CHAPTER 22 - By Candlelight

Chapter 224,920 wordsCompleted

While still in the humming, moon‑lit car, Margarita watches the city lights recede and the vehicle lands in a deserted Dorogomilovo cemetery. The black‑bird driver (the rook) departs, and a black cloak—Azazello—appears from behind a tombstone. He gestures, and together they mount a broom and rapier, soaring to Sadovaya Street, apartment 302‑bis. After passing through three identical guard men, Azazello unlocks the door to a dark hallway. A faint lamp illuminates a figure: Koroviev (Fagott) in a cracked monocle, who greets Margarita and explains that Woland’s annual “Spring Ball of the Full Moon” needs a hostess named Margarita. He describes the fifth‑dimension trick that expands space and insists she accept the role. Margarita, moved by the promise of happiness, agrees, and Koroviev leads her further.

The pair enters a small, foul‑smelling room (flat No. 50). Inside, an oak bed, a candelabrum shaped like bird claws, a lavish chess set, a golden bowl, and another candelabrum with snake‑branches create an infernal atmosphere. Woland lies on the bed, half‑naked, his face scarred and his eyes half gold, half void. He wears a patched nightshirt and a stone beetle on his chest. Beside him stand Azazello in a tailcoat, the witch Hella stirring a sulphur‑steam pot, and the enormous black cat Behemoth, who drops a chess knight from a tabouret and hides under the bed. Woland greets Margarita, apologizes for his shabby attire, and, after a brief exchange, beckons her to the bed. He places a heavy, hot hand on her shoulder, and she rubs ointment into his knee.

Woland proposes a chess game. The pieces are alive: a frantic white king, a bishop in a mantle, horsemen on fiery chargers, and Behemoth the cat arguing over his missing knight. A comic, absurd dialogue unfolds about the cat’s bow‑tie, gilded whiskers, and opera glasses. The game collapses into chaos, the pieces are packed away, and Hella’s ointment work on Woland’s knee resumes. Woland then shows Margarita a spinning globe that lights up sections of the world: a tiny village burns, a child dies in a pool of blood, and he comments on the impartiality of “Abaddon” who appears as a gaunt man in dark glasses before vanishing at Woland’s gesture. The chapter ends with Woland ordering Margarita to stay, warning her not to drink anything but water, and the arrival of Koroviev at the doorway, signaling the next stage of the night’s events.