'I suppose I might.'
She pulled out a tracksuit and handed it to me.
'Get changed, and I'll go make some more tea.'
She went out and I hurriedly pulled off the jeans. I started unbuttoning the blouse, fumbling with the funny little buttons that were too tight, and then glared balefully at myself in the mirror.
A good-looking girl, that was for sure. I put the new clothes on in a hurry and sat down on the sofa. There was a soap on TV– I was surprised Svetlana had chosen that channel. But then, the others were probably showing much the same stuff.
'You look great,' Svetlana said on her return.
'Don't, Sveta, please,' I begged her. 'I feel sick enough already.'
'Okay, I'm sorry,' she said lightly, sitting down beside me. 'So what have we got to do?'
'We?' I asked with gentle emphasis.
'Yes, Anton. You didn't come here by chance.'
'I had to tell you about the mess I'm in.'
'Okay. But if the boss' – Svetlana managed to pronounce the word 'boss' with respect and irony at the same time – 'has allowed you to confide in me, that means I have to help you. It must be the will of destiny.' She couldn't resist that.
I gave in.
'I mustn't be left alone. Not for a moment. The basis of the whole plan is that the Dark Ones are deliberately sacrificing their own pawns – either killing them or allowing them to die.'
'Like the other time?'
'Yes. Precisely. And if this provocation is directed at me, there's going to be another killing any time now. At some moment when they think I don't have an alibi.'
Svetlana looked at me with her chin propped on her hands and slowly shook her head.
'And then you'll jump out of this body like a jack out of his box. And it'll be clear that you couldn't have carried out these serial killings. The enemy is confounded.'
'Uhuh.'
'I'm sorry, I haven't been in the Watch for long, maybe there's something I don't understand.'
That put me on my guard. Svetlana hesitated for a second and then went on:
'When all those things happened to me, what was going on? The Dark Ones were hoping to initiate me. They knew the Night Watch would notice, they even figured out that you could possibly get involved and help.'
'Yes.'
'That was why they played out that complex plan, sacrificing a few pieces and building up false positions of strength. And to begin with, the Night Watch was taken in. If the boss hadn't launched his counter-plan, if you hadn't gone charging straight in, taking no notice of anything . . .'
'You'd be my enemy now,' I said. 'You'd be studying with the Day Watch.'
'That's not what I meant, Anton. I'm grateful to you, and to everyone in the Night Watch, but above all to you. But that's not what I'm talking about right now. Surely you understand that what you've just told me sounds about as probable as that story did? Everything fitted together so neatly, didn't it? A pair of vampires poaching. A boy with exceptional powers. A girl under a powerful curse. A massive threat to the entire city.'
I didn't know what to say. I looked at her and felt my cheeks beginning to burn. A girl who wasn't a third of the way through the introductory course, a total novice in our line of work, was laying out the situation for me the way I ought to have laid it out for myself.
'What's happening right now?' Svetlana continued, not noticing the torment I was in. 'There's a serial killer destroying Dark Ones. You're on the list of suspects. The boss immediately makes a cunning move: you and Olga swap bodies. But just how cunning is this move, really? As far as I understand it, the practice of body-swapping is quite common. Boris Ignatievich himself used it only recently, didn't he? Has he ever used the same move twice in a row? Against the same enemy?'
'I don't know, Svetlana, they don't tell me all the details of the operations.'
'Then think for yourself. And another thing. Is Zabulon really so petty, so hysterically vengeful? He's hundreds of years old, isn't he? He's been in charge of the Day Watch for a very, very long time. If this maniac—'
'Maverick.'
'If they really have let this Maverick run loose on the streets of Moscow while they get ready to make their move, then would the head of the Day Watch really waste him on something that trivial? I'm sorry, Anton, but you're really not such an important target.'
'I understand. Officially I'm a fifth-grade magician, but the boss said I could aim for third-grade.'
'Even taking that into account.'
We looked into each other's eyes and I shrugged:
'I give up, Svetlana, you must be right. But I've told you all I know. And I can't see any other possible interpretation.'
'So you're just going to follow instructions? Walk around in a skirt, never let yourself be alone for a single moment?'
'When I joined the Watch, I knew I was giving up part of my freedom.'
'Part of it!' Svetlana snorted. 'Is that what you call it? Okay, you know best. So we're spending the night together, then?'
I nodded:
'Yes . . . But not here. It's best if I stay with people all the time.'
'What about sleeping?'
'It's not that hard to go without sleep for a few nights,' I said with a shrug. 'I expect Olga's body is trained at least as well as mine. This last few months her life's been one never-ending high-society whirl.'
'Anton, I haven't learned these tricks yet. When do I sleep?'
'During the day. In class.'