Because he was an Absolute Zero.
Because we were all vampires.
And up there, beyond the bounds of the warm, living Earth, far from the people and animals, the plants and microbes, far from everything that breathes and moves and lives, we all become absolute zeroes. Without the free supply of power that allows us to fling bright ball lightning at each other so elegantly and heal sicknesses and cast hexes and turn maple leaves into banknotes or sour milk into vintage whisky.
All our Power was not ours.
All our Power was weakness.
That was what the fine young man Kostya Saushkin had failed to understand and refused to accept.
I heard Zabulon laugh – far, far away in the city of Saratov, standing under an awning in an open-air café with a glass of beer in his hand. Zabulon was gazing up at the darkening evening sky, looking for a swift new star whose flight would be brilliant but brief.
'You look like you're crying,' said Las. 'Only there aren't any tears.'
'You're right,' I said. 'No tears, and no strength either. I won't be able to open a portal to get us back. We'll have to take a plane. Or wait for the clean-up team, maybe they'll help.'
'Who are you?' a technician asked. 'Eh? What's going on?'
'We're inspectors from the Ministry of Health,' said Las. 'So why don't you tell us what you thought you were doing, burning cut cannabis plants by the air intake of the ventilation system?'
'What cannabis?' the technician asked, starting to stammer.
'Arboraceous!' I snapped. 'Come on, Las, I still have to explain officially.'
As we walked out of the hall, several technical personnel and soldiers with automatic weapons came running towards us. But the chaos was so total that no one took any notice of us – or perhaps we were still protected by the remains of the magical shield. At the end of the corridor I caught a glimpse of the German tourist's rosy backside – he was hopping and skipping along, with his finger still stuck in his mouth. There were two men in white coats chasing after him.
'Okay, listen to me,' I told Las. 'Apart from the ordinary human world that is visible to the eye, there is also a Twilight world. The Twilight can only be entered by those . . .'
I gulped and faltered – I'd had another vision of Kostya. Kostya as he had been years ago, the vampire-boy who had no powers yet . . .
'Look, I'm transforming! I'm a terrible bat! I can fly! I can fly!'
Goodbye, Kostya. You made it.
You're flying now.
EPILOGUE
SEMYON CAME INTO the office, pushing Las in ahead of him, as if he was a low-grade Dark Sorcerer caught red-handed in some petty crime. Las was fiddling with a tightly rolled tube of paper, trying to hide it behind his back.
Semyon flopped down into an armchair and growled:
'Your protégé, Anton? You sort this out.'
'What's happened?' I asked cautiously.
Las's expression wasn't guilty at all. Just slightly embarrassed.
'His second day in training,' said Semyon. 'Absolutely basic, elementary assignments. Not even anything to do with magic . . .'
'And?'
'I asked him to meet Mr Sisuke Sasaki from the Tokyo Watch . . .'
I chortled. Semyon turned scarlet.
'It's a normal Japanese name! No funnier than yours – Anton Sergeevich Gorodetsky.'
'I realise that,' I agreed. 'Is he the same Sasaki who handled the case of the girl werewolves in '94?'
'The same.' Semyon squirmed in his chair. Las carried on standing by the door. 'He stopped off on his way to Europe, and wanted to discuss something with Gesar.'
'And what happened?'
Semyon looked at Las indignantly, then cleared his throat and said:
'Our trainee here enquired if the highly respected Mr Sasaki knew Russian. I explained that he didn't. Then our trainee printed out a notice and went off to Sheremetievo to meet the Japanese gentleman . . . Show him the notice.'
Las sighed and unrolled the tube of paper.
The Japanese name was written in very large hieroglyphs. Las had made an effort and loaded a Japanese font into the computer.
But at the top, in slightly smaller Russian characters, it said:
'Second Moscow Congress for Victims of Forcible Infection with Cholera.'
It took an immense effort for me to keep a straight face.
'Why did you write that?' I asked.
'I always meet foreigners like that,' Las said, sounding offended. 'My business partners, and my relatives – I've got family abroad . . . If they don't know any Russian, I print their names in big letters in their own language and something funny in Russian in smaller letters. For instance: "Conference of Non-Traditionally Oriented Transsexuals", "European Festival of Deaf-Mute Musicians and Performers", "Forum of Activists of the International Movement for Total Sexual Abstinence" . . . And I hold the notice up like this . . . turning in all directions, so that everybody who's waiting for someone can see it . . .'
'I get the idea,' I said. 'What I want to know is what do you do it for?'
'When the person I'm meeting comes out of customs, everyone in the place wants to see who he is,' Las explained, unmoved. 'When he appears, everybody smiles, some even applaud and whistle and wave. He doesn't know why they're reacting like that. All he can tell is that everyone's glad to see him, then he spots his name and comes over to me. I promptly roll up the notice and take him to the car. And afterwards he tells everyone what wonderful, friendly people the Russians are. Everyone greeted him with a smile.'
'Blockhead,' I said emphatically. 'That's fine with an ordinary person. But Sasaki's an Other. A Higher Other, as it happens. He doesn't know Russian, but he perceives the meaning of written words on the conceptual level.'
Las sighed and lowered his head:
'I realise that now . . .Well, if I've screwed up, chuck me out.'
'Was Mr Sasaki offended?' I asked.
'When I explained everything, Mr Sasaki was kind enough to laugh long and loud,' Las replied.
'Please,' I said, 'don't do it again.'
'Never?'
'Definitely not with Others.'
'Of course I won't.' Las promised. 'It spoils the whole point of the joke.'
I shrugged and looked at Semyon.
'Wait for me in the corridor,' Semyon told Las. 'Leave the notice here.'
'Actually I collect . . .' Las began, but he put the notice down and went out.
When the door closed Semyon laughed, picked up the notice, rolled it back into a tube and said to me:
'I'll go round the departments with it and give everyone a laugh . . . How are you getting on?'
'Not too bad.' I leaned back in my chair. 'Settling in.'
'A Higher One . . .' Semyon drawled. 'Ha . . . and they used to say everyone has his limits. A Higher Magician . . . you've made a great career for yourself, Gorodetsky.'
'Semyon . . . It was nothing to do with me. It just turned out that way.'
'I know, I know . . .' Semyon stood up and started walking round the office. It was a small office, of course, but even so . . . 'Assistant director for personnel . . . Ha. The Dark Ones will start stirring things up now. With you and Svetlana that makes four Higher Magicians we have. And without Kostya Saushkin, the Day Watch only has Zabulon . . .'
'They can recruit someone from the provinces,' I said. 'I wouldn't object. Or we can expect another visit from a Mirror.'*
* See The Night Watch.
'We're wiser now,' Semyon said with a nod. 'We always learn from our mistakes.'
He moved towards the door, scratching his stomach through his linen T-shirt – a wise, benign, tired Light Magician. We all become wise and benign when we get tired. He stopped at the door and looked at me thoughtfully:
'It's a shame about young Saushkin. He was a decent guy, as far as that's possible for a Dark One. Is it getting to you?'
'I had no choice,' I said. 'He had no choice, and I didn't either.'
 
; Semyon nodded.
'And it's a shame about the Fuaran . . .'
Kostya had burned up in the atmosphere twenty-four hours after his leap into space. He hadn't calculated his orbit all that precisely after all.
The briefcase had burned up with him. They'd kept a radar fix on them to the very last moment. The Inquisition had demanded a space shuttle launch to collect the book, but there hadn't been enough time.
As far as I'm concerned, it's just fine that there wasn't enough time.
Maybe he was still alive when the fiery kisses of the atmosphere started burning up his spacesuit hundreds of kilometres above the Earth. After all, he was a vampire, and lack of oxygen might not have affected him as badly as an ordinary Other – like the overheating and overcooling and other delights of outer space that lie in wait for a cosmonaut in a light flight suit. I don't know, and I'm not going to go searching through the reference books to find out. If only because no one can say which is more terrible – death by suffocation or death by fire. After all, nobody dies twice – not even vampires.
'Look,' he used to say, 'I'm a terrible immortal vampire! I can turn into a wolf and a bat! I can fly!'
Semyon went out without saying another word, and I sat there for a long time, looking out of the window.
The sky's not for us.
We weren't meant to fly.
All we can do is try not to fall.
July 2002 – July 2003
This text contains extracts from songs by the following groups: The Hibernation of Beasts (Zimovie zverei), Belomor, The White Guard (Belaya gvardiya) and Picnic; and also by Alexander Ulyanov ('Las'), Zoya Yashchenko and Kirill Komarov.
Sergei Lukyanenko, The Twilight Watch:
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