Prison Memoirs of an Anarchist. Berkman Alexander

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Prison Memoirs of an Anarchist - Berkman Alexander

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It comes from somewhere alongside. “Can’t talk, eh? ’Sorderly, guess.”

      What am I in for? Oh, yes! It’s Frick. Well, I shall not stay here long, anyhow. They will soon take me out—they will lean me against a wall—a slimy wall like this, perhaps. They will bandage my eyes, and the soldiers there…. No: they are going to hang me. Well, I shall be glad when they take me out of here. I am so dry. I’m suffocating.…

      My brain is on fire. I press my head against the bars, and groan heavily. Alive? Have I failed? Failed?…

      II

      Heavy footsteps approach nearer; the clanking of the keys grows more distinct. I must compose myself. Those mocking, unfriendly eyes shall not witness my agony. They could allay this terrible uncertainty, but I must seem indifferent.

      “Good morning,” he greets me, pleasantly. “Have a seat,” pointing to a chair inside the railing. “I understand you asked for some water?”

      “Yes.”

      “Just a few questions first. Nothing important. Your pedigree, you know. Mere matter of form. Answer frankly, and you shall have everything you want.”

      His manner is courteous, almost ingratiating.

      “Now tell me, Mr. Berkman, what is your name? Your real name, I mean.”

      “That’s my real name.”

      “You don’t mean you gave your real name on the card you sent in to Mr. Frick?”

      “I gave my real name.”

      “And you are an agent of a New York employment firm?”

      “No.”

      “That was on your card.”

      “I wrote it to gain access to Frick.”

      “And you gave the name ‘Alexander Berkman’ to gain access?”

      “No. I gave my real name. Whatever might happen, I did not want anyone else to be blamed.”

      “Are you a Homestead striker?”

      “No.”

      “Why did you attack Mr. Frick?”

      “He is an enemy of the People.”

      “You got a personal grievance against him?”

      “No. I consider him an enemy of the People.”

      “Where do you come from?”

      “From the station cell.”

      “Come, now, you may speak frankly, Mr. Berkman. I am your friend. I am going to give you a nice, comfortable cell. The other—”

      “Worse than a Russian prison,” I interrupt, angrily.

      “How long did you serve there?”

      “Where?”

      “In the prison in Russia.”

      “I was never before inside a cell.”

      “Come, now, Mr. Berkman, tell the truth.”

      He motions to the officer behind my chair. The window curtains are drawn aside, exposing me to the full glare of the sunlight. My gaze wanders to the clock on the wall. The hour-hand points to V. The calendar on the desk reads, July—23—Saturday. Only three hours since my arrest? It seemed so long in the cell.…

      “You can be quite frank with me,” the inquisitor is saying. “I know a good deal more about you than you think. We’ve got your friend Rak-metov.”

      With difficulty I suppress a smile at the stupidity of the intended trap. In the register of the hotel where I passed the first night in Pittsburgh, I signed “Rakhmetov,” the name of the hero in Chernishevsky’s famous novel.

      “Yes, we’ve got your friend, and we know all about you.”

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