one wheel and a pile of barrels. There was no one in the garden, work had ended at sunset, and now over Judas choirs of nightingales pealed and trilled. Judas's goal was near. He knew that on his right in the darkness he would presently begin to hear the soft whisper of water falling in the grotto. And so it happened, he heard it. It was getting cooler. Then he slowed his pace and called softly: 'Niza!' But instead of Niza, a stocky male figure, detaching itself from a thick olive trunk, leaped out on the road, and something gleamed in its hand and at once went out. With a weak cry, Judas rushed back, but a second man barred his way. The first man, in front of him, asked Judas: 'How much did you just get? Speak, if you want to save your life!' Hope flared up in Judas's heart, and he cried out desperately: Thirty tetradrachmas!' Thirty tetradrachmas! I have it all with me! Here's the money! Take it, but grant me my life!' The man in front instantly snatched the purse from Judas's hands. And at the same instant a knife flew up behind Judas's back and struck the lover under the shoulder-blade. Judas was flung forward and thrust out his hands with clawed fingers into the air. The front man caught Judas on his knife and buried it up to the hilt in Judas's heart. 'Ni ... za ...'Judas said, not in his own high and clear young voice, but in a low and reproachful one, and uttered not another sound. His body struck the earth so hard that it hummed. Then a third figure appeared on the road. This third one wore a cloak with a hood. `Don't linger,' he ordered. The killers quickly wrapped the purse together with a note handed to them by the third man in a piece of hide and criss-crossed it with twine. The second put the bundle into his bosom, and then the two killers plunged off the roadsides and the darkness between the olive trees ate them. The third squatted down by the murdered man and looked at his face. In the darkness it appeared white as chalk to the gazing man and somehow spiritually beautiful. A few seconds later there was not a living man on the road. The lifeless body lay with outstretched arms. The left foot was in a spot of moonlight, so that each strap of the sandal could be seen distinctly. The whole garden of Gethsemane was just then pealing with the song of nightingales. Where the two who had stabbed Judas went, no one knows, but the route of the third man in the hood is known. Leaving the road, he headed into the thick of the olive trees, making his way south. He climbed over the garden fence far from the main gate, in the southern corner, where the upper stones of the masonry had fallen out. Soon he was on the bank of the Kedron. Then he entered the water and for some time made his way in it, until he saw ahead the silhouettes of two horses and a man beside them. The horses were also standing in the stream. The water flowed, washing their hoofs. The horse-handler mounted one of the horses, the man in the hood jumped on to the other, and the two slowly walked in the stream, and one could hear the pebbles crunching under the horses' hoofs. Then the riders left the water, came out on the Yershalaim bank, and rode slowly under the city wall. Here the horse-handler separated himself, galloped ahead, and disappeared from view, while the man in the hood stopped his horse, dismounted on the deserted road, removed his cloak, turned it inside out, took from under the cloak a flat helmet without plumes and put it on. Now it was a man in a military chlamys with a short sword at his hip who jumped on to the horse. He touched the reins and the fiery cavalry horse set off at a trot, jolting its rider. It was not a long way - the rider was approaching the southern gate of Yershalaim. Under the arch of the gateway the restless flame of torches danced and leaped. The soldiers on guard from the second century of the Lightning legion sat on stone benches playing dice. Seeing a military man ride in, the soldiers jumped up, the man waved his hand to them and rode on into the city. The city was flooded with festive lights. The flames of lamps played in all the windows, and from everywhere, merging into one dissonant chorus, came hymns of praise. Occasionally glancing into windows that looked on to the street, the rider could see people at tables set with roast kid and cups of wine amidst dishes of bitter herbs. Whistling some quiet song, the rider made his way at an unhurried trot through the deserted streets of the Lower City, heading for the Antonia Tower, glancing occasionally at the five-branched candlesticks, such as the world had never seen, blazing above the temple, or at the moon that hung still higher than the five-branched candlesticks. The palace of Herod the Great took no part in the solemnities of the Passover night. In the auxiliary quarters of the palace, facing to the south, where the officers of the Roman cohort and the legate of the legion were stationed, lights burned and there was a feeling of some movement and life. But the front part, the formal part, which housed the sole and involuntary occupant of the palace - the procurator - all of it, with its columns and golden statues, was as if blind under the brightest moon. Here, inside the palace, darkness and silence reigned. And the procurator, as he had told Aphranius, would not go inside. He ordered his bed made up on the balcony, there where he had dined and where he had conducted the interrogation in the morning. The procurator lay on the made-up couch, but sleep would not come to him. The bare moon hung high in the clear sky, and the procurator did not take his eyes off it for several hours. Approximately at midnight, sleep finally took pity on the hegemon. With a spasmodic yawn, the procurator unfastened and threw off his cloak, removed the belt girded over his shirt, with a broad steel knife in a sheath, placed it on the chair by his couch, took off his sandals, and stretched out. Banga got on the bed at once and lay down next to him, head to head, and the procurator, placing his hand on the dog's neck, finally closed his eyes. Only then did the dog also fall asleep. The couch was in semi-darkness, shielded from the moon by a column, but a ribbon of moonlight stretched from the porch steps to the bed. And once the procurator lost connection with what surrounded him in reality, he immediately set out on the shining road and went up it straight towards the moon. He even burst out laughing in his sleep from happiness, so wonderful and inimitable did everything come to be on the transparent, pale blue road. He walked in the company of Banga, and beside him walked the wandering philosopher. They were arguing about something very complex and important, and neither of them could refute the other. They did not agree with each other in anything, and that made their argument especially interesting and endless. It went without saying that today's execution proved to be a sheer misunderstanding: here this philosopher, who had thought up such an incredibly absurd thing as that all men are good, was walking beside him, therefore he was alive. And, of course, it would be terrible even to think that one could execute such a man. There had been no execution! No execution! That was the loveliness of this journey up the stairway of the moon. There was as much free time as they needed, and the storm would come only towards evening, and cowardice was undoubtedly one of the most terrible vices. Thus spoke Yeshua Ha-Nozri. No, philosopher, I disagree with you: it is the most terrible vice! He, for example, the present procurator of Judea and former tribune of a legion, had been no coward that time, in the Valley of the Virgins, when the fierce German had almost torn Rat-slayer the Giant to pieces. But, good heavens, philosopher! How can you, with your intelligence, allow yourself to think that, for the sake of a man who has committed a crime against Caesar, the procurator of Judea would ruin his career? 'Yes, yes...' Pilate moaned and sobbed in his sleep. Of course he would. In the morning he still would not, but now, at night, after weighing everything, he would agree to ruin it. He would do everything to save the decidedly innocent, mad dreamer and healer from execution! `Now we shall always be together,'[2] said the ragged wandering philosopher in his dream, who for some unknown reason had crossed paths with the equestrian of the golden spear. `Where there's one of us, straight away there will be the other! Whenever I am remembered, you will at once be remembered, too! I, the foundling, the son of unknown parents, and you, the son of an astrologer-king and a miller's daughter, the beautiful Pila.'[3] 'Yes, and don't you forget to remember me, the astrologer's son,' Pilate asked in his dream. And securing in his dream a nod from the En-Sarid [4] beggar who was walking beside him, the cruel procurator of Judea wept and laughed from joy in his dream. This was all very good, but the more terrible was the hegemon's awakening. Banga growled at the moon, and the pale-blue road, slippery as though smoothed with oil, fell away before the procurator. He opened his eyes, and the first thing he remembered was that the execution had been. The first thing the procurator did was to clutch Banga's collar with a habitual gesture, then with sick eyes he began searching for the moon and saw that it had moved slightly to the side and turned silvery. Its light was being interfered with by an unpleasant, restless light playing on the balcony right before his eyes. A torch blazed and smoked in the hand of the centurion Ratslayer. The holder of it glanced sidelong with fear and spite at the dangerous beast preparing itself to leap. 'Stay, Banga,' the procurator said in a sick voice and coughed. Shielding himself from the flame with his hand, he went on: 'Even at night, even by moonlight, I have no peace! ... Oh, gods! ... Yours is also a bad job, Mark. You cripple soldiers...' Mark gazed at the procurator in great amazement, and the man recollected himself. To smooth over the unwarranted words, spoken while not quite awake, the procurator said: `Don't be offended, centurion. My position, I repeat, is still worse. What do you want?' The head of the secret guard is waiting to see you,' Mark reported calmly. 'Call him, call him,' the procurator ordered, clearing his throat with a cough, and he began feeling for his sandals with his bare feet. The flame played on the columns, the centurion's caligae tramped across the mosaics. The centurion went out to the garden. 'Even by moonlight I have no peace,' the procurator said to himself, grinding his teeth. Instead of the centurion, a man in a hood appeared on the balcony. 'Stay, Banga,' the procurator said quietly and pressed the back of the dog's head. Before beginning to speak, Aphranius, as was his custom, looked around and stepped into the shadow, and having made sure that, besides Banga, there were no extra persons on the balcony, he said quietly: `I ask to be tried, Procurator. You turned out to be right. I was unable to protect Judas of Kiriath, he has been stabbed to death. I ask to be tried and retired.' It seemed to Aphranius that four eyes were looking at him - a dog's and a wolf's. Aphranius took from under his chlamys a purse stiff with blood, sealed with two seals. 'This is the bag of money the killers left at the high priest's house. The blood on this bag is the blood of Judas of Kiriath.' 'How much is there, I wonder?' asked Pilate, bending over the bag. 'Thirty tetradrachmas.' The procurator grinned and said: 'Not much.' Aphranius was silent. 'Where is the murdered man?' That I do not know,' the visitor, who never parted with his hood, said with calm dignity. 'We will begin a search in the morning.' The procurator started, abandoning a sandal strap that refused to be fastened. 'But you do know for certain that he was killed?' To this the procurator received a dry response: 'I have been working in Judea for fifteen years, Procurator. I began my service under Valerius Grams. [5] I do not have to see the corpse in order to say that a man has been killed, and so I report to you that the one who was called Judas of Kiriath was stabbed to death several hours ago.' 'Forgive me, Aphranius,' answered Pilate, 'I'm not properly awake yet, that's why I said it. I sleep badly,' the procurator grinned, 'I keep seeing a moonbeam in my sleep. Quite funny, imagine, it's as if I'm walking along this moonbeam ... And so, I would like to know your thoughts on this matter. Where are you going to look for him? Sit down, head of the secret service.' Aphranius bowed, moved the chair closer to the bed, and sat down, clanking his sword. 'I am going to look for him not far from the oil press in the garden of Gethsemane.' 'So, so. And why there, precisely?' 'As I figure it, Hegemon, Judas was not killed in Yershalaim itself, nor anywhere very far from it, he was killed near Yershalaim.' `I regard you as one of the outstanding experts in your business. I don't know how things are in Rome, but in the colonies you have no equal ... But, explain to me, why are you going to look for him precisely there?' 'I will by no means admit the notion,' Aphranius spoke in a low voice, `of Judas letting himself be caught by any suspicious people within city limits. It's impossible to put a knife into a man secretly in the street. That means he was lured to a basement somewhere. But the service has already searched for him in the Lower City and undoubtedly would have found him. He is not in the city, I can guarantee that. If he was killed far from the city, this packet of money could not have been dropped off so quickly. He was killed near the city. They managed to lure him out of the city.' 'I cannot conceive how that could have been done!' 'Yes, Procurator, that is the most difficult question in the whole affair, and I don't even know if I will succeed in resolving it.' 'It is indeed mysterious! A believer, on the eve of the feast, goes out of the city for some unknown reason, leaving the Passover meal, and perishes there. Who could have lured him, and how? Could it have been done by a woman?' the procurator asked on a sudden inspiration. Aphranius replied calmly and weightily: 'By no means, Procurator. That possibility is utterly excluded. One must reason logically. Who was interested in Judas's death? Some wandering dreamers, some circle in which, first of all, there weren't any women. To marry, Procurator, one needs money. To bring a person into the world, one needs the same. But to put a knife into a man with the help of a woman, one needs very big money, and no vagabond has got it. There was no woman in this affair, Procurator. Moreover, I will say that such an interpretation of the murder can only throw us off the track, hinder the investigation, and confuse me.' 'I see that you are perfectly right, Aphranius,' said Pilate, 'and I merely allowed myself to express a supposition.' 'Alas, it is erroneous, Procurator.' `But what is it, then, what is it?' exclaimed the procurator, peering into Aphranius's face with greedy curiosity. 'I suppose it's money again.' 'An excellent thought! But who could have offered him money at night, outside the city, and for what?' 'Oh, no, Procurator, it's not that. I have only one supposition, and if it is wrong, I may not find any other explanations.' Aphranius leaned closer to the procurator and finished in a whisper: 'Judas wanted to hide his money in a secluded place known only to himself.' 'A very subtle explanation. That, apparently, is how things were. Now I understand you: he was lured out not by others, but by his own purpose. Yes, yes, that's so.' 'So. Judas was mistrustful, he was hiding the money from others.' 'Yes, in Gethsemane, you said... And why you intend to look for him precisely there - that, I confess, I do not understand.' 'Oh, Procurator, that is the simplest thing of all. No one would hide money on the roads, in open and empty places. Judas was neither on the road to Hebron, nor on the road to Bethany. He had to be in a protected, secluded place with trees. It's as simple as that. And except for Gethsemane, there are no such places near Yershalaim. He couldn't have gone far.' 'You have utterly convinced me. And so, what are we to do now?' 'I will immediately start a search for the murderers who tracked Judas out of the city, and I myself, meanwhile, as I have already reported to you, will stand trial.' "What for?' 'My guards lost him in the bazaar last evening, after he left Kaifa's palace. How it happened, I cannot comprehend. It has never happened before in my life. He was put under surveillance just after our conversation. But in the neighbourhood of the bazaar he doubled back somewhere, and made such a strange loop that he escaped without a trace.' 'So. I declare to you that I do not consider it necessary to try you. You did all you could, and no one in the world' - here the procurator smiled - `could do more than you! Penalize the sleuths who lost Judas. But here, too, I warn you, I would not want it to be anything of a severe sort. In the last analysis, we did everything to take care of the blackguard!' 'Ah, yes! I forgot to ask,' the procurator rubbed his forehead, how did they manage to foist the money on Kaifa?' `You see, Procurator ... that is not especially complicated. The avengers came from behind Kaifa's palace, where the lane is higher than the yard. They threw the packet over the fence.' "With a note?' 'Yes, exactly as you suspected, Procurator.' 'Yes, although...' Here Aphranius tore the seal off the packet and showed its contents to Pilate. `Good heavens, what are you doing, Aphranius, those must be temple seals!' "The procurator needn't trouble himself with that question,' Aphranius replied, closing the packet. 'Can it be that you have all the seals?' Pilate asked, laughing. 'It couldn't be otherwise, Procurator,' Aphranius replied very sternly, not laughing at all. 'I can imagine the effect at Kaifa's!' 'Yes, Procurator, it caused great agitation. They summoned me immediately.' Even in the semi-darkness one could see how Pilate's eyes flashed. 'That's interesting, interesting...' 'I venture to disagree, Procurator, it was not interesting. A most boring and tiresome business. To my question whether anyone had been paid money in Kaifa's palace, I was told categorically that there had been nothing of the sort.' 'Ah, yes? Well, so, if no one was paid, no one was paid. It will be that much harder to find the killers.' 'Absolutely right, Procurator.' `It suddenly occurs to me, Aphranius: might he not have killed himself?" 'Oh, no, Procurator,' Aphranius replied, even leaning back in his chair from astonishment, 'excuse me, but that is entirely unlikely!' 'Ah, everything is likely in this city. I'm ready to bet that in a very short time rumours of it will spread all over the city.' Here Aphranius again darted his look at the procurator, thought for a moment, and replied: 'That may be, Procurator.' The procurator was obviously still unable to part with this question of the killing of the man from Kiriath, though everything was already clear, and he said even with a sort of reverie: `But I'd like to have seen how they killed him.' 'He was killed with great art, Procurator,' Aphranius replied, glancing somewhat ironically at the procurator. 'How do you know that?' 'Kindly pay attention to the bag, Procurator,' Aphranius replied. 'I guarantee you that Judas's blood gushed out in a stream. I've seen murdered people in my time, Procurator.' 'So, of course, he won't rise?' 'No, Procurator, he will rise,' replied Aphranius, smiling philosophically, 'when the trumpet of the messiah they're expecting here sounds - over him. But before then he won't rise.' 'Enough, Aphranius, the question is clear. Let's go on to the burial.' The executed men have been buried, Procurator.' 'Oh, Aphranius, it would be a crime to try you. You're deserving of the highest reward. How was it?' Aphranius began to tell about it: while he himself was occupied with Judas's affair, a detachment of the secret guard, under the direction of his assistant, arrived at the hill as evening came. One of the bodies was not found on the hilltop. Pilate gave a start and said hoarsely: 'Ah, how did I not foresee it! ...' 'No need to worry, Procurator,' said Aphranius, and he went on with his narrative: `The bodies of Dysmas and Gestas, their eyes pecked out by carrion birds, were taken up, and they immediately rushed in search of the third body. It was discovered in a very short time. A certain man ...' 'Matthew Levi,' said Pilate, not questioningly, but rather affirmatively. 'Yes, Procurator... Matthew Levi was hiding in a cave on the northern slope of Bald Skull, waiting for darkness. The naked body of Yeshua Ha-Nozri was with him. When the guards entered the cave with a torch, Levi fell into despair and wrath. He shouted about having committed no crime, and about every man's right by law to bury an executed criminal if he so desires. Matthew Levi said he did not want to pan with the body. He was agitated, cried out something incoherent, now begging, now threatening and cursing...' 'Did they have to arrest him?' Pilate asked glumly. 'No, Procurator, no,' Aphranius replied very soothingly, 'they managed to quiet the impudent madman, explaining to him that the body would be buried. Levi, having grasped what was being said to him, calmed down, but announced that he would not leave and wished to take part in the burial. He said he would not leave even if they started to kill him, and even offered for that purpose a bread knife he had with him.' 'Was he chased away?' Pilate asked in a stifled voice. 'No, Procurator, no. My assistant allowed him to take part in the burial.' 'Which of your assistants was in charge of it?' asked Pilate. 'Tolmai,' Aphranius answered and added in alarm: `Perhaps he made a mistake?' 'Go on,' answered Pilate, `there was no mistake. Generally, I am beginning to feel a bit at a loss, Aphranius, I am apparendy dealing with a man who never makes mistakes. That man is you.' `Matthew Levi was taken in the cart with the bodies of the executed men, and in about two hours they reached a solitary ravine north of Yershalaim. There the detachment, working in shifts, dug a deep hole within an hour and buried all three executed men in it.' 'Naked?' 'No, Procurator, the detachment brought chitons with them for that purpose. They put rings on the buried men's fingers. Yeshua's with one notch, Dysmas's with two, and Gestas's with three. The hole has been covered over and heaped with stones. The landmark is known to Tolmai.' 'Ah, if only I had foreseen it!' Pilate spoke, wincing. I needed to see this Matthew Levi...' 'He is here, Procurator.' Pilate, his eyes wide open, stared at Aphranius for some time, and then said: 'I thank you for everything that has been done in this affair. I ask you to send Tolmai to me tomorrow, and to tell him beforehand that I am pleased with him. And you, Aphranius,' here the procurator took a seal ring from the pouch of the belt lying on the table and gave it to me head of the secret service, 'I beg you to accept this as a memento.' Aphranius bowed and said: 'A great honour, Procurator.' `I request that the detachment that performed the burial be given rewards. The sleuths who let Judas slip - a reprimand. Have Matthew Levi sent to me right now. I must have the details on Yeshua's case.' 'Understood, Procurator,' Aphranius replied and began retreating and bowing, while the procurator clapped his hands and shouted: To me, here! A lamp to the colonnade!' Aphranius was going out to the garden when lights began to flash in the hands of servants behind Pilate's back. Three lamps appeared on the table before the procurator, and the moonlit night at once retreated to the garden, as if Aphranius had led it away with him. In place of Aphranius, an unknown man, small and skinny, stepped on to the balcony beside the gigantic centurion. The latter, catching the procurator's eye, withdrew to the garden at once and there disappeared. The procurator studied the newcomer with greedy and slightly frightened eyes. So one looks at a man of whom one has heard a great deal, of whom one has been thinking, and who finally appears. The newcomer, a man of about forty, was black-haired, ragged, covered with caked mud, and looked wolf-like from under his knitted brows. In short, he was very unsightly, and rather resembled a city beggar, of whom there were many hanging about on the porches of the temple or in the bazaars of the noisy and dirty Lower City. The silence continued for a long time, and was broken by the strange behaviour of the man brought to Pilate. His countenance changed, he swayed, and if he had not grasped the edge of the table with his dirty hand, he would have fallen. 'What's wrong with you?' Pilate asked him. 'Nothing,' answered Matthew Levi, and he made a movement as if he were swallowing something. His skinny, bare, grey neck swelled out and then slackened again. 'What's wrong, answer me,' Pilate repeated. 'I'm tired,' Levi answered and looked sullenly at the floor. 'Sit down,' said Pilate, pointing to the armchair. Levi looked at the procurator mistrustfully, moved towards the armchair, gave a timorous sidelong glance at the gilded armrests, and sat down not in the chair but beside it on the floor. 'Explain to me, why did you not sit in the chair?' asked Pilate. 'I'm dirty, I'd soil it,' said Levi, looking at the ground. 'You'll presently be given something to eat.' 'I don't want to eat,' answered Levi. 'Why lie?' Pilate asked quietly. 'You haven't eaten for the whole day, and maybe even longer. Very well, don't eat. I've summoned you so that you could show me the knife you had with you.' `The soldiers took it from me when they brought me here,' Levi replied and added sullenly: 'You must give it back to me, I have to return it to its owner, I stole it.' 'What for?' To cut the ropes,' answered Levi. 'Mark!' cried the procurator, and the centurion stepped in under the columns. 'Give me his knife.' The centurion took a dirty bread knife from one of the two cases on his belt, handed it to the procurator, and withdrew. 'Who did you take the knife from?' 'From the bakery by the Hebron gate, just as you enter the city, on the left.' Pilate looked at the broad blade, for some reason tried the sharpness of the edge with his finger, and said: 'Concerning the knife you needn't worry, the knife will be returned to the shop. But now I want a second thing - show me the charta you carry with you, on which Yeshua's words are written down.' Levi looked at Pilate with hatred and smiled such an inimical smile that his face became completely ugly. 'You want to take away the last thing?' he asked. 'I didn't say "give me",' answered Pilate, 'I said "show me".' Levi fumbled in his bosom and produced a parchment scroll. Pilate took it, unrolled it, spread it out between the lights, and, squinting, began to study the barely legible ink marks. It was difficult to understand these crabbed lines, and Pilate kept wincing and leaning right to the parchment, running his finger over the lines. He did manage to make out that the writing represented an incoherent chain of certain utterances, certain dates, household records, and poetic fragments. Some of it Pilate could read: '...there is no death ... yesterday we ate sweet spring baccuroth ...'[7] Grimacing with the effort, Pilate squinted as he read: '... we shall see the pure river of the water of life [8] ... mankind shall look at the sun through transparent crystal...' Here Pilate gave a start. In the last lines of the parchment he made out the words: '... greater vice ... cowardice...' Pilate rolled up the parchment and with an abrupt movement handed it to Levi. Take it,' he said and, after a pause, added: `You're a bookish man, I see, and there's no need for you to go around alone, in beggar's clothing, without shelter. I have a big library in Caesarea, I am very rich and want to take you to work for me. You will sort out and look after the papyri, you will be fed and clothed.' Levi stood up and replied: 'No, I don't want to.' 'Why?' the procurator asked, his face darkening. `Am I disagreeable to you? ... Are you afraid of me?' The same bad smile distorted Levi's face, and he said: 'No, because you'll be afraid of me. It won't be very easy for you to look me in the face now that you've killed him.' 'Quiet,' replied Pilate. Take some money.' Levi shook his head negatively, and the procurator went on: 'I know you consider yourself a disciple of Yeshua, but I can tell you that you learned nothing of what he taught you. For if you had, you would certainly take something from me. Bear in mind that before he died he said he did not blame anyone.' Pilate raised a finger significantly, Pilate's face was twitching. 'And he himself would surely have taken something. You are cruel, and he was not cruel. Where will you go?' Levi suddenly came up to the table, leaned both hands on it, and, gazing at the procurator with burning eyes, whispered to him: 'Know, Hegemon, that I am going to kill a man in Yershalaim. I wanted to tell you that, so you'd know there will be more blood.' 'I, too, know there will be more of it,' replied Pilate, `you haven't surprised me with your words. You want, of course, to kill me?' `You I won't manage to kill,' replied Levi, baring his teeth and smiling, 'I'm not such a foolish man as to count on that. But I'll kill Judas of Kiriath, I'll devote the rest of my life to it.' Here pleasure showed in the procurator's eyes, and beckoning Matthew Levi to come closer, he said: 'You won't manage to do it, don't trouble yourself. Judas has already been killed this night.' Levi sprang away from the table, looking wildly around, and cried out: 'Who did it?' `Don't be jealous,' Pilate answered, his teeth bared, and rubbed his hands, 'I'm afraid he had other admirers besides you.' 'Who did it?' Levi repeated in a whisper. Pilate answered him: 'I did it.' Levi opened his mouth and stared at the procurator, who said quietly: `It is, of course, not much to have done, but all the same I did it.' And he added: 'Well, and now will you take something?' Levi considered, relented, and finally said: 'Have them give me a piece of clean parchment.' An hour went by. Levi was not in the palace. Now the silence of the dawn was broken only by the quiet noise of the sentries' footsteps in the garden. The moon was quickly losing its colour, one could see at the other edge of the sky the whitish dot of the morning star. The lamps had gone out long, long ago. The procurator lay on the couch. Putting his hand under his cheek, he slept and breathed soundlessly. Beside him slept Banga. Thus was the dawn of the fifteenth day of Nisan met by the fifth procurator of Judea, Pontius Pilate. CHAPTER 27. The End of Apartment No.50 When Margarita came to the last words of the chapter - '... Thus was the dawn of the fifteenth day of Nisan met by the fifth procurator of Judea, Pontius Pilate' - it was morning. Sparrows could be heard in the branches of the willows and lindens in the little garden, conducting a merry, excited morning conversation. Margarita got up from the armchair, stretched, and only then felt how broken her body was and how much she wanted to sleep. It is interesting to note that Margarita's soul was in perfect order. Her thoughts were not scattered, she was quite unshaken by having spent the night supernaturally. She was not troubled by memories of having been at Satan's ball, or that by some miracle the master had been returned to her, that the novel had risen from the ashes, that everything was back in place in the basement in the lane, from which the snitcher Aloisy Mogarych had been expelled. In short, acquaintance with Woland had caused her no psychic damage. Everything was as if it ought to have been so. She went to the next room, convinced herself that the master was soundly and peacefully asleep, turned off the unnecessary table lamp, and stretched out by the opposite wall on a little couch covered with an old, torn sheet. A minute later she was asleep, and that morning she had no dreams. The basement rooms were silent, the builder's whole little house was silent, and it was quiet in the solitary lane. But just then, that is, at dawn on Saturday, an entire floor of a certain Moscow institution was not asleep, and its windows, looking out on a big asphalt-paved square which special machines, driving around slowly and droning, were cleaning with brushes, shone with their full brightness, cutting through the light of the rising sun. The whole floor was occupied with the investigation of the Woland case, and the lights had burned all night in dozens of offices. Essentially speaking, the matter had already become clear on the previous day, Friday, when the Variety had had to be closed, owing to the disappearance of its administration and all sorts of outrages which had taken place during the notorious sance of black magic the day before. But the thing was that more and more new material kept arriving all the time and incessantly on the sleepless floor. Now the investigators of this strange case, which smacked of obvious devilry, with an admixture of some hypnotic tricks and distinct criminality, had to shape into one lump all the many-sided and tangled events that had taken place in various parts of Moscow. The first to visit the sleepless, electrically lit-up floor was Arkady Apollonovich Sempleyarov, chairman of the Acoustics Commission. After dinner on Friday, in his apartment located in a house by the Kamenny Bridge, the telephone rang and a male voice asked for Arkady Apollonovich. Arkady Apollonovich's wife, who picked up the phone, replied sullenly that Arkady Apollonovich was unwell, had retired for the night, and could not come to the phone. However, Arkady Apollonovich came to the phone all the same. To the question of where Arkady Apollonovich was being called from, the voice in the telephone had said very briefly where it was from. 'This second ... at once ... this minute ...' babbled the ordinarily very haughty wife of the chairman of the Acoustics Commission, and she flew to the bedroom like an arrow to rouse Arkady Apollonovich from his bed, where he lay experiencing the torments of hell at the recollection of yesterday's sance and the night's scandal, followed by the expulsion of his Saratov niece from the apartment. Not in a second, true, yet not in a minute either, but in a quarter of a minute, Arkady Apollonovich, with one slipper on his left foot, in nothing but his underwear, was already at the phone, babbling into it: 'Yes, it's me ... I'm listening, I'm listening ...' His wife, forgetting for these moments all the loathsome crimes against fidelity in which the unfortunate Arkady Apollonovich had been exposed, kept sticking herself out the door to the corridor with a frightened face, poking a slipper at the air and whispering: 'Put the slipper on, the slipper ... you'll catch cold ...' At which Arkady Apollonovich, waving his wife away with his bare foot and making savage eyes at her, muttered into the telephone: 'Yes, yes, yes, surely ... I understand ... I'll leave at once...' Arkady Apollonovich spent the whole evening on that same floor where the investigation was being conducted. It was a difficult conversation, a most unpleasant conversation, for he had to tell with complete sincerity not only about this obnoxious sance and the fight in the box, but along with that - as was indeed necessary - also about Militsa Andreevna Pokobatko from Yelokhovskaya Street, and about the Saratov niece, and about much else, the telling of which caused Arkady Apollonovich inexpressible torments. Needless to say, the testimony of Arkady Apollonovich, an intelligent and cultivated man, who had been a witness to the outrageous sance, a sensible and qualified witness, who gave an excellent description of the mysterious masked magician himself and of his two scoundrelly assistants, a witness who remembered perfectly well that the magician's name was indeed Woland, advanced the investigation considerably. And the juxtaposition of Arkady Apollonovich's testimony with the testimony of others - among whom were some ladies who had suffered after the sance (the one in violet underwear who had shocked Rimsky and, alas, many others), and the messenger Karpov, who had been sent to apartment no.50 on Sadovaya Street - at once essentially established the place where the culprit in all these adventures was to be sought. Apartment no.50 was visited, and not just once, and not only was it looked over with extreme thoroughness, but the walls were also tapped and the fireplace flues checked, in search of hiding places. However, none of these measures yielded any results, and no one was discovered in the apartment during any of these visits, though it was perfectly clear that there was someone in the apartment, despite the fact that all persons who in one way or another were supposed to be in charge of foreign artistes coming to Moscow decidedly and categorically insisted that there was not and could not be any black magician Woland in Moscow. He had decidedly not registered anywhere on arrival, had not shown anyone his passport or other papers, contracts, or agreements, and no one had heard anything about him! Kitaitsev, head of the programme department of the Spectacles Commission, swore to God that the vanished Styopa Likhodeev had never sent him any performance programme of any Woland for approval and had never telephoned him about the arrival of such a Woland. So that he, Kitaitsev, utterly failed to see and understand how Styopa could have allowed such a sance in the Variety. And when told that Arkady Apollonovich had seen this magician at the seance with his own eyes, Kitaitsev only spread his arms and raised his eyes to heaven. And from Kitaitsev's eyes alone one could see and say confidently that he was as pure as crystal. That same Prokhor Petrovich, chairman of the main Spectacles Commission... Incidentally, he returned to his suit immediately after the police came into his office, to the ecstatic joy of Anna Richardovna and the great perplexity of the needlessly troubled police. Also, incidentally, having returned to his place, into his grey striped suit, Prokhor Petrovich fully approved of all the resolutions the suit had written during his short-term absence. ... So, then, this same Prokhor Petrovich knew decidedly nothing about any Woland. Whether you will or n