“No questions at all?” Aubyn’s voice was high-pitched, querulous.
Duranty raised a languid hand. The film crew scuttled towards him, the sound recordist using his long boom to capture the reporter’s question.
“Professor, thank you very much for a most stimulating talk. Some newspapers in the West have been airing stories that the Soviet Union, far from being the bread basket of Europe, is actually suffering a famine. Would you like to comment?”
“This story… erm… concocted by propagandists sympathetic to Herr Hitler… erm… is a monstrous lie. There is no famine here. On the contrary, there is so much food being produced that the Soviet Union is exporting more grain than ever before.”
Once again, Lyushkov made the “stand up” gesture with his hands and, once again, the workers expressed joy unbound and rapture unconfined.
Jones’ hand went up. “Professor, thank you very much for your most interesting talk. Having finished the work of your commission, what are your plans now?”
“Erm… I find the Soviet Union a most stimulating place… I plan to go on a cultural tour of the country before making my way back, slowly, reluctantly, to Washington DC.”
The meeting was called to a close and the reporters drifted out into the fresh air. Outside, the sky was overcast, the cold less biting than before.
Duranty came up to Jones and Evgenia, his eyes lively, his voice warm. “Your question was a bit dull, old cock. But talk of famine is a monstrous lie, eh? Is the Western Mail going to report that? The New York Times most certainly will. Best angle of the day, no?”
“Yes, best angle of the day.”
“Is anyone going to organise a send-off for old Max?”
The question cut both Jones and Evgenia to the quick. Their faces, pink with the cold, turned to grey.
“Not a funeral, I guess,” said Duranty, “not the way he died. But something to mark his passing, surely?”
Jones recovered first. “Not sure that would be appropriate, Duranty. Officially, Max died of suicide.”
“You don’t believe that suicide nonsense, do you?” asked Duranty, all of the warmth gone from his eyes.
“No,” said Jones, “I don’t. And you? The other day it seemed you did.”
“I never believe a word anyone says here on principle.”
“Does that go for Aubyn’s line on the famine being a monstrous lie?”
“Of course. But as I’ve said before, who cares? They’re only Russians.”
Duranty smiled, knowingly, at them both and walked off to join his new Uzbek woman. When he said something to her, she burst out laughing – and together they disappeared into a Mercedes. The doors closed softly and it slid quietly away.
Jones and Evgenia were still standing on the steps of the House of the Unions when they were approached by a small boy, pitifully thin, his face old before its time. Out of habit, Jones was about to delve into his pockets and fetch a kopek when the boy handed him an envelope.
He opened it. Inside was the shortest letter he had ever received. In hand-writing that crabbed across the page, it read, “Come see me. Bill.” There was an address, somewhere nondescript, nothing more.
Haywood was dirt-poor so, out of necessity, he lived out in the sticks, seven long miles north of the Kremlin. They took a droshki, the driver a thing plucked out of some nightmare, an Egyptian mummy swaddled in black, only his eyes alive. The old nag that pulled the carriage was so pitifully thin that they could see her ribs move with every breath.
“Get a move on, kolkhoznik!” the cabbie called out..
Evgenia explained that it meant a collective farmer, who, according to the general party line, were all fabulously lazy. The droshki was beyond cold, agonisingly uncomfortable and horribly slow, so slow that it would be impossible for the Cheka to follow them by car without them knowing. That did not happen. Even so, they paid off the droshki half a mile from where Haywood lived, then tramped through the snow and frozen slush, clinging onto each other for support. Out here, on the edge of the city, the towering apartment blocks gave way to homes made of brick, then of wood. They called them izba, log cabins, the fancier ones with sizeable yards walled off from the world.
Soon, certain that they were not being followed, they reached Haywood’s izba and knocked on the door. Very softly, Evgenia whistled Let My People Go. After a long time, the door swung open, a candle casting a flickering light on the face of Big Bill Haywood. He’d lost a lot of weight, his face haggard, his eyes dull, the spirit of the man broken.
“You folks had better come in.”
It felt colder inside than out. The wooden stove had long gone out, icicles hung from the ceiling, and the water in the kitchen sink had frozen, locking in dishes and glasses in ice. Evgenia said that she would go and buy some wood for the fire.
“Get some vodka too,” Haywood rumbled.
“Yes, boss,” said Evgenia.
“I’m no-one’s boss. I’m A Wobbly ‘till the day I die… which is pretty damn soon.” Haywood started to laugh but it turned into a battle for his next breath.
Now that Evgenia had gone, Jones took the candle from him and helped the old man to a chair. It was a poor house, no doubting it. There was a rough wooden table, a bed with a quilt, a tiny kitchen of sorts. One wall was lined with books: Marx, Lenin, Jack London, Mark Twain, Shakespeare, Keats, Shelley. Jones lingered over a copy of Macbeth and pulled it out. The book fell open and, by the feeble light from the candle, he found himself reading out loud:
“Thou liest, abhorred tyrant; with my sword I'll prove the lie thou speak'st.”
Jones paused.
“Go on,” said Haywood.
“It’s just a stage instruction.”
“Read it.”
“They fight and Young Siward is slain.”
“That’s what’s happened here. We thought that there was a great revolution taking place, that the bosses were being made to kneel before the workers. Got that wrong, big time. All that’s happened is that the whole of Russia is the stage for a new version of Macbeth, one with lies and blood and a lying abhorred tyrant, name of Stalin.” Then he started to cough, helpless, a man drowning in his own phlegm.
Jones sat on the arm of the chair, his hand patting Haywood on the back.
“You don’t look good, old man.”
The whites of his eyes rolled upwards in his head. “Sounds paranoid but…” Haywood reached up to his scalp and pulled out a chunk of hair which came out in his hand with no effort at all. He examined it with a mixture of disgust and wonderment. “I think the bastards are poisoning me. They heard about Stalin’s Epigram. Fancy being killed for reading out a poem. What kind of country is this?”
Jones said nothing.
“Thing is, Garry, I think we have a traitor in our midst and I think they’re trying to knock me off before I can prove my suspicion.”
At that very moment, the door opened and Evgenia returned, clutching firewood, bread, sausage and vodka. Haywood fell silent, looked down and very deftly retched into a bucket.
Jones lit the fire while Evgenia broke open the bread and diced the sausage.
“In the shop they called the sausage Budenny’s First Cavalry,” she said.
“What’s that mean?” asked Jones, puzzled.
“The sausage is not from a cow.”
Uncorking the bottle of vodka, she found three dirty glasses and went out to clean them in the snow.
Haywood’s use of the word “traitor” hung in the air, a challenge not taken up by Evgenia. Ordinarily Jones would have disregarded the idea, told the old man not to be so crazy. But in that time, in that place, fear of betrayal was a rational, logical response.