My Grandfather's Island - the Story of a Family

This is a story I posted in my general thread in the Writer's Forum many a month ago. Now I wanted to put it up here in its entirety as well so it is more widely available.



My Grandfather's Island


One: The Summers of My Childhood


I tied up my borrowed boat to the rickety old wooden jetty and stepped ashore, sure to take my things with me from the boat. I glanced at my wristwatch – 17.45. The autumn evening was starting to get dark and the weather was ominous, with nearly black clouds rolling in from the east, obscuring the last light of the sun, on its way to settle down for the night with a red glare on the horizon.The wind was picking up, too. A storm was coming. Why the hell did I come so late, and why on such a night, too? Sighing heavily, I checked my flashlight. It was working perfectly.


...


The first time I saw the island of Palosaari was in 1947. I was twelve, a thin, bookish city boy. I had lived in Helsinki for all my life. Since my father, Petteri, had died in the war four years ago, it had been just me and my mother Hanna, a young widow who supported us with her job as a shop assistant at the Stockmann department store. Life wasn't easy during those years, especially for those that had lost the family's main breadwinner to the flames of war. Even a boy of twelve could see my mother was struggling to keep us afloat financially. She did an admirable job, though. Even if the food we ate was simple and often monotonous, I never had to go hungry. Even if the clothes I wore were often old hand-me-downs, they always were clean and well-ironed. The rented rooms we lived in might have been small and cramped, but she made them comfortable, homely and warm. And she always had a smile for me, even when she seemed like she was exhausted herself, stumbling home from work in the evenings.

By age twelve, I was getting accustomed to being sent to the countryside for the summer. Many children I knew spent the summer at a farm owned by relatives, somewhere to the north. It eased the parents' financial burden to let someone else pay for their food for the summer months. For me it meant going to Kuopio, many hours on the train and then a boat to a small farm owned by my mother's relatives there, a youngish couple with two boys my age. The farmer was a kind, soft-spoken man with a wiry frame. Sometimes, he used to sneak a smoke behind the barn when his dragon of a wife wasn't looking. To get caught would have meant hell to pay. On his farm I first learned the value of hard work, looking after cows and hens, weeding the garden, making hay. The farm boys teased me for being such a ”little gentleman” with my city manners, but all in all I could not complain – to balance the work, we would swim a lot, have time to play in the woods, eat well, go to the sauna every night and then go to sleep early, to wake up to another morning when the rooster willed us to.

This summer, though, it would be different. One day in the spring my mother had told me that a letter had come from my paternal grandfather, Aleksanteri, inviting me to spend the summer with him at the island he lived on in Lake Saimaa in Eastern Finland. Upon hearing this, I was immediately apprehensive – I had never met Aleksanteri, and it did not strike me as a nice prospect of not spendng the summer with Seppo and Risto, the farmer's boys who I had started to almost consider my half-brothers these last summers.*

My mother was adamant, though. It was time for me to meet my grandfather, she said, and get to know my father's side of the family a little better. ”Your father would have wanted this”, she said, glancing at the photo of the smiling young reserve officer in uniform, holding his young wife's hand with a mischievous smile on his handsome face. ”He did not always see eye to eye with his father, but when he left for the front he made me promise that if... something happened to him, you would learn about his family's history.”

My mother looked at me seriously.

” - Your grandfather is a fine old gentleman. I have not told this to you before, but he sends me... us money, to help us get by. Every now and then I get an envelope from him, with a small note wishing that we are well. Your grandfather's money bought you those shoes you like so much, and your backpack. The way I see it, it is only decent that you go and spend time with him when he has been kind enough to offer his invitation. You are going to Lappeenranta this summer.”

And that was that. It was with mixed feelings I sat in the train with all the other people travelling to the lakeland, chugging along with what then seemed to a young boy like an impressive speed towards Lappeenranta. I was still a bit peeved about not getting to go to Kuopio, and I was equally anxious and nervous to meet my mysterious grandfather. It did help a bit that it was a beautiful June day, and that the benevolent sun was showing me the best side of the small towns and fields and forests and lakes (and yet more forests and lakes) I saw from the train window as we passed them. After stepping off the train at the Lappeenranta station, the old one they call the Emperor's Station because it was built in 1885 specifically for Tsar Alexander II's visit in the Finnish Grand Duchy, I just stood there alone for a while, holding my meagre luggage of a backpack and a small suitcase, being confused of coming to a place I never saw before. The people offloading from the train bustled around me, and the conductors and other railway workers went about their business.*

Now I just had to find my old grandfather. It took me a while, but as I looked to my left, I saw a tall, old man with a full grey beard standing next to the railway station's wall, in turn scanning the scene with his eyes. His attire was old-fashioned and it seemed a bit too warm for the glorious summer weather all around us. Not seeing anyone else around who could fit my mother's description of my grandfather, I took a few tentative steps towards the somewhat scary man. Taking this as his cue, he started towards me as well. We met halfway through the platform, me holding my suitcase in front of me, the old man taking time to get a good, measured look at me.

He looked me sternly in the eye and held out his hand.

” - I am Aleksanteri Väärä. You must be Konsta - you look very much like your father.”

Swallowing a lump in my throat I held out my hand, too, to shake the one he was offering.

” - Good day, I am Konsta Väärä, good to meet you, Mister Väärä.”

The old man's face changed a little, and it was like a hint of a smile visited the corner his mouth, then. I could not keep my eyes away from his impressive full beard.*

” - No need for any misters - or sirs, for that matter. You can call me Aleksi, or better yet, call me grandfather.”

”- Yes, mist.. I mean, I will do that, grandfather.”

He smiled slightly but very soon grew serious again.*

” -Now, let me take your bag there, we'll have to walk a bit to reach my boat.”


...


As I started up the path towards the buildings, I could see nobody – no human – had been on the island for many years. Passing the ruins of the old groundskeeper's cottage I saw that nature had taken over – without knowing where the ruined and collapsed building was, I might not have noticed it at all, not in this low light. It was starting to rain now, on top of the surprisingly cold wind, and after taking a moment to get my bearings I made a beeline towards the abandoned boat yard's main building. It seemed to stand, still, and hopefully it would shelter me from the storm somewhat. I was startled to see some movement in the bushes to my left, and I swung my flashlight into that direction – to find myself face to face with a rather seedy-looking squirrel, in turn staring at me like I was trespassing on its private property. Which I was doing, for all intents and purposes, I thought. Perhaps the squirrel had more right to the island than I had – this was its family home after all.



Two: Shelter from the Storm



The man in a dirty civil servant's uniform had a job to do. Taking a better grasp of the shovel, he could not help thinking that this surely was not the kind of work he should be doing – and this most definitely was not a place he should be spending any time in. Not if he valued his life and not if he wanted to have any hope for the salvation of his immortal soul.*

He stood alone in the semi-darkness.

Looking at the pile of bloody bodies in front of him, he was suddenly startled by a slight bit of movement among them. An ice-cold finger traced a route along his spine as he saw a bloody hand rise from the shallow grave. His face very pale he stood very, very still, with his shovel raised in his hand, careful not to make a move.

The hand was followed with a face, and a pair of pleading eyes looked at the man with the shovel. The face was equally covered in blood and grime, but the man it belonged to seemed very much alive.

” - Help me”, the man said weakly.

” - For the love of God, help me”.


...



I remember the rhytmic put-put-put of the small inboard motor powering the wooden boat as we started from the lakeshore near Lappeenranta, towards the island of Palosaari. As I sat at the bow, my grandfather steered the boat with a practiced hand. My mother had told me he had lived on the island for many, many years and that the boat was the only way to get to the mainland. To me it seemed old but serviceable, in a rough-and-ready fashion, something like the man himself. While to a young boy the bearded man sitting silently in front of me seemed ancient, at 71 he still appeared to have some strength left in him. And a sense of purpose, it struck me as I looked at him. I could not explain it at the time, but this old man looked like one who had a Purpose, a Direction in his life.*

I looked at a pair of terns flying over us and I spied an old passenger ship steaming towards what I though must the be Lappeenranta harbour. I tried to spot a ringed seal, the most famous example of Saimaa wildlife, but could not catch a sight of this likable creature. So in my thoughts I was that I was almost startled when the bearded man finally spoke up, having spent most of the way in silent contemplation himself.

” - There it is, my island.”

And there it indeed was. Larger than I had thought, the Palosaari island spread out before us. We were heading towards a small jetty on the shore, while a small collection of bigger jetties and piers stood, unused, to the left of it. The island seemed mostly forested, but from here on the lake one could see a number of buildings jutting out from between the trees. They were all painted red – and the biggest one of them had a large, faded white text on it, saying OY PALOSAAREN VENEVEISTÄMÖ.

My grandfather later told me that a boat yard had operated here until the year 1918. Started sometime in the 19th century, the yard had been known for its good quality and reasonable prices all around the Grand Duchy and as far as Stockholm and St. Petersburg. The Palosaari boat yard had experienced something like a small boom during the early years of the First World War, delivering various boats to the Russian state and navy. After the Revolution, in 1917, the orders had stopped cold and then the Russians even refused to pay the bills for the already completed and delivered vessels. The company had already been heavily indebted (my grandfather said the owners were good with boats but useless with money) and with no funds left to pay the workers, and no possibility to take further loans, the boat yard had had to declare bankrupcy soon after the Finnish Civil War. There had been talk of restarting the business in the 20s and again in the 30s, but nothing ever came of it. So the yard just stood empty, its buildings slowly decaying and the name of the company fading away with each consecutive winter.


...


The small group of railway officials wanted nothing to do with the civil war. Their responsibility to the nation ended with making the trains run on time. But as railways were a vital asset for the revolutionary as well as counterrevolutionary forces, these men had been swept up in the events. For the last few months, they had been working for a group of revolutionaries who claimed to fight for their rights and their liberty but in actual fact acted like a pack of ungodly, murderous thieves.

And now their recent abominable act. A travesty, a crime against the laws of God and men both. It was too much for the former station inspector and his two comrades.

But maybe they still could do good, to redeem themselves in the eyes of the Almighty looking down at them from Heaven. In the dark, they escorted the two weary, wounded refugees they had near-miraculously saved from the carnage to the railyard where another one of their comrades was preparing the railway engine.


” - The bastards are all passed out from the drink”, the engineer said to them in low tones, with a melancholy smile on his face.

” - They have been commemoriating their recent exploits. Not even a sentry is awake.”


As the small group started putting some distance between themselves and the town they were escaping from, the former station inspector contemplated the fact that before the war, he never would have though stealing a train and just driving it away in the dead of night could be so easy.


...



From the jetty I followed my grandfather to the cabin where he lived. It was actually bigger than the farmhouse in Kuopio I had been accustomed to – to call it a cabin was probably a misnomer, the old man conceded. Before it had been turned over to him as the island's guardian and groundskeeper, it had been the summer villa of one of the boat yard's former owners. Taking in the mood at the old villa, I could see he told me the truth. It was an elegant building with big windows and a nice big fireplace in what would have been the living room. It also seemed somewhat ratty, all told, and it was very clear that someone, and a man at that, had been living in it alone, perhaps for decades. The bohemian mess I saw around me was a bit shocking at first, after the tight ship my mother kept at home. The bearded man probably saw all this from my eyes - he waved his hand apologetically and uttered a few words in lieu of a welcome to his home.

” - Your own room is to the left. Let's leave your things there and we'll have something to eat. I have some bread and butter, potatoes – and smoked whitefish. Cold spring water to drink. That all right with you?”

I nodded. I only now realized I was ravenous after travelling most of the day. I had eaten the sandwiches my mother had packed for me soon after I left Helsinki.

As we ate, the bearded man spoke about the island. It was his duty to watch over it and the buildings there, he told me in between pieces of bread laden with butter and smoked whitefish. He had been hired for this job in 1918, by the administrator of the property of the bankrupt boat yard. And now, 29 years later, he did the same job. He very rarely had any contact with whoever paid his wages, but as long as the wages kept coming, he would stay at his post. He told me that as his guest I could roam freely on the island – provided I remembered one single rule.

” - And that rule is: never go into the main building, you know the big one with the text on the wall, without me. It is terribly unsafe, it might fall down any time. You might hurt yourself or even get killed if it collapses on you! I couldn't bear having to tell your mother that you hurt yourself stupidly climbing in the rafters or exploring the cellars. So understand this: don't go to that building alone!”

He looked at me sternly, almost angrily, and nodding my head vigorously I promised that I will respect this rule. We even shook hands on it.

I looked at the bearded man and thought of the idea of spending 29 years alone on this island. It might well play tricks on a man's mind. He surely must be happy to have someone to keep him company, someone to talk to for a change, I thought.


...


The small group had to abandon the train in the morning because the railway ahead had been sabotaged. The former station inspector was surprised they had managed to come this far. Only once their right of using the line had been questioned on the way, by a group of revolutionary soldiers at a small railway station, but the railway official had managed to conjure up some of his old bureaucratic officiousness to use as a sword and shield to ensure the young soldiers that it was vital for the revolutionary cause that this train gets through. His heart had pounded madly when they left behind the armed men who could have killed them all then and there.

Climbing off the train, they still had a long way to go to reach what he thought would be a place of safety. A shelter from the storm that was the civil war raging all around them. It would be slow going – they would have to keep to the side roads, as it would be so much harder to fool revolutionary patrols now that they were off the train. It did not help that both the man and the woman they were escorting were injured, and for the woman especially, walking briskly for long distances proved difficult because of a wound in her leg.

The former station inspector took out his small icon of the Holy Mother and prayed for the safety of himself and the small group of people along with him. Only higher powers would help them now, he thought, in this valley of the shadow of death.




Three: One Day in the Summer



I had to go around the old main building to find a way in – the roof had partly collapsed, after all, but most of the building was still intact, if only so-and-so. The rain was drumming on the roof and the wind was shaking the old structure to make the roof creak and groan on top of my head.

With the help of my flashlight I looked around the main hall, where miraculously a half-finished old motor boat stood, still looking as if its builders had just left yesterday to return to their work after the weekend, when in fact it was now well-nigh 60 years since skilled boatbuilder's hands had last put down the tools left scattered around the boat. Seeing the three dismantled inboard motors in the corner made me smile, briefly – with my mind's eye, I could just see a tall, bearded man stripping them for parts, humming contentedly by himself.

I had been wondering for a while if the batteries in my flashlight would have enough power in them to last throught the night, and now I had an idea. Remembering when I had last visited the place, I made my way towards the foreman's office. And there, like I remembered, an old oil lamp hung from the ceiling. Even more surprisingly, it still had some oil in it and, lo and behold, I managed to light it up. I then went around the building, with the flickering light from the oil lamp casting huge, monstrous shadows on the walls.


...



What my grandfather called his job seemed to consist of him going around the island several times a day, checking all the buildings for God knows what, and generally standing guard. To me it seemed he was like an old soldier fighting a war everyone else had already forgotten. He even had an old rifle at the cabin, which he sometimes slung on his shoulder when he went on his jaunts around the island. Most days, I went along with him on some of his walks. He would talk to me about his life and the history of our family, both on those walks and when we went fishing, which was another of his daily rituals. We would check the fish traps he had around the island, and we would go fishing for pike, whitefish, bream or perch. There was a small potato field and a garden on the island, too, and I helped him with them.

Even though a lot of the food we ate could thus be found on the island and the surrounding waters – and never have I eaten so much fish than on that summer – for some things, we had to take the boat to the mainland. Once or twice a week, we then would start up the old Wickström inboard. It took certain tricks to get the motor running, and some more to keep it running well, and the old man tried to teach me all he knew about it. He told me that there were several of these old motors at the boat yard's main building, originally acquired to be installed on motor tenders to be sold to the Imperial Russian Navy, and over the years he had broken down three of the forgotten motors for parts.

” - One of the perks of the job”, he told me with a wink, ”for as long as those parts last, I will never have to buy another motor in my life.”

After a while, the old man felt confident enough to send me to town alone with the boat, and I was very proud that I managed to keep the motor running and remembered to get all the groceries the old man had asked for. On one of these outings, in early July I believe, I was packing up the tin cans and loaves of bread and whatnot, when a man I had seen before at the shop walked up to me. He had heavy-rimmed glasses and a thick moustache. His coat was worn and dirty.

” - Hi there, sonny. You the boy who's living with old man Väärä on the island?”

He looked somewhat shabby and had dark stubble on his cheeks. I didn't like the smell of his breath.

” - Yes, I am his grandson. I'm Konsta Väärä, pleased to make your acquintance, Mr....?”

The man flashed a predatory smile.

” - My name's Jauhiainen. So, you are the old coot's grandson, eh? How well do you know the old man, Konsta? Do you know that he's... not right in the head?”

He cocked his head and looked at me, smiling that unnerving smile of his all the while. The words stuck in my throat.

” - Walking that damn island with his rifle... Waving and shouting at passing boats in some sort of a foreign uniform... He's a damn Nazi, that's what he is. And out of his bloody mind, to boot.”

” - That is not true!”, I said to the man, finally able to open my mouth, ”you are a mean liar!”

The man shrugged his shoulders, his smile not wavering. As he started to open his mouth again, another man intervened, a man in his flannel shirt and heavy boots very reminescent of the farmer I knew in Kuopio.

” - Leave the boy alone, Kalle. Everyone knows you have something against old man Väärä, but I'll be damned if I let you harass innocent kids with your bloody vendetta.”

The man had put his hand on Jauhiainen's shoulder. The shorter man in glasses backed away.

” - No reason to get riled up, Juha, get your Fascist hands off me”, he said belligerently.*

” - I was just educating young Konsta here so he gets... a more comprehensive picture of his crazy old grandfather.”

The man who looked like a farmer shoved Jauhiainen so that the man almost fell down.

” - Take a hike, you bloody Communist. Everyone here knows you for the coward and traitor you are. You are not fit to educate a dog, let alone a fine, well-mannered boy Konsta here seems to be.”

The shorter man again opened his mouth, but then caught himself, muttered something and turned around to stalk away. I looked at the man who had faced him. He shook his head.

” - I am sorry about that. Konsta, was it?”

I nodded.

” - Konsta Väärä. Pleased to make your acquintance, Mr...”

Smiling, the man offered his hand.

” - Juha Ahonius. Good to meet you, young mister Väärä.”

He glanced at the door the man with a foul breath had just slammed shut behind himself.

” - I wouldn't put a lot of stock into that man Jauhiainen's words. He has a beef with your grandfather, on account of old Aleksi being a staunch anti-Communist. You know that, right?”

I nodded. The old man had said things about revolutionaries I had been shocked to hear. He seemed to consider the Soviet Union to be under the spell of Devil himself.

” - Kalle there is a Red. His whole family is – I think his father died in the civil war, and he never got over it...”

I looked at the floor.

” - My Dad died in the war, too, in 1943...”

The man looked at me, seemingly unsure what to do next. Then he nodded his head.

” - I am sorry to hear that. I lost my brother, too. This is something men like Kalle there should understand – he is not alone with his loss. This land is full of men like you and me, and like your grandfather...”

The man shifted his weight uncomfortably from side to side. The female shop assistant came to our rescue. She tousled my hair and handed me a piece of candy.

” - Come on now, chief. I'll get your groceries together, and I am sure Juha here can give you a lift to your boat with his tractor... You keep it at the Mäkelä jetty, right?”

I nodded. She smiled happily to me and Ahonius both.

” - Sure”, the man said, seemingly snapping out of his reverie, ”thank you, Sirkka.”

When we reached the boat the farmer helped me to get the Wickström going. He looked across the water towards Palosaari thoughtfully.

” - Konsta”, he said quietly, ”your grandfather has always seemed like a decent man when I have had dealings with him, but he does have something of a reputation as an eccentric and a recluse... His right-wing, religious views are well known.”

He rubbed his forehead.

” - And then there are those who say that the island is haunted – the Reds killed some people there during the Civil War, and people around here talk about strange things happening there.”

I must have looked at him with my eyes wide, because just then he looked at me and flashed a wide smile.

” - Just silly stories, I am sure. Ask your grandfather about the island, he surely is the foremost authority on its history. For now, I bid you a good day and hope we'll soon meet again.”

He took off in his tractor, touching the brim of his cap with his finger, what he must have thought was a reassuring smile on his face.

For me, it would be a long trip back to the island.


...


The storm was not letting up, rather to the contrary. I again cursed my stupidity for coming here on this night, of all autumn nights I could have chosen. By and by, gathering my courage, I made my way towards the steps down to the cellars.

There was a reason I had come to the island today, after all.


I knew that the building had rather large cellars below it. The old man had warned me about them being treacherous, back in the day. Of course I didn't truly believe him, then. But what might have been mere hyperbole to scare an impressionable kid back then might be more true after the ravages of 30 years the building had endured since – at least the parts of it that were above ground seemed a lot worse than I remember them being in 1947.

Finally reaching the stairwell downstairs I opened the door very carefully. Even if prepared, the creak from the rusted, unoiled hinges still made me nearly jump out of my skin.



Four: Dead Comrades



Looking back to that rainy July day, the man never really forgave himself for abandoning his dying friend like he did, to escape the clutches of the revolutionaries himself. Sure, the man had told him to go, to run, while he sat there, bleeding, propping a military-issue rifle towards the muddy road to shoot at the revolutionaries should they try to follow them.

Maybe he should have stayed there and died with him on that road, on the edge of the areas the revolutionary and counterrevolutionary troops were contesting. Fought on his side to the last with all the four bullets he had left to his Mosin-Nagant rifle.

But then again, he had a higher purpose, one he had started to believe had been handed down from Heaven Above. Miracles, after all, were not that common, especially not in this day and age.

And so, stupidly, he raised his hand in a final salute to the wounded railway engineer and grabbed the reins of the stolen carriage, rousing the thin, pale horse it was hitched to. The man and woman lying down in the back of the carriage were so quiet he had to check they were still alive. They were.


Bleeding himself from a cut in his head caused by a bullet's near miss, the former station inspector took the horse and carriage towards the border, as fast as he dared on the poor road. He hoped the horse would have the strength left in him to take them the last remaining kilometers.*

He prayed to God they all would have the strength to make it to safety.


...



The days were warm and sunny, and like all summer days in my childhood, they were long. I explored almost all corners of the island, finding birds' nests, small hidden caves and all kinds of interesting pieces of machines and boats. It was almost like a paradise for a boy of that age – the only downside was the lack of more boys of that age to play and explore with. With less work to do than on the farm, I would read old books the bearded man gave to me, about cowboys and indians, adventure, machines and wonders of the world.

When the sun had to give way for the rains, we would sit in the cabin with the old man, with logs burning in the old fireplace. There was no electricity on the island, so the small radio ran on batteries and in the nights the only light in the cottage came from oil lamps and candles. And the fireplace, of course, which was the biggest one I had ever seen. I could have walked in it without bowing my head.

” - Konsta”, the old man asked me on one of such rainy afternoon, after we had eaten some fried perch with the ever-present boiled potatoes.

” - What do you remember of your father?”

I told him all I could – how I only saw him when he came home for a holiday from the front, once for a longer period of time because he had been wounded in his arm. I always thought he looked like a hero in his uniform, with his lieutenant's rank tabs and the medals on his chest. He rarely smiled, though. My mother had told me that before the war he would not stop smiling and joking. He had been so handsome and funny, my mother told me, that all the girls she knew had been in love with him – and she had been the lucky one to walk down the aisle with him, to marry him. But now, now he was solemn and quiet. And in the night, he would wake us all up by thrashing around in his bed and suddenly shouting something in his sleep.

To me he always was friendly, but felt somehow distant. Once he cried when he embraced me, and that had scared me deeply. My hero of a father, this rock of male strength, wiping tears from his eyes... I don't know if I remembered this right, but I thought it was the last time I saw him. Some time later, the message was brought to my mother that Lieutenant Petteri Väärä had died in the line of duty, fighting for the Fatherland and the freedom of the Finnish people and been posthumously awarded the Cross of Liberty, Second Class. My mother set the medal on the side table next to the picture of her and Dad, and there it was until the day she died.

Of course I might not have had the words to tell all this to the old man at the time, but, well, at least I would have wanted to.

” - We rarely met, me and your father”, the bearded man said.

” - His mother died soon after we moved here, and when Petteri was only some months old. I could not take care of him on my own, how could I, and that is why I gave him to my sister, your great aunt, to raise as her own child. Has your mother told you this?”

I nodded.

” - Yes, grandfather. Everyone needs a mother, and a stepmother is better than no mother at all.”

” - Quite so. But still... Now I find myself sorry that I did not visit him more often... I always thought I have time... That he is still a young man... But then came the war.”

He looked at me mournfully.

” - I have seen war before. I could have known – I should have known.”

The old man looked at me, with the fire from the fireplace throwing dancing shadows on the walls. The rain drummed on the windowpanes.*

He smiled, and somehow it was both reassuring and a bit scary.

” - And that is why I invited you to spend the summer with me. You are young, and you have your life in front of you. Me, I am an old man, I will never know how much time I still have left...”

” - Grandfather...”, I started.

” - Yes, I know. I probably have several good years in me left. But you can never be sure, and with the Communist devils still holding sway in Russia, we never know when another war is upon us. You know they are fighting in Russia even now, from the radio reports.”

We had been listening to the radio a lot, and indeed the news from the USSR were that the Soviet leader, Stalin, had died in June and now there were running battles on the streets of Moscow between various Bolshevik factions looking to take over the reins of the Soviet state after him. There were also revolts in progress in several Eastern European countries and Soviet tanks were reported on the streets of Prague and Budapest. Back home, apparently the Communists were protesting almost daily in Helsinki now.

To be frank, I was worried about my mother.

Me, Konsta, at age twelve, then thought it was my responsibility to help this old man feel better about the world.

” - Grandfather, we miss Dad a lot, me and Mother. But we make do, the two of us. We are all right, despite everything.”

I remember that I could see a kind fire lighting up in the old man's eyes.

” - I am glad to hear that, Konsta. I am glad. Remember, if there is any way to help your mother...”

I looked at him and smiled.

” - But grandfather, you are already helping us! Mother said you are sending money to us almost every month, and that helps us a lot.”

The old man looked back at me, now suddenly confused.

” - No, you are mistaken. I have never sent money to your mother.”


...


Crossing the border turned out to be the easiest part. As the former station inspector took his horse and carriage next to the border crossing with a large if tattered red flag flying over it, only one bored revolutionary bothered to come out of the hut to ask what he had in the back. As it was covered, he was eying it greedily.

”- Corpses, taking them back home to be buried. It is bloody business trying to work the railways these days, too”, he said, indicating his filthy uniform so that the man could see he was a railway official.

The revolutionary took a peek below the canvas cover and backed away quickly.

”- Why the hell you cart them around for? Just bury them somewhere, you idiot!”


He looked at the man riding the carriage like he was a madman.

”- I promised to get them home. Promise is a promise.”

The revolutionary shook his head and waved towards the contested border.

”- All right, go ahead. But I need your shoes first.”

The former station inspector raised his head slowly.

”- You need what?”

The man gestured towards his feet.

”- Your fine shoes. Call it a toll”, he said, smiling a broken smile and raising his rifle for effect.

The man on the carriage looked at him in silence, took off his boots and threw them to the ground. As the revolutionary warrior started to pick them up, the former station inspector took the reins and led the horse forward, towards safety.

The horse was already exhausted. It, too, had not eaten in days. Slowly, ever so slowly they crossed the small bridge into the land the driver called home.



[filler]
 
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Five: The Morning Mist

With the situation in the USSR turning ever more like into a new civil war, the years '47 and '48 were very tense in Finland, too. The army was partly mobilized and one could see military patrols keeping order on the streets of Helsinki, too, in cooperation with the ordinary police. From time to time, another Communist demonstration would rock the capital as well as other Finnish towns.

In the fall of '48 I walked back home from school, with a couple of my friends, joking all along. The leaves were coming down from the trees, and we riled up a janitor by jumping into a pile of leaves he had just gathered up and spreading the leaves all around us. We ran away to leave the fuming man shouting behind us.

When I got home, I was surprised to find the door ajar. I was even more taken aback to see a serious man in a policeman's uniform wait me there.

Apparently, my mother had been coming home early from her work, and on the Hämeentie she had had to jump to avoid getting run over by a military truck. Unfortunately, that had landed her right in front of a bus going the other way. The policeman, speaking silently and in a grave tone offered his condolences for my loss, with his cap tucked under his arm. Clumsily, he tried to hug me, too.

The next day I moved in with my old great aunt in Kallio.


...


From time to to that summer, I woke up in the middle of the night to the cabin door opening or closing. Once I realized it was no ghost doing it, once I understood that it was my grandfather who would also patrol his island during the night time, I accepted this nocturnal commotion as a normal situation. He always tried to be very careful about coming and going, and I believe he oiled the hinges of the front door specifically so that he could sneak out as quietly as possible. By late July, I would usually sleep through the noises made by my insomniac grandfather – until, of course, he started making too much noise for even me to ignore.

One such night I heard the old man come in again after spending more than an hour outside. I heard heavy steps around the house and the sound of him rummaging about, like searching for something. It was very early morning, and the light outside had started to grow again. Annoyed that he would not let me sleep I got up from the bed and went to the living room, where he was going through come of the cupboards.

I spoke to him, and he turned around, his face pale from something like shock and beads of sweat dotting his forehead. He looked worried and sick.

” - Konsta”, he said to me, ”you are awake, are you?”

Despite himself, he tried a feeble smile, which made him look even scarier.

” -Sorry if I woke you up, kid.”

Standing there, my old grandfather looked helpless. That was a word I had never before associated with him, and even the thought chilled me.

His eyes twitching nervously, my grandfather took a few steps towards the door and then stopped.

” - Look, Konsta, I have to visit town. I'll take the boat and leave right now. Make sandwiches for breakfast, you'll find everything you need in the pantry. I'll be back as soon as I can.”

He again started to the door and again he stopped, looking worried.

” - All right, kid?”

I nodded, and with that he was out of the door. Soon I could hear him starting up the Wickström, that being the only sound audible in the quiet, misty early summer morning. I put on my trousers and socks and shirt and went out to the steps to see the boat slowly receding from the island, leaving a slowly expanding wake behind it on the still waters of the big lake. Moments later, nobody could have seen a boat had just gone there.

I fixed myself some cheese sandwiches and sat down by the table to eat them with a glass of cold water. I shivered a little. The chilly morning air had creeped to the cabin, or maybe I just felt cold because the look my grandfather had about him had scared me.

During the recent days, my grandfater had prayed a lot and had me pray along with him. We would kneel by the icon on the wall ask for God's and the Holy Mother's help for us and those close to us. That, too, had scared me. The old man was so serious, and at least once I thought I could see a tear in the corner of his eye.

I knew the trip to town and back would take the old man at least three hours. To pass the time, I though I could get started with some of my morning chores and so went out to fetch water from the old well closer to the boat yard's old buildings. This is where all the water the boat yard's workers had used had came from, the old man had told me. It had been hard work in the summer, and so at times there would have been a long line of sweaty men next to the well, queing for water to drink and also sometimes to pour over their heads.

Now, though, no soul could be seen around the well, with the mist rising from the lake still sticking to the lower parts of the island like a shroud.

As I started pumping water to the jug I had brought along, a sound to the direction of the old main building startled me. I was relieved to see it was just an owl, swooping out from below the roof of the big building, most likely on the night's last outing to find a mouse or a field vole for breakfast. I took the jug to the cabin and then returned to fill up another one.

Now I could not get my eyes off the main building. If the owl could get in and out without any trouble, so could I... Sure, I had promised the old man, and had held on to that promise for over two months now. But he would be gone for at least two hours more... He would never know, I assured myself.

And so I left the jug next to the old well and started walking towards the old main building, looming behind the pines and firs, surrounded by white morning mist.


...


My great aunt was a lot more strict than my mother had been but otherwise she was a sweet old lady. A couple of years junior to her brother Aleksanteri, Sanni Pettersson née Väärä was the widow of a sea captain who had sailed big windjammers on all the world's oceans, and her home was full of mementos from all around the world, or so it seemed to me.

Even with her trying her best to look after me, I found myself drifting away from her, spending more time with the boys from my school and getting up to all kinds of mischief. At age 16 I would drink my first glass of cheap brandy, in secret with some of my mates. After that, alcohol would become a defining feature of my life.

My great aunt tried to keep me in the straight and narrow, and make me go to school so I could get a decent education. Me, I had very poor motivation for all that. I would rather hang out at the docks, to see all the exotic ships there, the Finland-America Line ships and the Polish freighters and all that.

At age 17, then, I ran from home after one night of heated words with old Sanni Pettersson and found employment on the S/S Mercator, bound for America.




Six: In Dark Light


The cellar was bigger than I remembered, rather incongruously so. There were several storerooms with various machine parts and some containing wooden boards and coils of rotting rope. With only the oil lamp lighting my way now after the flashlights' batteries had given up, the shadows kept dancing on the walls, making me feel like there was almost imperceptible movement in the corners of my field of vision, like someone or something following me very carefully but withdrawing back to the shadows if I looked directly at it.

As I walked along the corridor I felt I was getting closer. I almost tripped on a big capstan, looking like something from a bigger ship than was ever built here, suddenly remembering the same from all those years ago. It would be right from here. Right, and then left. And that would be the place.



...


Carefully I crept into the large wooden building, through a door I managed to get open.. All was still and quiet. The summer morning was getting lighter all the time, and some light was filtering into the big hall through windows high up on the walls. When the boats were built here, the big doors up front towards the slipway and the piers would have been open, the old man had told me, and it would have been a lot easier to see inside.

It was very exciting to explore the building, partly perhaps because my grandfather had forbidden it. There were half-finished boats in the hall, and pieces of wood all around, and parts of engines. I nearly tripped on a wooden board, and crept along more carefully after that. On the left side of the hall there was a hut with large glass windows, like building in a building, and I thought I should check that out. The door was locked, but the big old key was in the lock. It still took me some strength to turn it and enter.

The hut was an office of sorts. There were a couple of writing desks there, and shelves with drawings and plans for motor and sailing boats there. The old almanac on the wall said April 1918. I went through some of the boat plans, which I thought were beautiful. Most of them had the name of the yard's main designer, a man called Sahlberg on them.

A deep coat of dust covered everything, making it seem like even my grandfather had not visited the office for the last 29 years or more. I opened a large book on one of the desks – it turned out to be a ledger of sorts, containing lists of the boat yard's workers from each month it had been in operation, beginning in 1903. Curious about the last times of the yard, I turned it to the final page containing a few lines in that precise handwriting. April 1918, it said, like the almanac. The last page was a list of carpenters, it seemed, in no particular order I could discern. Aaro Kujansuu, Väinö Korhonen, Evald Auvinen, Matti Mattila, Antero Mäki, Frans Jauhiainen, Juhani Stark, Antti Suomalainen, I read. Three of the names, Korhonen, Mattila and Stark, had been overlined with red ink. Maybe they had been laid off, I thought.

Straightening my back I nearly bumped my head on something, which turned out to be an old oil lamp hanging from one of the beams in the office hut's ceiling. To think it had been three decades since anyone had last lighted up that lamp... The thought of fire made my think of coffee, and that in turn led to the thought that my grandfather's return would be closer all the time... I got out of the office and started across the hall to trace my steps back to the old well.

Glancing to my right, I saw the steps leading down to the cellars. A single shaft of morning light from the big windows above illuminated a part of a railing and the steps, and there, obviously, some of the dust had been wiped away by the touch of a hand and feet. It was like fate itself revealing me the way to go. Someone had been continually going down the steps here, I thought. That someone could have only been my grandfather. Again abandoning caution, I peered down the stairs and saw a door in the gloom, a bit ajar.

It could not hurt me to take a quick look behind the door, I though, taking the first step down the stairs.


...


The former railway official sat heavily down in the freight carriage's rough wooden floor after helping the woman up first. He had managed to convince a colleague he barely knew to let him take the two grimy refugees along with him aboard the train getting ready to leave the Terijoki railyard. The thin, exhausted horse he had left with the young railwayman, exchanging it and the carriage to a couple of loaves of bread and a bit of butter and salted meat. He was not sure which one of them won and which lost in the bargain.

The freight carriage was a far cry from anything any of them three had been accustomed to before the civil war, the former station inspector thought as he looked at the man and woman sitting opposite in the dim light, the silent, confused man in his scruffy full beard and the woman with a seemingly permanent pained expression on her face. At least she wasn't crying again. To think of the luxury the Bolshevik demons, that scum of the earth, were now getting used to in the imperial capital, the man thought. It surely was a world turned upside down.

The man must have dozed off for a good while ago, because he suddenly came to when the carriage jerked to a violent halt. He fumbled with his hand and was relieved to find out that his stolen rifle was still beside him, covered by a canvas sack. It was darker, now, and it was all quiet outside the carriage. Slowly, carefully, the man in the tattered uniform opened the door a little and peered outside. It was another railyard, this one with a view towards a lake. The man spotted the train guard, an armed man with a white armband walking by the side of the tracks. The tall man stepped out and streched his back, silently calling out to the man who knew they had been in the carriage and had reluctantly looked the other way.


- Hey”, he partly whispered, partly mumbled, ”where are we?”

- Lappeenranta”, the armed man said, ”the end of the line”.

It would be far enough from the border, the tall man decided. He woke up his travelling companions. The bearded man wouldn't want to move at all, he had settled into a sort of dark fugue these last days. Once he opened his eyes, he did follow the woman wordlessly like a sort of a poorly oiled, sluggish and erratic automaton.

The late July night smelled of wet grass and old pine needles as they trundled out past the silent railway station, the two men working with the wheezing railway engine paying them little heed. You saw a lot of sorry refugees these days, after all.

After walking a while on the road along the lake's edge, the former station inspector was becoming all the more desperate. Their pace of progress was slowing to a crawl; the woman was obviously in pain and the man seemed to have a tendency to wander off in the wrong direction if he wasn't constantly supervised. The tall man, exhausted himself but still he most functional human being among the sorry trio scanned the summer night around him for anything to help them.

His prayers were answered when a lone young man in a grey militia uniform appeared on the road, riding a worn-sounding bicycle. The tall man raised his hand and bid the apprehensive man to stop.


- Good evening there, soldier”, he said, now seeing the militiaman was a smooth-faced youth, barely 18 if that.

- Please help a weary traveller and point us to the direction of the most trustworthy, ranking White official in the surroundings.”

The youth looked at the filthy, ragged threesome silently for a while. The former railway bureaucrat thought that maybe some of his word choices had sounded off to him. His Finnish had already managed to get a bit rusty after only two years in Russia.

The young man, holding on to his bicycle, pointed back towards the way he came from.


- I reckon that would be.. the judge.”

His eyes lingering in the hopeless trio, he seemed to make a decision.


- Come on then, I'll take you there”, he said, turning his bicycle around.


...


On and on I crept along the dark corridor, my heart pounding in my chest. I was at once afraid and dying to find out what there was in the cellars my grandfather would keep visiting, perhaps every night. After almost hitting my foot to an impossibly large old capstan, I thought I could see a faint bit of light in front of me. Following this inkling of light I turned first right and then left... and then I saw the door. The light shining from the cracks around it made it seem like a portal to another world. Very carefully and silently, I sneaked to the door and pushed the handle.

The door opened smoothly and silently, revealing what was, all things considered, a very comfortable-looking and surprisingly large room. There was a oil lamp providing light, a large table with books and papers strewn on top of it and two chairs around it and some pictures and something like a tapestry on the walls, too. To be in a dilapitated cellar below an abandoned old industrial building, the room was almost absurdly homely.

As I stepped towards the table to see the books more clearly, I was shocked to hear a feeble sound to my left, a muffled cough.

Quickly turning my panicky gaze towards the sound, my eyes only now registered something like an alcove in the shadow behind a bookcase, and a modest bed in the alcove.

There was a man on the bed, and he turned his head to look at me.


...


August Palosaari sat at his desk, burning the midnight oil and finishing some of his correspondence. The local Civil Guards headquarters was otherwise silent at this hour, leaving the bald man in a simple grey uniform as the only man working, as on so many other nights. His fellow Civil Guard officials called him a fiend for work. He took it as high praise. Thankfully now he was already finishing for the night when the knock on the door interrupted him.

- Enter”, he snapped with a strong voice, to see a young militiaman enter the room, abashed.

- I am sorry to disturb your work, your honour...”

- Ahonius? What the deuce? I thought you left for the night!”, the judge boomed, in truth more surprised than annoyed.

Young Ahonius was not the only one of the men working here who was afraid to raise Judge Palosaari's ire by interrupting him in his work. Not only was the bald man easily angered, but he also was one of the most feared men in Lappeenranta, especially among those in the political left. As the leader of a White military tribunal, during and after the recent war, this man had personally sentenced hundreds of revolutionaries to death by firing squad.

Palosaari had studied law at university, but before the war he had not worked as a lawyer or a judge – he was, first and foremost, a merchant, a financier and a local polician. But when the Fatherland had called, he had gladly taken up service in the military tribunal.

The conservative man thought of himself as a tool of higher justice. In times of chaos and lawlessness, in times of violence and rebellion against the established order, in times like these – someone had to make sure justice was carried out. And it had to be a harsh and a purifying sort of justice. Otherwise, how would civilized society stand against the darkness and uncertainty threatening it all around?


- Ahem, your honour”, Ahonius said in an unsure voice, ”I have people here who want to see you.”



Seven: Watch Over Me


The judge stared at the three visitors in his office and tried to wrap his head around it all. All the power you get from holding the life and death of what in the final accounting might be an even somewhat significant number of terminally guilty Red traitors on the palm of your hand was nothing, nothing in comparison to the power and influence that now could be at his very fingertips through these people. With a blank, noncommittal expression the man had perfected at a twoscore or more trials for high treason and rebellion against the legal government on his face, August Palosaari was in fact feverishly thinking what his next move would be.

Finally he got it.

" - I have a very safe place for you to hide out for a little while", he said to the trio in front of him, looking shrewd and conspiratorial.

" - Come now, we have no time to waste", he said, strapping his Parabellum pistol to his waist and making for the door.

After a yet another slow walk in the dark, the judge leading the way and the former railway official bringing up the rear to stop the man in front of him becoming a straggler this late in the march, they reached the boat. And after a relatively short voyage through the waters of the lake under the cover of darkness, they arrived at the place the bald man had talked about.

" -There it is, my island!", he said, nodding towards the dark mass of land looming in front of them.

Formerly called Ryssänsaari because of the Russian soldiers who had camped out on the island and used it as a base for violent raids of the surrouding countryside during the Great Northern War, it was now known as Palosaari after the name of the boat yard the judge's grandfather, Gustaf, had established on it during the Crimean War in 1854. The Palosaari family no longer owned the company entirely, and more pertinently the company itself was not really functioning anymore since a few months ago. The island was abandoned, the judge told the tall man sitting next to him on the boat.

" - I'll make you the island's groundskeeper for the small while you'll be here, to be on the level and to stop people wondering why you live here and why you go by boat between the town and the island" , he said, feeling inspired by the cover story he had just came up with.

The former station manager nodded in agreement. It seemed like a workable temporary solution. In his heart, he was feeling glad and thanking God for leading him to this man who seemed to understand what he and the two refugees he brought along with him needed.

The boat was tied at the jetty, next to another one at the shore. The judge and the tall man helped the wounded, tired, confused couple up to the jetty and to dry land again. Together, they walked up to the elegant villa.

" - Get settled in this building", the judge instructed the tall man.

" - You'll find everything you need inside. I'll come back tomorrow with a doctor who can keep our secret and we'll start putting things right."

On the villa's veranda, the former station inspector thanked the judge and shook his cold but surprisingly strong hand. The judge looked back at his relieved, dirty face with the same blank, noncommittal expression as before on his own.

Very carefully, a scared, lonely man watched the dark figures of four people standing by the villa and tried to control his chattering teeth in the chilly night. Standing still in one of the buildings in the boat yard area, he squeezed an old, small caliber revolver in his shaking hand.



...

First I thought the man on the bed was my grandfather. He had a similar, bushy grey beard and his clothes seemed similarly old-fashioned. But when I walked closer to the old, no, ancient man who kept mumbling something, I noticed he was much thinner than my grandfather. His eyes were set deep in their sockets. Close up, his beard and hair looked more white than grey, too.

As I got closer to the man who now looked utterly harmless, a kindly elderly figure who smiled confusedly at me. I was now embarrassed that he had scared me at first. Clearly this man represented no threat to me at all. The look in his eyes was piercing, feverish. He had a sickly smell about him.

" - Malenki maltsik...", the man said to me in a weak voice. I could not understand the words. He reached out with his hand, and without thinking I took it in my hand and squeezed. The man's hand felt so weak and light, his skin like parchment.

Weakly, he pulled me closer, smiling, and quietly whispered a single, short word into my ear. It did not make much sense to me, either.

Not until much later.

Then he was again overcome with that feeble, muffled but hacking cough. On a whim, I put my hand on his forehead. It was hot, as if he was burning up.

It would prove to be the last of the fire he had left inside him. As I sat there next to the weak, ancient man, holding on to his hand, I could feel him drifting away from me.

The man was dying.

While I was sitting there, listening to the man breathe laborously and from time to time succumb to another coughing fit, my grandfather sat impatiently in the boat, sweaty from hurrying to the pharmacy, trying to coax as much power from the old engine as possible. I can just imagine him sitting hunched at the stern of the boat. When I think of it, I always envision a lazy ringed seal watching over him from a nearby skerry, with a benevolent, understanding smile, only moving its plump body and slipping into the waves after the boat has passed it.

When he finally did barge into the room below the old boat yard's floor, his heavy footsteps echoing in the corridor for what seemed like minutes before he actually arrived, he was so surprised to find me in the room that he dropped or rather threw the bag he was carrying on the floor. Confused and angry, he looked at me accusingly.

”- Konsta”, the old man said to me, ”you promised!”

The sudden, crushing guilt I felt for betraying my grandfather's trust was only overshadowed by my worry about the ancient man.
”- I am sorry, grandfather”, I said quietly, looking down at the rug covering the old wooden floor.

The old man, suddenly deflated, picked up the bag containing, I was now sure, some medicine for the white-bearded man.

”- How is he?”, the tall, bearded man asked.

Only now, tears started filling my eyes. Only now I let go of the ancient man's withered hand.

”- I think he is dead. I am sorry, grandfather, I am so sorry!”

The tall, bearded man walked to the bed and looked closely at the silent figure lying there in the shadow. He sighed, or rather grunted.

Then he took me into a bear-like embrace.

...


All through my lost years at sea, during the long, the cold weeks on a freighter's deck, in the brief embrace of a Rio de Janeiro prostitute, all along the nights spent high in the coffee shops of Amsterdam or plastered out of my mind on cheap brandy in a series of Cape Town dives, and later, as a factory worker in Sweden, through the week-long drunken benders that finally cost me my job, the memory of that day had remained with me, to resurface at unexpected times. But in the last few years, through my torrid marriage with Nina in Linköping, it had started to acquire a dream-like quality. It got to the point where I could not say if the memory was from a real-life event or just a very vidid dream a troubled child's mind had conjured up for him.

After Nina had left me and taken the boys (and I guess I could not blame her, not after how I had treated her), my interest into the memory I couldn't quite pin down had grown into an obsession. And so it was that one hung-over morning in Stockholm in October 1977 that I had stolen some money from a passed-out drinking buddy's wallet and bought a cheap ferry ticket to Finland.

Now, standing in the surprisingly big, dark room in the bowels of the Palosaari boat yard's old main building, with an autumn storm raging out over Lake Saimaa, I saw that it had all been real. For in the flickering light of the old oil lamp I could see a still figure on the bed, the dead body of the ancient white-haired man, lying there like in state, still partly under the same old sheet the tall, bearded man had covered him with that day.

I sunk to my knees and prayed. Around me, the shadows kept on dancing on the walls.




Eight: Red and Black


Judge Palosaari did not sleep that night. In fact right now the nights he actually slept through were very few and far in between. And it wasn't because he liked to work in the nighttime, like he would have everyone believe – the truth was, he didn't dare sleep, because of the nightmares. The dead rebels and traitors haunted him every time he closed his eyes.

And so he didn't sleep. The help it bought him was only temporary, for now he spent also his waking hours obsessing about Bolshevik plots against Finland and against his own self. He knew that by now he was one of the Reds' main enemies in Lappeenranta – surely they were working tirelessly to bring about his downfall. He surrounded himself with armed men to avoid assassins creeping behind him in the dead of night, and he kept his Parabellum loaded and never far from his side what ever he did.

The next day was a blur to him. He made many important decisions, of this he was sure, and had a number of meetings, including with the commandant of the detention camp for the Red prisoners in the old Lappeenranta fortress, Tammelin, and his colleague Judge Tapanainen. The three men agreed that the trials of treason should continue unabated. There still were almost 3000 Red beasts at the camp, according to the recent estimates, and certainly those most dangerous of them should be rooted out and destroyed – lest the rotten core of the revolution be preserved to later give a new rise to the vile disease of Communism in Finland.

The work never seemed to end. Someone had to oversee all the arrangements, the timetables for the tribunals, the executions, the mass burials. It was tedious as much as it was necessary.

In the evening, Palosaari made some excuse to leave early (early for him, that was), fetched young Doctor Sahlberg and boarded the boat. The doctor had only recently opened his practice in the town, and he needed support. The judge was ready to provide it, to an old family friend. After all, he had employed Sahlberg's father at the boat yard, and in a rather good position at that.


- What ever you see at the island”, the judge told the young man in a three-piece suit, with round spectacles dangling on his nose, ”you will never tell a soul about it.”

The doctor had been only too eager to agree to that. He knew that this man could destroy him, as well as make his life a lot easier, through his contacts and, he suspected, his still substantial family fortune.

When the boat reached the island, it was again starting to get dark. The doctor made his way to the villa, to examine the Russian couple. The older man opted to sit down next the jetty to wait, and found it actually quite relaxing here. The last rays of the setting sun glittered on the lake's silent waters, and his eyelids kept getting heavier.

Suddenly a cracking sound woke him up.

Just a few steps away, he saw a rather unkempt man approaching the boat, with a gun in his hand. Almost simultaneously, the man saw him, too – from the direction he had approached the jetty, the judge's position had been obscured by a boulder.

The judge realized he knew the man.


- What the hell... Jauhiainen!”

He was a carpenter who had worked at the island. Before the rebellion had started... Before he had joined the Reds and betrayed the trust of Palosaari and the nation both.

The judge scrambled to get up and to pull his pistol. He was too slow. The Red pulled the trigger, and suddenly the judge lost his footing. Foggily, he realized the man must have hit him.

Jauhiainen pulled the trigger again, but now there was no bang. The cartridge must have been a dud, the judge rationalized later.


- Put the gun down”, said a stern, tired voice.

A little way up the hill, the former station inspector was aiming his military-issue rifle at the young Red deserter who had come to the island to hide – though neither the tall man or the judge would have known that.

Seeing August Palosaari propping himself up with his left hand and pulling out his Parabellum, the young man saw his position was hopeless. He dropped his revolver, which slid down to the water below.



...


” - Konsta”, my grandfather said.

” - He was an old man, it was his time to go.”

My eyes still full of tears I tried to nod.

” - Yes, grandfather”, I said weakly.

After the tears had cleared away so that I could see again, I noticed a photograph on the wall next to the bed. A bearded man in a uniform sat there, with a woman I could only assume was his wife, surrounded with four young women. A young boy sat at his feet, dressed as a sailor.

” - Is it him in the photo?”, I asked.

” - Yes, that is him. He was a very important man, once. But then came the war and the revolution, and he lost his position. And then, the Devil made the Communists attack him and his family, to kill him”, the tall, bearded man said, looking at the dead man lying on the bed.

” - What happened then, grandfather?”

” - A miracle. They tried to kill him, but God would not allow it. God saved him, you see, and then he sent me and my comrades to bring him to safety, through a war-torn land Devil, the King of Lies himself had grasped with his bloody claws. A land that still bows down to the Old Satan, never mind the lofty, utopian ideals its leaders claim to have and uphold. It is all the machinations of the Fallen One. Keeping this man and his legacy safe was the task God gave me, his humble servant. I have tried to be worthy of that task, and you know I ask His guidance every day. All through my years on this island, I have tried to keep this man safe. I am sorry I could not tell it to you before, but I thought you were too young to understand.”

” - What about his wife and children?”, I asked, looking at the photo.

” - Dead. Everyone you see in the picture died a long ago, save this man who once was the leader of the great Russian Empire.”

It didn't seem very fair, and I told my grandfather as much.


With a red stain spreading on his left trouser leg, the judge felt a shiver go through his body. Even here, he thought, even here the Red traitors had spread their dirty tentacles! Even here, their assassins stood ready to murder him!

- Please, Director”, the young man in simple working man's clothes pleaded, ”I didn't mean anything by it! I was just hiding here, not to be killed by the butchers! I didn't mean to...”

The man has seen everything, he had seen the man and woman who came to the island, the judge realized. He looked at the tall man who still aimed his rifle at Jauhiainen.


- Easy, now”, he said to the young carpenter, ”come closer!”

Slowly, the man started walking towards him, still pleading.


- Just let me go back to the mainland, Mister Palosaari! I am sorry for what just now... I am sorry!”

- That is close enough”, Judge Palosaari said.

- Frans Jauhiainen”, he boomed, his voice much stronger now, ”you are hereby sentenced to death for treason against the Finnish state and nation!”

The man stared at him incredulously, his eyes wide.


- The sentence shall be carried out immediately”, the judge boomed, lifted his pistol and shot the man twice at point blank range.

As the Red deserter slumped to the ground, quite dead, the judge turned to the tall man who had frozen in place.


- I said I would protect you three”, Judge Palosaari said, ”let what just happened be proof that I always keep my word!”

After tying a makeshift bandage on his leg, the tall man helped the judge up the slope to the villa's veranda, and then fetched the doctor to come and see his wound, too. The young carpenter the former station inspector would bury on the island the next day.

The young doctor looked shocked when he came out of the building, so much that seeing the unexpected wound on August Palosaari's leg didn't seem to have much of an effect on him.

The judge looked at him questioningly.


- Well, how are they?”

The doctor stood there his mouth slightly open for a moment, and then spoke up.


- They'll both live. It is nothing short of a miracle, though. They both have wounds that should have put them to a much worse condition by now – to be frank, I can't really explain why at least one of them is not struggling for their very life at this very moment...”

The tall man crossed himself and the doctor again grew silent for a while.

It was dark now, and only the light in the fireplace and a few candles inside the villa illuminated the three men on the veranda.


- But that is not all”, the doctor said.

- What do you mean”, asked the judge, ”what else could there be?”

- The woman, the woman...”, the young doctor said, stammering.

- The woman is at least five months pregnant.”

The two men stared at him, dumbstruck.


- And right now my medical opinion is that provided she is given the right care, I can't see why she couldn't carry the baby to full term.”



Nine: December Stars


As the fall of 1918 wore on and the first snow brought the promise of winter to Lappeenranta, too, Judge Palosaari was becoming increasingly erratic. He would snap at his colleagues for any minor thing and easily descend into rage over disagreements. His duel with Frans Jauhiainen had left him ever more convinced that a vast Red conspiracy surrounded him, soon ready to pounce and attack both him and other authority figures in the young Finnish republic to sow chaos and to rekindle the revolution in the country. Palosaari was somewhat pro-German and an ardent supporter of the scheme to make Friedrich Karl of Hessen the king of Finland. He was worried over German conduct in the Great War, though, and the rumours he heard of revolution taking over the German Empire, too, definitely made things worse for his state of mind. Gradually, even Palosaari's most closest allies and collaborators started to see him as a liability, especially when the news leaked out that the judge had secretly tried to make contact with representatives of Russian White leaders, especially Nikolai Yudenich. Given the general anti-Russian feelings prevalent in Finland at the time, these news did make many people suspicious of the judge's actions.

Doctor Sahlberg was worried about the judge. Correctly diagnosing a lot of the judge's odd behaviour being heavily influenced by his insomnia and lack of sleep, he prescribed the man sleeping pills and convinced Palosaari's wife, Miina, to make sure his husband took a pill before going to bed. Initially, the plan seemed like a success – until the young doctor heard Mrs. Palosaari tell him that even if the judge now did sleep, he had started to walk in his sleep. To the doctor that seemed like a minor inconvenience, though – at least in daytime the bald man seemed to be becoming more balanced and collected.

All through the late summer and fall, Doctor Sahlberg had visited the island periodically to attend to the Russian woman. Her pregnancy seemed to suffer from few complications – the biggest problems were that the prospective mother's age was too high for comfort, her depressed state of mind and the fact that the Russian man was alternating between bouts of depression and hopelessness and brief periods of positive lucidity when he would actively plan the couple's future. The prospect of soon seeing his child born seemed to be an important thing in keeping the man's spirits up at least somewhat.

In November, since the news of the armistice in the West and Emperor Wilhelm's abdication reached Finland, the judge had contacted the Finnish military leadership to get a chance to meet General Mannerheim himself – the judge had decided that he would have to share his secret with the General, who the rumours said was about to be named the Regent of Finland if the plans of Friedrich Karl's ascension to the throne would now be dashed. The White General was very busy, however, and probably the judge's as of recently rather sketchy reputation did not help his prospects. Finally, in early December, Palosaari got word that should he come to the capital, the General would meet him to discuss his his ill-defined, mysterious ”news of national importance”.

On December 3rd, then, Judge Palosaari boarded the train to the nation's capital, his state of mind more positive than in months. As the man in a fur hat and a heavy overcoat stepped down on the platform on the Helsinki railway station, he could already imagine what Mannerheim's astonished face would look like when he told the former Tsarist General that Nikolai AlexandrovichRomanov, the former Emperor and Autocrat of All the Russias, was still alive with his wife, safely in Finland, and would soon have a child, too.

The mere thought made August Johannes Palosaari's hard face melt into a delighted smile.



...


My grandfather kept his hand around my shoulders when we walked out from the room below the old boat yard's main building, leaving the dead white-haired man lying there, below a sheet my grandfather had carefully covered him with.

” - We'll need to give him a proper burial”, the tall, bearded man said.

” - But first, we need to eat to get our strength up, what,” he said squeezing me slightly and leading me out of the building.

Outside, the sun was already high in the sky. It was sunny and warm, but a strong wind had risen and it was blowing clouds over us – they seemed to float like big, ethereal tall ships on the top of hour heads. If I wasn't so sad over the fate of the ancient man, it would have probably seemed very impressive to me. My grandfather scanned the horizon with his keen eyes, shaking his head.

” - There might be a storm coming”, he said, and sure enough, it seemed a wall of dark clouds had gathered on the eastern part of the sky.

” - We need to hurry if we are to bury him today. I know it is not according to tradition to bury him so soon already, but considering nobody else will be coming to the funeral, I guess the Father Above might forgive us.”

I glanced at his face to see if he was jesting, but his expression was dead serious.

Past the old well we walked and I picked up the jug I had left there. When we arrived closer to the cabin, my grandfather suddenly stopped and seemed to just stare at the jetty, towards which we had a great view here from higher ground.

” - Grandfather, what is...”, I started, but the old man shushed me.

” - Konsta, be quiet now. Look at the jetty!”

He had immediately noticed what I only saw now: apart from his old but well-maintained motor boat, there was now also another boat tied up at the jetty! It was a sorry-looking thing, but it floated and had a reasonably new outboard motor attached to its stern.

More silently, now, we walked towards the cabin, and when we had a clear view of the building, we suddenly heard noise inside, like something shattering on the floor. I got scared and froze to place, dropping the jug in my hands. The water poured on the mossy ground. My old grandfather seemed to just become angry at this apparent trespass.

” - Stay here”, he whispered to me in a hard voice, ”I need to go and see who has broken into my home.”

Before I had the chance to say anything, off he went, stalking carefully towards the building, while I stood there unthinkingly, picking up the jug in my hand. At least outside the building, or anywhere around, nobody stirred. It seemed that anyone and everyone who arrived with the boat would be inside the old villa.

As my grandfather opened the door and stepped in, I heard a brief, loud exhange of words. I could not make out the exact content of it, but it seemed obvious just one male voice was arguing with the old man – a voice I could recognize, to my surprise.

Despite my grandfather's words, I realized my feet were now taking me towards the wooden building. The argument between the two voices continued and now I could hear what they were saying.

” - ... And for long last, tell me what you did to my father!”, the voice I had heard before said, a bit slurred like the man behind it would have been drinking.

” - My mother and aunt knew he came to the island to hide in 1918. Many of his comrades had been killed by the bloody butchers, and he did not want to end up like them...”

Silently, I stepped on the veranda and walked closer to the door.

” - ...And then you arrived here, with that old monster Palosaari hiring you to watch over his precious island. My father was never heard from again! You killed him, perhaps with this very rifle, didn't you?”

I now arrived to the living room to see the room even more thrashed up as it was in the morning, with papers, books and various broken things all aroun. The candle I had lit up in the early morning was still burning on the table, and a man was pointing my grandfather with the old Russian military rifle. He was the man I had seen at the store on mainland! Kalle Jauhiainen, his name had been. He was clearly inebriated and almost shouted now, waving the old rifle slightly.

” - Ah, there's your precious grandson now! How appropriate, isn't it, Väärä? What if I shoot him first, to make up for you killing my father. An eye for an eye, right, isn't that what you religious kooks tend to preach about?”

Aleksanteri Väärä glanced at me angrily and then again fixed his eyes at the drunken man.

” - You hurt the boy anyway at all, you vile Bolshevik, and I'll make sure that will be the last thing you ever do!”, he said with a menacing drawl.

” - Please put the gun down, Mr. Jauhiainen”, I remember saying, probably quite weakly because I was so, so scared now.

I think my miserable voice had an effect on him as he now looked at me and, unsure, lowered the rifle somewhat. He opened his mouth to say something to me – and while he was destracted, my old grandfather launched himself at him! The tall man might be a lot older than Jauhiainen, but he had a lot more mass in him. Now it looked to me like the old man would manage to tackle Kalle Jauhiainen easily to to floor.

But at the last moment, the drunken man managed to turn his rifle towards the old man and squeeze the trigger.

Mere fractions of a second later from the sound of the gunshot, my grandfather was on the man and they were on the floor, struggling for the rifle. I just stood there, again frozen, my ears ringing with the sound of the shot, not knowing what to do. As it looked like Jauhiainen was getting the best of the old man, who the bullet had seemed to hit and to slow down, but not dangerously so, I grabbed the empty jug and, holding it aloft, took a few quick steps towards the wrestling men. I aimed the jug at Jauhiainen's head, but stumbled at the last moment and landed on the wooden table instead, knocking over the candle in the process.

The flame easily caught in the stacks of papers and books on and around the table.

Horrified, I looked at the spreading flames as the men continued their struggle on the floor. As the flames engulfed the dusty old drapes flanking the largish windows, I grabbed the vessel containing all the water I could find and emptied it to the flames. It did not help a bit – the water was too little, too late.

I stepped back from the flames, seeing my grandfather had finally managed to get a hold of the rifle, and now he struck the younger man with its butt, grimacing from pain as he did so. Through tears that were again welling up in my eyes I saw him strike the man again and again until Jauhiainen did not move anymore, his head a bloody mess. Then my grandfather dropped to the ground next to his body, with a pained look on his face, panting heavily.

As the flames had now climbed up the walls and spread to the floor, I tried to get closer to my grandfather, but the fire was too hot and I had to step back. Behind what I remember as a wall of flames, I saw my grandfather, who looked at me and tried to shout over the sound of fire. It came out as a croak.

” - Get out, Konsta! Go get help! Don't try to come to me – I am gone already. Go to the mainland!””

Absurdly, I remember him smiling at me from behind the flames.

” - Go with God, Konsta”, my dying grandfather told me ”go with God and remember that you are very important, not only to me but to Him, too.”

Unable to withstand the heat and smoke anymore, I ran out of the building, and stopped only at the yard, coughing because of the smoke in my lungs.

I can't remember much of the following hours, but I eventually managed to get the old inboard motor working and took the boat towards the mainland, with the old villa burning ever so brightly behind me. The smoke from the fire spread to a large area around the island, carried by the strong wind as the storm front crept closer.

Not able to stop crying, I steered the boat towards the Mäkelä farm. Somehow, I remember thinking, somehow I could still save my grandfather if I only made it to the mainland fast enough. That thought kept me going even if at times I could not really see ahead for the tears in my eyes.

Finally I tied the boat up at the Mäkelä farm's jetty and sprinted towards the yard and the big red farm house behind some birch trees as fast as I could. Out of breath, tears streaking my cheeks dirty with dust and soot, I barged into the Mäkelä hall, to find the portly Mr. Mäkelä sitting at the large table with four more local farmers around it, one of them Juha Ahonius, with papers in front of them. At the head of the table, Mäkelä held a gavel aloft but stopped in place as I entered.

” - Mr. Mäkelä, Mr. Ahonius, please help me... and my grandfather”, I said, desperately.


...


Judge Palosaari had managed to score a room at the prestigious Hotel Kämp, until recently General von der Goltz's headquarters before the German Baltic Sea Division had now started leaving Helsinki. It was already night, and so he would make his bid to meet General Mannerheim in the morning. The judge had a snack in the hotel bar and settled down at the room to sleep. He noticed a strong smell of tobacco smoke in the room, courtesy of some German officer, and cracked open the window despite the chilly early December weather outside. Taking the sleeping pill Doctor Sahlberg had prescribed him with a small glass of water, he settled on the bed to get a good night's sleep.

At roughly 4.30 in the morning, three German soldiers arrived at Hotel Kämp to load some officers' luggage and Finnish mementos on a horse-drawn van to take down to the docks. In the dark, they saw something on the ground they first thought was bunch of old clothes. Checking closer, they were surprised to find it was a bald, 50-something man, apparently dead from a fall, in his underwear and tangled in one of Hotel Kämp's drapes. The men went to fetch the hotel's night porter, who then would alert the police.

Officially, Judge August Palosaari's death was determined to be caused by an unfortunate accident due to the man's habit of walking in his sleep. Unofficially, many of his allies and collaborators were sure the man was a victim of a left-wing conspiracy, like he had for long feared. The fact that only three days later, on December 6th, three Red would-be assassins tried to shoot General Mannerheim himself in what was clearly a Communist conspiracy against the leader of the Finnish (White) Army only seemed to enforce the theories about a Communist plot against Palosaari, too - the most common theory would be that he had wanted to warn Mannerheim of the plot but had been killed to stop him doing this. The night porter's connections to leftist relatives were made public in early 1919, the man was fired and would be continually harassed by the far right and the police for the next few years. It was never proved that he had anything to do with the judge's death, however, and in the minds of many, the death would remain for ever a mystery.

Meanwhile on the Palosaari island, the Russian woman had gone into labour. Doctor Sahlberg did his best to preserve the life of both the mother and the child, but in the end, even he could not do wonders. As the doctor swaddled the strong and apparently healthy, crying baby boy in clean linen, he could not stop the woman from bleeding to death in the bed where she had given birth. Alexandra Feodorovna, the former Empress Consort to the Emperor of All the Russias died in silence on that remote island, delivering her last child at the advanced age of 46.

His face ambivalent, his husband held his newborn son in his arms, looking intently into his eyes that seemed to shine like two stars lighting at least one small corner of the deep darkness he found himself in.

“ - Pjotr”, he said, “My son, you shall be called Pjotr.”


...


Praying to God on the rough wooden floor, with only the oil lamp for light in the deep darkness of the room where the nearly mummified body of the white-haired man still layed in, I could almost again hear my grandfather's footsteps closing in through the corridors behind me, but now as just a silent echo of the strong footsteps I remembered from 1947.

Just before he had arrived, the ancient man had pulled me closer and whispered one word into my ear.

“ - Pjotr”, I now said it aloud, and it seemed like the shadows in the room would soon start forming real, tangible shapes in my eyes.

“ - Pjotr Nikolaevich Romanov”, I suddenly heard an old man's precise voice say behind me. Confused, I turned around to see an old man in an impeccable suit, with heavy-rimmed glasses on his nose, looking at me almost tenderly.

“ - Pjotr Nikolaevich Romanov”, the man repeated, “your father, Konsta.”




Ten: Sic Transit


The death of Judge Palosaari and the subsequent attempt at General Mannerheim's life had a great effect on Aleksanteri Väärä and Doctor Pauli Sahlberg. While the former station inspector had been on the lookout for Red assassins all along, the doctor had by now started thinking that it was all just the judge's paranoia talking, nothing more. But now, now he was again coming around to believe they actually were in mortal danger. The Russian man was also greatly alarmed when he heard of the news of Palosaari's passing. Together, the three men started preparing a shelter of sorts for the man and his son, safely in the cellars of the old main building.

The tall man redoubled is efforts in patrolling the snowy island with his rifle. As ice now surrounded Palosaari, it would have been that much easier for murderous Bolsheviks to sneak up close to attack them. Christmas 1918 was thus a fearful time of the year on the island, especially as only two of the men could be there to look after themselves and the young child who they both agreed sorely missed a mother or any feminine touch at all.

The idea was Väärä's. One morning, he woke up, thinking of a dream he had seen. A handsome young man walked the streets of a big city. A man whose real name nobody knew. A man utterly unknown and safe from harm, smiling and humming to himself. That was the answer, the tall man understood. The way to protect the child from harm. He detailed his idea to the doctor, and then they both took it to the Russian man. After initially resisting the idea, finally he acquesced. At least the boy would be safe, even if he had to part from him – only temporarily, the doctor assured him.

On January 7th a tall man walked silently to the Lappeenranta railway station, carrying in his hands a small child wrapped warmly against the cold. There he met a woman two years his junior, with the same dark eyes as those of his brother.


- Aleksanteri”, she said, quickly embracing him, ”you have grown a beard. It suits you, I think.”

- Sanni”, the tall man said, ”I don't have much time. Please take the boy with you and promise you take good care of him. I know I can trust you, sister.”

Sanni Pettersson took the bundled-up baby boy in his arms.


- Oh, what a precious little boy! And those bright eyes, oh my”, she said, smiling.

- After Maria... passed, I can't look after him on my own”, Aleksanteri Väärä told his sister, ”I hope you understand how much I need your help”.

Sanni Pettersson had been very surprised to get his brother's letter. To be honest she had not known he was even still alive, having gotten caught up in the Russian Revolution and Civil War. And now he writes her, telling of his wife's death and the small child she left him with.

But, not having children herself, she was ready to help. The boy could keep her company when his husband, the sea captain, was away all those months. It would be no burden at all, she assured her tall, bearded brother.


- I promise I will take good care of little Petteri, of yes I will”, she cooed to the smiling baby.

As Aleksanteri Väärä stood there in the darkness of the snowy railway station, watching the train to Helsinki start slowly rolling away and then picking up speed, he asked God's forgiveness for lying to his only sister. But it was not a big lie, was it, he told himself. After all, his wife Maria had been pregnant, those long months ago, when the Red Russian beasts gunned her down on the small railway station north of Kazan.

It was not that big a lie.

His eyes lingering on the dull, metallic rails leading directly away from him Aleksanteri Väärä suddenly had a vision of life and history itself, being like a predetermined set of rails, leading from one's birth to his very last days. Upon birth, the Lord sets you on the rails, with a little help from your parents and loved ones, he thought. And after that, you will go where ever the rails take you. You might be just a passenger on this train of your life, without a chance other than where to get off it. Or you might be a train driver, the engineer, who can from time to time choose which tracks to take when you come across a switch. But even then, the options are limited, chosen by God Above, the Greatest Engineer of all.

For Aleksanteri Väärä, the vision-like thought came as a relief of sorts. God Himself looked over him, and with His help the former station inspector hoped he could stay to the true path He had chosen for him, without getting derailed by the forces of evil.



....



As I sat by a small side table, Mäkelä's oldest daughter, Johanna, brought me something to eat, with home-made nonalcoholic beer to wash the food down with. But first, she had helped me to wash my hands and face.

The men of the local temperance society's board had cut their meeting short, after hearing the news I brought with me, about Aleksanteri's and Kalle's fight and the fire at the island, and taken two boats towards the island forthwith. The volunteer fire brigade had been alerted, too. I was very thankful the men believed me and hoped against hope that they could do something to help my grandfather.

I had said nothing about the ancient man in the cellar.

After I finished the meal, Johanna took me to a small room in the back where a bed had been prepared for me in the meanwhile.

” - Konsta”, the young woman with a concerned face said, ”you can rest here while we wait for the men to come back. All right?”

I looked at the pretty but serious young woman, nodded and sat down on the bed. When Johanna Mäkelä left the room, I truly thought that I probably could not sleep, not right now. And so I put my head down to the feather-filled pillow mainly to humor the woman.

I was fast asleep in what must have been two minutes at the most.

I came to when I heard hushed voices from across the corridor. For a while oblivious about where I was, I was brought back to reality by what they were saying.

” -...Burnt to the ground. No point in sending the fire brigade...”

” -...Both dead, no word about it. There is no way they would be alive if they were inside the house when the ceiling collapsed...”

” -...Poor kid, it must be horrible for him...”

I got up from the bed, and walked towards the voices. When I got to the hall, I faced six men and one woman. I can still vividly remember the sad, serious faces they looked at me with, the wooden large table and a great big grandfather clock behind them.

After a brief silence, one of the men walked to me and tried a little smile.

” - Hello, Konsta. I am Doctor Sahlberg.”

We shook hands.

” - Let's sit down over there, why don't we?”

The doctor wore a crisp three-piece suit and had large glasses on his nose. His face was plain but pleasant enough.

” - Konsta, I am sorry but I must tell you that your grandfather has passed away...”

No, I thought, no.

” - He and Kalle Jauhiainen both got caught in the flames and neither managed to come out of the building...”

The doctor corrected the position of his glasses.

” - I am so sorry for your loss, son.”

He briefly took hold of my shoulder and then let go. Again, my eyes were filling with tears, even if I thought I was all cried out by now.

” - Tell you what”, the doctor said with an encouraging tone, ”what if I call your mother in... Helsinki was it, and organize for you a train ride home as soon as possible. You must miss your mother, and I am sure that if she knew what has just happened here she would be worried sick.”

And so it would pass. The doctor, a man in his early 50s, a bit older than the farmer Juha Ahonius, called my mother at Stockmann directly and told her what had taken place. While he organized for my train ticket home, in the next morning, the Mäkelä household's women took turns in trying to console me. Even Mr. Mäkelä himself clumsily tousled my hair and tried some words of consolation on me. The word soon got around, and even some neighbouring farmers came to pay their respects, which I did not feel helped me a bit. Later in the afternoon, a uniformed policeman went to the island with Ahonius and upon returning asked me some questions. He scribbled something on a notebook and I must assume a police report was written about the fire. I never did see one, though.

I slept that night at the Mäkelä farm.

In the morning, Doctor Sahlberg came to pick me up in his new American car. It was an impressive thing, shiny red in the morning light. Johanna Mäkelä had made me sandwiches to go. On the way to the station, the doctor told me that he had known my grandfather and that he had been a good, honest man if a bit set in his ways. The doctor again said how sorry he was, but reminded my that it was very good that I had not been hurt myself.

” - You have a long life ahead of you, Konsta", the man in his immaculate suit said, ”you will do and see a lot of things old Aleksanteri could only dream about.”

When we got to the station, the doctor suddenly took a large brown envelope out of his pocket and gave it to me.

” - I owed some money to old Aleksanteri. Please take this to your mother – let us say that it is a small part of your grandfather's inheritance, yes?”

Then he took me to the platform and helped me up to the train. I thanked him for his help.

” - You're welcome, Konsta. Take care, now, and don't forget to give the envelope to your mother. I wish all good things to you and your mother, now and in the future.”

There he stood, his hand raised in a salute as the train took off.

Some minutes into the journey I took the envelope out of my pocket and opened it gingerly. Inside was more money than I had ever seen in one place at a time.


...


At first I thought the old man was a figment of my imagination, standing there in the dancing shadows, a mournful smile on his spectacled face. It took some time, but finally I recognized the man I had not seen in 30 years.

Doctor Pauli Sahlberg had assumed an almost aristocratic air in his old age. He must have been over 80 now, but he seemed surprisingly fit and collected, the grey hair on his head elegantly groomed.


- I always thought you had been to this room with old Aleksanteri. You were good not to tell anybody about what you saw here, even after the fire. Your grandfather would have been proud of you had he known. And now when I suddenly heard, out of the blue, that a man by the name of Konsta Väärä had come to town and wanted to borrow a boat... Imagine my surprise and delight."

- My grandfather”, I said, my throat dry, ”do you mean Aleksanteri...”

The old doctor offered me his right hand, an ivory-handled cane in his left one.


- I mean your real grandfather, Nikolai Romanov. The former Emperor and Autocrat of All the Russias, etc, as his title went at the time.”

I did not take the hand he offered, instead helping myself up. My head was swimming.


- You are lying”, I said to the old doctor.

- I can assure you I am not”, Doctor Pauli Sahlberg told me with a straight face.

- I was here when your father was born, helping your grandmother with the delivery – your grandfather named the son Pjotr, and when the boy was sent to Sanni Pettersson to be anonymously raised, in utmost security, out of the reach of the Bolsheviks we thought were out to get us, Aleksanteri opted to call him Petteri, a near Finnish equivalent of the name. And so he grew up to become a Finnish boy, just like his son did after him.”

Incredulously, I stared at the elegant man. What if he
was telling the truth, I asked myself. Could this be the reason I had always felt myself an alien everywhere I went?

- Konsta”, the doctor said to me, ”or should I say Konstantin, now that you know the truth, what are you going to do about it?”

He sat down on an old chair, propping his cane against the wall.


- You are the direct male line descendant of the last Tsar of Russia.”

He paused for a moment.


- If you have been following the news at all, you know that the Soviet state is on its last legs. Soon, it will have lost all its so-called allies. Soon, the men who still cling to power in Moscow will lose it for good. What then, for Russia?”

He left the question float in the air for a moment, and then answered it himself.


- Russia deserves a good leader, after all the decades of Communist misrule. We can go and tell the press tomorrow that the grandson of Nicholas II of Russia is alive and well, that we have the former Tsar's and his wife's bones for evidence... And that there is a living witness – me – who can vouchsafe for these facts.”

In the flickering light of the old oil lamp, I could see the man smiling.


- It is what you were destined to do, Konsta. It is what old Aleksanteri Väärä worked for all his life, or so I believe.”

The old man paused again.


- Konsta... This is not just something I want. Nothing like that, in the big scheme of things, I am nothing. No, it is more, much more. It is your fate.”

I looked at the doctor, and then at the room in general, dimly lit by the flickering flame, with prowling shadows following the brief shafts of light all around us. Maybe the old man is right, I thought, maybe this is what I need – what everyone needs. Maybe this indeed is what I should do. Me, becoming Emperor Constantine of Russia...

And then I again saw the ancient man's mummified corpse in the corner, alone, dead and dried up in that abandoned cellar. What good did being the emperor ever bring that man, I now asked myself, that poor man who was my true grandfather and who lost his entire family and his entire life because of who he was, a symbol as much as he was the leader of a great nation.

That destiny, that burden was not for me. I now thought I understood this was why Aleksanteri Väärä had sent the baby boy, my father, away. He had wanted to change his fate. This, what the old doctor expected of me, this was not my path.

And so, violently, I rejected all of it.


- Father, if you are willing, let this cup pass from me”, I mumbled as I picked up the oil lamp and hurled it to the table, overflowing with papers and books. The lamp broke, spreading burning oil all around the room. It was suddenly much warmer and brighter.

Outside, the autumn storm had started hitting the island with all its force. As the fire in the room spread, I could hear thunder roaring above us.

In the chair by the door, the old doctor looked at me, with pure horror in his eyes.




Eleven: In The Eye of the Storm


As 1919 dragged on and turned into 1920, the world seemed to be getting crazier all around. The civil war in Russia would not stop, and Germany was also in chaos. White nationalists fought Communists in the Baltic states and in Poland. Even in Sweden Communist protestors wreaked havoc and in Finland, the Bolsheviks who had escaped across the border tried to foment new rebellion with underground action.

On Palosaari island, Aleksanteri Väärä and Pauli Sahlberg were worried about the Russian man. He seemed to be losing his mind, sometimes wandering around and telling Väärä wild, inconsistent stories. Once the tall man found him on the shore, waving to a passing ship and shouting he had been kidnapped by Communists. Only with great effort Väärä managed to convince him he was safe, and there were no Communists anywhere around. After that, he and the doctor agreed the man should be moved to the shelter below the boat yard. The tall, bearded man tried to make the room as cozy and habitable as possible.

On other days the Russian was so depressed he could barely move out from his bed, mumbling about his wife and children in Russian, his eyes in tears. When he was like this, the only thing that could console him was to remind him of his one living son. The former station inspector managed to get his sister to send them a photograph of young Petteri, and seeing it the first time made the Russian smile broadly.


- Pjotr, my precious little Pjotr”, the man would repeat, holding the photo tightly in his hand.

Doctor Sahlberg was growing ever more worried, and one day when he was sitting in the villa with Aleksanteri Väärä, he broached the subject of finding the former Russian emperor some help outside the island. The men had just had some coffee, and the tall man was sitting on a bench, methodically cleaning the Mosin-Nagant rifle.


- Aleksi”, the young doctor said, ”I think it would be better we get the man to a place where he can get some professional help. He is getting worse, and you must see it, too. Now, I know a clinic near Helsinki that would be perfect, and there is a doctor there I have seen many times and think I can trust...”

Aleksanteri Väärä kept working on the rifle's barrel, his hands moving with practiced efficiency.


- It has been two years since you came to the island, after all. I think if we are careful and keep his identity hidden, we could safely take him to...”

- No”, said the tall, bearded man, not raising his eyes from the weapon.

- It is deadly out there”, he said, seeing his wife slowly falling down to the ground in his mind's eye, seeing the pile of dead and dying people where he had saved the Russian man and his wife. Seeing the judge shooting the young Communist operative on the island.

- Darkness is taking over the world, Pauli, and only here we can keep it away... It is too dangerous.”

The doctor stood up.


- Look here”, he said, ”what about the child? What about the future of the Romanov family?”

Putting the rifle together, and then picking up a single cartridge, gleaming in the light from an oil lamp, Aleksanteri loaded the bolt-action rifle.


- It... is... too... dangerous!”, he boomed, lifting the rifle and turning his furious eyes towards the doctor.

Shaken, Doctor Pauli Sahlberg walked out of the villa, never to take up the subject again.

What about the child, thought the tall man with the military rifle. What about the child, indeed.



...


I stumbled through the woods, like some cursed forest with the flames from the burning building coloring red the trees waving in the storm wind. I can't really remember how much it rained, but what I do remember is that the wind almost kept knocking me down and the lightnings came almost every two seconds, to be followed almost immediately with the roaring thunder.

I must have fallen down repeatedly before I made it to the jetty, after a nighmarish trek through the red-tinted island. I would need to get help, I kept saying to myself.

The boat was still tied to the jetty. On all fours as the ground itself seemed to shake, I scrambled across the treacherous wooden planks and reached down to the boat bobbing in the roiling water. This is where my bag was, I had remembered, and here I would find help. Fumbling about in the dark and hitting my knuckles painfully to the boat's bench my fingers finally found a metallic object. It was the pistol I had owned since I was almost stabbed to death in Rio de Janeiro in 1964. I took the pistol and another heavy object from the bag and very slowly made my way back towards solid ground.

The dark corridors below the old boat yard's main building had never seemed to end. I remember running on them for hours, whether or not that really was the case. I had had some heated words with the old doctor, and then, enraged, I had pushed him away from me. I would not dance to his tune, I shouted to him, I would not be bought like my lonely, poor mother.

And then I made to for the door, as the room was getting altogether too hot and the smoke made it impossible to see anything around me. Or at least almost anything – the image of the ancient man's dried up corpse in flames, the empty eye sockets in his skull looking at me intently has seared itself in my brain.

Sometimes, in darker dreams, it is old Doctor Sahlberg I see, on fire from head to toes, staring at me accusingly with a deadly grimace on his face.

After slipping on the wet stone but thankfully not dropping the things I was carrying, I made to the questionable shelter of an old lean-to halfway up to the ruins of the former Palosaari villa. Here I sat down on the ground, seeing the island illuminated by the still growing red flames and the bright white flashes of the lightnings. For a moment contemplating the small pistol, feeling surprisingly cold in my hands, I finally threw it down the hill.

That was not the help I needed. Gingerly, I reached for the other object I had retrieved from the boat, a big bottle of one-star cut brandy. I took a big swig from the bottle and looked out to the stormy lake. A warm feeling engulfed me. Things would be all right, I told myself as I kept drinking from the bottle I was now terribly thankful I had brought along.

After about one-third of the bottle was gone, a children's song came to me. I started humming it, first quietly, then more loudly.


- Granddad has an island”, I sang, ”it's his very own!”

I took another mouthful from the bottle.


- Granddad has an island, it's his very own! Uh-oh my granddad, not everyone has an island, but our own granddad – he has his very own!”, I shouted to the storm wind.

I could not stop myself laughing hysterically. It felt like something breaking down in my mind, and it was.. a relief.

That is where they would find me in the morning, passed out and soaking wet, with the nearly finished bottle of Jaloviina smashed to the rocks next to me.




Twelve: The Long Arm


The young detective came to work early, as she was wont to do. If you're not early, then you are already late, she kept telling herself. As the first female detective at the Lappeenranta police department, it seemed to her she had to constantly prove her worth, be head and shoulders above her male colleagues to make the grade. It was perhaps a blessing she had grown up with three older brothers – she thought she knew exactly how to deal with overbearing males.

She parked her muddy old Volvo Amason and made her way to the main building. After passing the front desk, she almost bumped straight into a uniformed police sergeant.


- Oh, Juha-Matti. Good morning. What's new?”

She seemed to be bumping into him almost constantly these days, and she didn't mind. The sergeant was ruggedly handsome, a farm boy with a nice muscular frame, a scar on his cheek making him look a bit rogue. Today, the man with rather impressive sideburns made a face at her.


- Morning, Eeva. What's new, she asks, after the weekend and a night well slept. I'll tell you what's new – the storm last night has the town properly messed up, that's what. The fire department has been out in force, clearing trees from roads and power lines, and the Imatran Voima guys have been pulling an all-nighter, too, to try and get the power outages under control. The company's cancelled all holidays. It seems most of the countryside will be without electricity for a while longer. They have already called conscripts from the military barracks to be sent to help with clearing out all the trees, debris and whatnot.”

The detective nodded. Power had been out in her apartment, too, and she had not been able to make even a cup of coffee in her oh-so-modern electrified kitchen. And she could not listen to the news or watch the TV – one of these days, she would need to get a battery radio.

At least the station seems to have power, she thought, looking along the corridor and seeing the large police coat-of-arms and the official portrait of President Paasio well-lit on the wall opposite.


-There's been a number of fires, too, started by the lightnings no doubt. Most have burned out by now.”

The man sighed.


- That's not all, though. Russian refugees keep pouring to the border crossings. The Border Guard's been calling us all morning, and we've had to second five uniforms to the Imatra department as backup. They're calling out to the Defence Forces for that, too. It seems to be the biggest bunch of Ruskies there since old man Kaganovich croaked in the summer – so much for ”a controlled, gradual transition”, what?”

His smile was full of mirth for the plight of the struggling Soviet leadership.


- Seems their goose is cooked anyway, after what's going on in Berlin and Budapest...”

The detective hadn't heard about that. The sergeant looked at her and grimaced.


- You don't know anything about that, either? Jesus! There's people pouring over the ”Anti-Fascist Barrier” from East to the West, now, and it seems the Ulbricht junta's doing fuck-all to stop it. The Hungarian government's stepped down 'cause of the protests, just this morning...”

The handsome man smiled even more widely now.


-They're falling like dominos they are. And any day now Moscow'll be next, mark my words. It's like back in 1948, my old man says, but even worse for them. There's nobody there with the support to take it under control this time around.”

He nodded towards the photo of the President of the Republic on the wall.


- I'd hate to be old Rafael there right now, truly. Sometimes it's all well and good to be a mere functionary, a cog in the machine so to speak. Really, I'd rather be wondering like I am now whether Constable Mikkonen makes it to work today than whether I really should order the Defence Forces to seal the border to the Porkkala Lease Area with armored units... You know.”

The detective nodded and glanced at her watch again. Time to get to work.


- Any bodies in the cells overnight?”, she asked to get an idea of the booking situation as it were - it might come in handy later.

- The usual, the usual. A couple of drunks and a wife-beater in Three and Four, the bloody Rutola car thief in Two – and, right, the man they brought over from the island just now in Five...”

- Come again?”

- Right, something odd there. The volunteer fire brigade got a report of a fire at the old boat yard in Palosaari, and when they took a boat there they found the big old hall almost burned down – and this drunken guy passed out nearby. They brought him over, 'cause they couldn't make heads or tails of him – he's not like some wino, but acting really crazy, just humming this nursery rhyme.”

The sergeant shook his head.


- A shrink's coming over from the hospital, to talk to him.”

- Any idea who he is?”

- Yeah, wait”, the sergeant said, opening a small notebook.

- He had a Swedish passport on him... Get a load of this...”

- ..Väärä, it says, Konsta Väärä. Pretty odd, huh?”

The detective had to agree it was pretty damn odd.


- Thanks for the lowdown, Juha-Matti”, she said to the sergeant and graced him with a smile she thought was very charming, ”but now I really need to go before Stark gets angry with me.”

The uniformed officer winked at the plainclothed detective.


- Yeah, I am sure he has some case for you that he can send a girl to, instead, you know, a real policeman.”

Rather than getting cross with him, Detective Eeva Jauhiainen only smiled. She knew he was not belittling her – it was just their usual banter.


- Screw you, Ahonius”, she said without losing the charming smile, ”for all the cock-ups you 'real policemen' tend to come up with, the department absolutely needs this little girl to make things right and stop you all poor sods from losing your precious badges.”

The Väärä stuff was downright spooky, though, she thought as she walked towards the coffee room to get her first shot of caffeine that morning.

Someone had already brewed some coffee. While she nursed her steaming mug, something she couldn't quite put her finger on bothering her, an older man looked through the doorway.


- Ah, Eeva! Good morning. I thought I could count on you being here on time, despite... you know. I wouldn't say as much for all these other muppets”, Detective Lieutenant Stark told the promising young investigator with a mock scowl.

- Morning, Jorma. Some weather last night, huh?”, she said, absentmindedly.

- Tell me about it. Now, we got the Rutola car thief in the cell...”

He opened the folder in his hands.


- Markkanen, Matti Vilho Olavi. I'd like you to question him with me. Something does not add up in that guy...”

The young female detective stood up suddenly.


- Jorma, I just remembered something important. Would it be all right if I chase down a lead about the man they picked up at Palosaari just now – I think there's more to the fire than meets the eye.”

The Detective Lieutenant raised an eyebrow.


-Eeva, I don't think...”

Just then, a grizzled male detective in a tan suit and a great big striped tie walked in and nodded to Stark, fighting a mighty yawn and heading for the coffee pot.


- I'll be right back, I promise. Möttönen there will help you out with the car thief, won't you?”, she said, shooting a winning smile at both of the slightly confused men and striding out of the room.

Detective Lieutenant Stark looked at the young woman go. She was a pain in the ass, the older man thought. He should have reprimanded her for insubordination – once again. But then, Eeva was his best and brightest detective, the one sharp knife in the box of blunt instruments he had to work with. That girl... She'll make police commissioner by age 40, Stark was in a habit of thinking. And so, he tended to give her some leeway.


- Her female senses tingling again, Lieutenant?”, Detective Möttönen asked, scorn in his voice. He picked up a danish and turned it gingerly in his right hand like a prime piece of evidence.

If there was a certain measure of contempt in the look Stark gave to the man whose idea of good police work consisted mostly of roughing up suspects and lounging about the Esso bar for clues, he was sure the man was too stupid to figure it out.

And so it was Detective Eeva Jauhiainen who, with the help of the volunteer fire brigade, found the two charred bodies in the cellar of the burned-down building. Her initial theory was that one of them might be a retired medical doctor who had gone missing during the night (as his son's equally missing boat was found tied up at the island's jetty) and eventually dental records confirmed that this indeed was the case. That is where the investigation stalled, though – they had no idea where to start with the other body, which anyway seemed it had been dead for many years, maybe since WWII, the coroner said. They couldn't get anything of value out of Väärä, either: the man seemed to suffer from a profound shock and had to be committed to the psychiatric department at the regional hospital for his own safety.

The detective never ceased to wonder, though – after all, her own uncle had died on the island in 1947 and Konsta Väärä had been there that time too. The mystery of Palosaari stayed in her mind through all her career. Finally, in 1996, just before she was due to retire from her position as the chief of police for entire Eastern Finland, Eeva Jauhiainen-Ahonius re-opened the case and ordered a DNA test for the unknown remains, a procedure that had then just recently come available to the Finnish police.

Further investigations on the island uncovered five more bodies, those of four young men and a middle-aged woman. It was estimated all had died sometime (but not long) before the mid-1920s. And to add to the seasoned police official's frustration about it all, the results of the DNA test just made the case even more confusing.




Thirteen: Arrivals


April 1998


A young, casually dressed man walked past the Norden Lines car ferry M/S Borealis and then the Estlines ship M/S Riigivanem Päts at Katajanokka in Helsinki. Looking energetic, he carried a new, full backpack. Passing a line of flagpoles with the Finnish, Swedish and Estonian flags he stopped briefly to regard the blue-white flag of the Atlantic Council Defence Community flying in the last of them, reminding him how the Finns were rather proud of being the first country to join the ACDC in its first post-Cold War expansion stage in Europe in 1986.

Cheerfully, the Swedish man winked at an equally happy and a bit tipsy pair of pretty Finnish girls walking the other way, obviously to take a cruise with either of the ships to Stockholm via Mariehamn or to Tallinn. After passing the girls, he could hear them giggle. Peter Lund knew girls generally didn't think he was too hard on the eye. It must be my sturdy Finnish genes, he had thought since he saw an old photo of his grandfather Petteri from 1941, in his uniform the very picture of a dashing young officer whose mere smile would have made young girls swoon.

Peter's older brother Alex had called him crazy to come to Finland to find out more about his roots. It might be that Alex remembered their boozing, deranged Finnish father better than he did – Peter had only been 3 when his father left his family in 1976 after all. But he could not help that his Finnish roots intrigued him. For one thing, his father's family had taken part in both world wars, he suspected, and that was not so common in Sweden. And so he had cleared three weeks vacation time to come to Finland to try and chase down the leads he had about his family.

There was not a lot to go on – some bits and pieces from the things their father had left behind him, some photos like the one with young Konsta Väärä looking sullenly at the camera, standing next to an old woman that might be his great aunt Sanni, in a photo only marked ”At Brahenkatu in August 1950”, and some letters like one from Konsta's grandfather, Aleksanteri, inviting the boy to the island in Lake Saimaa where the old man lived in 1947.

Peter Lund pulled out his tourist map of Helsinki and a piece of paper containing the address of the mental institution his father was being treated in. It was in a part of Helsinki called, um, Kivenlahti, apparently. Thumbing the map, he started working out which tram or bus to take – he knew Helsinki, unlike Stockholm, did not have a metro he could opt for.

The young man was rather excited. He fully expected his trip in Finland to become an adventure his curmudgeonly brother would yet regret he didn't join. Humming happily to himself Peter Lund waved his hand at the approaching bus with the Transport for Greater Helsinki logo on it.



...


Spring was coming to Lake Saimaa. The ice was melting away, and even if some parts of the great lake were still iced over, where the current was stronger the water was already free. Today, the sky was overcast but from time to time the sun would peek out from between the clouds.

The man at the big fibreglass boat's steering wheel would not have wanted to take the boat out to the water this early, but this outing was important. Since over a decade ago, many investors had been coming to the Lappeenranta area from the resurgent Russian Federal Republic, and these recently affluent men wanted very much to buy lakeside properties around Lake Saimaa. The area was handily close to St. Petersburg, like the city was again called since 1985 and the Russian nouveau riche appreciated the dullness and political predictability of Ollila's Finland, as well as the good roads.

There were three such Russian investors in the big boat right now, with one man along to act as something like an assistant and a female interpreter. The most vocal and apparently also most affluent one of them was the man they called Kononov, a red-faced and rotund fellow they said was a close friend of Prime Minister Malkin himself. To him, especially, the man at the wheel was acting as a guide, through the local interpreter called Nadia Räikkönen, a Russian immigrant who had married a Lappeenranta-based entrepreneur.

The men had already taken a look of several bays and heads of land jutting out to the lake. Their reactions were mixed. Some places they liked, but only so and so. Others they seemed to almost detest, though the man in the controls could not see why. The fair-haired man was getting bored of this all, especially as one of the Russians, Luzhkov, kept bugging him about the speed the boat was going. ”Davai, davai!”, he would say and wave his hand. Of course, the young man would have been quite happy to hear the satisfying roar of the two powerful Valmet Marine motors – in the summer, in open water. But he knew that right now the ice might still be surprisingly thick in places and he was quite weary of possibly damaging the expensive boat's hull.

This was what he was doing now, trying to gauge the ice ahead, as Kononov pointed to the left and exclaimed something. Räikkönen interpreted his words to the young, fair-haired man.

” - Mr. Kononov wants to know what island that is and would it be possible to buy it”, she said, also pointing to the same direction.

The young man looked at the same direction and felt a twinge of uncertainty in his stomach.

” - That island... They used to call it Palosaari, earlier. Now it is most often called Vääränsaari. It is owned by a private concern.

Konovov listened to Räikkönen's translation and smiled.

” - Mr. Kononov says this would be a very nice location for a small group of exclusive villas.”

The man at the wheel shook his head slowly.

” - I don't think that is a very good idea. There used to be a boat yard on the island, and now it is full of ruined buildings. Some of them are pretty dangerous, having burned down... accidentally.”

Kononov didn't quite seem see why the fair-haired man was so negative about the island's prospects. He spread his hands with an incredulous smile on his face.

” - It is just a matter of money”, Räikkönen translated, ”your good Finnish workers will clear out the island in no time.”

Uh-oh, thought the fair-haired man. He looked at the enthusiastic young interpreter.

” - The thing is – the locals are apprehensive about the island. Several strange things have happened there over the years, and now many people don't want to even go near it.”

He paused for a while to let the woman translate his words. He could see a strange look on Kononov's face.

” - People say that the island is cursed... and haunted. It is said that on some nights, anyone visiting the island will come across an old man patrolling the island with an ancient rifle, weeping and looking for the family he lost in the Civil War. But if you try to talk to him, he will vanish.”

He again paused for effect.

” - And then they say that anyone who spends any serious time on the island will die horribly or go mad. There have actually been several violent deaths recorded on the island, all through the last century.
"

The Russians spoke briefly between themselves and, smiling, Luzhkov turned to the interpreter.

” - Mr. Luzhkov says that he is surprised for the stolid Finns to be so superstitious. He says that such stories only make the island more interesting – it has a real history, and he says that the Russians in St. Petersburg like such things.”

Luzhkov smiled even more broadly now.

” - We'd very much like to buy the island”, he said through Räikkönen, ”me and Mr. Kononov. We'll make it into a luxury resort for our most valued allies and collaborators – perhaps even the Prime Minister himself, what?”

The man at the controls said nothing, only looking forwards to steer clear of the treacherous ice. Räikkönen continued to translate the Russian's words.

” - We'll call it Bear Island – no, better yet, the Tsar's Island! It will become grand enough for such a name after our builders get through with it.”

The fair-haired man looked at the beaming Luzhkov.

” - Please listen to me”, he said quietly, ”this is the wrong island for you.”

Kononov interjected, laughing and patting him on his back.

” - Don't be so glum, Ahonius”, Räikkönen translated, ”you'll make a good commission from this deal, too! Now, let's turn back to Lappeenranta. You'll feel much better after a good lunch and some vodka in you! And look, even the sun is coming out!”

And so it was. Carefully, young Kalle Ahonius took a last look at the forbidding, forested island many now called Vääränsaari and turned the boat around to take the Russians back to town.


---



August 1947

My mother was waiting for me at the railway station. She took my hand and we walked home through the Kaisaniemi park, redolent in the deep, dark greens of late summer. The air already smelled like autumn. The big envelope full of money weighed heavy in my pocket, and somehow it felt I could not get the smoke out of my eyes and throat. I kept coughing, and from time to time my mother looked at me, concerned. When we were almost through the park, a young soldier on leave passed us and smiled to us. I remember squeezing my mother's hand harder.

Before we made it home, the rain caught up with us and my mother opened the black umbrella to shield us from the water, pouring down on the people on the Hakaniemi market square and filling the gutters to overflowing.

My feet were wet as we reached home. My mother helped me get my coat and shoes off - shoes I now somehow knew had been bought with Doctor Sahlberg's money. I lowered the partly wet, plump envelope on the small table and looked at my mother.

” - Mum...”

She looked at me, and perhaps misinterpreting my expression, came to me and hugged me. I saw the photo of my dad on the cupboard, and felt like crying again.

” - Everything's all right, dear, you are home now and everything is all right”, my mother said to me, squeezing me against her. She smelled faintly of soap and syringa flowers.

At that moment, I believed her. I wanted to believe her, wanted everything to be all right again.

The very next night, in my dreams, I would be on the island again.

The End
 
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