When Pavlo Zhilin and his patrol hit the streets of Cherkasy, men often swerve to avoid them.
Pavlo is a conscription officer looking for soldiers for Ukraine's army.
But almost two years into Russia's full-scale invasion, there's no flood of volunteers to the front line anymore.
Most of those who wanted to fight are either dead, injured or still stuck at the front waiting to be relieved by new recruits.
In
the central town of Cherkasy, like elsewhere, finding them isn't easy
now that the first burst of enthusiasm and energy has faded.
Ukraine is exhausted.
Pavlo's story
"I
don't get it. People are out and about, like the war is somewhere far
away. But this is a full-scale invasion, and it's like people still
don't care," Pavlo says.
He is frustrated by what he sees as indifference.
"We need everyone to come together like they did on the first day. Everyone was united then, like brothers."
Instead,
the security service in Cherkasy is constantly shutting down local
social media channels that warn people when the conscription teams are
in town and alert them to areas to avoid.
At 24, Pavlo has sacrificed a lot for his country.
He
grew up dreaming of being a soldier - his eyes light up when he
remembers that - and he was serving in the army in February 2022 when
Russian troops rolled across the border.
He
fought near Kyiv, then Soledar in the eastern Donbas, where the battle
was brutal. That first summer, he was moved to Bakhmut.
"We
came under heavy fire. A shell landed next to me. I lost my whole
elbow. There was nothing left," he says, describing an attack in which
he was badly injured.
He managed to crawl beneath a bush and he began to pray.
The
soldier admits that getting to hospital was a huge relief: not just
because he'd survived, but because he was finally off the front line.
"It was hard there. I can't even put it into words."
He looks down and falls quiet.
Pavlo's
injuries were severe. His right arm was amputated below the shoulder,
he still feels pain where his limb is missing, and he has shrapnel in
his leg. His basic prosthetic gives him limited movement.
But he wanted to go on serving, so he became a conscription officer.
After all he's been through, I wonder whether he understands why other men evade the draft.
"One
day, their children will ask what they did during the war, when the men
were fighting. When they reply, 'I was hiding,' then they'll plummet in
the children's eyes," Pavlo says firmly.
And yet the price Ukraine is paying to defend itself is already immense.
When
I ask Pavlo whether he's lost friends in the fighting, he admits that
there's "almost no one left" from his entire company.
"The only ones left are [injured] like me. The others are dead."
Serhiy's story
Away from the eastern front line, there are signs of recovery among the ruins.
Irpin,
near Kyiv, was occupied by Russian forces at the very start of the war.
There are shell-shattered buildings all around, but also the sound of
building work.
For
those who lost everything, there are now small "towns" of
pre-fabricated cabins, each with two rooms and a shower room. About half
of the residents are from Irpin itself. Others have been displaced from
closer to the front.
Lilia Saviuk and her husband have just moved in from Kakhovka in the east, still occupied by Russian forces.
At
the start of the war, their son Serhiy was captured there and held in a
basement. Lilia says he was tortured for shouting pro-Ukrainian
slogans.
When Serhiy got out, he left the region and immediately signed up to fight for Ukraine.
When Lilia flicks through her phone for pictures to show me, it throws up images of terrible injuries.
Most of the flesh on one of her son's legs was blown off and his foot was in tatters.
Serhiy
was injured last autumn in Avdiivka, where the fighting has been fierce
and even Ukrainian officials admit their army is outgunned and
outmanned.
One source put the difference at 8-1, in Russia's favour.
Lilia
and her husband couldn't leave Kakhovka with Serhiy, because their
elderly parents refused to go. So they stayed, under occupation,
terrified the Russians might discover that their son was a soldier.
They
finally left when Serhiy was injured, to be with him in hospital, but
Lilia cries with the shame she feels at leaving relatives behind.
"We
call and ask them, 'Is it quiet?'" she says, meaning is there shelling.
"Everyone there is waiting for liberation. For it to be loud. But there
is only quiet.
"People have been crying for so many months and nothing is getting any better."
But there is another fear driving Lilia's tears.
She
shows me videos of her pushing her son around in a wheelchair. The two
are laughing, covered in snow. Then there are pictures of the skin
grafts he's had, where Lilia says the doctors have "performed a
miracle".
But
as soon as Serhiy is fully fit, he's told his mother he'll go back to
the front. He says there are not enough soldiers there. His friends need
him.
So Lilia is praying for the war to end first.
"I
think he has already done his duty," she says, eyes full of tears. "As a
mother, it is a sin to say this, but while he is in hospital, I can
sleep calmly. I can't sleep when he is on the front line.
"So I am glad my son is in hospital now, although I really shouldn't say this. I'm glad he's not at the front."
Vladislav's story
On
the edge of Cherkasy, there is a cemetery with a long line of recent
graves. They're for the men of all ages from the town who've died
fighting since Russian President Vladimir Putin gave the order to
invade.
Ukraine honours the dead as heroes, but it's left to their families to grieve.
Each grave is decorated with national flags and heaped with wreaths and
flowers. There are images, fixed to crosses or etched into marble
headstones, of the soldiers in military uniform.
Inna
can't bear to put her son's photo on his grave yet. The image that she
used for his funeral is still at home. She's not ready to let go.
Vladislav
Bykanov was killed last June by a mine explosion near Bakhmut. He was
about to turn 23 and already a deputy commander.
"I believe my son died doing the right thing," Inna says firmly, as her daughter cries quietly beside her.
"I'm
a teacher and I always tell the children this: we are right, we are
defending our country and our children. My son was defending us. He
believed in this cause. And I believe," Inna says before pausing to take
in the flags and faces all around.
She hasn't visited the cemetery for a little while and the row of soldiers' graves has grown.
"Do
you think my son wasn't afraid? I was afraid too, when he went.
Everyone's afraid of dying," she answers, when I wonder what she thinks
of those who avoid signing up to fight.
"But
maybe being enslaved by Russia is more frightening? Now we see death.
It's very difficult. Very difficult. But there is no way back. We can't
give up."
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