The glass lid was carefully replaced, fitting beautifully, and a snap of his fingers produced two bottles of Stolichnaya and glasses on a hexagon-shaped tray. Setting it down near Lenin's head he poured them each a nip.
âVodka straight?' Garry turned to the others.
âWe are not monsters,' the host joked.
âWhat about the others waiting to come in?' Sheila asked. She looked up at ground level but there were no windows. The Russian waved his hand.
The chilled glasses left moist overlapping circles on the lid. A party atmosphere naturally prevailed, and small circles developed. Violet and Sasha found cigarettes, and the Russian rushed over with matches.
âWell, that was an eye-opener,' said Doug rocking with his glass. âThat's what I call an experience.'
âAren't you glad you came?' Sheila asked Gerald. To Sheila it epitomised travel.
âYou have been honoured,' Anna smiled. âIt is not every dayâ¦'
âI found it instructive,' Gerald admitted. âVery Russian, it seems.'
âWhat did you try?' Sasha asked.
âThe leg. Remember?' Gwen cupped her mouth. âI nearly died.'
Sasha and Violet laughed. The Russian glanced at his watch and nodded to the others. He opened a second bottle.
Sheila wondered again about the people waiting in the queue.
âLet them be,' he waved. âOur people are patient.'
âI'm more concerned about the Scots,' said North.
âAt least it's nice and cool down here,' Mrs Cathcart observed, âand clean.'
Doug glanced around. She was right as usual.
Garry Atlas who had asked Ivan, âSo what's it like being a communist?' (well, because they didn't look any different), broke off: âI bet old Hammersly's fuming!' He threw his head back. âIf only he knew. Drink up! How long have we been down here?'
Taken for granted now, the shape of the tomb had blurred. The walls had gradually fallen away; tired walls. It was as if they were alone. There was nothing unusualânothing novelâin the shape of the grey claque in the corner, backs turned, and the cleaner with the dribbling hose gaping at them. The body of Lenin lay alongside them but behind, for they had turned, and anyway it was difficult now to distinguish his embalmed features, so many glasses and marks left by moisture, and palms of hands, as well as Violet's handbag were on the lid.
The Russian proposed a toast.
Repeating his gratitude and their wide experience (âmen and women of the world') he added a few statistics on tourism in the Soviet Union and a dubious plug for the safety record of Aeroflot. He bowed graciously. âTell your people what you saw.'
In reply Phillip North reddened.
âWe too are grateful. I'd like to think that in realising something for the first time we come close to ecstasy. Is it possible? At any rate, that should be the essence of observations. I'd say it is. Umâall thingsâI mean the inanimate as well as the mobileâhave a life of their own. Every experience is a journey.' (Hear, hear!) âWhat we have seen today I don't suppose we shall ever forget. But time is needed to sort out impressions.' Always the zoologist North closed with some obscure lines from Vvedensky, and an appreciative word on the overwhelming proof of the vodka (joke, joke).
Laughter mingled with the clapping and genial smiles from their hosts. Returning to his place Sasha squeezed North's arm.
Both Sheila and Mrs Cathcart would write postcards that evening, their last:
âHello everybody. You'll never guess what happened to us todayâ'
But now they congregated behind the dead leader, holding the empty glasses in their hands like trophies. Each one formed a previously decided, tested facial expression for Kaddok's tilted composition. Louisa and Sasha smiled.
âThis is a rotten place. It's awful; empty.'
They could hear Sasha being homesick in the basin. These rooms were nothing but partitions jerry-built in the second five-year plan, the sloping ceilings plastered with varnished travel posters: the metal products of Tula and the wonders of Samarkand.
âNever mind,' North soothing, âcover yourself up.'
âThe waiter was rude. I hate the food.'
After shouting their orders to the kitchen in his thick tongue he'd leaned on the servery window watching them. And the Soviet cutlery had felt queer to handle. The rest of the dining room was empty. Borelli had said the world was speeding by, separate from them. They were flung out at the edges; it felt as if it would be hard to get back.
âI can think of worse,' North assured her. âWe're just being left alone, that's all. It's educational.'
To comfort her, he sat on a tabouret which revealed his short woollen socks. Violet had gone off to another room. He stroked Sasha's hand which fluttered and fidgeted. The swallows had migrated south weeks ago.
âYou don't care,' Sasha pouted.
From her bed Sheila heard:
âBut I do care. 'Course I do.'
âDo you wear pyjamas?' the voice as transparent as vodka and ice.
North coughed. âBeg your pardon?'
Although she was sick a few minutes before Sasha gave a rattle-laugh and came to life under the eiderdown, finally resting with her cheek on her hand. That was the creaking.
âCover yourself,' North advised: traces of anxiety. âSasha? You'll get cold!'
âHe's embarrassed! I think he is!'
âShhhh,' whispered North, âyou're being silly.' But the way he spoke showed he was smiling, looking at her. Sheila could tell.
The acoustics were activated by the angle of the ceilings and the varnish. The layers of tourist posters also contributed.
âDo you know eiderdown,' North changed the topic, though not quite, âcomes from the Icelandic:
Eider
, being a species of duck;
dunn
, if I'm not mistaken, is Old Norse for the soft underplumage of fowls and so forth.'
âChooks,' Sasha inspected her elbow. She wasn't interested.
He coughed again.
âYou like to educate us,' she said. âYou can't resist, can you?'
âI imagined you'd be interested.'
âEiderdownâwhat difference does it make? I suppose that's why you came here. You find every little thing interesting.'
âNothing much happens to us. It's all happened before, at some other time. We can see it in the museums or the libraries. It's been stored for us to see. There are almost too many things.'
âThere he goes again,' Sasha yawned. âHow boring. Youch! I'm going to get rid of that beard. Now don't be such a prude. Listen'âher voice descended to that of a child's. Sheila couldn't quite hear.
Gerald also lay in his room, trying to read.
âThere's only this one night.' That was Borelli's voice: cramped, as if he was lifting something. âYou don't like it much either?'
On his bed sat Louisa Hofmann, the married woman.
âYou know; I told you why. The places make very little difference.' She clicked her tongue. âLook at all the washing you've got to do.'
Borelli didn't seem to hear. Standing on his bed he was peeling from the ceiling a lime-green shot of the Volga, revealing now a corner, and finally the whole of Riefenstahl's 1936 Games. âA-ha! I thought it was.' It was one of the original posters. The ceilings were decorated with them.
âWhere's old Gerald? He'd be interested in this.'
âI'm trying to read!' the voice shouted. An aerial view would show where.
Borelli pulled a face and Louisa laughed.
She leaned back on her elbows, her legs vaulting into the shadows of her skirt; above her the planks and congested angles of a wooden church seemed to crown her head. Gold hung on Louisa's wrists and curled on her lobes; a fine chain fell like wheat down inside her blouse. She'd been watching Borelli. At the same time she seemed to look past him and into herself; or in the near future. Borelli sat beside her.
âWhat is it?'
Louisa smiled. âI didn't say a word.'
Sheila, for one, listened.
Borelli's voice of understanding; âBut what though? What were you thinking?'
âBut you always ask me that.' She added, quite mysteriously, âBut it's niceâ¦'
âHas Ken gone somewhere else?' Borelli asked. âWhere is he?'
âI don't care where he is.'
She touched the edge of the eiderdown.
Borelli hesitated but now leaned towards her, and kissed Louisa. They could hear Gerald somewhere clattering the pages of Pevsner; Sheila heard Louisa sigh as if turning in her sleep. âDoug, what's the name of Jean's eldest?' came Mrs C's voice, polishing off the postcards. They heard Louisa: âWhat's going to happen now?' Fumbling, Borelli undid the French buttons of her blouse. Louisa began murmuring something (inaudible); her young man put his finger to her lips. Her blouse opened like a coat. He kissed her throat, her breasts, pressed his cheek between them. Louisa held onto his hair. She began crying, but so softly. âWhat forâ¦?' Borelli asked. âNothing!' Louisa cried. Gerald loudly coughed and blew his nose.
No one ever knew what the Kaddoks spoke about. The tidal murmuring could be heard, mainly Kaddok's monotone as he changed a film, using a device like a black coat turned inside out; but now they were shouting. Gwen was shrill. Kaddok preferred single, curt words, patient spittingâboth in a foreign tongue, a private language. Soon they were quiet.
Sasha and North were laughing, and he was old enough to be her father.
Sheila heard the interruption. Slamming the door Violet shook all the other partitions. Her voice was high. âViolet, wait a sec,' said Sasha.
She took no notice of them. âHe's a pig, and I know them. He's disgusting.'
âWhat?' said North.
Sasha held his arm. Tipping out her bag Violet searched for cigarettes.
âSit down. Tell us. They're on the dressing-table.'
âSmoothie-chops. I could clip him one. I pity her, poor girl.'
âI'll toddle off,' said North.
âStay! Violet, you sit down. Now calm yourself. It doesn't matter.'
Violet laughed. âListen to her.'
âNothing much matters,' North offered. âWhat can we do about many things?'
His hands rested on his knees.
âWhat do you know?' Violet turned. âI'm talking about myself.'
âAt least we're together,' said Sasha. âWe're supposed to be on a holiday. I've been sick.'
âSo I heard. Shit.'
The relentless snoring of Cathcart could be heard, yards of gravel raised then rolling down a tin slope. Sleep: a form of death rattle.
Someone banged on the wall. Everyone could hear everyone else.
Sheila had to laugh.
There was Hofmann's voice, âWhere the hell have you been?'
âNever mind,' Louisa said. She began whistling.
âI asked a question.'
âThen I can ask: where have you been?'
âShut up.'
âYou weren't very successful? You poor man.'
And Violet nearby began crying. âShe's so nice, from the beginning I always thought.'
âI'm tired,' Louisa told him. âI'm retiring.'
Sitting up Sheila buttoned her pyjamas. In the midst of a group, among friends, the world was so intensely and constantly changing: even alone there was so much to see. The door unexpectedly rattled, then opened. It was Garry Atlas: almost falling in.
âWhoopsie! Fuck, where's the light?'
Sheila covered herself as Garry sat heavily on the bed.
âThere we areâ¦' said he.
Looking around the room he smacked his lips. Almost neat, on the sharp side, in his new Simpson's coat, the knitted shirt and flared trousers, Garry's bibacious face had rushed infra-red in places, blown slightly off its axis, and breathed heavily. Below the eyes, around the nose: flesh had shifted away. Someone staring like Sheila could glimpse the bone contour and sunken expression of twenty years' time. Already his mouth was crimped as if he had lost his teeth. From the lapel pocket protruded the uncircumcised tip of a Cuban cigar.
âWell, Sheil,' he sighed. âHow's it going?'
He was tired.
âI met some really interesting people downstairs, Sheil. Really interesting, good people. But I couldn't speak their language.'
Clutching at her shoulder, the eiderdown slid off.
âI've been meaning to ask, Sheil. Are you having a good time?'
But Sheila tried to straighten the covers.
âFor Christ's sake, Sheila. Live dangerously! I've been meaning to tell you. That's your problem. You're cooped up.'