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Yudin peeped into the nave of the cathedral. There was some light s.h.i.+ning in through the high windows, but he would be safe if he remained in the shadows. It was hard to say why he had come here, but the simple answer was that it was because he could. It would not have been possible for him to walk across Cathedral Square and enter the church by the normal means, but there were other ways through the Kremlin, known only to a few. An underground corridor had led him up to a small enclosure, just behind the right-hand Deacon's Door in the iconostasis. The most risky part was to move from there into the nave, but all eyes were on Aleksandr, standing in front of the Beautiful Gate; and in a church of this size, n.o.body's attention encompa.s.sed both that and the door through which Yudin now slipped.
But there was more to being here than proving that his inability to walk in sunlight was no bar to his attending this most important of occasions Yudin also felt a sense of history. He had failed to attend the coronation of Nikolai it being at a time when he was still coming to grips with his new state as a voordalak but he had been instrumental in the ending of the reign of Nikolai's predecessor. There were powers in the world that would now be focusing all their attention on this new Aleksandr. Did Zmyeevich, Yudin wondered, know that he could not make his move on Aleksandr II until Aleksandr I, wherever he might be, finally died? It seemed likely. Yudin had his blood samples and his microscope, but Zmyeevich had his mind, and that would tell him in seconds what it might take Yudin months to methodically ascertain.
But Zmyeevich would not come in person to see this; it would be too great a risk. That did not mean that he might not send someone through whose eyes he could see. If Tyeplov had, like Yudin, found a way into the cathedral that avoided the sun's light then he might stand as a proxy for Zmyeevich, allowing one to bear witness to everything that was seen through the eyes of the other.
He glanced around the crowd that filled the nave brows glistening in a heat that Yudin perceived but did not suffer from. Though the people stood shoulder to shoulder, still the great height of the building meant that it had a sense of emptiness. The pillars that supported the roof, ten times higher than the tallest man in there, soared upwards, the painted faces of the saints staring down on the proceedings below. The vast iconostasis filled the eastern wall. It was all as though it had been built as an antidote to hubris, a reminder to the new tsar that however powerful he might believe himself to be, he was puny compared to the one who gave him that power. Whether that one was G.o.d or Zmyeevich, the tsar himself would have to choose.
Yudin saw no sign of Tyeplov. The only unexpected face was that of Gribov, who caught his eye from his vantage point beside the South Portal. He seemed almost to merge into the biblical scenes that were painted on it. Yudin was surprised that someone so lowly would be invited here, to the heart of the ceremony, but he realized that Gribov had almost as good a knowledge as he did of the ancient pa.s.sageways that ran beneath the Kremlin perhaps better. If he did know of all of them, at least he did not have the keys to access the most important ones, beneath Yudin's office.
The tsar and his entourage moved away from the iconostasis and on to a raised platform closer to the centre of the church, where all could get a better sight of him. The tsar and the tsaritsa sat on their thrones. An elderly general approached them Prince Gorchakov, hero of the Russian army and leader of the defence of Sevastopol. In his hands he carried a red velvet pillow, and on it sat the Golden Orb, the most important item of the imperial regalia. Gorchakov shuffled forward slowly and ceremoniously, his head bowed in deference. Then he appeared to stop dead in his tracks, before tottering, at first gently but with ever-increasing speed, to his right, overcome by the heat. The pillow dropped from his hands and the orb spilled over on to the wooden floor. The crack as it made contact filled the silent s.p.a.ce of the cathedral. Yudin covered his mouth to hide a smirk.
Attendants stood in momentary confusion as to whether to rescue the fallen orb or the fainting prince. In the end, both were raised back to their proper positions, little the worse for wear. There was frantic checking to ensure that the diamond-encrusted cross, which was mounted above a huge sapphire at the top of the orb, was not bent out of shape, but it seemed that all was in order. The tsar said a few rea.s.suring words to his general.
'It's all right to fall here. The important thing is that you stood firm on the battlefield.'
The words were spoken softly; at the distance Yudin was standing, a human ear would not have been able to catch them. Yudin had to admire Aleksandr's quick thinking, but it was a poor way to inspire confidence in the general. Some time later that evening the old man would play those words over again in his mind and remember that he had not stood firm it was he who had ordered the evacuation of Sevastopol.
The ceremony continued with prayers and blessings from Metropolitan Filaret and then at last he handed the crown more reminiscent of a jewelled mitre than the image of a royal crown that Yudin had grown up with in England to the tsar. Aleksandr placed the Great Imperial Crown upon his own head, just as Bonaparte had done over half a century before. Today though, no denial of G.o.d's authority was implied.
Next, the emperor was to crown his empress, but again there was to be mishap. She looked pale as she rose from her throne and knelt before him. He lifted the Lesser Imperial Crown distinguishable from his own only by its size and its slightly more modest jewels and placed it on her head. Four attendants reached forward to clip the crown to her hair, but as she rose, it slipped to one side and was only just caught before it too fell to the ground. A look of horror filled the tsaritsa's face, but Aleksandr remained calm. He replaced the crown on her head and the same attendants, with hands that Yudin could only imagine were trembling, clipped it again. This time it stayed in place.
Now the cathedral was filled with sound, from within and without. The bells of the cathedral and all the churches around began to toll, and a salute of 101 guns boomed. The choir struck up the Polychronion. All in the church then knelt to pray, and Yudin decided that it was best to follow suit. More hymns were sung and another salute was sounded by the guns outside. At last the tsar was led away by the metropolitan, through the Beautiful Gate and into the sanctuary where he would receive communion. It was the only time and the tsar the only man that someone who was not ordained was allowed before the altar in any church in Russia. Even the tsaritsa had to remain in front of the iconostasis, to receive the bread and wine together on a spoon in the normal fas.h.i.+on.
The thought of the consumption, however symbolic, of flesh and blood caused stirrings in Yudin's own stomach, and he could only smile at the mimicry that existed between the world of Christianity and that of the voordalak. It also gave him pause to wonder what was to become of Dmitry. It had been a week now since Yudin had shown him the letters from Raisa, which Yudin himself had so carefully dictated to her. And yet he had heard nothing of Dmitry going to Raisa to discover the truth. But he knew not to worry. Dmitry would act as Yudin had predicted he would act. He had no need to go back to his labour to peek at it as it bubbled in the oven and give it an extra stir. Like any great chef he knew that that could ruin a recipe; he knew to trust in himself.
Aleksandr was back on his throne now, receiving homage from the closer members of his family, including his brothers, Konstantin, Nikolai and Mihail, and also his son, the tsarevich Nikolai Aleksandrovich. Perhaps it would be on to that boy not yet thirteen years old that Zmyeevich would now turn his attention.
Finally the dismissal was read and the tsar and his family began to process out of the cathedral to the strains once again of the Polychronion. Once they had gone, the rest of the congregation began to follow. But it was still light outside in Cathedral Square, and Yudin could only disappear back through the Deacon's Door and return the way he had come.
Raisa was alone. She was standing by the window, looking out at the moon that hung over Degtyarny Lane. She turned as he closed the door behind him. In her eyes he saw only terror.
'h.e.l.lo, my little Mityenka,' she said softly.
Dmitry said nothing. He gazed at her, trying to take in what she was, and what she had been. The silence seemed almost painful to her. Tears began to form in her eyes and she took a step towards him.
'I know why you're here, Mitka,' she said. 'But I beg you, on everything we've ever meant to each other, give me a chance to explain first.'
'First?'
She laughed mirthlessly. 'Don't tease me. I've seen what you can do with that.' Her eyes flicked towards his right hand.
In horror he took in what she meant, and what she was looking at; the cane that he carried with him everywhere. He'd used it in front of her to kill Ignatyev in this very room. He threw it aside on to the bed.
'I would never ...' he began to say, but he knew it was untrue. It was still just conceivably where the evening might end. But there was another reason that the words would not come to him; a simple, visceral reason. He had not seen her apart from the sight of her body in a churchyard in Klin for many weeks; had not seen her, or put his arms around her, or smelt her, or kissed her.
He charged across the room and clutched her in his embrace, pus.h.i.+ng his lips down on to hers and feeling them open to receive him. He felt her hands on his back, his shoulders and his head. There was nothing different here, nothing changed from what she had been before. It might be that she could no longer exist in daylight, that she would live for ever, that any wound to her body would heal, but to everything he cared about, that seemed to make not a jot of difference. Her kiss was still Raisa's kiss; her caress still Raisa's caress. What else was unchanged about her, he would discover as time went by, but for now, this was enough.
They separated and stared silently into each other's face. It was Dmitry who spoke first.
'Why didn't you tell me?'
She looked away from him, embarra.s.sed. 'There's so much I haven't told you.'
Only then did it dawn on him that she could have no idea what he'd discovered. He persisted with the point of his original question. 'About the consumption.'
'How would that have helped? Could you have cured it?'
'I deserved to know.'
'So you could cry over me and tell me how you loved me and how you would miss me?'
'Yes,' he said earnestly.
'And remind me every minute of my last days that I was going to die.'
He couldn't deny it. 'I saw you with him,' he said bitterly. 'With Tyeplov in the cemetery in Klin.'
'What?' She couldn't conceal her surprise.
'I chased him there. We found his letter to you.'
'And you came to ... to save me?'
Dmitry nodded.
'You fool!' she said. 'He might have killed you.'
'No,' said Dmitry. 'He let me live. And now I understand why.'
'I doubt that.'
'I read your letters, the ones you sent to him. Not until afterwards.' She looked at him, trying to fathom what precisely he might have gleaned from them. He explained. 'I know why you did it so that you could live.'
'That was selfish of me.'
'So that I could join you,' he added.
She flushed. 'That was even worse.'
'No. No,' said Dmitry. 'It was wonderful the most selfless gesture that anyone could imagine.'
'Selfless?'
'You did it for love.'
She turned away from him. 'I did it for me, Mitka. Not for love, not even for you. I did it because I couldn't bear the thought of living without you, or even of sharing you with your wife, and so I decided that I was going to have you all of you and for ever.'
'So why haven't you come to me? Why haven't you asked me?'
She walked back to him and laid her cheek against his breast. 'I've tried. I've come close to you; I've watched you, but it's the same terror that strikes me every time.'
'What terror?'
'That you'll say no.'
'What would you do if I did?'
'I would pray for death.'
'Only pray for it?' asked Dmitry.
'I could not bring it about myself.'
'What if I were to?' he asked.
She turned and walked to the bed, then picked up the cane he had thrown there. She plucked off the protective cap and flung it aside, before handing him the now lethal weapon. She sat down and began to unfasten her bodice and then unb.u.t.ton the blouse beneath. She lay back on the bed, the garments hanging on either side of her, revealing her belly and her b.r.e.a.s.t.s.
'If that's your choice, then I won't stop you,' she said. 'This isn't how I'd have chosen my life to finish, but from where I am now, I can conceive of no better ending than by your hand.'
She raised her arm to cover her face, either so that she would not see him or, more likely, so that he would not look into her eyes and be diverted from what he must do. He gazed at her body, as he had done so many times before, but now with very different thoughts. He had the weapon in his hand. He need only press it down against her skin, just below her breast. It would be doing her will, and the will of G.o.d. Afterwards, he still had the pistol for himself, but he need not tell her about that.
And yet what he saw before him was not the p.r.o.ne body of a voordalak, easier to be rid of than any he had before encountered. It was Raisa. Beneath that point on her chest where he would stab, her heart still beat. He could almost see it. Her kiss and her touch had been the same as before why then should so much else be different? He fixed his eyes on her chest, watching its slight movement as she breathed. He felt the solid, firm shaft of the cane in his hand and imagined it penetrating her flesh, imagined her momentarily writhing as her skin ruptured and then ... that was too much. He had seen two vampires die both by his own hand and though he had no idea what they suffered, the mere image of Raisa's beauty decaying so utterly and so suddenly persuaded him that he could not go ahead with this. Even when he had entered the room he had known he would not. He had been teasing himself, which was indulgent, and teasing Raisa, which was cruel.
He leaned forward and placed his lips on precisely the point where, in another life, he might have thrust with the blade.
'One final kiss,' he heard her say, 'to prove it as an act of love.'
But Dmitry chose to express his love quite differently. Quickly, and with the pa.s.sion of weeks of separation, he began to remove the remainder of her clothes.
'You're a fool, my little Mityenka,' she said. It was a harsh word that she had chosen prostak as was her tone. She might almost have been crowing, like an adversary at Preferans who had tricked him into playing the wrong card and was now in a position to take everything he had. He knew it was not true, but he doubted he would have changed his course of action, even if it had been.
If there was anywhere in Moscow that wasn't celebrating, Tamara had been unable to find it. It was almost as light as day now, the sky illuminated by the most magnificent display of fireworks she had ever seen. She'd headed north-east, in the direction of the station, and was now caught up in the huge crowds that thronged the largely open s.p.a.ces around the Red Gate, through which earlier that very day Aleksandr had made his ceremonial entrance into the old capital.
All through the city, stalls had been set up to provide free food and cheap drink for the people, paid for by the tsar. Vodka, beer and wine had flowed freely, and more than once a tankard had been thrust into Tamara's hand by a complete stranger. At first she had felt a little detached from these people, but as the evening had worn on it had become impossible not to be sucked up into the atmosphere of ecstatic joy. On top of that, she had to admit, she was a little drunk.
Not for the first time, she felt a man's hand grab her around the waist and attempt to squeeze her close to him. On any other day, he would have been walking away from her in agony, but today she extricated herself with a fairly gentle push. He was in no condition to hang on.
The air was filled with the sound of people's cheering, of the church bells still pealing and above all of fireworks exploding. Smoke blew across the square ahead of her, causing some to cough, but Tamara revelled in the smell of it the taste of it. Bright rockets exploded across the sky, white and green. Three huge fountains of red sparks spewed into the air like volcanoes. An old man on a cart tried to drive his way through the crowd, but his horse took fright at the noise and reared into the air. Three men managed to grab it and calm it, but still the driver seemed intent on continuing, despite the terror of the beast. The men led them away horse, wagon and driver into a nearby courtyard, and soon four men emerged, all drinking, the driver abandoning his journey for now.
An arm draped itself around her shoulder, but it felt like someone who sought physical support rather than anything else from her body. He must have been sixty or more, and had hung himself from her and another woman.
'Just like in '12,' he said to no one in particular. 'We saw them off then and we will next time.'
'What?' asked Tamara. Despite his drunkenness, the man seemed joyous, and Tamara could not help being infected by it.
'The French!' he shouted, freeing his other hand to wave it in the direction of the imagined enemy. 'Rostopchin burned the city to stop them. They never even made it this time.' He released her and staggered down the hill towards the flames, only to be caught by the crowd before he ever got near them.
Tamara walked on. Through the sounds of the fireworks and the crowd and the church bells, there came something else that she couldn't make out an artificial sound that sometimes cut through the noise, sometimes was masked by it. She followed it, away from the fireworks. The crowd thinned a little and then grew more dense and the sound became clearer. It was music two men played balalaikas, one a guitar. In front of them people were dancing, some very well particularly the men others less so.
Tamara began to push her way through to the front of the circle of people who stood and watched. Just as she reached it, the music came to its climax and the onlookers cheered. Some of the dancers, exhausted, fell back among their friends in the crowd, but others stayed, ready for the next dance. Two of the men had tambourines and started the music by striking them in time. The band struck up and then the crowd began to clap in rhythm. Tamara joined them. It was a slow song at first, but she knew it would speed up.
The two tambourinists were expert dancers. They threw themselves to the ground at strange angles, sometimes supported by both feet, sometimes by a hand and a foot, constantly swapping the hand in which they held the instrument, and beating it against their foot or knee or head. There were times when Tamara would have sworn they were standing on both hands, but she could not see how they could manage that and still keep striking the tambourines. Their movement was rapid, fluid and instinctive.
Tamara raised her hands above her head as she clapped, swinging her hips and shoulders in time with the accelerating rhythm. Soon she realized that she was no longer watching, but part of the dance itself. She did not know from where inside her it came. She had seen dances like this before, but never partaken. Her dancing had always been far more formal; western, French, the way she had been taught. This dancing was Russian. It was about feeling, not understanding. At another time, the thought of the crowd watching her as she gyrated before them would have embarra.s.sed her, but now she was thrilled by it; she felt at one with them.
The two men with the tambourines had soon caught sight of her, and now they danced on either side, facing one another and with her in between. They continued the same strange motions, as though for them legs and arms were of equal function, and without even having to think, Tamara found her movements fitting in with theirs. As one did a cartwheel, his feet almost hitting her nose, she fell back instinctively and found herself caught by the other. Now off balance, she was under their control and they threw her back and forth between them, while her feet remained fixed to the ground at a single point. She could have stepped away at any time, but she enjoyed the loss of control; it was like being caught in a great storm that would lead her where it willed.
Then she found that she was upright again and the two men were on the ground, both on their backs, supported by their arms. They seemed to be kicking at her legs, but never made contact. Once she had cottoned on she began to jump in time with them, and they now aimed their feet much closer to her, so that if she didn't keep her skips and leaps in exact time with the music, they would surely kick her. Tamara lifted up her skirts, revealing her boots and ankles, and was amazed to watch as the men's legs swung beneath her, as if gravity applied to none of them.
As the music sped up still further, she became a little giddy, and feared she would lose her balance. With one final leap she was away from the two men, but turned to see her place had already been taken by another woman, who continued the game of musical hopscotch with no less enthusiasm than Tamara herself had displayed. Tamara joined another group of dancers who held hands and circled around the central trio, occasionally letting go to clap at a slower beat than that with which the guitar and balalaikas and tambourines rushed on. But as the tempo increased, so they were forced to as well, and Tamara found herself circling round and round with ever-increasing pace. The sound of the music filled her ears, along with the explosions of fireworks that still lit the sky, their colourful sparks blurring before her eyes as she moved faster and faster, her hands sore from clapping, her breath short.
It was over before she even noticed. She had felt that the crescendo and accelerando of the music could never stop, but finally it did and the crowd exploded into cheers and applause with which Tamara happily joined in, while noting with not a little pride that some of it was directed at herself. She felt hands patting her on the back and arms embracing her and she did not resist them. Someone handed her a mug. She sniffed it and then gratefully downed the cooling ale inside.
Then, to a cheer, the band struck up again and, to an even greater cheer, Tamara stepped back out among the dancers.
The boom of the fireworks outside reminded Dmitry of the guns at Sevastopol, but he did not fear the sound any more. Soon he would be beyond all fear. The process had already begun.
There was little pain. Her playful bites during their lovemaking had in the past caused him more discomfort than this. The overriding sensation was the smell of Raisa's hair, which pressed against Dmitry's face. He could see nothing of what she was doing to him. Only the slight sound of her tongue lapping away at him and her occasional moans of pleasure gave any clue as to what was happening.
After they had made love, they did not speak. She had lain in his arms, just as ever they had done before. After what seemed like an eternity, she had asked one question.
'So, will you join me?'
'Yes.' Dmitry's answer had been a whisper, but he had always known what it would be. She wasted no time. First she had kissed him on the lips and then her mouth descended on to his neck.
She remained there, drinking from him, for two or three minutes, and although he could feel little at the point where she drew the blood, the effects of its loss were becoming clear. He felt light-headed happy even, though that was not truly his mood. Then, just as Raisa's letters to Tyeplov had described, he began to share her mind. His first sensation was of his own blood. The taste itself was foul, though he imagined he would get used to it, but he also experienced the pleasure which Raisa took from it. He understood that soon he would know that pleasure for himself. He tried to explore other corners of her mind but found himself unable. Each door he came to was barred.
Raisa pulled away from him and looked into his face. Her expression was of a joy he had never seen in her. The blood smeared around her mouth his own blood should have revolted him, but the ecstasy to which it had driven her, as she ran her tongue around her lips to taste a little more, could only turn revulsion into hunger.
'Not yet,' she said. 'Not everything.' He knew that she was talking about those closed doors of her mind. 'First you must drink.'
She knelt up on the bed on one knee, her right leg up, so that her thigh was horizontal. In her hand she had a knife. She drew it across the inside of her thigh, just inches from the top, and blood began to drip down on the sheets.
'Quickly,' she said. 'Before it heals.'
Dmitry leaned forward and placed his mouth over the wound. He licked at the blood on the surface. It tasted foul, as his own blood had always done on those occasions when he had had cause to taste it, but the joy he felt from knowing it was Raisa's blood, knowing that it was willingly given, was overpowering. He pushed forward with his tongue, using its tip to force open the tiny wound she had created in herself, trying to make it wider and deeper so that more blood could escape. Then, as though her heart had suddenly beaten more strongly, a spurt of blood forced its way into his mouth. He swallowed it in an instant and waited for more, but it did not come. He knew he would have to take it. He pressed his lips to her skin, sealing the wound, and then began to suck. The blood flowed smoothly, and he allowed his mouth to fill before swallowing each gulp.
Music came to him, music that was louder and more powerful than ever before. For all he loved the melodies and rhythms that he had created in his mind in the past, this was the sound of true genius. This would make Bach, Mozart and Chopin weep for their inadequacies. It grew louder with each gulp of her blood that he swallowed, and the harmony grew darker, more unnerving. There was a distinct moment at which he realized that the music was no longer magnificent, but terrifying. He wanted to make it cease, but could not. It filled his head with images of pain and torture and betrayal, as though it were played by an orchestra that had been d.a.m.ned to h.e.l.l. He tried to listen to the fireworks outside, to use their noise to make the music end, but he could not. And through it all, hiding behind the music but clearly there, was the sound of laughter; Raisa's laughter.
Suddenly, he could no longer taste blood. He pulled away. The wound in her thigh was gone healed. He felt her hand on his hair, pulling his face upwards to look into hers, and stretching open the wound to his neck as she did so.
'That's enough,' she said. 'Now we need to finish you off.'
The foul music still played and images filled his mind. One predominated. It was himself a little boy of about five playing with a wooden sword, sparring with a grown man, who brandished a real sword; his father, Aleksei. Was this, Dmitry asked himself, how it was supposed to end?
'No,' he said weakly, but she did not listen. She pushed him down on to the bed with a strength he could never have guessed she owned. One hand pressed down on his forehead and the other on his chest as her mouth returned to the still-fresh wound that she had created and began to drink once more.
Still the music grew louder, as did the laughter, even though there was no chance now for it to escape her mouth. But it did not come from her mouth; it came from her mind. Dmitry felt her grip on him relax and tried to move, but he was too weak. He raised his hand just a few inches and looked down on it. It was pale and thin. He could not hold it there for more than a moment and was forced to let it drop.