Authors: Justin Richards
He reached out to shake Sarah's hand. âI am Feyodor Vasilov.'
Larisa said something in Russian, and Vasilov nodded and replied.
âLarisa is my granddaughter,' he explained to Sarah. âI am afraid she has never learned to speak English. But please, take a seat. We have much to discuss, I am sure. Take a seat,' he repeated, gesturing to one of the armchairs. âAnd then I have things to show you.'
As soon as they were all seated, the old man asked, âHow much has Elizabeth told you about me?'
âNot very much,' Sarah admitted. âShe didn't know if you would still be here.'
Vasilov shrugged. âLife goes on.' He leaned forward, glancing at Larisa before asking: âAnd how is George?'
Sarah had wondered how best to reply to this. She had decided that it was probably best to be truthful. âI'm afraid I have no idea who George is.'
The old man nodded slowly, his expression unreadable. âBut you know Elizabeth, yes?'
âOf course. She said that you have a similar role to hers. I assume you are some sort of curator?' Elizabeth had told her as much, but she wanted to keep the conversation going.
âOur own archive here in the Kremlin is rather smaller than Elizabeth's, or so I believe from how she described it to me.'
When did you meet her?'
âOh, many years ago now. Many many years. So much has changed. And yet, some things remain the same.' He stood up, apparently invigorated by their brief conversation. âBut Elizabeth asks, in her letter, that I give you any information I can about what she calls the Vril.'
âThey live underground,' Sarah explained, not knowing how much the letter had told him. âCreatures of darknessâ'
He waved her to silence. âThen underground and into darkness is where we must go.'
He turned to speak rapidly to Larisa, who nodded. She went over to the desk where her grandfather had been working, and opened a drawer. She returned with three torches, handing one to Vasilov and another to Sarah.
âIf anyone speaks to you, let one of us reply,' Vasilov warned as they left the room. He closed and locked the door behind them.
âWhere are we going?' Sarah asked.
âFirst, to the Arsenal Tower, and then you will see.'
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
There were as few people inside the Kremlin as out on the streets. Or at least, there were in the secluded, barely lit passageways that Vasilov led them along. They descended a stone staircase, and continued along a narrow passageway with whitewashed walls. It wasn't long before Sarah was hopelessly lost, with no idea how she might ever find her way out again on her own if she had to.
âThe Kremlin is like a city,' Vasilov told her. âBuilt for the whole population of Moscow to retreat into and take shelter if necessary.'
Finally they reached another stairway, this one made of iron, spiralling down into the cellarage. At the bottom was a large iron gate, secured with a heavy padlock. As Larisa opened it, Vasilov explained they were below the Arsenal Tower.
âThere are many tunnels beneath the Kremlin, and several converge below this tower. There are underground rivers too, all manner of secret ways. Most of them have been blocked off now, for security reasons.'
The other side of the gate was a wide, low passage. There was no light here, so they turned on the torches. Larisa and Vasilov concentrated their beams on a large flagstone a short way along the passage. Under the old man's instructions, Sarah helped Larisa slide the flagstone to one side, revealing a dark cavity below.
âDown there?' she said.
âThere is more room than there seems.' He smiled. âDon't worry, I shall go first.'
In fact, there were steps down, leading into another tunnel. But the opening was narrow, and Sarah felt the gun tucked into her waistband catch on the edge as she climbed down. She paused for a moment at the bottom to reposition it. The walls, floor, and arched roof were lined with white stone that almost glowed under the glare of the torch beams.
âThere are other ways in,' Vasilov said as he led the way down the tunnel. âBut this way is unguarded. Even Stalin does not know it exists.'
âWe're avoiding the guards?'
âThe less they know the better,' Vasilov said.
Larisa caught her grandfather's arm, speaking rapidly and urgently to him. The old man frowned and glanced back at Sarah before answering.
âWhat is it?'
âLarisa is worried that there may be guards at the Archive. But I have assured her this is unlikely. They guard the entranceways, the other access tunnels, but not the Archive itself.'
âThe Archive? Like Elizabeth's department at the British Museum?'
âIt was a library originally,' Vasilov explained as he led the way along the tunnel.
The air was damp and close. Somewhere Sarah could hear water dripping.
âDon't the books get damp?'
âThe Archive itself is dry enough. But you are right, it is a worry, especially as the books are so old. They come from Constantinople.' He glanced back at Sarah, who shrugged.
âSorry, ancient history isn't really my thing.'
âThe city fell in 1453,' Vasilov explained. âThe library was said to be unsurpassed. But the only books that survived were taken by the Emperor's niece Sofia, and brought here to Moscow.'
âWhy Moscow?' Sarah wondered.
âShe married a Russian prince. Her grandson was cruel and sadistic, but also learned and well read. He added to the library, and kept it hidden and secret. He created these tunnels by diverting underground rivers. Anyone who knew of the library's location was put to death.'
âThat seems a bit extreme,' Sarah said.
âThey did not call him Ivan the Terrible for nothing.'
They walked on in silence for a while.
âFor many years the library was lost,' Vasilov said. âMost people think it still is, if it ever really existed. But we maintain it, and we have added to it, as you shall soon see.'
The tunnel ended in two enormous metal doors. Vasilov produced a large key, which he handed to Larisa, who unlocked one of the doors. It swung open easily. Vasilov went inside first. Sarah saw him reaching for a switch on the side wall, and a light came on overhead.
The chamber it illuminated had been made by blocking off a section of the tunnel. It extended into the distance, fading into darkness and shadow. Wooden shelves lined the walls, stacked with metal strong boxes. The floor was a maze of wooden crates and packing cases. Sarah could see an immediate and obvious similarity with the vault beneath the British Museum, although this was on a smaller scale. And unlike the Museum vault, everything here seemed to be packed away, nothing left out on display. She guessed this was to protect the artefacts, books and papers from the damp, as Vasilov had said.
Larisa pushed past Sarah, heading for one of the nearest crates. She murmured something to Vasilov as she passed, and he nodded grimly.
âThis is impressive,' Sarah said.
âAnd now that you are here,' Vasilov said, his voice suddenly harsh and angry, ânow that we have brought you where you wanted to come, I think you should tell us who you really are and what you want here.'
âYou know who I am,' Sarah said, surprised at his sudden change of tone.
âWe know nothing about you, except what was in the letter that is supposed to come from Elizabeth Archer.'
âIt does,' Sarah protested. âShe gave it to me herself. She's a friend, or at least a colleague.'
Vasilov was shaking his head. Larisa reached into a crate and pulled out a revolver. She trained it on Sarah, gesturing for her to put her hands up.
âYou claim Elizabeth sent you,' Vasilov went on. âYet you do not know George. And you have a gun. Don't deny it, Larisa saw you reach for it earlier.'
âI wasn't reaching for it,' Sarah protested. âLook, let's just talk about this, can we?'
Larisa was right in front of her now. The gun held steady, aiming at Sarah's chest.
âTake off your coat,' Vasilov ordered. âCarefully. Slowly.'
Sarah did as he said, dropping her coat over the nearest crate. The old man reached behind her and removed the small handgun Tustrum had given her. He put the gun down on top of a nearby crate.
âNow,' he said. âTell us the truth, or Larisa will shoot you.'
But Sarah barely heard. She was staring past the young woman, into the darkness beyond, watching as a patch of shadow coalesced into a shape. Long, crooked limbs reached out over the top of a crate. A bloated, glistening mass hauled itself up, crouching behind Larisa's shoulder.
âTell us,' Vasilov demanded. âNow!'
Larisa braced herself, legs apart, holding the gun in both hands ready to fire.
Close behind her, the hideous creature shivered and tensed as it prepared to launch itself at the woman.
Â
They crossed under cover of darkness. There was a near-constant stream of boats ferrying men and equipment across the Volga to the wooden landing stages on the other side of the river. As they approached, Guy's senses were assaulted by the city: the constant noise of gunfire and explosions; the flashes of light and guttering flames; the smell of cordite, smoke, decay, and death.
âI have to confess I've never been in a real battle before,' Davenport said.
âThis isn't like any battle I've been in,' Guy told him.
They were wearing Russian army uniforms, armed with pistols rather than rifles. Neither of them intended to kill anyone at long range, and up close if they needed to defend themselves a pistol was likely to prove more useful and effective.
An officer they knew only as Malinov was responsible for getting them across the river and into the city. He shook hands with them in the shadow of the embankment. Several trucks were lined up under cover of the high bank, huge sets of rocket launchers arranged on a framework on the back of each, ready to fire.
âKatyusha,' Malinov explained. âWe reverse them back, fire the rockets over the bank at the German positions, then drive forward under cover again before the rockets have even hit.'
âThat's a lot of firepower,' Guy said. âBut why the name?' Katyusha was a form of Katya, equivalent to Katherine in English.
âKatyusha is a girl in a traditional story, who waits for her lover to return from the war.' He shrugged. âI believe the Germans call them “Stalin's Organ” because of the arrangement of the pipes and the God-awful noise it makes when it fires.'
Davenport laughed when Guy translated. âWell,' Davenport said, âI guess it rather emphasises the differences between the two peoples, doesn't it? The Germans with their prosaic bombast and the Russians with their romantic notions of pining lovers.'
Guy told Malinov what Leo had said, and the Russian grinned. âThey don't like the music we play on them, that's for sure. Now, I have work to do. Maybe I'll see you on your way back. If you come back,' he added. âI have to tell you that most people don't.'
He pointed them in the rough direction of the Square of Fallen Heroes, then returned to supervise the unloading.
Negotiating the ruined streets took longer than Guy would have imagined. As far as possible they kept to the darkest areas, cutting through the empty shells of half-demolished buildings. It was hard to imagine that anyone still lived in here, but occasionally they caught sight of other shadows flitting through the darkness â Russian soldiers, or civilians struggling to survive?
âAbandon hope,' Davenport muttered at one point. âDante had it easy compared to the people here.'
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
The Vril moved fast. It launched itself from the crate at Larisa. But Sarah was faster. She dived towards the young woman. Larisa fired. The shot grazed past Sarah and ricocheted off the metal door behind her.
Sarah's shoulder collided with Larisa, knocking her backwards â out of the way of the Vril. The creature landed on the floor nearby. Vasilov cried out in surprise and terror, backing away. He stumbled, falling to his knees, staring in incredulous horror.
Larisa hadn't seen the hideous shape that almost hit her. Her eyes were full of rage as she struggled to hold on to the gun. But Sarah's training had kicked in, and she twisted the handgun easily out of Larisa's grasp. She rolled away from the woman, landing on her back and bringing the gun up.
The Vril was moving again â scuttling rapidly across the floor towards them. Larisa did see it now, and screamed. Her hands came up in front of her face as the grotesque shape leaped straight at her.
The bullet stopped it in mid-air, knocking the creature sideways. Its ghastly, inhuman scream echoed round the chamber. A trail of dark, viscous liquid hung from its body as it landed awkwardly on the ground, smearing across the pale stone floor.
Sarah fired again. Two shots in rapid succession hammered into the Vril's bloated body. The first punctured it, sending out a spray of the dark liquid. The second ripped into the damaged body and out the other side, bursting it like a balloon full of brackish water. Larisa screamed again as the dark sludge spattered across her hands and body. Vasilov crawled across to her, speaking quickly but nervously.
âIt's all right,' Sarah said. But she turned slowly, checking every shadow for more of the creatures. She clicked her torch back on, holding it aligned with the gun, checking the furthest, darkest corners for any sign of movement.
Nothing.
âYou asked me about the Vril,' she said, putting the torch down and kneeling beside Vasilov and Larisa. âWell, now you know.' She held the gun out to Larisa. âYours, I think.'
But Larisa shook her head, wiping her shaking hands on her coat. Sobbing quietly in her grandfather's arms.
âI know you don't trust me,' Sarah said. âAnd I guess I understand that. But everything I told you is true. That letter I sent you really is from Elizabeth Archer.'