One Night in Winter

One Night in Winter by Simon Sebag Montefiore Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: One Night in Winter by Simon Sebag Montefiore Read Free Book Online
Authors: Simon Sebag Montefiore
Tags: Fiction, Historical, History, Europe, Russia & the Former Soviet Union
his hands, palms up, as his curiosity got the better of him. ‘One final thing. What is the Game?’
    George was already half out of the door but he turned back. ‘It’s Nikolasha’s obsession. You’ll find out. For now, we’ve got to eat lunch. Will you join us in the gym?’
     
    The gym was usually empty for lunch and the children ate their sandwiches perching on its chairs and soft mats. But when George and Andrei found the girls, Minka was obviously upset. ‘Look what’s happening to my little brother,’ she said.
    The Director of Physical Education, the moustachioed Apostollon Shuba, was standing with one hand on the wooden horse and a whistle in his mouth. His face was a deep shade of teak. A class of younger children in shorts and T-shirts stood to attention in a line on the other side of the horse. Alone at the far end of the gym was the frail figure of Senka Dorov, whom Andrei had last seen at that morning’s drop-off with his father. Senka looked as comfortable in sports kit as he would in a deep-sea-diving outfit. He gave his sister a beseeching ‘rescue me’ look with his big brown eyes, but it was too late.
    ‘Right, boy,’ Shuba barked. ‘Fifth attempt! No one leaves until you get over the horse!’
    ‘But I never will,’ said Senka in his high voice.
    ‘Defeatism is not Soviet!’
    ‘I’m not one of your strapping horse-vaulting heroes. Surely even you can see that,’ Senka said.
    ‘Hurry up, Senka! We’re hungry!’ cried one child.
    ‘SILENCE!’ Shuba ordered, pointing at the wooden ladders on the wall. ‘Next one to speak must touch the ceiling twenty times!’ He blew the whistle. Senka took a breath and then ran very fast towards the horse, jumped on to the springboard but then, like a racehorse refusing a jump, shied away.
    ‘Do you call yourself a Soviet man?’ Shuba yelled. ‘AGAIN!’ Another blast on the whistle.
    ‘I can’t do it, and I won’t do it,’ Senka shouted, bursting into tears.
    ‘You’ll do it if you die here!’ Shuba bellowed back, at which Senka suddenly grasped his chest, fought for breath and then fell to the floor.
    ‘He’s collapsed!’ cried a voice from the class. ‘He’s ill! He’s dying!’
    ‘He’s faking,’ replied Shuba, marching over. There was total silence in the gym.
    ‘Oh my God,’ said Minka, stepping forward.
    ‘Is he OK?’ asked George, taking her hand. ‘Minka!’
    ‘GET UP, BOY!’ ordered Shuba. ‘If you’re scrimshanking’ – he used old military slang – ‘you’ll pay for this.’
    ‘What if he isn’t?’ asked one of Senka’s classmates.
    ‘All right, at ease,’ said Shuba finally. ‘Briusov, get me some water.’ He leaned over Senka and slapped his cheeks a couple of times with a leathery hand. When the water arrived, he splashed it on Senka’s face. Senka appeared to stir.
    ‘Where am I? Am I at school?’
    ‘Don’t give me that,’ Shuba growled, breathing heavily.
    Senka remained lying down.
    ‘Please don’t make me do it again.’
    ‘I knew it! You
are
going to do it again,’ Shuba said, straightening up. ‘And then you’re going to touch the ceiling a hundred times!’
    ‘I get dizzy up ladders, and might fall off,’ replied Senka. ‘I have blocked sinuses.’
    ‘I’ve seen Russian heroes die in battle! How do you think we won this war? By fainting in the gym? I’m training another generation of warriors to defend our Soviet paradise. The Party demands sacrifice and hardness. Can everyone hear me? NO ONE MOVES UNTIL THIS USELESS BOY GETS OVER THE HORSE!’ He blew the whistle, but Senka did not move.
    ‘We need warriors,’ Senka agreed, ‘but we also need thinkers and I’m one of those. Comrade Stalin also said that “we must value our cadres” and even if I’m not a future warrior, I am a future cadre. I must warn you that if I die of a heart attack, Teacher Shuba, it will be all your fault.’ Senka managed to raise his head and look around the class. ‘And there are

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