“I was there, that day on the Nevski Prospekt, where I know for a fact you should have died.”
It was a summer evening. Pekkala had spent the day trying to find a birthday present for Ilya, wandering up and down the arcade of shops in the Passazh—a glass-roofed corridor lined with expensive jewelers, tailors, and vendors of antiques.
For hours, he had paced back and forth in front of the Passazh windows, steeling himself to enter the cramped shops where he knew he would immediately be set upon by salesclerks.
Three times, he had abandoned the arcade and fled across the Nevski Prospekt to the huge produce market known as the Gostiny Dvor. The floors were strewn with sawdust, wilted cabbage leaves, and discarded sales receipts scribbled on cheap gray paper. Trucks pulled up onto the wide cobblestoned delivery area and porters in blue tunics with silver buttons, their hands bound with scraps of cloth as protection against the splintery wooden crates, unloaded vegetables and fruit.
Inside the vast, cold, echoing hall of the Gostiny Dvor, surrounded by vendors chanting out their lists of goods and the soft murmur of footsteps shuffling through the sawdust, Pekkala sat on a barrel in a cafe frequented by the porters, sipping a glass of tea and feeling his heart unclench after the stuffiness of the Passazh.
The last train to Tsarskoye Selo would be leaving in half an hour. Knowing that he could not go home empty-handed, he steeled himself for another trip to the Passazh. It’s now or never, Pekkala thought.
A minute later, on his way out of the hall, he noticed a man standing by one of the pillars at the exit. The man was watching him and trying not to make it obvious. But Pekkala could always tell when he was being watched, even if he could not see who was doing the watching. He felt it like static in the air.
Pekkala glanced at the man as he walked past, noting the stranger’s clothing—the knee-length coat made of wool and gray like the feathers of a dove, the out-of-fashion Homburg hat, rounded at the top and with an oval brim that sheltered his eyes so that Pekkala could not see them. He had an impressive mustache, which grew down to the line of his jaw, and a small, nervous-looking mouth.
But Pekkala was too preoccupied with Ilya’s birthday present to think much more about it.
Outside, the evening sky, which would not darken until midnight at this time of year, shimmered like an abalone shell.
He had almost reached the exit when he felt something nudge him in the back.
Pekkala spun around.
The man in the Homburg hat was standing there. He was holding a gun in his right hand. It was a poorly made automatic pistol, of a type manufactured in Bulgaria, which often showed up at crime scenes, since it was cheap and easy to purchase on the black market.
“Are you who I think you are?” asked the man.
Before Pekkala could come up with a reply, he heard a loud clapping sound.
Sparks erupted from the barrel of the gun. The air became hazy with smoke.
Pekkala realized he must have been shot, but he felt neither the impact of the bullet nor the burning, stinging pain which, he knew, would quickly change to a numbness radiating through his whole body. Astonishingly, he felt nothing at all.
The man was staring at him.
Only then did Pekkala notice that everything around him had come to a standstill. There were people everywhere—porters, shoppers with string bags, vendors behind their barricades of bright produce. And all of them were staring at him.
“Why?” he asked the man.
There was no reply. A look of terror spread across the man’s face. He set the gun against his own temple and pulled the trigger.
With the sound of that gunshot still ringing in Pekkala’s ears, the man fell in a heap into the sawdust.
Then, where there had been silence only seconds before, a wall of noise surrounded him. He heard the guttural cries of panicked men shouting useless commands. A woman grabbed him by the shoulders. “It’s Pekkala!” she shrieked. “They’ve killed the Emerald Eye!”
Carefully, Pekkala began to undo his coat. The act of unfastening the buttons felt suddenly unfamiliar, as if this was the first time he had ever done such a thing. He opened his coat, then his waistcoat, and finally his shirt. He prepared himself for the sight of the wound, the terrible whiteness of punctured flesh, the pulsing flow of blood from an arterial break. But the skin was smooth and unbroken. Not trusting his eyes, Pekkala ran his hands over his chest, certain that the wound must be there.
“He’s not hurt!” shouted a porter. “The bullet did not even touch him!”
“But I saw it!” shouted the woman who had grabbed Pekkala’s shoulders.
“There is no way he could have missed!” said the porter.
“Perhaps the gun wasn’t working!” said another man, a fishmonger in an apron splashed with guts and scales. He bent and picked up the weapon.
“Of course it works!” The porter gestured at the dead man. “There is the proof!”
Around the head of the corpse grew a halo of blood. The Homburg lay upturned beside him, like a bird’s nest knocked out of a tree. Pekkala’s eyes fixed on the tiny bow of silk used to join the two ends of the leather sweatband.
“Let me see that—” The porter tried to take the gun from the fishmonger.
“Be careful!” snapped the fishmonger.
As their fingers closed on the gun, it went off. The bullet smacked into a pyramid of potatoes.
The two men yelped and dropped the gun.
“Enough!” growled Pekkala.
They stared at him with bulging eyes, as if he were a statue come to life.
Pekkala picked up the gun and put it in his pocket. “Go find me the police,” he said quietly.
The two men, released from his freezing stare, scattered.
Later that night, having made his report to the Petrograd police, Pekkala found himself in the Tsar’s study.
The Tsar sat behind his desk. He had been going through papers all evening, reading by the light of a candle set into a bronze holder in the shape of a croaking frog. He insisted on reading all official documents himself and used a blue pencil to make notes in the margin. It slowed down the process by which any matters of state could be accomplished, but the Tsar preferred to handle these things personally. Now he had set aside his documents. He rested his elbows on the desk and settled his chin upon his folded hands. With his soft blue eyes, the Tsar regarded Pekkala. “Are you sure you are all right?”
“Yes, Majesty,” replied Pekkala.
“Well, I’m not, I don’t mind telling you,” replied the Tsar. “What the hell happened, Pekkala? I heard some madman shot you in the chest, but the bullet vanished in midair. The police checked out the gun. Their report indicates that it is functioning perfectly. All of Moscow is talking about this. You should hear the absurdities they’re uttering. They believe you’re supernatural. By tomorrow, it will be all over the country. Any idea who this man was? Or why he was trying to kill you?”
“No, Majesty. He was carrying no identification. His body had no distinctive marks, no tattoos, scars, or moles. All the labels had been removed from his clothes. Nor does he match the description of anyone currently wanted by the police. It is likely we will never know who he was, or why he attempted to kill me.”