PART ONE
Chapter
Two
Like
a whirlwind the stupendous news broke into the small town:
"The tsar's been overthrown!"
The
townsfolk refused to believe it.
Then
one stormy winter day a train crawled into the station: two
students in army greatcoats, with rifles slung over their
shoulders, and a detachment of revolutionary soldiers wearing
red armbands jumped out onto the platform and arrested the
station gendarmes, an old colonel and the chief of the
garrison. Now the townsfolk believed the news. Thousands
streamed down the snowbound streets to the town square.
Eagerly
they drank in the new words: liberty, equality and fraternity.
Turbulent
days followed, days full of excitement and jubilation. Then a
lull set in, and the red flag flying over the town hall where
the Mensheviks and adherents of the Bund had ensconced
themselves was the sole reminder of the change that had taken
place. Everything else remained as before.
Towards
the end of the winter a regiment of the cavalry guards was
billeted in the town. In the mornings they sallied out in
squadrons to hunt for deserters from the South-Western Front
at the railway station.
The
troopers were great, beefy fellows with well-fed faces. Most
of their officers were counts and princes; they wore golden
shoulder straps and silver piping on their breeches, just as
they had in the tsar's time—for all the world as if there
had been no revolution.
For
Pavel, Klimka and Sergei Bruzzhak nothing had changed. The
bosses were still there. It was not until November that
something out of the ordinary began to happen. People of a new
kind had appeared at the station and were beginning to stir
things up; a steadily increasing number of them were soldiers
from the firing lines and they bore the strange name of
"Bolsheviks".
Where
that resounding, weighty name came from no one knew.
The
guardsmen found it increasingly hard to detain the deserters.
The crackle of rifles and the splintering of glass was heard
more and more often down at the station. The men came from the
front in groups and when stopped they fought back with
bayonets. In the beginning of December they began pouring in
by trainloads.
The
guardsmen came down in force to the station with the intention
of holding the soldiers, but they found themselves raked by
machine-gun fire. The men who poured out of the railway
carriages were inured to death.
The
grey-coated frontliners drove the guards back into the town
and then returned to the station to continue on their way,
trainload after trainload.
One
day in the spring of nineteen eighteen, three chums on their
way from Sergei Bruzzhak's where they had been playing cards
dropped into the Korchagins' garden and threw themselves on
the grass. They were bored. All the customary occupations had
begun to pall, and they were beginning to rack their brains
for some more exciting way to spend the day when they heard
the clatter of horses' hoofs behind them and saw a horseman
come galloping down the road. With one bound the horse cleared
the ditch between the road and the low garden fence and the
rider waved his whip at Pavel and Klim. "Hi there, my
lads, come over here!" Pavel and Klim sprang to their
feet and ran to the fence. The rider was covered with dust; it
had settled in a heavy grey Layer on the cap which he wore
pushed to the back of his head, and on his khaki tunic and
breeches. A revolver and two German grenades dangled from his
heavy soldier's belt.
"Can
you get me a drink of water, boys?" the horseman asked
them. While Pavel dashed off into the house for the water, he
turned to Sergei who was staring at him. "Tell me, boy,
who's in authority in your town?"
Sergei
breathlessly related all the local news to the newcomer.
"There's
been nobody in authority for two weeks. The homeguard's the
government now. All the inhabitants take turns patrolling the
town at night. And who might you be?" Sergei asked in his
turn.
"Now,
now—if you know too much you'll get old too soon," the
horseman smiled.
Pavel
ran out of the house carrying a mug of water. The rider
thirstily emptied the mug at one gulp and handed it back to
Pavel. Then jerking the reins he started off at a gallop,
heading for the pine woods. "Who was that?" Pavel
asked Klim. "How do I know?" the latter replied,
shrugging his shoulders.
"Looks
like the authorities are going to be changed again. That's why
the Leszczinskis left yesterday. And if the rich are on the
run that means the partisans are coming," declared
Sergei, settling the political question firmly and with an air
of finality.
The
logic of this was so convincing that both Pavel and Klim
agreed with him at once.
Before
the boys had finished discussing the question a clatter of
hoofs from the highway sent all three rushing back to the
fence.
Over
by the forest warden's cottage, which was barely visible among
the trees, they saw men and carts emerging from the woods, and
nearer still on the highway a party of fifteen or so mounted
men with rifles across their pommels. At the head of the
horsemen rode an elderly man in khaki jacket and officer's
belt with field glasses slung on his chest, and beside him the
man the boys had just spoken to. The elderly man wore a red
ribbon on his breast.
"What
did I tell you?" Sergei nudged Pavel in the ribs.
"See the red ribbon? Partisans. I'll be damned if they
aren't partisans. . . ." And whooping with joy he leapt
over the fence into the street.
The
others followed suit and all three stood by the roadside
gazing at the approaching horsemen.
When
the riders were quite close the man whom the boys had met
before nodded to them, and pointing to the Leszczinski house
with his whip asked:
"Who
lives over there?"
Pavel
paced alongside trying to keep abreast the rider.
"Leszczinski
the lawyer. He ran away yesterday. Scared of you most likely.
. . ."
"How
do you know who we are?" the elderly man asked, smiling.
"What
about that?" Pavel pointed to the ribbon. "Anybody
can tell. . . ."
People
poured into the street to stare with curiosity at the
detachment entering the town. Our three young friends too
stood watching the dusty, exhausted Red Guards go by. And when
the detachment's lone cannon and the carts with machine guns
clattered over the cobblestones the boys trailed after the
partisans, and did not go home until after the unit had halted
in the centre of the town and the billeting began.
That
evening four men sat around the massive carved-legged table in
the spacious Leszczinski parlour: detachment commander Comrade
Bulgakov, an elderly man whose hair was touched with grey, and
three members of the unit's commanding personnel.
Bulgakov
had spread out a map of the gubernia on the table and was now
running his finger over it.
"You
say we ought to put up a stand here, Comrade
Yermachenko," he said, addressing a man with broad
features and prominent teeth, "but I think we must move
out in the morning. Better still if we could get going during
the night, but the men are in need of a rest. Our task is to
withdraw to Kazatin before the Germans get there. To resist
with the strength we have would be ridiculous. One gun with
thirty rounds of ammunition, two hundred infantry and sixty
cavalry. A formidable force, isn't it, when the Germans are
advancing in an avalanche of steel. We cannot put up a fight
until we join up with other withdrawing Red units. Besides,
Comrades, we must remember that apart from the Germans
there'll be numerous counter-revolutionary bands of all kinds
to deal with en route. I propose that we withdraw in the
morning after first blowing up the railway bridge beyond the
station. It'll take the Germans two or three days to repair it
and in the meantime their advance along the railway will be
held up. What do you think, Comrades? We must decide. .
." he turned to the others around the table.
Struzhkov,
who sat diagonally across from Bulgakov, sucked in his lips
and looked first at the map and then at Bulgakov.
"I
agree with Bulgakov," he said finally.
The
youngest of the men, who was dressed in a worker's blouse,
nodded.
"Bulgakov's
right," he said.
But
Yermachenko, the man who had spoken with the boys earlier in
the day, shook his head.
"What
the devil did we get the detachment together for? To retreat
from the Germans without putting up a fight? As I see it,
we've got to have it out with them here. I'm sick and tired of
running. If it was up to me, I'd fight them here without fail.
. . ." Pushing his chair back sharply, he rose and began
pacing the room.
Bulgakov
looked at him with disapproval.
"We
must use our heads, Yermachenko. We can't throw our men into a
battle that is bound to end in defeat and destruction Besides
it's ridiculous. There's a whole division with heavy artillery
and armoured cars just behind us. . . . This is no time for
schoolboy heroics, Comrade Yermachenko. . . ." Turning to
the others, he continued: "So it's decided, we evacuate
tomorrow morning. . . . Now for the next question,
liaison," Bulgakov proceeded. "Since we are the last
to leave, it's our job to organise work in the German rear.
This is a big railway junction and there are two stations in
the town. We must see to it that there is a reliable comrade
to carry on the work on the railway. We'll have to decide here
whom to leave behind to get the work going. Have you anyone in
mind?"
"I
think the sailor Fyodor Zhukhrai ought to remain,"
Yermachenko said, moving up to the table. "In the first
place he's a local man. Secondly, he's a fitter and mechanic
and can get himself a job at the station. Nobody's seen Fyodor
with our detachment—he won't get here until tonight. He's
got a good head on his shoulders and he'll get things going
properly. I think he's the best man for the job."
Bulgakov
nodded.
"I
agree with you, Yermachenko. No objections, Comrades?" he
turned to the others. "None. Then the matter is settled.
We'll leave Zhukhrai some money and the credentials he'll need
for his work. . . . Now for the third and last question,
Comrades. About the arms stored here in the town. There's
quite a stock of rifles, twenty thousand of them, left over
from the tsarist war and forgotten by everybody. They are
piled up in a peasant's shed. I have this from the owner of
the shed who happens to be anxious to get rid of them. We are
not going to leave them to the Germans; in my opinion we ought
to burn them, and at once, so as to have it over and done with
by morning. The only trouble is that the fire might spread to
the surrounding cottages. It's on the fringes of the town
where the poor peasants live."
Struzhkov
stirred in his chair. He was a solidly built man whose
unshaven face had not seen a razor for some time.
"Why
burn the rifles? Better distribute them among the
population."
Bulgakov
turned quickly to face him.
"Distribute
them, you say?"
"A
splendid idea!" Yermachenko responded enthusiastically.
"Give them to the workers and anyone else who wants them.
At least there will be something to hit back with when the
Germans make life impossible. They're bound to do their worst.
And when things come to a head, the men will be able to take
up arms. Struzhkov's right: the rifles must be distributed.
Wouldn't be a bad thing to take some to the villages too; the
peasants will hide them away, and when the Germans begin to
requisition everything the rifles are sure to come in
handy."
Bulgakov
laughed.
"That's
all right, but the Germans are sure to order all arms turned
in and everybody will obey."
"Not
everybody," Yermachenko objected. "Some will but
others won't."
Bulgakov
looked questioningly at the men around the table.
"I'm
for distributing the rifles," the young workers supported
Yermachenko and Struzhkov.
"All
right then, it's decided," Bulgakov agreed. "That's
all for now," he said, rising from his chair. "We
can take a rest till morning. When Zhukhrai comes, send him in
to me, I want to have a talk with him. Yermachenko, you'd
better inspect the sentry posts."
When
the others left, Bulgakov went into the bedroom next to the
parlour, spread his greatcoat on the mattress and lay down.
The
following morning Pavel, coming home from the electric power
station where he had been working as a stoker's helper for a
year now, felt that something unusual was afoot. The town
seethed with excitement. As he went along he met people
carrying one or two and sometimes even three rifles each. He
could not understand what was happening and he hurried home as
fast as he could. Outside the Leszczinski garden he saw his
acquaintances of yesterday mounting their horses.
Pavel
ran into the house, washed quickly and, learning from his
mother that Artem had not come home yet, dashed out again and
hurried over to see Sergei Bruzzhak, who lived on the other
side of the town.
Sergei's
father was an engine driver's helper and owned a tiny house
and a small plot of land.
Sergei
was out, and his mother, a stout, pale-faced woman, eyed Pavel
sourly.
"The
devil knows where he is! He rushed out first thing in the
morning like one possessed. Said they were giving out rifles
somewhere, so I suppose that's where he is. What you snotnosed
warriors need is a good hiding—you've got out of hand
completely. Hardly out of pinafores and already dashing off
after firearms. You tell the scamp that if he brings a single
cartridge into this house I'll skin him alive. Who knows what
he'll be dragging in and then I'll have to answer for it.
You're not going there too, are you?"
But
before Sergei's mother had finished scolding, Pavel was
already racing down the street.
On
the highway he met a man carrying a rifle on each shoulder.
Pavel dashed up to him.
"Please,
uncle, where did you get them?"
"Over
at Verkhovina."
Pavel
hurried off as fast as his legs could carry him. Two streets
down he collided with a boy who was lugging a heavy infantry
rifle with bayonet attached. Pavel stopped him.
"Where'd
you get that?"
"The
partisans were giving them away out there opposite the school,
but there aren't any more. All gone. Handed them out all night
and now only the empty cases are left. This is my second
one," the boy declared proudly.
Pavel
was utterly dismayed by the news.
"Damn
it, I should've gone straight there," he thought
bitterly. "Now it's too late!"
Suddenly
an idea struck him. Spinning around, he overtook the boy in
two or three bounds and snatched the rifle out of his hands.
"One's
enough for you. This is going to be mine," he said in a
tone that brooked no opposition.
Infuriated
by this robbery in broad daylight, the boy flung himself at
Pavel, but the latter leapt back and pointed the bayonet at
his antagonist.
"Look
out or you'll get hurt!" Pavel shouted.
The
boy burst into tears of helpless rage and ran away, swearing
at Pavel as he went. Pavel, vastly pleased with himself,
trotted home. He climbed over the fence, ran into the shed,
laid his acquisition on the crossbeams under the roof, and,
whistling gaily, entered the house.
Summer
evenings in the Ukraine, especially in small Ukrainian towns
like Shepetovka, which are more like villages on the
outskirts, are beautiful indeed. These calm summer nights lure
all the young folk out of doors. You will see them in groups
and in pairs—on the porches, in the little front gardens, or
perched on woodpiles lying by the side of the road. Their gay
laughter and singing echo in the evening stillness.
The
air is heavy and tremulous with the fragrance of flowers.
There is a faint pinpoint glimmer of stars in the depths of
the sky, and voices carry far, far away. . . .
Pavel
dearly loved his accordion. He would lay the melodious
instrument tenderly on his knees and let his nimble fingers
run lightly up and down the double row of keys. A sighing from
the bass, and a cascade of rollicking melody would pour forth.
. . .
How
can you keep still when the sinuous bellows weave in and out
and the accordion breathes its warm compelling harmonies.
Before you know it your feet are answering its urgent summons.
Ah, how good it is to be alive!
This
is a particularly jolly evening. A merry crowd of young folk
have gathered on the pile of logs outside Pavel's house. And
gayest of them all is Galochka, the daughter of the stonemason
who lives next door to Pavel. Galochka loves to dance and sing
with the lads. She has a deep velvety contralto.
Pavel
is a wee bit afraid of her. For Galochka has a sharp tongue.
She sits down beside Pavel and throws her arms around him,
laughing gaily.
"What
a wonder you are with that accordion!" she says.
"It's a pity you're a bit too young or you'd make me a
fine hubby. I adore men who play the accordion, my poor heart
just melts."
Pavel
blushes to the roots of his hair—luckily it is too dark for
anyone to see. He edges away from the vixen but she clings
fast to him.
"Now
then, you wouldn't run away from me, would you? A fine
sweetheart you are," she laughs.
Her
firm breast brushes Pavel's shoulder, and he is strangely
stirred in spite of himself, and the loud laughter of the
others breaks the accustomed stillness of the lane.
"Move
up, I haven't any room to play," says Pavel, giving her
shoulder a slight push.
This
evokes another roar of laughter, jokes and banter.
Marusya
comes to Pavel's rescue. "Play something sad, Pavel,
something that tugs at your heartstrings."
Slowly
the bellows spread out, gently Pavel's fingers caress the keys
and a familiar well-loved tune fills the air. Galochka is the
first to join in, then Marusya, and the others.
All
the boatmen to their cottage
Gathered
on the morrow,
O,
'tis good
And
O, 'tis sweet
Here
to sing our sorrow. . . . |
The
vibrant young voices of the singers were carried far away into
the wooded distances.
"Pavka!"
It was Artem's voice.
Pavel
compressed the bellows of his accordion and fastened the
straps.
"They're
calling me. I've got to go."
"Oh,
play just a little more. What's your hurry?" Marusya
tried to wheedle him into staying.
But
Pavel was adamant.
"Can't.
We'll have some music tomorrow again, but now I've got to go.
Artem's calling." And with that he ran across the street
to the little house opposite.
There
were two men in the room besides Artem: Roman, a friend of
Artem's, and a stranger. They were sitting at the table.
"You
wanted me?" Pavel asked.
Artem
nodded to him and turned to the stranger:
"This
is that brother of mine we've been talking about."
The
stranger extended a knotted hand to Pavel.
"See
here, Pavka," Artem said to his brother. "You told
me the electrician at the power plant is ill. Now what I want
you to do is to find out tomorrow whether they want a good man
to take his place. If they do you'll let us know."
The
stranger interrupted him.
"No
need to do that. I'd rather go with him and speak with the
boss myself."
"Of
course they need someone. Today the power plant didn't work
simply because Stankovich was ill. The boss came around
twice—he'd been looking high and low for somebody to take
his place but couldn't find anyone. He was afraid to start the
plant with only a stoker around. The electrician's got the
typhus."
"That
settles it," the stranger said. "I'll call for you
tomorrow and we'll go over there together."
"Good."
Pavel's
glance met the calm grey eyes of the stranger who was studying
him carefully. The firm, steady scrutiny somewhat disconcerted
him. The newcomer was wearing a grey jacket buttoned from top
to bottom—it was obviously a tight fit for the seams
strained on his broad, powerful back. His head and shoulders
were joined by a muscular, ox-like neck, and his whole frame
suggested the sturdy strength of an old oak.
"Good-bye
and good luck, Zhukhrai," Artem said accompanying him to
the door. "Tomorrow you'll go along with my brother and
get fixed up in the job."
The
Germans entered the town three days after the detachment left.
Their coming was announced by a locomotive whistle at the
station which had latterly been deserted.
"The
Germans are coming," the news flashed through the town.
The
town stirred like a disturbed anthill, for although the
townsfolk had known for some time that the Germans were due,
they had somehow not quite believed it. And now these terrible
Germans were not only somewhere on their way, but actually
here, in town.
The
townsfolk clung to the protection of their front-garden fences
and wicket gates. They were afraid to venture out into the
streets.
The
Germans came, marching single file on both sides of the
highway; they wore olive-drab uniforms and carried their
rifles at the ready. Their rifles were tipped with broad
knife-like bayonets; they wore heavy steel helmets, and
carried enormous packs on their backs. They came from the
station into the town in an endless stream, came cautiously,
prepared to repel an attack at any moment, although no one
dreamed of attacking them.
In
front strode two officers, Mausers in hand, and in the centre
of the road walked the interpreter, a sergeant-major in the
Hetman's service wearing a blue Ukrainian coat and a tall fur
cap.
The
Germans lined up on the square in the centre of the town. The
drums rolled. A small crowd of the more venturesome townsfolk
gathered. The Hetman's man in the Ukrainian coat climbed onto
the porch of the chemist's shop and read aloud an order issued
by the commandant, Major Korf.
§
1
All
citizens of the town are hereby ordered to turn in any
firearms or other weapons in their possession within 24 hours.
The penalty for violation of this order is death by shooting.
§
2
Martial
law is declared in the town and citizens are forbidden to
appear in the streets after 8 p.m.
Major
Korf, Town Commandant.
The
German Kommandantur
took up quarters in the building formerly used by the town
administration and, after the revolution, by the Soviet of
Workers' Deputies. At the entrance a sentry was posted wearing
a parade helmet with an imperial eagle of enormous
proportions. In the backyard of the same building were storage
premises for the arms to be turned in by the population.
All day long
weapons were brought in by townsfolk scared by the threat of
shooting. The adults did not show themselves; the arms were
delivered by youths and small boys. The Germans detained
nobody.
Those
who did not want to come in person dumped their weapons out on
the road during the night, and in the morning a German patrol
picked them up, loaded them into an army cart and hauled them
to the Kommandantur.
At one o'clock
in the afternoon, when the time limit expired, German soldiers
began to take stock of their booty: fourteen thousand rifles.
That meant that six thousand had not been turned in. The
dragnet searches they conducted yielded very insignificant
results.
At
dawn the next morning two railway men in whose homes concealed
rifles had been found were shot at the old Jewish cemetery
outside the town.
As
soon as he heard of the commandant's order, Artem hurried
home. Meeting Pavel in the yard, he took him by the shoulder
and asked him quietly but firmly:
"Did
you bring any weapons home?"
Pavel
had not intended to say anything about the rifle, but he could
not lie to his brother and so he made a clean breast of it.
They
went into the shed together. Artem took the rifle down from
its hiding place on the beams, removed the bolt and bayonet,
and seizing the weapon by the barrel swung it with all his
might against a fence post. The butt splintered. What remained
of the rifle was thrown far away into the waste lot beyond the
garden. The bayonet and bolt Artem threw into the privy pit.
When
he was finished, Artem turned to his brother.
"You're
not a baby any more, Pavka, and you ought to know you can't
play with guns. You must not bring anything into the house.
This is dead serious. You might have to pay with your life for
that sort of thing nowadays. And don't try any tricks, because
if you do bring something like that home and they find it I'd
be the first to be shot—they wouldn't touch a youngster like
you. These are brutal times, understand that!"
Pavel
promised.
As
the brothers were crossing the yard to the house, a carriage
stopped at the Leszczinskis' gate and the lawyer and his wife
and two children, Nelly and Victor, got out.
"So
the fine birds have flown back to their nest," Artem
muttered angrily. "Now the fun begins, blast them!"
He went inside.
All
day long Pavel thought regretfully of the rifle. In the
meantime his friend Sergei was hard at work in an old,
abandoned shed, digging a hole in the ground next to the wall.
At last the pit was ready. In it Sergei deposited the three
brand-new rifles, carefully wrapped in rags: he had picked
them up when the Red Guard detachment distributed arms to the
people. He had no intention of giving them up to the Germans
and had laboured hard all night to make sure that they were
safely hidden.
He
filled up the hole, tramped the earth down level, and then
piled a heap of refuse on top. Critically reviewing the
results of his efforts and finding them satisfactory he took
off his cap and wiped the sweat off his forehead.
"Now
let them search, and even if they find it, they'll never know
who put it there, because the shed is nobody's anyway."
A
firm friendship had sprung up between Pavel and the grim-faced
electrician who had been working a full month now at the
electric station. Zhukhrai showed the stoker's helper how the
dynamo was built and how it was run.
The
sailor took a liking to the bright youngster. He frequently
visited Artem on free days and listened patiently to the
mother's tale of domestic woes and worries, especially when
she complained about her younger boy's escapades. Thoughtful
and serious, Zhukhrai had a calming, reassuring effect on
Maria Yakovlevna, who would forget her troubles and grow more
cheerful in his company.
One
day Zhukhrai stopped Pavel as he was passing between the high
piles of firewood in the power station yard.
"Your
mother tells me you're fond of a scrap," he said,
smiling. " 'He's as bad as a game-cock,' she says."
Zhukhrai chuckled approvingly. "As a matter of fact, it
doesn't hurt to be a fighter, as long as you know whom to
fight and why."
Pavel
was not sure whether Zhukhrai was joking or serious.
"I
don't fight for nothing," he retorted, "I always
fight for what's right and fair."
"Want
me to teach you to fight properly?" Zhukhrai asked
unexpectedly.
"What
d'you mean, properly?" Pavel looked at the other in
surprise. "You'll see."
And
Pavel was given a brief introductory lecture on boxing.
It
did not come easy to Pavel. Time and again he found himself
rolling on the ground, knocked off his feet by a blow from
Zhukhrai's fist, but he proved a diligent and persevering
pupil, and in the end he mastered the art.
One
warm day after a visit to Klimka's place Pavel, for want of
something better to do, decided to climb up to his favourite
spot—the roof of a shed that stood in the corner of the
garden behind the house. He crossed the backyard into the
garden, went over to the clapboard shack, and climbed up onto
its roof. Pushing through the dense branches of the cherry
trees that hung over the shed, he made his way to the centre
of the roof and lay down to bask in the sunshine.
One
side of the shed jutted out into the Leszczinski garden, and
from the end of the roof the whole garden and one side of the
house were visible. Poking his head over the edge, Pavel could
see part of the yard and a carriage standing there. The batman
of the German Lieutenant quartered at the Leszczinskis' was
brushing his master's clothes.
Pavel
had often seen the Lieutenant at the gate leading to the
grounds. He was a squat, ruddy-faced man who wore a tiny
clipped moustache, pince-nez and a cap with a shiny lacquered
peak. Pavel also knew that he lived in the side room, the
window of which opened onto the garden and was visible from
the shed roof.
At
this moment the Lieutenant was sitting at the table, writing.
Presently he picked up what he had written and went out of the
room. He handed the paper to the batman and walked off down
the garden path leading to the gate. At the summer house he
paused to talk to someone inside. A moment later Nelly
Leszczinskaya came out. The Lieutenant took her arm and
together they went out of the gate into the street.
Pavel
watched the proceedings from his vantage point. Presently a
drowsiness stole over him and he was about to close his eyes
when he noticed the batman entering the Lieutenant's room; he
hung up a uniform, opened the window into the garden and
tidied up the room. Then he went out, closing the door behind
him. The next moment Pavel saw him over by the stable where
the horses were.
Through
the open window Pavel had a good view of the whole room. On
the table lay a belt and some shining object.
Driven
by an irresistible curiosity, Pavel climbed noiselessly off
the roof onto the cherry tree and slipped down into the
Leszczinski garden. Bent double, he bounded across the garden
and peered through the window into the room. Before him on the
table were a belt with a shoulder strap and holster containing
a splendid twelve-shot Mannlicher.
Pavel
caught his breath. For a few seconds he hesitated, but
reckless daring gained the upper hand and reaching into the
room, he seized the holster, pulled out the new blue-steel
weapon and sprang down to the ground. With a swift glance
around, he slipped the revolver into his pocket and dashed
across the garden to the cherry tree. With the agility of a
monkey he climbed to the roof and paused to look behind him.
The batman was still chatting pleasantly with the groom. The
garden was silent and deserted. Pavel slid down the other side
and ran home.
His
mother was busy in the kitchen cooking dinner and paid no
attention to him.
He
seized a rag from behind a trunk and shoved it into his
pocket, then slipped out unnoticed, ran across the yard,
scaled the fence and emerged on the road leading to the woods.
Holding the heavy revolver to prevent it from knocking against
his thigh, he ran as fast as he could to the abandoned ruins
of a brick kiln in the woods.
His
feet seemed barely to touch the ground and the wind whistled
in his ears.
Everything
was quiet at the old brick kiln. It was a depressing sight,
with the wooden roof fallen in here and there, the mountains
of brick rubble and the collapsed ovens. The place was
overgrown with weeds; no one ever visited it except Pavel and
his two friends who sometimes came here to play. Pavel knew
places where the stolen treasure could be safely hidden.
He
climbed through a gap in one of the ovens and looked around
him cautiously, but there was no one in sight. Only the pines
soughed softly and a slight wind stirred the dust on the road.
There was a strong smell of resin in the air.
Pavel
placed the revolver wrapped in the rag in a corner of the oven
floor and covered it with a small pyramid of old bricks. On
the way out he filled the opening in the old oven with loose
bricks, noted the exact location, and slowly set out for home,
feeling his knees trembling under him.
"What
will happen now?" he thought and his heart was heavy with
foreboding.
To
avoid going home he went to the power station earlier than
usual. He took the key from the watchman and opened the wide
doors leading into the powerhouse. And while he cleaned out
the ashpit, pumped water into the boiler and started the fire
going, he wondered what was happening at the Leszczinskis.
It
was about eleven o'clock when Zhukhrai came and called Pavel
outside.
"Why
was there a search at your place today?" he asked in a
low voice.
Pavel
started.
"A
search?"
"I
don't like the look of it," Zhukhrai continued after a
brief pause. "Sure you haven't any idea what they were
looking for?"
Pavel
knew very well what they had been looking for, but he could
not risk telling Zhukhrai about the theft of the revolver.
Trembling all over he asked:
"Have
they arrested Artem?"
"Nobody
was arrested, but they turned everything upside down in the
house."
This
reassured Pavel slightly, although his anxiety did not pass.
For a few minutes both he and Zhukhrai stood there each
wrapped in his own thoughts. One of the two knew why the
search had been made and was worried about the consequences,
the other did not and hence was on the alert.
"Damn
them, maybe they've got wind of me somehow," Zhukhrai
thought. "Artem knows nothing about me, but why did they
search his place? Got to be more careful."
The
two parted without a word and returned to their work.
The
Leszczinski house was in a turmoil.
When
the Lieutenant had noticed that the revolver was missing, he
had called in his batman, who declared that the weapon must
have been stolen; whereupon the officer had lost his temper
and had smashed his fist into the batman's face. The batman,
swaying from the impact of the blow, stood stiffly at
attention, blinking and submissively awaiting further
developments.
The
lawyer, called in for an explanation, was loudly indignant at
the theft and apologised to the Lieutenant for having allowed
such a thing to occur in his house.
It
was Victor Leszczinski who suggested that the revolver might
have been stolen by the neighbours, and in particular by that
young ruffian Pavel Korchagin. His father lost no time in
passing on his son's conjecture to the Lieutenant, who at once
ordered a search made.
The
search was fruitless, and the episode of the missing revolver
showed Pavel that even enterprises as risky as this could
sometimes succeed.
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