Оцените этот текст:


---------------------------------------------------------------
 "Граф Калиостро"
 Russian translation by Olga Shartse
 Raduga Publishers, Moscow, 1991
 Origin: http://home.freeuk.net/russica2/
---------------------------------------------------------------

     A Soviet  writer, Alexei Tolstoy (1883-1945) was an aristocrat by birth
- he inherited the title of count-and a  distant relative of Lev Tolstoy. He
studied engineering at the St.  Petersburg  Technological Institute. It  was
his  admiration for symbolist poetry  that inspired him to write. His  early
stories, such as those of the collection Eccentrics (1910), depict the decay
of  the  life of  the  provincial gentry. At first opposing the  Revolution,
Alexei Tolstoy emigrated in 1919, going to Paris and then to Berlin. In 1923
he returned to the Soviet Union  where  he was hailed as a great writer. His
books  were  tremendously popular: with Sholokhov he was  probably  the most
widely  read  novelist  of the  late  1930s  and  the early 1940s. Tolstoy's
masterpiece is his  trilogy, Ordeal  (completed in  1941) which attempts  to
give a  broad picture of the historical events of the  Revolution and  Civil
War, and their  effect on a group of intellectuals, who at first  oppose the
Reds, but gradually  come to understand and accept the "people's" cause. The
unfinished Peter the Great (1929-45)  also has claims  to  be  regarded as a
masterpiece. Though Peter is  the  central figure,  the author gives a vivid
portrayal of Russia  at the time of reforms.  Tolstoy was to try his hand at
sci-fi:  the  fantastic  romance, Aelita  (1924),  was followed by  Engineer
Garin's Death  Ray  (1925-26);  Tolstoy also wrote two plays about  Ivan the
Terrible in which Ivan's cruelty is minimized  as incidental to his struggle
to unite and strengthen the Russian land.



     In Smolensk Uyezd, on  the tall bank  of the river, in the middle  of a
hilly plain,  covered  with stripes of wheat fields and  small  birch woods,
sprawled an  estate  called  White Springs, the  ancient family  seat of the
Princes  Tulupov. The original wooden house, standing in a  dip of the land,
had been boarded up and abandoned. The new mansion with columns in the Greek
style faced the river and the fields beyond. At the back of  the house there
were two wings which stretched  into the park, complete with ponds, islands,
and fountains.
     Besides, in different corners  of the  park one could come upon a stone
woman with an arrow, or an urn with this inscription on the socle: "Sit here
a while and ponder  how fleet is  time", or else some sad ruins, now tangled
in  creepers.  The house and  the  park had been  completed some five  years
earlier  when  the  mistress of White Springs, Princess Praskovia  Tulupova,
widow of the Brigadier, suddenly died in her prime. The estate was inherited
by  her third cousin Alexei  Fedyashev,  then serving  as an officer  in St.
Petersburg.

     Alexei sent in  his papers and settled down to a quiet existence in the
privacy of White Springs together with his aunt Fedosia Ivanovna Fedyasheva.
He  was a quiet,  dreamy sort,  and  still  very  young-he  had  just turned
nineteen. He gladly resigned from the military service because the noise and
bustle of the Court receptions, the din of the  regimental drinking parties,
the  laughter of  the beauties at the  balls, the  smell of  powder and  the
rustle of their silk skirts gave him  a splitting headache and a  stitch  in
his heart.
     With quiet joy  he  welcomed  this  privacy amid  the fields and woods.
Sometimes he rode out to look at the haymaking  or reaping, sometimes he sat
angling on the bank of the river  under an old willow, and sometimes he gave
orders for  the  village girls  to  dance  around the  pond  in the park and
watched this picturesque  scene from  a window.  On  winter evenings he read
avidly,  while Fedosia Ivanovna played solitaire, as the wind howled in  the
tall garrets,  and the little old man who took  care of  the stoves shuffled
along the creaking floorboards to stoke up the fire here and there.
     And  that is how they  lived, in  peace  and  quiet.  But soon  Fedosia
Ivanovna began to  notice that something was not quite right with Alexis, as
she called  her nephew.  He was strangely moody, absent-minded and pale. And
once Fedosia Ivanovna ventured to say to him:
     "Isn't it time, my dear, for you to take the plunge and marry, because,
after all, if you  go on looking at an old mushroom  like  me all life long,
something might go wrong with you..."
     What a hope! He actually stamped his foot in anger. "Stop it, auntie...
I have no  wish now or ever to sink into such boring  prosiness: going about
in  a dressing  gown all day  long and playing tre-septs  with guests... And
then whom would you have me marry, I'd like to know?"
     "Prince   Shakhmatov  has  five  daughters,"  replied  his  aunt.  "All
excellent wenches. And then Prince Patrikeyev has fourteen daughters... Then
there are the Svinyins-Sasha, Masha, Dasha..."
     "Ah,  auntie,  auntie  dear,  all  the  girls  you  have  named possess
excellent  qualities, but  just think:  supposing  my  heart is  fired  with
passion,  we marry,  and what then? The  one  whose  glove  or garter should
excite and thrill me, starts running about with a bunch of keys, poking into
the barn, puttering in the store-rooms, or else ordering chicken noodle soup
for dinner and spooning it up in my presence..."
     "But why must it be noodle soup, Alexis? And even if it is noodle soup,
what's wrong with that?"
     "No,   auntie,   only  a  superhuman   passion  could  break  down   my
melancholy... But there is no woman capable of this in the world."
     Saying this he glanced with languid longing at the wall on which hung a
large, full-length portrait of the  beautiful Praskovia Tulupova. Then, with
a sigh, he snugly wrapped himself into his dressing-gown made of silk with a
Chinese pattern, filled his  pipe,  and  settled down in an armchair  at the
window, to puff on his pipe and gaze at the thin plumes of smoke curling up.
     However, it  seems  that he did let  something slip and  his  aunt  did
understand something, because, glancing at him in wonder, she said:
     "If  you're a man,  then love a  woman and not  some lunatic dream, for
mercy's sake..."
     Alexei  said nothing in reply. In the yard, overgrown with curly grass,
where his bored  gaze travelled, a reddish calf stood sucking at the ear  of
another  calf. The yard sloped down to the river, on the bank of which, amid
the  burdocks sat  several white geese, much like lumps of snow; one  of the
geese rose, flapped its wings and sat down again. It was sultry and quiet at
this  midday  hour. Hazy waves of heat hovered and  quivered above the wheat
fields  beyond  the river. A peasant came riding along the road that emerged
from  a small  birch wood, then  he went down to the ford, the horse stepped
belly-deep into the water and began to drink. Now he turned the horse round,
scattering the  frightened geese, galloped up the slope,  sticking  out  his
elbows  and dangling his bare feet,  called out something  to a servant girl
carrying  an armful of straw,  guffawed, but suddenly noticing the master in
the window, quickly jumped down from the  horse and doffed his cap. This was
the  Fedyashevs' messenger boy who was sent  once a week  to fetch the mail.
This time he brought a letter for Fedosia Ivanovna and a  batch of books for
the master.
     Fedosia Ivanovna  went to  fetch her glasses.  Alexei started  glancing
through the books. His attention was caught by an article in  the 28th issue
of  the  Economic  Magazine  on  the  causes of hypochondria.  "The  primary
unfortunate  source  of  hypochondria is a cruel  and  lasting indulgence in
carnal desires  and such passions which  maintain  the  spirit  in perpetual
melancholy;  a man, troubled by such desires  for  which he does not  see an
outlet, seeks privacy, sinks more and more into the depths of sadness, until
at   last  the   nerves  of  his   stomach  and  intestines  become  utterly
exhausted..."
     After reading these lines, Alexei closed the book. And so, hypochondria
was in  store for  him, since there was no outlet for the passion, devouring
his soul.
     About  half  a  year  ago,  when  Alexei  was  finishing  the  interior
decoration of some of the  rooms, he went to the  old  house to see if there
were any things there worth salvaging.  He  remembered going there as  if it
were yesterday. The sun was setting in colours that presaged hard frost. Dry
snow was already swirling over the cooling fields. An ancient crow, croaking
harshly,  took wing from a birch  tree, adorned  with  hoarfrost, and sifted
snow over Alexei who,  in a jacket lined with  fox fur, was walking along  a
path on the river bank which had just been swept clean of snow.
     A village girl, squatting beside the ice-hole on the river, was drawing
water; she filled her pails, lifted them on the yoke  over her shoulder, and
went  home, turning her round, black-browed face at the master every now and
again.  In the  village,  lights were appearing  in the  snow-crusted little
windows in the cottages here and there between  the snowdrifts;  gates could
be heard creaking, and voices that sounded clear in the frosty air. A bleak,
peaceful picture.
     Alexei mounted the porch steps of the old house, ordered the boards  to
be ripped  off the front door, and entered the rooms. Everything was covered
with  dust, everything  terribly old and gone to  rack and ruin. The servant
boy who walked ahead of him with a lantern  threw the light on some  gilding
on  the wall, and then on  broken  bits of furniture dumped into a corner. A
large rat ran  across the  room. Apparently,  everything of any value at all
had been taken  out of  the house. Alexei  was about to turn back, but then,
going  past  a  low-ceilinged empty room,  he  looked  in and  saw,  hanging
crookedly on the wall,  a large, full-length portrait of  a young woman. The
servant boy raised the lantern. There was a film of dust on the canvas,  but
the colours were fresh,  and  Alexei  discerned a face of  wondrous  beauty,
smoothily dressed and powdered hair, arched eyebrows, a small and passionate
mouth with the corners curling up, and a cream-coloured gown cut very low on
the high, maidenly bosom. The hand  which lay serenely under the breast held
a rose.
     Alexei guessed that this was a portrait of  the late Princess Praskovia
Pavlovna  Tulupova, his third  cousin whom  he  had seen only when  he was a
child. He had the portrait moved to the new  house at once and hung  in  the
library.
     He  saw the portrait  there  before  him all the time.  Whether he  was
reading  a  book-he  loved  reading the description  of  travels  in  savage
lands-or making notes in his note-book, while smoking  a pipe, or whether in
his slippers sown with  glass beads he was simply wandering about  the rooms
with the freshly waxed  hardwood floors, he would  pause for a long  look at
the lovely portrait.  Little by  little he bestowed upon this image  all the
most excellent  qualities  of  kindness, wisdom and  passion. To  himself he
started calling Praskovia Pavlovna  the friend  who shared  his lonely hours
and inspired his dreams.
     Once, he  had a dream  about  her in which she  was as  motionless  and
haughty as in  the portrait, but the rose in her hand  was fresh, he reached
for  it but could not take it out of her hand. He  awoke with an  alarmingly
beating heart  and a burning head. After that night he could not look at the
portrait without a thrill of excitement. The woman in it had wholly captured
his imagination.
     Fedosia Ivanovna came back with the letter in  her hand, her spectacles
on her nose, and, seating herself in an armchair facing Alexei, said:
     "Pavel Petrovich writes..."
     "What Pavel Petrovich, auntie?"
     "Why,  bless you,  Alexis,  my  dear,  Pavel Petrovich  Fedyashev,  the
second-major...  Well then,  he  writes  about  this  and that,  and  here's
something  for  you: A great  to-do has been  caused here  with  us  in  St.
Petersburg by the well-known Count  Fenix, or as he is called-Cagliostro. He
cured Princess's Volkonskaya's sick pearls,  increased  the ruby  in General
Bibikov's ring  by eleven carats, and  what's more, destroyed the air bubble
inside the stone. He showed Kostich the famous deal  in a bowl of punch, and
the very  next  day  Kostich won more than a hundred  thousand  roubles. For
Golovina, the lady-in-waiting, he materialized the ghost of her dead husband
out of her locket, and the husband actually spoke to her  and held her hand,
after which the poor  old lady  became quite daft... In short,  the miracles
are too many to enumerate... The Empress was  of a mind to summon him to the
palace,  but  here  a  most  funny  thing  happened.  Prince Potyomkin  fell
violently in love with the wife of  this  Count Fenix, a  Chech lady, I have
not seen her myself, but people say she is a  beauty. Potyomkin had a lot of
money,  costly carpets  and objets d'art passed on to the Count, but when he
saw there was no buying  him off  with money, he decided to steal the beauty
at his  own ball. But  that  very day the  Count,  together with  his  wife,
vanished  from  St. Petersburg  no one knows where, and the police have been
looking for them in vain till this day...'"
     Alexei  listened  to the letter very attentively, and then read it over
himself. A light flush appeared on his cheeks.
     "All these miracles are a manifestation of an incomprehensible magnetic
force," he said. "If only I could meet  that man... Oh, if I could just meet
him..." He started pacing the floor,  uttering  these  ejaculations: "Oh, if
only... I would find the  right words to persuade  him... Let him experiment
on me... Let him embody my dream... Let my  dream become reality, and let my
life dissolve like smoke. I won't regret it..."
     Fedosia Ivanovna looked at her  nephew  with fright, her faded eyes all
but starting  out of her head. It was enough to give anyone a fright. Alexei
had flung himself into an  armchair and  with a  dreamy smile stared through
the window at the two village girls who  had come close to the window with a
basket  of mushrooms,  but he saw neither the mushrooms, nor the  girls, not
the  field  where a tall  pillar of dust started whirling  along a balk, and
drifted away, swirling and scaring the birds in the roadside birch.
     The next morning Alexei woke up with  a splitting headache. The sky was
sultry  in  spite of  the early hour.  The  leaves hung  motionlessly on the
trees, everything seemed mesmerized, and the green had a metallic sheen like
the leaves on  a tin  gravestone wreath. The hens did not  cluck;  a red cow
that looked bloated lay without moving or chewing on the slope going down to
the river. Even the  sparrows  were subdued. In the north-east, close to the
ground the colour of the sky was dark, dull and harsh.
     The steward came into the dining-room  with his report. Alexei left him
with Fedosia  Ivanovna and, grimacing from the pain  in his temples, went to
the library, opened a book but very soon grew bored with it, so he took up a
pen, but all he could do was practise his signature.
     Then  he began to  contemplate the portrait of Praskovia  Pavlovna, but
even  the  portrait,  like  everything  else around  him,  seemed cruel  and
sinister. Three flies were  sitting on the  face.  Alexei felt that he would
burst  into sobs if  everything that  surrounded him remained  so  glaringly
clear-cut and harsh much longer. His soul was sick with misery.
     Suddenly,  a window banged open somewhere in the house,  there was  the
sound of shattered glass and frightened voices. Alexei went and stood at the
library  window.  A huge,  dense cloud, as dark  as the sky  at  night,  was
advancing on the estate, creeping low  over  the  fields. The  water in  the
river turned dark blue and had  a sullen look.  The reeds thrashed about and
then lay down in crumpled heaps. A strong wind picked up the goose  feathers
on the bank, tore the  crow's nest down  from  the  old  willow, tousled the
branches, chased the hens  down the yard, rocked the wooden fence, picked up
the skirt of a peasant woman and threw it over her head, and then pounced on
the house with all its might, tore into the windows and set up a wail in the
chimneys.  A flash of light appeared  in  the  dark  cloud and with blinding
zigzags  like a tree root ran all the way down to the ground.  The sky split
apart, and thunder  crashed. The house shook. The spring  in the mantelpiece
clock rang sadly in response.
     Alexei was standing  at the  window with  the wind tearing  at his long
hair and fluttering the skirts of his dressing-gown.  His aunt came  running
in, she gripped him by the hand, pulled him away from the window and shouted
something, but the second, even  more terrible crash of thunder, drowned out
her  words. The next minute came the first heavy drops of rain, and  then it
came pouring down in a  grey curtain,  drumming and frothing on the panes of
the closed window. It grew quite dark outside.
     "Alexis," said his aunt, still breathing heavily from the scare she had
suffered. "I'm telling you: we have guests."
     "Guests? Who are they?"
     "I  don't  rightly  know  myself.  Their carriage broke  down,  they're
frightened of the storm and are asking us to put them up for the night."
     "They're welcome, of course."
     "I've  already given the orders.  They're taking  off their wet  things
just now. And you might go and dress too."
     Alexei hurried out of the library, but in the door he all but  collided
with Fimka,  the parlour  maid, who cannoned in with her hair hanging loose,
her sarafan rain-soaked, and cried in a panic:
     "Mistress,  mistress  dear,  these  guests, I  swear  it's  the  honest
truth-one of them is as black as the devil!"
     The rain went on pouring for the rest of the day, and candles had to be
lit earlier than usual. Quiet came  after the storm. The windows  and  doors
into the  garden were flung open, and there  a gentle, warm rain was falling
in the darkness, pattering softly on the leaves.
     Alexei  stood in  the door  wearing a silk  kaftan, a waistcoat with  a
design of forget-me-nots woven on the cream  ground, he carried a  sword and
his hair had been curled and powdered. The wet grass on the lawn looked grey
where the light fell on it. The air smelt of damp and flowers.
     Alexei stood looking at the lighted  windows of the  right  wing of the
house which  was built  in  a semicircle  and ended behind the  lime  trees.
There, shadows appeared on the lowered white window curtains: now the shadow
of a man  in a huge wig, now the graceful shadow of a woman, and now that of
the servant-a tall person wearing a turban.
     They were the guests. They had  long changed their wet clothes, had had
a rest,  and were  now  evidently  dressing  for dinner. Alexei watched  the
movement of the  shadows on the curtains  with  impatience. The smell of the
rain, the flowers and the burning candles made him dizzy.
     And now the  long shadow  of the  servant appeared again, it  bowed and
vanished, and measured steps were  heard in  the  house. Alexei stepped back
from the door. In came a tall, perfectly black  man, the whites  of his eyes
like hard-boiled eggs. He  had on a long  raspberry-red robe  belted  with a
scarf, and another scarf  was wound round his head. With  a deferential, yet
dignified bow he said in broken French:
     "My  master salutes  you,  sir, and has asked  me to  tell you that  he
accepts your invitation to have supper with you with exceptional pleasure."
     Alexei smiled and, coming close to him,  asked: "Tell me please what is
your master's name and title?"
     With a sigh the servant dropped his head "I do not know."
     "What  do  you mean-you don't know?" "His  name has been concealed from
me."
     "Oh, I can see you're a rogue, my  good man. But then your own name, at
least, can you tell me?"
     "Margadon."
     "What are you-an Ethiopian?"
     "I was born in Nubia," Margadon replied calmly, looking down on Alexei.
"In the reign of Pharaoh  Amenkhosiris I was taken prisoner and  sold to  my
master."
     Alexei backed away from him and frowned.
     "What nonsense are you telling me? How old are you then?"
     "Over three thousand."
     "See  if  I don't  tell your master to have  you  flogged properly  for
this!" cried Alexei, flushing an angry red. "Get out!"
     Margadon  bowed  as  deferentially  as  before  and walked out.  Alexei
cracked his fingers as  he pulled  himself together, then  he pondered for a
moment and burst out laughing.
     At this very moment  the  servant boy flung  open  both  halves of  the
carved door, and into the room came a gentleman with a lady on his arm. Bows
and introductions began.
     The  gentleman was  perhaps  in  his  fifties and  solidly  built.  His
purplish-red face with a hooked  nose  was cushioned  in  lace. His huge wig
with  locks, of  a style worn  at the  dawn of the  century, was  carelessly
powdered. His coat  of stiff blue silk was  embroidered in gold  thread with
masks and flowers. On top of this coat he wore a green  overcoat lined  with
blue  foxes.  His black  stockings were  also  embroidered with gold thread.
Diamonds sparkled on the buckles of his velvet shoes, and each finger of his
blunt, hairy hands was adorned with two or even three precious rings.
     In  a duskish deep voice  this  gentleman  greeted his host, and  then,
moving a step aside from the lady, presented her.
     "Countess-our host. Sir-my wife."
     This done, he busied himself with his snuff-box, sniffing,  blowing his
nose, and  throwing  back  his  head.  Alexei  expressed  his regret to  the
Countess on account  of the bad weather and his  keenest delight  which this
unexpected acquaintance with  them afforded him. He offered her his arm, and
led the way to the table.
     The  Countess answered  him  in  monosyllables  and  seemed  tired  and
depressed. But  even  so  she was  startlingly lovely.  Her  blond  hair was
dressed simply. Her face, a  face of a child rather than  that of  a  woman,
seemed transparent, for so soft and clear was the skin; she kept her eyelids
modestly lowered over her blue eyes, and her sweet mouth slightly parted-she
must have been gladly breathing in the freshness pouring in from the garden.
     Fedosia  Ivanovna met the guests at the  table laden with cold  and hot
dishes. Her French was poor, the guests did not speak Russian at all, and so
Alexei  had to do all  the talking. The guests, it appeared, were travelling
from St. Petersburg to Warsaw without changing horses and  had  already been
on the road for two weeks.
     "Do forgive me," said Alexei, "but I did not quite get your name."
     "Count Fenix," replied the guest,  greedily  plunging  his strong white
teeth into a chicken leg.
     Alexei quickly set down the glass that had started shaking badly in his
hand, and turned whiter than his napkin.
     "Then you are the celebrated  Cagliostro whose miracles the whole world
is talking about?" asked Alexei.
     Count Fenix raised his  shaggy greying eyebrows, poured some  wine into
his glass and poured it down his throat, without gulping.
     "Yes, I'm  Cagliostro," he  said, complacently smacking his thick lips.
"The whole world is talking about my wonders. But that comes from ignorance.
There are no  wonders.  Just knowledge of natural  elements, that is to say:
fire, water, earth  and air; the substances of  nature, that  is, the solid,
the  liquid, the soft, and the  volatile; the forces of  nature: attraction,
repulsion, motion  and tranquillity; the  elements of nature  of which there
are thirty six, and finally the energy of nature: electric, magnetic, light,
and sensitive. All this is subordinate to three things: knowledge, logic and
will, which  are contained right here," at  this,  he banged  himself on the
forehead. He put  his napkin down on the table,  took a golden toothpick out
of his  waistcoat  pocket, and went to  work  at his teeth with a determined
air.
     Alexei watched him like a timid little rabbit. Dinner over, he took the
guests to the library where logs were blazing in the fireplace, driving away
the evening damp. Fedosia Ivanovna, who had not understood a word throughout
dinner, stayed behind in the dining-room to see to things.
     Cagliostro  sat down in a leather armchair and between pinches of snuff
held forth on the  beneficial  effects of  a  good digestion.  The  Countess
seated  herself on a small chair near the fireplace  and gazed at the  fire,
deep in thought. Her hands, folded in her  lap, sank in the blue silk of her
gown.
     "My friend, a doctor of philosophy who died in Nuremberg in fourteen...
What  a  cursed  memory,"  muttered Cagliostro,  drumming his fingers on his
snuffbox,  "my friend,  Doctor  Bombastus  Theophrastus Paracelsus, told  me
again and again: chew, chew, chew, - that is  the  first commandment  of the
wise: chew..."
     Alexei glanced  at  him in puzzlement, but the  very next moment, as it
often happens in dreams, the inconceivable merged effortlessly with reality,
he  felt  slightly  dizzy  for a moment  as his  mind took it  in,  but  the
dizziness passed at once.
     "I,  too,  have  often heard,  Your Excellency,  that a good  digestion
inspires happy thoughts and  a poor digestion  plunges  one into sadness and
even causes  hypochondria," said  Alexei. "However, there are other  reasons
besides..."
     "Undoubtedly," said Cagliostro, lowering his eyebrows.
     "I  make so bold as  to  speak  of myself as an  example... It was  the
portrait over there that started my nervous distress..."
     Cagliostro  turned his head, looked the portrait up and down, and again
lowered his eyebrows over his eyes.
     And then Alexei told his  guests the story of the  portrait  painted in
France (this he had learnt from  his aunt), and  how he  found it in the old
house, and ended by pouring out all his feelings and  hopeless desires which
had brought on his hypochondria.
     During the  telling of  the  story he  glanced at the Countess now  and
again. She  was  listening  attentively. Alexei rose  from  his armchair and
pointing at the portrait exclaimed:
     "Only today  I was  telling Fedosia Ivanovna  that if only I could meet
Count Fenix I would persuade him to embody my dream,  to bring  the portrait
alive, and after that-even if it cost me my life..."
     A look  of horror  appeared in  the  Countess's blue eyes when  he said
this, she quickly dropped her head and again stared into the fire.
     "The  materialization of emotional ideas," said Cagliostro, yawning and
covering his  mouth with a hand glittering with precious stones,  "is one of
the  most difficult  and  dangerous  tasks  of  our  science...  During  the
materialization,  fatal  defects of the idea  that is being materialized are
very often disclosed, and sometimes its  utter uselessness too... However, I
should like to ask our host to allow us to retire for an early night."
     Alexei did not shut his eyes all  night. At daybreak, he put on a robe,
went  down to the  river  and jumped into  the water,  invisible through the
mist. On the surface it  was lukewarm, but deep down it was  icy.  After the
bathe, he got dressed, had his hair waved,  drank some hot  milk with honey,
and went  down  into the garden-his thoughts were excited, and his  head was
afire.
     The  morning  was  humid and  still. Blackbirds, looking worried,  were
running about the grass. A golden oriole was whistling as if it were blowing
into a warbler. In the bluish mist hovering over the pool with the fountains
playing at half strength, a dove was sobbing tenderly somewhere in the tall,
spreading trees.
     The walks had been washed clean and were still damp, and on one of them
Alexei noticed the  prints of  a  woman's feet. He followed  them,  and in a
glade where the  outlines of a round folly and the huge black poplars beside
it stood out from the bluish mist, he saw the Countess. She was standing  on
the steps  with drooping arms and listening  to the  cuckoo  calling  in the
grove.
     When he came closer his  heart began to hammer,  for tears were pouring
down  the young woman's  face, and her bare shoulders were jerking. Startled
by the  sound of his footsteps, she turned round, gasped and ran, holding up
her full skirt with both hands. However, at  the pond  she stopped and faced
him. A blush suffused her  cheeks,  and  tears stood in her frightened  blue
eyes. She quickly wiped them with a tiny handkerchief and smiled contritely.
     "I frightened you, forgive me," said Alexei.
     "No, oh no," she  replied, tucked the handkerchief into the low neck of
her dress, and  curtsied. Alexei  kissed her hand politely. "The morning was
so lovely, the cuckoo called so nicely,  that I felt sad, and you gave me  a
fright." She walked beside Alexei along the shore. "Don't you feel  sad when
you see how  lovely is God's world? You know, I was thinking about  what you
told us last night. You are living in such plenty,  unattached. And young...
But why, why is there no happiness?"
     She  stopped short and looked into  his eyes. Alexei answered the first
thing that came into his head-something about the coarseness of life and the
impossibility  of happiness. Saying  this he gave her a wide  smile  and the
smile remained on his lips.
     As they continued  their stroll and talked, he saw before  him only her
blue eyes-they seemed to be suffused with the morning's loveliness, he heard
only the sound of her voice and the distant incessant calls of the cuckoo.
     The Countess told him that she had been  born in a village near Prague,
she was an  orphan, she was called Augusta, though her real  name was Maria,
that  for three years now she had been  travelling about  the world with her
husband, that what she  had seen in that  time was more than others saw in a
lifetime, and that just now,  in this morning mist, all  her past flashed by
before her mind's eye, and made her cry.
     "I was married when I was a mere child, but during these three years my
heart  matured,"  she said,  and again  glanced  gently  and  straight  into
Alexei's eyes.  "I  do not know  you,  but for some reason I trust you as if
I've known you for a  long time. You  won't think ill of me  for chattering,
will you?"
     He took her hand and, leaning low over it, kissed it several times, and
at his last kiss her hand turned palm upward, pressed his  lips lightly, and
slipped away.
     "Couldn't you have found a wife, could you not have fallen in love with
a woman instead of some incorporeal dream or  something?" Maria asked  in  a
quivering voice. "You are inexperienced  and naive... You don't know what  a
horror your dream is..."
     She went to a stone seat and sat down. Alexei sat down beside her.
     "But why a  horror?" he asked.  "What is  so  sinful in my  dreaming of
something that does not exist in life"?
     "The more reason... On a morning like this you must  not, you  must not
dream  of  something  that cannot be," she said, and tears rose  to her eyes
again.
     He moved closer to her and took her hand.
     "I feel that you are unhappy..."
     She nodded silently and quickly. She was touching like a little girl in
her agitation. Alexei felt that she wanted with  her whole heart and soul to
draw  his  thoughts  and emotions to  her  own self. His  heart  felt  hot-a
tenderness  towards  this  woman swept  over  it like  a gust  of wind that,
running through a field, causes the grass to lie low.
     "Who makes you suffer?" he asked in a whisper.
     And  Maria  replied  hurriedly as if afraid to  lose a minute  of  this
conversation:
     "I fear...  I  hate  my husband... He's a  monster, the world has never
seen his like... He tortures me... Oh, if you only knew... I have no one  in
the whole world... My love  has been sought by many, but what is it to me...
Not one of them asked me  with sympathy whether my life was happy or  not...
You and I have barely met, and we have to part, but I shall forever remember
this  minute when  you asked  me..."  her lips  began  to  quiver,  she  was
obviously  mastering her shyness  with  a  great  effort,  and suddenly  she
blushed furiously and  said: "The moment I saw you my  heart  told me: trust
him."
     "Oh  good God ... it's unbearable... I  shall kill him!" cried  Alexei,
clenching the handle of his sword.
     And in the  next instant someone sneezed loudly behind them. Maria gave
a  feeble cry, like a bird. Alexei  leapt to  his feet and between  the lime
trees saw Cagliostro.  He had on the  same green overcoat  and large-brimmed
hat from which  white ostrich  feathers  fell  on  his  shoulders  and back.
Holding  his snuff-box in his hand, he  was making  terrible faces with  the
next sneeze coming on. In the light of day his face seemed purple,  for that
is how full-blooded and swarthy he was.
     Keeping his  hand  on  the handle of his  sword, Alexei glared  at this
extraordinary  man. Cagliostro, changing  his mind  about sneezing, held out
his snuff-box and said:
     "Have a pinch."
     Instinctively  Alexei  raised  his  hand, but  gripped his sword handle
again at once.
     "Well, if you  don't  want to take a pinch,  don't,"  said  Cagliostro.
"Countess, I've  been looking  for you all over the  garden, my bag has been
packed,  but I  have not touched your things."  Turning to Alexei again,  he
said: "Well then,  if our carriage has  been repaired, we  shall  be on  our
way."
     He offered an arm to Maria; meekly, without raising her head,  she took
her husband's arm, and they started  towards  the house walking along a path
between tall grasses.
     Alexei covered  his face  with his hands  and sank  down  on the garden
seat.
     He sat thus for a  long time in a trance, hearing neither the whistling
of the birds nor the splashing of the fountains  which the gardener had  now
turned full on. He stared at the  sand under  his feet and the bugs crawling
about  there. These were  the flat red bugs each of  which  had a funny face
painted  on its back. Some crawled clutched together-one funny  face next to
another, while some crawled in and out of the crack in the hard-packed earth
of the walk without any apparent need.
     Alexei was thinking that the enchantment of the morning had wrecked his
life.  He  could  never  go  back  now  to  the  cosiness  of  his  hopeless
day-dreaming about ideal love: Maria's blue eyes,  these twin blue rays, had
reached into his heart and aroused it.  Maria was going  away and they would
never  meet  again.  Both dream  and  reality had been shattered-what  other
enchantments could he expect from life now?
     Suddenly  he  remembered  the crooked leer  with  which  Cagliostro had
offered him his snuff-box, and  his blood boiled with fury. He sprang to his
feet and,  without knowing  yet  what  he  was going to  do,  but  something
resolute  anyway,  he pulled  his  hat down over his  eyes and strode to the
house.
     In the door he was met by Fedosia Ivanovna.
     "Alexis," she  cried fretfully. "The  blacksmith has  just  been and he
told me,  the rogue, that he simply could not get the Count's carriage fixed
in less than two days from now."
     The news  that the  guests  were  staying  quite confused  all Alexei's
thoughts, he began to shiver as  in  a fever and his hands trembled. He went
into the house with his aunt and sat down on a  love-seat. Fedosia Ivanovna,
unable to  read his thoughts, asked him if in that case they should not send
to the nearest village for more blacksmiths.
     "Not on any  account!" Alexei shouted.  "Don't  you dare  send for  any
blacksmiths!" Then he smiled suddenly. "No, Fedosia Ivanovna, let our guests
stay with  us  for  another couple of  days... Auntie, I  don't suppose  you
understood who our guest was, right?"
     "Some Fenin or something."
     "That's   the  whole  point-not  Fenin,  but  Count  Fenix-  Cagliostro
himself!"
     Fedosia  Ivanovna opened wide her eyes  and fluttered her  plump hands.
Fedosia Ivanovna, however, was a Russian woman, and so the  news  that  they
had a famous  sorcerer  in  the house impressed  her  on  quite  a different
account, and she spat angrily.
     "A heathen,  with  no cross on him, for  mercy's  sake," she said  with
disgust. "We'll have to wash all the crockery with holy water now, and  have
a service sung in all the rooms... A  worry we could very well do without...
And she, is she a sorceress too?"
     "Yes, auntie, the Countess is a sorceress."
     "Why  then,  I  guess  they   need  quite   other  food,  those  cursed
magicians...  Oh,  Alexis... Maybe they can't  eat our  food, and you  never
guessed... Go and ask them what they want for breakfast..."
     Alexei burst out laughing, and went  to  the library. There, lighting a
pipe, he  started walking up  and down  the  room and suddenly  clenched his
teeth so hard on the tip of his pipe that the amber cracked.
     "I shall challenge the Count to  a duel, kill him, and flee abroad with
Maria," he thought, and flung  his pipe on  to  the window-sill. "What cause
have I for the duel? Oh, never mind what..."
     He  drew his  sword out  of the sheath  and examined the blade.  "Can I
challenge  a guest though?"  The floorboard  creaked at the back of the room
where a dark-red  curtain draped a niche.  He quickly  raised  his head, but
instantly forgot about the  sound, for his  thoughts were in  a whirl.  "No,
I'll have to wait until they leave, overtake them beyond the river and there
pick a quarrel with him." He stopped beside the window and, listening to the
hammering  of  his  heart, mentally  reviewed the whole of  his  stroll with
Maria, from the folly, along the  shore of  the  pond,  to the stone  garden
seat. "Oh darling," he whispered.
     Breakfast was announced. Alexei awaited his guests  in the dining-room.
When he  heard  their footsteps he went dizzy for  a moment. Maria walked in
with lowered eyes, curtsied before Fedosia Ivanovna, and  took her seat. Her
face was  pale  and powdered,  and the fire in her soul seemed to have  been
quenched. Cagliostro  unfolded his  napkin, silently gave Alexei  an oblique
glance, and throughout breakfast remained in a huff, chewing loudly and most
unpleasantly. Fedosia  Ivanovna gave Fimka her orders in  a whisper, and did
not eat a thing herself.
     In vain Alexei tried  with  his hot glances  to evoke a blush or even a
barely perceptible  movement in Maria's face:  she  sat like a waxen figure,
and  Alexei's hot glances invariably met her husband's keen,  hard  glances.
And true to character, Alexei fell suddenly into despair.
     Breakfast was over. Maria, never raising her eyes, retired to her room.
Cagliostro expressed a desire to smoke  a pipe with his host in the library,
and stepped aside at the door to let him go in first.
     Sprawling  in  the  same  armchair  as he  had  done the night  before,
Cagliostro sucked  wheezingly on  his pipe for  some  time, glancing now and
then from under his  bushy  eyebrows at Alexei who was moping at the window,
and suddenly pronounced in a loud, imperative tone:
     "I have thought it over and decided to carry out your  wish  tonight: I
shall perform  a perfect and complete materialization  of Madame  Tulupova's
portrait."
     Alexei  gave  him a startled  look and ran his tongue over  his parched
lips. Cagliostro left his armchair  and, taking a magnifying glass framed in
silver from his pocket, peered  at  the  portrait,  clicking his tongue  and
wheezing.
     Within an hour preparations were begun. Margadon took down the portrait
from the wall, dusted  it  carefully, set it  against the wall  and spread a
carpet on  the floor before it. All the things that would not be needed were
carried out of  the  room, and the  curtains were drawn across the  windows.
Alexei  was ordered to undress and stay in bed until  dusk without eating or
drinking anything.
     Alexei did everything  he was  told. Lying in his darkened bedroom,  he
felt only that  his  head was  bound  with hoops of lead.  At  five  o'clock
Cagliostro  brought  him  an  infusion of rhubarb and  holly, and though the
taste was awful he drank it up. At seven o'clock his bowels  were evacuated.
At eight, wearing a loose and light robe, he went, together with Cagliostro,
into  the library where wax  candles were burning in candelabra  before  the
portrait, brightly illumining it.
     "Do  not  breathe too  deeply or  too lightly. Your  breathing must  go
smoothly  without any yawning, gurgling, coughing, panting  or sneezing, for
magnetic substance cannot stand jolts."
     Thus spoke Cagliostro as he seated Alexei  in a low armchair before the
portrait. Drops of perspiration  streamed from  under his  wig  down his red
face with the twitching eyebrows. As he moved about  he did not stop talking
for a minute, and gave Margadon his orders by signs.
     The Ethiopian took several bunches of  dried herbs from a box, put them
in a copper bowl, set it down on a low table in front of Alexei, then took a
sort of  mandolin with a long finger-board out of its  case, carried it into
the back of the room, then went and brought a large, thin and obviously very
strong net, stretched it out on his hands, and  squatted on  the  floor near
the door.
     While he  did all this, Cagliostro chalked a large circle on  the floor
near the armchair in which sat Alexei.
     "I repeat," he  said. "You must strain all your imagination and picture
this person," he indicated the portrait with the chalk, "unveiled,  that  is
naked...  All the details  of  her body will  depend on  the power  of  your
imagination... I recall  in 1519 in  Paris the due  de  Guise  asked  me  to
materialize  Madame de Sevignac who died from a gastric disease... I was not
quick enough  to warn the due, he was too impatient, and  Madame de Sevignac
turned out to be something like a bag stuffed with straw  under her dress...
I  lost eight thousand livres, and  it  took me a great deal of  trouble  to
drive that  enraged scarecrow back into the portrait. And so,  when you have
very meticulously pictured the body of your heart's desire, you must picture
it fully dressed,  and  here  you  must proceed without  haste  for,  as  it
happened in 1251 when at the request of the widow I called out the spirit of
the deceased French  king Louis the Bald, he appeared with only the front of
his body clothed, while he was naked behind, which caused much amazement..."
Straightening up and licking the chalk from his fingers, he said: "Margadon,
go and call the Countess."
     He stepped back a little, measured the circle with his  eyes, then bent
down again and, going round the  circle,  chalked on it the twelve  signs of
the zodiac, the twenty two signs of the cabbala, the keys and the gates, the
four elements,  the  three beginnings, and the seven spheres. This done,  he
entered the circle.
     "You shall have a perfect example of my art," he said importantly. "Her
ability to speak, her  digestion,  all the bodily functions  and sensitivity
will be just like those in a person born by a woman."
     He leaned over Alexei who lay  like a corpse in his armchair, took  his
pulse, ordered him  to close his eyes, and placed his  hot,  fat hand on his
forehead. In this moment Alexei heard light steps and the rustle of silk. He
knew  that it  was  Maria  who had come in,  and moaned,  making a desperate
effort  to break free of  the terrible  will of this  man whose fingers were
pressing down painfully on his eyeballs.
     "Do  not   move,  concentrate,  follow  my  instructions...  I  begin,"
Cagliostro said imperatively,  took  a  long stiletto from the little table,
entered  the  circle  and  traced  the great sign of Makropozopus.  Standing
inside the circle, he threw up his arms, and his deeply lined face  with the
drooping nose turned to stone.
     Behind his back Alexei heard the  sweet  sounds of  the mandolin. "I am
locked in. I am securely protected by all the signs,
     I am strong. I  order," spoke Cagliostro in  a  sing-song  voice, which
mounted and mounted in volume. "O spirits of  the air, Sylphs, I call you in
the name of the  Inexpressible which is pronounced  as the  word  Esha... Do
what you must..."
     Alexei stared at the  candle-lit  haughty face  of Praskovia  Pavlovna,
proudly  set on the tall neck.  In that minute he remembered all the anguish
of his dreamings, all the longing of his sleepless nights, and now her face,
so  beloved only yesterday, appeared frightening, hurtful, feverishly sallow
like an illness.  However,  feeling  that  he  should obey just the same, he
looked down from the face  to  Praskovia  Pavlovna's  bared  shoulders,  and
forced himself to picture her as told. The blood rushed to his face. He felt
a stab of shame and a sharp pain in his chest.
     When  Cagliostro  uttered  the word  Esha,  the candle-flames  began to
waver, and a  whiff  of rancid  air  ran  through  the room. Alexei  dug his
fingers into the arms of his chair. Cagliostro continued in an ever stronger
voice:
     "Spirits  of  the  earth,  Gnomussi, I  call  you in  the  name of  the
Inexpressible which is pronounced as the syllable El. Do what you must."
     He  raised the stiletto  and lowered it, and  suddenly the whole  house
shook as from an earthquake, the crystal chandelier  tinkled,  doors  banged
everywhere in the house, the door of the book-case flew open and a book fell
out. Cagliostro continued:
     "Spirits  of  the waters,  Nymphs,  I call  you  in  the  name  of  the
Inexpressible which  is pronounced as the sound  Ra... Come and  do what you
must..."
     At  these words Alexei heard the distant sound  of the  surf  and never
taking  his  eyes off  Praskovia  Pavlovna  noticed  to his horror that  her
features were becoming hazy and elusive...
     "Spirits of the fire," Cagliostro now spoke in a thunderous voice. "The
mighty and the wilful, I call you in the name  of the Inexpressible which is
pronounced as the letter Y. Spirits of the fire, Salamanders, I call you and
adjure  you with the sign  of  Solomon  to  obey and do what you must..." He
raised both arms and  strained upward on tiptoe in extreme tension. "Do what
you must according to the laws  of nature, without digressing from the form,
without mocking and without breach of your obedience to me..."
     Whereupon, a soundless, dancing flame ran round  the  carved  frame, it
was so bright that the candle-flames blushed, and all  of  a sudden blinding
rays of light started  from  Praskovia  Pavlovna's image.  The  herbs in the
copper bowl caught fire. Maria's voice, quavering and feeble, sang something
not Russian behind Alexei.
     But before she had finished singing, Alexei cried out wildly: Praskovia
Pavlovna, freeing  herself, released her head  from the canvas and  unsealed
her lips.
     "Give me your hand," she said in a thin, cold and spiteful voice.
     In  the  ensuing silence, Alexei heard the mandolin  fall  on the floor
with a thump, Maria's quick sigh, and Cagliostro's wheezing breath.
     "Give me  your hand, I  said,  and  I  shall  be free," said  Praskovia
Pavlovna.
     "Your hand, give her your hand!" cried Cagliostro.
     As in a trance Alexei went to the portrait.  Praskovia Pavlovna quickly
thrust  out her small  hand and  gripped Alexei's with cold, dry fingers. He
sprang back and she, pulled along  by him, stepped out  of the  portrait and
jumped down on to the carpet.
     This  was a  thin,  very  beautiful and  posturing woman of the  medium
height. Her movements  were  somewhat  erratic like the flight of a bat. She
ran up to the pier-glass and, looking at herself this way and that, spoke as
she patted her hair in place:
     "Surprising... Was I asleep  or what? What a sallow colour! And my gown
all crumpled... The cut is funny too, too tight  in the chest... Oh  dear, I
can't remember rightly... I've  forgotten... (And she rubbed her eyes.) I've
forgotten everything..."
     Holding up her full  skirt  with the tips of her fingers, she walked up
and down the  room, and then brought her dark,  lustreless  eyes to rest  on
Alexei. Slowly she smiled, revealing her small, sharp  teeth and  pale gums,
and took his arm.
     "You  look at me so strangely, you  frighten  me," she said with  a coy
little laugh, and drew him to the balcony door. "We must have a talk."
     When they left the  room, Cagliostro hugged himself under his fur-lined
overcoat and laughed.
     "That was an  excellent cadaver,"  he said, his whole body shaking with
laughter. Then, he turned on his heels  and,  no longer  laughing, fixed his
stare on Maria. "Crying, are you?" She  quickly brushed  away her tears and,
rising  from her chair, stood before  her husband with  lowered head.  "Even
this has not convinced you of my enormous power over dead and living nature,
isn't  it so?"  Without  lifting her head Maria glanced at her husband  with
obstinate hatred. The fright she  had gone through and the aversion she felt
distorted  her  sweet  face.  "And  your  Prince  Charming   chose  to  find
consolation with that nauseating cadaver and not you."
     "You  will answer for practising  black magic on Judgement Day,"  Maria
said in a low yet firm voice.
     At this Cagliostro turned quite purple, pulled his hands out from under
his overcoat, and glowered at her ferociously from under his bushy eyebrows.
Maria,  however, stood  perfectly still before him, and he  said with utmost
unctuousness:
     "For three years, madam, I have  been patiently  waiting for your  love
without resorting  to any art at  all, while you have  nothing but escape on
your ungrateful little mind. You should not let my patience run thin."
     "You  have  no power over my love anyway,"  Maria  retorted. "You can't
make me love you..."
     "Yes, I can." Maria  smirked at this, and instantly the blood rushed to
his  eyes. "I shall seal you into a little phial, madam, and carry you about
in my pocket."
     "Just the same you have no power  over  my love," Maria repeated. "If I
survive I'll give my love to another man, never to you."
     "This time you've said too much,"  muttered Cagliostro and snatched  up
the stiletto from  the table, but  in the nick of time  Margadon,  who until
then had been standing motionless behind his back, sprang forward and caught
hold of his hand with amazing  agility. Cagliostro growled,  hit Margadon on
the  face with his  left hand, flung away  the stiletto,  noisily  exhaled a
chestful of air and strode out of the room.
     Alexei with the thing that  had a likeness to a woman and was addressed
as Praskovia Pavlovna by him, walked  along the path  across the lawn to the
ponds. The air was damp. The moon had risen over the garden, and its greyish
light illumined  the whole of the wide lawn. Spider  webs, already stretched
by their busy weavers, glinted here  and there in  the dark-blue  grass. The
flowers made whitish  blots, a copious dew had fallen and the drops sparkled
prettily.  In  the  distance beyond  the ponds the vapour rose  in a silvery
halo.
     Alexei  walked without speaking, clenching  his teeth and staring under
his feet. Praskovia Pavlovna  talked without a pause  as she  looked at  the
silver ball of the moon hanging over the lush greenery.
     "Ah,  the  moon,  the  moon! Alexis, how  insensitive you are  to  this
magic!"
     The  words  her  cold thin voice dropped were  like bits of  glass, the
swish of her  silk  skirt  scraped at Alexei's nerves  unbearably  with  its
whistling sound, making  him clench  his  teeth. His heart felt like a heavy
lump of ice. It did not  surprise him that walking  arm in arm with  him was
something  which  an  hour ago  had  lived only  in  his  imagination.  This
jabbering, posturing creature in the full-skirted gown with a narrow bodice,
pale-faced from the moonlight with  deep shadows in the eye hollows,  seemed
as incorporeal to  him as his dream.  And  in vain he told himself again and
again: "Gratify  your desire,  come on,  she's  yours to enjoy..."-he simply
could not overcome his aversion.
     When they came  to the pond and the stone seat on which that morning he
had talked with Maria, he asked Praskovia  Pavlovna if she would not care to
sit down. She sat down at once, flaring her skirt about her.
     "Alexis,"  she whispered, smiling  widely at the moon. "Alexis, you are
sitting with a lady so unfeelingly. After all, you should  know how pleasant
boldness is for a woman."
     He replied through set teeth:
     "If you knew how I dreamed of you you would not rebuke me."
     "Rebuke you?" She laughed, and it  sounded like bits of glass scattered
on the  ground. "Rebuke you  indeed, when all  you do is press my hands, and
that very weakly too. You might at least take me in your arms."
     Alexei raised his head, peered at  her and  his heart  quavered. He put
his  right arm round her shoulders, and in his left  hand  he  took both her
hands.  In the low-cut  gown  he  could  see  her  chest with  the  slightly
protruding  collar-bones breathing  calmly  and evenly.  He brought his face
close to hers, trying to recapture the enchantment it had had for him.
     "My dream,"  he said  with anguish.  She drew away  from  him slightly,
smiling and  shaking  her head, and then looked  straight into his eyes with
her  transparent  eyes  that glittered  like dots of  moonlight.  "You  feel
elusive as a dream..."
     "Hold me tighter then," she said.
     He crushed her with all his might and kissed her on her  cool lips, and
she  responded with such  unexpected and  urgent eagerness that he instantly
sprang back: repugnance, loathing and horror made his gore rise.
     Stretching languidly and all but purring, she said after a while:
     "It's damp here, and I want to eat."
     Alexei got  up quickly and  started  for  the house.  When he heard the
swish of her  silk skirts behind him, he walked faster and even changed to a
run, but Praskovia Pavlovna caught up with him at once, and hung on his arm.
     "Alexis, you're such a very difficult person!"
     "Look here," he shouted, stopping. "We'd better part, don't you think?"
     "No, I  don't think so at all," she replied, looking up into his  face.
"I like being with you."
     "But I think you  loathsome,  can't you understand?" He gave  his arm a
jerk to break free  of her hold  and ran, but she clung fast to his hand and
flew after him down the path.
     "I don't believe you, I don't believe you, you did say yourself  that I
was your dream..."
     "Will you let me be or not?"
     "Never, mon cher, not until I die!"
     Thus, holding hands, they flew into the house. Alexei collapsed into an
easy chair, while she stood before him, fanning herself and looking buoyant.
     "I shall have to work very, very hard, my  dear, to curb your temper...
You are selfish, you know." She folded her fan,  perched  on the arm  of his
chair, and  said: "Darling, I terribly want something  all the time, I don't
know if  I'm  hungry  or thirsty... At moments I feel  as  if cold water was
trickling down my body..."
     Alexei leapt  out  of  the  chair, and gave  the  beaded tassel of  the
bell-rope a vigorous tug.
     "You'll be brought food, water, anything you want, so don't worry."
     Fedosia  Ivanovna's soft  steps  were  heard in  response to  the  bell
ringing somewhere in the back rooms.
     Blocking the half-open door  with  his body,  Alexei  asked his aunt to
order some food  to be brought to  the library.  Fedosia Ivanovna  gave  her
nephew  a strangely  searching look,  silently pushed him  out of  her  way,
walked into  the room and saw a skinny-as she afterwards told it-dark-haired
woman, not really a woman but a dead moth more like-standing there, twirling
her fan, and looking at her piercingly.
     Fedosia Ivanovna's mouth fell open and her knees all but gave way.
     "Theodosie, don't you  know me, ma chere!" asked the dark-haired one in
a squeaky voice.
     Fedosia  Ivanovna  felt her legs folding up as she stared  at the empty
portrait frame on  the wall. When Praskovia Pavlovna came a  step closer  to
her, she quickly raised her arm and made the sign of the cross.
     "Come,  auntie,  what's  there  to  be  afraid  of,"  said Alexei  with
something like exasperation. "It's all very simple: this lady is the product
of Count Fenix's sorcery, do go and see about the food..."
     Wincing as from heartburn, he went to the door opening into the  garden
and, leaning against the doorframe, gazed at the moonlit  lawn. He heard his
aunt  mumbling  a  prayer,  then dashing off in  her  Mother  Goose  waddle,
Praskovia  Pavlovna  snickering  spitefully  in  her  wake,  and  a  panicky
running-about  and whispering starting in the house. He did  not look round,
though, and gazed miserably at the lighted windows of the guest wing.

     The tinkle of glasses and crockery sounded  in the room- that was Fimka
laying the small table,  setting  down the  plates  and dishes  and probably
casting horrified looks over her shoulder all the time.
     Praskovia Pavlovna sat down at the table and asked Fimka:
     "Slavewoman, what's in that dish?"
     "Mushrooms, mistress."
     "I'll have some."
     Fimka served the mushrooms and then stood behind her chair, and covered
her mouth with her  apron. Praskovia Pavlovna ate the mushrooms and  ordered
Fimka to give her some chicken noodle soup.
     "Your  serving manners  are  atrocious,"  said  Praskovia Pavlovna, as,
Fimka set down the plate  before her. "You may  be a village wench, but your
serving manners should be genteel."
     "I'll try to please, mistress."
     "Curtsy  when you  are  speaking  to  your  mistress!"  said  Praskovia
Pavlovna, glaring at the poor girl with her  dark eyes. Suddenly she  banged
her soup  spoon  on the table. "Curtsy, slavewoman!  Bend  your right leg...
Don't wobble to left or right, keep a straight back... Pick up your skirt...
Smile... Sweetly, more sweetly!"
     Alexei watched this scene with loathing.
     "Leave the girl alone," he said at last. "Fimka, go."
     Still holding the  soup  spoon in her  hand, Praskovia  Pavlovna looked
round at him in amazement, and shrugged a shoulder.
     "Alexis,  mon cher, I am the mistress  here, it's not you who gives the
orders. I shall have that wench flogged so she'll be quicker to learn..."
     The  blood rushed to  his head, but he controlled his fury and went out
into the garden.

     His  hands stuffed into the pockets of his coat,  Alexei walked  across
the lawn, his hose  getting soaked up to the knees in the  dew. Schemes, one
madder than the  other, were  born in his head. Escape? Jump  into the pond?
Kill her?  Kill  the Count? Kill himself? But these schemes were like sparks
that  went out at once-he felt  that he was doomed, that the cursed creature
had him in  its web like a spider, and who could tell what other frightening
powers it possessed?
     "It  was all my own,  my  own doing," he muttered. "I myself  wanted my
dream, I wanted the fantasy of my sleepless nights to come alive... We built
up  her body with horrible black magic...  The most febrile of  imaginations
could never have thought up such nastiness..."
     He  stopped  and mopped the cold  sweat on his brow. "But  what if it's
only a bad  dream?  I'll pinch myself and wake up in  my  clean bed  in  the
morning... I'll  see  that pretty little meadow, the  white geese, a peasant
girl with a rake..."
     In  utter misery he shook his  head and raised his  eyes. The moon  was
high  above the  garden,  its light muted by hazy  little clouds. The dismal
croaking of the frogs reached him from the river...
     Suddenly,  the  silence  of  the  garden  was  shattered  by  Praskovia
Pavlovna's thin, shrill voice calling  "Alexis! Alexis!" He stamped his foot
in annoyance. Going to her in  response to her call was out of the question,
and running away was  shameful. And now  he saw three figures coming towards
him: Margadon, Cagliostro and Praskovia  Pavlovna. She reached him first and
cried spitefully:
     "I know everything,  my good  sir! I thought your preoccupied look  and
your impudent talk was all part of a love game, but now I  see that you have
another woman on your mind! I won't have another woman anywhere near me, you
hear?"
     "Oh  for shame, for shame!" said Cagliostro as he approached Alexei. "I
toiled in  the sweat of my  brow  for you, and  you turn your nose away from
her!"
     "You fickle lover," shrieked Praskovia Pavlovna. "I'll have you chained
to the wall in the basement!"
     "No,  madam,  chaining him  to the wall won't do," objected Cagliostro.
"As for you, sir, don't be so mulish, it's time to go home-the lady wants to
sleep, and going to bed all by herself will distress her."
     The inertia  he  felt  before took hold  of  him again,  he  sighed and
shuffled homewards, pulled  along by Praskovia Pavlovna, hanging on his arm.
They were almost at the door into the library when he turned round and saw a
woman's shadow  on the  curtain of the guest wing. He tried to break free of
Praskovia's clutch and shouted "Maria!" but he  was  gripped from behind  by
Margadon who pushed him into the room and locked the door behind him.
     Alexei had given that  shout because the scales seemed to fall from his
eyes and he understood in what  lay his  salvation.  Left  tete-a-tete  with
Praskovia  Pavlovna, he lit his  pipe, sat down on a rung of the step-ladder
and  pretended to  be listening. She threatened  to keep him  chained to the
wall  till he rotted, she screamed that the whole household was against her,
that in the morning she  would throw out  Fedosia Ivanovna's junk,  tear out
Fimka's  hair  with  her  own  hands,  have  all the  servants flogged,  and
establish her own rule in the house...
     Alexei waited for  the screaming to tire her, but  her  anger showed no
signs of abating. He listened but  did not hear her-his heart  was hammering
so. He decided to take action. He knocked out his pipe, stood up  and took a
stretch.
     "Those are all small things," he said, yawning. "Let's go to bed."
     Praskovia Pavlovna immediately broke  off  her stream  of words and her
parched  lips  parted  in  a  smile  of  happy  surprise.  Alexei  took  the
candelabrum with lighted candles from  the table and drew  back  the curtain
screening the alcove, inviting Praskovia Pavlovna to go in first. The moment
she  had  gone  in, he  held the candelabrum  close to  the curtain  and the
crimson velvet caught fire at once.
     "Fire!"  Alexei shouted in  a voice  that did  not sound  like his own,
threw down the candelabrum  and started running along the gallery leading to
the guest wing.
     Only once he paused  and, turning round, saw Praskovia Pavlovna pulling
down the blazing curtain with her skinny hands, emitting frightened cries as
she did so. When he heard voices and the thudding of  feet at the far end of
the  gallery, he darted to the  nearest window and flattened himself against
the wall  of  the deep  niche. Margadon, his  robe streaming behind him, and
Cagliostro wearing a night cap,  a long patterned nightgown and no trousers,
ran past him with frightened cries. They disappeared
     behind the turning in the gallery  whence thick smoke came pouring out.
And then Alexei dashed to the guest wing, and saw Maria standing in the door
opening into the garden. She  was fully dressed and had a white shawl draped
on  her shoulders. Alexei jumped out into  the garden from the window in the
gallery and ran to her.
     "Maria, just say the word," he  said,  folding his hands  on his chest.
"Wait... If it's no, then  it's  all up with me...  If it's  yes, I live,  I
shall live forever... Tell me-do you love me?"
     With a small cry, she  raised her  arms, put  them round Alexei's neck,
and throwing back her head,  looking into his eyes through her  tears, said:
"I love you."
     And when she  had  spoken these words, he came  out  of  the spell, his
heart thawed out, the blood ran hotly and noisily  in his veins, joyfully he
drew in  a  breath of the scented night's air  and of Maria's fragrant young
body, cupped her weeping face in his hands and kissed her on the eyes.
     "Maria,  run down this  walk to  the pond and wait for me in the folly.
When you have crossed  the  little bridge  don't forget to give the chain  a
tug, and it will be raised... You will be perfectly safe there."
     She nodded to say that she understood, picked up her skirts and started
briskly down the path, turning round once to smile at him happily before she
vanished in the thick darkness of the trees.
     Alexei drew his sword then and rushed back into the house.
     He knocked Fimka off her feet, resolutely pushed away  Fedosia Ivanovna
who  tried to hold on  to  his  arm,  elbowed his way  through the  crowd of
frightened servants, and flew into the library.  The room was full of smoke.
The five candles in the  twin  candelabrum with their smoking little tongues
of  flame barely illumined the  books scattered all over the floor  from the
bookcase which had toppled over,  Margadon who  was stamping the smouldering
carpet, and Cagliostro crouching beside an armchair  in which sat a cringing
creature whose  body  with protruding dark ribs was barely covered  with the
tatters of  her burnt gown. On  seeing Alexei, the creature hissed, leapt to
its  feet  and rushed  towards  him.  He uttered a shout, thrust  his  sword
forward and the creature,  with a wail of despair and fury, sprang back from
the  menacing  blade, ran to the back of the room and disappeared behind the
book-cases.

     Cagliostro, now barricaded by  the armchair, was making some  signs  to
Margadon,  who  stopped  stamping the carpet and began to steal up to Alexei
pulling his dagger out from  behind his belt. Alexei,  however, forestalling
the man's leap, himself made a lunge with the sword in his outstretched arm,
and it pierced Margadon's shoulder,  buried in his flesh to half its length.
Margadon gave a grunt, gasped for air with his open mouth, and' fell  on his
back.  And then  Cagliostro threw the armchair  at Alexei, and whirled about
the room with a nimbleness amazing for his age and his girth, ducking behind
various  objects and throwing them. Alexei  ran  about the room  after  him,
trying to hit him  with his sword, but Cagliostro  managed to slip out  into
the gallery, from  there he jumped out into the garden  from  the very first
open window he came to, and kicking up his bare legs in large leaps made for
the ponds.
     Alexei  only  caught  up with him at the  little bridge leading  to the
folly where Maria's white gown made a pale blur  between the columns. With a
growl Cagliostro  started  up the bridge,  but coming to the edge,  with the
other half raised,  he flung up his arms  and  with a heavy splash fell into
the  water.  Maria's faint cry  was  heard.  Moonlit ripples appeared on the
water, and  a frightened  bird  flew  low  over  the grass  with a lingering
whistling call. All was still once more: not a sound was heard either on the
pond or in the dark thickets.
     Alexei stepped on to the bridge and peered down. Suddenly he saw a pair
of  eyes at the  very pile supporting  the  structure, and these eyes slowly
winked. Now he made out Cagliostro's upraised face,  bristly  skull and ugly
ears.
     "That pile is  slippery and you  won't be able to climb out anyway," he
said  to Cagliostro. "And I'm warning you, if you  start anything again I'll
stab you  with my  sword. You're a scoundrel.  So better  sit there quietly,
you'll  be  pulled  out  just  now." Cupping  his hands round  his mouth  he
shouted: "Hey, come here someone, here!" Very soon voices were heard  in the
distance, and people came running-youngsters, servant men and  wenches, some
armed with pitchforks, some with scythes, and some simply with clubs. All of
them had been roused from their beds and were tousled from sleep.
     Alexei  ordered the men  to fetch ropes, tie up Cagliostro and pull him
out of the water. Three hefty men went down into the water, first taking off
their pants and  crossing  themselves.  A tussle started  under  the  bridge
between the piles.
     "Master, he's scratching, damn him," one of he rescuers called out.
     "Grab him by the jowls and pull him out," men shouted from the bridge.
     Finally, Cagliostro was tied  up with ropes and hauled  out.  The fight
had gone out of him and, with drooping head, teeth chattering from the cold,
and wet shirt  sticking  to  his body, he  tramped  towards the house in the
crowd of servants.
     When everyone had gone, Alexei started calling Maria, first softly, and
then in an ever louder  voice, more and  more tinged  with fear. She did not
respond. He  then ran round the pond, jumped into an old boat he found there
and poled himself across to the island. Maria  was lying on the wooden floor
of the folly. Alexei put his arms  round her, raised her up, held  close her
helplessly drooping head, and kissed her face, all but weeping from love and
pity for her.  At last he felt her body growing lighter, she raised her head
and  cushioned  it snugly  on his  chest.  And without  opening her eyes she
whispered:
     "Do not desert me."

     The fire was put out. Only the library had suffered: fire and water had
ruined a great number of books and things in it, and nothing remained of the
canvas on which Praskovia Pavlovna's portrait had been painted.
     At daybreak, a cart was brought  to the front porch, and on  the  fresh
hay  it was carpeted with the servants placed the luggage  of the guests and
then  seated  Margadon who was in a very bad way: his face was quite  ashen,
his mouth hung  open, and he had two shawls wound round his head. The people
crowding round the  cart and  standing at the porch felt sorry for  the poor
old chap-he was another servant, after all, he had come to  grief through no
fault of his own. The dairy woman  gave him  a baked  egg to eat on the way.
But then  when  Cagliostro  was  brought out of the  house, still bound with
ropes, wearing his wig, stuck lopsidedly on  his head,  his hat with the now
tousled feathers, and his  fur-lined greatcoat flung over his nightgown, the
youngsters began to whistle,  the  women to  spit, and Spiridon,  a purblind
peasant-hatless,  barefoot, his  coat  unbelted-who  had bustled  more  than
anyone else all night for the master to notice, sprang  at Cagliostro, swung
out an arm to give him a good  cuff, but was pulled back in time. Cagliostro
got into the cart unaided, his bushy eyebrows hooding his  eyes. A fat-faced
young  chap,  famed in the village for  his  strength and  his recklessness,
jumped cheerfully on to the  driver's  seat, wound  the rope reins round his
wrist, the old grey mare pushed her head into the horse-collar, and the cart
moved off to the accompaniment of the servants' whistling and whooping.
     "Fedka," Alexei shouted to the driver from the front  porch, "take them
straight to Smolensk, and there hand them over to the police."
     "I sure will!"  Fedka shouted  back.  "I'll hand them over  all in  one
piece, it's not the first time."
     After her fainting fit in the folly, Maria was barely able to walk back
to the house. She was put to bed in the bedroom kept for especially honoured
guests. The drapes were drawn across the windows, the bed-curtain was folded
back,  and she  fell asleep. She slept till noon. Fedosia Ivanovna, who came
up to the door every now and again, heard her muttering, so she went  in and
found  Maria  lying  in  bed with her eyes closed, bright-red spots  on  her
cheeks,  and muttering something without a pause in a low voice. The illness
kept her hovering between life and death for a whole month.
     Alexei  almost went out of his mind with  fright, and that  same day he
galloped off to Smolensk  to  fetch a doctor. On the way back he learnt from
this  doctor that two foreigners  had  been brought to the police in a cart;
first thing they  were  arrested, and then despatched  on the  way to Warsaw
with great pomp and ceremony.
     After examining  Maria, the  doctor  said that  it would  be one of two
things: either the fever would defeat  the patient, or the patient would get
the better of the fever.
     Alexei stayed at Maria's bedside all the time now; at night he dozed in
an  easy chair beside the  window;  he  hardly ate at all,  he grew terribly
thin-his  face became manlier, his eyes limpid, and a  white strand appeared
in his chestnut hair.
     Once, towards evening, he was dozing  in his easy  chair.  Through  the
peach-coloured curtains the sun had stretched  its long  rays into  the room
with motes of dust dancing in them, and a sleepy fly was beating against the
window-pane.  Ungluing his  eyelids  with  an effort, he  glanced now at the
motes, now  at  the fly. The clock on the mantelpiece calmly  ticked off the
minutes of life.  And  suddenly, through his drowsiness, Alexei became aware
of  some change in everything, he shifted round in  his chair, looked at the
bed and saw that Maria's blue eyes were wide open.  She was looking  at  him
and wrinkling up  her face very  comically from amazement and  the effort to
remember. He fell on his knees beside the bed.
     "Please tell me where am I and who are you?" she asked. Too overcome to
utter a  word, Alexei gently took her hand and pressed his lips to it. "I've
been watching you dozing for a long time," Maria continued.  "You had such a
sad face, like someone near and dear to me," she wrinkled up her face again,
and  gave up  trying to remember. "Now, if you opened the window it would be
very nice."
     Alexei pulled  apart  the curtains,  opened  the window, and  the merry
whistling and singing  of birds  poured  into the bedroom together with  the
warm and scented air. Colour appeared in Maria's cheeks. She listened to the
jolly  sounds  with a smile, and then she heard a late cuckoo calling  three
times. Tears rose to her eyes. Alexei bent over her and she whispered:
     "Thank you for everything..."
     Soon she fell fast asleep and slept for a  long time. Her convalescence
began, and Alexei could no longer spend the nights in her bedroom.
     Fedosia  Ivanovna alone  clearly understood the situation which Maria's
recovery  had brought  about. She and  Alexei  could  not stay  apart  for a
minute, but when they were together neither said a word: Maria  brooded, and
Alexei  frowned, bit his lips, and stood  or sat  in  the most uncomfortable
attitudes imaginable.
     Once his aunt broached the subject with him.
     "Forgive  me for being indiscreet, Alexis, but just what are your plans
for Maria? Are you going to send her back to her husband, or what?"
     Alexei cried furiously:
     "Maria is no wife to her husband. Her home is here. And if  she doesn't
want to see me, I can go away, I can join  the army and let the bullets find
their mark!"
     His nights were wretched: he  had  terrible  nightmares, they strangled
him,  they choked  the  breath out of  his body.  He got  up in  the morning
feeling all done  in and until Maria awakened he wandered sullenly about the
house, but the moment he heard her voice his bad mood evaporated, he hurried
to her and gazed at her with tortured, sunken eyes.
     It was August  now.  Myriads  of stars came out  and  glimmered  in the
ponds, while the Milky Way appeared as a pale, hazy cloud. The smell of damp
leaves came from the garden. Gone were the birds.
     On one  such night,  Alexei and Maria  were sitting in her  bedroom  in
front of the fireplace, gazing at the little lights that ran up and down the
smouldering log. And suddenly, in the semi-darkness, a  shadow appeared from
the draped alcove at  the far end  of the room. Startled, Alexei peered hard
at  the shadow. Maria also  raised her head.  Slowly, the shadow vanished. A
minute of dead silence  passed. Maria threw  her  arms round Alexei, pressed
close to him and repeated in a desperate voice:
     "You're mine... You're mine..."
     In that minute, all the obstacles to their love-imaginary, complex, and
insurmountable-dissipated  like  smoke, blown away  by the wind. There  were
only lips,  pressed to lips, eyes gazing into eyes,  the happiness  of love,
perhaps short-lived, perhaps sad-who could measure it?

Last-modified: Sun, 01 Jul 2001 11:28:00 GMT
Оцените этот текст: