Yet something was not right. Her breath caught in her throat. Bristling with Bolshevik vigilance, she moved silently, nerves like forked lightning that jazzed down her spinal column. She turned into the sitting room. There was the rasp of a rough strike and a kerosene lamp sprang to life.
“Greetings! I thought you’d never come.” A familiar voice—so why did it give her such a shock?
“Don’t mess with me,” she said, swallowing hard. She had the Mauser. “Lift up the light.”
He illuminated his face. “Did you buy some sweet dresses, Zemfira?”
Captain Sagan sat in the chair, wearing an ill-fitting black suit with a string tie. A fur coat lay on the floor.
“What are you doing here?” She was conscious that her voice sounded high and a little squeaky.
“Your comrade’s not coming. We picked him up. Tomorrow, the Special Commission’ll sentence him to two years of Siberian exile. Nothing too serious. So rather than leave you to waste your evening, I came instead.”
She shrugged, struggling to remain calm. “So? This safe house will no longer be safe. If you’re not arresting me, I’ll go home and get some sleep. Good night.” As she turned, she remembered Mendel’s order. She needed to get to know Sagan better. Besides, she was curious as to why he was here. “Or perhaps it’s too late for sleep?”
“I think so,” he said, pushing back his hair and looking younger suddenly. “Are you a night owl?”
“I feel lazy in the mornings but I come to life at night. All this conspiracy suits me. What about you, Captain? If I’m a night owl, you’re a bat.”
“I live on a knife-edge. Like you and your uncle Mendel. I sleep so little that when I go home to bed, I find I can hardly settle. I get up and read poems. This is what happens to us. We enjoy it so much that it changes us and we can’t do anything else. We conspirators, Sashenka, are like the undead. The vampires. We feed on the blood of the workers, and you feed on the blood of the bloodsuckers themselves who suck the blood of the workers. Quite Darwinian.”
She laughed aloud and sat on the edge of a metal bed, where the mattress was dyed sepia yellow by the hissing lamp.
“We conspirators? There’s no parallel between us, you police pharaoh. We have a scientific program; you’re simply reacting to us. We’ll win in the end. You’ll be finished. You’re digging the grave of the exploiters for us.”
Captain Sagan chuckled. “Yet I see no sign of this. At the moment, your vaunted Party is just a few freaks: the intellectual Mendel Barmakid, a worker named Shlyapnikov, a middle-class boy named Scriabin (Party alias Molotov), a few workers’ circles, some troublemakers at the front. Lenin’s abroad, and the rest are in Siberia. That leaves you, Sashenka. There can’t be more than a thousand experienced Bolsheviks in the whole of Russia. But you’re having a lot of fun, aren’t you? Playing the revolutionary.”
“You’re deluding yourself, Sagan,” she said hotly. “The lines are growing longer, the people getting angrier, hungrier. They want peace and you’re asking them to die for Nicholas the Last, Nicholas the Bloody, the German traitor Alexandra and the pervert Rasputin…”
“Whom you know all about from your mother. Let me try some thoughts on you. Your parents are the very definition of the corruption of the Russian system.”
“Agreed.”
“The aspirations and rights of the workers and peasants are totally ignored by the present system.”
“True.”
“And we know that the peasants need food but they also need rights and representation, and protection from the capitalists. They must have land, and they are desperate for peace. Your father’s dream of a progressive group taking power is too little, too late. We need a real change.”
“Since we agree on everything, why aren’t you a Bolshevik?”
“Because I believe a revolution could come soon.”
“So do I,” said Sashenka.
“No, you don’t. As a Marxist, you know a socialist revolution isn’t yet possible. The Russian proletariat isn’t yet developed. That’s where we differ. According to you, there’ll be no Bolshevik revolution.”
Sashenka sighed. “Our beliefs are so close. It’s a shame we don’t agree on that.”
They were silent for a moment then Sagan changed the subject. “You’ve heard the new Mayakovsky?”
“Can you recite it?”
“Let me try:
Sashenka took it up:
“Beautifully declaimed, Mademoiselle Zeitlin. I salute you!”
“In our country, poetry’s more powerful than howitzers.”
“You’re right. We should use poetry more and the gallows less.”
She watched him closely, keenly aware that both of them were risking their lives in what Mendel called the Superlative Game.
Her hand was on the frozen butt of the Mauser. A few weeks previously, Mendel had arranged for her to be taken out of the city to the birch forests and taught how to shoot: soon she could hit the target more than she missed it. When the Party ordered her to kill Sagan, she would do so.
“What are you carrying?”
The gun at her fingertips made her heart thump. She heard her voice and it did not sound like hers anymore. It was stranger, deeper, surprisingly calm. “Arrest me if you wish. Then you can have some Medusa of a policewoman search me.”
“There’s only one big difference between us, Sashenka. I believe human life is sacred. You believe in terror. Why do your comrades have to kill? I wonder if there is something in their mentality that suits them to this creed? Are they criminals or madmen?”
She stood up again. “Do you have a home to go to, Captain? Are you married?”
“Yes.”
“Children?”
“Not yet.”
“Happy?” Sashenka rubbed her eyes, now weary.
“Are any marriages happy?” he answered.
“I pity you,” she said. “I’ll never marry. Good night.”
“One thing, Zemfira: do you think there’s anywhere I’d rather be than here?”
Sashenka frowned. “That’s no compliment. I suspect most men don’t want to go home. Particularly when they’re vampires like you and me.” We are both armed, she thought almost deliriously. We could both die tonight.
Outside again, Sashenka walked through the streets with a light sleet caressing her face and eyelashes. Sagan was certainly an odd sort of gendarme, she reflected. She was playing along with him, drawing him out. He was older than her, much older, and he had recruited many double agents but his smug confidence in the his gamesmanship was his Achilles heel. Somehow, she’d break him down and deliver him to the Party, like John the Baptist’s head on a platter.
Far away, a train rushed whistling through the night. The black smoke of the factories encircled a silver moon. It was almost dawn: the sky was tinged with pink; the snow a deep purple. The muffled trot of a sleigh approached, and she hailed it.
The bulldog was so cold in her pocket, it burned her fingers.
“The price of oats is up again,” said the coachman, pulling on his tangled beard as they trotted toward the Zeitlin house on Greater Maritime Street.