CHAPTER 19 - Margarita

Chapter 194,841 wordsCompleted

At the start of Chapter 19 Margarita is overwhelmed by grief for the Master, fearing she has lost him forever. She reflects that she has never known happiness despite her privileged life, and she questions whether she loved a living or a dead man. The next morning, driven by a presentiment that something will happen, she awakens at noon, dresses, and recalls a stark dream in which she sees a bleak, bridge‑crossed landscape, a rundown log house, and a ragged Master calling to her from the gloom. She interprets the dream as either a warning of her own death or a promise of reunion.

When her husband is away on a three‑day business trip, Margarita explores the house, enters a dark storage room, and opens a drawer to retrieve a leather album containing the Master's photograph, a bank book with ten thousand roubles, dried rose petals, and a charred notebook. She reads the notebook, which ends abruptly with a mutilated passage describing the darkness that covered Yershalaim; the rest is unreadable. She weeps, then folds the items back and locks the wardrobe.

Later, in the hall she talks with her housemaid Natasha. Natasha excitedly recounts recent “seances” in a theatre where audience members suddenly appeared naked, and a story of a woman whose shoes vanished in a shop after a performance. Margarita mock‑scolds her, then gives Natasha a pair of stockings and a bottle of perfume, warning her not to run in nothing but stockings.

Margarita boards a trolley‑bus on Arbat, listens to two passengers whispering about a “head stolen from a coffin” that morning in Griboedov’s hall. She pieces together that the dead man’s head was taken, and that the thieves are somehow connected to the missing head.

She alights at a bench beneath the Kremlin wall, near the Manège, and mentally converses with the Master, pleading for his release. A stranger—a short, red‑haired man in a starched shirt, striped suit, bowler hat, and a chicken bone protruding from his pocket—sits beside her. He explains the head theft, mentions the scandal, and suggests asking Behemoth. Margarita, confused, asks about “Berlioz” and the writers following the coffin. The red‑haired man identifies himself as Azazello, a member of the foreigner’s retinue.

Azazello invites Margarita to meet a distinguished foreigner that evening. He offers her a small golden box containing a mysterious ointment, instructs her to apply it at half‑past nine, stay near the telephone, and that he will call her at ten with further directions. He assures her that the foreigner is not dangerous and that she will be delivered safely. Margarita, desperate and love‑driven, agrees, demanding the ointment back repeatedly, then finally accepts the box. Azazello warns her not to speak loudly and disappears.

Margarita, clutching the box, rushes out of the Alexandrovsky Garden, determined to obey the ominous summons.