Galya gave me a thoughtful look. She put a piece of omelette in her mouth, chewed it and said:
‘Thank you, Light One. But I don’t really fancy you, honestly. Would you like me to bring you some food? Look after you a bit?’
‘Yes, do,’ I agreed.
The girl went over to the smorgasbord – omelettes and fried eggs in heated containers, bread, salami, cheese, meat, a bunch of green herbs. In the corner by the door into the kitchen there was a small refrigerator. I wondered if the vampire’s blood was kept in there? Or did the barman pour it for them in the evening? The bar counter was empty now: even the beer pumps were draped with colourful coverings.
My phone rang again.
‘Oh, let me get something to eat,’ I groaned, taking the phone out of my pocket.
‘Anton?’
‘Hello, Foma.’
‘Are you up already, Anton?’
‘Yes, I’m just having breakfast.’
‘I’ll send a car round for you. Can you be outside your hotel in about five minutes?’
‘Er …’ I said, gaping at Semyon, who had appeared in the doorway. He looked radiant and he waved to me gleefully. ‘All right if I bring a friend?’
‘That Dark One? The girl werewolf? Better not.’
‘No. A friend of mine has just arrived from Moscow. A Light Magician.’
Foma sighed.
‘All right. Both of you come. The driver knows where to go.’
‘There’s something I have to ask you,’ I warned him.
Lermont sighed again.
‘I’m afraid there’s also something that I have to tell you. Get a move on, I’m waiting.’
I put the phone away and smiled at Galya, who had just reached me with the plates and the coffee pot. At the same time Semyon started moving towards me from the door.
‘Oh! Galya Dobronravova!’ Semyon exclaimed, breaking into a broad smile. ‘I remember, I do … How’s school going? How’s Marina Petrovna?’
The little girl’s face came out in red blotches. She put the dishes down on the table.
‘Can you imagine?’ Semyon told me in a confidential voice. ‘Galya took a dislike to her chemistry teacher and started harassing her. She would transform and then wait for her outside the house in the evenings, snarling and showing her teeth. Can you believe it? But the husband of this modest teacher of chemistry turned out to be a modest police patrol officer. And on the third evening, the way it always happens in fairy tales, he came out, rather concerned about aggressive dogs, to meet his wife on her way home from work. He saw our little Galya snarling in the bushes, realised that she wasn’t a dog but a wolf, grabbed his pistol and fired at her, emptying the entire clip. Two bullets, by the way, got Galya in her little backside as she was hightailing it away from the infuriated guardian of law and order. There a was great fuss, we worked out what was going on, paid Galya a visit at home and had a little chat… It was okay, though, we managed without the Inquisition. The whole business was played down.’
The girl turned and ran out of the dining room. The vampires watched her go, with thoughtful expressions on their faces.
‘You shouldn’t be so hard on her,’ I said. ‘Yesterday she faced bullets to save my life.’
Semyon grabbed a piece of salami and chewed it. He sighed.
‘Pure soya … It’s good that she faced up to the bullets. But what about persecuting her teacher?’
‘That’s bad,’ I said gloomily
We piled into the taxi that was waiting for us, taking the robot shooter wrapped up in a dressing gown. The metal tripod stuck out, but that didn’t concern us too much.
The driver was a human being. It looked as if the Edinburgh Watch made much greater use of paid human staff than we did. We drove quickly out of the tourist centre and set off in the general direction of the bay.
‘Thanks for calling me over,’ said Semyon, gazing out of the window with undisguised delight. ‘I’d been stuck in Moscow too long … So tell me, what’s going on?’
I started telling him. At first Semyon listened with the condescending interest of an experienced old soldier listening to a raw recruit’s horror stories. But then he turned serious.
‘Anton, are you sure? I mean that Power flows down there?’
‘Shall I ask the driver to turn back and drive past the Dungeons?’
Semyon sighed and shook his head. He said just two words:
‘A vault.’
‘Meaning?’
‘A hiding place. Where something very important is hidden.’
‘Semyon, I don’t really understand …’
‘Anton, imagine that you are a very, very powerful magician. And, for instance, you can stroll around on the fifth level of the Twilight.’
‘I can’t.’
‘Imagine it?’
‘Stroll around down there. I can imagine it easily enough.’
‘Then imagine it. You can go deeper than any of the Others that you know. You suddenly need to hide something that’s very valuable. A magical artefact, a powerful spell – even a sack of gold, if you like. So what do you do? Bury it in the ground? It will be found. Especially if you’re hiding a magical object: it would create a disturbance in the Power around itself, no matter how you covered it up. Then you take this thing and go down deep into the Twilight …’
‘And I leave it there, say on the fifth level,’ I said and nodded. ‘But an object from our world would be pushed back up …’
‘That’s why you need a constant stream of Power. Well… it’s like putting an object that floats on the bottom of a bath of water. Left on its own, it will surface. But of you keep it pressed down with a stream of water …’
‘I understand, Semyon.’
‘Do you have any ideas about who hid what down there?’
‘Yes,’ I said. ‘Only first I’ll ask Foma about it.’
The phone in my pocket rang again. Would it never give me any peace…
‘Yes?’ I said, without looking at the screen.
‘Anton, this is Geser.’
The boss’s voice sounded strange somehow. As if he was bewildered.
‘Hello.’
‘I’ve had a word with Foma, and he’s promised to be frank with you. And with Semyon, now it’s come to that…’
‘Thank you, Boris Ignatievich.’
‘Anton …’ Geser began and paused. ‘There’s another thing … We’ve dug back into Victor Prokhorov’s past. And we’ve found something.’
‘Well?’ I asked, already sure that I shouldn’t expect anything good.
‘Did his photo look familiar to you?’
‘An ordinary-looking young guy. A statistically average Moscow face.’ I caught myself starting to get rude, the way I always do when I get agitated. ‘Every second guy in every college looks like that.’
‘Try to picture Victor a bit younger. As a teenager.’
I made an honest effort. And answered;
‘You get a statistically average Moscow schoolboy. In every school…’
‘But you’ve almost certainly seen him, Anton. And not just once. He was in the same class at school as your neighbour Kostya Saushkin. He knew him very well – you could say they were friends. He probably dropped in to see him at home quite often. I think sometimes he must have run into you, waving his briefcase about and laughing for no reason at all.’
‘It’s not possible,’ I whispered. Geser’s story had flabbergasted me so completely that I wasn’t even amazed by the untypically colourful way he’d told it. Waving his briefcase about and laughing? Yes, more than likely. If there are children living on your stairwell in the apartment building you’re bound to stumble over their briefcases, hear them laughing and step in little patches of chewing gum. But who remembers the faces …?