CHAPTER ONEThey were denied the stage.
Sasha looked down, his eyes tired of red flags and grey military coats.
Red fluttered around them, brushing their faces, sometimes stirring the odour of musty fabric.
Grey stood behind the barrier. All identical conscripts — short, grimy, weakly gripping billy clubs. The police had heavy faces, burgundy from annoyance. The indispensable officer glared defiantly at the crowd. His insolent hands on the top rung of the fence separating them, the guardians of the law and of the whole city, from the protestors.
Around them stood some mustachioed lieutenant colonels, lavish bellies under their military coats. And somewhere there should also be the most important and officious of them all, the full colonel.
Sasha always tried to spot this one, the rally’s chief security officer. Sometimes he was a lean man with ascetic cheeks, squeamishly bossing around the porky lieutenant colonels. Sometimes he was like the lieutenant colonels, a bigger, heavier version yet at the same time more agile, more spry, with a smile on his face and good teeth. There was also a third type — absolutely tiny, mushroom-like, moving rapidly behind the rows of police on his quick little feet…
Sasha hadn’t seen him yet, this full colonel, stars on his shoulders.
A little farther away, behind the fencing, cars buzzed and squeaked, heavy metro doors clanged shut, dusty down-and-outs gathered bottles and surveyed their rims in a businesslike manner. A Caucasian man sipped lemonade and watched the protest from behind the backs of the policemen. Sasha accidentally met his eyes. The Caucasian man turned and walked away.
Sasha noticed some buses bearing the coat of arms with a fanged beast. The curtains in the bus windows trembled. People were sitting in those buses, waiting for an opportunity to step out, to run out, clutching rubber mallets in tough fists, looking angrily for somebody to hit, and to hit them with flourish, to knock them down and knock them out.
“You see this, yes?” Venka asked Sasha. Venka had not slept. He was hungover, his eyes swollen like overcooked dumplings.
Sasha nodded.
Their hope hadn’t panned out. The OMON unit was here.
Venka smiled as if there weren’t a bunch of camouflaged demons awaiting their cue but rather a brigade of clowns handing out balloons.
Sasha wandered into the crowd gathered behind the fence.
Fenced them in like lepers…
The fence was composed of two-metre sections along which the conscripts stood at equal intervals.
Venka followed Sasha. Their crew gathered at the other end of the plaza, and they could already make out Yana’s voice as she lined up the formation of boys and girls.
Sasha studied the unwell and poor as he brushed up against them. Almost all of them were deeply and irritatingly old.
Some sort of despair showed in their demeanour, as if they had gathered their last reserves of strength to get here and now wished only to die. The portraits that they carried in their hands and clutched to their chests depicted their leaders as younger than most of the people here. The face of young Lenin, smiling softly, an enlarged photo familiar to Sasha from his first grammar book. Then the calm face of Lenin’s successor, held up by trembling elderly hands. The successor wore a military cap and the epaulettetes of a generalissimo.
Thin newspapers printed on grey paper were being handed out. Sasha refused outright, and Venka rebuffed merrily.
The scene was a simple mixture of pity and anguish.
Several hundred or maybe several thousand people gathered in this plaza two to three times a year, united in the unrealistic certainty that their presence would somehow expel a government they hated.
In the years that had passed since the bourgeois takeover, the torchbearers had become definitively old, and they didn’t scare anyone anymore.
Then four years ago, Kostenko, a former officer and also, oddly, a philosopher, a wily and original thinker, led into the plaza a crowd of brazen and angry youths who didn’t exactly understand what they were doing among the red banners and elderly people.
Within a few years, this group expanded and gained infamy for its brazen acts and noisy brawls.
By now Kostenko’s party attracted so many motley youths that a metal fence was needed to contain today’s rally. So that none of them spilled out…
Robust, sharp old men periodically surveyed Sasha and Venka with interest, hope, and skepticism.
A representative of the patriotic house faction shuffled in place at the podium. Even from a distance, one could make out his smooth, pink face — the face of a person who ate well, a face that set him apart from all the other grey and anxious faces gathered nearby.
The representative was wearing a black, expensively cut coat. He took off his sheepskin hat and stood before the people with his head uncovered. Someone from the valetry held this hat for him.
Banners with clumsy messages hung along the stage. These would never motivate anyone towards decisive action.
Sasha cringed as he read them.
There was no time for them to do their presentation. They were denied the stage. Sasha, standing on the second-to-last step, looked up at the administrator. The administrator pretended to be distracted by other business.
“Let’s go, guys, let’s go. Another time.”
“What’s happening with Kostenko?”
Sasha heard the deep, clear voice of the representative as he descended from the stage. The representative had noticed Sasha’s red armband and posed this question to the administrator, who had already turned away, relieved.
“He’s been locked up.”
There was a hint of malice in his voice that quickly disappeared when the representative shot back: “I know he’s been locked up.”
“They say he’s going to get fifteen years,” said the administrator. Now his voice belied slight regret for Kostenko’s fate.
In the short time this conversation took place, Sasha stood still on the steps of the narrow ladder and blatantly eavesdropped. One step down from him stood an elderly woman, waiting to ascend the stage.
“Well, are you coming down, or what?” she asked. Sasha jumped off” the ladder and onto the tarmac.
“Go and scream down there,” she said to him. “You’re too young for the stage…”
Venka waited for Sasha at the bottom. He quickly understood everything, and asked him nothing. It seemed Venka didn’t care whether they were allowed on the stage or not.
Venka fingered several dozen firecrackers in his pocket. At times, he pulled them out, one at a time, and twirled them in front of his face, almost as if he didn’t know what they were.
“Got a fag?” Venka asked Sasha.
“I’ve already told you…”
“Have you?” Venka smiled, puzzled. “What have you told me?”
Once again, they emerged from the crowd to join their crew, already in formation.
Yana, raven-haired, wearing a short, elegant jacket with fur-trimmed hood and sleeves, marched up and down the ranks, looking absolutely charming.
Sasha knew that she was Kostenko’s lover.
Kostenko was in pretrial detention, yes, under investigation. He was arrested for buying firearms, just a few automatic rifles, and now his crew, his pack, his gang stood in nervous ranks, black headbands over their faces, foreheads sweaty, eyes bewildered.
They came from all over the country. Youthful outsiders, freaks, malcontents united by who knew what, maybe just some black mark placed on them at birth.
Matvey, who led their faction in Kostenko’s absence, was not among the ranks today. He stood on the sidelines, watching.
Yana lifted the megaphone to her face and raised her arm.
Her voice was swallowed by the collective scream that answered it, and only her very first rolling, sonorous syllable remained.
Having not yet found his place, Sasha stood near the ranks, his mouth wide open. In his peripheral vision, he could see the frightened pigeons leaving the tarmac, an officer twitching nervously, the sluggish hands of the conscripts standing near the fencing as they fondled their batons. As Sasha shouted along with the others, his eyes filled with that requisite void, which, throughout the ages, always precedes an act of violence. They were seven hundred souls, and they screamed the word “Revolution”.
“Tishin!” They waved Sasha over. “Come here!”
He joined the left front rank next to Venka, whose hungover eyes, previously doughy, were now red, almost burnt, as if they had been sautéed in a piping hot skillet.
“Go away, granny!” Venka laughed.
An old lady stood near the formation, and Sasha heard her voice in the brief pause between shouting: “Fools! Provocateurs! Your Kostenko goes to prison to become famous! The Jews brought you here!”
Yana walked by, not paying any attention to the old lady, her face bright and exposed, like an open fracture.
“Heathen!” screamed the old lady into her face, but Yana was already walking away indifferently.
Granny’s sharp eye found Sasha.
“The Jews brought you!” she repeated. “You’re a Jew! A Jew and a Nazi!”
Sasha was gently nudged in the back by those standing behind him, and the formation began to move.
The chant “Re-vo-lu-ti-on!” trembled and vibrated across the whole plaza, overpowering the deep voice from the stage, the police radios, and the voices of the other protesters.
“Founding Fathers! Guys!” The voices from the stage appealed to them. “You didn’t come here to scream! Let’s behave ourselves…”
The formation waved red and black flags and moved past the stage in the direction of the enclosure. The screaming was loud enough to puncture eardrums.
“The president…” shouted Yana. The protesters responded with seven hundred throats: “Should be drowned in the Volga River!” “The governor…should be drowned in the Volga River!”
“Well, will somebody please do something, gentlemen,” the speaker pleaded helplessly. And Sasha noted the out-of-place usage of “gentlemen”, and it might even have made him smile if he wasn’t too busy screaming, hoarsely and tirelessly, until his teeth chilled: “We loathe the government!”
The other sounds in the plaza fell into a rhythm with this scream, the squeal of the metro doors, the conscripts fussing with their grey military coats, the hiss of portable radios, the honks of car horns.
“Love and war! Love and war!”
“Love and love!” Sasha improvised, when he caught another glimpse of Yana as she turned sharply in front of the first rank, her jacket’s hood rising and falling.
How sweetly this hood smells, like her head, thought Sasha accidentally, and then he pushed the thought away.
Like a Tula gingerbread. He didn’t even understand why he was thinking this.
“You’re ruining the rally,” a woman screamed and tried to grab Yana by the sleeve. “Founders!” the woman said, trying to look into their eyes. “You call yourselves ‘Founding Fathers’! What are you founding? You’re destroying, that’s what you’re doing!”
“Did you come here to protest? In this paddock?” Yana asked her, removing the megaphone from her face. “Go ahead and protest. We’re leaving now.”
They were already standing near the railing, and Sasha could see the shifty eyes of the policemen and the officer, who was yelling into the portable radio.
“Yes,” he shouted. “Send in the OMON. These f*****g FF are coming through.”
“We are maniacs and we will prove it,” shouted the formation in chorus, devoutly, on key, stamping their feet and waving their flags.
Venka turned to face the formation, his back to the police and the enclosure, and he quickly distributed the firecrackers to the next rank.
“Fire ’em up!”
The stage went silent; everyone was looking at the mass of chanting protestors.
Several firecrackers blew at once, an explosive bag flew at the police next — it plopped down next to a frightened officer, spitting out dirty smoke.
Sasha saw one officer’s cap fall off” when he, confused by what was happening, turned and ran away.
“Re-vo-lu-ti-on!” The voices resounded, nearing a hysterical pitch, as the formation stamped along in their trainers and worn combat boots.
Several fireworks lit above the protestors at once.
Sasha already had his hands on the fence and pulled it towards him. From the opposite side, a policeman frantically held onto it.
Another swung a club at Sasha’s head.
Sasha let go, ducked, and then, carefully, as if it were hot, took hold of the fence again.
The officer shifted the club to his other hand and landed a sideways blow on Venka’s cheek, which immediately erupted in a puffy, crimson welt.
“The staff,” Venka yelled, looking back with a demonic smile. “Give me the staff!”