We the Living (9 page)

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Authors: Ayn Rand

BOOK: We the Living
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The cab rattled through silent streets. Wide, smooth, empty sidewalks looked like long canals of gray ice, luminous under the tall lamp posts that swam, jerking, past the cab. At times, they saw the black circle of a shadow on the bare sidewalk; over the circle, a woman in a very short skirt stood swaying a little on fat legs in tightly laced shoes. Something like the black silhouette of a windmill wavered down the sidewalk; over it—a sailor tottered unsteadily, waving his arms, spitting sunflower seeds. A heavy truck thundered by the cab, bristling with bayonets; among the bayonets, Kira saw the flash of a white face, pierced by two holes of dark, frightening eyes.
Victor was saying: “A modern man of culture must preserve an objective viewpoint which, no matter what his personal convictions, enables him to see our time as a tremendous historical drama, a moment of gigantic importance to humanity.”
“Nonsense,” said Kira. “It is an old and ugly fact that the masses exist and make their existence felt. This is a time when they make it felt with particular ugliness. That’s all.”
“This is a rash, unscientific viewpoint, Kira,” said Victor, and went on talking about the esthetic value of sculpture, about the modern ballet and about new poets whose works were published in pretty little books with glossy white paper covers; he always kept the latest poem on his desk along with the latest sociological treatise, “for balance” he explained; and he recited his favorite poem in the fashionable manner of an expressionless, nasal sing-song, slowly taking Kira’s hand. Kira withdrew her hand and looked at the street lights.
The cab turned into the quay. She knew they were driving along a river, for on one side of them the black sky had fallen below the ground into a cold, damp void, and long bands of silver shimmered lazily across that void, streaming from lonely lights that hung in the darkness somewhere very far away. On the other side of them, mansions fused into a black skyline of urns, statues, balustrades. There were no lights in the mansions. The horse’s hoofs, pounding the cobblestones, rolled in echoes through rows of empty chambers.
Victor dismissed the cab at the Summer Garden. They walked, shuffling through a carpet of dry leaves that no one swept. No lights, no other visitors disturbed the silent desolation of the famous park. Around them, the black vaults of ancient oaks had suddenly swallowed the city; and in the moist, rustling darkness, fragrant of moss, mouldy leaves and autumn, white shadows of statues outlined the wide, straight walks.
Victor took out his handkerchief and wiped an old bench wet with dew. They sat down under the statue of a Greek goddess whose nose was broken off. A leaf floated down slowly, fluttered around its head and settled in the curve of its handless arm.
Victor’s arm slowly encircled Kira’s shoulders. She moved away. Victor bent close to her and whispered, sighing, that he had waited to see her alone, that he had known romances, yes, many romances, women had been too kind to him, but he had always been unhappy and lonely, searching for his ideal, that he could understand her, that her sensitive soul was bound by conventions, un-awakened to life—and love. Kira moved farther away and tried to change the subject.
He sighed and asked: “Kira, haven’t you ever given a thought to love?”
“No, I haven’t. And I never will. And I don’t like the word. Now that you know it, we’re going home.”
She rose. He seized her wrist. “No, we’re not. Not yet.”
She jerked her head, and the violent kiss intended for her lips brushed her cheek. A swift movement of her body set her free and sent him reeling against the bench. She drew a deep breath and tightened the collar of her coat.
“Good night, Victor,” she said quietly. “I’m going home—alone.”
He rose, confused, muttering: “Kira. . . . I’m sorry. I’ll take you home.”
“I said I’m going alone.”
“Oh, but you can’t do that! You know you can’t. It’s much too dangerous. A girl can’t be alone in the streets at this hour.”
“I’m not afraid.”
She started walking. He followed. They were out of the Summer Garden. On the deserted quay, a militia-man leaned against the parapet, gravely studying the lights in the water.
“If you don’t leave me right now,” said Kira, “I’m going to tell this militia-man that you’re a stranger who’s annoying me.”
“I’ll tell him you’re lying.”
“You may prove it—tomorrow morning. In the meantime, we’ll both spend a night in jail.”
“Well, go ahead. Tell him.”
Kira approached the militia-man. “Excuse me, comrade”—she began; she saw Victor turning and hurrying away—“can you tell me please which way is the Moika?”
Kira walked alone into the dark streets of Petrograd. The streets seemed to wind through an abandoned stage setting. There were no lights in the windows. Over the roofs, a church tower rose against floating clouds; the tower looked as if it were swimming slowly across a motionless sky, menacing, ready to collapse into the street below.
Lanterns smoked over locked gates; through grilled peepholes, night-watchmen’s eyes followed the lonely girl. Militia-men glanced at her sidewise, sleepily suspicious. A cab driver awakened at the sound of her steps to offer his services. A sailor tried to follow her, but took one look at the expression of her face and changed his mind. A cat dived soundlessly into a broken basement window as she approached.
It was long past midnight when she turned suddenly into a street that seemed alive in the heart of a dead city. She saw yellow, curtained squares of light breaking stern, bare walls; squares of light on the bare sidewalk at glass entrance doors; dark roofs, far away, that seemed to meet in the black sky over that narrow crack of stone and light.
Kira stopped. A gramophone was playing. The sound burst into the silence from a blazing window. It was “The Song of Broken Glass.”
It was the song of a nameless hope that frightened her, for it promised so much, and she could not tell what it promised; she could not even say that it was a promise; it was an emotion, almost of pain, that went through her whole body.
Quick, fine notes exploded, as if the trembling cords could not hold them, as if a pair of defiant legs were kicking crystal goblets. And, in the gaps of ragged clouds above, the dark sky was sprinkled with a luminous powder that looked like splinters of broken glass.
The music ended in someone’s loud laughter. A naked arm pulled a curtain over the window.
Then Kira noticed that she was not alone. She saw women with lips painted scarlet on faces powdered snow-white, with red kerchiefs and short skirts, and legs squeezed by high shoes laced too tightly. She saw a man taking a woman’s arm and disappearing through a glass door.
She understood where she was. With a jerk, she started away hurriedly, nervously toward the nearest corner.
And then she stopped.
He was tall; his collar was raised; a cap was pulled over his eyes. His mouth, calm, severe, contemptuous, was that of an ancient chieftain who could order men to die, and his eyes were such as could watch it.
Kira leaned against a lamp post, looking straight at his face, and smiled. She did not think; she smiled, stunned, without realizing that she was hoping he would know her as she knew him.
He stopped and looked at her. “Good evening,” he said.
And Kira who believed in miracles, said: “Good evening.”
He stepped closer and looked at her with narrowed eyes, smiling. But the corners of his mouth did not go up when he smiled; they went down, raising his upper lip into a scornful arc.
“Lonely?” he asked.
“Terribly—and for such a long time,” she answered simply.
“Well, come on.”
“Yes.”
He took her arm and she followed him. He said: “We have to hurry. I want to get out of this crowded street.”
“So do I.”
“I must warn you not to ask any questions.”
“I have no questions to ask.”
She looked at the unbelievable lines of his face. She touched timidly, incredulously, the long fingers of the hand that held her arm.
“Why are you looking at me like that?” he asked. But she did not answer. He said: “I’m afraid I’m not a very cheerful companion tonight.”
“Can I help you?”
“Well, that’s what you’re here for.” He stopped suddenly. “What’s the price?” he asked. “I haven’t much.”
Kira looked at him and understood why he had approached her. She stood looking silently into his eyes. When she spoke, her voice had lost its tremulous reverence; it was calm and firm. She said: “It won’t be much.”
“Where do we go?”
“I passed a little garden around the corner. Let’s go there first—for a while.”
“Any militia-men around?”
“No.”
They sat on the steps of an abandoned residence. Trees shielded them from a street light, and their faces and the wall behind them were dotted, checkered, sliced with shivering splinters of light. Over their heads were rows of empty windows on bare granite. The mansion bore an unhealed scar above its entrance door from where the owner’s coat of arms had been torn. The garden fence had been broken through, and its tall iron spikes bent toward the ground, like lances lowered in a grave salute.
“Take your cap off,” said Kira.
“What for?”
“I want to look at you.”
“Sent to search for someone?”
“No. Sent by whom?”
He did not answer and took off his cap. Her face was a mirror for the beauty of his. Her face reflected no admiration, but an incredulous, reverent awe. All she said was: “Do you always go around with your coat shoulder torn?”
“That’s all I have left. Do you always stare at people as if your eyes would burst?”
“Sometimes.”
“I wouldn’t if I were you. The less you see of them the better off you are. Unless you have strong nerves and a strong stomach.”
“I have.”
“And strong legs?”
His two fingers were held straight while his fingertips threw her skirt up, high above her knees, lightly, contemptuously. Her hands grasped the stone steps. She did not pull her skirt down. She forced herself to sit without movement, without breath, frozen to the steps. He looked at her; his eyes moved up and down, but the corners of his lips moved only downward.
She whispered obediently, without looking at him: “And strong legs.”
“Well, if you have strong legs, then—run.”
“From you?”
“No. From all people. But forget it. Pull your skirt down. Aren’t you cold?”
“No.” But she pulled the skirt down.
“Don’t pay any attention to what I say,” he told her. “Have you anything to drink at your place?”
“Oh, . . . yes.”
“I warn you I’m going to drink like a sponge tonight.”
“Why tonight?”
“That’s my habit.”
“It isn’t.”
“How do you know?”
“I know it isn’t.”
“What else do you know about me?”
“I know that you’re very tired.”
“I am. I’ve walked all night.”
“Why?”
“I thought I told you not to ask any questions.”
He looked at the girl who sat pressed tightly against the wall. He saw only one gray eye, quiet and steady, and above it—one lock of hair; the white wrist of a hand held in a black pocket; the black, ribbed stockings on legs pressed tightly together. In the darkness, he guessed the patch of a long, narrow mouth, the dark huddle of a slender body trembling a little. His fingers closed around the black stocking. She did not move. He leaned closer to the dark mouth and whispered: “Stop staring at me as if I were something unusual. I want to drink. I want a woman like you. I want to go down, as far down as you can drag me.”
She said: “You know, you’ve very much afraid that you can’t be dragged down.”
His hand left her stocking. He looked at her a little closer and asked suddenly: “How long have you been in this business?”
“Oh . . . not very long.”
“I thought so.”
“I’m sorry. I’ve tried my best.”
“Tried what?”
“Tried to act experienced.”
“You little fool. Why should you? I’d rather have you as you are, with these strange eyes that see too much. . . . What led you into . . . this?”
“A man.”
“Was he worth that?”
“Yes.”
“What an appetite!”
“For what?”
“For life.”
“If one loses that appetite, why still sit at the table?”
He laughed. His laughter rolled into the empty windows above them, as cold and empty as the windows. “Perhaps to collect under the table a few little crumbs of refuse—like you—that can still be amusing. . . . Take your hat off.”
She took off her tam. Against the gray stone her tangled hair and the light tangled in the leaves, glittered like warm silk. He ran his fingers through her hair and jerked her head back so violently that it hurt her. “Did you love that man?” he asked.
“What man?”
“The one who led you into this?”
“Did I . . .” She was suddenly confused, surprised by an unexpected thought. “No. I didn’t love him.”
“That’s good.”
“Have you . . . ever . . .” She began a question and found that she could not finish it.
“They say I have no feeling for anyone but myself,” he answered, “and not much of that.”
“Who said it?”
“A person that didn’t like me. I know many people that don’t like me.”
“That’s good.”
“But I’ve never known one who said it was good.”
“Yes, you’ve known one.”
“And can you tell me who that is?”
“Yourself.”
He bent toward her again, his eyes searching the darkness, then moved away and shrugged: “You’re wrong. I’m nothing like what I think you think I am. I’ve always wanted to be a Soviet clerk who sells soap and smiles at the customers.”

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