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Stalin's Haystack (standard:other, 1445 words) | |||
Author: Professor | Added: Nov 14 2001 | Views/Reads: 3199/2212 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
The child shrieked and released his biting mouth from Yuri’s calf. It took one blow from his rifle butt to crack the child’s head like a turtle shell. In his pant’s pocket, Yuri felt the child’s picket-pocket hands tremble, then go limp. Yuri’s own hands, | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story The barracks filled with dark laughter. The next day, Viktor sent for Yuri at a Moscow Orphanage. He requested the boy's presence on his up-coming tour of duty in the Ukraine. The Kremlin encouraged adolescents to help the Red Army in herding stubborn peasants onto the collective farms in Ukraine. Yuri joined Viktor in Kiev, curious about his new friend. "You are a leader Yuri and we need young people like you down here," Viktor explained. The truth was buried on the Volga. "What is out there?" Viktor then realized that Yuri had not seen any of the villages or collective farms. He had only seen the endless mud roads of starving people. To Yuri, the famine was a complete puzzle. "When I first came to Ukraine I was stationed with the big tractors near Poltava. I did not see anything different. I told people back home 'There is no famine, everyone here is fat and lazy.' Then we were told that some peasants were hiding grain in local villages. We were armed. The first village we went to was called Likaev. Viktor paused as Leo sighed deeply in his sleep. Yuri squirmed closer to Viktor. "It was in Likaev I first saw the open mouths. Mothers begged us to take their starving babies. Big black flies buzzed around. I saw whole families shot. I shot them too. We burned their belongings. Old photos and books mostly. Two families were healthy. The local politician and the town's butcher." Yuri was wide awake now. Viktor began to whisper. "Nobody dared harm the butcher because he secretly fed the soldiers. Rations were slim and a piece of pork was hard to refuse." Laying on his side, Yuri's bloody hand was placed on his chin in stoic fashion. He looked at Leo before he spoke. "Did you eat there?" "Once. But generally, only the higher-ranking soldiers did. The rest stood outside, like dogs, hoping to get some scraps." Viktor stopped again, laying silent as he listened for Leo's breathing. "One day I saw the butcher walking back to the killing house. I wanted to ask him for some meat. When I got to the door, he screamed for me to leave. He grabbed a knife and came at me. He was crazy." "What did you do?" Asked Yuri impatiently. "Did you kill him? Tell me!" Leo groaned and rolled over. "Shhh," Viktor cautioned. "I shot the butcher and he was dead." Viktor paused, and closed his eyes as if he might go to sleep. Yuri's own pale blue eyes were fixed on Viktor's mouth. He hoped the soldier would continue. "I thought of burning down the killing house," whispered Viktor, "But I wanted some meat first. We were all so hungry." Viktor's voice was breaking. He grabbed Yuri by the front of the shirt and looked him in the eyes. Viktor's own eyes opened and filled with tears. "Listen to me, Yuri," he whispered. "That killing house..." Viktor stopped. Leo was awake know and aiming his pistol at Viktor. "Just what did you see there Viktor? Tell the boy!" ordered Leo. Viktor was shaking. "Bodies ... human bodies hanging on hooks," screamed Viktor. One shot was fired. "Run Yuri!" groaned Viktor. Yuri ran out from under the truck and hid behind the haystack. He heard another shot and watched as Leo rolled Viktor's body out of their hiding spot and into the moonlight. "Come back Yuri," coughed Leo. "They'll get you out there." Yuri put his hands over his ears. He wept uncontrollably as Leo fired into the haystack. "I'll tell them where you are Yuri," shouted Leo. "They'll eat you dead." Yuri could not erase the vision of the killing house. He burrowed into the haystack. He heard more shots. He looked out saw people swarming Leo. They were the same starving peasants that had stormed the truck last night. "He's in the haystack. Get him!" screamed Leo. Yuri watched as their long white arms pulled Leo to the ground. Leo shrieked. Yuri closed his eyes and did not hear another sound. It was morning. The sun warmed the haystack and the sensation meant Yuri was alive. He wiped the moist hay from his eyes and looked out towards the truck. There were no signs of Leo's body. Yuri stretched his arms and legs and crawled to the truck. Small mounds of grain littered the ground. Beside the truck, Viktor's body was trampled and covered in grain. Yuri wanted to bury him there, but he knew the tractors would come soon to plow the land. Instead, he lifted the muddy carcass into the payload. After taking the keys from Viktor's pocket, Yuri started the truck and drove it out of its mucky captivity. The warm sun and the piles of grain had dried up the dirt road. After passing several miles, Yuri stopped the truck. He reached into his pocket and pulled out the shiny compass his father had given him. His hands trembling, Yuri watched the compass arrow spinning around, never stopping on any direction. He threw the compass into the field in frustration. Maybe it would work for someone else, he thought. As for himself, Yuri knew he only wanted to distance himself from the fields, the peasants, and the haystack. Tweet
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