Story Two
NOBODY'S SPACE
Prologue
VACATIONS IN THE COUNTRY OUTSIDE MOSCOW HAVE ALWAYS BEEN THE prerogative of the rich or the poor. It's only the middle class that prefers Turkish hotels on inclusive tariffs offering "as much drink as you can get down," a torrid Spanish siesta, or the neat and tidy sea coast of Croatia. The middle class doesn't like to take its vacations in central Russia.
But then, the middle class in Russia isn't very big.
In any case, the profession of biology teacher, even in a prestigious Moscow grammar school, has nothing whatsoever to do with the middle class. And if the teacher is female, if her swine of a husband left her three years ago for another woman who has absolutely no intention of encroaching on the mother's right to bring up her two children, then Turkish hotels are no more than an idle fantasy.
It was a good thing the children had not yet reached the terrible teenage years and were genuinely delighted by the old dacha, the little stream and the forest that started just at the back of the fence.
What was not so good was the way the elder child, a daughter, took her senior status so seriously. At the age of ten you can be pretty good at keeping an eye on your little five-year-old brother splashing about in the stream, but there's no way you ought to go wandering deep into the forest with him, relying on the knowledge you've gleaned from the Nature Studies textbook.
However, ten-year-old Oksana had no idea that they were lost yet. She walked blithely on along the forest path that she could barely even make out, holding her brother tightly by the hand as she told him a story.
"And then they hammered more pine stakes through him. They hammered one stake into his forehead, and another into his stomach! But he got up out of his coffin and said, 'You can't kill me anyway. I've been dead for a long time already. My name is...'"
Her brother started whining quietly.
"All right, all right, I was joking," Ksyusha said seriously. "He fell down and died. They buried him and went off to celebrate."
"I'm f-f-frightened Ksyusha," Romka confessed. He wasn't stammering because he was afraid, though¡ªhe always stammered. "Don't t-tell me any m-m-more, all right?"
"All right," said Ksyusha, looking around. She could still see the path behind them, but ahead it was completely lost under the fallen pine needles and rotting leaves. The forest had suddenly become gloomy and menacing. Nothing at all like it was near the village where their mother had rented their summer dacha, an old house that no one lived in anymore. They'd better turn back, before it was too late. As a caring older sister, Ksyusha realized that. "Let's go home, or Mom will give us a scolding."
"A doggy," her brother said suddenly. "Look, a doggy!"
Ksyusha turned around.
There really was a dog standing behind her. A large, gray dog with big teeth, looking at her with its mouth open¡ªjust as if it were smiling.
"I want a doggy like that," Romka said without stumbling over the words at all and looked at his sister proudly.
Ksyusha was a city girl and she'd only ever seen wolves in pictures. And in the zoo as well, only they were some rare kind of Sumatran wolves...
But now she suddenly felt afraid.
"Let's go, let's go," she said in a quiet voice, tightening her grip on Romka's hand. "It's someone else's doggy, you can't play with it."
Something in her voice must have frightened her brother, frightened him so badly that instead of complaining, he clutched his sister's hand even tighter and followed her without a murmur.
The gray doggy stood still for moment, and then set off after the children at a slow, deliberate walk.
"It's f-following us," said Romka, looking back. "Ksyukha, is it a w-wolf?"
"It's a doggy," said Ksyusha. "Only don't run, okay? Wolves bite people who run."
The doggy made a sound like a cough¡ªas if it were laughing.
"Run!" shouted Ksyusha. They set off at random, forcing their way through the forest, through the prickly bushes that grasped at them, past an incredibly huge anthill as tall as a grown-up, past a row of moss-covered tree-stumps where someone had once cut down ten trees and dragged them away.
The dog kept disappearing and appearing again. Behind them, on the right, on the left. And every now and then it made a noise like a cough... or a laugh.
"It's laughing," Romka shouted through his tears.
The dog disappeared. Ksyusha stopped beside an immense pine tree, clutching Romka tight against her. Her little brother had rejected any sissy stuff like that a long time ago, but this time he didn't struggle, just pressed his back against his sister, put his hands over his eyes in fear, and repeated quietly over and over again, "I'm n-not afraid, I'm n-not afraid. There's no one there."
"There's no one there," Ksyusha confirmed. "And you stop that whining. The wol... the doggy had puppies here. She was just driving us away from her puppies. All right? We're going home now."
"Let's go!" Romka agreed happily and moved his hands away from his eyes. "Oh, the puppies!"
His fear disappeared instantly the moment he saw the puppies coming out of the bushes. There were three of them¡ªgray with big foreheads and foolish eyes.
"P-puppies..." Romka exclaimed in delight.
Ksyusha jerked to one side in panic. The pine she was standing against wouldn't let her go¡ªher little calico dress was stuck to the resin on its bark. Ksyusha tugged harder and the cloth tore with a crack and came unstuck.
And she saw the wolf. The wolf was standing behind her, smiling.
"We have to climb up the tree..." Ksyusha whispered.
The wolf laughed.
"Does she want us to play with the puppies?" Romka asked hopefully.
The wolf shook its gray head with the dark patches. As if it were answering: No, no. I want the puppies to play with you...
And then Ksyusha started shouting¡ªso loudly and piercingly that even the wolf took a step backward and wrinkled up its gray muzzle.
"Go away, go away!" Ksyusha shouted, forgetting that she was already a big, brave girl.
"Don't shout like that," she heard a voice say behind her. "You've woken up the entire forest..."
The children turned around with renewed hope. Standing beside the pups was a grown-up woman¡ªa beautiful woman with black hair, barefoot, and wearing a long linen dress.
The wolf growled menacingly.
"Don't be silly," said the woman. She leaned down and picked up one of the pups¡ªit dangled limply in her hands, as if it had fallen asleep. The other two froze on the spot, too. "Now who do we have here?"
Paying no more attention to the children, the wolf moved sullenly toward the woman.
Dense wolf's thickets dark with fear, There's no way you can hide in here...the woman chanted. The wolf stopped.