This is the sixteenth part of a fiction serial, in 797 words.
Helen was subdued the next day, but she was dressed and ready when I got there, and wearing make-up too. I had extended my stay at the pub indefinitely, settling the bill up to that date as requested. They considered me to be one of their regulars now, as I sometimes ate in the bar in the evening. Despite considering more comfortable accommodation, I stayed there because it was so close to Helen’s house. There was no tea offered that morning, and it seemed she had already been hitting the vodka hard before I got there. As soon as I was set up, she lit a cigarette and started talking.
“The next morning I was taken from my cell. No breakfast, no hot drink, just marched up a flight of stairs, and into a room. Seated behind a large desk was the man with rimless glasses, and a stern-faced woman who turned out to be the prison governor. Both speaking in Russian, they read out charges against me of spying for Britain against the Soviet Union. Then they added spying for Bulgaria against the Soviet Union. I said it was all nonsense. I was an interpreter, a Foreign Office employee. I demanded to see someone from the British Embassy, or at least be allowed to speak to them on the phone. Glasses man opened an envelope and laid out some photos on the desk. Me at Sozopol, with the Soviet warship in the background. Desi in the same spot, photographed by me. He said Desi was a double-agent, working for the KGB and also the Bulgarians. He accused me of trying to arrange her defection, put the photos back in the envelope, and shook his head. He said there would be no trial, and the British Government would not even be informed of my capture. For the first time since I had left England, I was really scared”.
Helen poured the last dregs of a bottle of vodka into her tumbler, and downed it in one.
“He went on to say that I was small fry, but as things were getting very dangerous over the Cuban issue, I might have my uses later, if exchanges took place. I was to be detained in Odessa until arrangements could be made for my transfer to Moscow. That was about it, Martin. No interrogation, no torture. But in many ways, that felt worse to me. I had vanished from Sozopol. My colleagues in Burgas, maybe even those from London, would guess what had happened. But what of my parents? The government would never tell them the truth, and as far as they knew, I had gone missing in Bulgaria for my own reasons. Whatever else happened, nobody would be looking for me in Odessa or Moscow. Sorry, I forgot to offer tea, I will get you some”.
She wandered off into the kitchen, looking all of her seventy-six years. Slightly stooped, and her skin pallid and wrinkled. I almost felt sorry for her at that moment. When she came back with my tea, she was carrying a bottle of vodka in the other hand. It was the first time I hadn’t seen her eating anything.
“They established a routine with me in that prison in Odessa. I was segregated from the Russian prisoners because I was fluent in Russian and they didn’t want me talking to them. For fifteen minutes a day, I was allowed to walk around the yard, but with no coat provided, that was awful once the weather turned. Once a day, they brought me a bowl of the cabbage and pork fat soup with one slice of black bread. Before I was allowed to eat it, I had to take my bucket to the shower room and empty it into the toilet, then wash it out in a big sink. By the time I got back it was lukewarm, but I devoured it out of hunger. I had a shower once a week, on my own once the other prisoners had left. No shampoo for my hair, just the greasy soap. No razors allowed for shaving my legs or under my arms, and when I had my period, they gave me a huge swathe of beige cloth and some strings to tie it on with. I was not allowed to read any books, or associate with anyone else. It was the complete definition of solitary confinement, Martin”.
She paused there, appearing to be upset as she remembered.
“After three months I was so depressed, I was contemplating suicide. I was always hungry, desperate for a cigarette, and I had lost so much weight I had stopped wearing my knickers as they fell down all the time”.
The tears came after that, and I sat there feeling awkward.
There is always something about extreme situations which brings out a strange feeling for me of wishing to experience/share in what they went through… but you do paint this so bleak I have no such thought here. (ps. also, don’t worry about replying to my comments – there will be many as I catch up, I just enjoy being able to ‘speak’ while enjoying reading this story 🙂 ). Cheers ~
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When I was 19, in 1971, I spent one night (7 hours) in a police cell in London, after a fracas in a pub. I was released without charge at 7 the next morning, and left with a lifelong desire to never be incarcerated again.
Best wishes, Pete.
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I bet he did feel awkward. Helen is becoming more than just a storyteller. Well done, Pete.
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Yes they are forming a bond of sorts.
Best wishes, Pete.
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Yes. Best to you, Pete.
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Reblogged this on NEW BLOG HERE >> https:/BOOKS.ESLARN-NET.DE.
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(1) Vodka is hard liquor. It’s not hard to understand why Helen would hit the vodka hard, though I would hardly do the same.
(2) “The next morning I was taken from my cell.” At that moment in time, Helen was no longer a single cell organism.
(3a) Desi was a double agent. Or was she? Maybe she had a twin sister.
(3b) I once knew a double agent. She worked in Hollywood, and negotiated with the movie studios on behalf of her client, a body double who resembled Melanie Griffith.
(4) “He went on to say that I was small fry…” That statement sounds fishy to me!
(5) Bad citation: “That was about it, Martin. No interrogation, no torture, no trial, no books, no razors, no shampoo, no feminine napkins, no cigarettes, no breakfast, no hot drink.” (And no rims on the interrogator’s glasses.)
(6) “Nobody would be looking for me in Odessa or Moscow.” They wouldn’t be looking for her in Gotham City either.
(7) “Once a day, they brought me a bowl of the cabbage and pork fat soup with one slice of black bread.” According to prison records, Helen ate Teleshko Vareno, drank Tamjanika, and had Torta Garash for dessert. Prison records don’t lie!
(8) Oftentimes, Helen accepted items given to her in prison without knowing whether or not there were strings attached. But that wasn’t the case when it came to those huge swathes of beige cloth. She was told up front that there were no strings attached. (She would have to attach the strings herself.)
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I used to have ‘Body Double’ on VHS. Perhaps I should buy the DVD and watch it again. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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It was not knowing when the tedium would end that was doing her in. She was used to action and excitement. Good observation that the dullness would make her suicidal.
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Thanks, Elizabeth. As the old saying goes, slightly altered. “There was no light at the end of the tunnel”.
Best wishes, Pete.
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Precisely.
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Poor Helen. Perhaps the vodka helps to blot out the worst of it.
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The vodka is a habit she acquired in Russia, Stevie. That will be explained.
Best wishes, Pete.
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This explains a lot about Helen’s present behaviour…Very well written chapter, Pete …Tweeted for you 🙂 x
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Thanks, Carol. I did tell everyone that all would be explained.
Best wishes, Pete. x
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Always interesting to read the other comments and see how others are reacting to the story Pete…looking forward to the next chapter!
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Thanks, John. Helen is a rarity for me, a sympathetic main character.
Best wishes, Pete.
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Will be interesting to see if it stays that way!
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this begins to explain who she is now
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That was always coming, Beth. She endured deprivation as a young woman.
Best wishes, Pete.
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Well, so much for the interrogations…no overt torture either…but, yikes, the depravation…the loneliness, making do with only the most minimal, base hygiene products…that’s torture. No doubt.
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She is just locked away and ignored, Pam. The truth being that she was completely unimportant in the grand scheme of things.
Best wishes, Pete.
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Painful memories. but she is there now, so we know she got out, so let’s see how and why in future episodes. Warmest regards, Theo
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Yes, that’s the plan, Theo. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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Not even a little mouse to keep her company? Hard to imagine how one would retain their sanity. I remember the Cuban Missile crisis. Will it set her free, though…you say this is only half the story….oh my.
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No, Stephen King wasn’t writing her story. So there is no Mr Jingles, Carolyn.
Best wishes, Pete.
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I feel even more sorry for Helen now, and I’m wondering how she manages to get back in the UK.
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It will all be revealed in time.
Thanks, Liz.
Best wishes, Pete.
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You’re welcome, Pete. 🙂
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Aw, poor Helen, this is so sad.
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It goes to explain why she is like she is in 2015, FR.
Best wishes, Pete.
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No wonder Helen is what she is at age 76. She has gone through hell. And knowing you, Pete, she has more hell to go through.
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Thanks, Don. Her incarceration continues in the next episodes.
Best wishes, Pete.
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She’s certainly been through the mill
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This is just the half of it, Sue.
Best wishes, Pete.
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Well, in the coming episodes we shall learn more
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Fabulous story
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So sad for her
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Thank you. Helen is a sad character indeed.
Best wishes, Pete.
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