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Penguin Lost

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by Andrey Kurkov




  Penguin Lost

  Originally published in Russian as Zakon uliki by Folio, Kharkov, 2002

  Copyright © 2002 by Andrej Kurkov and 2003 Diogenes Verlag, AG, Zürich, Switzerland

  Translation © George Bird, 2004

  Melville House Publishing

  145 Plymouth Street

  Brooklyn, NY 11201

  www.mhpbooks.com

  eISBN: 978-1-61219-075-4

  Library of Congress Control Number: 2011925817

  v3.1

  CHARACTERS IN THE STORY

  From earlier:

  Viktor Alekseyevich Zolotaryov a writer

  Misha his penguin

  Nina niece of militiaman Sergey Stepanenko and partner of Viktor

  Sonya daughter of late Misha-non-penguin, adopted by Viktor

  Lyosha a guard

  Igor Lvovich sometime editor of Capital News

  Ilya Semyonovich a vet

  In Kiev:

  Andrey Pavlovich Loza candidate for election to People’s Assembly

  Pasha his aide

  In Chechnya:

  Khachayev Chechen entrepreneur

  Aza his manager

  Seva slave to Aza

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Characters in the Story

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Chapter 53

  Chapter 54

  Chapter 55

  Chapter 56

  Chapter 57

  Chapter 58

  Chapter 59

  Chapter 60

  Chapter 61

  Chapter 62

  Chapter 63

  Chapter 64

  Chapter 65

  Chapter 66

  Chapter 67

  Chapter 68

  Chapter 69

  Chapter 70

  Chapter 71

  Chapter 72

  Chapter 73

  Chapter 74

  Chapter 75

  Chapter 76

  Chapter 77

  Chapter 78

  Chapter 79

  Chapter 80

  Chapter 81

  Chapter 82

  Chapter 83

  Chapter 84

  Chapter 85

  Chapter 86

  Chapter 87

  Chapter 88

  Chapter 89

  Chapter 90

  Chapter 91

  Chapter 92

  Chapter 93

  Chapter 94

  Chapter 95

  Chapter 96

  Chapter 97

  Chapter 98

  Chapter 99

  Chapter 100

  Chapter 101

  Chapter 102

  Chapter 103

  Chapter 104

  Chapter 105

  Chapter 106

  Epilogue

  About the Author

  1

  It took Viktor three days to recover from the four spent crossing Drake Passage. In which time, the scientists who had sailed with him from Ushaia in the Horizon were already acclimatized and working fast to complete measurements and analyses before the onset of polar night. Viktor kept to his quarters in the main block, emerging only to eat or to take a peek outside. He went unquestioned, and even made friends with a biophysicist researching the limits of human endurance, such as the crossing of Drake Passage would have provided ample material for, had he not spent the whole of it seasick in his bunk.

  Vernadsky Base was soon got the hang of, and Viktor ventured forth, wearing the obligatory bright red with luminous yellow stripes, and entering name and time of exit on a board to the left of the door. Failure to return within the hour would, he’d been told, bring the whole base out on search. The base had known tragedy, and it was not hard to see why, after losing 16 men and two supply aircraft, the British had presented it to Ukraine, quite apart from the Devil’s Island appearance of it, viewed from the shore. The one and only place to relax was the bar, but there being neither barman nor drink, you either brought your own or did without.

  Viktor saw his first penguins when walking with biophysicist Stanislav down by the dinghy slipway, and compared with his Misha, now languishing in Kiev, they looked toy-sized. “These are Adélie penguins,” Stanislav explained. “We’re not Antarctica proper, just an island.” Their walk took them, via the noisy generator hut, to the set-apart magnetic research lab. “We’ve another Stanislav here,” Stanislav confided, looking around uneasily. “In the sick bay. He’s from Moscow. I mentioned you. He’d like to see you.”

  *

  The ailing Muscovite, a big man of about 40, lay on his back, legs bent, the bed being too short. His massive face was of a pallor suggestive of the worst.

  Biophysicist Stanislav slipped away.

  “What are you here for?” the sick man demanded.

  “Just to look round.”

  “Cut the crap! I’m Stanislav Bronikovsky, banker. Put on the spot and lying low. And you are?”

  “Lying low, too.”

  “Good.”

  “Why so?”

  “Makes us comrades in adversity. You might have come to do me in.”

  A long silence followed. Viktor rose to leave.

  “Come when you can,” said Stanislav abruptly. “We’ll play chess … I could be of use to you.”

  From then on, Viktor became a regular visitor. He was not short of time, and it was cold outside, although less so than he had expected, a mere –15°. The living quarters were well heated, but the sanatorium was even better. They played chess, and as they did so, chatted about everything under the sun. It did not escape Viktor that occasionally Bronikovsky was sounding him out, but there was nothing strange about that. Bronikovsky plainly suffered from a persecution mania, and a highly developed one at that. Viktor would never have believed it possible that anyone might send a killer to the Antarctic in search of him. Who, after all, was he that anyone should be sent that far? But Bronikovsky was important and powerful, a Queen to Viktor’s pawn. Bronikovsky’s fears might be well founded. Added to which, his strange, undiagnosed illness was growing steadily worse, in spite of the expedition medic’s antibiotic injections. The medic had thoughts of consulting the Americans at Palmer Base, but was put off by the 300 km separating the two bases. So, racked with stomach pains and eating nothing, Bronikovsky lived off his massive frame much as the camel lives off its hump. As his pallor became bluish, he
whispered that he knew who was poisoning him, but left it at that, and played bravely on, losing in stony silence. Reaching under his bed, he produced a half full bottle of the Argentine vodka Viktor remembered trying and not liking.

  “Look,” he said, pouring two cups, “I’ve a proposition. It involves asking a favour.” Viktor looked attentive. “Tomorrow a Pole called Wojciech puts in on his yacht to take me off, give me a new identity. But seeing me like this, he won’t … So you go in my place, if you like, taking my wife a letter and a credit card which is yours to use on the way.”

  “Except that I’m not you.”

  “For Wojciech, the work of a minute.”

  Viktor thought for a moment, then nodded his agreement. Bronikovsky’s pallid face registered a feeble smile.

  2

  A month or so later, Polish passport in one pocket, blue Ukrainian in the other, Viktor stepped from a train in Kiev, shoulder bag lightly packed with casino chips, notebook, and a packet of Polish pastries.

  Emerging from the station, instead of proceeding in the normal way on autopilot to the bus stop and thence home to his flat, he stopped. His autopilot wasn’t working, and his first few steps in the station yard were those of a novice moon-walker, while everyone else went rushing by, guidance systems in full working order.

  Still, he had to go somewhere. In his pocket were the Ukrainian hryvnas which had sojourned with him in south polar regions, and provided there had been no geographical creep Russia-wards in his absence, he was able to afford the small pleasures of life. A bus journey, for instance. But where to?

  Looking around and spotting a newspaper kiosk, he made towards it, the asphalt suddenly firmer beneath his feet. Of the many papers displayed he opted for Kiev’s Capital News, and for some 30 minutes stood absorbed in its contents.

  Life hadn’t changed: foreign visitors delivering charitable aid to orphanages; two Ukrainian People’s Deputies imprisoned in Germany for fraudulent banking; businessman’s family shot dead in Kherson; opening of super garden-centre at Obolon; and on the last page but one, a couple of wretchedly written obituaries, all the more distressing for having been signed with Viktor’s own pseudonym. The Editor-in-Chief, it appeared, was no longer his quondam patron Igor Lvovich, but one P.D. Weizmann.

  For just one brief blissful moment he was back standing with Penguin Misha at the grave of some departed bigwig, sun streaming down, while some nearest and dearest delivered words having no effect on him or Misha, who were outside it all, Misha part of the ritual, he part of Misha. And there they’d stand, unfeelingly waiting for it to be done with – as if they were immortal.

  It would be good to be immortal. And to die young, cut off from physical time as if under a bell jar, yet seeing the trees on Shevchenko Boulevard, dogs cocking their legs, girls growing into women, while remaining the person one was. Foolish thoughts. But easier, pleasanter than wise ones.

  Where was Misha now? At the Clinic? Resting between funerals? Baykov Cemetery would be the place to look – when the Mercedes turned up in force.

  The grim icy waste that was home to Misha commanded respect – he’d not forgotten the searing cold to his cheeks. That was a country in its own right, giving not a damn what flags conqueror scientists sought to raise, secure in the knowledge that its native populace, its penguins, would remain free and unbowed come what might. The unprotected, paper frontiers of their “conquests” were the vanity and vainglory of the geography schoolbook for the patriotic edification of the children of a few countries bent on appearing bigger, colder, more inaccessible and of greater consequence than they actually were. Something else they vaunted were the penguins rounded up and brought back to their zoos to create the illusion of a quainter, more accessible Antarctica. Roll up, this enclosure’s Antarctica. Breakfast at eight. Lunch at one. Muck out at four.

  As he tucked the paper into his bag, the sun broke through the louring sky, and just as unexpectedly retired again for a while. It was still summer, though autumn was on its way. As he was on his – though to where had yet to be decided. Home to his flat and a bath was where he felt like going. His next priority being to find Misha, and make up for doing him out of his flight to Antarctica – a debt only he, Viktor, could, and would, repay.

  From the window of his bus, streets and pavements were again lit by the sun. The elderly man in jeans and white football shirt seated next to him was immersed in an Emigrate-to-Canada brochure in the form of a quiz. A Higher Technical education earned you three points, an Intermediate – two points, Higher Arts – one point, and so on under each heading. A total of 15 or over put you in with a chance, so why not apply?

  Assessing himself at eight points, Viktor sighed with relief. Maple Leaf Land was not for him. A paucity of chance offered more scope than a surfeit. From the bus stop to his block was about 30 metres, and the way led past a kindergarten, a school and a tiny square.

  In no hurry, he stopped to watch a group of two- and three-year-olds playing trains, circling the sandpit on invisible rails, hands on the shoulders of the one in front, waddling like so many penguins.

  He fell to thinking of Sonya and her father, Misha-non-penguin. Odd, Misha’s outliving his non-real equivalent, as hopefully was the case.

  With greater assurance and a spring in his step he walked on to the entrance to his block, newly-operative autopilot disorientatingly disengaged. Looking up at his windows, he felt heavily oppressed.

  Mashka, the neighbours’ cat, came flying down the stairs, and by the time he reached his own floor he was himself again. His metal door looked as impregnable as ever, except that beneath the existing keyhole another had been cut, leaving Viktor to finger his own now inoperative key uneasily, and to take in the new rubber doormat embossed with the English word welcome. Below, a door banged, footsteps followed, and he froze. A jingling of keys one floor down, the opening and shutting of a door, then silence.

  Cautiously he made his way down to the entrance, and looked out, still in the grip of nameless past anxieties. Opposite, beyond the courtyard clotheslines, was the newly painted green door of the block where Old Tonya lived, one floor up. Mother of his friend Tolik, Old Tonya sold milk in the yard, as she had all her life, her Milk-o, milk-o! from six in the morning on serving to prepare him for his mother’s Up you get! an hour and a half later.

  Striding across the yard, he went up to her flat. “Why, it’s little Vik!” she exclaimed happily, opening the door. “Thought you’d gone away. Come in.” Neat in appearance, she took good care of herself, and though probably at least 60, had nothing of the old granny about her. Selling milk kept you young, did wonders for the complexion. “Like some broth?” she asked. “I bought a chicken, but broth was all it was good for.”

  As they made for the kitchen, he glanced into the sitting room and saw on the sideboard a portrait of the eternally young Tolik, her son. Tolik had fallen to his death from a tree. In those days there had been any number of fine old trees to build houses in, then look down on the petty world of adults building Communism. It was plain, even then, that what each was in fact building was his own private version of it, secretly competing to be the one with the most smoked salmon and Soviet champagne in his fridge at home. Another age entirely!

  The broth recalled something of the distant past, too – the good homely childhood that had been his, with chicken legs of tooth-defeating toughness, and great yellow lakes of broth patterned with globules of chicken fat.

  “There’s a bit of cold rice,” Old Tonya said, “Like some?” He nodded, and two spoonfuls of fried rice went plunging to the bottom of his broth.

  “Where do you live now?” she asked.

  “Over there.”

  “So you’re renting the flat out. I thought you’d sold it.”

  “A friend’s niece and a little girl are there.”

  “Such a nice husband she’s got – tall, militiaman or a soldier, from the look of him.”

  “Really? I didn’t know about the husband.” He loo
ked anxiously across to his flat. “Could I, I wonder, use your phone?”

  “On the fridge.”

  He dialled his number, and Sonya’s clear voice answered. “Uncle Kolya?”

  “No, Viktor.”

  A slight pause, then, “Uncle Vik! Where are you?”

  “Kiev.”

  “Is Misha with you?”

  “No, but he’s somewhere here in Kiev.”

  “Lost?”

  “Yes, but I’ll find him.”

  “You must, and bring him home. Auntie Nina’s got a cat and it scratches. Misha never scratched.”

  “No,” said Viktor sadly. “Is Auntie Nina there?”

  “She’s gone to the shops. Are you coming here?”

  “Not just yet. And probably when Auntie Nina and Uncle Kolya aren’t there. He lives with you, does he, this uncle?”

  “Yes, and he’s nice. Bought me roller skates. He’s just gone away for a couple of days. He’s going to bring me some mussels.”

  “So he’s gone to the sea. What does he do?”

  “Some sort of watchman – something special … But here’s Auntie Nina. Like to talk to her?”

  “I’ll ring later,” he said, replacing the receiver.

  “Spend the night here, if over there’s not on,” Old Tonya said matter-of-factly, now standing by the stove.

  “Thanks, Tonya, but if I may I’ll just leave my bag, and collect it tomorrow.”

  “Of course.”

  3

  Viktor walked along Kreshchatik Street feeling a need to unwind. Before leaving Old Tonya’s he had retrieved from his bag the fruits of beginner’s luck at the casino before his forced flight to Antarctica, and now the rattle of chips in his pockets revived a sense of reckless excitement. Still, more important than the chips, and safe in an inner pocket with his letter to his wife, was Bronikovsky’s Visa credit card. Whether there were children he’d forgotten to ask, but would find out when he took the letter to Moscow and told what he had to tell. And there’d be tears …

  First, though, he must find Misha, seek his forgiveness, do his best to put things right. Maybe there’d be another chance to fly him to the cold far south.

 

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