No-one stopped them, no-one invoked penalties. They had become a law to themselves. They killed anyone they liked, it didn’t matter.
As long as they didn’t kill one of their own kind, no-one would interfere.”
He paused once more, and the fingers of one hand began again to play with a tile. His eyes seemed haunted by memories still not remote enough in time to have lost their shadows.
“As you’re aware, the International Express from Siberia to Manchuria runs through Transbaikalia. I was taken for a journey along the railway, to see how Semenov was keeping communications open in the region under his control. The whole country along the Transbaikalian sector was dotted with what Semenov called his “Killing Stations”. People would be plucked off trains Jews, suspected Bolsheviks, commissars, rich merchants. They were taken straight to one of these stations. None of them ever returned to finish their journeys. If ever an enquiry were made, the official answer would always be:
“Missing en route.” And in those days, who asked such questions anyway?”
He hesitated briefly, then began again.
“Once .. .” and here his eyes grew large with memory “Once I saw the strangest, most awful thing on the horizon. It seemed to go on forever: an endless line of trains, all jammed together. Miles of them, miles and miles of carriages and locomotives, all joined together like a giant serpent. A sea monster, but long enough to swallow a navy.
“The first locomotive had run out of fuel and water and then frozen to the tracks. The metal had been soldered together by the cold. Then a second train had come up behind and tried to push the first, but without success. And it had frozen too. And all this time, no-one was getting word through about what was going on, so they kept on sending trains. Train after train.
“We went up close. It was freezing, I remember; everything was frost, bleak white frost that lay hard on the metal of the trains, turning them white. They were full of bodies, the bodies of all the passengers who’d frozen to death there, afraid to leave the security of their compartments, not knowing what had happened, waiting for help to be sent out from Moscow. They told me that forty-five thousand people froze to death in those carriages. I don’t know if that’s true. But I saw a lot of bodies. All preserved, all beautifully preserved.”
He stammered.
“I ... I saw a beautiful woman in one carriage, dressed in sable, with frost clinging to her hair like lace. She hadn’t changed, not really. She’d grown pale as ice and stiff with frost, but her features were still perfect. Beautiful she’d become a sort of doll, white and sad and untouchable, like Pierrot in a mask. I wanted to break a window and go inside to look at her more closely. I wanted to kiss her, just to taste the ice on her lips. I thought I could thaw her, I thought my warmth could bring her back to life. She was so still, so very still.”
He grew silent, lost in the pain of memory, walking alongside the frozen tracks of the Trans-Siberian Express, watching pale faces in the gathering dusk, and wooden cattle-trucks crammed with the dead.
Christopher left him like that, brooding, and returned to the room upstairs. It would soon be time to leave. He had no choice.
He had never had a choice.
Mongolia
They left later that morning. Chodron stayed in Sining-fu with the family who ran the rest-house in which they had lodged: the nemo had taken a fancy to her and, on hearing her story, expressed a wish to take her in. For her part, the child had been overjoyed: the excitement of Sining-fu, the first town of any size she had ever seen, and the luxury of living in a house instead of a tent were, for the moment, compensations of a sort for the losses she had sustained. She readily agreed to stay, and neither Chindamani nor Christopher could recommend a better solution.
But Chindamani had found it hard to part from the little girl.
Apart from her old nurse Sonam, she had never known female companionship; and Chodron’s loneliness had reminded her acutely of her own as a child. Perhaps the laws dictating that a child be taken from its parents at an early age merely to live out another phase in the cycle of incarnation were in their way as brutal as the violence that had made Chodron an orphan.
The car was a sturdy little Fiat which Winterpole had obtained at a price from the Dao T’ai. It had been modified for the desert and used up until then by the Dao T’ai for brief hunting expeditions into the Gobi. There were enough cans of petrol for a journey to Siberia and back, water, food, and tents. Winterpole was to drive while Christopher navigated with the help of charts that came courtesy of the British Embassy in Peking.
They skirted the eastern fringes of the Nan Shan mountains, travelling north from Sining-fu, then veering slightly east. Late that afternoon they passed through the Great Wall near Wuwei.
Here, the Wall was little more than a symboclass="underline" low mud ramparts, broken and eroded by man and time alike. But for all the insignificance of mud and cracked stone, Christopher felt they had passed more than a token barrier.
Once, they passed a long train of astonished camels For a moment, the air held a smell of spices, then they were past and the desert was all about them again. Ahead of them, the Ala Shan stretched out into a blue haze on the horizon. Beyond it, the Gobi proper shifted beneath a shimmering sun. Inside the car, it was unbearably hot.
“You were telling me about Dauria,” Christopher reminded Winterpole.
“About Ungern Sternberg and Dauria.” He was sitting in the rear with Chindamani, who had taken much coaxing to ride in the machine. She was still torn between terror and wonder at the speed with which the motor car travelled.
Winterpole glanced up, like a man suddenly woken from a deep sleep.
“Dauria? Why yes, of course. Dauria.” He looked out of the window, at the desert rushing past, at the sand piling up on all sides, pale and sterile.
“I want you to understand what it was like, Christopher. I want you to know what you’ll be going into. Believe me, if I thought we had any choice, I’d see Ungern in hell before I made a deal with him. But it’s him or Zamyatin now.”
He paused. Something was making him reluctant to say more about what he had seen.
“I went there afterwards,” he said.
“After I’d seen Semenov, I went to visit von Ungern Sternberg in Dauria. Semenov suggested it himself; he thought I might be impressed. I don’t know what he expected really. They didn’t understand us. Still don’t.
“I arrived late one afternoon, just as the sun was setting. We came down into a vast plain through a narrow circle of sandy hills. The plain was devoid of life as far as we could see. Nothing grew, nothing moved there was just a collection of dirty huts, like a leper colony in the middle of nowhere. I’ve never felt so great a loss of the sense of place, of definition, boundaries. It was as though we were nowhere at all, as if we were at the centre of a great emptiness.
“There was a little Russian church with a spire, more in the western than the Byzantine style. It might have been quite pretty once, I don’t know; but it had lost all its tiles and paint .. . and something else. Whatever it is that makes a church a church how can I explain? And down in the middle of the plain was Ungern’s headquarters. A small fortress built from red bricks. From where I first saw it, it looked very much like a slaughterhouse a slaughterhouse someone had daubed all over with blood. And there was wind blowing through it all, an empty sort of wind.”
He paused briefly, seeing the red walls of Dauria again, hearing the empty wind whistle across the plain. Outside the car, the sands of the desert swayed past, faded, hazy, a waterless mirage shimmering in the late afternoon light.