The last time Petya had embraced his brother, Anna, his brother's wife, had just passed from this world and onto the next. Petya, in his adolescence youth of unwarranted attention of such things, had generally avoided his brother's loving affections. Yet he squeezed back and his brother pulled him in, a tight, enclosed, embrace. Ignoring that at this moment, Petya was perhaps the most well-armed of the gathering within the cottage, Vasily took hold with protective intent.
There were no words between the brothers as Vasily finally tore away, Petya himself unsure of what to say, what was there to say beyond riddles and questions of what was happening around them. Petya counted the faces of who was in their company, Tristen, Vasily, blind Nadeen, “Where's Antonina?” His question was drowned out by the next wave of screams. Evil things hunted in the village, Petya fell back against a wall and listened, bow and arrow, for what it was worth, ready to protect against what was outside all the while, feeling like a boy again. He could tell you the sound of the doe deer upon a winter's field or the call of the little egret within the trees, but these creatures he did not know. They were in the streets, upon the roofs, creaking movements like skinless animals, that scratched and gnawed and moved like ants. And still, the screams, cold scared screams of those who were not protected enough and those still outdoors, silenced by choking gurgles and bodies nearby settling in the snow.
Petya looked to his elder sibling who had Nadeen protected, Petya took up cover in the far corner of the room, nearest to the small window. Of what he could afford to see, he saw nothing, but he felt it. His eyes may of betrayed him on this occasion, but he felt perverse eyes peer into their shelter, their one last defence before moving onto the next cottage, and then the next. Breaking through the smallest cranny which once, only winter's wind could enter through.
Then, silence.
Silence.
“Vasily,” Petya said with a whisper, worried that his words would call the darkness back again. The brothers exchange a look, then, "Antonina... " he said softly, "She's with Nadejda... Sergei... She is... "
Petya watched as his brother flew from their shelter and Petya gave chase.
The village had always seemed so small, even as a youth, Petya felt how small the village was. All the faces and all the families who knew each other, he would stand upon the foot of the hill which led towards the hunting grounds and stare down at Adishi, able to say he lived in what house and what cottage, who worked in the smithy, the tavern, and who was who as they walked upon the roads. Yet now, in the darkness, it felt very large, very daunting, he knew where Nadejda and Sergei made their home, just like he did with everyone, but something wouldn't carry him along the paths he knew. He was last, running amidst a dark road with small embers in the distance that grew closer and closer, “Petya!”
“Dmitri?” Petya sounded surprised. Dmitri, with torch in hand, was flanked by Alexander and Pavlichenko, Zinoviy, Vladislav and Juho, it had seemed most of his fellow hunters had survived. They were all dirty, bloody and bore some scarring, across the brow of Dmitri was a large gash and a river of crimson that dirtied the side of his face. “You're hurt?”
“Petya,” Dmitri's voice was heavy. In the light of their burning torches, Petya saw their faces, remorseful and detached looks, “The old man did not make it.”
Petya pushed his aside the others to the front of the gathering where, in all too picturesque fashion, lay a fur coat in a halo of a light. In the outlying darkness were specks of blood that trickled towards where the body lay. Despite reservation, Petya lifted up the coat and caught the sleeping face of old Pavel, his old beard knotted with thick crimson.
“We should head to the tavern and gather any survivors,” Dmitri, came, taking sudden charge of the party. “That was the old man's last order. We don't know if these things may return.”
“Survivors,” Petya said, his words forming into mist and escaping into the night. It was an odd word, it weighed heavily on his tongue, but it was true, they had always been survivors in theory, they tended to their own fields, hunted and fished their own lands, they were ignored by the world and proud of it, “Nobody could survive our ways.” But now, it seemed a grim title to claim as Petya covered the face of old Pavel, letting the old tree finally rest.