Полина Саймонс – The Summer Garden (страница 25)
“If the Soviets knew I was American, they would’ve shot me years ago.”
Frederick looked at him suspiciously. “I don’t understand …”
“Can’t explain.”
“What division did you say you served in?”
Alexander sighed. “I was in Rokossovsky’s Army. His 97th penal battalion.”
“What—that’s not the U.S. Army …”
“I was a captain in the Red Army.”
“Oh, my God.” On Frederik’s face played sharp disbelief. “You’re a
“Yes.”
Frederik careened off the plank with his cane so fast, he nearly tipped himself over. “I got the wrong impression about you.” He was wheeling away. “Forget we ever spoke.”
Alexander was visibly upset when he came home. “Anthony!” he said as soon as he walked through the door. “Get over here. I told you this before, I’m going to tell you again, but for absolutely the
The boy was perplexed.
“You don’t have to figure it out, you just have to listen. I told you to keep quiet, and you still continue as if I hadn’t made myself clear.”
Tatiana tried to intervene, but Alexander cut her off. “Ant, as punishment tomorrow you’re not going on the boat with me. I’ll take you the next day, but if you ever speak about me to strangers again, you’ll be off the boat for good. You got it?”
The boy cried.
“I didn’t hear you, Anthony.”
“I got it, Dad.”
Straightening up, Alexander saw Tatiana watching them silently from the stove. “Wouldn’t it be nice if you could put a long-sleeve linen shirt on Anthony’s mouth like you do on my body,” he said, and ate dinner by himself out on the deck.
After Tatiana put Anthony to bed, she went outside.
The first thing Alexander said was, “We haven’t had meat in weeks. I’m as sick of shrimp and flounder as you were of lobsters. Why can’t you buy some meat?”
After hemming and hawing, Tatiana said, “I can’t go to the Center Meat Market. They’ve put a sign in the window—a little war souvenir.”
“So?”
“Sign says, ‘Horse meats not rationed—no points necessary.’”
They both fell mute.
Tatiana is
And Alexander was remembering
Tatiana stood in front of Alexander, leaning against the rail of the deck and listening to the water. He smoked. She drank her tea.
“So what’s the matter with you?” she asked. “Why did you eat by yourself?”
“I didn’t want to be eating dinner with you looking at me with your judging eyes. Don’t want to be judged, Tania”—he pointed at her—“most of all by you. And today, thanks to Ant, I had an unpleasant and unwanted conversation with a crippled Jewish man from Holland who mistook me for a brother in arms only to learn I fought for a country that handed over half of the Polish Jews and all of the Ukrainian Jews to Hitler.”
“I’m not judging you, darling.”
“I’m good for nothing,” Alexander said. “Not even polite conversation. You may be right about me not being able to rebuild my life working off Mel’s boats, but I’m not good for anything else. I don’t know how to be anything. In my life I’ve had only one job—I was an officer in the Red Army. I know how to carry weapons, set mines in the ground, drive tanks, kill men. I know how to fight. Oh, and I know how to burn down villages wholesale. That’s what I know. And I did this all for the Soviet Union!” he exclaimed, staring into the water, not looking at Tatiana, who stood on the deck, staring at him. “It’s completely fucked up,” he went on. “I’m yelling at Anthony because we have to pretend I’m not what I am. I have to lie to deny what I am. Just like in the Soviet Union. Ironic, no? There I denied my American self, and here I deny my Soviet self.” He flicked his ash into the water.
“But, Shura, you’ve been other things besides a soldier,” Tatiana said, unable to address the truth of the other things he was saying to her.
“Stop pretending you don’t know what I’m talking about,” he snapped. “I’m talking about living a life.”
“Well, I know, but you’ve managed before,” she whispered, turning her body away from him to herself look out onto the dark bay. Where was Anthony to interrupt the conversation she realized belatedly she didn’t want to have? Alexander was right: there were many things she would rather not have out. He
“It was a fake life,” said Alexander. “There was nothing real about it.”
“It was the realest life we knew.” Stung at his bitter words, she sank down to the deck.
“Oh, look,” he said dismissively, “it was what it was, but it was a month! I was going back to the front. We pretended we were living while war raged. You kept house, I fished. You peeled potatoes, made bread. We hung sheets on the line to dry, almost as if we were living. And now we’re trying it in America.” Alexander shook his head. “I work, you clean, we dig potatoes, we shop for food. We break our bread. We smoke. We talk sometimes. We make love.” He paused as he glanced at her, remorsefully and yet—accusingly? “Not Lazarevo love.”
Tatiana lowered her head, their Lazarevo love tainted by the Gulag.
“Is any of it going to give me another chance to save your brother?” he asked.
“
“But, Tania, don’t you know that the things that torture you most are the things you cannot fix?”
“That I know,” she whispered.
“And do I judge
Tatiana hadn’t shaken her head. She bowed her head; how different.
“You once skipped barefoot through the Field of Mars with me. And then,” said Alexander, “you helped me drag your mother’s body on a sled to the frozen cemetery.”
“Shura!” She got up off the deck on her collapsing legs. “Of all the things we could talk about—”
“On the sled
“Shura! Stop!” Her hands went over her ears.
Grabbing her, removing her hands from her head, Alexander brought her in front of him. “Still there,” he said almost inaudibly, “still digging new ice holes to bury them in.”
“Well, what about you?” Tatiana said to him in a lifeless voice. “Every single night reburying my brother after he died on your back.”
“Yes,” Alexander said in his own lifeless voice, letting her go. “That is what I do. I dig deeper frozen holes for him. I tried to save him and I killed him. I buried your brother in a shallow grave.”
Tatiana cried. Alexander sat and smoked—his way of crying—poison right in the throat to quell the grief.
“Let’s go live in the woods, Tania,” he said. “Because
“Darling, but the enemy is gone,” Tatiana said, starting to shake, remembering Sam Gulotta and the State Department.
“I don’t know about you, but I can’t live without the enemy,” said Alexander. “I don’t know how to wear the civilian clothes you bought to cover me. I don’t know how not to clean my weapons every day, how not to keep my hair short, how not to bark at you and Anthony, how not to expect you to listen. And I don’t know how to touch you slow or take you slow as if I’m not in prison and the guards are coming any minute.”