On the top landing the guards jumped in surprise when they saw the red robe of a government worker.
"Out!" ordered Benedikt.
The workers took off, tearing down the stairs, pushing one another, all eight legs thundering down.
From the tower you could see far away. Far away… There wasn't even a word in the language to say how far you could see from the tower! And if there was a word like that, you'd be scared to say it out loud. Ooooh, so far away! To the farthest of far, the edge of the edge, to the limit of limits, all the way to death! The round pancake of the earth, the whole heavenly vault, the entire cold December, the whole city with all its settlements, with its dark, lopsided izbas-empty and wide open, gone over with the fine-tooth comb of the Saniturions' hooks and still inhabited, still swarming with scared, senseless, stubborn life!
O world, roll up into a single block, A cracked and broken sidewalk, A fouled and filthy warehouse, The burrow of a mouse!
A thin strip of horrible yellow sunset filled the western window, and the evening star Alatyr twinkled in the sunset. The pushkin stuck out like a small black stick in the confusion of streets, and from that height the rope looped around the poet's neck and hung with laundry looked like a fine thread.
The sunrise lay hidden in a dark-blue blanket in the other window, covering the woods, rivers, more woods, and secret fields where red tulips sleep under the snow, where Benedikt's eternal bride hibernates, dressed in frosty lace, inside an icy, decorated egg, with a smile on her luminous face, my unfound love, the Princess Bird, and she dreams of kisses, of silky grass, golden flies, and mirrored waters where her unspeakable beauty is reflected, shimmers, ruffles, multiplies. In her sleep the Princess Bird sighs a happy sigh and dreams of her beautiful self.
To the south, lit by a terrible double light-the yellow from the west and the dark blue from the sunrise side-in the south, blocking the impassable snowy steppe with its whistling whirlwinds and stormy columns, in the south, which runs, runs ever onward toward the dark blue, windy Ocean-Sea, in the south, beyond the ravine, beyond the triple moat, covering the whole width of the window, spread the red, adorned, embellished, ornamented, painted, many-towered, many-storied terem of Fyodor Kuzmich, Glorybe, the Greatest Murza, Long May He Live.
"Ha!" laughed Benedikt.
Joy spurted from him like foamy, sparkling kvas.
Joy, thou beauteous godly lightning, Daughter of Elysium.
Suddenly, everything became as limpid as a spring brook. It was all right in front of him, clear as day. That's what it was! There!… There, right before him, unspoiled, unspent, a treasure trove full to the brim, a magical garden blooming and fruitful in its pink-white froth, a garden flowing with the sweetest juice, like a billion blind firelings! There, packed tight from its sonorous cellars to its aromatic attics, was the pleasure palace! Ali Baba's cave! The Taj Mahal, for cryin' out loud!
Of course! In the south, that's right! So the west did help! The light was from the west, the star was a beacon. It illuminated everything! He guessed, he figured it out, he understood the clues, he understood the fable-and everything fit together!
He squinted from happiness, squeezed his eyelids tight, and shook his head. He stuck his head through the window slit to feel it better; he inhaled the aroma of frost and wood, the sweet smoke curling up from the chimneys of the Red Terem. He seemed to see things better with his eyelids closed, he heard more clearly, and felt more acutely; there, there, right nearby, very close, just beyond the gully, beyond the ditch, behind the triple wall, beyond the high pike fence-but you can jump over a wall and slip under a pike fence. If only he could jump from the tower right this minute, softly softly, unheard and unseen, and be swept away in the blizzard's whirlwind, carried like weightless dust across the gully, like a snowspout right into the attic window! Crawling and leaping, limber and long, but just so he didn't miss it, didn't lose the trail; closer, still closer to the terem, without leaving traces on the snow, scaring dogs in the yard, or disturbing any creatures in the house!
And then to drink, drink his fill, drink in the letters, words, and pages with their sweet, dusty, acrid, inimitable smell! O my beauteous poppies! O my imperishable, ever-shining gold!
"Oooooooh!" Benedikt squealed blissfully.
"So, son, are you ready now?" came a quiet laugh behind him, just above his ear. Benedikt started and opened his eyes.
"Goodness gracious, Papa! You scared me!"
Father-in-law stole up quietly, the floorboards didn't even tremble. You could tell he'd pulled his claws in. He, too, wore a red robe and hood over his head, but by the voice and the smell you could tell that yes, it was Father-in-law, Kudeyar Kudeyarich.
"So what now?" whispered Father-in-law. "Shall we do a bit of tumbling?"
"I don't understand."
"Feel like doing a bit of overturning? Fyodor Kuzmich, that is, Glorybe? Ready to knock off the evil tormentor? That damned dwarf?"
"I'm ready," Benedikt whispered with conviction. "Papa! I'd do it with my own hands!"
"Oh, heart of mine!…" said Father-in-law joyfully. "Well? Finally!… Finally! Let me hug you!"
Benedikt and Kudeyar Kudeyarich embraced and stood looking down on the city from the heights. Bluish lights began to flicker in the izbas, the sunset went out, the stars emerged.
"Let's swear an oath to each other," said Kudeyar Kudeyarich.
"An oath?"
"Yep. For eternal friendship."
"Well… all right."
"I gave you everything. I gave you my daughter-if you want, I'll let you have my wife."
"Uh, that won't be n-n-n-necessary. We need Kant in our hearts and a peaceful sky above our heads. There's a law like that," Benedikt remembered.
"True enough. And it's us against the tyrants. Agreed?"
"Of course."
"We'll ravage the oppressor's nest, okey dokey?"
"Oh, Papa, he's got books piled high as the snow!"
"Aaah, my dear, even higher. And he tears pictures out of them."
"Quiet, I don't want to know," said Benedikt, gritting his teeth.
"I can't be quiet! Art is in peril!" Father-in-law exclaimed sternly. "There is no worse enemy than indifference! All evil in fact comes from the silent acquiescence of the indifferent. You read Mumu, didn't you? Did you understand the moral? How he kept silent all the time, and the dog died."
"Papa, but how-"
"Know-how, that's how. I've thought the whole thing through. We'll make a revolution. I've just been waiting for you. We'll go in at night, he doesn't sleep at night, but the guards will be tired. Okey-dokey?"
"At night, how can we do it at night? It's dark!"
"And what am I here for? Aren't I a torch-bearer?"
Father-in-law's eyes gave off a ray of light, and he laughed contentedly.
Clear and simple. The soul was icy clean. No neuroses now.
YAT
The red terem had a moldy smell-a familiar, exciting smell… Unmistakable. Old paper, the leather of ancient bindings, traces of gold dust, sweet glue. Benedikt felt a bit weak in the knees, like he was on his way to a woman for the first time. Women!… What did he need Marfushkas or Olenkas for now, when all the women of the ages, the Isoldes, the Rosamunds, the Juliets, with their combs and silks, their daggers and caprices, would be his any minute, now and forever more… When he was just about to become the owner of the untold, the unimaginable… the Shah of Shahs, the Emir, the Sultan, the Sun King, Head of the Housing Committee, Chairman of the Earth, Head Clerk, Archimandrite, Pope of Rome, Boyars' Council Scribe, the Collegiate Assessor, King Solomon… He, Benedikt, he would be all of these…
Father-in-law illuminated the path with his eyes. Two strong, moon-white rays searched the hallways. Dust swam in the beams of light, disappearing for a moment when Father-in-law blinked. Benedikt's head spun from the frequent flares, the fragrance of nearby book bindings, and the sweetish stench coming from Father-in-law's mouth-Father-in-law kept jerking hi
s head, as though his collar was strangling him. Shadows danced along the walls like gigantic letters: [*]-Glagol of the hook, [*]- Liudi of Benedikt's peaked hood, [*]-Zhivete of the cautious fingers splayed to feel their way along the walls, to search for hidden doors. Father-in-law ordered him to step softly, not to shuffle his feet.
"Listen to the revolution, dammit!"
The revolutionaries crept through the corridors, turned corners, stopped, looked around, listened. Somewhere back there near the entrance lay the pitiful guards, no longer breathing: what can a poleax or a halberd do against a double-edged hook, swift as a bird?
They passed through two floors, climbed the stairs, ran on tiptoe across the hanging galleries where the moon shone bright and terrible through the window bladders. Their black felt boots silently crossed the moonlit floorboards; the tall, ornamented inner doors opened to show the drunken private quarter guards snoring-legs akimbo, caps on their chests. Father-in-law swore quietly: No order in the government at all. Fyodor Kuzmich, Glorybe, had ruined everything. Quickly, with a swift poke, they dispatched the guards.
After the entrance there were more corridors and the sweet smell grew nearer. Glancing upward, Benedikt clasped his hands: books! The shelves were packed with books! Lord Almighty! Saints alive! His knees gave way, he trembled and whined softly: you couldn't read them all in a whole lifetime! A forest of pages, an endless, indiscriminate blizzard, uncounted! Ah…! Ah!!! Aaaaa! Maybe… just maybe… somewhere here… maybe the secret book is here somewhere! The book that tells you how to live, where to go, where to guide the heart! Maybe Fyodor Kuzmich, Glorybe, has found it, and is already reading it: he jumps up on the bed quick as a wink, and just reads and reads! He went and found it, the monster, and he's reading it!! The tyrant! Shit!
"Pay attention!" Father-in-law breathed into his face.
The hallways branched off, turned, forked, and disappeared toward the unknown depths of the terem. Father-in-law looked every which way: all that could be seen was books.
"There has to be a simple way in," muttered Father-in-law. "Somewhere there must be an entrance. There has to be… We took a wrong turn somewhere."
"The Northern Herald!!! Issue number eight!!!" Benedikt cried. He rushed at it, pushing Kudeyar Kudeyarich, who tripped and fell against the wall. As he fell, he reached his hand out to break his fall: the wall yielded and turned into a shelf, the shelf collapsed and broke into pieces. Suddenly they were in an enormous hall whose walls were entirely covered with bookcases and shelves; there were countless tables heaped high with books, and at the head table, in a semicircle of a thousand candles, was a high stool, and on that stool sat Fyodor Kuzmich himself, Glorybe, with a writing stick in his mouth: he turned his face to look at them and his mouth opened wide: he was surprised.
"Why are you here unannounced?" he said, frowning.
"Get down, overthrow yourself, you accursed tyrant-bloodsucker," cried Father-in-law with real flourish. "We've come to oust you!"
"Who's come? Why did they let you in?" said Fyodor Kuzmich, Glorybe, in a worried voice.
"Who's come? Who's come? He whose time has come, that's who."
"Tyrants of the world, tremble; but you take courage and hark!" cried Benedikt from behind Father-in-law's shoulder.
"Why tremble?" asked Fyodor Kuzmich, as he realized what was happening. He screwed up his face and began to cry. "What are you going to do to me?"
"Your unjust rule has ended! You tormented the people- and that's enough of that! Now we'll give you a taste of the hook!"
"I don't want the hook, I don't. It huuurts!"
"Next thing you know he'll be telling us his sad story," cried Father-in-law. "Beat him!" he cried, striking a blow in his direction. But Fyodor Kuzmich, Glorybe, rolled off the stool like a pea and ran, so Father-in-law hit a book instead, and split it in two.
"Why, why are you ousting meeee?"
"You're doing a bad job of running the state!" cried Father-in-law in a terrible voice. Hook in hand, he rushed at the Greatest Murza, Long May He Live, but Fyodor Kuzmich, Glorybe, dived under the stool again and scrambled under the table. He ran to the other side of the room.
"I do the best I can!" sobbed Fyodor Kuzmich.
"You destroyed the whole goddamned country! You tear pages out of books! Get him, Benedikt!"
"You stole poems from the pushkin," cried Benedikt, working himself up, "and he's our be all and end all! And you stole from him!"
"I invented the wheel!"
"It was the pushkin who invented the wheel!"
"And the yoke!"
"Pushkin did it!"
"The torch!"
"Jeez! He's still being stubborn."
Benedikt ran after Fyodor Kuzmich from one side of the table, Father-in-law tried to head him off on the other side, but the Greatest Murza, Long May He Live, once again bolted under the books.
"Leave me alone, I'm a good boy!"
"You wily louse!" cried Father-in-law. With one hand leaning on the table, he jumped over it in a single leap. Fyodor Kuzmich, Glorybe, squealed, scampered under the bookcase, and took refuge somewhere out of sight.
"Catch him!" croaked Father-in-law, thrusting his hook under the shelves. "He'll get away! Get away! He has tunnels dug everywhere!"
Benedikt ran over to help. Together, getting in each other's way, they poked around with their hooks, huffing and puffing…
"I've got something here. Think I got him… Come on, you're younger, squat down and take a look… I can't quite get the hook in. It's him, right?"
Benedikt got down on his hands and knees and looked under the shelves-it was dark and there were all kinds of wisps and rags.
"I can't see anything… Kudeyar Kudeyarich, if you could just light it up!"
"I'm afraid to let him go… Come on, now, take the hook from me… Dammit… I can't figure out…"
Benedikt grabbed the hook; Father-in-law got on all fours, shone his light under the shelves. His joints creaked.
"There's so much dust… Can't see anything… Huge dust balls under here…"
Something jerked the hook, they heard the sound of clothes ripping. Benedikt jabbed and gave the hook a twist, but too late: tap tap tap-they could hear small steps running along the walls behind the shelves somewhere in the depths of the room.
"You let him get away, dammit!" cried Father-in-law in disappointment. "And I taught you, I taught you!"
"Why is it always me?… You were the one who hooked him by the clothes!"
"We should have squashed him. Where is he now?… Come on now, come out, Fyodor Kuzmich! Come out like a good boy!"
"No fair, no fair!" cried Fyodor Kuzmich, Glorybe, from below.
"There he is! Come on!"
But Fyodor Kuzmich scurried away again.
"Don't try to catch me, I'm just a little guy."
"Stick him… Poke over here, that way!"
"Why are you so insistent?… Go away!" Fyodor Kuzmich squeaked from a third place.
"You're not nice!" he cried from a fourth.
Father-in-law looked all around, Benedikt looked around, his neck craned, his head bent. Something shuffled under the far shelf; he turned his head that way; something rustled under the shelves; with a soft, long leap Benedikt jumped. If he closed his eyes, he could hear the sounds better; so he closed his eyes and turned his head from side to side; if he could only push his ears back a bit more, it would be even better. His nostrils flared-he could find him by smell too, his smell went with him when he ran… There he is!
"There he is!" cried Benedikt, leaping and lunging at the spot. He turned his hook. There was a piercing squeal under the hook. "I've got him!"
Something burst. It was a soft sound, but distinct. Something tensed and then went limp on the hook. Benedikt turned it and pulled the Greatest Murza, Long May He Live, out from under the shelf. So much fuss and bother for such a puny little body. Benedikt pushed back his hood and wiped his nose with his sleeve. He took a closer look. The backbone
had broken; the head was twisted to one side, and the eyes had rolled back.
Father-in-law walked over and looked. He shook his head.
"The hook got dirty. It'll have to be boiled."
"Now what?"
"Clean him off it and throw him in a box or something."
"With my hands?"
"Why your hands? God forbid. Use a piece of paper. There's tons of paper around here."
"Hey, hey, don't tear up any books! I have to read them!"
"No letters here. Just a picture."
Father-in-law tore a portrait out of a book, rolled it up in a cone, stuck his hand in it, and cleaned Fyodor Kuzmich, Glorybe, off the hook. Then he wiped off the hook.
"There you go," muttered Father-in-law. "No more tyranny allowed! It was just getting too darn fashionable!"
Benedikt was suddenly exhausted. His temples pounded. He wasn't used to bending down. He sat on a stool to catch his breath. There were a bunch of books laid out on the table. Well, that was it. Now everything was his. He opened one of them cautiously.
The trepidation of life, of all the centuries and races, Lives in you. Always. Right now. In all your hidden places.
Poems. He clapped the book shut and looked at another.
He who draws the darkest lot of chance Is not subject to the dance; Like a star drowned in the skies, In his place, a new star will arise.
More poems! Lord and Saints Almighty. How much there is to read! He opened a third book:
What kind of East do you favor?
The East of Xerxes, or of Christ the Savior?
A fourth book:
Is all quiet among our fair people? No. The Emperor's murdered, cast down. And there's someone now talking of freedom, On the square of the town.
It was all sort of about the same thing. The tyrant must have been putting a little collection together for himself. Benedikt opened the fifth book, the one from which Father-in-law tore a portrait that Fyodor Kuzmich, Glorybe, ruined:
Man suits all elements, every season. Tyrant, traitor, or the prison.
Father-in-law tore the book away from Benedikt and tossed it aside.
The Slynx Page 27