Rasputin's Bastards

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Authors: David Nickle

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DAVID NICKLE
ChiZine Publications

RASPUTIN'S BASTARDS

FIRST EDITION

Rasputin’s Bastards
© 2012 by David Nickle
Cover artwork © 2012 by Erik Mohr
Cover design © 2012 by Samantha Beiko
Interior design © 2012 by Samantha Beiko
Cyrillic translations © 2012 by Vaike Rannu and Tatiana Ignatenko Ranaweera

All Rights Reserved.

CIP data available upon request.

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either
a product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to
actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

CHIZINE PUBLICATIONS
Toronto, Canada
www.chizinepub.com
[email protected]

Edited and copyedited by Sandra Kasturi
Proofread by Samantha Beiko

to Olga Nickle
who dreams better dreams than anyone within these covers

DRAMATIS PERSONAE
T
HE
S
PIES

A
LEXEI
K
ILODOVICH

A spy who remembered

F
YODOR
K
OLYOKOV

A spy who loved too much

L
ENA

A spy who adored life

B
ABUSHKA
— A spy who disdained death

J
EAN
K
ONTOS
-W
U

A diligent spy

V
ASILI
B
OROVICH
— A spy who dreamed badly

T
HE
K
OLDUN

A spy who slept quietly

R
ICHARD
[REDACTED] — A spy who broke

M
ILES
S
HUTE

A spy repurposed

I
LYICH
C
HENKO

A spy who made his fortune in real estate

T
ANYA
P
ITOVOVICH

An associate of Chenko’s; a spy who is good at it

T
HE
A
MERICANS

S
TEPHEN
H
ABER
— A talentless orphan

H
OLDEN
G
IBSON
— A terrible father

H
EATHER
[REDACTED] — A rebellious daughter

J
AMES
[REDACTED] — A recalcitrant son

L
EO
M
ONTASSINI
— A man in who fell into mystery

G
EPETTO
B
UCCI
— His boss

T
HE
T
URKS

A
MAR
S
HADAK

A purveyor of arms and collector of submarines

K
ONSTANTINE
U
ZIMERI

A “submarine guy”

T
HE
C
HILDREN

V
LADIMIR

A baby, filled with too much wisdom

Z
HANNA

A girl, filled with too much love

T
HE
V
ILLAGERS
OF
N
EW
P
OKROVSKOYE

D
ARYA
O
RLOVSKY

A shopkeeper of surpassing beauty

P
AVEL
O
RLOVSKY

Her father, who stopped killing without regret

N
IKOLAY
T
ROLYNKA

A fisherman

M
AKAR
T
ROLYNKA

His son


A particle of the Supreme being is incarnated in me. Only through me can you hope to be saved; and the manner of your salvation is this: you must be united with me in soul and body.

— G
rigori
Y
efimovich
R
asputin


All happy families are alike.

— L
eo
T
olstoy
TABLE OF CONTENTS

Cover

Title Page

Copyright

Dedication

Dramatis Personae

Epigraph

Prologue

The Idiot

A Lost Opportunity

The Idiot

The Gambler

The Idiot

There Are No Guilty People

The House of the Dead

The Idiot

The Gambler

The Insulted and the Injured

The Grand Inquisitor

The Idiot

The Gambler

The Stranger-Woman

The Gambler

The House of the Dead

The Grand Inquisitor

The Little Hero

Awakening

The Grand Inquisitor

The Idiot

The Little Hero

The Idiot

The Insulted and the Injured

The Grand Inquisitor in the House of the Dead

The Idiot

Master and Man

The Idiot

Resurrection

The Honest Thief

Resurrection

The Idiot

The Little Hero

There Are No Guilty People

The Little Hero

The Insulted and the Injured

The Honest Thief

The Insulted and the Injured

The Idiot and the Honest Thief

The Double

Resurrection

The Honest Thief

The Grand Inquisitor

The Idiot in Youth

The Little Hero

The Idiot

There Are No Guilty People

The Little Hero

There Are No Guilty People

The Idiot

The Honest Thief

The Grand Inquisitor

The Idiot

The Little Hero

The Idiot

The Honest Thief

The Little Hero

The Idiot

Epilogue

Acknowledgements

About the Author

Praise

PROLOGUE

The steam carried the smell of Babushka’s death like a soaked sponge. It leaked between the wooden slats of the bath house’s door, and whipped and whirled from there in thin, hot tendrils to mingle with the ice fog that had enshrouded the village of New Pokrovskoye since the early days of March.

March was an important month. It was the month that Babushka had first set down a schedule for her own death; the month the giant squid came to the harbour and presaged it all, by dying there itself.

The squid arrived sometime in the night. It thrashed and twisted underneath the translucent grey ice for hours before it died, its tentacles braiding and spreading — a woman’s long dark hair in a suicide bath.

Suicide seemed the best explanation. The squid could have dived — gone back south, and deep, into the cool dark ocean where its brethren dwelled in unguessable numbers. But something stopped it; or it knew, somehow, that its time was up. Whatever the reason, it stayed there beneath the harbour ice of New Pokrovskoye, thrashing and twisting until finally it slowed — its giant form stretching under the grey-green sheet for fifteen metres, like a great, dark stroke of watercolour.

Babushka wheeled herself out onto the ice in the predawn, breath making a contrail behind her as she huffed along to the squid’s remains. The ice creaked as she leaned forward in her wheelchair, propped on her walking stick, and glared down at the creature.

The walking stick was old. It was said that it had been carried to St. Petersburg by a holy man a hundred years ago, and was cut many years before that — and it was hard as iron. She leaned over, hacking at the ice, eventually tumbling out of her chair and falling to her knees with the effort. By this time, someone had called the Koldun — the fishing village’s lodge wizard and healer, second only to Babushka herself in esteem and influence.

He went out and joined her for a time. A growing crowd of villagers watched at the bank as he wheedled and cajoled and finally took hold of her arm. But she shook off his attempt angrily, and that was all it took. The Koldun had known Babushka for many years. But neither he nor anyone else dared confront her when she became like this.

She glared down into the squid’s eye for a full minute — then finally, drew back, barked a harsh laugh, and spat in it.

She turned to the Koldun and the rest, and that was when she said it, loud enough to carry through the whole, ice-bound village:

“When this kraken is gone — I go too.”

The Koldun and the others laughed, uncomfortably at first — and then, as she joined them, with more assurance.

And because of that, the people of New Pokrovskoye concluded:

Everything is fine. It’s just another of Babushka’s jokes.

But it was no joke.

Babushka knew the lay of her years the same as she knew the lay of this foreign and rocky earth, the hearts of the men and women who believed they controlled it, and the movements of the long, dreaming war that had long ago faded to mere skirmishes. As the ice from the waters in the north mingled with the waters to the south, so would Babushka mingle with the air.

And so Babushka reached from the bath house, and quit of her flesh, she joined the icy air swirling in the breaths of her grandchildren.

To each one, Babushka’s scent was different. Darya Orlovsky, who had suckled at the Babushka’s teat and loved her more dearly than her own mother, smelled breast milk and coffee and sausage. “Oh,” she said, as she lifted a crate of caviar from the back of the truck and turned to carry it into the store. “Babushka.”

Old Nikolay Trolynka, who was in his fishing boat as it crossed the part of the harbour where candle wax chunks of the iceberg had still floated just a day before, smelled ginger and garlic. “Ah,” he said, nodding to himself. “‘The kraken goes, and so do I.’ That explains it.”

“Heh?” said Makar, Nikolay’s oldest son. His nostrils flared around a sharper smell — of sulphur and mint — as he wheeled the fishing boat.

“Babushka,” said his younger brother Oleg, smelling old sweat not his own. “She has gone, and drawn the fish with her.”

“Makes as much sense as anything.” Makar ran his arm across his nose and snorted. It did no good; the smell remained.

It remained, and it spread — through the town store, in hues of blueberry and whiskey and pine needle; in shades of clove and musk and olive, through the rambling Museum of Family History that was the Koldun’s gift many years past; and across the fishery, where the flatulent stench of rotting cod guts was replaced by a mélange of odours — each one better or worse than fish death, depending upon the predisposition of the particular grandchild’s nose that it touched.

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