Cilka's Journey (ARC) Page 5
   ‘Eat your soup, then have your bread or save it for later,’
   Cilka says to Josie. ‘Sometimes it is better to save it, just like we did on the train, until we know how often and
   how much we are going to be fed.’
   She can see from looking at some of the women’s sunken
   faces that it won’t be frequent or nutritious.
   The two girls slowly sip the brown liquid. At least it is
   hot. There is no real substance to it. Josie notices others
   sitting at the table with spoons, scooping out what look
   like bits of potato or possibly fish.
   ‘They didn’t give us a spoon.’
   ‘I think that might be something we have to obtain for
   ourselves,’ says Cilka, seeing the beat-up-looking utensils
   some of the old-timers are using, ‘when and however we
   can.’
   Soon, Cilka and the other newcomers are gathered by
   their brigadier. Antonina Karpovna corrals the women
   together and leads them back to their hut.
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   As the last woman enters the room, Antonina watches them wander either to their bed or to the stove in order
   to be comfortable.
   ‘In future, when I enter the room you will immediately
   go and stand at the end of your bed. Do I make myself
   clear?’
   Women jump from their bed or scurry to it, and all
   stand to attention at the foot.
   ‘You will also turn and face me. I will give instructions
   once only and I want to look into your eyes and know
   you have all understood. Who understands what I am
   saying?’
   Several hands meekly rise, including Cilka’s. The rest
   had seemingly just followed what the other women were
   doing.
   ‘Then those who understand better teach the rest,
   quickly.’
   She pauses to watch the women look to the person
   standing next to them and a few of them pass on what
   had been said, mostly in other Slavic languages.
   ‘These are the rules you will live by while you are here.
   We have already determined when and how you will work,
   receive food and how long you will sleep. Lights will go
   out at 9 p.m., though in summer you won’t really notice
   . . . Between now and then is when you will clean the
   floor in here, restock the coal for the next day, shovel any
   snow away from the front of the building, do any mending
   of your clothes, whatever is required for you to live here.
   I will not stand for this place looking like a pigsty – I
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   want to be able to eat off the floor. Do you hear me? You will hear the wake-up call, you won’t be able to sleep
   through it. Two of you will empty the toilet buckets, I
   don’t care who does it, just make sure it is done. No one
   will eat until it is.’
   Not a word is spoken, but all heads nod.
   ‘If you fail to do any of this, but especially if you fail
   to do your share of work – letting down my brigade – you will be thrown in the hole.’ She sniffs. ‘The hole is a solitary confinement cell in the lagpunkt. It is a dank, mouldy place where your body is forced into a crooked shape
   whether you stand, sit or lie down. There is no stove, and
   through a barred open window the snow will come in on
   you from outside. You’ll be lucky to get a bucket for your
   waste, as there’s a ready-made stinking hole in the floor.
   You will receive barely a third of your normal ration – and
   a black, hard piece of bread at that. Do you understand?’
   The heads nod again. A shiver runs down Cilka’s spine.
   From a bag draped over her shoulder Antonina produces
   strips of rag, and a crumpled piece of paper from her
   pocket.
   ‘When I call your name come and get your number.
   You have two: one you must put on your hat, the other
   on whatever outer garment you wear. You must never be
   seen outside without your number visible on at least one
   garment.’
   As names are called out the women respond and take
   the two rags handed to them, examining the number
   roughly written in paint.
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   Another number. Cilka subconsciously rubs her left arm; hidden under her clothing is her identity from that other place. How many times can one person be reduced, erased?
   When her name is called, she takes the fabric handed to
   her and examines her new identity. 1-B494. Josie shows Cilka hers. 1-B490.
   ‘Sew the numbers on, and do it tonight, all of you. I
   want to see them all in the morning.’ She pauses, lets the
   translations come through, looks at the confused stares.
   ‘I expect to see some interesting needlework, it will tell
   me a lot about you,’ she sneers.
   A brave voice pipes up, ‘What do we use for needle
   and thread?’
   From her bag the brigadier produces a small piece of
   fabric with two needles punched through. They look like
   they’ve been fashioned from wire and sharpened to a
   point. She hands them to the nearest woman.
   ‘So, get to it. I’ll be back in the morning. Tomorrow,
   you work. Six o’clock wake up.’
   ‘Excuse me,’ says Natalya, ‘where do we get coal from?’
   ‘Work it out for yourselves.’
   As the door shuts behind her the women gather around
   the stove. Cilka is relieved no one received a beating for
   their questions.
   Josie offers, ‘If we go outside, we might see the others
   getting their coal; then we will know where to go.’
   ‘Knock yourselves out,’ says the bully, Elena, lying back
   on her bed. ‘This could be our last day off.’
   ‘I’ll come with you,’ says Cilka.
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   ‘Me too,’ says Natalya. ‘The rest of you start sewing.’
   ‘Yes, master,’ says Elena coldly.
   Josie has placed the remaining few pieces of coal beside
   the stove and picks up the empty bucket.
   The three of them cautiously leave the hut, looking
   around. Darkness is closing in, and spotlights light the
   yard. It is cold. They can see prisoners darting here and
   there between buildings, and a group of young women
   walking quickly towards the hut near them, carrying
   buckets brimming with coal.
   ‘This way,’ says Cilka.
   Natalya steps in front of the women. ‘Can you tell us
   where the coal is, please?’
   ‘Find it yourself,’ is the reply.
   Natalya rolls her eyes.
   ‘They came from here,’ Josie says, pointing to a building.
   ‘From behind there somewhere, let’s go and look.’
   They arrive back in the hut after taking turns carrying
   the heavy bucket. Natalya goes to place it on the floor.
   Her soft hands slip from the handle, the coal spilling on
   the floor. She looks at the other women, apologising.
   ‘It’s all right, I’ll sweep up,’ volunteers Josie.
   Two women are quickly sewing their numbers to their
   hat and coat.
 &nbs
p; ‘Where did you get the thread from?’ Natalya asks
   before Cilka gets the chance.
   ‘From our sheets,’ says the older woman, speaking a
   halting Slavic, close to Slovak, and repeating it in Russian.
   Possibly the oldest in the hut, a lifetime of hard work and
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   making do evident in her abrupt words. She tells them her name is Olga.
   Cilka looks around and sees other women carefully
   stripping away thread from the end of their sheets.
   ‘Hurry up. What are you doing taking so long with the
   needle, Olga?’ an impatient Elena asks, looming over the
   older woman.
   ‘I’m trying to do a good job. If you do it properly the
   first time you won’t have to do it again.’
   ‘Give me the needle now, you stupid bitch. There’s a
   time and place to show off your embroidery skills and it’s
   not here.’
   Elena reaches her hand out impatiently.
   ‘I’m nearly there,’ Olga says patiently. Cilka admires the
   way she’s dealing with the hot-tempered Elena, but she
   also understands the urge to lash out when all is not going
   as planned. This must be Elena’s first camp. Olga increases
   her sewing speed, snapping off the end of the thread with
   her teeth before handing the needle over. ‘Here you go,
   Tuk krava.’
   Cilka suppresses a grin. Olga has just called Elena a fat
   cow in Slovak in an endearing voice. She winks at Cilka.
   ‘My father was Slovakian,’ she says.
   Elena scowls, snatching the needle.
   Cilka sits on her bed, looking at Josie, who forlornly
   fiddles with her number patches. She seems to go from
   capable to overwhelmed in a matter of moments.
   ‘Hand it over,’ she says.
   Josie looks pained.
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   ‘One day at a time,’ Cilka says. ‘All right?’
   Josie nods.
   Cilka starts stripping threads from her sheet. When a
   needle is handed to her, she quickly sews the numbers on
   Josie’s and her own garments.
   Each time she stabs the needle through the fabric she
   feels the pain of a needle stabbing into her left arm.
   Another number. Another place. She grimaces.
   To have lost everything. To have had to endure what
   she has endured, and be punished for it. Suddenly the
   needle feels as heavy as a brick. How can she go on? How
   can she work for a new enemy? Live to see the women
   around her tire, starve, diminish, die. But she – she will live. She does not know why she has always been sure of
   that, why she feels she can persist – keep picking up this
   needle even though it’s as heavy as a brick, keep sewing,
   keep doing what she has to do – but she can. She starts
   to feel angry, furious. And the needle feels light again.
   Light and quick. It is this fire, then, that keeps her going.
   But it is also a curse. It makes her stand out, be singled
   out. She must contain it, control it, direct it.
   To survive.
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   CHAPTER 4
   The fearsome clanging of a hammer on metal wakes the
   newest arrivals at Vorkuta Gulag at 6 a.m. Antonina
   was right – it is an unmissable wake-up call. The women
   have taken turns putting coal in the stove throughout the
   night, just enough to keep it burning. Though the sun still
   shines through most of the night, there had been frost on
   the ground when they walked back after their meagre
   evening meal in the mess. They had all slept in the clothes
   they had been given the previous day.
   The door opens, sending in a blast of cold air. Antonina
   Karpovna holds the door open, watching the women run
   to the foot of their beds, their eyes turned to her. She
   nods approval.
   She walks up the hut inspecting the newly sewn
   numbers on the women’s coats. Pausing at Elena, she
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   barks, ‘Do it again tonight. That’s the worst needlework I’ve ever seen.’
   When she is back at the door, she turns to the two
   nearest girls. ‘Grab the buckets and I’ll show you where
   to empty them. Tomorrow, one of you take another zechka
   and show her where to go and so on, you follow?’
   The two girls scamper to the toilet buckets at the rear
   of the hut, directly opposite Cilka’s bed.
   While Antonina and the two girls with the buckets
   disappear, the rest of the women stay standing, no one
   prepared to move. When the girls return, ashen-faced,
   Antonina tells them all to head to the mess for breakfast
   and be back by 7 a.m. for rollcall.
   Outside, the two girls who emptied the toilet buckets
   bend down and rub their hands across the frost in an
   attempt to wash the stench and urine away.
   If this is the end of summer, Cilka thinks, as she walks
   with Josie over to the mess hut, and there is already
   light snow on the ground and air like ice, then none of
   them will be prepared for what is to come. Working
   outdoors will be unbearable.
   Breakfast is a thick, tasteless gruel. Josie remembers to
   place her precious piece of bread up her sleeve. Like the
   day before, there are no vacancies at any of the tables.
   This time, the newcomers know what to do, and lean
   against the walls.
   It is obvious the gruel cannot be drunk. The women
   look around. There are others using two fingers for a
   spoon. That will have to do for now.
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   * * *
   Rollcall. This is very familiar to Cilka. She only hopes with the twenty of them it will go quickly. That no one has
   gone missing in the night. She remembers a night standing
   out in the cold – all night – until an inmate was found.
   The ache in her knees, her ankle bones. And that was not
   even the worst night in the other place. Not even close.
   Antonina Karpovna starts calling out names. Names. I’m
   not a number. And yet I have a number. Cilka looks at
   her covered-up left arm and the number now emblazoned
   on her brown, scratchy coat. I have a name. She answers
   loudly, ‘Yes,’ when it is called. They are told to get into
   four rows of five.
   Groups of women file past them, each headed by a
   brigadier. Groups of men are also coming from the other
   side of the camp. Cilka and her hut fall in with them as
   they march to the gates that lead out of the compound.
   From what Cilka observed on arrival, there was only one
   way in and one way out. A simple barbed wire fence
   defines the boundary. Groups of men and women swarm
   forward.
   They slow down, coming to a halt as they near the
   exit and see for the first time the ritual of going to work
   each day. As Antonina’s turn comes, Cilka observes her
   approaching a guard or administrator and showing him
 &nbs
p; the list of names. Antonina then beckons for the first row
   of women to approach. The guard walks along the row,
   counting out five, roughly patting them down in a search,
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   and then pushing them onward, before doing the same with the next three rows. He nods to Antonina, who goes
   along with the women, telling them to keep walking behind
   the others. They follow a train line, occasionally tripping
   over the rails, thinking it will be easier to walk on them
   than pull their feet through the sucking mud that drains
   them of energy they know they will need for work.
   Guards walk up and down the rows of men and women
   trudging to the large mine that looms ahead of them. It
   looks like a black mountain with an opening that disap-
   pears into hell. Piles of coal tower beside small ramshackle
   buildings. At the top of the mouth of the mine they can
   see the wheel that is drawing coal up from the depths
   below. Open train carts line the track as the women get
   closer.
   As they reach the mine, those in front peel off, going
   to jobs and areas they are already familiar with. Antonina
   hands the new arrivals over to a guard before following
   some of the women from the other huts, who are also part
   of her brigade.
   Walking amongst the women, the guard pushes several
   to one side, separating them out.
   ‘Hey, Alexei,’ he calls out, ‘come and get this lot. They
   look like they can swing a pick.’
   Another guard comes over and indicates that the fifteen
   women should follow him. Cilka, Josie and Natalya remain
   behind. The guard looks at them.
   ‘Couldn’t swing a bloody pick with all of ya hanging
   on to it. Follow me.’
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   They walk over to one of the mountains of coal, arriving just as the crane dumps a load on the top. They are showered in dust and small chunks of the hard, sharp coal.
   ‘Grab a bucket each and start loading. When it’s full,
   take it over to one of the carts and dump it in,’ he says,
   indicating the carts sitting on the train rails. Others are
   already at work, and again it seems a matter of following
   their lead.
   The women pick up a bucket each and start filling them
   with pieces of coal.
   ‘You better go faster or you’ll find yourselves in trouble,’
   a woman says. ‘Watch me.’
   The woman takes her empty bucket and uses it as a