CHAPTER 13

The Russians were building a railroad to nowhere. At least, that’s what it looked like to Whitlock, even if the railroad was officially known as the Vologda-Kotlas-Ukhta Railroad Line. That first day after their arrival, Whitlock and Ramsey were sent out as part of a work gang, given picks, and shown where to dig. Reluctantly, Whitlock had to admit that he didn't mind the work. He welcomed being outdoors and doing something after long weeks spent first in the German stalag and then in the box car on its endless journey deep into Russia.

However, a few swings of the pick revealed just how soft his hands and muscles had become after those weeks of inactivity. He never had done any real physical labor, and his body soon reminded him of that fact. Within ten minutes he had blisters on top of blisters. He ignored the pain. The sun, weak as it was, warmed his shoulders. Fresh air filled his lungs. It was all he could do to stop himself from whistling.

Ramsey was having a harder time of it. Having been imprisoned longer, and undernourished from the poor diet the Germans fed POWs, he was struggling to swing the pick. Every few minutes, he doubled over with a coughing fit. It was going to be a long day for Ramsey.

Whitlock looked around. There were armed guards, but they were lazing around, smoking cigarettes. A big Russian was in charge, and tucked into his belt was a short whip that Whitlock didn't like the looks of. He had seen some of the other guards use them on prisoners.

There was no way he could know that it was a Cossack whip or nagyka, with a long handle that resembled a billy club and a thick length of braided leather, ending with the leather braided around a lead slug like a big fishing weight. Thirty-six inches of pure meanness. The whip was meant for managing the huge horses used to haul freight wagons, but it happened to double as a cruel weapon. Just the sight of it made the prisoners cringe.

The big Russian also carried a rifle with a telescopic sight, which he used now and then to scan the horizon.

Volki, Whitlock heard some of the Russians say.

When he repeated the word to another prisoner swinging a pick beside him, raising his eyebrows in the universal gesture for what the hell does that mean, the man had given a low howl in imitation of a wolf.

Given that fact, the guards seemed redundant. Where could anyone escape? The Russian landscape was imposing. An empty plain stretched before them — apparently they were to lay railroad tracks across it. In the distance loomed deep forests. To escape meant death by starvation. Or exposure. Or wolves. Letting a prisoner escape into the wilderness would be the same as shooting him, although a bullet would be faster and more humane.

Whitlock kept swinging the pick, ignoring the pain of his torn hands.

He and Ramsey were the only Americans, but there seemed to be a hodgepodge of prisoners laboring on this railroad to nowhere. Some spoke Polish and looked European; their only offense was being the citizens of a conquered nation. A few had the furtive look of actual criminals. Toiling nearby were a few intellectual types whom he understood to be political prisoners who had dared to disagree with Stalin. A handful of prisoners had asiatic features and spoke a language that didn't sound Chinese, but that certainly was not Russian. Mongols, perhaps? These groups of prisoners stayed separate, working together, and shunning the others. Whitlock and Ramsey didn’t fit in with any of the other groups. They were on their own.

"How long do you think we'll be at this?" Ramsey asked wearily. Already, his swings of the pick had become weaker and weaker.

Whitlock glanced at the distant horizon that the tracks would have to cross, and then at the sun, which still had to reach its zenith for the day. "Hang in there until lunchtime, and you can rest," Whitlock said.

But there was no lunchtime. At mid-day the prisoners were given water, but no food. They were allowed to sit quietly for a few minutes while the Russian guards ate. The only food that the prisoners could expect would be a piece of bread at the end of the day, or a bowl of thin soup.

The big Russian gang boss sat apart from the others, alone except for a small fellow who seemed to follow him around like a loyal dog. The two men were as different in size as Mutt and Jeff — or maybe David and Goliath. He looks like a rabbit, Whitlock thought, studying the smaller man. But no — that wasn't quite right. The man moved with a fluid grace that was vaguely menacing. Not a rabbit, then. Maybe a mink or a fisher cat like they had in the New England woods — some predatory furbearer with small, sharp teeth.

The guards ate a peasant meal of chunks of black bread, raw onions, and some cold sausages, but the spicy, smoky smell of the meat made Whitlock's stomach rumble. The guards passed around a bottle of vodka. And then all too soon, it was time to get back to work.

Because of the raw skin from the burst blisters, Whitlock's hands felt like they were on fire when he touched the pick handle again. His hands soon began to leave faint red stains on the worn wood.

Beside him, Ramsey continued to swing the pick, but each of his swings grew weaker. One or two of the guards glanced in Ramsey's direction. If Whitlock had learned anything so far in his short career as a POW, it was that you were better off not attracting any attention to yourself.

"You've got to keep going," Whitlock urged him. "Just a little longer."

"I'm all played out," Ramsey said.

"None of that now," Whitlock said. "We've only got an hour or two yet.”

That was a lie, of course, for Ramsey's benefit. It was just past mid-day and they would be working on the railroad bed for hours to come.

But Ramsey had had enough. He tried to raise the pick. The iron head weighed perhaps ten pounds, but it was too much for Ramsey. He gave up and slumped over the handle, panting with the effort. Two guards started toward them, their heavy faces expressionless as those of a couple of bulldogs.

It was the big Russian, the work gang boss, who got their first. He moved fast for a big man. He grabbed Ramsey by the shoulder and flung him to the ground. The Russian was shouting. Whitlock didn't know the language, but the man's words needed no translation. He was clearly cursing Ramsey, or maybe insulting him.

Up close, the man was big as a bear, heavy through the shoulders, and his angry Russian words sounded like mortar fire. He smelled like onions and alcohol. He kicked Ramsey with a muddy boot, nearly sending him airborne. Ramsey cried out in pain. He drew back his foot to kick Ramsey again.

"Stop that!" Whitlock shouted.

The big Russian turned to regard him. Like Whitlock, he didn't need to know the language to understand the meaning. He tugged the Cossack whip from his belt and started toward Whitlock. The whip was no more than a yard long, so the Russian had to come in close. He struck Whitlock almost casually across the shoulder, but the stinging force of the blow drove Whitlock to his knees. The Russian's arm went up again and Whitlock put up his hands to protect his face.

The whip never fell.

A guard shouted urgently, and the Russian's arm sagged. To Whitlock, the man's bicep looked big around as a tree trunk.

The guards were pointing and shouting, unslinging their rifles. Whitlock was as curious as they were and looked in the direction that they were pointing, though he kept one eye on the whip. Was it a wolf? When he looked, he saw the figure of a man running away across the empty plain.

One of the prisoners had taken advantage of the commotion to make a run for it.

There was nowhere to go. The empty landscape stretched in all directions. The escapee's only hope was to run for the forest, nearly a mile away. If he got into those trees, he might have a chance.

Some of the guards raised rifles to shoot, but the big Russian barked something at them and they lowered their guns. Whitlock felt a faint sliver of hope for the man. Were the Russians allowing him to escape?

Then the big Russian unslung his rifle.

The escapee was getting farther and farther away. He was really covering ground. Running for his life. The guards didn't seem all that concerned. Some were even grinning and laughing, shouting as if urging the runner on.

The big Russian wrapped an arm through the sling of his rifle to steady it, and then put his eye to the telescopic sight. Whitlock thought the man was too far now for the Russian to hit him, even with the telescopic sight.

Even the Russian seemed to have his doubts. He called over the small man, who stood stock still as the Russian rested his rifle across his shoulder. The way that they worked together made it seem as if they had done something like this before.

Whitlock tried to guess the distance. Four hundred feet? Five hundred? The man was increasing that distance every few seconds, running flat out.

The Russian held very still, his bear-like heaviness seeming to shift and settle like a boulder. Then the rifle fired.

Across the distance, the runner seemed to hit an invisible wall. He flung out his arms as he came to a full stop, and then toppled forward.

Whitlock stared in disbelief. How had the Russian shot a running man that far away? He wouldn’t have thought it was possible if he hadn’t seen it with his own eyes.

Then the Russian slung his rifle again, walked over to Ramsey, and kicked him almost casually. He started toward Whitlock again, Cossack whip in hand. Once more, Whitlock raised his arms to protect his face. But instead of whipping him, the Russian grabbed one of Whitlock’s wrists and held his bloodied, blistered hand aloft, yelling something in Russian. The others laughed.

The small man came over. "Hands like woman," he said to Whitlock in broken English that was mostly a snarl. "You both go to the infirmary."

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