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Already his expedition had met with success, as he had anticipated. The riot at Uliassutai had been a mere beginning.  He had met with the Sain Noyon Khan and one of the princes from his aim ak a man called Damdinsuren, and had presented them to the boy.  It had gone exactly as planned both men, together with the lamas in their entourage had recognized Samdup as the new Khutukhtu and promised their support, moral and military both.

They had given him letters to other princes, to the Tushetu and Setsen Khans, and to the heads of several key monasteries.

Somehow he could not explain it, did not wholly admire or admit it even to himself- the boy exerted some sort of charm over everyone he met. He played the part, but there was more to it than that.  Perhaps it was simply that Samdup had throughout his life been little else but a god, so that he behaved as a god might be expected.  And the boy did not have to act: he really believed he was the Maidari Buddha.  But the Mongols, like the Tibetans, were accustomed to little boys who deported themselves as god lings yet they responded to Samdup with genuine respect.

Mongolia then was divided into several large provinces or aimaks, each of which was further divided into several ho shun  Zamyatin calculated that he had already perhaps ten ho shun solidly behind him or, to be precise, behind the boy, which was the same thing as far as he was concerned.  There would be more riots, and next time he would see to it that the participants were armed.

The main thing was to keep the boys on the move.  Word would be out by now, and if what he had heard about Ungern Stern berg was even partly true, the baron would stop at nothing to crush the rebellion breeding beneath his nose.  Every night, Zamyatin and the boys stayed at the juris of a different clan, moving in a broken pattern across the country, never keeping to a straight line, never staying in one place long enough to make tracing them easy.

Tomorrow they would start for Urga.  The Sain Noyon Khan

would organize a series of uprisings in the west and north while Zamyatin and his young Pretender took horses to the capital.  By the time they arrived there, Ungern’s attention would be focused elsewhere.  They would make their way into the city with the assistance of a few sympathizers.  Zamyatin would make contact with Sukebator and the other revolutionaries, explain what was happening, and put himself in charge.

Up ahead, Samdup had stopped and sat down by the side of the track.

Zamyatin went up to him slowly, holding the rein of William’s pony.

“What’s wrong?”  he asked.

“My feet hurt,” Samdup said.

“What do you want me to do about it?”  snapped Zamyatin.  His own feet hurt.

“We’ve still got miles to go.  Do you want to spend the night out here with the wolves?”

But he liked the boy.  He really did.  He liked both of them.  It was just that he did not know how to show it.  He had never known.

No-one had ever told him.

Urga

Urga lay in the sunshine uneasily, trapped in a hollow between dark hills.  Sunlight had entered it in proper measure, scattered from a cloudless and smiling sky, but no sooner did it touch its narrow lanes and fetid alleyways than it lost whatever lustre it had possessed and became a grey and sickly thing.  The city’s rooftops were golden and the spires on its temple tipped with sunlight and precious stones, but shadows hung over them and the sound of great trumpets echoed round them with a mournful and desperate flatness.

Mountains enclosed a melancholy plain across which the city stretched

for mile after mile, in three separate sections: Mai-maich’eng, the

Chinese trading city, to the east, its stores and warehouses deserted

and empty; Gandan, the grey city of the lamas, with its temples and

colleges for the study of theology and medicine, to the west; and in

the centre, Ta Khure, where the Living Buddha dwelt behind thick walls

of dull red and white, among rooms full of holy relics and a thousand

ticking clocks, each set to a different hour and minute.  Time passed

in those chambers to a morbid creeping sound, like ice moving down a

mountain slope

In slow procession, pilgrims walked or crawled in circles about their god, while trumpets played and gongs shivered and the voices of ten thousand dreaming priests shimmered and echoed in the hollow air.  All was as it had been, nothing was changed, nothing was altered except for the actors and their faces.  They wore ancient robes and spoke ancient lines, turning and bowing and lighting the proper incense in the proper places, as generations of actors had done before them, as they themselves had no doubt done in former lifetimes.  Precise, mannered, without a syllable altered or a gesture changed.  And in the Buddha’s chambers, clocks ticked and rang out in the stillness.

In the centre, brooding, dressed in scarlet, his eyes heavy from sleepless nights, Roman von Ungern Sternberg sat among the warm tents of his troops, planning the stages of a small apocalypse.

He drank small cups of Chinese tea and smoked dark-scented cigarettes, but all the time his mind was on other things.

He stood up and went to the door of hisjwrt.  It was situated in the courtyard of an abandoned hong that had once belonged to the great Shansi house of Ta Sheng K’uei.  The Buriat regiment under Sukharev was stationed here by Ungern’s choice; nearby were the Chahar and Tatar regiments commanded by Bair Gur and Rezukhin.  But Rezukhin had gone south with a Russian detachment two weeks ago and still had not returned.

The city filled his nostrils with its peculiar smell, a rich, sour smell that was a blend of holiness and corruption, sanctity mixed with greed and simple, raw humanity.  He had not chosen Urga a malign Fate had chosen him for it and sent him there to serve its purposes.

Stubbing out a half-finished cigarette on the door-post, he lit another.  His nicotine-stained fingers trembled slightly.  It was late afternoon, time to receive the reports that had come in at lunchtime.  The combined sounds of men and horses conveyed to him a sense of ease and normality.  They did not know what burdens he carried on their behalf, what worries and anxieties he bore for their sake.  But when the time came, they would ride out of Urga in his train, like a host of riders out of hell, destroying all that lay in their path.  He could already see the dust rising above their horses’ fetlocks and hear the sound of their galloping.  He had come to long for that moment as a lover for his wedding-night.  Mongolia was to be his bride: he would tear her to pieces in order to possess her.

He turned and went back into the vurf.  Colonel Sepailov had just

finished his third glass of han chi

“Have some more, Colonel.”

Ungern poured another measure into the colonel’s empty glass and watched him throw back the powerful drink as if it were milk.

If the colonel drank much more of this stuff, he would cease to be of much use, and that would be a pity.  Ungern could only really trust two of his staff now Sepailov was one and the other was Burdokovskii, whom the men had nicknamed the Teapot.  They were his eyes and ears and when there was dirty work to do, his hands as well.  There was often dirty work to be done.  Sepailov would have to cut down.

“Start at the beginning again,” Ungern said, ‘and tell me the story just as you had it from Jahantsi.”  He lit another cigarette, blowing smoke carelessly in Sepailov’s eyes.

The Khutukhtu Jahantsi was Chairman of the Mongolian Council of Ministers.  A sinecure really, but Jahantsi was astute enough to make his position count for something even in these times.  He had spoken to Sepailov that morning and asked him to pass on information to the Baron.  It gave an impression of intermediacy, even though all concerned knew such things were mere formalities: the Baron was in control for the moment.