‘We should have taken the girl, then he would have helped us,’ Gennady rumbled from behind me.
‘Calm down,’ Edgar told him. ‘What kind of monster are you anyway? You should be more humane, Gennady!’
‘I was humane when I was alive,’ said the vampire. ‘And I held out until they killed Kostya. And until Polina left me. I can’t take any more!’
‘But even so we have to try to overcome our differences of opinion, since we’re going to be in the same team for a little while at least,’ Edgar stated reasonably. ‘Avoid insults, don’t threaten his family … there’s no point. Is that all you have to say, Anton?’
‘No, there’s one more little comment. I can’t get through to the seventh level. When I got to the sixth, I was hyped up, the adrenalin was flowing. But the next barrier is too strong for me to break through. And the Watches have also evaluated the strength of the barrier – no input of Power from outside will help.’
‘Why?’
‘Because it’s not a case of Power as such! There’s more of it pouring down the vortex above the Dungeons of Scotland than you could possibly use. But you have to work with it, pass it through yourself. And what if you do supply Power artificially? Pump it out of people, out of artefacts… what then? You can’t keep raising the voltage in the mains for ever, the wires will melt! What’s needed is a superconductor, do you understand? And that superconductor is a zero-point Other, someone who produces absolutely no magical energy!’
‘Oh, these technical explanations,’ Edgar sighed. ‘Gennady, did you understand that?’
‘I did. I told you—’
‘All right, be quiet. Anton, I understand that you can’t jump over your own head. And neither can I …’
‘Edgar, when did you become a Higher One?’
The former Inquisitor laughed.
‘Just recently. Don’t pay any attention to that.’
‘Okay, so you removed Gennady’s registration seal,’ I said, thinking out loud. ‘That’s fine, I know they taught you fancier tricks than that in the Inquisition. But you can only raise your level of Power with the Fuaran. The book was burnt up …’
‘Don’t try to blind me with science,’ Edgar said. ‘Tell it to Gennady, he likes that stuff. Nobody’s expecting any miracles from you. What’s expected is a bit of savvy. Find the way round the barrier.’
‘I’m sure Thomas the Rhymer has been searching for that for hundreds of years.’
‘But he didn’t have a wife and a daughter sitting on a nuclear bomb all set to blow,’ said Edgar, glancing at his watch. ‘We’re on time. Well done, you’re a good driver. And now listen – don’t go into the parking lot, we don’t want to leave any unnecessary tracks. There’s a young guy waiting for us at the entrance to the departures hall, give him the keys. He has been paid to drive your car to a parking lot and pay for three days. If you come back, you can pick it up.’
‘If you come back,’ Gennady growled.
‘I’m sorry, but I think his chances are better than you do,’ Edgar snapped. ‘So, we’ll slip through passport control quickly, and you won’t try to attract the attention of the Others at customs. A Light One wouldn’t want any unnecessary casualties, right? We’ll get into the plane and you’ll have a cup of coffee, even a sip of brandy is permissible. And you’ll think. Think hard. So hard that I can hear your brains creaking. And it will be very good if by the time we reach Edinburgh you already know how to get the Crown of All Things. Because we don’t have any time to spare. Only twelve hours until the bomb goes off.’
‘You bastard,’ I said.
‘No, I’m a highly effective personnel manager,’ Edgar said, with a smile.
CHAPTER 4
THERE ARE SOME words that can send a man into a trance without using any magic.
For example: ‘Tell me something funny.’ Even if you’ve just watched the final of Smart-Alecs Club’ on TV, read the latest Terry Pratchett book and dug up ten really funny, fresh jokes on the internet – that will all fly right out of your head in an instant.
The words ‘Sit and think’ are pretty effective too. They immediately remind me of an algebra test or some quarterly essay at school, and the weary face of the teacher who no longer expects anything good from his pupils.
This time we were flying directly to Edinburgh, on Aeroflot. If this had been a standard assignment, I wouldn’t have minded at all – I liked what I’d seen of Scotland. And particularly since Edgar, of course, had taken seats in business class. Three infuriated com patriots of ours, who between them could obviously have bought the Boeing 767 we were flying in, were left fuming at check-in when their tickets proved to be invalid. I didn’t say anything, but I felt hope beginning to warm my chest. Most human problems with double bookings or invalid tickets are caused by the machinations of certain light-fingered Others, most often Dark Ones but sometimes Light Ones too. That’s why all such incidents are investigated by the Watches. Well, in theory all, but in practice only the ones that cause serious scandals. In this case it looked as if a really large-scale scandal was in the offing …
But I was afraid that the investigation still wouldn’t be as prompt as I needed it to be. Especially right then, when everyone all the way across Moscow was hunting for Saushkin.
The customs post at departures had also been reinforced. Instead of two Others on duty, there were four – in such cases parity is strictly observed. I had been hoping that perhaps they might use some of our lads for the reinforcements and they would spot me, but all of the Others were from Moscow District, not the city. And before check-in Edgar had given us false passports and applied high-quality masks that fourth- and fifth-level Others wouldn’t be able to penetrate. So I walked past my colleagues under the name of Alexander Peterson, resident of St Petersburg. Gennady became Konstantin Arbenin, but what Edgar called himself I didn’t hear.
Once I was in the plane and the flight attendant had brought the coffee and cognac that Edgar had promised I realised that I had lost the game all hands up. Every now and then the furry noose on my neck, which had attracted glances of puzzlement at customs, squeezed a little bit tighter, or scratched at my skin with its tiny little claws … or teeth. Just about the only thing it didn’t do was purr while it waited for me to use any magic. I even remembered what the thing was called. Schrödinger’s Cat. Evidently because nobody had ever been able to decide whether this piece of trash was alive or dead. In the Inquisition they used Schrödinger’s Cat for transporting the most dangerous criminals. The lousy son of a bitch had never failed. And by the way, unless I was getting things confused, it was the only one of its kind. Edgar had stolen some truly unique artefacts.
‘Drink your coffee,’ Edgar said amiably. I had been put in the window seat, with Gennady beside me. Edgar sat behind us, and he made sure there was no one in the seat beside him: the perplexed but unprotesting passenger was moved to somewhere in economy class, with showers of apologies and promises of countless bonuses in compensation. All in all, Aeroflot made a quite remarkably pleasant impression. No worse than the western carriers, or even a bit better. It was just a pity I wouldn’t be able to enjoy the flight. I was in the wrong company for that.
I drank coffee and brandy by turns, watching as the plane rolled out onto the runway. Edgar whispered something behind my back – and the roar of the engines disappeared. A Sphere of Silence. Well, it made sense: now no one would bother us, and no one would hear us. It was a good thing that, unlike the wizard Khottabich in the fairy tale, Edgar had other ways of combating the noise apart from stopping the engines…