Last Watch

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Last Watch Page 30

by Sergei Lukyanenko


  Garik came in and lingered just inside the door.

  “Well?” Gesar asked without turning around.

  “Fifty-two,” Garik said.

  “What do the specialists say?”

  “They’ve examined three. They all have the same injuries. The throat has been bitten and the blood has been drunk. Boris Ignatievich, can we carry on with this somewhere else? The stench is so terrible that the spells can’t handle it... And it’s all around the house already... as if a sewer had burst...”

  “Have you called a truck?”

  “A van.”

  “All right, take them away,” said Gesar. “To some waste ground, well away from the city. Let them be inspected there.”

  “And then?”

  “And then... ,” Gesar said pensively. “Then bury them.”

  “Are we not going to send them back to their families?”

  Gesar thought it over. Then suddenly he turned to me. “Anton, what do you think?”

  “I don’t know,” I replied honestly. “Disappeared without a trace or murdered... I don’t know which is better for the families.”

  “Bury them,” Gesar ordered. “When the time comes, we’ll think about it. Perhaps we’ll start quietly exhuming them and sending them back to their families. Invent a story for each one. Do they all have documents?”

  “Yes. They were lying in a separate pile. All neat and tidy, the work of a perfectionist.”

  Yes, he had always been neat and tidy. He used to lay down plastic sheeting when he drilled holes in the wall and carefully cleaned the floor after himself.

  “How could we have failed to notice him?” Gesar asked in a voice filled with pain. “How did we botch it? A vampire killed more than fifty people right under our very noses!”

  “Well, none of them are Moscow locals,” Garik said. “They’re from Tajikistan, Moldova, Ukraine...” He sighed. “Working men who came to Moscow looking for a job. Not registered in Moscow, of course. They lived here illegally. They have places along the main roads where they stand for a day or two, waiting to be hired. And he’s a builder, right? He knew everyone and they knew him. He just drove up and said he needed five men for a job. And he chose them himself, too, the bastard. Then he drove them away. And a week later he came back for some more...”

  “Are people really still so sloppy?” Gesar asked. “Even now? Fifty men died, and nobody missed them?”

  “Nobody,” Garik said with a sigh. “That dead piece of filth... he probably didn’t kill them all straightaway... He killed one, and the others waited for their turn—for a day, two, three. In this room. And he put the ones he’d drunk in two garbage bags so they wouldn’t stink, and stacked them in the corner. The radiators on that side are even switched off. He must have started in the winter...”

  “I really feel like killing someone,” Gesar spat through his teeth. “Preferably a vampire. But any Dark One would do.”

  “Then try me,” said Zabulon, casually moving Garik aside as he entered the Saushkin family’s sitting room. He yawned and sat down on the divan.

  “Don’t provoke me,” Gesar said quietly. “I might just take it as an official challenge to a duel.”

  A deadly silence fell in the apartment. Zabulon screwed up his eyes and braced himself. As usual, he was wearing a suit, but without a tie. And for some reason I got the impression that he had chosen the black suit and white shirt deliberately, as a sign of mourning.

  Olga and I waited, watching the standoff between these two Others who were responsible for what happened on a sixth of the world’s land surface.

  “Gesar, it was a figure of speech,” Zabulon said in a conciliatory tone of voice. He leaned back on the divan. “You don’t think I was aware of this... excess, do you?”

  “I don’t know,” Gesar snapped. But from his voice it was clear that he knew perfectly well that Zabulon had nothing to do with this business.

  “Well, let me tell you,” Zabulon said just as peaceably, “that I am every bit as outraged as you are, or perhaps even more so. And the entire community of Moscow vampires is outraged and demands the execution of this criminal.”

  Gesar snorted.

  And Zabulon finally couldn’t resist making a jibe. “You know, they don’t like the idea of their food base being undermined...”

  “I’ll give them a food base,” Gesar snapped in a low, grave voice. “I’ll keep a lid on the preserved blood for five years.”

  “Do you think the Inquisition will support you?” Zabulon asked.

  “I think so,” said Gesar, finally turning around and looking him in the eye. “I think so. And you will support my request.”

  Zabulon lost the game of stare-me-down. The Dark One sighed, turned away, looked at me, and shrugged, as if to say, What am I to do with him, eh? He took out a long, frivolous pink cigarette and lit it. Then he said, “They’ve gone completely wild...”

  “Then you make sure they don’t go wild.”

  “Their children can’t grow up without this, you know that. Without fresh blood they never reach sexual maturity.”

  Naturally, Zabulon was not in the least concerned for the fate of vampire children. He just wanted to make fun of Gesar. As far as that was at all possible.

  “Children? We’ll allow the children fresh blood,” Gesar said after thinking for a moment. “We wouldn’t want thirty... er... Anton?”

  “Thirty-two,” I told him, remembering the exact number.

  “We wouldn’t want thirty-two bloodsucking teenagers. Fresh blood. But donor blood! We are suspending the issue of licenses for five years.”

  Zabulon sighed and said, “All right. I’ve been thinking it was time to tighten their rein myself. I had asked the secretary of the community to keep an eye on the Saushkins... They proved to be a rotten little family.”

  “I ought to have insisted on seven years,” said Gesar. “You agreed to five too easily.”

  “But what’s to be done now, we’ve already agreed,” said Zabulon, puffing out a cloud of smoke. He turned to me. “Anton, did you come to see Gennady after Kostya was killed?”

  “No,” I answered.

  “But why didn’t you? As an old friend and neighbor... ai-ai-ai...”

  I didn’t answer. Eight years earlier I would have blown my top.

  “We’ve decided this matter,” said Gesar. He frowned as he looked out into the corridor, where they had started carrying out the bodies. The whole entrance and stairway had been put under a light spell that completely removed any desire the inhabitants of the building might have had to peek out their doors or look out their windows. But then, in view of the fact that no one had come to see what the woman from my old apartment was screeching about, people around here must all be exceptionally incurious anyway.

  It kept getting harder and harder for me to love them. I had to do something about that.

  “What else?” Zabulon asked. “As far as help in catching Saushkin is concerned, there’s no problem. My watchmen are already out hunting for him. Only, I’m afraid they might not deliver him in one piece...”

  “You’re not looking too well, Zabulon,” Gesar suddenly said. “Why don’t you go to the bathroom and wash your hands and face.”

  “Really?” Zabulon asked curiously. “Well, since you insist...”

  He got up and then halted in the doorway for a moment to make way for two watchmen who were carrying along a half-decomposed corpse in a plastic sack. Apart from blood, there’s a lot of water in a human body. If you leave a bloodless body to rot inside a plastic cocoon, the result is extremely unpleasant.

  Zabulon, however, was not appalled by the sight.

  “I beg your pardon, madam,” he said, letting the remains pass. Then he strode cheerfully off to the bathroom.

  “Were the
re women as well?” Gesar asked.

  “Yes,” Olga replied curtly.

  Gesar didn’t ask any more questions. Apparently even our boss’s iron nerves had given way.

  That night the lads who were carrying out the bodies would get totally juiced. And although it was a breach of the rules, I wouldn’t try to stop them. I’d sooner go out on patrol duty myself.

  Zabulon came back a minute later. His face was wet.

  “The towel’s dirty; I’ll dry off like this,” he said with a smile. “Well?”

  “Your opinion?” Gesar asked.

  “I had this friend once, she liked to draw a Christmas tree on the mirror with toothpaste for the festive season. And the words ‘Happy New Year’ and little numbers.”

  “Very funny,” Gesar said fastidiously. “Have you heard anything about such an organization?”

  “About a ‘Last Watch’?” Zabulon asked, clearly emphasizing the capital letters in his intonation. “My dear enemy, even among the Dark Ones there are any number of sects, groups, and mere clubs that I have never heard of. But there are some that I have heard of. And the names that you come across! ‘Children of the Night,’ ‘Watchmen of the Full Moon,’ ‘Sons of the Wind.’ And, by the way, I recall one group of children—human children, not Others—who love to play at vampires. Perhaps we ought to bring them here? To make them realize that a vampire is not really an imposing gentleman in a black cloak who lures maidens into an ancient castle? It’s not that gothic at all...”

  “Zabulon, have you heard anything about the Last Watch?”

  “No.”

  “Gorodetsky has suggested”—Gesar paused and looked at me—“that it’s what the three Others who tried to get their hands on the artifact in Edinburgh call themselves. The Dark One, the Inquisitor, and the Light One.”

  “The Dark One is Saushkin, the Inquisitor is Edgar,” Zabulon said, nodding. “But who is the Light One?”

  “I don’t know. We’ve checked all the Higher Ones; they’re clean.”

  “Well, Saushkin wasn’t a Higher One... ,” Zabulon said with a shrug. “Although... it’s easier for vampires. And then, what about Edgar, Gorodetsky?”

  “I didn’t have time to study his aura thoroughly,” I replied. “There was a battle going on... and he was also hung with amulets from head to toe. Give me five minutes in a quiet situation, and I’ll know everything there is to know about him...”

  “Nonetheless,” Zabulon insisted, “I know what happened on the Plateau of the Demons. In general terms. So tell us about it.”

  “In battle he behaved like a Higher One,” I admitted after seeing Gesar nod his reluctant permission for me to reply. “There were three of us... Well two, if you don’t count Afandi, although he tried his best too. We had a set of protective amulets from Gesar, all very well chosen. But he was almost a match for us. I even think that he might have been able to continue the fight and had a chance of winning. But when Rustam left, Edgar had no reason to carry on fighting.”

  “And so we have an Other who has managed to raise his level,” said Zabulon. “My dear Gesar, don’t you think that the Inquisition got hold of the Fuaran after all?”

  “No,” Gesar said definitely.

  “If Kostya had survived,” Zabulon said, thinking out loud, “then we might have hypothesized that he had memorized the recipes in the Fuaran. And managed to create some... er... copy of the book. Perhaps not as powerful, but still capable of raising Edgar to the Higher level. And then a Light One could have been subjected to the same procedure.”

  “And then we could suspect any Light One,” Gesar summed up. “But fortunately for us, Kostya is dead and he wasn’t able to reveal the secret of the Fuaran to anyone.”

  “Did he not have time to share the contents of the book with his father?”

  “No,” Gesar replied firmly. “It’s a book of enchantment. You can’t retell it over the phone, you can’t photograph it.”

  “What a shame, that would be such a good idea,” Zabulon said, clicking his fingers. “A little witch showed me just recently that there’s this thing in cell phones, it’s called SMS messaging. You can send a photograph over the phone!”

  At first I thought Zabulon was being witty again. Speaking with such amazement about the SMS messages that little kids cheerfully send each other in class, he looked very comical.

  And then I realized he was being serious. Sometimes I forget just how old they are. To Zabulon, a cell phone is like magic.

  “Fortunately it’s not possible,” said Gesar, returning to the question at hand. “He could have memorized something and reproduced it... but no, that’s nonsense. Even that’s impossible. The nature of a vampire is different from the nature of a witch. Only an experienced witch could re-create the Fuaran, even in a weaker form...”

  I looked at Gesar and asked, “Tell me, Boris Ignatievich... can a witch become a Light One?”

  The happiest moments in the life of parents of a small child in Russia are from a quarter to nine until nine o’clock in the evening. Fifteen minutes of happiness while the child joyfully watches advertisements for yogurt and chocolate (even though that in itself is a bad thing) and then his or her eyes are glued to Piggy, Crow, Stepashka, and the other characters in the program Good Night, Kiddies.

  If only the people who allocate time for children’s programs on TV sat with their own children in the evening, instead of dumping them on highly trained nannies, then Good Night would last half an hour. Or an hour.

  And, by the way, extending the show would be great for improving the birth rate. Fifteen minutes is not very long, whichever way you look at it. At least there would be time to drink a cup of tea in peace.

  I didn’t tell Svetlana the details of what we saw in Saushkin’s flat. But she understood everything perfectly well, even from a very brief account. No, it didn’t spoil her appetite, she carried on drinking tea. We had seen plenty of worse things in the Watch. But of course, she turned a bit gloomy.

  “We have a theory about the Light One,” I said, trying to lead the conversation to a different subject. “Gesar checked out all the Higher Ones, no one’s under suspicion there. But Edgar had a lot of charms on him. That’s the work of a witch. So I thought...”

  “That Arina had changed color?” Svetlana asked, looking at me. “Maybe.”

  “You squeezed her pretty hard that time,” I said. “You must have felt her mind. Do you think she could have become a Light One?”

  “For an ordinary Other, it’s impossible,” Svetlana said. “Or almost impossible... For a Higher One... for Arina...”

  She paused, remembering. I waited, glancing now and then at the TV screen, where a sad little girl was dragging a mitten along on a string and imagining that it was a puppy. How terrible! That would be the end of all our mittens and gloves. Nadya wouldn’t actually turn them into dogs, of course—any magic has its limits. But there would be more toy dogs in the apartment from now on.

  It was time to buy her a puppy, before life became unbearable.

  “She could,” Svetlana said. “She could have become a Light One. Her soul is very strange, there’s everything mixed up together inside it... there weren’t any particular atrocities, though. But Arina swore an oath to me that she would live for a hundred years without killing a single human being or Other. She can’t go against that.”

  “And she hasn’t killed anyone,” I observed. “But as for supplying Edgar with amulets and raising his level of Power... nothing was said about that. Arina has enough wisdom to interpret your prohibition selectively.”

  “Anton, we’re talking about the wrong thing,” Svetlana said, putting down her cup. “Arina, who has become a Light One, or some other enchantress—that’s not the point at all. The important question to ask is: What are they trying to achieve? What has united them? The ambitio
n to destroy the entire world? Nonsense! You only find people who want to destroy the world just for the sake of it in stupid films. Power? But that’s stupid too, Anton! They have enough Power already. No artifact, not even one made by a crazy magician fifteen hundred years ago, will allow them to achieve absolute Power. Until we understand what they are trying to achieve, what they want to find at the bottom of the Twilight, then it’s completely irrelevant whether it is Arina or not, if she has become a Light One or disguised herself so that Thomas couldn’t recognize her.”

  “Sveta, do you have any hunches?” I pretended not to notice that she had said “we.” It’s true what they say—you never really leave the Watch completely.

  “The Crown of All Things erases the barriers between the levels of the Twilight... ,” Svetlana said, and paused.

  “Mama, the cartoon’s over!” Nadya shouted.

  “Try comparing it with the White Mist. The spells obviously have a single root,” Svetlana concluded, getting up and walking toward Nadya. “Time for bed.”

  “A story!” Nadya demanded.

  “Not today. Daddy and I have to talk.”

  Nadya looked at me resentfully, fiddling with the thin string of turquoise beads around her neck. She muttered, “You’re always talking... And Daddy’s always going away.”

  “That’s Daddy’s job,” Svetlana explained calmly, grabbing hold of her daughter’s hand. “You know he fights against the forces of Darkness.”

  “Like Harry Potter,” Nadya said rather doubtfully, looking at me. I suppose I didn’t have the spectacles or the scar on my forehead that were needed to match up to the image.

  “Yes, like Harry Potter, Făt-Frumos, and Luke Skywalker.”

  “Like Luke Skywalker,” Nadya decided, and gave me a smile. Obviously that was the character she thought I resembled most of all. Well, that was better than nothing.

  “I’ll be straight back,” said Svetlana, and the two of them went to the nursery. I sat there, looking at a chocolate with a bite taken out of it. It had alternate layers of dark chocolate and white chocolate. When I counted seven layers, I laughed. It was a graphic illustration of the structure of the Twilight. The White Mist folded all the layers together, turning any Others who got in the way into stone. OK, let’s sidestep the effect of the spell in battle. What happened afterward? I closed my eyes, trying to remember.

 

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