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Authors: Monique Raphel High

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A thin young man had entered behind Diaghilev, and the older man said: “Alexei Mavrin, my secretary; Pierre Riazhin. Are you not that young painter about whom Borya has been telling me? Serov's student?”

“I did not know that Boris Vassilievitch had mentioned me,” Pierre remarked. He appeared humbled.

“Now I know why Boris inveigled us to come tonight! A casual encounter. Truly, Borya must see some good in our meeting, and—we missed the first act. What do you think of what you've seen?”

Pierre sat down beside Diaghilev and began to tell him his impressions. As always, he was most confident where his work was concerned. He no longer felt ill at ease, or in awe of the other. This time his painter's eye put him in charge. When Boris and Svetlov returned, laughing, Pierre was showing his sketches to Diaghilev. Boris looked pleased, but he said very little, merely taking his seat between Pierre and Svetlov. But Pierre was suddenly touched: With what finesse Boris had arranged this encounter, allowing Pierre to meet Serge Pavlovitch as a fellow guest, equal to equal, rather than in Diaghilev's apartment in front of all the other members of the “committee”! He felt embarrassed and cleared his throat. “Boris Vassilievitch,” he murmured, his voice unusually melodic and gentle, “I want to thank you.”

Boris raised his fine golden eyebrows and nodded. He was holding a small box, which he now laid unobtrusively on the floor. But the curtain was rising once more, and silence descended moments before strains of Tchaikovsky's music filled the theatre with sound. The Land of Sweets was displayed, a candy box wherein the Sugar Plum Fairy was queen and mistress.

Natalia came out among the small pupils, the various sweets that peopled this land of fantasy. All at once calmness diffused through her from head to toe. Her nervousness had stilled, after its first quick flare-up behind the scenes, and the lights blinded her view of the spectators. She felt at ease forming the familiar steps. The Nutcracker-turned-Prince arrived with small Clara, and she thought: I know him, he was a senior last year, but I can't recall his name. The Prince did not smile at her; with singular sympathy she could understand why. She did not smile at him, either.

All at once they were performing their
pas de deux,
the short piece that was this ballet's dessert. In the Kussov stall, Pierre Riazhin suddenly came alert. He focused his opera glasses on the small billow of pink tulle swept into the air, horizontal above her partner, who was holding her by the thighs. Her tiny, boneless arms were like wings, her head reared up as though poised for flight. This was a teasing, impish fairy: translucent, ethereal, yet conspiratorial. Pierre began to smile. Next to him Boris had stiffened, and in the absolute stillness even Svetlov and Diaghilev seemed to have stopped breathing. Pierre's heart soared, as it had when he had ridden his beloved stallion bareback in the Caucasus. Through the glasses he could define her face, the face of a figurine, with disproportionately large eyes, chin too small, and the nose perhaps too long. He wanted to cry out, but instead he bit his lip and regarded Boris. His patron had risen in his seat and was now flinging something from the stall, his features concentrated on the stage and the little ballerina.

Natalia saw nothing of her public, for the stage lights separated her from them, but at the back of her mind she was aware that flowers were being cast from the loges to the dancers' feet. She had been told that the dowager empress, Maria Feodorovna, was present, but this fact was meaningless to her moving limbs. She had blended with the air, created a momentum that made her magic. During the playing of Tchaikovsky's favorite instrument, the delicate celesta, Natalia even ceased being aware of her partner: He had become as separate from her as an icicle from red-hot fire—odorless, sexless, ageless, as distant as an angel from the human heart. This feeling of separateness created a disorientation that, added to the lights, made her dance with yet a stronger appeal to the unseen public. She seemed to say: Play with me, believe in me, but don't think that I am made to last!

It was over with the abruptness of an awakening. She curtsied to the bejeweled people in the stalls. Looking up briefly, she was startled to recognize the tall blond stranger whom she had encountered in the corridor of the Mariinsky. More luminous than the others, radiant as a bright bird, he could not be missed. Through a blur, she saw his raised arm; something was floating through the air over the heads of the orchestra players. It landed at her feet. Her Prince had seen it, too, and was now bending with infinite grace to retrieve it. He handed it to her with a courtly, sweeping gesture, and she executed her final
révérence
and disappeared as swiftly as a frightened doe, her face tingling, her limbs trembling. Behind the stage she did not stop, continuing her steps to allow the momentum to decrease naturally. Then it was over, truly over. She could hear the ovations from the theatre but already she had blanked them out.

No one had found her yet behind the scenes, and she crouched down, touching the bouquet of rosebuds that the stranger had hurled to her. They lay nestled among soft leaves. She counted fifteen rosebuds, white, pink, red, and yellow. And then, curled between two sprigs of baby's breath, she saw a stiff card. Surprised and intrigued, she pulled it out, and saw a family crest embossed with a calligraphic name: Count Boris Kussov. Was the name familiar? He had scrawled below it: “May these herald full-blooded roses at the peak of their bloom.” Suddenly she felt the presence of someone behind her and turned abruptly to face Lydia Markovna Brailovskaya.

“All alone, our Sugar Plum?” Lydia asked. “Finished with the
encores?”

“Did you like it?” Natalia broke in hastily. “The way I danced her?”

“Infinitely better than I liked Clara,” Lydia said and laughed. “You were adequate, lovey.”

Natalia said nothing, but the color drained from her face. Lydia's eyes softened. “You were much more than that, and I think you know it. You were the most spirited Sugar Plum I have ever watched.” Then, quickly looking away, she noticed the roses. “What's this?” she cried. “Your first admirer?”

“I'm not sure,” Natalia responded hesitatingly. She handed Lydia the bouquet with its card. The other read it carefully, then raised her eyebrows quizzically and gave the flowers back to the young girl.

“The praises of Boris Vassilievitch are worth a mountain of roses,” she commented wryly. “He is a true balletomane. He follows his favorite dancers to Moscow when they go. They say he organizes claques to applaud his pets, but I don't believe it. He's Svetlov's friend—you know, the ballet critic.”

“Do you know him?” Natalia queried.

“I've met him. He's a magnificent man, yet I've never heard his name linked with a woman's. Perhaps he is discreet. He is much coveted in society. The Kussovs are an old aristocratic family, friends of the court ever since there's been one in Russia. But none of the Kussov men has ever worked to increase the fortune. Oh, there is a great deal of wealth—but I have heard that Count Vassily, Boris's father, is becoming worried. He is marrying off his two younger daughters, and Boris spends more money than any man in Petersburg. Soon, he will have to find a wife.”

“But—why?”

“Ah, you are naïve, love,” Lydia said. “For men such as Boris Vassilievitch Kussov, wives mean handsome dowries to recuperate funds lost by marrying off his younger sister. Although I don't suppose he'll have much trouble finding a lady to his taste—there are so many who would wish to be selected!”

Natalia began to laugh. “Well then, let's wish him luck!” she cried. “And I shall keep his rosebuds, for they have brought me luck, too, haven't they?”

In Boris Kussov's victoria, Pierre Riazhin, his cravat untied, his eyes wild and glowing like a cat's, was laughing. He had never felt such ecstasy in his twenty-two years of life, and the champagne that had flowed at the Aquarium nightclub had only improved his already ebullient mood. He had consumed it like water, and now his head spun round and round. “The Paris exhibition!” he cried over and over, remembering that Diaghilev had been impressed with his sketches and ideas, and had suggested that Pierre come by his apartment to show him some of his more serious work. He might include Pierre's work in the art exhibition which he was planning at the Grand Palais in 1906. Pierre could hardly believe his infinite good fortune.

“Naturally, there are no guarantees,” Boris was saying somewhat cruelly. “Serge's taste—and that of our friends—is very particular.”

Pierre's effervescence seemed to subside. He did not understand why his patron was placing a damper on his enthusiasm—he who had arranged this meeting with such apparent care. But Boris said: “Well? Are you going to accompany me to Prince Lvov's gathering?”

Pierre shook his head. “I don't think so, Boris Vassilievitch. I—have work to do.” He glanced uneasily at his sponsor, whose fine profile seemed tightly drawn at this late hour.

“Work? Now?”

“Yes. I could never settle down if I tried to sleep. Too much excitement.” He felt awkward about admitting what was on his mind. He had seen the loveliest creature in the world, an airborne sprite defying human limitations, and he wanted to rush home and commit her to paper. She was the sweetest, most mischievous fairy, a brilliant dancer. Svetlov had said so, too: “That is the first time I have seen a Sugar Plum with a sense of humor.” And although he had added criticism of her
port de bras,
Pierre had felt that he had done so only to preserve his reputation for tough judgment.

Clearly, Boris had agreed with this approval. Pierre realized that the count had purchased flowers during the intermission, but that he had not thrown them down until the end. He had even written a few words on one of his visiting cards. Well prepared, Boris Vassilievitch: a bouquet in case he should become transported with enthusiasm. Pierre sorely regretted not having possessed his patron's foresight. Thinking about the ballerina, Pierre's former euphoria returned. “I have never seen anyone so wonderful as little Oblonova,” he said. “Don't you think so, too?”

Carefully appraising the young man, Boris replied: “Ballet is still new to you. But yes, I agree. She combines character with fluid grace. That is very rare. However, I shall have to take you to a performance of the greats. Pierre, Kchessinskaya is too staid these days, but you will enjoy our new ballerinas: Pavlova, Karsavina, Kyasht.”

Pierre shook his head in sudden animation. With profound emotion, he countered: “No, Boris Vassilievitch. As works of art, perhaps I shall appreciate these ladies, but for me, no one will ever surpass the charm, the absolute beauty, of Oblonova. I—I could love her.”

“Oh? Tell me, Pierre—what do you really know about love? It seems to me you're being somewhat childish. Talented, yes: Of course, she's that. But—love?” His mouth turned down in a smile of irony, but he could feel his throat constricting. Boris smoothed his mustache in a mechanical gesture and looked out the coach window, past the blur of nighttime mist. “Love ...” he intoned pensively, almost to himself. “Come now, Pierre. One doesn't love a woman from afar.”

With sudden stubbornness the younger man resisted. “Then, I'll arrange to meet her.” He glared at Boris. “Why should you care, Boris Vassilievitch? Clearly you already know all the ballerinas and could make love to any one of them!”

Boris's stomach turned. He pressed a hand to it, containing the crippling pain. Turning from the window, he stared directly at the young painter, his eyes intense points of metal, sharp and cruel. “Don't be an ass, Pierre,” he said. “Let's drop this discussion, shall we?”

But the other refused to let go. Something in Boris's tone, a verbal dismissal, had hurt his pride, and now he cried: “I see it now! You're incapable of love, and so you envy me! You could not understand my feeling for Oblonova. In my place you would simply want her for a toy, to be displayed at your convenience. You fancy that artists are your friends, but you can't grasp our fundamental soul, what makes us live and breathe! If you ever felt love, it would not be the love we feel but something else, something tarnished, a need to
use.
Well, Oblonova is not a mechanical doll that can be wound up for your pleasure. She is an artist, and only another artist can really be touched by her performance. If I could meet her, I know that she could love me, too. She would understand what lies in my heart, and she would identify with my conception of the world.”

Boris now turned toward Pierre, and the young man suddenly shivered. The count's face was distorted into a mask of Greek tragedy, tight and ugly. He jabbed the young man in the chest with an extended forefinger that seared like a talon. “You, my friend, are going to pay for this,” he whispered. “And may God damn you straight to hell.”

The coachman was now stopping in front of the shabby building where Pierre rented a small apartment. Before the horses had fully halted, the young artist pulled open the door and jumped out. Boris watched as he ran into the building without looking back. The points of fire in his stomach refused
to
subside.

Chapter 3

P
rincess Marguerite Tumarkina
sat very quietly next to Boris. She was a small, thin girl with a bust too large for her petite build. Her face was plain, with pale ‘blue eyes, a small upturned and rather pleasant nose, and very slight, bloodless lips. Her hair was a dull blond, and too thin, so that the elaborate pompadour that dominated her head was always threatening to come tumbling down. Tendrils curled around her forehead, and she looked uncomfortable with herself, as if her natural state beneath her finery was one of shy simplicity and dull predilections. Or so Boris thought, speaking with her.

“You do not like Italian opera, Marguerite Stepanovna?” he now asked.

“I—I do not know enough about it for discussion,” she replied and bit her lower lip. She was embroidering a cushion in petit point and now averted her eyes to look intently at her work.

“That is fine artistry,” he commented, taking a corner of the material and examining it. “Marguerite Stepanovna, you must see the jewel that is our Mikhailovsky Theatre—all orange velvet and silver. I shall take you there to hear
La Traviata.
Our singers are magnificent—Battistini, the baritone, and the Swedish soprano, Arnoldson. You will be enchanted.”

She looked at him then, the color gone from her thin little face. I'll be damned, he thought. She resembles a scared rabbit cornered by a hunting dog! He enjoyed his own analogy. But

she smiled, and tiny green and gold flecks shone in her eyes, and a spot of pink jumped into her skin where it was tightly drawn over her cheekbones.

“If you would like to go, of course I shall be glad to accompany you, Boris Vassilievitch. You—are so attentive. But you do not have to feel obligated to take me. The Brianskys have been most kind to me, and I am not bored. You—mustn't worry.”

Good God, he thought; but he inclined his head and smiled. “It is my pleasure,” he murmured. “I never forgot our encounter in Kiev years ago.” Indeed no, he added wryly to himself.

She blushed to the very roots of her hair, and did not answer. Presently he took out his gold watch and exclaimed: “Dear Marguerite Stepanovna, you must forgive me! I am late for a meeting.”

“But of course. An artistic meeting, Boris Vassilievitch?”

He appeared surprised. “Why, yes. Had I mentioned it?”

She shook her head, which was top heavy and garnished with a thick comb of mother-of-pearl. “Count Briansky told me that you are a great patron of the arts. He says that you have helped painters, and that you love the Imperial Ballet. I have done some water colors, and play the piano, of course—but I do not know any artists.” She looked wistfully at him, and he thought, Now she will want to play me a sonata, to please my artistic tastes…. Damn Briansky!

“I truly must leave you,” he stated, and bowed over her frail hand. His senses were rebelling against his rational mind, which argued that she was not, after all, such a bad sort. But reason could do little to dispel the revulsion he was feeling toward Marguerite.

She was drab, timid, not as cultured as a girl of her station should have been—but perhaps that was due more to a deficiency in taste and intellect rather than education. Other men had wives such as this one stashed away in elegant palaces on the Quays—and surely this little rodent of a girl would hardly be bold enough to impose her own predilections upon the furnishings, or bemoan his absences. Still, his entire being shied away from Marguerite Stepanovna, and it was with physical

relief that he stepped outside the Briansky mansion and into his waiting victoria. He began to hum an aria from
La Traviata,
then stopped suddenly. He had committed himself to escorting her to hear the opera, and he would choke rather than bring the agony closer by association.

He was going to meet Walter Nouvel and the painter Leon Bakst, friends who had been associated with the Diaghilev projects for many years. Boris had known Nouvel during their adolescence at the May Gymnasium, although the other man was five years his senior. Bakst had joined the group later. He was a red-haired, elegantly attired Jew who had been born “Rosenberg” and had adopted the name of his maternal grandfather; Bakst was nearsighted, and his small mustache matched the high color of his hair. His background was very different from that of any other member of the group. He did not possess a university degree, but not because, like Diaghilev, he had abandoned his studies; indeed, he had never begun them. As a Jew, he had not known the easy, aristocratic life of his companions during early youth; his social class was rooted in commerce. Young Pierre Riazhin had most attached himself to Bakst; not only did he admire the vivid tone of his work, but having begun as an outsider, too, Pierre felt drawn to him.

They were to have met at Boris's apartment, and now, because of Marguerite, he was late. Ivan had settled his friends in the sitting room, with a plentiful supply of tea and cakes. He joined them. Bakst had brought some samples of the gold brocades with which he planned to hang the icons in the Salon d'Automne of the Grand Palais during the exhibition of two hundred years of Russian painting, concerning which project Diaghilev was in Paris making further arrangements. “And is Pierre going to contribute anything?” Boris asked nonchalantly.

“Several pieces,” Bakst replied. “One is most interesting—of a ballerina. Have you seen it? Nothing so dark as Degas's works. This one is full of joy, incandescent. I have never heard of this girl, but after seeing Pierre's rendition, I am much intrigued.”

Boris regarded his friend with a level gaze. “I dare say,” he commented dryly. He was somewhat shocked: Pierre had never shown him the canvas in question. Yet Pierre always came to him first. If this was to hang at the Paris exhibition, then surely

the boy must have known that Boris would see it then. Why then, and not now?

Walter Nouvel, who was most knowledgeable in music and had straight, intelligent features, now said: “Boris, there is a slight problem. Serge's calculations fell somewhat short, and the patrons—Grand-Duke Vladimir and the others—have already clinched their various contributions. We shall need a loan.”

“Oh? A Kussov loan, I presume?”

Nouvel smiled. “We have all given what we could. You have more at your disposal than the rest of us.”

Boris frowned. “But at this moment, I have less than usual. Damn it, Walter, you know it isn't a loan that's needed, but a donation. Do you remember my sister Nina's wedding the Christmas of ‘04? Even the Tsar's own marriage was no more extravagant. In any case, my own yearly income will be reduced because of it. I don't begrudge my sister anything, of course, but Father would not understand the importance of our needs here.”

M
arguerite wore
a cloak of pale blue velvet lined with white ermine, its hood covering her small head beneath its pompadour. It was really too cold for a walk, but Boris seemed to need the brisk exercise, and she had not wished to refuse his request. He appeared disturbed, and she, who absorbed others' moods like a sponge, was growing nervous. The Summer Garden stretched before them; they were like moving figures in a still life, and she thought that the large statues seemed grotesque replicas of a time when the sun had shone and blood had coursed through human veins. Now, only she and Boris traversed this lovely French-styled park, only he and she existed in this frozen landscape. In Kiev there were the sugar plantations, enormous stretches of flat ground. But she had pictured more movement in the capital, and the emptiness gave her a headache.

What was it that Boris wanted? She sneezed and tried to keep pace with his long strides. She was certain that her father was concerned for her, and that he had forced her to come here for a reason. She had never before wanted to leave the safety of her home—not since that awful year when everything had turned into a dark hole and she had stopped sleeping. Even now the memory of Baron Revin made her eyes burn. He had not loved her—had not found her worthy. Or had someone told him stories of her frail constitution, of her fainting spells? Because she was genuinely sickly, nobody knew how frequently she had enlarged on this weakness and literally made herself black out or attain heights of hysteria when she rolled on the floor—to frighten her parents or her nurse into granting her fulfillment of a wish. She had wanted Revin, had wanted somehow to bind him to her, and in the effort Marguerite had become very ill. But Revin had returned to Moscow without proposing marriage. She had set her mind to win him and had failed. Even her considerable dowry had failed. After that her parents had sent her to the rest home in Switzerland. And since then she had been afraid to appear much in public. She knew that some of her former friends in Kiev said that she was crazy, that there was a streak of insanity in her that could resurface at the least provocation. But the Brianskys were most kind to her, and as for Boris—who could have hoped for a more enviable escort?

Suddenly she did not want to hear what Boris had to say. She already knew what it would be: He had not wanted to mislead her, but he did not care for her. Somebody must have told him about the sanitarium. She clasped her hands together until they hurt. She had not allowed herself to want a life, any kind of life outside her calm existence in Kiev—until now. Going out into Petersburg society with this handsome, intelligent man—she did want this, desperately. She remembered wanting a ruby necklace once in Geneva and sitting down in the middle of the street with her arms crossed, while coachmen maneuvered, cursing, around her, until her father had been forced to give in and purchase the gems. She had been barely twelve years old at the time. No, most decidedly, today she did not want to hear Boris's excuses. Marguerite uttered a small cry and started to run, light as a sparrow, across the snow-covered park.

At first Boris watched her erratic advance in bewilderment. Then, with annoyance, he ran after her. His steps were longer, quicker than hers, and soon he had reached her side. “What on earth—?” he began, then stopped, for the small pale face turned to look at him with an intensity of emotion that robbed him of speech. She bit her lip until it was almost bleeding, and he saw that the rims of her pale eyes were red. “What is it, Marguerite Stepanovna?” he asked. Her expression was so strange that he felt ill at ease so close to her.

She took a step toward him and stood right in front of him, her hands touching the lapels of his coat. “Do you love me?” she whispered.

He thought he had surely mistaken the question. “I beg your pardon?”

“I said: ‘Do you love me?' Because you see, it is essential that you love me. I
need
your love! Now you must propose marriage to me.”

Boris felt that he had entered a dream, or rather a nightmare. “Marguerite Stepanovna—” he began, but she interrupted him, putting a finger on his lips.

“Don't speak unless you love me,” she said. Her cheeks were flushed. Boris thought: Perhaps the sickness has resurfaced and she is truly becoming insane. Had his own father done this to him? What was he to do? Such a wave of revulsion swept over him that for an instant Boris thought he would vomit. Then the nausea drained away, and when he regarded Marguerite once more, she too seemed to have calmed down, returned to normal. She had stepped back a decorous distance from him, and her face was pale and reserved, if somewhat embarrassed. She said, tremulously: “It's all right, Boris Vassilievitch. I am sorry.”

But the incident could hardly be erased. He gave her his arm but could not help trembling with ill-concealed repugnance. They resumed their promenade, each silently locked with his own thoughts. She was, in actuality, too afraid to think. But he was pondering the question of the loan, or the donation, to the committee of friends. What would happen if no one came up with these funds? And afterward? There would be further shortages, further demands. He had absolutely no illusions: His friends liked him well enough, but among all these gifted people, his most important contribution was money. And he needed them more than they needed his money. He lived through all of them, and if he were to be excluded from their enclave—It was better not even to formulate the thought.

And Pierre. Pierre was going to exhibit some work in Paris. His future reputation might be made at such a show. Pierre had not shown him the painting of the girl, the dancer, and Boris knew exactly why. Pierre was learning to play the game by Boris's own rules, and this was not good; it was even dangerous.

Children, or those endowed with the naïveté of children, should not be permitted to manipulate events to suit their own fancy, to play at being gods. Pierre had to be allowed to go to Paris—for the sake of all concerned. The Tumarkin dowry would amply cover the expenses of the exhibition, and no Kussov funds would need to be probed: His father would be relieved, Pierre would be grateful, and the Sugar Plum would reenter the realm of a simple artwork. Because it could be no other ballerina but that one, he knew.

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