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