Read A Victim of the Aurora Online
Authors: Thomas Keneally
Sir Eugene said, âNo one move!'
John Troy joined us in the doorway. His eyes, taking in the crisis, were bright beads of canniness in a face that was older than its 33 years, hooked, crooked, knowing. He reminded me of Druids and those Cornish fishermen who have secret ways of spotting a shoal of halibut.
He murmured in Sir Eugene's ear about breaking out a carbine. Sir Eugene thanked him but declined, asking instead for Warren Mead, who knew some Russian.
Mead was fetched from the stables. He had not heard his handler going berserk in the sailors' quarters. The wind noise, the hiss of the blubber stove, the snuffling of ponies had filled his hearing, and the slight swelling on Tulip's underjaw provided him with his sole horizon.
Before Warren arrived, Stewart and Mulroy began their advance on Alexandrei.
I stayed by the door jamb, half protected by it. I wanted to call out about the folly of walking up to Alexandrei, of not shooting him first. I've found out since that only the very brave are able to estimate the quotient of danger in a situation. Like most men, I've spent my life over-estimating perils.
But because Sir Eugene and Mulroy made their slow way to Alexandrei â Sir Eugene murmuring the man's name over and over, soothingly â I felt bound to expose half my body to the harpoon; and I cursed not Alexandrei but the knight and the petty officer. I watched the three terrible barbs at the point of the harpoon. I knew it had been deep in the bodies of seals and sea-leopards whose blood had dried on it. These weapons were cleaned but never sterilized. The wound would be terrible for that reason, as well as for the barbs.
As the Leader and Mulroy approached him round the end of the mess table, Alexandrei let out an even shriller threnody and threw the harpoon with expert force but at no particular target. It would in fact have entered some part of Percy Mulroy's upper body. It seems there are tennis players who can actually
see
a tennis ball, its defined edges, at ninety miles an hour. Likewise baseball batters and batsmen in cricket, a Britannic sport in which some modern Australian bowlers can project a ball at speeds close to a hundred miles an hour. Mulroy must have been one of these high-speed sighters, because he lifted a chair, holding it legs first towards Alexandrei, and fielded the harpoon with it. The barbed point punched into the underside of the seat and impaled it as far as the wooden haft.
His missile released, the Siberian knelt, folding himself up smaller than seemed naturally possible. Then he fell on his side, moaning. He had become too pitiable for anyone to want to punish him. Alec Dryden felt his pulse.
âIs it rabies?' Stewart asked, thinking of the horses and the dogs.
âNone of the dogs has rabies,' Alec said. âWe took swabs from each of them.'
When Alexandrei had been sedated, three sailors lifted him on to his bunk. I remember how they always lifted the weak or injured with a certain tenderness. But that day they had had too many shocks and toted Alexandrei unlovingly.
Nikolai, the dog-handler, still sat at the table. In his quiet and absolute grief he didn't even seem to notice what had happened to his friend. Mead had now arrived and sat beside him, murmuring to him in Russian. It seemed that every member of the expedition was around the doorway or milling in the sailors' sleeping area, watching the dialogue. At last Mead seemed satisfied and patted Nikolai's shoulder. Then he came to Stewart.
âThey are afraid of the darkness,' he told Stewart. âThat's basically what it is.'
Stewart said, âI think you should explain that to the men. They must be angry.'
Mead coughed and instantly obeyed. âNikolai and Alexandrei were afraid the night would never end. It's as simple as that. I beg for your tolerance and I promise you nothing like this will happen again.' He hesitated, half-turned back to Stewart, but then began speaking again. âI think we might all be more understanding of the two of them. We lump them together as
The Russians
. In fact Alexandrei is a Chukchee from the far north-east corner of Siberia. He grew up in a sod shanty roofed with walrus hide. He didn't hear Russian spoken until he was thirteen. Nikolai is the son of a Russian father and an Evenki mother from near Magadan, far to the south. They both have separate languuages â Russian is their second language. They have different songs and dances and customs. They are friends only because no one else is their friend.'
Mulroy, who had fielded the harpoon, was going red in the face beside the impaled chair.
âPermission to speak, sir,' he said. âThe men in here have been very kind to the two Russ â Asiatic persons. Language is a problem, sir.'
The way he said it, respectfully aggrieved, you could read a submerged question: if you like them so bloody much why don't you take them in next door?
Mead stared him in the eyes, aloof, un-chagrined.
âI am sure both men have received consideration from you, Petty Officer Mulroy. But we can all get on better with people if we are aware of their backgrounds.'
The emergency had ended. We sauntered to our places in the hut. It seemed the air of our habitation had changed. Until today, the hut had represented an agreeable life. The one quarter-acre where your breath, your sentience, the integrity of your skin, were all guaranteed. Now we all wondered, would I be safer outside?
Ten minutes later, as I stood bemused by the mess table, Alec Dryden asked me back into the Leader's alcove. Here I found both Sir Eugene and Warren Mead seated, and Warren began speaking even before the curtain was pulled.
âYou have to remember,' he began shyly, âthese two Siberians are primitives. Until Christianity reached that corner of Siberia, its peoples were sun-worshippers. Naturally enough. Like most primitives they used to believe that every season was a miracle, that you couldn't depend on the sun returning in strength in the spring unless you performed certain ceremonies.' He then seemed to be afraid we might feel superior to Nikolai and Alexandrei. âIt used to be exactly the same with peasants in Western Europe. In fact some of our popular festivals today have their origins in that kind of belief.'
âWe understand,' Sir Eugene assured him.
âNow even after Christianity arrived, the priests had to perform certain rites to guarantee the return of the sun. That's a common experience Nikolai and Alexandrei have shared all their life. A priest comes into the village at the beginning of winter. He wears a silken cope and carries a golden disc. It's just what the sun-priests used to do, centuries ago, except that the golden disc now has Christian symbols engraved on it. The priest blesses the people with the disc, then he conceals it in the folds of his cope and takes it away to the church. The idea is that the strong summer sun is in God's keeping and God will send it back at the proper time.'
âFascinating,' said Sir Eugene, his avid face characteristically tilted.
âIt's a very important ceremony up where Alexandrei comes from. The polar night is deep, though not quite as deep as this. Just the same, the Chukchee know they will die if the sun doesn't return to them.' Now Mead winced as if he'd come to the most painful part of his story. âVictor Henneker was a correspondent with the Russian High Command during the war between Russia and Japan some years back. The war petered out in the summer of 1905 and Victor must have visited Siberia on his way home and obtained a sun disc there, because I've never seen them on the open curio market in England.'
âVictor owned one of these discs?'
âYou know what Victor was like,' said Warren. âHe was a sort of teasing uncle. He liked to have something to tease everyone with. He would have heard about Nikolai and Alexandrei and thought a sun-disc would divert or tease them. That was his nature.'
My respect for this votary of pack-horses was increasing as I listened.
âNikolai said that about the time the sun was vanishing Victor suddenly produced this disc in front of them. He teased them with it, threatening to drop it down an ice crack. You have to understand, to Nikolai and Alexandrei it was a cosmic threat, even if it might have been no more than a good joke to Victor. Here was the sun in Victor's care and he was threatening to sink it to the bottom of the sound. Anyhow, when Victor went missing, both the Siberians began fearing for the sun. You see, in Siberia priest passes the sun-disc on to priest, but here was this man they considered dubious and he had no one to pass it on to. When he died, the sun was lost for ever. I believe, Tony, that fear of that loss set Nikolai wailing this afternoon. They're good men, both of them. They thought the world had changed beyond repair.'
âJust to torment them,' Sir Eugene murmured. âHe did it just to torment them.'
âNo. It seems a time came ⦠I don't know when the time was ⦠that he wanted certain favours. From Alexandrei.'
Saying this, Warren Mead's face, sooty from blubber smoke, yet managed to take on a supreme pallor. In the alcove there was a silence for ten seconds, and ten seconds is a wide and intimidating time.
âFavours?' Sir Eugene said. But I could see him realize then that it was unfair to make Warren specify further. He filled in the picture himself. âDo you mean homosexual favours?'
âAccording to Nikolai, sir.'
Sir Eugene thought for a while. There was a grunt from him as if he'd been hit in the stomach. Everyone seemed compelled to comfort him.
Mead said, âThis sort of thing can happen anywhere.'
Alec Dryden said, âHenneker wasn't exactly chosen by you, sir. He was thrust on you by the expedition's need.'
The phrases of comfort did not dent Sir Eugene's bewilderment. It took him some seconds more to drag his mental and moral forces together. When he did he said, âDid any of you have any inkling of this matter?'
âNot of Alexandrei's case,' I admitted painfully. âI had heard two rumours of Victor's â tendencies.'
âMy God, what sort of man would do this to a Russian peasant?' He turned to me. âWhy didn't you say something, Tony?'
âOne prefers not to believe rumours of that kind, Sir Eugene,' I answered, an acceptable answer for those days.
âI suppose not. Alec, did you have any intimation?'
âI saw ⦠certain indications. Sir Eugene, I refuse to believe the greatest polar expedition of its day could be destroyed by ⦠by homosexual undermining.'
Such a sentiment would today be considered a line from comedy, from the same sort of comedy that would make a joke of a journey in search of an egg, yet I saw the total belief with which the sentiment was delivered. The consummate British Antarctic expedition could not be harmed by sexual abnormality. God would not permit it. Alec Dryden
knew
God would not permit it.
Mead went back to inspect Tulip's underjaw. If her breathing was congested he would sit up all night with her.
As soon as Mead was gone Sir Eugene asked Alec to search again for the sun-disc, and when Alec bad gone out of the alcove the Leader turned to me and asked me to specify the rumours I had heard concerning Victor.
I gave him the information about Victor and the Mulroys I had got from Barry in his state of sexual grievance. Sir Eugene made notes.
At last Alec returned and put a golden disc on the table. It looked old and was engraved with a Byzantine Christ, a Messiah promising summer from his cross.
âIt's exquisite,' said Sir Eugene. âCome.'
We followed him as he carried the disc through into the men's quarters, more or less concealing it under his sweater. He stopped at the lower bunk where Alexandrei lay, eyes nearly closed. Nikolai leaned over from the upper bunk. We could hear the hiss of breath he let out when Sir Eugene produced the disc. Even the comatose Alexandrei saw it. His eyes grew wide.
âAlexandrei, Nikolai,' said Sir Eugene in the English language they could not understand. âI have the disc. I will keep it safe. The sun will return.'
Alexandrei smiled, turned on his side and went instantly to sleep.
5
I woke at 8 a.m. in a severe stillness I could not at first define. After some seconds of frowning, I understood that the blizzard had passed. I became aware that Quincy was already sitting on his bunk reading and saw Sir Eugene tip-toeing towards him.
âBrian,' I heard Sir Eugene say to Quincy, âI would be obliged if you read the memorial service at eleven.'
âAround the mess table, Sir Eugene?'
âThat would be altogether too homely. In the open, I think.'
As I made my way to the latrines after breakfast I saw Sir Eugene walk up to Mead in the stable. Mead sat dozing â cold pipe in mouth â on a butter box by the stove. It was a strange atmosphere he worked in, the air narcotically heavy from the blubber heat and the floor of the stable solid perma-frost.
âWarren, we're having a memorial service for Victor this morning. I want you to tell the Russians that they are to attend and that their behaviour is to be perfect. When that is over we can all settle again.'
We can all settle again
⦠Shivering in the latrines I considered the mandate Sir Eugene and Alec Dryden had given me. To raise the question of Forbes-Chalmers, since there might have been many reports of sightings suppressed when Sir Eugene, in the autumn, labelled the vision an illusion of light. I was also to listen to and observe the sailors. I didn't know how to deal with this last duty. It wasn't a problem of class. I wasn't a product of the great public school system. One of my uncles had been a petty officer in the Royal Navy and I had no trouble talking to him. But it was the task of speaking to them obliquely, without having them guess the truth.
When I mentioned this to Sir Eugene, he smiled paternally. âDon't approach anyone if you believe
that
might happen. We're in a unique position. It is far less dangerous to let the criminal escape than to admit the existence of the criminal.'