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Authors: Sergei Lukyanenko

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BOOK: Night Watch 05 - The New Watch
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The flat had three rooms, but it was small, and the hallway was really narrow and cramped. Loud rock music – something unfamiliar – was pouring out through the sitting-room door.

I was a player and I could have challenged

The inventor of cards at his game.

My luck always in, I followed my star,

It would never fail me, I would go far,

But disaster struck all the same . . .

This precious life crushes the weak like moths,

You have to choose which you trust the most –

The Holy Bible or a trusty Colt!

Las pricked up his ears – he adored little-known rock bands – then shook his head regretfully and clicked his tongue.

Without speaking, the woman gave me slippers, choosing one of the larger pairs out of a drove of them loitering around the door. Las didn’t bother to take his shoes off – and she didn’t react to that either.

Strange. Such simple habits are usually the most stable of all. She should either have asked both of us to change our shoes or not bothered to offer me any slippers, in keeping with the fashionable European traditions that are so slow to take hold in Moscow, with its wet climate and its mud.

There was a skinny kid sitting on the sofa in the sitting room with a laptop on his knees. From the laptop a wire snaked across the floor to a pair of speakers. The young lad looked at us and turned down the volume of the speakers but he didn’t even say hello, which was really strange for an eastern boy. I scanned his aura too. Human.

‘This way . . .’

We followed the woman through to the bedroom. She opened the door to let us go on in and, without speaking, closed it behind us, staying out in the hallway.

Oh, something bad was going on around here . . .

Bisat Iskenderov was lying on the made-up bed in just his shorts and singlet, watching the TV hanging on the wall facing the bed. Everything in the place was in average Moscow style, with almost no national character at all, absolutely no personal touch: furniture from IKEA, a carpet at the head of the bed (I thought they didn’t hang them up like that any longer, that the tradition had died out with the old, stagnant Brezhnev days), a women’s magazine on one of the night tables, an anthology of detective stories on the other. A bedroom like that could have been in any Russian town or city. The man lying on the bed could have been Ivan the manager or Rinat the builder.

I don’t like flats that don’t bear the stamp of their owner.

‘Hello, Bisat,’ I said. ‘We’re from the department. What happened to you? Are you ill?’

Bisat looked at me and shifted his gaze back to the screen. It was showing a popular programme – a young female doctor with kind eyes was telling people about periproctitis. ‘And now we’ll ask someone wearing a T-shirt or a shirt without a collar to come up on stage from the audience . . .’

‘Hello,’ Bisat replied. ‘Nothing happened. I’m fine.’

‘But you abandoned your watch . . .’ I said.

And I looked at him through the Twilight.

At first I thought there must be something wrong with me.

Then I realised it wasn’t me. But that wasn’t reassuring at all.

‘Las, take a peek at his aura . . .’ I said quietly.

Las wrinkled up his forehead and answered: ‘I can’t seem to see it . . .’

‘That’s because it isn’t there,’ I confirmed.

Bisat waited patiently while we talked. Then he answered: ‘I abandoned the watch because there was no point in staying on duty.’

‘Tell me about the man you talked to before you left,’ I said.

‘I don’t get this,’ Las said thoughtfully. ‘Are there really people who don’t have any aura?’

‘Now, imagine that the neck of the T-shirt is really . . .’ the female presenter told us from the screen.

‘Before I left I talked to Dima Pastukhov,’ said Bisat. ‘He’s a decent man . . .’

‘Before that!’ I told him. ‘Before Dima!’

‘Before Dima I talked to the woman in the tobacco kiosk,’ said Bisat. ‘She’s quite an attractive woman, but very thin . . .’

‘No, wait,’ I told him. ‘Bisat, when Pastukhov got stomach cramps and he went into the airport building – remember? You stopped a man coming out of the arrivals hall . . .’

‘But he wasn’t a man,’ Bisat objected very calmly.

‘Then who was he?’ I exclaimed.

‘I don’t know,’ Bisat said as imperturbably as ever. ‘But not a man. There aren’t any people like that.’

‘All right, tell me what this not-man looked like,’ I told him. ‘And what you talked about.’

‘He . . .’ For the first time Bisat thought about his answer. He even displayed a certain degree of animation, reaching out his hand and scratching his stomach. ‘He had light hair. Very tall. A short beard. Blue eyes. I asked him for his ID. He said there was no need for that. He put his hand on my shoulder and looked into my eyes. I . . . I was going to ask him what he thought he was doing. But I didn’t.’

‘Why not?’

‘What difference does it make?’

‘Your partner Dima described this . . . not-man . . . differently.’

‘I don’t know how he described him,’ Bisat replied calmly.

I sighed, gathered together a little Power in my hand and cast the Socrates spell – a temporary but irresistible desire to tell the truth, and nothing but the truth – in the policeman’s direction.

Hurtling through the Twilight, the hazy blob of the spell passed straight through Bisat and carried on through the wall out into the street. Oh-oh, now someone was in for it . . .

‘Try the “Dominant”,’ suggested Las.

I shook my head, looking at the man lying on the bed. A normal man, who couldn’t care less about anything now. He had no aura. And spells passed clean through him.

‘That won’t help. Let’s go, Las.’

‘But . . .’

‘Let’s go,’ I said.

Bisat turned back to the screen again. The presenter was happily explaining: ‘And so, in these delicate folds and wrinkles . . .’

The policeman’s wife was waiting for us in the hallway. The music was still playing, only more quietly now.

Howl if you like, it won’t change a thing,

You must pay the price for your luck.

Water won’t save a shrivelled-up garden

And money won’t buy my life back.

‘We’ll be going,’ I said awkwardly. ‘You know . . . you’ll probably get more phone calls. And people will call round . . . from work.’

‘I want to take him away,’ the woman said suddenly.

‘Where to?’

‘Home . . . To Azerbaijan. There’s an
otachi
there – Yusuf. He cures people with herbs. He cures everything. He’s not just a herb doctor, he’s a
gam
.’

‘A wizard?’ I asked.

The woman nodded and pursed her lips tightly.

‘Take him,’ I said. ‘Only first show him to our healer, all right?’

The woman looked at me suspiciously.

‘He’ll come to see you today,’ I said. ‘A good healer. Believe me.’

‘What’s wrong with him?’ the woman asked.

‘I don’t know,’ I admitted.

‘It’s like he’s lost his soul,’ said the woman.

‘Wait for the healer,’ I told her.

We walked out of the flat. I looked into the Twilight – the blue moss had crept even further away from the door. It didn’t like what was going on in there.

‘Come on, Las,’ I said. ‘We’ve got to see Gesar, and quick.’

But we had to stop for a minute outside the building. Standing in front of the entrance was a young couple – a girl with an expression of simultaneous fury and bewilderment on her face and a young man who was declaring enthusiastically: ‘And I only kissed your sister, and that was when I was drunk. But I slept with Lenka once, she came round when you were out . . .’

‘We have to tidy things up here,’ I decided. ‘I’ll deal with the girl, and you remove the Socrates from the guy and make him forget everything.’

‘Do we really have to?’ Las asked pensively. ‘It’s his own fault – let him take the consequences.’

‘Mistakes have to be corrected,’ I said. ‘At least, those that
can
be corrected.’

Las obviously thinks that I already understand something and the reason we’re in such a rush to get back to Gesar is because
he
definitely understands everything – who this tiger is, why a living man has no aura (and at the same time has lost all interest in life), why spells aimed at him pass straight through him. But in actual fact, I don’t understand a thing. And I expect Gesar will be just as dumbfounded as I am.

Just what is an aura, if you think about it?

It’s Power. The same Power that people produce all the time, but can’t use. The Power flows out of them into space and blankets the whole Earth. We Others produce far less of it – which means we can absorb it from the ambient environment. (The blue moss does pretty much the same thing, only we’re far more efficient – and we can think too!) If there’s no aura, it means there’s no Power . . . no life energy . . . the man or Other is already dead.

No, what kind of nonsense is this I’m thinking? No aura? Vampires are dead, they’re in a state of ‘afterlife’, but they have an aura. Their own special vampire aura, but they have it. And my Nadiushka – an absolute enchantress with a ‘zero magical temperature’ – she has an aura, too, and boy, what an aura that is!

I wiped my forehead. I’d never really attempted to come to grips with all the fine details of our existence. I’d always preferred to let the research team rack their brains over that . . . All these theories are infinitely distant from real life in any case.

So . . . why do beings who are dead have an aura? And those who don’t radiate any ‘life energy’ at all? And why are they alive . . . horrifying as it was to put vampires and Nadya in the same category, I forced myself to do it and tried to view the question in the abstract. Without life energy, it’s impossible to live . . . but the dead and ‘zero-temperature magicians’ don’t produce it . . .

Stop! It’s all very elementary. They don’t radiate it, but they consume it. Other beings’ Power is what allows vampires to exist after death. So it turns out that’s what keeps Nadya alive too. To refine the analogy . . . my daughter is like a person whose body doesn’t produce blood. And she lives on constant, continuous transfusions . . .

I winced and squirmed in my seat. Even just thinking about it was unpleasant. Maybe that was why I’d never gone into the details of how Power, aura and life were interconnected?

Okay, that was all idle conjecture. So Nadya lived on other people’s life energy. She was alive and she was just fine. But how was it possible to take away a man’s Power and still leave him alive? Not kill him, not turn him into a vampire – but transform him into a strange kind of talking puppet?

I didn’t know

‘You’re lost in thought,’ said Las.

‘Uh-huh,’ I confirmed.

‘Listen, I’ve got a question . . . Higher Others – can they see the soul fly out of the body?’

‘The soul?’ I asked, mystified. ‘Fly out?’

‘Well, yeah. The aura’s the soul, right? So when someone dies, can you see where the aura flies off to? What I’m getting at is that you could figure out where heaven and hell are. If you take two people dying simultaneously at opposite ends of the globe and pinpoint the direction the souls fly off in, then you could triangulate—’

‘Las, the aura is not the soul!’ I objected. ‘The aura is life energy.’

‘Ah, and I thought it was the soul,’ said Las, upset. ‘So the soul can’t be seen?’

‘No,’ I replied. ‘And when someone dies, the aura doesn’t go flying off anywhere, it just stops glowing.’

But there was something to all of this. Las’s question, my answer . . .

But I couldn’t understand what it was, and I ran out of time. We drove under the boom that had risen obligingly to allow us into our car park – and stopped right in front of Gesar.

That’s the difference between a real magician and a beginner like me – experience. And the ability to do a whole heap of things all at the same time. If I’d sent someone off to do a job, and then been keeping close tabs on the action, I could probably have sensed that he was hurrying back with something important to report. Only I would have had to do that deliberately. But Gesar seemed simply to have sensed my approach in between doing everything else – and he felt so concerned that he’d come out to meet me.

‘Tell me,’ he ordered curtly as I started clambering out of the car. ‘And quick!’

All right, then, quick it is . . . I looked into his eyes and played back the conversation with Pastukhov and the visit to Iskenderov.

‘Let’s go to my office,’ said Gesar and swung round. Putting up a portal from that distance would simply have looked flashy. ‘Call Svetlana.’

‘What for?’ I asked, taking out my mobile.

‘I’ll open a portal to your flat. Tell her to come here and bring Nadya.’

A repulsive, chilly tremor of fear ran down my spine.

‘No, I don’t see any immediate threat,’ said Gesar, without turning round. ‘But I don’t like what’s happening one little bit. And I need all the Higher Ones in Moscow.’

As he walked along, Gesar seemed to falter every now and then, not stopping completely but slowing down for an instant. It looked to me as if he was communicating with the other Higher Ones.

But then – what others? I was calling Svetlana . . . why wasn’t she answering? . . . there was Olga, too . . . and that was the entire complement of the Night Watch’s ‘Magicians Beyond Classification’. The Day Watch only had Zabulon on active service now – they had lots of First-and Second-Level Magicians, but recently things hadn’t gone so well for them with Higher Ones . . .

‘And what shall I do?’ Las shouted after us resentfully.

‘Call into the science department and have them send Innokentii to me!’ Gesar told him. He liked everyone around him to have some task to perform.

Svetlana finally answered.

‘Anton?’

‘Sveta, Gesar’s going to put up a portal to our flat . . .’

‘It’s already up,’ Svetlana answered calmly.

‘Grab Nadka and get over here, quick.’

‘Is there some kind of rush?’ asked Sveta.

‘Say they can bring things for a day or two,’ Gesar responded briskly. ‘But they mustn’t dawdle.’

BOOK: Night Watch 05 - The New Watch
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