‘How do we get inside?’ Ivan asked.
Josef shook his head. ‘I don’t know yet.’
The sun beat on them pondering this question. Katya waited for Josef to concoct a plan. The horses shifted hoof to hoof. Filip never raised his gaze from beneath his brim.
Katya spoke.
‘Nikolai?’
‘What?’ the twin answered. He’d become more lively than his brother.
Perhaps he hoped to wipe away his stain by helping free the downed pilot.
‘The two guards. Were they the same ones who were there three days ago?’
‘I don’t… let me see. Yes, I think yes. I’m sure at least one of them was.’
‘Alright. Ivan, how much food do we have with us?’
Ivan swung his backpack around and dug into it. He pulled from it a canteen and a broad, hard loaf.
‘Bread and water,’ Katya said. ‘Perfect.’
Josef asked, ‘You have an idea, Witch?’ The dark man looked at her with new eyes today. Katya worried all the time who in the partisan cell might be the spy, who had betrayed the Night Witches and the partisans beside the railroad. She’d been troubled that it might have been Josef, he seemed so distant and embittered. She began to believe it would not prove to be him.
She pointed at the twin. ‘At least one of the guards has seen Nikolai before, right? He knows Nikolai is an interpreter.’
She swung the finger to the
‘Filip will go instead. The guard won’t know the difference. I’ll pose as a nurse and go with him carrying the food. We’ll tell the guards we’re waiting for the Gestapo, they’re going to interrogate the prisoner again. We’re there to feed the pilot and get him ready. We’ll get one of the guards to come inside. Then Josef, you take care of the one outside.’
‘And the guard inside, Witch?’
She thought of Leonid’s face, too bashed to tell the color of his eyes.
His eyes were blue. Sky blue. She fingered the knife at her hip, the pistol in her belt.
‘I’ll do what I have to.’ She looked over to the
Josef turned in his saddle to the soldiers Daniel and Ivan, book-ends around the German prisoner. Breit did not understand anything being said, his eyes darted to every speaker.
‘Alright,’ Josef said. ‘When both guards are down, you two come with the Nazi and the extra horse for the pilot. Witch, you and Filip…’
‘I’ll go.’
Nikolai sat straight in his saddle. The twin spoke with his chin high; his brother peered out from under his brim to listen.
‘Filip can stay here where it’s safe. I’ll go. They know me.’
Katya cut her eyes to Josef. Even under such a sun, his gaze was hooded.
‘I’ll go,’ Nikolai said again. ‘I’ve done enough to my brother.’
Josef growled, ‘Shut up,
Filip raised his head to his twin. Katya watched them stare at each other, the two faces so identical, and so different.
‘No,’ the
Filip pivoted to Katya. The elder nodded at her. The resolve she’d seen earlier on Nikolai’s face was now on Filip’s, the gallows. ‘I’ll do what I have to.’
Josef wasted no time for the tempest on Nikolai’s face; the twin wanted to object but everyone had turned their backs to him. Daniel swung up in his stirrups, a fresh weed clamped in his teeth. Ivan handed the bread and canteen to Katya.
‘I’ll be one minute behind you, Witch,’ Josef said. ‘Count to sixty before you make a move. Start counting when you get inside. I’ll be watching. If you hear gunshots, you’ve got to act quick. The rest of the garrison will come running, we’ll only have a few seconds. Daniel, you and Ivan stay a hundred meters back. When you see us come out with the pilot, bring the horses fast. Bring the German, and the
The
‘Give me your knife.’
Katya pulled the blade from her belt. Josef unsheathed it and slid the knife inside the crust, then packed the white pulp on top of the grip to hide it. He handed the loaf back to Katya. The bread had an odd and deadly weight.
Josef nodded to Katya.
