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had thought that he had killed her mother...

CHAPTER FIVE

THREE YEARS

Youth does not end in a single day; you do not mark that day off in the

calendar: "Today my youth has ended." It passes imperceptibly, and it is

gone before you know it.

From Leningrad they sent me to Balashov. After graduating from the

flying school I started studying at another-this time under a real

instructor and on a real machine.

I do not recall any period in my life when I worked so diligently.

"Do you know how you fly?" our School Superintendent had said to

me back in Leningrad. "Like an old tub. For the North you have to be

first rate."

I learnt night-flying, when you get into the dark the moment you take

off, and while you are climbing you feel all the time as if you are making

your way gropingly through a dark corridor. I learnt to fly blind, when

everything around you is wrapped in a white mist and you seem to be

flying through millions of years into a different geological epoch; as if

you are being borne on and on in a Time-Machine instead of an

aeroplane.

I learnt that an airman has to know the properties of the air, all its

ways and whims, just as a good sailor knows the ways of the sea.

Those were the years when the Arctic, until then regarded as a remote

and useless icy wilderness, had drawn closer to us and when the first

great air jumps were attracting the whole country's attention. Every day

articles about Polar expeditions by sea and air appeared in the

newspapers and I read them with a thrill. I was longing for the North

with all my heart.

Then, one day, when I was about to take one of the most difficult

examination flights and was already seated in the cockpit, I saw a

newspaper in the hands of my instructor. It had something in it which

made me take off my helmet and goggles and climb out of the plane.

"Warm greetings and congratulations to the members of the

expedition which has successfully solved the problem of navigating the

Arctic Ocean" was printed in big letters right across the front page.

Paying no heed to what the astonished instructor was saying to me, I

looked at the page again, trying to take it all in at a glance. "Great

Northern Sea Route Opened", one article was headed. "The Sibiryakov

in the Bering Strait" ran another. "Salute to the Victors" said a third.

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This was the news of the historic expedition of the Sibiryakov, which for

the first time in history had navigated the Northern Sea Route in a

single season-the route which Captain Tatarinov had attempted in the

schooner St. Maria.

"What's the matter with you? Are you ill?"

"No, I'm all right."

"Altitude one thousand two hundred metres. Two sharp banks one

way, then two the other. Four upward spins."

"Okay!"

I was so excited that I was almost on the point of asking permission to

put off the flight.

All that day I thought of Katya, of poor Maria Vasilievna, and of the

Captain, whose life had become so surprisingly interwoven with my

own. But this time I was thinking of them in a different way and my

grievances appeared to me now in a different, calmer light. Of course, I

had not forgotten anything. I had not forgotten my last talk with Maria

Vasilievna, in which every word of hers had had a secret meaning—her

farewell to her youth and to life. itself. I had not forgotten how I had sat

the next day in the waiting-room together with the old lady, and the

door had opened revealing something white with a dark head and a bare

arm dangling from a couch. I had not yet forgotten how Katya had

turned away form me at the funeral, nor had I forgotten my dreams of

meeting her in a few years' time and tossing to her the proofs showing

that I had been right. I had not forgotten how Nikolai Antonich had spat

in my face.

But all this suddenly presented itself to me like a play in which the

chief character is offstage and appears only in the last act, and until then

he is merely talked about. They all talked about a man whose portrait

hangs on the wall-the portrait of a naval officer with a broad forehead, a

square jaw and deep-set eyes. Yes, he was the chief character in this

play. He was a great explorer, killed by non-recognition and his history

had a significance far beyond the bounds of personal affairs and family

relationships. The Great Northern Sea Route had been opened—that

was his history. Through navigation of the Arctic Ocean in a single

season-that had been his idea. The men who had solved the problem

which had confronted mankind for four hundred years were his men.

He could talk with them as equals.

What, compared with this, were my own dreams, hopes and desires!

What did I want? Why did I become an airman? Why was I so keen on

going to the North?

And now, as in my imaginary play, everything clicked into place and

quite simple ideas came into my head concerning my future and my job.

I was keen on the North and on my profession as a polar airman

because it was a profession which demanded from me endurance,

courage and love for my country and my job.

Who knows but that I, too, one day may be named among those men

who could have talked as equals with Captain Tatarinov?

A month before I finished the Balashov school I put in an application

to be sent to the North. But the school would not let me go.

I was kept on as instructor and spent another whole year at Balashov. I

would hardly call myself a good instructor. Of course, I could teach a

man to fly without experiencing any desire to swear at him every

minute. I understood my pupils. It was quite clear to me, for instance,

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why, on coming out of the plane, one man hastened to light up, while

another wore an air of studied jollity. I was not a teacher by vocation

and found it boring to have to explain a thousand times to others things

I had learnt long ago.

In August 1933 I got leave and went to Moscow. My travelling warrant

was made out for Ensk via Leningrad and people were expecting me in

both these places. Nevertheless I decided to stop over in Moscow, where

no one was expecting me.

Of course, I had no intention of phoning Katya, all the more as I had

received only one greeting from her in all these three years-through

Sanya—and everything was finished and long forgotten. So completely

finished and forgotten that I even decided I would ring her up and had

prepared for the occasion an opening phrase in a polite impersonal tone.

But somehow, when I lifted the receiver in my room at the hotel, my

hand began to shake and I found myself asking for another number

instead-that of Korablev.

He was out of town, on his holiday, and the woman who answered the

phone said that he would not be back until the beginning of the school

year.

Valya, too, was out of town. I was politely informed that lecturer

Zhukov was in the Far North and would be away for six months.

There was no one else I could phone in Moscow, unless it was some

secretary or other member of the staff of the Civil Aviation Board. But I

had no use for secretaries. I picked up the receiver and gave the number.