Not underground, a tent, you know what I mean. I'd never done that before [laughs]. So that was kind of a hard trip. One time we were on the train and the Russian soldiers came through, and everybody, we all cut our hair very, very short, and it was ... we had one those uniforms, and it was dark so there wasn't anything [that] happened or anything. That was also kind of [a] not pleasant experience. Anyway, that was hard and it was ... think about ... the place where we were trained, it is on the map, it was close to China. When you're looking at Manchuria and China, the land is the same, except it's separated by a border, whatever it is. And Dairen, it is close to China, and Ryōyō is in the middle, kind of the middle of Manchuria. Sort of north in the middle, northeast, little bit east, in the middle. And where we were trained, it was close to Dairen, it was west of Dairen. The way they came is, they go ... I was the first one, I left ... they stopped [in] Ryōyō, and I stopped, and everybody thought I shouldn't go home, but I did. Which means ... logically speaking, Dairen would be the first, because it was closer, than to go to Ryōyō, if they were, you know.... But they went around [Dairen], meaning they probably had to go that way to hide from the so-called enemy. It took a long time, I think that was a hard trip. And when I got off the train and I walked to my home and I got to my home, there were Russian soldiers [who] were taking all [of our] things from [the] house [chuckles]. And our house was in front of a park, you know, and in the park, [there were] all these Chinese merchants waiting [chuckles]. And they go there and they were selling [our things], of course, the Russians, and they'd come back and get more [chuckles], take something away. I was....