“Dmitry Stepanovich, you are being asked to give a consultation in the Special Division, in your area of expertise.”
Dulin was alarmed. This request was, in fact, an order. It was common knowledge that the Special Division was where “politicals” were kept, and the people who worked there had “clearance”—they were special people, secretive people who kept quiet. No one else wanted to have access to it. Ordinarily, if they needed to consult someone, they invited Karpov, the department head; but he happened to be away on vacation. Kulchenko, another distinguished senior research fellow, had gone to a conference in Leningrad. Dulin tried to wriggle out of it.
“Eleonora Viktorovna, I would be honored, of course, but I’m afraid it’s impossible; I don’t have clearance.”
Eleonora Viktorovna adjusted her hair—a fashionable bun that added volume to her head on top and in back—and smiled:
“We have already arranged for clearance. Just sign here.”
And she held out to him a malachite pen sticking out of a malachite stand. Dulin took the pen, still protesting:
“But I’ve never taken part in this kind of consultation. Karpov will be back in two weeks, and Kulchenko will already be back at work on Monday.”
Eleonora Viktorovna’s mouth expressed dissatisfaction.
“Are you not aware that any specialist with a diploma can be called in to offer expertise? It’s your duty! Those are our laws. And this is just such a consultation.” Eleonora paused; the pause lasted just long enough to give Dulin to understand that resistance was futile. He signed the document.
“Please report to the Special Division at eleven o’clock on Thursday. They’ll provide you with a pass. Professor Dymshitz, head of the Special Division, would like to have a little talk with you now. Wait for him here. He’s in the director’s office.”
“Yes, of course,” Dulin said, with a sense of foreboding.
He sat on a chair, taking note of its alarming crimson upholstery. He had already heard unpleasant rumors about this Dymshitz, but he couldn’t recall precisely what they were.
He waited for quite a while. Finally, the door opened, and a fat, stumpy fellow with a few thin gray hairs combed over his bald pate, from the right side to the left, emerged from the director’s office.
“Efim Semenovich, Doctor Dulin is waiting for you. You wished to see him,” Eleonora said, rising to greet him.
A head taller than he, the older beauty had to bend down to communicate with this gnomish creature; still, she exuded fear, and he menace. Dulin’s agitation grew more and more pronounced. He couldn’t quite grasp what was happening, as though he were witnessing a play performed in a foreign language.
No one explained to Dulin that Eleonora had been married to Dymshitz before the war, and that she had left him for a younger man who went missing in action during the war. In 1946 she returned to Dymshitz again, and after living with him for a short while, abandoned him again. Thus, Dulin was a chance witness of their strange and convoluted relationship.
Dymshitz turned his gaze toward Dulin.
“Yes, yes. Very good. Have you ever taken part in a psychiatric expert review?”
Dulin had done this hundreds of times for cases of alcoholism, naturally. But he suddenly grew confused, and something so frightened him that his underarms, as well as his back and chest, broke into a sweat.
“Yes, of course,” he said.
The gnome was sizing him up. And not very highly.
“I would like to talk with you beforehand, but I’m in a hurry at the moment. Come to the Special Division at eleven, and before you see the patient, look in on me.”
And Dymshitz went up the stairs to the third floor, his little ankle boots clattering noisily on the steps.
He probably buys his shoes in Children’s World, Dulin thought irritably. And he wasn’t wrong. The professor wore a size 4.
* * *
Leaving the institute at eight o’clock in the evening, a vapor of dried, malodorous sweat trailing behind him, Dulin ran into Vinberg. Erect, lanky, and thin, in a worn-out gray suit with a striped silk tie, and smelling of eau de cologne, he was elegant, as always.
It’s not just the tie, of course, Dulin thought to himself. It’s his nature, his character. He’s dry as a biscuit.
Dulin himself had put on weight in the last two or three years. He ate a lot: for his mother, for his grandmother, for all the years he had gone hungry in childhood, which had settled into depths known only to psychiatrists.
They walked to the metro together.
“They called me to give a consultation at the Special Division,” Dulin reported without any hesitation.
Vinberg raised a neatly trimmed eyebrow.
“Really? They must trust you. Are you a member of the Party, Dmitry Stepanovich?”
“Of course I am. I served in the army after college. They took everyone back then.”
“Ah, yes. Party discipline. You have a duty to take part, then,” Vinberg said drily, clearing his throat.
“Usually, Karpov … he’s on vacation,” Dulin said, trying to justify himself, and was taken aback by his own behavior. “They obviously have an alcoholic there, or there’s at least an episode involving alcohol in the case. But in our country, Edwin Yakovlevich, everyone drinks: actors, academics, and cosmonauts. Recently we had…” And Dulin told him about the celebrated actor.
“Back in the camps, there was a certain talented writer, an exceptionally erudite man. He translated Rilke in prison so as not to be degraded by the circumstances. Well, it’s unlikely that you’ve ever heard of Rilke. Right here, in the Serbsky Institute, that very writer underwent a psychiatric expert review at the beginning of the 1930s; he hoped to be diagnosed as an alcoholic (which he was not). And for the time being he wasn’t sent to prison, but for treatment. He spent three years in treatment. He praised God and read books. But they sent him to prison in the end anyway. Yes, Rilke, Rilke … That’s the paradox of our time: before the war, people evaded persecution in psychiatric wards, and now it’s precisely psychiatric wards where—”
“Dymshitz asked me to drop by for a talk with him,” Dulin said plaintively, his voice lowered. But Vinberg seemed not to hear. He suddenly turned away.
“Excuse me, I completely forgot. I have to run into the bookstore. Good-bye!”
And he strode off in the direction of Metrostroevskaya Street. Vinberg had been taken off guard. This decisive young man who had single-handedly managed to quell a fire, unsophisticated and somewhat limited, but conscientious and decent, in his own way, seemed to be asking for his advice.
What could he say to a simple-hearted and conscientious fool? Even a wise man wouldn’t be able to extricate himself from this one. Vinberg walked right past the bookstore. He hadn’t really needed to go there.
When Hitler came to power, Jacob Vinberg, his father, a well-known Berlin lawyer, had said: “As a lawyer, I always find a way out. I know that in every situation there is at least one exit. Usually several. Under Hitler’s regime, there are none.” Jacob Vinberg died without realizing how right he was. This regime doesn’t allow a man any way out, either. Not one. They always get the better of those who have a conscience, Vinberg thought.
The Special Division was located in a separate building, three trolleybus stops away. At half past ten on Thursday, Dulin rang the stern bell, which seemed to be calling him to account. A female porter in a white robe opened the door.
“Whom do you wish to see?”
Dulin showed her his pass. “I’m here for a consultation. I need to see Professor Dymshitz.”
“One moment,” the woman said, and, with a brisk nod, shut the door in his face. A few minutes later another woman, taller, with a fancy hairdo, opened the door. Instead of a robe she was wearing a pink dress.