Read Into the Lion's Den Online
Authors: Tionne Rogers
“Is it true what your wife told me?”
“Yes, my angel. I never wanted you to be involved with my world. I love you too much to hurt you.”
“How could you lie to me? I loved you.”
“I never wanted to lie for so long, but I was terrified that you would leave me the minute you heard
about her.”
“I destroyed a family, Constantin. I deprived your children from their father. What kind of trash am I?
I'm going back home and I hope I never see you again.”
“I will not let you go away. You belong to me and you're too sick to be left alone. I will look after you till
you're fine again. Everything will be perfect again. I'll make my wife pay for this.”
“Pay for defending her own children? You are the one who should be asking her forgiveness. I never
knew you were married! You cheated on her all the time! This is how you take your oaths to God?”
“It was a civil marriage. No God involved at all. She always knew of my inclinations. We married
because she liked my money and I liked her father's contacts within the Politburo in Moscow. Nothing else. We had
the children just to keep a façade. Russian society does not accept homosexuality as well as in Europe.”
“You're a mobster!”
“Not all my income comes from a legal source, Guntram, but that's very common in Russia. I'm trying to
become completely legitimate.”
“You deal with other humans' misery! You sell drugs to children, weapons to murderers and people to
perverts! How can you live with that?”
“I don't do many of those things. Those are my business associates. I'm mostly into Transport, Oil,
Energy and weapons. Over the years, I've left the other aspects of my business. I want to leave it. I want that you
come with me and live with my children, in St. Petersburg. They will adore you.”
“Are you crazy? They should be with their mother!”
“Olga Fedorovna will not come near them any longer. It's my decision. It's final. She dared to touch my
most beloved possession.”
“You can't do that!”
“You can't become too nervous. Rest now my angel as I will take care of you. I swear that no one will
ever take you away from me ever again.”
He left the room and immediately Mikhail was there to make sure that I would sleep, but it was useless
because that brief conversation had just left me exhausted.
I've tried to reason with Constantin about letting me come back to Argentina but he's deaf as a wall. It's
St. Petersburg with his children or London. I can't go back to that place. I really can't. I was so happy there but now
the mere idea of returning makes me start to breathe like a raging bull and have an oppressive feeling in the chest.
The doctors told me that those are the symptoms of an angina, a condition also included with this myocardial
hypertrophy.
I'm in a hotel room in London, very elegant and expensive place but I feel very bad because I know that
this is paid with the money he might have gotten from a guerilla group in an African country or some pills sold to
stupid teenagers or a poor woman raped to death to make some extra dollars.
Today I was introduced to my personal physician. A Russian: Yuri Andropovich. He will be always with
me in St. Petersburg and oversee my recovery. He repeated more or less the same speech that the doctors in the
hospital gave me and told me that I was not to return to school for the next term, that I should rest as much as I can,
that I would have to take like six different pills and I should relax as much as possible. He's not happy that we fly back
to Russia as it could be very taxing for me, no matter if it's a private jet and he will be with me the whole time.
I don't want to go to St. Petersburg. I want to go back to Buenos Aires.
Mikhail had brought his folders and pencils, the ones Guntram loved the most, but he didn't look at them at all; he just sat by a window looking at the street, and doing nothing else. Repin arrived for dinner and the boy refused to change. To his utter relief, his employer let the offence go unpunished. The boy fidgeted with the food all the time and forgot to take his night pills. Repin scolded him, but he did not pay attention at all.
At ten, Repin sent Massaiev away as he had decided to spend the night with the child.
Guntram stood undecided by the bed. Was Constantin planning to stay? Most probably as he was removing his jacket and tie. His heart started to beat very fast and he had to sit on the bed because he felt very dizzy.
“Do you need help with your clothes, my dear?” Constantin asked solicitously while he removed his own shirt.
“No, I'm fine,” Guntram said so quietly that the man had to make an effort to hear him. “I'll ask Mikhail to help me with the buttons.”
“Don't you prefer that I do it, darling?” Constantin asked sounding somehow upset.
'
He will follow you like a puppy all over the world, killing everyone in his path to have you back, like
that friend of yours, the one with the drug problem. Constantin checks all your letters and conversations and hated
him,'
Olga's words pierced his brain and Guntram realised that from now onwards he would be extremely careful because the wrong word could awaken the monster standing in front of him. He gulped before saying out loud. “I'm afraid the doctor said no sex for some months, Constantin. My heart couldn't handle it.”
“My dear, I know it and I would never do anything that could hurt you,” Constantin said advancing and firmly catching Guntram by the waist, feeling a bit disappointed at the unwillingly breath intake from his angel when he put his arms around his slim frame. “I just want to sleep next to you and cuddle with you, like you love so much to do. Do you have any idea how horrible it was for me to see you lying in that bed, unable to do a thing for you, only one hour per day? Not knowing if you would be back at all? Let me help you, please.”
“I'm sorry, I didn't realise it was so bad for you too,” Guntram muttered as he let the man remove, with infinite care his clothes, doing his best to avoid touching the plaster on the left hand and the bandages around his torso. The bruises had disappeared but Constantin was aware that the scars would remain forever. “Are you in pain?”
“No, I feel fine. I want to start to leave the painkillers.” “It's not a good idea, the pain increases your stress; you should take the pills whenever you need, the scar tissue is very sensitive.” “As you wish, Constantin,” Guntram answered meekly as the man finished buttoning his pyjama jacket. He escaped to the bathroom to calm himself down.
“Do you mind if I take the right side, Constantin? The doctor said I should not sleep over the heart's side and the plaster also doesn't help much.”
“Of course,” said the man, changing his place. Once Guntram laid down, he put his arms around him and checked that he was well covered. “My love, I was thinking about your refusal to come to Russia.”
“Will you let me go back home?”
“Home? Your home is with me Guntram,” Constantin clarified sternly, making the boy flinch. “I'm more thinking in a detour. We could stay for a few days in Paris till you feel better. You can start to draw again there. You always liked the city.”
“I don't know if I can do it again,” Guntram confessed. “She said that you loved me because of my art and perhaps this is for the best.”
“Drawing is what keeps you alive! Never forget that!” Constantin shouted, jumping out of the bed while Guntram sat terrified, huddling against the capitonée headboard.
“I'll draw if you want, please don't be upset,” Guntram said, fearing that the man would take revenge on someone else for his own stupidity. Had he not killed that poor French banker because the man was insinuating him during one party or that Dutch march and for trying to kiss him in the storage room?
“No, my dear, please don't be nervous. You understood it all wrong,” Constantin said very sweetly, advancing on his fours over the bed till his body efficiently trapped Guntram's under him. “You can't stop painting now. Your exhibition was a success. Everything is sold and I wasn't buying it. We were in the hospital but Oblomov attended the vernissage. Your manager, Robertson was very glad. Ivan told me that the place was full with the best of London's society and many were very impressed by your paintings. Your teacher was also there and he was transfixed when he saw the series of nude women. “Glorious, just glorious,” he opined. He told Ivan that he does not understand why you behave like an imbecile at class and then you can paint such things when you're alone. I saw many of the pieces at your studio, before they were packed away and they were wonderful. How can you give grace, make ethereal some punks sitting on a bench drinking beer on their social security money, it's beyond me. The pictures with children and poor people were a frenzy; sold on the first night.”
“Really?”
“You should speak with the man tomorrow. I want to see it too. We can take the plane in the afternoon to Paris, my love.”
“Constantin, I don't want to see people!”
“Just your manager. The man sent you two baskets. Don't ask me where they are, my men were hungry and nervous all the time,” he chuckled, relieved that Guntram was showing some interest in something. “Be glad his cards survived them. Besides he has a check for you: Almost
£
56,000 from the sales.”
“Keep the money, Constantin. I don't want it.”
“Why? It's your work!” He shouted enraged again, but this time Guntram didn't react at all. “All right, don't keep it. You don't need it, but you could send it to the priest in Argentina. Are you going to let a rich merchant keep it so he can buy more champagne for his filthy rich customers?”
“No, you're right. They could use it much better than I.”
“Exactly, besides you need nothing else as you have me and I will take care of you as I see fit, my love.
You will be happy with me again.”
Guntram finally emerged from the big Rolls Royce, taking one step backwards when he saw so many people briskly walking past him. His breathing increased its pace and he needed to support himself in the car's roof, looking truly terrified.
“Now, we go in and see your manager. It's just Robertson. He's almost 80,” Constantin huffed.
“I don't want to.”
“Guntram, move. Do you want to abandon everything and paint only for me?”
“No,” Guntram whispered and advanced toward the door but nearly ran away when the bodyguard overtook him to open the door.
'Have to tell the men. No rush moves and not coming from behind.' Constantin realised and gently took the boy by the elbow.
Once inside the gallery, Guntram looked around the familiar open white space and the complete silence was like a balm for his nerves. The receptionist recognised him and greeted him effusively asking him at full speed about his accident. He was only able to crack a nervous smile for her. “Guntram, why don't you show me around while this young lady goes for Mr. Robertson?” Constantin spoke.
They both walked around the two rooms containing his twenty-five paintings and drawings. Almost two years of work of a person he didn't know any longer. For Guntram, everything seemed so alien; had he ever thought that people were like that? Kind, luminous and good? No, they were money-driven, greed and dark, very dark.
“That charcoal with the hands was very celebrated,” Robertson interrupted his musings. “I had several offers for it but it was sold almost immediately. A German colleague bought it. He wants to have you in Berlin. You had four good critics too and one neutral. You can't complain at all, my dear boy.” He finished and carefully shook his right hand, making Guntram flinch at the touch. “It was a very bad car accident. I hope they catch the bastard.”
“Thank you for your notes, Mr. Robertson.”
“Don't mention it! We were all concerned about you. Ms. Smithers came here twice to check if I had news about you. It was after you left work, wasn't it?”
“Yes, it was.”
“Guntram is still very shocked about his experience, Mr. Robertson,” Constantin warned the man.