'The letters have been cut out of three newspapers,' said Gesar. 'Pravda, Kommersant and Arguments and Facts.'
'Ingenious,' I remarked. 'Can I open it?'
'Yes, do. The forensic experts have already done everything they can with the envelope – there aren't any fingerprints. The glue was made in China and it's on sale in every newspaper kiosk.'
'And it's written on toilet paper!' I exclaimed in delight as I took the letter out of the envelope. 'Is it clean at least?'
'Unfortunately,' said Gesar. 'Not the slightest trace of organic matter. Standard cheap pulp. "Fifty-four metres", they call it.'
The sheet of toilet paper had been carelessly torn off along the perforation and the text was glued onto it in different-sized letters. Or rather, in entire words, with a few endings added separately, and with no regard for the typeface:
'The NIGHT WATCH should BE INTERESTED to know that a CERTAIN Other has REVEALed to a CERTAIN human being the entire truth about oTHErs and now inTENDs to turn this human beING into an OTHER. A wellWISHer.'
I would have laughed, but somehow I didn't feel like it. Instead, I remarked perspicaciously:
'"Night Watch" is written in complete words . . .'
'There was an article in Arguments and Facts,' Gesar explained. 'About a fire at the TV Tower. It was called "NIGHT WATCH ON THE OSTANKINO TOWER".'
'Clever,' I agreed. The mention of the tower gave me a slight twinge. That hadn't exactly been the best time of my life . . . I would be haunted forever by the face of the Dark Other I threw off the TV Tower in the Twilight . . .*
* See The Night Watch, Story Two
'Don't get moody, Anton, You didn't do anything wrong,' said Gesar. 'Let's get down to business.'
'Let's do that, Boris Ignatievich,' I said, calling the boss by his old 'civilian' name.
'Is this for real then?'
Gesar shrugged.
'There's not even a whiff of magic from the letter. It was either composed by a human being, or by a competent Other who can cover his tracks. If it's a human being, then there has to be a leak somewhere. If it's an Other, then it's a totally irresponsible act of provocation.'
'No traces at all?' I asked again to make sure.
'None. The only clue is the postmark.' Gesar frowned. 'But that looks very much like a red herring.'
'Was the letter sent from the Kremlin then?' I quipped.
'Almost. The postbox the letter was left in is located on the grounds of the Assol complex.'
Great tall buildings with red roofs – the kind that Comrade Stalin would have approved of. I'd seen them. But only from a distance.
'You can't just go walking in there!'
'No, you can't,' Gesar said with a nod. 'So, in sending the letter from the Assol residences after all this subterfuge with the paper, the glue and the letters, our unknown correspondent either committed a crude error . . .'
I shook my head.
'Or he's leading us onto a false trail . . .' At this point Gesar paused, observing my reaction closely.
I thought for a moment. And then shook my head again:
'That's very naïve. No.'
'Or the "wellwisher",' Gesar pronounced the final word with frank sarcasm, 'really does want to give us a clue.'
'What for?' I asked.
'He sent the letter for some reason,' Gesar reminded me. 'As you well understand, Anton, we have to react to this letter somehow. Let's assume the worst – there's a traitor among the Others who can reveal the secret of our existence to the human race.'
'But who's going to believe him?'
'They won't believe a human being. But they will believe an Other who can demonstrate his abilities.'
Gesar was right, of course. But I couldn't make sense of why anyone would do such a thing. Even the most stupid and malicious Dark One had to understand what would happen after the truth was revealed.
A new witch hunt.
And people would gladly cast both the Dark Ones and the Light Ones in the role of witches. Everyone who possessed the abilities of an Other . . .
Including Sveta. Including little Nadya.
'How is it possible "to turn this human being into an Other"?' I asked. 'Vampirism?'
'Vampires, werewolves . . .' Gesar shrugged. 'That's it, I suppose. Initiation is possible at the very crudest, most primitive levels of Dark power, but it would have to be paid for by sacrificing the human essence. It's impossible to make a human being into a magician by initiation.'