Read Penguin Lost Online

Authors: Andrey Kurkov

Tags: #Suspense, #Ukraine, #Mafia, #Kiev, #Mystery & Detective, #Satire, #General, #Crime, #Fiction

Penguin Lost (3 page)

“And get paid?”

“$15 a month in hryvnas. Still, it’s not for its money you love your home.”

“Meaning?”

She drew him to her.

“This, for my first five years, was home. They’d drop me at 8.00, my parents, and pick me up at 6.00.”

“But why do this?”

“Sod off!” she exploded. “Who are you to tot up my earnings, not
having paid a kopek! Let’s get on with it!”

And pushing him over, she dived on top. “Explorer, my arse! Old windbag more like!”

“Only from being silent for so long!”

After which the dormitory echoed to bed noise, until, in the distant darkness, a phone rang. Just three rings.

“Someone wanting the headmistress. Like something to eat?”

“What’s on the menu?”

“Semolina, knob of butter, dash of strawberry jam – ever since ’73: Greedy gutses pick the butter and jam out and drink the rest, the sensible ones mix all together.”

“Sounds good.”

“So up we get. Toilets and washbasins just along the corridor.”

They dressed and went down to the kitchen where Svetlana prepared semolina in the dark. Homely yellow light attended the opening of a fridge for milk, then the bluish flames of a gas ring contributed a semblance of comfort. But when it came to eating off a tiny table, petite Svetlana managed better than he.

“You fit in well here,” he said lightly.

“And I like it because they’re not nasty to the little ones, but make allowances, try to be nice, spoil them.”

“And how do I spoil you?”

“It’s you who’s being spoilt, as way-out explorer, with semolina, but $50 will do.”

He laughed. “Isn’t that a bit much?”

“I hadn’t thought in terms of an explorer discount, but if you insist …”

“I don’t.”

*

He woke to the ringing of an alarm clock somewhere on the floor,
and reaching for it, realized it was in Svetlana’s handbag. She, face deep in her pillow, was still asleep. Silencing the alarm, he examined her student identity card. Svetlana Alyokhina was her name, and she was in her third year at the International Business College. He went over to the window, stretched, feeling unusually fit, and looking out saw two elderly ladies advancing purposefully across the courtyard.

“Get up, Svetlana! People are coming.”

“The alarm’s not gone.”

“It went fifteen minutes ago.”

She leapt out of bed, dressed, then, helped by Viktor, moved the beds apart, restoring them to something like their former neat appearance.

They slipped out by way of a back door, meeting two hefty fellows on their way in with large cardboard boxes. Svetlana slipped past with a cheery “Hi!” Viktor stood aside.

“Who are they?” he asked catching her up.

“They rent the storeroom cellar. They sell computers.”

She looked at her watch, then up at Viktor.

“And my hard-earned money?”

He gave her her $50.

“Sorry, but must dash.” She kissed him quickly on the lips.

“How about another time?”

“What’s your number?”

“No phone,” said Viktor, not anxious for the call to be taken by Nina, Sonya or the militiaman-like guard.

“That’s a feeble one! And before you blow your polar money, buy yourself a mobile!”

“Have you a phone?”

“But it’s by Mummy’s bed, and she hates being woken.”

“I’ll come and find you.”

“That’s the way. And when you do, you get a kiss.”

When they got to Shelkovichnaya Street, she darted into the road, waved down a car and was gone.

He watched it out of sight, then set off down Lutheran Street.

5

The Old Kiev Cellar Café was just open and pleasantly cool. The woman in charge of the coffee machine was yawningly laying out yesterday’s pastries.

The coffee was ghastly, seriously over-sugared, but fortunately not stirred.

Still in thrall to the night’s experiences, Viktor wondered at petite Svetlana’s possessing a student card. Maybe it was for the sake of cheap travel. Any kind of ID – from old MVD to Ukrainian State Security – could be bought in the Petrovka book market. A photo, a stamp, and the world, within reason, was your oyster.

He sipped his coffee, but it left none of the usual bitter tang. In its place was a taste of semolina and strawberry jam as remembered from childhood.

For the first time in his life he’d actually bought a night of happy passion – naturally, with no bad feelings, no qualms of conscience. There’ll
be a time when you won’t get it free and be too ashamed to pay
, Bronikovsky had told him. Not so. $50, yes, as a gift in recognition of moments of bliss. All so easy and homely. Rendezvous in a kindergarten where, when the children are gone, strange, romantic things can happen – computers in the cellar, semolina at night, and God knows what in the attic. Life with a cheerful touch of mystery somehow lacking before his trip to Antarctica, thanks perhaps to the isolation of a full, unsociable life as member of a disintegrating
family, while feeding Misha, writing poignant advance obituaries, and shedding the odd tear. Added to which, his concern for Sonya, and, to the extent of providing her with money and the sense of being a housewife, for Nina. His own little world of his own, to which he’d had the key and from which, with the change of lock, he was now a refugee.

He thought of the kindergarten, also two-storeyed with sand pits and swings, where he had been a pupil, with semolina, strawberry jam and the same little melty butterberg for lunch. And after lunch a quiet hour and a song about a little hare to learn.

He worried about what Sonya, who had not been to kindergarten or played much with other children, was doing. Hers was a very different childhood.

Leaving the café, he rang his flat from a street phone.

Listening to the bleeps, he wondered what to say if Nina answered.

Happily it was Sonya who did, cheerfully announcing that Nina was out, Uncle Kolya hadn’t come back and hadn’t rung, and she’d let the cat out, who, though she scratched, was a good cat, and clever, clawing the door to be let in, and when would
he
be coming home?

He panicked.

“Don’t know,” he said eventually, “maybe in a day or two.”

“Come when no-one’s here,” she suggested. “I’ll make you an omelette. I can. Auntie Nina went away for two days once leaving just eggs and a roll. So I made myself an omelette. I’m grown up now. Seen Misha?”

“Not yet. I’m going to today.”

“Give him my love and say he’s to come back soon. It’s dull without him.”

“I will. And I’ll come when everyone’s out.”

“And ring more often.”

“Tomorrow morning then.”

Ringing off left him depressed and with a sudden urge to go home, resume his old life, only with no more obituaries, no more funerals-with-penguin. But first, he must get organized, run Misha to ground. Then to Moscow, and Bronikovsky’s wife or widow.

His prime duty was to Misha, and starting right now, he would do his damnedest, though it wouldn’t be easy. Bad as it was, the coffee had done the trick.

6

At Theophania, a cool breeze, fitful sunlight, rustling foliage, singing of birds, and patients perambulating the grounds of the Hospital for Scientists, beyond which lay the Veterinary Clinic, where – and he blinked back a tear – he remembered seeing Misha mobilizing under strict medical supervision.

Today two white-coated assistants were walking dogs, one of which was limping.

On asking where to find the vet, he was directed to the first floor of the consultation block.

Passing what had been Misha’s ward, he looked in. Only one of the child-sized beds was occupied, and the sounds emanating from the apparatus beside it, suggested that some four-footed creature was fighting for its life.

Ilya Semyonovich, the vet, was indeed in his room, and greeted Viktor pleasantly without immediately recognizing him.

“Do you remember operating on a penguin called Misha?”

“Of course. He was the only one we’ve ever had. Your name’s coming back to me.”

“Zolotaryov.”

“That’s it! People were here keeping a look out for you. For three weeks or so.”

“What people?”

“Oh, I don’t know – active, sporty-looking types. One stayed all the time, the other two came each morning, walked Misha, and left in the evening.”

“And?”

“Misha made a full recovery, and men turned up in two jeeps to collect him – nice polite chaps who settled up for his treatment and drugs. They asked after you, and I seem to remember, left something for you … No, I tell a lie – the ones who collected Misha weren’t the ones who waited earlier. It was the ones who waited who left the envelope.”

“Where is it?”

Sitting down at his desk, the vet pulled out one drawer, then another, from which, together with X-ray photographs, he pulled a brown envelope which he passed to Viktor.

“We never lose anything here, unless it’s our sense of honesty. Only yesterday I had to sack some kennel maids for stealing dog food from the kitchen.
Not their fault
, of course,” he smiled sadly, “genetic engineering’s the only remedy for that.”

But Viktor was no longer listening, having taken from the envelope a folded newspaper cutting and the word processed message:

“In your own interest, ring 488 03 00 before 20th of May.”

There was no signature.

Unfolding the cutting, he was shocked to see looking up at him his former Chief, Igor Lvovich, edged round in funereal black. A brief obituary told of his tragic death in a motor accident on the Borispol
Highway, his chauffeur-driven car having collided at speed with a tipper lorry loaded with sand.

Viktor folded the cutting and slipped it back into the envelope.

“When was it Misha was collected?”

“Quite some time ago. He spent six weeks here, so you can work it out from when you brought him in.”

Viktor shook hands with Ilya Semyonovich and left.

Outside, he stopped for a moment. Veterinary assistants, hefty fellows, looking more like butchers in their white coats, were still walking dogs. One assistant stared back in a way that prompted Viktor to head quickly for the gate.

7

Short is the road from hospital to cemetery – even for the fit proceeding under their own steam. And proceeding by tram inspires thoughts about life and the sense of it, thoughts both prodigal of time and a distraction from the immediate. Leisurely, soporifically, the tram clanks along, then at the sudden sight of the red brick wall enclosing an overpopulated City of the Dead, thoughts of life and the sense of it fly up and off like so many sparrows. Almost reverentially the tram slows, and stops twelve metres short of the cemetery gate. Cawing crows. Gentle breeze. Old women selling wild flowers. Homeless urchins hawking flowers they’ve stolen from graves.

Arrived at the gate, Viktor paused. He foresaw no difficulty in locating the grave he had come to visit, though a good 15- or 20-minute walk was involved.

“How much?” he asked, going over to the hunchbacked old woman in an old blue quilted jacket standing with a boxful of flowering
plants.

“Ten for five hryvnas.”

Producing a 5-hryvna piece, he selected a clump of violets.

“Hang on,” said the old woman, tearing in half a Marlboro carrier bag to wrap around the roots.

He walked slowly, letting his legs lead the way, and came at last to the now grassy mound, marking where Penguinologist Pidpaly lay. He put the violets down on the mound, seeing, as he did so, the good, gentle, ill-used old man he had known and done a little to help. Pidpaly had had charge of Misha at the zoo, until it could no longer afford a penguinologist or penguins …

Away in the distance the clank of a tram. He looked round. No-one was about. The only sound apart from cawing crows was now the whisper of the wind in the lofty trees. “I have no unfinished business”, Pidpaly had told him shortly before his death. Would that he, Viktor, could say as much.

And buried somewhere here now was Igor Lvovich, cut off in life at speed on the Borispol Highway, when heading perhaps for the airport.
He
would have left any amount of unfinished business, to say nothing of a wife and a son in hiding in Italy from the horrors of Ukraine. Every story must end at a full stop, and none bolder and more final than that of death.

Some way off, in a little enclave, he spotted a skip filled with cemetery rubbish. There was a standpipe, a bucket and a watering can, both stencilled with numbers in red, and leaning against the skip, an old spade. Taking it, he planted the violets around the grave, watering them well in an attempt to create something of a memorial to Pidpaly amidst all the marble and the portraits in oval frames.

With a last regretful look at the grave, he retraced his steps, skirting a life-size marble statue of a man in modish tracksuit standing before a Mercedes radiator, also in marble.

Rastoropov, Pyotr Vitalyevich, 15.03.1971 – 11.10.1997
who might well have been one of the three thugs whose lavish interment Lyosha had been bodyguarding on the morning of Pidpaly’s funeral. Lyosha, remembering him and Misha from a New Year celebration, had hailed them as they passed, driven them home, and later made a lucrative business of hiring black-suited Misha out as a fashionable adjunct to mourning parties.

Faintly, above the clanking of far-off trams and the cawing of crows, he caught the strains of a funeral march, and spotted mourners in the distance.

As he got to the main avenue, flashy cars and a limo hearse drove in at the gate. Four identical black jeeps followed, from the last of which two men alighted to post themselves either side of the gate, while the cavalcade went on to the church and crematorium.

What’s a Mafia funeral without a penguin? he thought suddenly.

Quickening his pace, cutting corners, he made towards the cemetery church, dodging headstones and railings, stumbling, literally, over names and dates with the church hovering, mirage-fashion, inaccessible, unattainable – like happiness after death. Even so he was in time for the carrying in, by elegantly attired males, of a costly, bronze-handled coffin in polished mahogany, while 40 or so mourners, of whom the few ladies wore long black gowns and dark glasses by Armani or Versace, prepared to follow. And for one brief moment a small black-and-white something went waddling in with them. His heart missed a beat. Misha! Yes, there had to be a penguin! He collided painfully with something, and nursing a bruised knee walked on. The mourners were now inside, then suddenly a ragged urchin sprinted out, pursued by a steward. Tripping him, Viktor continued on his way.

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