance data had to be studied and analyzed, the area had to be worked over politically and when the critical mass was ready, when all was set out like pieces on a chess-board, then the game could begin. Chapter Nine. The Operation The "crocodiles" rose above the hillocks, slicing the grayish-blue morning air with their blades, dropped altitude closer to the road along which army vehicles wove like a steel streamlet; then, some three kilometers further, the choppers veered to the left, and flying almost at zero altitude, examined a ruined village by the road, sniffing it out as if it were a rotting carcass in the heat, then slid like predators into the depths of the valley. Senior lieutenant Sharagin noticed them from afar, when he turned to get some matches from the men; and while he tried to strike one, cupping his hands around it against the wind, he noticed the choppers as he made the first few drags. They were pretty sure of themselves, he thought, as he watched them fly under the cover of the "blocks" on the sides of the road - BMPs with guns aimed towards the mountains and soldiers who had dug in, lying belly up, on their sides, on their stomachs. The choppers circled the dead village and swooped away. Sharagin, who had automatically been watching the walls and a stand of trees relaxed after the survey by the choppers and looked ahead, over the column where it disappeared from sight in the foothills. ... hostile soil, the territory of war... He knew the spooks wouldn't dare attack the army on the march; a solitary column - yes, a string of "fillers" - petrol tankers carrying fuel to distant garrisons or a company hemmed in by mountains - that they'd go for, but an army was more than they could handle. However, writing off the possibility of danger would be wrong and criminal, and in any case, the dangers were all very different in this war. If something happened to just one of the men, it would be a mote of dust for the army, a mark in the daily tally of losses, but for Oleg it would be a real person. Lots of men died or got hurt on any march, not necessarily through being shot or ambushed, but through their own carelessness or stupidity. Larger-bodied choppers with windows - Mi-8s - followed the "crocodiles" as though trying to catch up with them, looking for all the world like tadpoles. "Probably delivering the brass, hey comrade senior lieutenant?" asked private Sychev for the sake of saying something, following the choppers with his eyes. Actually, he did not so much say as shout in order that the commander could hear him through the noise of engines and the earphones. He crouched on the tower of the BMP with the cannon protruding between his legs, which gave him the appearance of a sexual giant. "Maybe they've got the commander of the division on board?" "In that case, snap to attention and salute him, Sychev," replied Sharagin ironically. "And stay that way until we arrive. You just might get a medal." "Yeah, the Order of saint Fucker with a twirl on the back," guffawed junior sergeant Myshkovsky. ... jokers! A year ago they were all milksops - was a time when I called their whole contingent that, yet now they're grandpas: Myshak, Sych, Chiri-they've grown, straightened their backs, matured, the sons of bitches, they've become the backbone of my army - a soldier remains blinkered only until his first taste of combat, then he starts to think about how to survive, starts using his head and making the little gray cells do their job.... It was expected that their division commander would arrive to watch how the paratroops battalions would move out of Kabul. That was why that morning the paratroopers went out as if on parade, cleaning, tidying and enhancing themselves until the last minute. They traveled the first kilometers feeling tense - expecting the division commander, although as soon as the main army column spread out on the road behind the large, dusty field after the infectious diseases hospital, all tidiness vanished in the fumes and dust that swirled around the vehicles and settled on freshly-laundered uniforms, columns and undershirts. The Soviet warriors saddled their armored steeds, and moved out; motorized infantry and paratroops, artillery and communications, sappers and medics; all were clad differently: faded camouflage fatigues, mountain outfits, "sands", tattered camouflage cloaks. Regulation footwear mingled with brown "trophy" spook boots, and a scattering of "Kimry," the best of the worst sneakers created towards the end of the century by domestic industry. Engines roared into life, the column moved forward, the wind whipped the men's faces. A long journey faced the men on the armor and in the trucks with bulletproof vests draped over their windows. All that day, they would be swallowing greasy diesel fumes and dust whipped up by the passage of the first vehicles, covering them from head to foot and getting into clothes and eyes. Earlier on, recalled Sharagin, the regimental leadership fussed unnecessarily, afraid that the division commander would descend with a lightning inspection on the eve of the pullout. Because of this, all the preparations for the operation were nervous, tense, and all directives, orders and comments were accompanied by shouts and fists, which would supposedly teach sloppy youngsters, toughen up and discipline lazy soldiers. The fist of the grandpas was pitiless, felling and numbing, that of the commanders - hard, sharp and usually timely and fair. Preparations for the operation began well in advance. The orders came a week earlier, but even so it had been clear that fighting would soon be inevitable, that an operation against the spooks was being planned. Everyone in the regiment, from the commander to the waitresses in the mess hall talked about it. Even the shopkeepers in Kabul, warming food on primus stoves, would ask shopping officers for how long they would be going into the mountains, and wished them well, expressing sympathy. The transports stood ready, patched up as much as possible, weapons had been cleaned at least sixteen times, ammunition was loaded and political instruction carried out. The officers, who traditionally "wet the head" of forthcoming combat operations had recovered from their hangovers; the men had stocked up on cookies, juices and jam from the regimental commissary and stolen bread and sandwich spread from the kitchen or the commissary, depending on who had friends where; they had already secreted sacks of potatoes, written off and stolen spare parts and anything else that wasn't nailed down for exchange or sale to the Afghans - a small but appreciated bit of extra cash. It would be nice to get a bit of sleep and rest before going out on combat mission, but no: instead of that, you have the officers making you run around. Darkness outside, the stars are still bright, then the alarm sounds and the regiment has to leap to its feet. The men rush out in full kit, scramble into the vehicles, then sit there like idiots for one hour, two: during the day the sun melts the asphalt - the company commander decided that it was necessary to hold a drill session: "Le-- -- e-f' face! Left! Left! Left, right, left! Start singing!" Those new to the war - privates or fresh lieutenants - find it hard to understand why this stupid square-bashing is required. You'd think they weren't in Afghanistan but some showcase garrison in the Union, as though they weren't going into combat in a day or two, but simply had to drive "boxes" through Red Square. It is no secret that the commander determines what one's service shall be like. If the commander's a fool, then his foolishness will affect the entire regiment, until he's replaced, or killed (not very likely), or promoted; if he's fussy, nobody will have a moment's peace; if they send an idiot - it's curtains; if they send a great guy - that's marvelous, praise and glory be to all, the smart "Cap", and those who sent him, and the fate that brought you to this regiment. The regimental commander is like a father, or a stepfather - if he decides to have the regiment line up in the middle of the night, it will be done in minutes; if he can't sleep, then why should anybody else, he's got a bee in his bonnet that the commander of the division will stage a lightning inspection. So he'll drive the men to exhaustion, sound the alarm once an hour and make them drill twenty-four hours a day, just in case the big brass turns up. So it's no easy task to earn praise in the Paratroops, you can slip up at any moment and, if you do, don't expect mercy, it's a small world, a narrow one, closed in on itself, everyone knows everyone-. The long-servers stopped asking "why?" and "what for?" ages ago. They adapted to the flow of the local version of meaningful army stupidity and learned to act on reflex level. They know it's no use bashing your head against a brick wall, so nothing can dampen their spirits, their thoughts are of tomorrow: there's combat ahead, but at the moment it's like being on holiday, a lethally dangerous one, to be sure, but still a break from endless drills, boring political studies and in any case, they had been sitting around idle for too long, it was time to get some action, do some shooting, they had barely poked their noses outside the base gates for more than a month as there had been nothing serious to deal with. Orders would come soon, it would be time to start getting your demobilization uniform together, but only a few could boast of a bit of tin to pin to their chest: those who had been wounded and sent to hospital had probably been recommended for medals, but the others still had to try, had to catch their moment, fight a bit more and then - who knows? - you might even get a medal, they're not always posthumous; moreover, when you're out on combat mission, there's always a chance to get your hands on something by shaking down the spooks. The further the column got from Kabul, the more chaotic it became. Like an over-stretched spring, the vehicles tried to get themselves back into some semblance of order. Sharagin's platoon encountered more and more breakdowns: the radiator of an "Ural" went on the boil like a kettle, clouds of steam pouring from under its bonnet, like a smokescreen, infantrymen struggled to get the tracks back on a BMP, further ahead one armored car was towing another with great difficulty. "Go on, Degtyarenko, pass them!" Sharagin ordered his driver-mechanic. Degtyarenko had veered to the left a few times, but decided against trying to pass. Come on! Come on! "Pissing his pants," commented junior sergeant Myshkovsky, displeased by Degtyarev's shilly-shallying. "Scared of that heap of junk!" They caught up with the BMP on a tow cable, then the one towing, driving alongside and forcing oncoming brightly painted Afghan trucks to the sides ... they look like Palekh boxes, Afghan-style... One Afghan truck keeled over on the side of the road, while the paratroopers proceeded onwards like kings along the wrong side of the road, passing the "Kamazes" with their torn canvas covers fluttering in the wind, with headlamps like bulging eyes. They caught up with the first platoon and fell in behind. The sun became kinder, warmed the armor and the men clinging to it like bees in a hive. The day was just beginning, but the men, who had been on their feet since the crack of dawn tended to doze off. Those who had managed to get a comfortable spot lay on mattresses, others on trench coats, eyes drooping. ... it's always been like this in the army: reveille at two in the morning, breakfast at four, final preparations at six, pull out at eight, and there's nothing you can do about it... The mountain pass slowed down the pace of the advance. The road began to wind steeply. The vehicles slowed to a crawl, engines whining, as if complaining about the load they were carrying, but not giving up. At a bend in the road, beside a steep precipice, two machine-gun carrying dark-haired soldiers stood beside a trailer, arms hanging helplessly. They looked like Central Asians, Tadjiks most likely. From his perch on the armor Sharagin saw what the problem was without having to ask: a mobile "Acacia" installation had come off its mounting and fallen into the chasm. The men cheered up at the sight of someone else's misfortune, their comments even rousing the old-timers who had dozed off to the familiar rumble of the engines. "Greasers!" uttered Myshkovsky contemptuously. "Shit soldiers!" agreed Sychev, who had been napping nearby. As they wound through the pass, Sharagin's platoon tried to outwit the sun, traveling when possible in the shade of the cliffs. The vehicles dived into the stone galleries occasionally, re-em