Petersburg (30 page)

Read Petersburg Online

Authors: Andrei Bely

Tags: #Fiction, #Classics, #General

BOOK: Petersburg
8.47Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Silence.

‘I hope you will give me that promise; common sense should prompt you: spare me the need for explanations.’

Silence.

‘I should like you yourself to admit the impossibility of your going to the ball after what has just taken place.’

Silence.

‘At any rate, I have given my honourable officer’s word that you will not be at the ball.’

Silence.

‘Otherwise I should quite simply have to forbid you from going.’

‘All the same, I am going to the ball …’

‘No, you are not!’

Sofya Petrovna was shocked by the threatening, wooden voice in which Sergei Sergeyevich pronounced this phrase.

‘Yes, I am.’

A painful silence ensued, during which all that was heard was a kind of gurgling in Sergei Sergeyevich’s chest, which made him clutch nervously at his throat and shake his head twice, as though he were making an effort to ward off the inevitability of some dreadful occurrence; suppressing within with an incredible effort an explosion that was almost about to burst forth, Sergei Sergeich Likhutin quietly sat down, as straight as a rod:

‘Look: it was not I who pressed you for details.
You yourself called me as a witness of what has just happened.’

Sergei Sergeyevich could not utter the words
red domino
: the
thought of what had just taken place made him instinctively experience a kind of abyss of depravity into which his wife had slid down an inclined plane; what was depraved about it, apart from the wild absurdity of the whole incident, Sergei Sergeyevich could not for the life of him tell: but he sensed that it was so, and that this was no ordinary everyday romance, that it involved not merely an unfaithfulness, a fall.
No, no, no: over all this hung a whiff of Satanic excesses that poisoned the soul for ever, like prussic acid; he had smelt the sweetish smell of bitter almonds quite clearly when he had come in, and had experienced a most violent attack of suffocation; and he had known, known for certain: if Sofya Petrovna, his wife, were to be at the Tsukatovs’ tomorrow, if she were to meet there that loathsome domino – everything would go to rack and ruin: the honour of his wife, and his own, officer’s honour.

‘Look.
After what you have told me, don’t you understand that it is out of the question for you to meet him there; that it would be a vile, vile thing to do; and that in fact I have given my word that you will not be there.
Have pity then,
Sophie
, on yourself, and me, and … him, because otherwise … I … do not know … I cannot guarantee …

But Sofya Petrovna was growing more and more indignant at the brazen interference of this officer who was totally alien to her, an officer, what was more, who had dared to appear in the bedroom in a most indecent aspect with his absurd interference; picking up some dress that was lying on the floor (she had suddenly noticed that she was
déshabillée
), and covering herself with it, she retreated into a dark corner; and from there, from the dark, shadowy corner, she suddenly shook her head decisively:

‘Perhaps I might not have gone, but now, after this interference of yours, I shall go, I shall go, I shall go!’

‘No: that shall not be!!!’

What was this?
It seemed to her that a deafening shot rang out in the room; at the same time an inhuman howl also rang out: a thin, hoarse falsetto shouted something incoherent; a man made of cypress wood leapt to his feet, and the armchair toppled and slammed against the floor, while the blow of a fist smashed the cheap little table in two; then the door slammed; and all was deathly quiet.

The strains of the polka-mazurka from upstairs broke off; above
her head, feet began to stamp; voices began to babble; at last, someone in the flat above, indignant at the noise, began to beat on the floor with a scrubbing brush, thereby evidently wishing to express from up there his enlightened protest.

Sofya Petrovna Likhutina shrank inwardly and began to sob insultedly from the dark little corner; it was the first time in her life that she had had to face such fury, because before her just then had stood … not a human being, even, not a wild beast.
Here before her there had just yelped – a mad dog.

The Senator’s Second Space

Apollon Apollonovich’s bedroom was simple and small: four grey, mutually perpendicular walls and a single slit of a window with a small white lace curtain; the sheets, the towels and pillowslips on the high-plumped pillows were distinguished by the same whiteness; before the senator went to sleep the valet sprayed the sheet with an atomizer.

Apollon Apollonovich would only permit the use of triple-strength eau-de-Cologne from the Petersburg Chemical Laboratory.

Then: the valet placed a glass of lemon water on the bedside table and hurriedly withdrew.
Apollon Apollonovich always undressed himself.

In a most precise manner he threw off his robe; in a most precise manner he threw off his little jacket and his miniature trousers, remaining in his knitted, tightly fitting drawers and singlet; and, thus attired in his underwear, before he went to sleep Apollon Apollonovich strengthened his body with gymnastics.

He would spread his arms and legs; then move them apart and turn his waist this way and that, squatting down twelve times and more, in order then, in conclusion, to pass on to an even more useful exercise: lying down on his back, to strengthen his stomach muscles, Apollon Apollonovich would set about working his legs.

Apollon Apollonovich had recourse to these most useful exercises especially frequently on days when he suffered from haemorrhoids.

After these most useful exercises Apollon Apollonovich pulled the blanket over him in order to devote himself to peaceful rest and
to embark upon a journey, for sleep (let us add for our part) is a journey.

This evening, Apollon Apollonovich did the same thing.
His head wrapped in the blanket (with the exception of the tip of his nose), he was now hanging from his bed above a timeless void.

But here we shall be interrupted and asked: ‘What do you mean – above a void?
What about the walls, and the floor?
And … so on?
…’

We shall reply.

Apollon Apollonovich always saw
two
spaces: one that was material (the walls of rooms and the walls of carriages), and another which was not exactly spiritual (it, too, was material) … well, how may one put it: above Senator Ableukhov’s head Senator Ableukhov’s eyes saw strange currents: highlights, gleams, misty, opalescent dancing spots emerging from whirling centres, clouding in twilight the limits of material space; space swarmed in space, and this latter, overshadowing all the rest, disappeared in its turn in an immensity of vacillating, swaying perspectives, which consisted … well, as it were, of Christmas tree tinsel, of little stars, sparks, lights.

Before he went to sleep, Apollon Apollonovich usually closed his eyes and opened them again; and lo and behold: little lights, misty spots, threads and stars, like some bright scum on a bubbling, immensely vast darkness, unexpectedly (for only a quarter of a second) and suddenly formed into a clear picture: of a cross, a polyhedron, a swan, a pyramid filled with light.
And then it all flew apart.

Apollon Apollonovich had a strange secret: a world of figures, contours, shimmerings, strange physical sensations – in a word: a
universe
of strange manifestations.
This
universe
always appeared before he fell asleep; and appeared in such a way that Apollon Apollonovich, going to sleep, remembered at that instant all the earlier inarticulacies, rustlings, crystallographic figures, the golden, chrysanthemum-like stars racing through the darkness on rays that resembled myriapods (sometimes a star like that would bathe the senator’s head in golden boiling water: gooseflesh would run across his cranium): in a word, he remembered all that he had seen the previous day before going to sleep, so as not to remember it again in the morning.

Sometimes (not always) before the very last moment of daytime consciousness, Apollon Apollonovich, as he went to sleep, would notice that all the threads, all the stars, forming a bubbling vortex, made a corridor that ran away into immeasurable distance and (what was most surprising) he would feel that this corridor began from his head, i.e.
it, the corridor, was an infinite extension of his own head, the crown of which suddenly opened – an extension into immeasurable distance; thus the old senator, before going to sleep, received the most strange impression that he was looking not with his eyes, but with the very centre of his head, i.e.
he, Apollon Apollonovich, was not Apollon Apollonovich but
something
that had lodged in his brain and was looking out of there, out of his brain; when the crown of his head opened up this something was able both freely and simply to run along the corridor
until a point where it plunged into the abyss
that was revealed there, far away down the corridor.

This was the senator’s
second space
– the land of the senator’s nightly journeys; and of this, enough …

With his head wrapped in the blanket, he was now hanging from his bed above a timeless void, the lacquered floor fell away from the legs of the bed and the bed stood, so to speak, on the unknown – but then a strange, distant clatter reached the senator’s ears, like the clatter of small and swiftly beating hooves:

‘Tra-ta-ta … Tra-ta-ta …’

And the clatter was coming nearer.

A strange, a very strange, an exceedingly strange circumstance: the senator thrust out an ear to the moon; and – yes: it was highly probable that in the hall of mirrors someone was knocking.

Apollon Apollonovich thrust out his head.

The golden, bubbling vortex suddenly flew apart in all directions above the senator’s head; the chrysanthemum-like star that was a myriapod moved towards the crown of that head, swiftly disappearing from the senator’s field of vision; and, as always, the tiles of the parquet floor instantly flew up from beyond the abyss towards the legs of the iron bed; at this point Apollon Apollonovich, small and pale, reminiscent of a plucked chicken, suddenly rested his two yellow heels on the rug.

The clatter continued: Apollon Apollonovich leapt up and ran out into the corridor.

The rooms were lit by the moon.

Clad in nothing but his singlet and holding a lighted candle, Apollon Apollonovich journeyed forth into the rooms.
Straining after his alarmed master was the little bulldog who turned out to be here, indulgently wagging his little docked tail, jingling his collar and snuffling through his smacked-in muzzle.

Like a flat wooden lid, the hairy chest heaved with painful crepitations, and the pale green tinted ear listened to the clatter.
The senator’s gaze happened to fall on a pier-glass: but strangely did the pier-glass reflect the senator: arms, legs, hips and chest were swathed in dark blue satin: that satin threw off a metallic gleam in all directions from itself: Apollon Apollonovich turned out to be clad in blue armour; Apollon Apollonovich turned out to be a little knight and from his hand extended not a candle but some kind of luminous phenomenon which shone with the spangles of a sabre blade.

Apollon Apollonovich screwed up his courage and rushed to the hall; the clatter was coming from there:

‘Tra-ta-ta … Tra-ta-ta …’

And he snarled at the clatter:

‘On the basis of which article of the Code of Laws?’
25

As he shouted this, he saw that the indifferent little bulldog was peacefully and sleepily snuffling there beside him.
But – what effrontery!
– from the hall someone shouted in reply:

‘On the basis of an emergency regulation!’

Indignant at the brazen reply, the little blue knight waved the luminous phenomenon which he held clutched in his hand and rushed into the hall.

But the luminous phenomenon was melting in his little fist: it streamed between his fingers like air and lay at his feet like a little ray.
And the clatter – Apollon Apollonovich now saw – was the clicking of the tongue of some kind of wretched Mongol: there some kind of fat Mongol with a physiognomy which Apollon Apollonovich had seen during his time in Tokyo (Apollon Apollonovich had once been sent to Tokyo) – there some kind of fat Mongol was appropriating for himself the physiognomy of Nikolai
Apollonovich –
appropriating
, I say, because this was not Nikolai Apollonovich, but simply a Mongol, as seen in Tokyo; none the less his physiognomy was the physiognomy of Nikolai Apollonovich.
This Apollon Apollonovich was unwilling to grasp; with his little fists he rubbed his astonished eyes (and again he did not feel his hands, as he did not feel his face); two intangible points simply rubbed against each other – the space of the hands probed the space of the face).
And the Mongol (Nikolai Apollonovich) was approaching with a mercenary end in view.

Here the senator shouted a second time:

‘On the basis of what regulation?

‘And of what paragraph?’

And space replied:

‘There are neither paragraphs nor regulations now!’

And unknowing, unfeeling, suddenly bereft of ponderability, suddenly bereft of the very sensation of his body, turned merely into vision and hearing, Apollon Apollonovich imagined that he had lifted up the space of his eyes (he could not say positively by touch that his eyes were lifted up, for he had thrown off the sense of corporeality), and, having lifted up his eyes in the direction of the site of the crown of his head, he saw that there was no crown, for in the place where the brain is compressed by strong, heavy bones, where there is no sight, no vision – Apollon Apollonovich saw inside Apollon Apollonovich a round, gaping breach into a dark blue distance (in place of the crown); the gaping breach – a dark blue circle – was surrounded by a wheel of flying sparks, highlights, gleams; at that fateful moment when according to his calculations the Mongol (only imprinted on his consciousness, but no longer visible) was creeping up on his helpless body (in that body the dark blue circle was a way out of the body) – at that very moment, with a roaring and a whistling like the sound of the wind in a chimney, something began to suck Apollon Apollonovich’s consciousness from beneath the vortex of flashing lights (through the dark blue breach in the crown of his head) out into stellar infinity.

Other books

Island of Saints by Andy Andrews
Montana Bride by Joan Johnston
Death Grip by Matt Samet
Seduced by Lies by Alex Lux
Prince's Fire by Cara Carnes
The Killing House by Chris Mooney
The Suicide Shop by TEULE, Jean
The Wood of Suicides by Laura Elizabeth Woollett
Drifting into Darkness by La Rocca, J.M.
Godless by Pete Hautman