We the Living (67 page)

Read We the Living Online

Authors: Ayn Rand

The clerk wiped his nose with his thumb and forefinger, wiped the linseed oil off the bottle’s neck with his apron, and asked: “That all today, citizen?”
“That’s all,” said Andrei Taganov.
The clerk tore a piece of newspaper and wrapped the bottle, greasy stains spreading on the paper.
“Doing good business?” Andrei asked.
“Rotten,” the clerk answered, shrugging his shoulders in an old blue sweater. “You’re the first customer in three hours, I guess. Glad to hear a human voice. Nothing to do here but sit and scare mice off.”
“That’s too bad. Taking a loss, then?”
“Who, me? I don’t own the joint.”
“Then I guess you’ll lose your job soon. The boss will be coming to do his own clerking.”
“Who? My boss?” The clerk made a hoarse, cackling sound that was laughter, opening a wide hole with two broken, blackened teeth. “Not my boss, he won’t. I’d like to see the elegant Citizen Kovalensky slinging herrings and linseed oil.”
“Well, he won’t be elegant long with such poor business.”
“Maybe he won’t,” said the clerk, “and maybe he will.”
“Maybe,” said Andrei Taganov.
“Fifty kopeks, citizen.”
“Here you are. Good night, citizen.”
Antonina Pavlovna had tickets for the new ballet at the Marinsky Theater. It was a “profunion” show and Morozov had received the tickets at the Food Trust. But Morozov did not care for ballet and he had a school meeting to attend, where he was to make a speech on the “Proletarian Distribution of Food Products,” so he gave the tickets to Antonina Pavlovna. She invited Leo and Kira to accompany her. “Well, of course, it’s supposed to be a revolutionary ballet,” she explained. “The first Red ballet. And, of course, you know my attitude on politics, but then, one should be broad-minded artistically, don’t you think so? At least, it’s an interesting experiment.”
Kira refused the invitation. Leo left with Antonina Pavlovna. Antonina Pavlovna wore a jade green gown embroidered in gold, too tight across her stomach, and carried mother-of-pearl opera glasses on a long gold handle.
Kira had made a date with Andrei. But when she left the tramway and walked through the dark streets to the palace garden, she noticed her feet slowing down of their own will, her body tense, unyielding, fighting her, as if she were walking forward against a strong wind. It was as if her body remembered that which she was trying to forget: the night before, a night such as her first one in the gray and silver room she had shared with Leo for over three years. Her body felt pure and hallowed; her feet were slowing down to retard her progress toward that which seemed a sacrilege because she did desire it and did not wish to desire it tonight.
When she reached the top of the long, dark stairs and Andrei opened the door, she asked: “Andrei, will you do something for me?”
“Before I kiss you?”
“No. But right after. Will you take me to a motion picture tonight?”
He kissed her, his face showing nothing but the ever-incredulous joy of seeing her again, then said: “All right.”
They walked out together, arm in arm, fresh snow squeaking under their feet. The three largest film theaters on Nevsky displayed huge cotton signs with red letters:
THE HIT OF THE SEASON!
NEW MASTERPIECE OF THE SOVIET CINEMA!
“RED WARRIORS”
A gigantic epic of the struggle of red heroes in the civil war!
A SAGA OF THE PROLETARIAT!
A titanic drama of the heroic unknown masses
of Workers and Soldiers!
One theater also bore the sign:
COMRADE LENIN SAID: “OF ALL THE ARTS, THE MOST IMPORTANT ONE FOR RUSSIA IS THE CINEMA!”
The theater entrances blazed in streams of white light. The cashiers watched the passersby wistfully and yawned. No one stopped to look at the display of stills.
“You don’t want to see that,” said Andrei.
“No,” said Kira.
The fourth and smaller theater played a foreign picture. It was an old, unknown picture with no stars, no actors’ names announced; three faded stills were pasted in the show window, presenting a lady with too much make-up and a dress fashionable ten years ago.
“We might as well see that,” said Kira.
The box office was closed.
“Sorry, citizens,” said the usher, “no seats left. All sold out for this show and the next one. The foyer’s jammed with people waiting.”
“Well,” said Kira, as they turned away with resignation, “it may as well be ‘The Red Warriors.’ ”
The foyer of the huge, white-columned “Parisiana” was empty. The picture was on, and no one was allowed to enter in the middle of a show. But the usher bowed eagerly and let them enter.
The theater was dark, cold, and seemed silent under the roar of the orchestra, with the echoing silence of a huge, empty room. A few heads dotted the waste of grayish, empty rows.
On the screen, a mob of ragged gray uniforms ran through mud, waving bayonets. A mob of ragged gray uniforms sat around fires, cooking soup. A long train crawled slowly through endless minutes, open box cars loaded with a mob of ragged gray uniforms. “A MONTH LATER” said a title. A mob of ragged gray uniforms ran through mud, waving bayonets. A sea of arms waved banners. A mob of ragged gray uniforms crawled down trench tops, against a black sky. “THE BATTLE OF ZAVRASHINO” said a title. A mob in patent leather boots shot a mob in bast shoes lined against a wall. “THE BATTLE OF SAMSONOVO” said a title. A mob of ragged gray uniforms ran through mud, waving bayonets. “THREE WEEKS LATER” said a title. A long train crawled into a sunset. “THE PROLETARIAT STAMPED ITS MIGHTY BOOT DOWN THE TREACHEROUS THROAT OF DEPRAVED ARISTOCRATS” said a title. A mob in patent leather boots danced in a gaudy brothel, amid broken bottles and half-naked women who looked at the camera. “BUT THE SPIRIT OF OUR RED WARRIORS FLAMED WITH LOYALTY TO THE PROLETARIAN CAUSE” said a title. A mob of ragged gray uniforms ran through mud, waving bayonets. There was no plot, no hero. “THE AIM OF PROLETARIAN ART,” a poster in the foyer had explained, “IS THE DRAMA AND COLOR OF MASS LIFE.”
In the intermission before the second show, Andrei asked: “Do you want to see the beginning of that?”
“Yes,” said Kira. “It’s still early.”
“I know you don’t like it.”
“I know you don’t, either. It’s funny, Andrei, I had a chance to go to the new ballet at the Marinsky tonight, and I didn’t go because it was revolutionary, and here I am looking at this epic.”
“You had a chance to go with whom?”
“Oh—a friend of mine.”
“Not Leo Kovalensky?”
“Andrei! Don’t you think you’re being presumptuous?”
“Kira, of all your friends he’s the one . . .”
“. . . that you don’t like. I know. Still, don’t you think that you’re mentioning it too often?”
“Kira, you’re not interested in politics, are you?”
“No. Why?”
“You’ve never wanted to sacrifice your life senselessly, to have years torn out of it for no good reason, years of jail or exile? Have you?”
“What are you driving at?”
“Keep away from Leo Kovalensky.”
Her mouth was open and her hand was lifted in the air and she did not move for a long second. Then she asked, and no words had ever been so hard to utter:
“What—do—you—mean—Andrei?”
“You don’t want to be known as the friend of a man who is friendly with the wrong kind of people.”
“What people?”
“Several. Our own Comrade Syerov, for one.”
“But what has Leo . . .”
“He owns a certain private food store, doesn’t he?”
“Andrei, are you being the G.P.U. agent with me and . . .”
“No, I’m not questioning you. I have nothing to learn from you. I’m just wondering how much you know about his affairs—for your own protection.”
“What . . . what affairs?”
“That’s all I can tell you. I shouldn’t have told you even that much. But I want to be sure that you don’t let your name be implicated, by chance, in any way.”
“Implicated—in what?”
“Kira, I’m not a G.P.U. agent—
with
you or
to
you.”
The lights went out and the orchestra struck up the “Internationale.”
On the screen, a mob of dusty boots marched down a dry, clotted earth. A huge, gray, twinkling, shivering rectangle of boots hung before them, boots without bodies, thick, cobbled soles, old leather gnarled, warped into creases by the muscles and the sweat inside; the boots were not slow and they were not in a hurry; they were not hoofs and they did not seem to be human feet; they rolled forward, from heels to toes, from heels to toes, like gray tanks waddling, crushing, sweeping all before them, clots of earth crumbling into dust, gray boots, dead, measured, endless, lifeless, inexorable.
Kira whispered through the roar of the “Internationale”: “Andrei, are you working on a new case for the G.P.U.?”
He answered: “No. On a case of my own.”
On the screen, shadows in gray uniforms sat around fires under a black sky. Calloused hands stirred iron kettles; a mouth grinned wide over crooked teeth; a man played a harmonica, rocking from side to side with a lewd grin; a man twirled in a Cossack dance, his feet flashing, his hands clapping in time; a man scratched his beard; a man scratched his neck; a man scratched his head; a man chewed a crust of bread, crumbs rolling into the open collar of his tunic, into a black, hairy chest. They were celebrating a victory.
Kira whispered: “Andrei, do you have something to report to the G.P.U.?”
He answered: “Yes.”
On the screen, a demonstration marched down a city street, celebrating a victory. Banners and faces swam slowly past the camera. They moved as wax figures pulled by invisible wires, young faces in dark kerchiefs, old faces in knitted shawls, faces in soldiers’ caps, faces in leather hats, faces that looked alike, set and humorless, eyes flat as if painted on, lips soft and shapeless, marching without stirring, marching without muscles, with no will but that of the cobblestones pulled forward under their motionless feet, with no energy but that of the red banners as sails in the wind, no fuel but the stuffy warmth of millions of skins, millions of flaccid, doughy muscles, no breath but the smell of patched armpits, of warm, weary, bowed necks, marching, marching, marching in an even, ceaseless movement, a movement that did not seem alive.
Kira jerked her head with a shudder that ran down to her knees and gasped: “Andrei, let’s go!”
He rose swiftly, obediently.
When he motioned to a sleigh driver in the street outside, she said: “No. Let’s walk. Walk. With both feet.”
He took her arm, asking: “What’s the matter, Kira?”
“Nothing,” she walked, listening to the living sound of her heels crunching snow. “I . . . I didn’t like the picture.”
“I’m sorry, dear. I don’t blame you. I wish they wouldn’t make those things, for their own sake.”
“Andrei, you wanted to leave it all, to go abroad, didn’t you?”
“Yes.”
“Then why are you starting something . . . against someone . . . to help the masters you no longer want to serve?”
“I’m going to find out whether they’re still worth serving.”
“What difference would that make to you?”
“A difference on which the rest of my life may depend.”
“What do you mean?”
“I’m giving myself a last chance. I have something to put before them. I know what they should do about it. I’m afraid I know also what they’re going to do about it. I’m still a member of the Party. In a very short while, I’ll know whether I’ll remain a member of the Party.”
“You’re making a test, Andrei? At the cost of several lives?”
“At the cost of several lives that should be ended.”
“Andrei!”
He looked at her white face, astonished: “Kira, what’s the matter? You’ve never questioned me about my work. We’ve never discussed it. You know that my work deals with lives—and death, when necessary. It has never frightened you like this. It’s something the two of us must keep silent about.”
“Are you forbidding me to break that silence?”
“Yes. And there’s something I have to tell you. Please listen carefully and don’t answer me, because, you see, I don’t want to know the answer. I want you to keep silent because I don’t want to learn how much you know about the case I’m investigating. I’m afraid I know already that you’re not quite ignorant about it. I’m expecting the highest integrity from the men I’m going to face. Don’t make me face them with less than that on my part.”
She said, trying to be calm, her voice quivering, a voice with a life and a terror of its own which she could not control: “Andrei, I won’t answer. Now listen and don’t question me. Please don’t question me! I have nothing to tell you but this: I’m begging you—you understand—begging you with all there is in me, if I ever meant anything to you, this is the only time I want to claim it, I’m begging you, while it’s still in your hands, to drop this case, Andrei! for one reason only, for me!”

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