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It was customary to weave a narrow strip of red cloth into children’s queues to ward off evil spirits who brought smallpox. The Baron wished for a similar protective charm as he began the inspection. “I apologize for interrupting you after a hard day’s work.” The surprise of a Russian speaking Chinese momentarily held the men’s attention. “We’re doctors. We’re here to find someone who was reported ill. The sick person must be treated.”

Faces unmoving as a wall. The men muttered and shifted uneasily. No man would betray another. The Baron was a Russian telling lies, his Chinese words a trick. He was seeking prey. Why would he help a Chinese?

“If one person is sick, everyone here will become sick. This is truth.” The Baron spoke softly to Wang as he set up a small lantern on the table. “How can we make it clear that the sickness jumps from person to person?”

The young doctor’s face creased with impatience. “They’re too stupid to understand. You might as easily explain a microscope. Lie to them,” he sputtered. “Frighten them. Force them into cooperating.”

“We’re outnumbered.”

Wang shouted for silence. “Your lungs, one of the five yang organs, guards your vital breath. Feng, the empty wind, possesses the body only when the body is weak. We will check for signs of weakness in the yang organs.”

This was familiar, and the tension in the room eased slightly.

The two doctors cleared space around the lantern, unpacked a medical kit, and placed thermometers, a jar of alcohol, and cotton masks where they could clearly be seen. The Baron held up a tiny wand of glass, a thermometer, then slipped it into Wang’s mouth. After a moment, the thermometer was removed, dropped into the jar.

“See? No harm.” Wang smiled. “If anyone is sick, they will be taken care of in the hospital without fee. They will be fed.”

The doctors spoke quietly, explaining their actions as they buttoned long white jackets over their clothing, concealed their hands with rubber gloves, secured cotton masks across their faces. White was the color of death, traditionally worn by Chinese mourners at funerals. But it seemed the doctors hid their faces behind masks to prepare for a sinister ritual.

A wave of hostility and several men in the back of the room stood up. The clamor of angry voices. “Throw out the foreign devils!”

The Baron hesitated, then boldly walked between the tables, hoping his presence would calm the situation. He was slow and bumbling in his clumsy uniform, his voice and vision muffled, but if a blow came, the extra clothing offered some protection. The laborers watched him move among them, no one daring to touch the stranger in white. He searched their faces, noticed a man with a long queue under a fur hat hunched over the table, gently asked him to stand. Scowling, the man lifted his legs over the bench with an effort, his sullen expression vanishing as his body shook with coughing. The others edged away from him.

“Come with us, little brother.” The Baron took the man’s arm, guided him to a seat by the lantern. The man’s defiance vanished as if he’d confessed to a crime. His temperature was high. He was obviously unwell.

The rest of the men reluctantly cooperated with the doctors’ rudimentary examination. None of them showed signs of fever, a flushed face, or a swollen tongue. The Baron couldn’t look at them without a sense of betrayal as he checked them for symptoms. He was repeatedly overwhelmed by a wave of tenderness, a longing to stop this process, to explain the situation, turn them aside from their fate.

* * *

Gradually, the Baron became preoccupied with the fact that he could carry the thread of sickness. He scoured and cleaned his contaminated hands, wished they could be peeled raw like an orange or a lemon, the dull thick skin. The rough whorls of his fingerprints should be uncoiled. They were dangerous patterns that trapped bacilli, deposited it on everything he touched, the back of a chair, his pockets, bootlaces, a spoon, circumference of a teacup, edges of a tray, the wadded silk coverlet on the bed. Perhaps he’d unwittingly tracked infection across the pages of calligraphy, bacilli from his fingers embedded in ink, the weasel-hair brush, water in the jar that dissolved the ink. Perhaps his fingerprint on a glass was a charm of infection, waiting to contaminate the innocent touch of Li Ju and the servants.

He usually recognized and dismissed these disturbing thoughts as fantasies formed by despair and fear. Still, people reacted in unpredictable ways when they were frightened. Patients had been known to strike at doctors in fury when they were ignored or in pain. One of his patients had smashed the glass in his office door after a poor diagnosis.

He began to hoard rubber gloves, even those that had been worn and discarded, certain that in the future they’d be scarce or unavailable. Gloves were valuable; like gold, they were a hedge against misfortune.

* * *

The locations where the plague dead had been found were converted into red dots on a map behind General Khorvat’s desk. There were identical maps in the offices of the doctors Boguchi, Iasienski, and Haffkine. Dr. Wu was the only Chinese who possessed this information. The Baron leaned close to study this view of Kharbin, its cluster of deaths telescoped into code on the map. His two fingers covered all the red dots, the greatest number concentrated in Fuchiatien. Four bodies on Bazarnaya Street. The dead were also found at 238 Mekhanicheskaya Street, 19 Torgovaya Street, and 8 and 20 Yaponskaya Street. With his Chinese contacts, he’d helped build this map, searching boardinghouses, brothels, barbershops, inns, and eating places for the plague-stricken and the dead.

The Baron turned to face Khorvat. “This map is a fraud. The number of dead is far greater.”

Khorvat’s benign expression barely wavered into disagreement. “There’s no proof of your statement. The dead are removed by corpse carriers. They tally the bodies. I assume they’re reliable.”

“Have you seen the corpse carriers?”

“No. But I make decisions based on information I receive.” Distracting and placating others is one of the liar’s skills. “Last night, I was confronted by a woman at the Railway Club. Can you imagine? She wants a flag flying over Central Station to warn about the level of danger from plague. Claimed it was the system for a yellow fever outbreak when she was in India. My wife has greater inconveniences in Crimea. I dismissed the woman immediately.”

“They’re hiding bodies.”

The Baron’s statement fixed a bewildered expression on Khorvat’s face.

“Families, innkeepers, even shop owners hide the dead so you won’t burn down their buildings. Or take everyone in the place to the hospital for observation.”

“It’s fortunate that with few exceptions, bodies were found in Fuchiatien, one-third verst away from us here in Novy Gorod. So there’s no need to panic. God forbid there’s a corpse near the British American Tobacco Company or John Deere headquarters. We’d have an international crisis. The consuls would flee Kharbin.”

The Baron ignored his comment. “A corpse freezes solid in less than a day. The Chinese hide the frozen body, later return it to their village, and bury it with the ancestors. Even plague victims. It’s their custom. Plague will spread across the country.”

Khorvat dug a crumbly Crimean cigarette from a small tortoiseshell box and offered it to the Baron with a sour expression. “Baron, ask anyone in my office if they’ve seen a corpse. The answer is no. I plan to keep the situation quiet until it’s conquered. There’s order on the streets.”

“Order? It’s temporary. A false peace. There are bodies under the snow on the streets.” The Baron recognized he was verging on disrespect but recklessly continued. “Picking up corpses won’t stop the epidemic. You’re sweeping the floor while the wind blows in leaves and dirt.”