In the beginning of Arkady and Boris Strugatsky's novel [*Hard to Be a God*][1], the protagonist, Anton, goes down a country road, disobeying a "wrong way" sign, and finds a skeleton of a fascist chained to his machine gun - a remnant of The Great Patriotic War. > "Toshka, what did you find behind the one-way street sign?" > "A collapsed bridge," answered Anton. "And the skeleton of a German, chained to a machine gun." He thought a while, then he added: "the machine gun was halfway sunk into the ground already." In the epilogue Anton's life-long friend Pasha wonders about the significance of this childhood experience: > "The anisotropic road. With the one-way street sign. Don't you remember? We were there, the three of us ..." > "Oh, yes. Now I remember. Anton used that word." > "Yes, and then he entered the one-way road the wrong way and walked its whole length; and when he returned he said he'd found a collapsed bridge and the skeleton of a German chained to a machine gun." > "I don't remember that part," said Anka. "What about it?" > "Nowadays I often think back to that road," said Pashka. "Maybe there's some connection somewhere... the road was anisotropic - just as history is. There is no way back. And he went right ahead anyway. And met up with a chained skeleton." What is the meaning of the skeleton? And the anisotropic road with the one-way sign? [1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_to_Be_a_God