Выбрать главу

Scrgey stands on the bank, raking the water with his net. His dream, Katya explains, is to catch a fish and cook it for everyone who depends on him. Anna is drawing. Ostentatiously, leaning away from her work so that others may admire it. She wishes to give Barley a portrait of herself to hang in his room in London.

'She is asking, are you married?' Katya says, yielding to her daughter's importuning.

'No, not at present, but I'm always available.'

Anna asks another question but Katya blushes and rebukes her. His loyalist duties completed, Matvey is lying on his back with his cap over his eyes, rattling on about heaven knows what, except that, whatever it is, it is all delightful to him.

'Soon he will describe the siege of Leningrad,' Katya calls with a fond smile.

A pause while she glances at Barley. She means, 'Now we can talk.'

The grey lorry was leaving, and high time too. Barley had been resenting it over her shoulder for quite a while, hoping it was friendly but wishing it would leave them alone. The side windows of its cab were dark with dust. Gratefully he, saw it lumber to the road then lumber out of sight and mind.

'Oh, he is very well,' Katya was saying. 'He wrote me a long letter and everything is excellent with him. He was ill but he is completely recovered, I am sure. He has many matters to discuss with you and he will make a special visit to Moscow during the fair in order to meet you and hear the progress concerning his book. He would like to see some prepared manuscript soon, perhaps only a page. My opinion is that this would be dangerous but he is so impatient. He wants proposals about the title, translations, even illustrations. I think he is becoming a typical dictatorial writer. He will confirm everything very soon and he will also find an apartment where you can meet. He wishes to make all the arrangements himself, can you imagine? I think yqu have been a very good influence for him.'

She was searching in her handbag. A red car had parked on the other side of the birch grove but she seemed oblivious to everything but her own good spirits. 'Personally I believe his work will soon be regarded as redundant. With the disarmament talks advancing so rapidly and the new atmosphere of international cooperation, all these terrible things will shortly belong to the past. Naturally the Americans a re suspicious of us. Naturally we are suspicious of them. But when we have joined our forces, we can disarm completely and between us prevent all further trouble in the world.' It was her didactic voice, brooking no argument.

'How do we prevent all further trouble in the world if we haven't got any arms to prevent it with?' Barley objected, and won a sharp look for his temerity.

'Barley, you are being Western and negative, I think,' she retorted as she drew the envelope from her handbag. 'It was you, not 1, who told Yakov that we required an experiment in human nature.'

No stamp, Barley noticed. No postmark. just 'Katya' in Cyrillic, in what looked like Goethe's handwriting, but who could tell? He felt a sudden sense of warning in his head and shoulders, like a poison, or an allergy coming on.

'What's he been recovering from?' he asked.

'Was he nervous when you met him in Leningrad?'

'We both were. It was the weather,' Bailey replied, still waiting for an answer. He was feeling slightly drunk as well. Must be something he had eaten.

'It was because he was ill. Quite soon after your meeting he had a bad collapse and it was so sudden and severe that even his colleagues did not know where he had disappeared to. They had the worst suspicions. A trusted friend told me they feared he might be dead.'

'I didn't know he had any trusted friends except you.'

'He has appointed me his representative to you. He naturally has other friends for other things.' She drew out the letter but did not give it to him.

'That's not quite what you tol~ me before,'he said feebly, while he continued to battle with his multiplying symptoms of mistrust.

She was unmoved by his objection. 'Why should one tell everything at a first encounter? One has to protect oneself. It is normal.'

'I suppose it is,' he agreed.

Anna had finished her self-portrait and needed immediate recognition. It showed her picking flowers on a rooftop.

'Superb!' Barley cried. 'Tell her I'll hang it above my fireplace, I know just the spot. There's a picture of Anthea skiing on one side. and Hal sailing on the other. Anna goes in the middle.'

'She asks how old is Hal?' Katya said.

He really had to think. He had first to remember Hal's birth year, then the year it was now, then laboriously subtract the one from the other while he fought off the singing in his cars.

'Ah well now, Hal's twenty-four. But I'm afraid he's made a rather foolish marriage.'

Anna was disappointed. She stared reproachfully at them as Katya resumed their conversation.

'As soon as I heard he had disappeared I tried to contact him by all the usual means but I was not successful. I was extrdmely distressed.' She passed him the letter at last, her eyes alight with pleasure and relief. As he took it from her, his hand closed distractedly over hers and she let it. 'Then eight days ago, a week ago yesterday which was Saturday, just two days after you telephoned from London, Igor telephoned me at my house. "I have some medicine for you. Let us have a coffee and I will give it to you." Medicine is our code for a letter. He meant a letter from Yakov. I was amazed and very happy. It is even years since Yakov has sent me a letter. And such a letter!'

'Who's Igor?' Barley said, speaking rather loudly in order to defeat the uproar inside his head.

There were five pages of it, written on good unobtainable white writing paper, in an orderly, regular script. Barley had not imagined Goethe capable of such a conventionallooking document. She took back her hand, but gently.

'Igor is a friend of Yakov from Leningrad. They studied together.'

'Great. What does he do now?'

She was annoyed by his question and impatient to have his good reaction to the letter, even if he could only judge it by appearance. 'He is a scientist of some kind with one of the ministries. What does it matter how Igor is employed? Do you wish me to translate it to you or not?'

'What's his other name?'

She told him, and in the midst of his confusion he was exalted by her abrasiveness. We should have had years, he thought, not hours. We should have pulled each other's hair when we were kids. We should have done everything we never did, before it was too late. He held the letter for her and she knelt herself carelessly behind him on the grass, steadying herself with one hand on his shoulder, while with the other she pointed past him at the lines as she translated. He could feel her breasts brushing against his back. He could feel his world steady itself inside him, as the monstrosity of his first suspicions made way for a more analytical frame of mind.

'Here is the address, just a box number, that is normal,' she said, her fingertip on the top right corner. 'He is in a special hospital, perhaps in a special town. He wrote the letter in bed – you see how well he writes when he is sober? – he gave it to a friend who was on his way to Moscow. The friend gave it to Igor. It is normal. "My darling Katya" – that is not exactly how he begins, it is a different endearment, never mind. "I have been struck down with some variety of hepatitis but illness is very instructive and I am alive." That is so typical of him, to draw at once the moral lesson.' She was pointing again. 'This word makes the hepatitis worse. It is "irritated".'

'Aggravated,' Barley said quite calmly.

The hand on his shoulder gave him a reproving squeeze. 'What does it matter what is the right word? You want me to fetch a dictionary? "I have had a high temperature and much fantasy – "'

'Hallucination,' Barley said.

'The word is gallutsinatsiya' she began furiously.

'Okay, let's stick with that.'

'" – but now I am recovered and in two days I shall go to a convalescent unit for a week by the sea." He does not say which sea, why should he? "I shall be able to do everything except drink vodka, but that is a bureaucratic limitation which as a good scientist I shall quickly ignore." Is that not typical also? That after hepatitis he thinks im- mediately of vodka?'

'Absolutely,' Barley agreed, smiling in order to please her - and perhaps to reassure himself.

The lines were dead straight as if written on a ruled page. There was not a single crossing out.

'"If only all Russians could have hospitals like this, what a healthy nation we would soon become." He is always the idealist, even when he is ill. "The nurses are so beautiful and the doctors are young and handsome, it is more a house of love here than a house of sickness. " He says this to make mejealous. But do you know something? It is most unusual that he comments- on anybody happy. Yakov is a tragedian. He is even a sceptic. I think they have cured his bad moods as well. "Yesterday I took exercise for the first time but I soon felt exhausted like a child. Afterwards I lay on the balcony and got quite a suntan before sleeping like an angel with nothing on my conscience except how badly I have treated you, always exploiting you." Now he writes love talk, I shall not translate it.'