Lisa ignored him and continued, “Novodevichy used to be a retreat for high-born ladies as well as a nunnery. It was also a fort, as you can see, the strongpoint on the southern approaches to Moscow. Odd sort of combination, but common in old Russia. It remained a nunnery until after the Revolution when the communists got rid of the nuns—no one seems to know exactly what became of them—and this place became a branch of the State History Museum. But they never really cared for Novodevichy.”
Hollis could see that the gardens were choked with undergrowth and the trees so badly in need of pruning that the branches touched the ground and blocked the paths.
Lisa said, “But it's still lovely and peaceful here. People come here to meditate. It's sort of the unofficial center of the religious reawakening here in Moscow.”
“And probably crawling with KGB because of it.”
“Yes. But so far they seem content to take names and photographs. No incidents yet.” She squeezed his hand. “Thanks for coming with me. You can visit Gogol's grave while you're here.”
“I might just do that.”
“I thought you might. That's why you're wearing that silly outfit.”
“Yes, it's business.”
“Can I come with you?”
“I'm afraid not.”
The lane took them into a paved square from which rose a beautiful six-tiered bell tower. On the far side of the square was a white and gold multidomed church. Lisa said, “That's the Cathedral of the Virgin of Smolensk.”
“Is she home?”
Lisa announced, “If I ever get married, I think I'd want an Eastern Orthodox wedding.”
Hollis wondered if she'd ever informed Seth Alevy of that.
“Did you get married in church?”
“No, we were married in a jet fighter, traveling at mach two, by an Air Force chaplain on the radio. When he pronounced us husband and wife, I hit the eject and blew us out into space. It was all downhill after that.”
“I see I can't talk to you this morning.”
Hollis regarded the throngs of people. Most of them were old women, a few old men, but there were also a number of young people—teenage boys and girls and university students. Here and there he saw intact Muscovite families.
As they passed the Cathedral of the Virgin of Smolensk, many of the people in the square stopped, bowed, and made the sign of the cross toward the cathedral. A few of the old women prostrated themselves on the wet stone, and people had to step around them. Hollis recalled the first time he'd been inside the Kremlin walls, when an old woman suddenly crossed herself in front of one of the churches, bowed, and repeated the process for several minutes. A militiaman walked over to her and told her to get moving. She paid no attention to him and prostrated herself on the stone. Tourists and Muscovites began watching, and the militiaman looked uncomfortable. Finally the old woman had risen to her feet, crossed herself again, and continued her walk through the Kremlin, oblivious of time and place or soldiers and red stars where crosses had once risen. She'd seen a church—perhaps of her patron saint, if Russians still had such a thing—and she did what she had to do.
Lisa watched the people performing their ritual outside the cathedral that had been closed for worship for seventy years and was now the central museum of the convent complex. She said, “After seventy years of persecution, their priests shot, churches torn down, Bibles burned, they still worship Him. I'm telling you, these people are the hope of Russia. They're going to bring about an upheaval here.”
Hollis looked at what was left of God's people here in unholy Moscow and didn't think so. It would have been nice to think so, but there were neither the numbers nor the strength. “Maybe… someday.”
They crossed the square, and Lisa steered him toward another church, a smaller single-domed building of white stucco. She said, “That's where we're going to mass. The Church of the Assumption.”
“It needs some care.”
“I know. I was told that the churches of Moscow and this place in particular—because it's so close to Lenin Stadium—got some quick cosmetics for the 1980 Olympics. But you can see how rundown everything is.”
Hollis nodded. He surveyed the ancient trees and buildings of the fortress-convent. It was well within the city limits now, not two kilometers from Red Square, but from inside the walls there was no sign of any century but the sixteenth. He could easily imagine a grey, misty October day in the early 1500s, soldiers on the battlements watching the woods and fields, ready to ring the alarm bells of the huge tower, to signal the Kremlin of any approaching danger. And on the paths the nuns would stroll, and the priests would be sequestered in prayer. The world may have been simpler then, but no less terrifying.
Lisa stopped about ten yards from the church. Hollis saw six men outside the doors stopping some of the younger people and the families, asking for identification. The men jotted information from the ID cards into notebooks. Hollis spotted another man, posing as a tourist, taking pictures of the people going inside. One of the six men at the door got involved in an argument with a young woman who apparently refused to show her identification. Hollis said, “I assume those men are not church ushers.”
“No, they're swine.”
Hollis watched a moment. The young woman finally managed to get away from the KGB without showing her identification, but she didn't try to enter the church and hurried away.
The old babushkas moved ponderously past the KGB men, ignoring them and being ignored by them. These black-dressed women, Hollis had learned, were invisible. They were also free, like the animals and proles in George Orwell's nightmare world. Free because no one cared enough about them to enslave them.
Lisa said, They don't usually stop anyone who looks Western.
“Well, I'll look Western. I'll smile.”
“But your shoes squeak.” She took his arm as they approached the doors of the church. The KGB man who had been arguing with the young woman intercepted them and said to Hollis, “Kartocbka!”
Hollis replied in English, “I don't understand a fucking word you're saying, Mac.”
The young man looked him over, waved his arm in dismissal, and began to turn to someone else when he noticed Lisa. He smiled and touched his hat, then said in Russian, “Good morning.”
She replied in Russian, “Good morning to you. Will you join us in celebrating Christ's message to the world?”
“I think not.” He added, “But be sure to tell Christ that Yelena Krukova's son sends his regards.”
“I will. Perhaps you'll tell Him yourself someday.”
“Perhaps I will.”
Lisa led Hollis up the steps of the church. He said, “I take it you come here often.”
“I take turns among the six surviving Orthodox churches in Moscow. That fellow back there must have permanent weekend duty. I've seen him nearly every Sunday I've come here for two years. We have that little ritual. I think he likes me.”
“That's probably why he volunteers for Sunday duty.”
They entered the vestibule of the Church of the Assumption. To the right of the door sat a long refectory table laden with bread, cakes, and eggs. Adorning the whole spread were cut flowers, and stuck into the food were pencil-thin brown candles all alight. Hollis moved through the crowd to examine the display. “What's this?”
Lisa came up beside him and said, “The people bring their food here to be blessed.”
As Hollis watched, more food was laid on the table, more flowers strewn over it, and more candles lit. Off to the side he noticed an old woman standing at a countertop selling the brown candles for three kopeks apiece. Lisa went to her, put a ruble on the table, and asked for two candles, refusing the change. Lisa took Hollis' arm and led him into the nave.
The church was lit only by the weak sunlight coming through the stained-glass windows, but the raised altar was aglow in the fire of a hundred white tapers.
The nave had no pews and was packed wall-to-wall, shoulder-to-shoulder with about a thou
sand people. Hollis became aware of the smell of strong incense, which competed for his olfactory attention with the smell of unwashed bodies. He could see, even in the dark, that whatever exterior cosmetics had been done in 1980 had not been carried through inside. The place was in bad repair, the water-stained stucco crumbling, and the heating had either failed or was nonexistent. Yet there was still a magnificence about the place, he thought. The gold on the altar gleamed, the iconostasis—the tiered altar screen made of individual icons—was mesmerizing, and the ruined architecture was somehow more impressive and appropriate than the fussily kept cathedrals of Western Europe. Lisa took his hand, and they made their way forward, finally meeting a solid block of bodies about midway through the nave.
Long-bearded priests in gilded vestments swung censers and passed a jeweled Bible from one to the other. The litany began, repetitious and melancholy, lasting perhaps a quarter hour.
Immediately after the litany ended, from somewhere behind the iconostasis, a hidden choir began an unharmonized and unaccompanied chant that struck Hollis as more primitive than ecclesiastic but nonetheless powerful. Hollis looked around at the faces of the people, and it struck him that he had never seen such Russian faces in the two years he'd lived in Moscow. These were serene faces, faces with clear eyes and unknit brows, as if, he thought, the others really were soul dead and these were the last living beings in Moscow. He whispered to Lisa, “I am… awed… thank you.”
“I'll save your spy's soul yet.”
Hollis listened to the ancient Russian coming from the altar, and though he had difficulty following it, the rhythm and cadence had a beauty and power of its own, and he felt himself, for the first time in many years, overwhelmed by a religious service. His own Protestantism was a religion of simplicity and individual conscience. This orthodox service was Byzantine Imperial pomp and Eastern mysticism, as far removed from his early memories of white clapboard churches as the Soviet “marriage palaces” were removed from the Church of the Assumption. Yet here, in these magnificent ruins, these medieval-looking priests spoke the same message that the grey-suited ministers had spoken from the wooden pulpits of his youth: God loves you.
Hollis noticed that the worshipers crossed themselves and bowed low from the waist whenever the mood seemed to strike them, with no discernible signal from the altar. From time to time, people would manage to prostrate themselves on the crowded floor and kiss the stone. He saw, too, that the murky icons around the walls were now illuminated by the thin candles that were being stuck into the gilded casings that framed the icons. People were congregating around what he presumed to be the icons of their patron saints, kissing them, then moving back to let someone else through.
For all the ritual on the altar, Hollis thought, the worship in the nave was something of a free-for-all, quite different from the mainstream Protestant churches he'd once attended, where the opposite was sometimes true.
Suddenly the chanting stopped, and the censers ceased swinging. A priest in resplendent robes moved to the edge of the raised altar and spread his arms.
Hollis looked closely at the full-bearded man and saw by his eyes that he was young, no more than thirty perhaps.
The priest began talking without a microphone, and Hollis listened in the now-quiet church where nothing could be heard but the young priest's voice and the crackling of the tallow candles. The priest delivered a brief sermon, speaking of conscience and good deeds. Hollis found it rather unoriginal and uninspiring, though he realized that the congregation did not hear this sort of thing often.
Lisa, as if knowing what was on his mind, whispered, “The KGB are recording every word. There are hidden messages in the sermon, words and concepts that the clergy and congregation understand, but which the KGB cannot begin to comprehend. It's a start anyway, a spark.”
Hollis nodded. It was odd that she used that word: spark—iskra in Russian. It was the word Lenin often used and what he named his first underground newspaper—Iskra. The concept then, as now, was that Russia was a tinderbox, awaiting a spark to set the nation ablaze.
Hollis heard the young priest say, “It is not always convenient to let others know you believe in Christ. But if you live your life according to His teachings, no power on this earth, no matter what they deny you in this life, can deny you the Kingdom of God.”
The priest turned abruptly back to the altar, presumably, Hollis thought, leaving the more educated worshipers to draw their own moral or finish the sermon in their minds.
At a particular point in the mass, toward the end, a large number of people either prostrated themselves completely, or if they couldn't find the room, knelt and bowed their faces to the floor.
Lisa dropped to her knees, but Hollis remained standing. He was able to look across the church now, and he saw standing to his left front, about twenty feet away, a stooped old man with disheveled hair, grey stubble on his face, dressed in a shabby dark coat that almost reached his ankles. At first sight there was nothing remarkable about the old man, and Hollis thought that what had initially caught his eye was the young woman standing beside him. She was about seventeen or eighteen, Hollis reckoned, and she too was dressed in a shabby coat, a shapeless red synthetic. But her manner and her bearing, if not her uncommon beauty, marked her as someone special. More than that, Hollis, who was trained to see such things, picked out the coat as a disguise. She was quite obviously someone who should not be seen in the Church of the Assumption. This discovery led Hollis to look more closely at the old man, who in an unusual gesture for a Russian, especially in church, was holding the girl's hand affectionately.
As Hollis stared at the man, people began to stand, and Hollis' view was becoming blocked, but in a second before he lost sight of the strange couple, he realized that the stooped old grandfather was actually somewhat younger than he appeared. In fact, it was General Valentin Surikov. Suddenly things were becoming more clear.
* * *
27
Sam Hollis and Lisa Rhodes moved with the crush of worshipers through the open doors of the church. The people carried their blessed food in bags, and many of them clutched a handful of the thin brown candles. Hollis looked out over the converging paths. These people, he realized, did not seem to know one another, did not speak, nor did they try to make acquaintances. They had come by metro and bus from all over Moscow to an inconveniently placed church, and now they scattered like lambs who smelled wolves. “Do the K-goons usually hang around?”
“Who? Oh, those men. Sometimes. But I don't see them now.”
Hollis didn't see them either. But he worried more about the KGB when he didn't see them. He moved off the path and watched the people coming down the steps.
“Are you looking for someone?”
“Just people-watching.” Hollis realized that not only were the worshipers scattering, but the priests had not come out to speak with their flock. As he watched for Surikov, he said to Lisa, “No tea and fellowship afterwards?”
Lisa seemed to understand. “The Orthodox Christian comes to God's house to worship Him. The priests don't come to your house to ask how you're getting along.”
“The Kremlin must find that useful.”
“True. In fact, the Russian church has always preached subservience to the state. When the czars were on the throne, it worked for the church and the czars. But when Lenin became the new czar, it backfired.”
“You mean there's something I can't blame on the Reds?”
“The communists didn't help the situation.”
Hollis watched the last of the worshipers leave the church but did not spot Surikov or the girl with him.
He and Lisa walked away from the church and sat on a stone bench occupied by a stout babushka who seemed to be sleeping in a sitting position. Lisa asked, “Did you like the service?”
“Very much. We take so much for granted in the West.”
“I know. Thanks for coming, even if you came because you had to go to the cemetery anyway.”
“I came to be with you.”
She nodded and looked up in the sky. “This is not like autumn at home, and it's not like winter either. It's something else. It's like a time of foreboding, grey and quiet, mist and fog obscuring the world. I can't see a sun or a horizon or even the end of a block. I want to go home now.”
Hollis took her hand. “We'll be in the air this time tomorrow, heading west.”
She moved closer to him. “Do you have to go to the cemetery?”
“Yes.”
“It's not dangerous, is it?”
“No. I just have to meet an old Russian friend to say goodbye.”
“A spy? A dissident?”
“Sort of.”
The old lady stood and moved aimlessly down the path.
Lisa said, “At Gogol's grave. Was that his idea?”
“Yes.” Hollis looked at his watch. The service had lasted about two hours, and it was nearly noon. Now he knew why Surikov had picked this hour and place. “I won't be more than thirty minutes. Where can I meet you?”
“At the bell tower there. See it? Don't get lost.”
Hollis stood. “How do I get into the cemetery?”
“Just keep on this path. You'll see another gate church set in the wall like the one we entered through. Go through the gate, and you'll find yourself in the cemetery.”
“Thanks. Are you going to walk around?”
“Yes. I like to walk here.”
“Don't walk in the cemetery.”
“Okay.”
“Try to walk where there are people.”
“If they come for you, it doesn't matter how many people are around. You know that.”
“Yes, I know that.” He added, “I don't think they know we're here. But be careful.”
“You be careful. They might have followed this friend of yours.” She gave him one of the thin brown candles. “Here. To light the way.”
He kissed her on the cheek. “See you later.” Hollis turned and walked down the path, carrying the candle. Within a few minutes he passed another large church of brick and white stone that looked forlorn among the bramble and bush, unused as either a church or a museum. The path curved around it, and he saw the towering south wall of the convent grounds, then spotted the gate church built into the center of it.