TANITH LEE
ALL THE BIRDS OF HELL
Tanith Lee's most recent books include Faces Under Water
and a young adult novel
that's due out in England very shortly, Law of the Wolf Tower. Her
last
appearance in these pages was exactly two years ago, with her retake on the
Cinderella
fairy tale, The Reason for Not Going to the Ball." She returns now
with a very different
sort of story, a dark and dazzling vision of a world
locked in winter for fifteen years...
ONCE THEY LEFT THE CITY, the driver started to talk. He went on talking during
the two-hour
journey, almost without pause. His name was Argenty, but the
dialogue was all about his
wife. She suffered from what had become known as
Twilight Sickness. She spent all day in
their flat staring at the electric
bulbs. At night she walked out into the streets and he
would have to go and
fetch her. She had had frostbite several times. He said she had been
lovely
twenty years ago, though she had always hated the cold.
Henrique Tchaikov listened.
He made a few sympathetic sounds. It was as hopeless
to try to communicate with the driver,
Argenty, as to shut him up. Normally
Argenty drove important men from the Bureau, to whom
he would not be allowed to
speak a word, probably not even Goodday. But Tchaikov was a
minor bureaucrat. If
Argenty had had a better education and more luck, he might have been
where
Tchaikov was.
Argenty's voice became like the landscape beyond the cindery cement
blocks of
the city, monotonous, inevitably irritating, depressing, useless, sad.
It was the
fifteenth year of winter.
Now almost forty, Tchaikov could remember the other seasons of
his childhood,
even one long hot summer full of liquid colors and now-forgotten smells. By
the
time he was twelve years old, things were changing forever. In his twenties he
saw them
go, the palaces of summer, as Eynin called them in his poetry. Tchaikov
had been
twenty-four when he watched the last natural flower, sprung pale green
out of the public
lawn, die before him -- as Argenty's wife was dying, in
another way.
The Industrial Winter,
so it was termed. The belching chimneys and the leaking
stations with their cylinders of
poison. The rotting hulks along the shore like
deadly whales.
"The doctor says she'll ruin
her eyes, staring at the lights all day," Argenty
droned on.
"There's a new drug, isn't
there --" Tchaikov tried.
But Argenty took no notice. Probably, when alone, he talked to
himself.
Beyond the car, the snowscape spread like heaps of bedclothes, some soiled and
some
clean. The gray ceiling of the sky bulged low.
Argenty broke off. He said, "There's the
wolf factory." Tchaikov turned his
head.
Against the grayness-whiteness, the jagged black of
the deserted factory which
had been taken over by wolves, was the only landmark.
"They howl
often, sound like the old machinery. You'll hear them from the
Dacha."
Yes, they told me I
would."
"Look, some of them running about there."
Tchaikov noted the black forms of the
wolves, less black than the factory walls
and gates, darting up and over the snow heaps,
and away around the building.
Although things did live out here, it was strange to see
something alive.
Then they came down the slope, the chained snow tires grating and
punching, and
Tchaikov saw the mansion across the plain.
"The river came in here," said
Argenty. "Under the ice now."
A plantation of pine trees remained about the house. Possibly
they were dead,
carved out only in frozen snow. The Dacha had two domed towers, a
balustraded
verandah above a flight of stairs that gleamed like white glass. When the car
drove up, he could see two statues at the foot of the steps that had also been
kept clear
of snow. They were of a stained brownish marble, a god and goddess,
both naked and smiling
through the brown stains that spread from their mouths.
There were electric lights on in
the Dacha, from top to bottom, three or four
floors of them, in long, arched windows.
But as
the car growled to a halt, Argenty gave a grunt. "Look," he said again,
"look. Up there."
They got out and stood on the snow. The cold broke round them like sheer
disbelief, but
they knew it by now. They stared up. As happened only very
occasionally, a lacuna had
opened in the low cloud. A dim pink island of sky
appeared, and over it floated a dulled
lemon slice, dissolving, half
transparent, the sun.
Argenty and Tchaikov waited, transfixed,
watching in silence. Presently the
cloud folded together again and the sky, the sun,
vanished.
"I can't tell her," said Argenty. "My wife. I can't tell her I saw the sun. Once
it happened in the street. She began to scream. I had to take her to the
hospital. She
wasn't the only case."
"I'm sorry," said Tchaikov.
He had said this before, but now for the
first time Argenty seemed to hear him.
"Thank you."
Argenty insisted on carrying Tchaikov's
bag to the top of the slippery, gleaming
stair, then he pressed the buzzer. The door was of
steel and wood, with a glass
panel of octople glazing, almost opaque. Through it, in the
bluish yellow light,
a vast hall could just be made out, with a floor of black and white
marble.
A voice spoke through the door apparatus.
"Give your name."
"Henrique Tchaikov.
Number sixteen stroke Y."
"You're late."
Tchaikov stood on the top step, explaining to a
door. He was enigmatic. There
was always a great deal of this.
"The road from Kroy was
blocked by an avalanche. It had to be cleared."
"All right. Come in. Mind the dog, she may
be down there." "Dog," said Argenty.
He put his hand into his coat for his gun.
"It's all
right," said Tchaikov. "They always keep a dog here."
"Why.?" Said Argenty blankly.
Tchaikov
said, "A guard dog. And for company, I suppose."
Argenty glanced up, toward the domed
towers. The walls were reinforced by black
cement. The domes were tiled black, mortared by
snow. After the glimpse of sun,
there was again little color in their world.
"Are they -- is
it up there?" "I don't know. Perhaps."
"Take care," said Argenty surprisingly as the door
made its unlocking noise.
Argenty was not allowed to loiter. Tchaikov watched him get back
into the car,
undo the dash panel and take a swig of vodka. The car turned and drove slowly
away, back across the plain.
The previous curator did not give Tchaikov his name. He was a
tall thin man with
slicked, black hair. Tchaikov knew he was known as Ouperin.
Ouperin
showed Tchaikov the map of the mansion, and the pamphlet of house rules.
He only mentioned
one, that the solarium must not be used for more than one hour
per day; it was expensive.
He asked if Tchaikov had any questions, wanted to see
anything. Tchaikov said it would be
fine.
They met the dog in the corridor outside the ballroom, near where Ouperin
located what
he called his office.
She was a big dog, perhaps part Cuvahl and part Husky, muscular and
well-covered, with a thick silken coat like the thick pile carpets, ebony and
fawn, with
white round her muzzle and on her belly and paws, and two gold eyes
that merely slanted at
them for a second as she galloped by.
"Dog! Here, dog!" Ouperin called, but she ignored
him, prancing on, with
balletic shakes of her fringed fur, into the ballroom, where the
crystal
chandeliers hung down twenty feet on ropes of bronze. "She only comes when she's
hungry. There are plenty of steaks for her in the cold room. She goes out a
lot," said
Ouperin. "Her door's down in the kitchen. Electronic. Nothing else
can get in."
They visited
the cold room, which was very long, and massively shelved, behind a
sort of airlock. The
room was frigid, the natural weather was permitted to
sustain it. The ice on high windows
looked like armor.
Ouperin took two bottles of vodka, and a bunch of red grapes, frozen
peerless in
a wedge of ice.
They sat in his office, along from the ballroom. A fire blazed
on the hearth.
"I won't say I've enjoyed it here," said Ouperin. "But there are advantages.
There are some -- videos and magazines in the suite. You know what I mean. Apart
from the
library. If you get...hot."
Tchaikov nodded politely.
Ouperin said, "The first thing you'll
do, when I go. You'll go up and look at
them, won't you?"
"Probably," said Tchaikov.
"You
know," said Ouperin, "you get bored with them. At first, they remind you of
the fairy
story, what is it? The princess who sleeps. Then you just get bored."
Tchaikov said
nothing. They drank the vodka, and at seventeen hours, five
o'clock, as the white world
outside began to turn glowing blue.. a helicopter
came and landed on the plain. Ouperin
took his bags and went out to the front
door of the Dacha, and the stair. "Have some fun,"
he said.
He ran sliding down the steps and up to the helicopter. He scrambled in like a
boy
on holiday. It rose as it had descended in a storm of displaced snow. When
its noise
finally faded through the sky, Tchaikov heard the wolves from the wolf
factory howling over
the slopes. The sky was dark blue now, navy, without a
star. If ever the moon appeared, the
moon was blue. The pines settled. A few
black boughs showed where the helicopter's winds
had scoured off the snow. They
were alive. But soon the snow began to come down again, to
cover them.
Tchaikov returned to the cold room. He selected a chicken and two steaks and
vegetables, and took them to the old stone-floored kitchen down the narrow
steps. The new
kitchen was very small, a little bright cubicle inside the larger
one. He put the food into
the thawing cabinet, and then set the program on the
cooker. The dog came in as he was
doing this, and stood outside the lighted box.
Once they had thawed, he put the bloody
steaks down for her on a dish, and
touched her ruffed head as she bent to eat. She was a
beautiful dog, but wholly
uninterested in him. She might be there in case of trouble, but
there never
would be trouble. No one stayed longer than six or eight months. The
curatorship
at the Dacha was a privilege, and an endurance test.
When his meal was ready,
Tchaikov carried it to the card room or office, and
ate, with the television showing him in
color the black and white scenes of the
snow and the cities. The card room fire burned on
its synthetic logs, the gas
cylinder faintly whistling. He drank vodka and red wine.
Sometimes, in spaces of
sound, he heard the wolves. And once, looking from the ballroom, he
saw the dog,
lit by all the windows, trotting along the ice below the pines.
AT MIDNIGHT,
when the television stations were shut down to conserve power, and
most of the lights in
the cities, although not here, would be dimmed, Tchaikov
got into the manually operated
elevator, and went up into the second dome, to
the top floor.
He had put on again his
greatcoat, his hat and gloves.
The elevator stopped at another little airlock. Beyond, only
the cold-pressure
lights could burn, glacial blue. Sometimes they blinked, flickered. An
angled
stair led to a corridor, which was wide, and shone as if highly polished. At the
end
of the corridor was an annex and the two broad high doors of glass. It was
possible to look
through the glass, and for a while he stood there, in the
winter of the dome, staring in
like a child.
It had been and still was a bedroom, about ten meters by eleven. His flat in
the
city would fit easily inside it.
The bedroom had always been white, the carpets and the
silken drapes, even the
tassels had been a mottled white, like milk, edged with gilt. And
the bed was
white. So that now, just as the snow-world outside resembled a white tumbled
bed, the bed was like the tumbled snow.
The long windows were black with night, but a black
silvered by ice. Ice had
formed too, in the room, in long spears that hung from the
ceiling, where once a
sky had been painted, a sky-blue sky with rosy clouds, but they had
darkened and
died, so now the sky was like old gray paint with flecks of rimy plaster
showing
through.
The mirrors in the room had cracked from the cold and formed strange
abstract
patterns that seemed to mean something. Even the glass doors had cracked, and
were
reinforced.
From here you could not properly see the little details of the room, the meal
held perfect under ice, the ruined ornaments and paintings. Nor, properly, the
couple on
the bed.
Tchaikov drew the electronic key from his pocket and placed it in the mechanism
of the doors. It took a long time to work, the cold-current not entirely
reliable. The
lighting blinked again, a whole second of black. Then the doors
opened and the lights
steadied, and Tchaikov went through.
The carpet, full of ice crystals, crunched under his
feet, which left faint
marks that would dissipate. His breath was smoke.
On a chest with
painted panels, where the paint had scattered out, stood a white
statue, about a meter
high, that had broken from the cold, and an apple of
rouged glass that had also broken, and
somehow bled.
The pictures on the walls were done for. Here and there, a half of a face
peeped
out from the mossy corrosion, like the sun he had seen earlier in the cloud.
Hothouse
roses in a vase had turned to black coals, petrified, petals not
fallen.
Their meal stood on
the little mosaic table. It had been a beautiful meal, and
neatly served. An amber fish,
set with dark jade fruits, a salad that had
blackened like the roses but kept its shape of
dainty leaves and fronds. A
flawless cream round, with two slivers cut from it, reminding
him of the
quartering of an elegant clock. The champagne was all gone, but for the beads of
palest gold left at the bottom of the two goblets rimmed with silver. The bottle
of tablets
was mostly full. They had taken enough only to sleep, then turned off
the heating, leaving
the cold to do the rest.
The Last Supper of Love, Eynin had called it, in his poem, "This
Place."
Tchaikov went over to the bed and looked down at them.
The man, Xander, wore evening
dress, a tuxedo, a silk shirt with a tunic collar.
On the jacket were pinned two military
ribbons and a Knight's Cross. His tawny
hair was sleeked back. His face was grave and very
strong, a very masculine
face, a very clean, calm face. His eyes, apparently, were green,
but invisible
behind the marble lids.
She, the woman, Tamura, was exquisite, not beautiful
but immaculate, and so
delicate and slender. She could have danced on air, just as Eynin
said, in her
sequined pumps. Her long white dress clung to a slight and nearly adolescent
body, with the firm full breasts of a young woman. Her brunette hair spread on
the pillows
with the long stream of pearls from her neck. On the middle finger
of her left hand, she
wore a burnished ruby the color and size of a cherry.
Like Xander, Tamura was calm, quite
serene.
It seemed they had had no second thoughts, eating their last meal, drinking
their
wine, perhaps making love. Then swallowing the pills and lying back for
the sleep of
winter, the long cold that encased and preserved them like perfect
candy in a globe of ice.
They had been here nine years. It was not so very long.
Tchaikov looked at them. After a
few minutes he turned and went back across the
room, and again his footmarks temporarily
disturbed the carpet. He locked the
doors behind him.
In the curator's suite below, he put
on the ordinary dimmed yellow lamp, and
read Eynin's poem again, sipping black tea, while
the synthetic fire crackled at
the foot of his hard bed.
We watched the summer palaces
Sail
from this place,
Like liners to
the sea Of yesterday.
Tchaikov put the book aside and
switched off the light and fire. The fire died
quite slowly, as if real.
Outside he heard
the wolves howling like the old factory machinery.
Behind his closed eyelids, he saw
Tamura's ruby, red as the cherries and roses
in the elite florist's shops of the city. Her
eyes, apparently, were dark.
Above him, as he lay on his back, the lovers slept on in their
bubble of loving
snow.
The first month was not eventful. Each day, Henrique Tchaikov made a
tour of the
Dacha, noting any discrepancies, a fissure in the plaster, a chipped tile,
noises
in the pipes of the heating system--conscious, rather, of the fissured
plaster and tiles,
the thumps of the radiators, in his own apartment building.
He replaced fuses and valves.
In the library he noted the books which would need
renovation. And took a general inventory
of the stores the house had
accumulated. Every curator did this. Evidently, some items were
overlooked. The
books, for example, the cornice in the ballroom, while lavatory tissue and
oil
for the generator were regularly renewed.
He used the hot tub, but only every three or
four days. In the city, bathing was
rationed. For the same reason he did not go into the
solarium, except once a
week to check the thermostat and to water the extraordinary
black-green plants
which rose in storeys of foliage to the roof.
Most of the afternoon he
sat reading in the library, or listening to the music
machine. He heard, for the first
time, recordings of Prokofiev and Rachmaninov
playing inside their own piano concertos, and
Shostakovich conducting his own
symphony, and Lirabez singing, in a slightly flat but
swarthy baritone, a cycle
of his own songs.
For those who liked these things, the Dacha
provided wonderful experiences.
Tchaikov also watched films, and the recordings of
historical events
Sometimes in the mornings he slept an hour late, letting the coffee plate
prepare a sticky brew, with thick cream from the cold room.
Usually he kept in mind these
treats were his only for eight months at the most,
less than a year. Then he would have to
go back.
The dog became more sociable, though not exactly friendly. He stroked her fur,
even
brushed her twice a week. He called her Bella, because she was beautiful.
Probably this was
not the right thing, as again, when he left, some other person
would be the curator, who
might not even like dogs.
Bella, the dog, each evening lay before the fire in the card
room, sometimes
even in the suite. But normally she would only stay an hour or two. Then
she
wanted to go down through the house and out by the electronic dog-door.
He began to
realize that the wolf howling was often very close to the mansion.
At last he saw the
indigo form of a wolf on the night snow. The wolf howled on
and on, until the dog went out.
Then the wolf and the dog played together in the
snow.
The first time he saw this, Tchaikov
was assailed by a heart wringing pang of
hope.
The house manual told him that the wolves had
invaded the factory, and remained
there, because they lived off the rats which still
infested it. The rats in turn
lived off the dung of the wolves. It was a disgusting but
divinely inspired
cycle. Bella and the wolf must have met out upon the frozen ice of the
ancient
river buried below the Dacha and the pines. Although there would be females of
the
wolf kind for the wolf to choose from, instead he took to Bella. An
individualist. Tchaikov
did not see them join in the sexual act, but he accepted
that they too were lovers. This
seemed to symbolize the vigor still clinging in
the threatened world, its basic tenacity,
its magic. But he put such thoughts
aside. Magic was illusion. Sex was only that, just like
the "hot" magazines
Ouperin, or someone, had secreted in the suite, and which Tchaikov did
not
bother with. For him, sensuality was connected to personality. He preferred
memory to
invention.
Of course, occasionally he pondered Tamura and Xander, their intrinsic meaning.
But never for long. And he did not go up again to look at them.
IN THE FIRST DAY of the
second month, a fax came through from the city computer,
informing him a party would be
arriving at midday. He shut the dog Bella in the
kitchen, and put on his suit and tie. At
sixteen hours, or four o'clock w they
were late, another avalanche -- the party drew up in
two big buses with
leviathan snow tires.
Tchaikov understood he was unreasonably resentful
at the stupid intrusion, for
which the place was intended. He wanted the Dacha to himself.
But he courteously
welcomed the party, twenty-three people, who stared about the hall with
wide,
red-rimmed eyes, their noses running, because the heating in the buses was not
very
good.
They had their own guide, who led them, following Tchaikov, up the stairs to the
manually
operated lift. Tchaikov and the guide took them in two groups of eleven
and twelve up into
the dome.
They seemed frightened on the narrow stair, and in the corridor, as though
extreme
cold still unsettled -- startled -- them. They peered through the glass
doors, exactly as
Tchaikov had. When he and the bossy guide ushered them
through, they wandered about the
bedroom. Told not to touch anything, they made
tactile motions in the air over ornaments
and furnishings, with their gloved
hands.
One woman, seeing the lovers, Tamura, Xander, on
the bed, began to cry. No one
took any notice. She pulled quantities of paper handkerchiefs
from her pocket;
possibly she had come prepared for emotion.
Downstairs in the ballroom, the
guide lectured everybody on the Dacha. They
stood glassy-eyed and blank. The significance
of Tamura and Xander was elusive
but overpowering. Tchaikov too did not listen. Instead he
organized the
coffee-plate in the card room, and brought the party coffee in relays, laced
with vodka, before its return to the city in the two drafty buses.
When they had gone,
about six, Bella was whining from the kitchen. He fed her
quickly, knowing she wanted to be
off to her lover. He gave her that night two
extra steaks, in case she should want to take
them out as a gift, but she left
them on the plate. Oddly, from this, he deduced she would
eventually desert the
Dacha for her wolf panner. Instinctively she knew not to accustom him
to extra
food, and to prepare herself for future hardship. But doubtless this was
fanciful.
Besides, she might by now be pregnant with the wolf's children.
Bella lay before the
synthetic log fire, her gold eyes burning golden-red. Her
belly looked more full than it
had. It was about twenty-two hours, ten o'clock.
Tchaikov read aloud to her from the poem
"This Place."
I dreamed
once, of this place.
When I was young.
But then I woke
When I was
young.
It was five nights since the bus party had visited. Once the dog had got up,
shaken
herself, and padded from the room, Tchaikov went upstairs and stepped
into the elevator.
The night was extra cold, minus several more degrees on the gauge, and the great
bedroom
had a silvery fog in it.
He could look at the couple now quite passively, as if they were
only waxworks.
A man and a woman who had not wanted to remain inside the sinking winter
world.
But was it merely that? Was their mystical suicide cowardice -- or bravura? Did
they
think, in dying, that they had somewhere warm to go?
The Bureau had not advanced any
records on them, and probably their names were
not even those they had gone by in life:
Again,
he asked himself what they meant. But it did not really matter. They
were. that was all.
In the night, about four A.M., an unearthly noise woke him from a deep sleep,
where he had
been dreaming of swimming in a warm sea jeweled by fish.
The sound had occurred outside, he
thought, outside both the dream and the room.
He got up and went to the window, and looked
out through the triple glazing
which was all the suite provided.
The snowscape spread from
the pines, along the plain, and in the distance
billowed up to the higher land, and the
black sky massed with the broken edges
of stars. Far away to the right, where the plain was
its most level and long, a
black mark had appeared in the snow. It must stretch for nearly
twenty meters,
he thought, a jagged, ink-black crack in the terrain.
Tchaikov stared, and
saw a vapor rising out of the crack, caused by the
disparity between the bitter set of the
air and some different temperature
below.
The sound had been a crack. Like a gigantic piece
of wood snapped suddenly in
half- a bark of breakage.
But new snow was already drifting
faintly down from the stars, smoothing and
obscuring the black tear in the whiteness. As
Tchaikov watched, it began to
vanish.
Probably it was nothing. In the city apertures
sometimes appeared in the
top-snow of streets, where thermolated pipes still ran beneath.
Somebody had
told Tchaikov there had been a river here, passing below the house. The driver
had mentioned it too. Perhaps the disturbance had to do with that.
Tchaikov went back to
bed, and lay for a while listening, expectant and tensed.
Then he recalled that once, in
his early childhood, he had heard such a crack
roar out across a frozen lake in the
country. Instinctively, hearing it now, he
had unconsciously remembered the springs of
long-ago, the waxing of the sun, the
rains, the melting of the ice. But spring was forever
over.
He drifted back down into sleep, numb and calm.
The next morning, as he was coming
from the solarium, having switched off the
sprinklers, he heard the sound of a vehicle on
the plain. He went into the
ballroom and looked down at the snow, half noticing as he did
so that the
curious mark of the previous night had completely disappeared. A large black
car
was now parked by the Dacha's steps, near the statues. After a moment, Tchaikov
recognized
the car which had brought him here. Puzzled, he waited, and saw the
driver, Argenty, get
out, and then a smaller figure in a long coat of gray
synthetic fur.
They came up the steps,
Argenty pausing for the smaller figure, which was that
of a woman.
After a minute the house
door made a noise.
There had been no communication from the city computer, but sometimes
messages
were delayed. In any case, you could not leave them standing in the cold.
Tchaikov
opened the door without interrogation. Argenty shot him a quick look
under his hat.
"It's
all right, isn't it?"
"I expect so," said Tchaikov.
He let them come in, and the door shut.
Argenty took off his hat, and stood almost to attention. He said, "There aren't
visitors
due, are there?"
"Not that I know of."
"I thought not. There's been another power failure. I
shouldn't think anyone
would be going anywhere today."
"Apart from you."
"Yes," said Argenty.
He turned, and looked at the woman.
She too had taken off her hat, a fake fur shako to
match the coat. She had a
small pale slender face, without, he thought, any makeup beyond a
dusting of
powder. Her eyes were dark and smoky, with long lashes of a lighter darkness.
Her dark hair seemed recently washed and brushed and fell in soft waves to her
shoulders.
Just under her right cheekbone had been applied a little diamante
flower. She met his eyes
and touched the flower with a gloved fingertip. She
said quietly, "A frostbite scar."
"This
is my wife," said Argenty. "Tanya."
Then she smiled at Tchaikov, a placating smile, like a
child's when it wants to
show it is undeserving of punishment. She was like a child, a
girl, despite the
two thin lines cut under her large eyes and at either side of her soft
mouth.
He remembered how Argenty had talked on and on about her, her light-deprived
Twilight
Sickness, her wanderings in the night and cries. She had been lovely,
he said, twenty years
ago. In a way she still was.
Unauthorized, they should not be here. It could cost Argenty a
serious demotion.
What had happened? The power failure? The electricity off in their flat,
gloom,
and the refrigerator failing, and Argenty saying, Leave all that, I'll take you
somewhere
nice. As you might, to stop a miserable and frightened child crying.
Tchaikov said, "Come
into the card room. There's a fire."
They went through with him, Argenty still stiff and
formal, absolutely knowing
what he had risked, but she was all smiles now, reassured
In the
warm room, Argenty removed his greatcoat, and helped her off with her
fur. Tchaikov looked
at them, slightly surprised. Argenty wore the uniform of
his city service, with an honor
ribbon pinned by the collar. While she -- she
wore a long, old evening gown of faded pastel
crimson, which left her shoulders
and arms and some of her white back and breast bare. On
her left hand, under the
woolen glove, was another little glove of lace. She indicated it
again at once,
laughed and said, "Frostbite. I've been careless, you see."
Tchaikov switched
on the coffee-plate. He said, "I usually have lunch in about
an hour. I hope you'll join
me."
Axgenty nodded politely. She began to walk about the room, inspecting the
antique oil
paintings and the restored damask wall covering. Argenty took out a
brand of expensive
cigarettes and came to Tchaikov, offering them.
Argenty murmured, very low, "Thank you, for
being so good. I can't tell you what
it means to her."
"That's all right. You may even get
away with it, if the computer's out."
Argenty shrugged. "Perhaps. What does it matter
anyway?"
After the coffee, Tchaikov showed them the ballroom, then went to organize a
lunch.
He selected caviar and pork, the type of vegetables and little side
dishes he did not,
himself, bother with, fruit and biscuits, and a chocolate
dessert he thought she would
like. He took vodka and two bottles of champagne
from the liquor compartment. For God's
sake, they might as well enjoy the visit.
He opened up the parlor off the ballroom. It too
had a chandelier dripping
prisms. He turned on the fire and lit the tall white candles in
the priceless
candelabra. He was not supposed to do this. But against Argenty's tremendous
gamble it was a small gesture.
Everything sparkled in the room. It was now only like an
overcast snowy winter
day in the country. Perhaps before some festival. And the lunch was
like a
celebration.
Argenty ate doggedly, drank quite sparingly. She ate only a little, but
with
interest, excitement. She sparkled up like the room, her personal lights
switched on.
In the middle of the meal, the dog, Bella, came padding in, her coat thick with
rime and
water drops. Tchaikov got up, thinking Tanya would be afraid of the
dog. But Tanya only
laughed with delight, and went straight to Bella, ruffling
her fur, and drying her
inadequately with linen napkins from the table.
As Bella stood before the fire, and the
slight woman made a fuss of her,
Tchaikov could see the swelling shape of the dog's belly,
her extended nipples.
She was definitely pregnant from the wolf. And the girl-woman bent
shining over
her, caressing and stroking- kissing the big animal on the savage velvet of
her
brow.
Argenty said, "Tanya used to live on a farm. They had dogs, cats, horses,
everything."
Tanya said, lightly, "I came to the city to sell stockings. Isn't that
ridiculous."
When the
meal was finished, they drew the large chairs to the fireside. They sat
drinking coffee and
brandy, and the dog lay between them, glistening gold along
her back from the fire.
Outside,
the dusk of the afternoon seemed only seasonal through the openings of
the heavy drapes.
They were sleepy, muttering little anecdotes of their pasts, quite divorced from
their
present. In the end, Tanya fell asleep, her head gracefully drooping, a
lock of her hair
like dark tinsel on her cheek.
"When she wakes up," said Argenty, "we'll be going."
"Why
don't you stay tonight?" said Tchaikov. "Leave early in the morning.
There's another
bedroom in the suite. Quite a good one-- I think it's for
visiting VIPS. By tomorrow the
power failure will be over, probably."
"That's kind...you've been kind...but we'd better
get back."
They looked at the sleeping woman, at the sleeping dog, and the fire.
"Why did
this happen?" asked Argenty. His voice was gentle and unemphatic.
"Couldn't they have
seen-- why did they give up all the best things, let them go
-- they could have --
something -- surely"
Tchaikov said nothing, and Argenty fell silent.
And in the silence
there came a dense low rumble.
For a moment Tchaikov took it for some fluctuation of the
gas jet in the fire,
and then, as it grew louder, for the noise of snow dislodged and
tumbling from a
roof of the mansion.
But then the rumbling became very loud, running in
toward them over the plain.
"What is it?" said Argenty. He had gone pale.
"I don't know. An
earth tremor, perhaps."
The rumbling was now so vehement he had to raise his voice. On the
table the
silver and the glasses tinkled and rattled, something fell and broke, and on the
walls the pictures trembled and swayed. The floor beneath their chairs was
chuming.
The dog
had woken, sat up, her coat bristling and ears laid flat, a white ring
showing round each
eye.
Argenty and Tchaikov rose, and in her sleep the woman stretched out one hand, in
its
lace glove, as if to snatch hold of something.
Then came a thunderclap, a sort of ejection
of sound that ripped splintering
from earth and sky, hit the barrier of the house,
exploded, dropped back in
enormous echoing shards.
The windows grated and shook. No doubt
some of the external glass had ruptured.
"Is it a bomb?" cried Argenty.
Tanya had started
from sleep and the chair, and he caught her in his arms. She
was speechless with shock and
terror. The dog was growling.
"I don't know. It's stopped now. Not a bomb, I think. There
was no light flash."
Tchaikov moved to the door. "Stay here."
Outside, he ran across the
ballroom, and to the nearer window which looked out
to the plain.
What he saw made him
hesitate mentally, stumble in his mind, at a loss. He could
not decipher what he was
looking at. It was a sight theoretically familiar
enough. Yet knowing what it was, he stood
immobile for several minutes, staring
without comprehension at the enormous coal-black
dragon which had crashed upward
through the dead ice of the frozen river, showering off
panes of the marble
land, like the black and white concrete blocks of a collapsed building.
In the
puddle of bubbling iron water, the submarine settled now, tall, motionless, less
than
thirty-five meters beyond the Dacha, while clouds of stony steam rose in a
tumult on the
steel sky.
THEY MARCHED STEADILY to the mansion, over the snow. Henrique Tchaikov watched
them come, black shapes on the whiteness.
Reaching the steps, they climbed them, and
arrived at the door. He could see
their uniforms by then, the decorations of rank and
authority. They did not seem
to feel the cold. They did not bother with the buzzer.
He spoke
through the door apparatus.
"You must identify yourselves."
"You'll let us in." The one who
spoke then gave a key word and number. And
Tchaikov opened the door.
The cold gushed in with
them, in a special way.
"You're the current Bureau man," said the commander to Tchaikov. He
was about
thirty-six, athletic, tanned by a solarium, his hair cut too short, not a pore
in his face. His teeth were winter white. "We won't give you much trouble. We've
come for
the couple."
Tchaikov did not answer. His heart kicked, but it was a reflex. He stood very
still. He had taken Tanya and Argenty down to the kitchen, with the dog, and
shut them all
in.
The commander vocalized again. "We don't need any red tape, do we? My men will
go
straight up. It'll only take the briefest while. The dome, right?"
Tchaikov said slowly,
"You mean Tamura and Xander."
"Are those the names? Yes. The pair in the state bedroom.
Here's the
confirmation disc."
Tchaikov accepted the disc and put it in the analyzer by the
door. After ten
seconds an affirmative lit up, the key number, and the little message:
Comply
with all conditions. The commander took back his disc. "Where would we be," he
said,
"without our machines." Then he gave an order, and the four other men ran
off and up the
stair, like hounds let from a leash, toward the upper floors and
the elevator. Obviously
they had been primed with the layout of the mansion.
Tchaikov saw that two of them carried
each a rolled rain-colored thermolated
bag. They would have some means of opening the upper
doors.
He said, "Why are you taking them away? Where are they going?"
The commander showed
all his pristine, repulsive teeth. "Quite a comfortable
stint here, I'd say, yes? Don't
worry, they won't recall you until your time's
up. Messes up the files. Seven months to go.
You can just relax."
Tchaikov grasped it would be useless to question the commander
further. He had
had his orders, which were to remove the frozen lovers in cold-bags, take
them
into the submarine, go away with them, somewhere.
Tchaikov said, "It was impressive,
the way you surfaced."
"That river," said the commander, "it runs deep. So far down, you
know, the
water still moves. We came in from the sea, thirteen kilometers. Must have given
you a surprise."
"Yes."
"There's nothing like her," said the commander, as though he boasted
about a
selected woman, or his mother. "The X 2 M's. Ice-breakers, powerhives. Worlds in
themselves. You'd be amazed. We could stay under for a hundred years. We have
everything.
Clean reusable air, foolproof heating, cuisine prepared by master
chefs, games rooms,
weaponry. See how brown I am," he added, dancing his narrow
eyes, flirting now. "Have you
ever tasted eggs?"
"No."
"I have one every day. And fresh meat. Salads. My little boat has
everything
I'll ever need."
There was a wooden, flat sound, repeated on and on.
The commander
frowned.
"It's only the dog" Tchaikov said. "I shut her in, below. In case she annoyed
you."
"Dog? Oh, yes. Animals don't interest me, except of course to eat."
Tchaikov thought he
heard the lift cranking up the tower, going to the dome.
The commander looked about now,
and laughed at the old regal house, the old
country Dacha with its sleeping white-candy
dead.
Then stood in silence in the hall, until the other four men ran down again,
carrying,
not particularly cautiously, the two thermolated bags, upright and
unpliable. Filled and
out of the dome, the material had misted over. Tchaikov
could not see Tamura or Xander in
these cocoons, although he found himself
staring, thinking for a second he caught the
scorch of her ruby ring.
"Well done," the commander said to him. "All over." It was like
the dentists in
childhood. "You can go back to all those cozy duties." He grinned at
Tchaikov.
But his use of jargon was somehow unwieldy and out of date. Did they speak
another
tongue on the submarine? "A nice number. Happy days."
The dog had suddenly stopped barking.
The door let the men out. Tchaikov watched them returning over the snow, toward
their black
dragon-whale. Already the ice was forming round the submarine's
casing, but that would not
be much of an inconvenience. He wondered where they
had been, how far out in jet black
seas, where maybe fish still swam. When the
vessel was gone, the ice would swiftly close,
and tonight's fresh snowfall heal
the wound it had made as snow had healed the preface to
the wound, last night.
Tamura and Xander, preserved from the submarine's warmth in some
refrigerated
cubicle. He did not know, could not imagine for what purpose. Although the
nagging
line from some book -- was it a Bible? --began to twitter in his
head...And He said: Make
thee an ark
Above, the dome was void. The great polar room with its stalactites of ice, the
footsteps already smoothing from the carpet.
He descended quickly to the kitchen. He had
told Argenty where the medicine
cabinet was, and suggested that he dial some sedative
tablets for his wife.
Tchaikov was unsure what he would find.
Yet when he reached the lower
floor, there was only quietness. Opening the
kitchen door, he found the two of them seated
urbanely at the long table.
The dog Bella had gone. But Tanya sat in her red dress, and
looking up, she met
Tehaikov only with her lambent eyes.
She said to him, reciting from
memory from Eynin's poem that he too knew so
well:
In Hell the birds are made of fire;
If all
the birds of Hell flew to this place,
And settled on the
snow,
Still darkness would prevail,
And utter cold.
"She knows it by heart," said Argenty.
"So do I, most of it," Tchaikov
answered.
"The dog went out," said Argenty. "We thought we heard a wolf."
"Yes. They've
mated."
The kitchen was bathed in vague ochre heat, only the light of the new cooking
area
was raw and too bright.
Tanya's eyes shone.
"You were very good, to hide us away."
"It's all
right," he said. "The military are shortsighted. They came for
something else."
In a while
they heard the strange, sluggish hollow suction of the submarine, its
motors, diving down
again below the ice. The house gave now only a little
shudder, and on its shelf one ancient
plate turned askew.
Tanya laughed. She lifted her dark springy hair in her hands.
Tchaikov
saw that Argenty's hair, under the polishing light, was a rich dull
gold.
He slept a deep
leaden sleep, and dreamed of the submarine. It was taller than
the tallest architecture of
the city, the Bureau building. It clove forward,
black, ice and steam and boiling water
spraying away from it, rending the land
with a vicious hull like the blade of some enormous
ice-skate. In the dark sky
above, red and yellow burning birds wheeled to and fro, cawing
and calling,
striking sparks from the clouds. The birds of Hell.
When the submarine reached
the Dacha, it stopped just outside the wall of the
suite, which in the dream was made of
glass. The wall shattered and fell down,
and looking up the mile of iron, steel and night
that was the tower of the
submarine, Tchaikov noticed a tiny bluish porthole set abnormally
in the side,
and there they sat, the lovers, gazing down with cold, closed eyes.
Waking, he
got up and made black tea on the plate. From the other bedroom of the
suite, across the
inner room, came no sound. When he looked out, there was no
longer a light beneath their
door. If they had switched off the optional lamp,
perhaps they slept.
When the afternoon
darkened, they had sat on with him in the kitchen, drinking a
little, talking idly. There
was the subtle ease of remaining; he realized before
Argenty asked, that they did after all
mean to stay a night at the house.
Later the dog came in again. Tchaikov fed her. She lay
by the hot pipes for half
an hour before going out once more.
During the interval, Tanya
suddenly sang a strange old song in her light girl's
voice, "Oh my dog is such a clever dog
--"
Bella listened. Her tail wagged slowly. She came to Tanya to be caressed before
padding
off into the star-spiked night.
They ate cold pork and bread for supper and finished the
champagne. Argenty
thanked Tchaikov, shaking his hand, throwing his arm around him. The
girl-woman
did not kiss Tchaikov as he had half expected -hoped? --she would. She only said
shyly, "It's been a wonderful day. Better than a birthday."
By the time he concluded his
nocturnal check of the Dacha, they had gone up, and
just the lamp showed softly under the
door.
But they were in full darkness now, so Tchaikov walked almost on tiptoe from the
suite.
He did not want to wake them if they slept. He wished her not to dream as
he had, of the
triumphant submarine.
Outside, the ice had superficially closed over again. Snow fell in
gentle
pitiless flakes.
The elevator seemed particularly sluggish. He had to work at the
lever with
great firmness.
Above, in the icy corridor, Tchaikov shivered, only his trousers
and greatcoat
on over his nightshirt. As he walked toward the glass doors, he had a sense
of
imminence. What was it? Was it loss?
As formerly, he hesitated, and stood at the doors,
staring in through the
glacial light, the glacial glass, the cracks, the fog of ice.
He
experienced a moment of dislocation, pure bewilderment, just as he had with
the submarine.
He had previously seen the bed clothed by two forms. Now they
were removed and the bed was
vacant. But there were two forms on the bed.
The bed was clothed.
Tchaikov opened the doors
with the electronic key they had so noiselessly
replaced on the chest in his room, before
going up again. Of course, the key,
lying there, had been obvious for what it was. Like the
house map in the card
room. There would have been no difficulty in deciding.
The bedroom,
when he entered it now, did not strike him as so frozen. The breath
of the living seemed
finally to have stirred it, like the fluid of the deepest
coldest pool, stirred by a golden
wand.
Tchaikov went across to the bed. Two bottles had fallen on the thick carpet. He
looked
down, at the couple.
They lay hand in hand, side by side. Their faces were peaceful, almost
smiling,
the eyes fast shut. Like the faces, the eyes, of Xander and Tamura. Yet these
two
lovers had needed to be brave. Despite the vodka they had swallowed and the
tablets from
the medicine cabinet, they had had to face the cold, had had to lie
down in the cold. He in
his well-brushed uniform with its single honor, and she
in her pale red sleeveless gown.
But there had been no struggle. They seemed to have found it very simple, very
consoling,
if not easy. Perhaps it had been easy, too.
Her somber hair, his gilded hair, both smoked
now by the rime. And on the
diamante flower that gemmed her cheek, a single mote of crystal
like a tear.
Tchaikov backed slowly and carefully away. It was possible they were not quite
dead yet, still in the process of dying. He tiptoed out, not to disturb their
death.
By the
end of the ninth month, when the Bureau at last recalled him, the dog was
long gone. He had
seen her at first sometimes, out on the snow, playing with the
wolf and their three pups.
But the wolf was a king wolf, made her queen over the
wolf pack, and in the end, she went
away to the factory with them.
When he heard the howling in the still night, he thought of
her. Once, the moon
appeared incredibly for a quarter of an hour, sapphire blue, and the
wolves'
chanting rose to a crescendo. Her children would be very strong, cross-bred from
an alpha male and such a well-nourished mother.
His faxed report had been acknowledged, but
that was all. Tchaikov never
commented upon or thought about the aspects of what had
occurred, he detailed
and visualized the events only in memorized images.
The night of the
blue moon, which was two nights before his return to the city,
and to his cramped flat with
its thudding radiators, the tepid bath once a week,
the rationing, the dark, he wrote in
the back of the book of Eynin's poetry, on
the blank page which followed the poem called
"The Place."
Here too he set out the facts sparely, as he had done for the Bureau. Under
the
facts he wrote a few further lines.
"I have puzzled all this time over what is their
meaning, the lovers in the ice,
whoever they are, whether right or wrong in their action,
and even if they
change, their bodies constantly taken and replaced by others. And I think
their
meaning is this: Love, courage, defiance-- the mystery of the human spirit,
still
blooming, always blooming, like the last flower in the winter world."