Sand.
Arkady let it pour from his fist to the valley of her back and when she turned over Arkady let it run off her stomach to the hollow of her hip, scattering over her skin like grains of salt. It got in every crevice, into her hair and into the corners of his mouth.
Wind.
Constant breezes played like spirits on the cabin’s steps. There were dead dunes and live dunes, according to Tatiana.
Time.
A live dune remade itself and changed from day to day. The entire spit moved like the sweep hand on a watch.
“Have you ever looked at sand through a magnifying glass?” Tatiana asked. “It’s many different things. Quartz, seashells, miniature worm tubes, spines.”
The cabin had its small discomforts-the thin mattress and rough wooden floor-but they lent a sharpness to the senses. The heat within her made up for a cold stove. The cabin creaked agreeably like an ancient ship.
A few birders came their way. All in all, however, the beach belonged to Arkady and Tatiana. Their sand castle.
Insomnia arrived in the middle of the night like a tardy guest. Arkady saw a lantern moving through the trees. He chased the light to the road, where it moved too fast to follow. In the morning he found a pair of footprints circling the cabin. The wind had erased them by the time Tatiana woke.
• • •
Arkady watched Tatiana walk down the road trying to get a cell phone signal. It was like ice fishing, he thought, not a sport for the impatient, but a hundred meters away, she waved her arm, and when she returned it was with a flush of excitement.
“I talked to Obolensky. He’s coming to Kaliningrad to do a special edition of the magazine about Russia’s most corrupt city.”
“Well, that’s a kind of honor.” Arkady paused in the task of hammering a plank in the cabin’s porch. “Written by you?”
“The main article, yes.”
“I would think so. It’s not every day his favorite journalist comes back from the dead. When?”
“It’s a rush job. I’ll be gone one day, maybe two. What do you think?”
It was the first anxious note he’d heard in her voice.
“I think you’ve got to do it.”
“I told Obolensky I would.”
“You did the right thing.”
“Can you come with me?”
“I’ll find things to do around the cabin.” Arkady tried to sound like a handyman.
He wondered what they looked like from a distance: a man and woman seesawing over something as innocent as a day apart. In fact, Obolensky had done him a great favor. Ever since Arkady had felt Piggy’s presence, he had wanted to remove her from the scene.
“You don’t mind, then,” she said.
“I’ll stay busy.”
• • •
The spit was famous for birding. It was home to mergansers and swans and was on a flight path for migrant eagles and kites. Cormorants with crooked necks perched on driftwood, gray herons stalked the lagoon and devout birders with cameras sat for hours to capture the image of a sodden duck.
Arkady dressed for the weather in a poncho and rainproof cap. He walked the beach and climbed the dunes, trying to stay a moving target. His only weapon was Tatiana’s Spanish pistol, as useful as a peashooter in the wind.
The problem was the conviviality of birders, who pursued each other to verify whether their sighting was a grebe, an eider or a goose, or to compare life lists of birds they had spotted.
He didn’t know what he hoped to see. He didn’t know how he would identify a murderer. They had met at this same beach but it was at night, Arkady had been staring into the headlights of a van and the driver had never said a word.
As the wind picked up birders trudged home. Arkady found a group sharing a flask of brandy under the eaves of Tatiana’s cabin. Ivan, Nikita, Wanda, Boris, Lena. All of the birders boasted over a thousand species on their life lists, fifty from the spit alone.
“But these conditions are impossible,” said Nikita. “Between the headwind and the sand. .”
Wanda agreed. “It makes your teeth rattle. If you’re not having fun, what’s the point?”
A notebook dropped from Arkady’s hand. As Ivan snatched it up the wind flipped through the pages. “Your list seems to be blank.”
“I’m just getting started. So you’re all friends or colleagues? You came to the spit together?”
“Most of us,” Lena said.
“Misery likes company.” Boris slapped his hands together. They were thick hands, slabs of meat.
“Are you looking for any bird in particular?” Nikita asked Arkady.
“I can’t say.”
Boris said, “I can tell you from experience that sometimes when you concentrate on one bird, you miss a better one. I remember in Mexico, I was looking for a particular bird and I almost missed a quetzal, which you know is a rare bird with spectacular plumage sacred to the Aztecs. The Aztecs, you know? Human sacrifice raised to its greatest heights? They would cut out a heart or skin a man alive. At the same time, they were a civilization of great beauty.”
Arkady thought they were getting a little far afield from birding.
“I’ll know what I’m after when I see it,” Arkady said.
“You must be after a special kind of bird.”
“Or a pig,” Arkady said.
Boris’s eyes went as flat as a dead fish.
For the rest of the day, Arkady watched terns fight the wind, twist and plunge headfirst into the water. That was him, only not into water but cement.
At night, pines swayed and sea grass flattened in the wind. Finally, the storm that had been building in expectation all week arrived and waves seethed up to the cabin stairs, sounding like the columns of a temple falling. At the same time, the lagoon flooded the road behind the cabin. Water plowed through the beach and revealed nuggets of golden amber.
Arkady woke and sat up, and although his teeth chattered from the cold, he staggered to the front door and opened it to find that the wind had, in fact, died down and the waves had retreated to the sea.
He wondered how anyone dared sleep. Tatiana hadn’t returned. Just as well, he thought.
The sea grew still. Clouds parted and revealed a moon balanced on the water. The off-season was soon to be the season; birders would be leaving and tourists would be pouring in.
Arkady boiled some instant coffee and took the key ring and lamp to the shed. What was it that Tatiana’s father wanted? A normal country? This little space with its simple tools must have been a refuge for the man.
The security cables that ran through the bikes were vinyl-coated steel with heavy-duty eyelets connected by padlocks, each cable about five meters long. Not long enough. Arkady sorted out the collapsible chairs in the corner of the shed and disentangled them from two more cables. He rummaged through overstocked shelves and found cables still in their plastic cases. Maybe not as many as he wished, but they would have to do.
Because he would have to get close. His only weapon was Tatiana’s pistol. Anything that Piggy carried would be bigger. It helped that Piggy was a conversationalist; that would draw him in. And he craved recognition, something for his own life list.
When Arkady was ready, he put on his poncho, blew out the lamp, slipped out the back door and circled to a patch of sea grass and waited. In summertime, music would be drifting from cabin to cabin. People would exclaim at shooting stars. Now the world was as black as a tunnel and the only sound was the idle lapping of water.
From a distance, he saw an ember that became a bouncing ball, which turned into a glowing pig dancing on the beach. Headlights off, the van rolled to a stop directly in front of the cabin and Piggy swung out to open the back door of the van. One by one, he tossed out Vova and his sisters like freshly caught fish. They were trussed hands and feet and crying hysterically, appealing to be saved.
There was a touch of the ham actor in Piggy; his hair was long and topped by a bowler and his gestures with a gun were exaggerated as he stood over Vova and shot into the sand. The sound mingled with the waves.
He called out, “Did that get your attention?”
The children were stunned into silence. Arkady cradled the Spanish pistol under his poncho.
“Don’t be shy,” Piggy said. “Come on out or I really will put a bullet in boychik’s brain. That’s better,” he said as Arkady stood.
“Let them go. You want me, not them.”
“Such egotism. How do you know what I want?”
“I don’t. What do you want?”
“Horror.”
Arkady did not have an answer for that but didn’t particularly care. From here on it was logistics. He was about twenty paces from Piggy. He hoped to cut that to five.
“What about the biker? Was he on your list?”
“I would say he was on Alexi’s list.”
“How did you know to target him?”
“I watch people in hotels. Butchers go in and out. No one sees us.”
“That’s clever. Your name’s not Boris, is it? And you’ve never been to Mexico, have you?” Arkady started to approach. “I wouldn’t even say you were a bird person.”
“They’re idiots. Get up at five in the morning to see a fucking sandpiper?”
“People do crazy things.”
“Well, you’re the craziest.”
“Did you know I have a bullet in my brain? Do you know what that does to you? Can you imagine? Like a second hand on a watch, just waiting to make one last tick. One tick and everything goes black. That’s how I live my life. Moment to moment.”
Arkady continued moving forward. It was unnerving; a man about to die should retreat, not approach.
“The strange thing is that having a bullet in the brain makes me feel invulnerable,” Arkady said.
“Stay where you are.” Piggy raised his gun.
Arkady took another quick two paces, even forcing Piggy back a step.
“Try it.”
Piggy fired. The shot knocked Arkady to the ground. It felt like being hit with a spike but he rose and Piggy fired a second time, dropping Arkady again. For a second time, Arkady got to his feet. Hesitation showed in Piggy’s eyes and in that moment, Arkady pulled his poncho aside, revealing an armature of steel cables that were coiled in double layers around his chest. In two places the cables were mangled. In his free hand he held the Spanish pistol and at a distance of four paces he couldn’t miss.