I SAID HELLO to Garik, who was discussing something with a colonel of the militia. The colonel was an ordinary man, but he was involved in our work ?he knew something about the Watches and helped us to cover up incidents like this one. The bodies had already been taken away, our specialists had finished fiddling about with auras and traces of magic, and now the forensic experts from the militia had started their work.
'In the Gazelle,' Garik told me, with a nod. I walked across to our operational vehicle and got in.
A young lad wrapped in a blanket and drinking hot tea from a mug gave me a frightened look.
'My name's Anton Gorodetsky,' I said. 'You're Andrei, right?'
The boy nodded.
'I...' the boy began in a remorseful voice. 'I didn't know...'
'Calm down. You're not to blame for anything. Nobody could have foreseen the appearance of a wild vampire in the centre of Moscow in broad daylight,' I said. But I thought to myself that if the lad had such a natural ability for reading auras, then this sort of thing ought to have been foreseen. But I didn't want to criti cise the dead tutor. Some day this incident would go into the teacher-training manuals, on the pages printed in red to indicate that the knowledge in them had been paid for in blood.
'But I shouldn't have shouted like that,' the boy said. He put down the mug of tea. The blanket slid off his shoulder and I saw a massive bruise on his chest. The vampire had hit him really hard. 'If he hadn't heard me...'
'He would still have sensed your fright and confusion. Calm down. The most important thing now is to catch this undead monster.'
'And lay him to rest,' the boy said in a firm voice.
'Right. And lay him to rest. Have you been studying with us for long?'
'Three weeks.'
I shook my head. He was a talented young boy, no doubt about it. I just hoped that what had happened wouldn't put him off working in the Watch ...
'Have you been taught how to record auras?'
'No,' the boy admitted. And he shuddered, as if at some unpleasant memory.
'Then describe the vampire as precisely as you can.'
The boy hesitated and then said:
'We haven't been taught. But I've tried studying it. It's the fourth paragraph in the textbook... recording, copying and transmitting an aura.'
'And you studied the subject?'
'Yes.'
'Can you transmit the vampire's aura to me?'
The boy thought for a moment and nodded.
'I can try'
'Go on. I'm opening myself up.' I closed my eyes and relaxed. Okay, come on, young talent...
At first there was a faint sensation of warmth ?like a hairdryer into my face from a distance. And then I sensed a clumsy, rather confused transmission. I locked onto it and took a close look. The boy was trying with all his might, transmitting the aura again and again. Gradually I began building up a complete picture out of the isolated fragments.
Just a little bit more,' I said. 'Repeat that...'
The coloured threads flared up more brightly and arranged them selves into an intricate pattern. The basic colours, of course, were black and red, non-life and death, the standard vampire aura. In addition to the colour scheme, which was constantly changing and could be very different at different times, there were fundamental features: the subtle pattern of Power, as individual as fingerprints or the pattern of blood vessels in the iris of the eye.
'Well done,' I said, pleased. 'Thank you. It's a very good impression.'
'Will you be able to find him?' the teenager asked.
'Definitely,' I assured him. 'You've been a great help. And don't be upset. Don't punish yourself... your tutor died a hero.'
That was a lie, of course. In the first place, heroes don't die. Heroes don't protect themselves with the Magician's Shield when they see a vampire attacking, they strike to stun him. An ordinary Grey Prayer would have slowed the vampire down and stopped him, at least for a while. Long enough for the trainees to scatter and run, and the tutor could have gathered his thoughts and erected a decent defence.
But there was nothing to be done about it now. There was no point in explaining to the boy that his first tutor had been a kind, sweet guy, but completely unprepared for real work. That was the whole problem ?genuine battle magicians with the smell of blood and fire in their nostrils didn't often go in for tutoring. The tutors were more often noble-minded theoreticians...
'Garik, do you need me here?' I asked. There was already a Dark One I didn't know loitering about beside Garik and the colonel. Which was only to be expected. The Day Watch had dropped by to get their guy off the hook, if they could, and if they couldn't, to find out how serious our losses were. Garik shook his head. I ignored the Dark One and walked off casually towards my car, which was parked right under a 'No Parking' sign. Anti-theft spells are used by all Others, but applying a spell that lets you be seen by everyone on the road and park wherever you like is a bit more complicated.
Getting an impression of the vampire's aura was a great stroke of luck. In a situation like that even experienced adult magicians lose their heads. But this kid had managed to do well. I was itching to get back to the office as quickly as possible and pass on the impression for the duty watchmen's information ?then everyone who went out on patrol could look for the bloodsucker. A Higher Vampire, unregistered... No, I couldn't count on a coincidence like that.
But it was a Higher Vampire!
Trying to set aside my excessive hopes, I got into the driving seat and set off for the office.
The city duty officer was Pavel. I flashed him the impression of the aura, and he was delighted to get it. It's always a pleasure to hand the patrolmen something serious instead of highly relevant information such as: 'At Chistye Prudy a wild vampire took out two of our side... His appearance? Male, kind of middle-aged...'
I sat down in front of the computer in my office, looked at the screen and said:
'This is plain crazy'
But I launched 'Comparison' anyway. The big problem with comparing auras is that you can't let the system compare them automatically, like you can with fingerprints. The impression of the aura can be passed 'from head to head' but not 'from head to computer' ?no computers like that exist. To get an aura into the database, we have an elderly artist who works with us, Leopold Surikov. Despite was some kind of impassable barrier. And I hadn't bothered to take even a single step sideways.
I was just about to print out the page when I realised that I couldn't even wait thirty seconds for the printer to purge its printing heads and make itself ready.
I leapt out of my office and dashed up the stairs.
But then I ran into a dead end ?Geser wasn't in. Of course, I realised that he needed to rest sometimes too, but why did it have to be right now? This was really bad luck...
'Hi, Anton,' said Olga, coming out of the door of the office. 'Why are you looking so ... hyped-up?'
'Where's Geser?' I howled.
Olga looked at me thoughtfully for a second. Then she walked up to me, pressed her hand carefully against my lips and said:
'Boris is sleeping. He hasn't gone home even once since the day you got back from Uzbekistan. An hour ago I used all the female wiles in the book to get him to go to bed.'
Olga was looking great. Her hair had obviously been worked on by a good stylist, her skin was covered with a wonderful gold tan, she was wearing a hint of make-up ?just enough to empha sise the beautiful outline of her eyes and the sexy plumpness of her lips. And she smelled of something very expensive: spicy and floral, hot and seductive.
She really had used all her female wiles.
But then, I'd seen her when she looked quite different. And not only seen her ?I'd actually been inside that magnificent body myself. The sensation had been instructive, but I couldn't say that I really missed it all that much.
'And if you, Anton, start yelling and phoning Boris and insisting that he has to come to work immediately, I'll turn you into a bunny rabbit,' Olga said. 'I just haven't decided yet if it should be a real one or a stuffed toy' 'An inflatable one from a sex shop,' I said. 'Don't try to frighten me, it's impossible anyway'
'You think so?' she asked, narrowing her eyes.
'I do. But if you really want to practise your battle magic that badly ?I have someone you can use as a target.'
'Who?'
'A Higher Vampire. The one who's been working with Edgar. The one who took out two Light Ones today at Chistye Prudy'
'Who?' Olga repeated insistently.
'Saushkin.'
A faint shadow ran across Olga's face. She took me very gently by the elbow and said:
'Anton, we all have tragedies in our lives. Sometimes we lose friends, and sometimes we lose enemies, but we still blame ourselves...'
'Save the psychotherapy for Geser!' I barked. 'It's Gennady Saushkin! Saushkin senior! Kostya's father!'
'We checked him, he's fourth level... ' Olga said, and then stopped.
'Do I have to explain to you how easy it is for a vampire to raise his level?' I asked.
'From fourth level to higher...' she said. 'But dozens of people would have disappeared; we ought to have noticed...'
'Then we just didn't!' I exclaimed, grabbing her by the hand. 'Olga, it's one chance in a thousand, but what if he's still at home? What if we could take him by surprise?'
'Let's go,' Olga said, with a nod. 'I hope you can still remember your old address?'
'Just two of us?'
'I think two Higher Light Ones can handle one vampire. Everyone in the office right now is too young. We don't want to take cannon fodder with us, do we?'
I looked into her eyes for a few seconds, watching the mischiev ous sparks dancing in them... was Olga bored of sitting in the office and managing things, then?
'Lets go,' I said. 'Just the two of us. Although its a bit too much like the beginning of a Hollywood action movie.'
'How do you mean?'
'I mean there'll be an ambush waiting for us. Or you'll turn out to be the Light Other who's helping Edgar and Gennady'
'Fool,' said Olga, not even offended. But while we were walking downstairs, she said spitefully, 'By the way, just to be sure we checked out your Sveta.'
'And what did you find?' I asked.
'It's not her.'
'I'm glad to hear it,' I said. 'And have you been checked out?'
'All Higher Light Ones have been checked. In Russia and Europe and the States. I don't know who it was that Foma caught a glimpse of in the Twilight, but all the Higher Ones have hundred-per-cent alibis.'
You should never go back to houses where you once used to live. Never, not for anything ?not until you're old and senile, and the sight of the sandpit in the courtyard of the building where you were born brings a sweet smile to your lips.
As I looked at my old front entrance, I thought that not so many years had gone by ... even by ordinary human standards. Eight years ago I had walked out of these doors to set out on just another vampire hunt. I hadn't known then that I would meet Svetlana, that she would become my wife, that I would become a Higher One...
But I was already an Other. And I knew that there were Others living above me ?a family of vampires. Good, law-abiding vampires, with whom I managed to remain friends for quite a long time.
Until I killed my first vampire.
Well, there's always a first time for everything.
'Shall we go?' Olga asked.
I was suddenly struck by another painful memory. The boy Egor, who was younger than the trainee Andrei at the time, had copied an aura just as successfully and had also almost become a vampire's victim. And Olga and I, working together for the first time, had set out on his trail... And Geser had managed to have Olga released from her terrible punishment of being confined inside a stuffed owl... *
( * This story is told in the first part of the book The Night Watch.)
'Deja vu,' I said.
'What's brought that on?' Olga asked absent-mindedly. She had lived in the world for so long that she could easily have forgotten that adventure of ours... 'Ah, you remembered us tracking Egor? By the way, I recently found out that he works in a circus, can you imagine? As an illusionist!'