Arkadi awoke later, at sunset. Scraps of blue showed through a sky 
closed in by white and leaden clouds scuttling off to the west. A 
difficult case had kept him sitting up until dawn opposite silent, 
tight-mouthed Maria Pavlovna, whose glance was direct when it fell on 
you, yet evasive when you tried to catch her eye, and that brute 
Terentiev, with his fat blond face and his disgusting way of licking his
 chops and of pulling his upper lip back over his bright red gums when 
he laughed. The file on the Schwaber case had been passed on from one 
hand to another.  Terentiev indicated the examining magistrate’s 
conclusion with the black-rimmed nail of his sausage-like finger: 
“guilty and dangerous.” But what if they were telling the truth, these 
Schwabers? The father, the mother, the older son and daughter all 
stubbornly gave the same story, which sometimes seemed strikingly 
sincere and at other times like an absurd denial in the face of the 
obvious. The spy had lived with them. They had passed on letters to 
third parties, received messages for him, lied to cover his 
indiscretions, kept a suitcase containing his code. They insisted they 
knew nothing about it; that it was all simple; that they had thought 
they were dealing with an ordinary, rather pleasant man. Who were they? 
None of the three judges had ever seen them. Arkadi pored over their 
signatures with a strange inner tension. Under hers, the girl had 
written in a schoolgirl scrawl: “I swear before the Virgin we are all 
innocent, Olga Schwaber.” This evocation of the Virgin made Terentiev’s 
lip curl.
“So,” he said, “that would make four coincidences!”
“Four coincidences,” repeated Maria Pavlovna with raised eyebrows.
“They were duped,” said Arkadi.
“One coincidence per head: nineteen years old, twenty-one (student at 
the Institute of Technology, Catholic), forty-four (graduate of the 
school for the Daughters of the Nobility, religious, monarchist), 
fifty-three (noble, rentier, former landlord, member of the 
Constitutional-Democratic Party…).” Rich religious nobles, “class 
enemies throughout every fibre of their beings,” wrote the examining 
magistrate.  “By the way, who was the magistrate?” “Zvereva.”
“Ah, yes, that ugly little woman – still young, always well dressed, zealous.”
“But atill,” replied Arkadi, “the suitcase with the code, without which 
there would be no case: they brought it out themselves at the end of the
 search. Babin was ready to leave, without having seized anything.”
Terentiev broke out in a deep loud laugh:
“But that was their ultimate ploy! They were convinced we knew everything from Procope. How do you explain Procope’s report?”
“Procope is an interested party.”
Here Maria Pavlovna broke in. Her voice was thoughtful, almost distant:
“Procope is a swine, that’s true. But up to now he has always been a reliable agent. And he is supervised by Zachary.”
“You know very well that Zachary is a bigger swine.”
It was the eleventh case to be judged that night. Dawn showed at the window. Maria Pavlovna said:
“I’m calling for a vote. Terentiev?”
“Death.”
“Arkadi?”
Arkadi stared down at the blue-covered file and felt the weight of two 
pairs of eyes pressing in on him – one glance was sensual, mocking, 
revolting, like a rude nudge; the other cold, severe sad – detecting, 
perhaps in his indecision, a sign of weakness, of nervous fatigue, of 
unconscious revulsion against the task. The word was wretched out of his
 mouth before he was fully conscious of it and fell onto the file like 
an invisible seal:
“Death.”
“Death.” Said Maria Pavlovna impassively.
“I’ll sign.”
Terentiev countersigned.
It was over, the inner nightmare subsided. Maria Pavlovna proposed 
adjourning the next cases until Wednesday’s meeting. They rose. 
Terentiev, apathetic again, was now nothing more than a big red-faced 
slob with sparse, nearly colourless eyebrows. He appeared to droop 
slightly, staring out the window at the white roofs and, in answer to 
Maria Pavlovna’s friendly inquiring glance, he murmured: “My youngest 
boy has scarlet fever.”
Arkadi, before going home, wandered for a short while around the vast 
deserted square, bathed in a strange, extremely pale blue dawn glow. The
 great calm of the stones, the snow, and the dawning day seemed to enter
 him from every pore. Like the cool of the water when the swimmer dives 
in, his skin burning. Reassured, he thought: Tomorrow I’ll go see Olga. 
Then he realised that a coincidence of names had weighed on his powers 
earlier. Olga. He thought about her as he got into bed in his messy room
 where Daghestan weapons with beautifully etched silver scabbards lay 
tossed on the divan. Olga. He had only to close his eyes and she was 
present. This was a different freshness than that of the dawn in the 
square: a bland freshness as calm and luminous as the late-afternoon sun
 reflected on the windowpanes.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Olga clapped her hands when he entered.
“I knew you would come today. I knew it! See, I was waiting.”
She placed her hands on his shoulders, looked into his eyes, and said:
“I woke up at four o’clock last night. I felt you were thinking about 
me. Tell the truth: did you think about me at four o’clock?”
It was too dark for her to be able to detect the somewhat forced smile with which he answered, believing he was lying:
“Yes.”
Olga clapped her hands again.
“I knew it! I knew it!”
He held her off with a gesture as she was about to throw herself into 
his arms. She could see his smile better. She felt his suppleness and 
his toughness. His soul as strong as his muscles, whose least movement 
had a masterful precision. He dropped himself onto the divan, crossed 
his legs – tall boots glistening- and said:
“Let me look at you, I feel so good.”
“I’ll make some tea,” she answered.
She was happily aware of the red glow of his cigarette in the 
semidarkness. She loved to move about in the invisible light of eyes 
following her from the far end of a dimly lighted room. Nowhere in the 
world could anyone ever give this man a greater feeling of calm, a more 
secure rest, a surer joy. She knew this. And the warmth of his gaze 
resting on her, soft at first, then imperious like a magnet, enveloped 
her wholly, imparted new suppleness to her movements. Somewhere, deep 
inside, her whole being cried out that this was an immense happiness. 
When she was sure that he couldn’t make out her face, she laughed 
silently with all her pretty teeth, with her depthless, shining eyes. 
Then she shut them for a moment, motionless, content with the single 
thought – he is here- ecstatic in delicious anticipation of hands ready 
to touch her.
She was tall and lissom, glowing all over with the multiple lustre of 
her eyes, whose long golden lids were always blinking as if to veil the 
brilliance of her gaze, of her sleek hair in which a touch of sunlight 
seemed to be captured forever, of her slender neck. Arkadi smoked. This 
female form filled his eyes and, far beyond his eyes, his mind, which 
forgot itself. And within him a wild-animal heat slowly came to life.
For her, he emerged from a darkness too frightening even to think about.
 There reigned a law of blood, incomprehensible yet necessary, since he 
was fulfilling it; he who was so pure, so strong, so calm after the 
mysterious labour of his nights. (She had only tried to question him 
once. He took her head between his hands: “Not a word about all that, my
 dove. Never. We are making Revolution. It’s a great, great thing…” Olga
 repeated: “A great, great thing.” Those words were engraved on her 
mind. Whatever she learned, whatever anyone told her, she repeated it to
 herself to regain her confidence. There was great deal of silence 
between them…)
“I promised Fuchs we would see him together. He has drawn a huge map, imagine…”
“Let’s go,” he said joyfully.
Arkadi was feeling light and vibrant, as when, at eighteen, in his 
village of Adjaris-Tskhahi, he would bound into the circle of clapping 
hands, one hand on his hip, the other on the back of his neck, with his 
dagger held tight at his waist, and dance – lighter, nimbler, and with 
greater endurance than anyone else.
The visiting card tacked to the door of the neighbouring room read:
JOHANN APPOLINARIUS FUCHS
ARTIST
Under the ancien regime, old Fuchs had lived rather well by his 
modest talents. The best dealers knew their way to his studio. His works
 could be found in the homes of patrons of the arts. Rasputin had liked 
them. Fuchs was the originator of those bathing girls with airy gestures
 who moved in or out of the waves as if offering themselves to love, 
wearing just enough to be more naked than they would have been if 
entirely nude, borne on the light, smiling and sensual. He had spent 
twenty years painting them over and over again, aware of his mediocrity 
and good workmanship, conscious that the shoulder which he finished off 
with a last touch would hold the eye and kindle, in older men, certain 
furtive sparks whose appearance he watched for, in the prudent gaze of 
his visitors. “Ah, signore,” he would say to himself, rubbing his hands 
together, “this too is an art.”
Even today, in this humble little room where a few carpets and some 
unsalable knickknacks in the worst of Viennese taste barely recalled 
better times, ex-dealers, ruined naturally, living off illicit 
trafficking, still sometimes came to ask him for “a red-haired bather, 
something a la Rubens, you understand?” for a mysterious client. – For, 
on the other side of the river, at the end of an empty street, in a vast
 frozen apartment, an aged man who, in order to feed the last of his 
great Danes, the only living being he had left with him, was selling his
 ex-mistress’ old-fashioned dresses, was waiting anxiously for “the 
red-haired bather a la Rubens” as formerly he waited for a living woman.
Fuchs, who had been busy painting the emblem of Labour surmounted by a 
figure of “Revolution” with the straight nose of a Greek goddess for the
 flag of the Porcelain Makers’ Union, immediately changed easels. He 
painted from memory now. One of his models had had precisely the Rubens 
complexion, but he had seen her for the last time back in 17, stouter 
and sunburned, wearing the uniform of the Women’s Battalion whose sorry 
end at the hands of the sailors on the night of the victorious 
insurrection is now legend. – Another, a thin brunette who used to pose 
for his Sevillanas, walked the central prospect every night, between the
 Fontanka Bridge, guarded by its noble horse tamers, and Caravan Street.
 She was often alone on that little-used sidewalk. On the other side you
 could see the red, rectilinear façade of Anichkov Palace, its corner 
topped by the delicious golden bulb of its chapel.
Fuchs accosted her as she strolled along, kissing her hand a little 
farther up than necessary. She lived in a small inside room on the top 
floor of an ordinary biggish apartment house. The furniture was covered 
with worn lace. Pictures of young officers leaned against empty cologne 
bottles. She still had fairly clean underthings, which she herself 
washed in the kitchen; she didn’t remove her high-laced boots to make 
love – that would take to long; on the other hand, she was good at 
spurring her males gently above the calf… Fuchs rather fancied this 
Lyda.
A knock came at the door. Fuchs quickly turned the Rubens-skinned girl 
to the wall. Olga and Arkadi filled the room with a virile grace. 
Arkadi, completely relaxed, a friendly smile revealing his fine teeth, 
scrutinised the fussily attentive old man. Short in stature, 
small-featured, a white goatee like an old faun.
“This comrade,” said Olga, “is interested in your chronicle of the Revolution…”
“I’m thinking of the future,” said Fuchs seriously.
Each day he would go out and get the newspapers, which was not an easy 
task since very few were for sale. Crafty and cautious like a thief, he 
sometimes had to peel the freshly posted pages off the walls, a risky 
undertaking. He studied them. It was his favourite job each day, the one
 which gave meaning to his daily existence. He cut out clippings, 
underlining with a ruler and red and blue pencils the significant parts 
of his chosen passage, which he then pasted into the large pages of his 
monthly classifiers.
Fuchs had to stoop to retrieve his clipping books from a trunk. Olga and
 Arkadi exchanged identical amused smiles. The little man stood up again
 and said, all of a sudden:
“The greatest happiness for a man is to live during a great epoch.”
“That is true,” said Arkadi.
“That is true, “ repeated Olga more quietly.
“…even,” Fuchs continued, “if it’s hard, even…”
Three minds stopped short on the threshold of something repeating that uncompleted “even…”
“That is true,” said Arkadi in the serious voice he used for passing sentence at the Special Commission.
“Here’s my new map,” said Fuchs.
Europe was divided between two colours, white and red. Red Europe was 
spilling over into white Europe. Red pincers encircled the 
Mediterranean. Italy, still white, was crisscrossed with red arrows; red
 arrows in Morocco, Algeria, Triplo, Egypt – red arrows!
“The arrows,” Fuchs explained, “indicate revolutionary movements which have not yet triumphed.”
Red countries covered the whole east, from the mouth of the Pechora on 
the White Sea to the gates of the Crimea, to Odessa, reconquered from 
the French and Greeks, to Daghestan, divided down the middle by a border
 of blood. The red countries, each bearing its date, spread out to the 
heart of Europe. Bavaria, a Socialist republic since April 7, 1919. 
Galicia, Soviet republic since April 25, 1919. Hungary, Soviet republic 
since March 22, 1919. Serbia – Serbia cut into the Balkans like a tooth-
 Socialist republic since April 14, 1919. Asia Minor pushed forward its 
red head like a snub-nosed pachyderm: Turkey, Socialist republic since 
April 19, 1919.
“Look here,” observed Arkadi, “the island of Crete is red too.”
“There has been a telegram from the Rosta Agency!”
Red arrows were exploding in Germany. Scattered red arrows were pointed 
at Paris, Lyon, Copenhagen, Rotterdam, London, Edinburgh, Dublin, 
Barcelona.
“How beautiful!” exclaimed Fuchs.
Arkadi answered:
“I don’t think Bavaria will hold much longer. They say Toller has been killed at an outpost.”
Fuchs flipped through a stack of clippings.
“What about this?” he said triumphantly.
Istanbul, April 27. The Executive Central Committee of the Moslem 
Revolutionaries of Turkey, Arabia, Persia, Hindustan, Algeria, Morocco, 
and Constantinople announce with profoundest joy that the Republic of 
the United States of the East will soon be proclaimed in Constantinople.
 The struggle is being carried forward vigorously. A soviet 
revolutionary corps of 2,000 men has been formed in Odessa.
The Turkish Consul at Odessa
Akhu-Ato-Bakh-Eddin
Arkadi burst into laughter.
“Your Akhu-Ato-Bakh-Eddin looks like a joker to me. I think…. I think the wisest thing would be to lock him up.”
“Really?”
J.A.Fuchs’s eyes went back and forth from his visitor to the map, whose 
veracity was suddenly being undermined. “So you think I should erase all
 this?”
“All of this” meant the red arrows piercing Mediterranean Africa from Suez to Casablanca.
“No. No. There’s no doubt about the revolutionary ferment in the colonies. See the Manifesto of the Third International.”
When his visitors had departed, Fuchs wrote (in pencil so as to be able 
to erase it later) in the corner of the map, in neat little characters:
“Cf. Manifesto of IIIrd Intern.”
They had only a few steps to take to be back in their room. But even 
before, in the dark corridor, as Olga turned toward Arkadi to say “He’s a
 character, isn’t he?” she felt his masculine breath against her lips, 
and he did not answer. He enveloped her waist in an iron grip. She 
melted against him and it was as if he was carrying her away toward an 
unknown happiness.
Arkadi could never stay long. His nights of work began early. He 
departed, leaving behind him, in the room still full of the odour of his
 cigarettes, a cloudy wake of joy, confusion, and strength; but in that 
wake Olga’s soul and flesh felt emptied. A strange desert of worn lips 
and slack nerves… she dozed. The bell rang twice. “For me!... Who could 
it be?”
She felt, as the tanned young soldier entered, a mixture of surprise and unease:
“You? You? How is it possible?”
Nonetheless they kissed each other’s cold cheeks.
“Little sister, I’m exhausted. I’ve come from Rostov, the long way 
round. Makhno’s men took me prisoner on the way. I told them I was 
practically an anarchist. They only took my fur coat and a thousand 
rubles. No importance.”
“… You’re a soldier? A major?...”
On his shoulder, a red star.
“No. Yes. Whatever you like. How’s Mama? Can I sleep at your place? Is this house safe? My papers aren’t in order.”
“…not in order? Why?”
“You wouldn’t understand, little sister. Don’t worry about it.  Where do you think I could stop for a few days?”
“I don’t know, Kolia. Maybe at Andrei Vassilievich’s. Or at Professor Lytaev’s.”
“How things change, little sister. My name is now Danil…”
He sat. He drank the tea which Arkadi had not touched. How mature he had
 become. His hands were those of a worker. As Olga listened to him 
laughing and talking, her uneasiness grew.
“I’m dirty, huh? What you smell on me is the peculiar odour of trains. 
Yet I’ve washed. Four weeks on trains, little Olga. And what trains, you
 couldn’t imagine. No windows, smashed in on every side, stinking like 
pigsty’s…. I even rode on the roof! Listen to this one, little sister, 
you’ll laugh. In Kharkov, in a little hotel full of fat bedbugs (they 
were fat from their habitual diet of government officials), I ran into 
some Frenchmen coming from God knows where, an old Socialist crank, 
Durand-Pepin, bringing us his life’s work, a complete outline for the 
organisation of the new society….”
The idea made him laugh so hard that he had to put down his teacup and bend over choking.
“He wanted to teach rational culture to the Ukrainian peasants by showing them little coloured pictures….”
Olga laughed too, infected. “When he saw that the peasants were more 
interested in stopping trains to at night to rob the passengers and hang
 the Jews, he declared he had to leave for home right away because of 
his heart disease. But they made him a member of a non-existent Academy,
 and gave him a set of Aluminium cookware, so he stayed… And his pretty 
niece, little sister, was worried whether she had enough dresses to 
appear in Kharkov society! Kharkov society! The biggest collection of 
bandits you could ever find…”
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