PART ONE
Chapter
Six
A
light shone in only one window of the big old house; the
curtains were drawn. Outside Tresor, now chained for the
night, suddenly barked in his reverberating bass.
Through
a sleepy haze Tonya heard her mother speaking in a low voice.
"No,
she is not asleep yet. Come in, Liza."
The
light footsteps of her friend and the warm, impulsive hug
finally dispelled her drowsiness.
Tonya
smiled wanly.
"I'm
so glad you've come, Liza. Papa passed the crisis yesterday
and today he has been sleeping soundly all day. Mama and I
have had some rest too after so many sleepless nights. Tell me
all the news." Tonya drew her friend down beside her on
the couch.
"Oh,
there's plenty of news, but some of it's for your ears
only," Liza smiled with a sly look at Yekaterina
Mikhailovna.
Tonya's
mother smiled. She was a matronly woman of thirty-six with the
vigorous movements of a young girl, clever grey eyes and a
face that was pleasant if not beautiful.
"I
will gladly leave you alone in a few minutes, but first I want
to hear the news that is fit for everybody's ears," she
joked, pulling a chair up to the couch.
"Well,
to begin with we've finished with school. The board has
decided to issue graduation certificates to the
seventh-graders. I am glad. I'm so sick of all this algebra
and geometry! What good is it to anyone? The boys may possibly
continue their studies, although they don't know where, with
all this fighting going on. It's simply terrible. . . . As for
us, we'll be married and wives don't need algebra," Liza
laughed.
After
sitting with the girls for a little while, Yekaterina
Mikhailovna went to her own room.
Liza
now moved closer to Tonya and with her arms about her gave her
a whispered account of the encounter at the crossroads.
"You
can imagine my surprise, Tonya, when I recognised the lad who
was running away. Guess who it was?"
Tonya,
who was listening with interest, shrugged her shoulders.
"Korchagin!"
Liza blurted out breathlessly.
Tonya
started and winced.
"Korchagin?"
Liza,
pleased with the impression she had made, went on to describe
her quarrel with Victor.
Carried
away by her story, Liza did not notice Tonya's face grow pale
and her fingers pluck nervously at her blue blouse. Liza did
not know how Tonya's heart constricted with anxiety, nor did
she notice how the long lashes that hid her beautiful eyes
trembled.
Tonya
paid scant heed to Liza's story of the drunken Khorunzhy. One
thought gave her no rest: "Victor Leszczinski knows who
attacked the soldier. Oh, why did Liza tell him?" And in
spite of herself the words broke from her lips.
"What
did you say?" Liza could not grasp her meaning at once.
"Why
did you tell Leszczinski about Pavlusha . . . I mean
Korchagin? He's sure to betray him. . . ."
"Oh,
surely not!" Liza protested. "I don't think he would
do such a thing. After all, why should he?"
Tonya
sat up sharply and hugged her knees so hard that it hurt.
"You
don't understand, Liza! He and Korchagin are enemies, and
besides, there is something else. . . . You made a big mistake
when you told Victor about Pavlusha."
Only
now did Liza notice Tonya's agitation, and her use of
Korchagin's first name confirmed what she had vaguely
suspected.
She
could not help feeling guilty and lapsed into an embarrassed
silence.
"So
it's true," she thought. "Fancy Tonya falling in
love with a plain workman." Liza wanted to talk about it
very much, but out of consideration for her friend she
refrained. Anxious to atone for her guilt in some way, she
seized Tonya's.
"Are
you very worried, Tonya?"
"No,
perhaps Victor is more honourable than I think," Tonya
replied absently.
The
awkward silence that ensued was broken by the arrival of a
schoolmate of theirs, a bashful, gawky lad named Demianov.
After
seeing her friends off, Tonya stood for a long time leaning
against the wicket gate and staring at the dark strip of road
leading to town. The wind laden with a chill dampness and the
dank odour of the wet spring soil fanned her face. Dull red
lights blinked in the windows of the houses over in the town.
There it was, that town that lived a life apart from hers, and
somewhere there, under one of those roofs, unaware of the
danger that threatened him, was her rebellious friend Pavel.
Perhaps he had forgotten her—how many days had flown by
since their last meeting? He had been in the wrong that time,
but all that had long been forgotten. Tomorrow she would see
him and their friendship would be restored, a moving, warming
friendship. It was sure to return—of that Tonya had not the
slightest doubt. If only the night did not betray him, the
night that seemed to harbour evil, as if lying in wait for
him. . . . A shiver ran through her, and after a last look at
the road, she went in. The thought, "If only the night
does not betray him", still drilled in her head as she
dozed off.
Tonya
woke up early in the morning before anyone else was about, and
dressed quickly. She slipped out of the house quietly so as
not to wake up the family, untied the big shaggy Tresor and
set out for town with the dog. She hesitated for a moment in
front of the Korchagin house, then pushed the gate open and
walked into the yard. Tresor dashed ahead wagging his tail. .
. .
Artem
had returned from the village early that same morning. The
blacksmith he had worked for had given him a lift into town on
his cart. On reaching home he threw the sack of flour he had
earned on his shoulders and walked into the yard, followed by
the blacksmith carrying the rest of his belongings. Outside
the open door Artem set the sack down on the ground and called
out;
"Pavka!"
There
was no answer.
"What's
the hitch there? Why not go right in?" said the smith as
he came up.
Setting
his belongings down in the kitchen, Artem went into the next
room. The sight that met his eyes there dumbfounded him: the
place was turned upside down and old clothes littered the
floor.
"What
the devil is this?" Artem muttered completely at a loss.
"It's
a mess all right," agreed the blacksmith.
"Where's
the boy got to?" Artem was getting angry. But the place
was deserted and dead.
The
blacksmith said good-bye and left.
Artem
went into the yard and looked around.
"I
can't make head or tail of this! All the doors wide open and
no Pavka."
Then
he heard footsteps behind him. Turning around he saw a huge
dog with ears pricked standing before him. A girl was walking
toward the house from the gate.
"I
want to see Pavel Korchagin," she said in a low voice,
surveying Artem.
"So
do I. But the devil knows where he's gone. When I got here the
house was unlocked and no Pavka anywhere about. So you're
looking for him too?" he addressed the girl.
The
girl answered with a question:
"Are
you Korchagin's brother Artem?"
"I
am. Why?"
Instead
of replying, the girl stared in alarm at the open door.
"Why didn't I come last night?" she thought.
"It can't be, it can't be. . . ." And her heart grew
heavier still.
"You
found the door open and Pavel gone?" she asked Artem, who
was staring at her in surprise.
"And
what would you be wanting of Pavel, may I ask?" Tonya
came closer to him and casting a look around spoke jerkily:
"I
don't know for sure, but if Pavel isn't at home he must have
been arrested."
Artem
started nervously. "Arrested? What for?"
"Let's
go inside," Tonya said.
Artem
listened in silence while Tonya told him all she knew. By the
time she had finished he was despairing.
"Damn
it all! As if there wasn't enough trouble without this
mess," he muttered gloomily. "Now I see why the
place was turned upside down. What the hell did the boy have
to get mixed up in this business for. . . . Where can I find
him now? And who may you be, miss?"
"My
father is forest warden Tumanov. I'm a friend of
Pavel's."
"I
see," Artem said absently. "Here I was bringing
flour to feed the boy up, and now this. . . ."
Tonya
and Artem looked at each other in silence.
"I
must go now," Tonya said softly as she prepared to go.
"I hope you'll find him. I'll come back later."
Artem
gave her a silent nod.
A
lean fly just awakened from its winter sleep buzzed in a
corner of the window. On the edge of an old threadbare couch
sat a young peasant woman, her elbows resting on her knees and
her eyes fixed blankly on the filthy floor.
The
Commandant, chewing a cigarette stuck in the corner of his
mouth, finished writing on a sheet of paper with a flourish,
and, obviously pleased with himself, added an ornate signature
ending in a curlicue under the title "Commandant of the
town of Shepetovka, Khorunzhy''. From the door came the
clinking of spurs. The Commandant looked up.
Before
him stood Salomyga with a bandaged arm.
"Hullo,
what's blown you in?" the Commandant greeted him.
"Not
a good wind, at any rate. Got my hand sliced to the bone by a
Bogunets." [Bogunets—a fighting man of the Red Army Regiment named after
Bogun, the hero of the national liberation struggle waged by
the Ukrainian people in the 17th century.]
Ignoring
the woman's presence Salomyga cursed violently.
"So
what are you doing here? Convalescing?"
"We'll
have time to convalesce in the next world. They're pressing
down pretty hard on us at the front."
The Commandant
interrupted him, nodding toward the woman.
"We'll
talk about that later."
Salomyga
sat down heavily on a stool and removed his cap, which bore a
cockade with an enamel trident, the emblem of the UNR
(Ukrainian National Republic).
"Golub
sent me," he began in a low tune. "A division of
regulars is going to be transferred here soon. In general
there's going to be some doings in town, and it's my job to
put things straight. The 'Chief himself may come here with
some foreign bigwig or other, so there's to be no talk about
any 'diversions'. What're you writing?"
The
Commandant shifted the cigarette to the other corner of his
mouth.
"I've
got a damn nuisance of a boy here. Remember that chap
Zhukhrai, the one who stirred up the railway-men against us?
Well, he was caught at the station."
"He
was, eh? Go on," Salomyga pulled his stool closer.
"Well,
that blockhead Omelchenko, the Station Commandant, sent him
over escorted by a Cossack, and on the way the lad I've got in
here took the prisoner away from him in broad daylight. The
Cossack was disarmed and got his teeth knocked out, and was
left to whistle for his prisoner. Zhukhrai got away, but we
managed to grab this fellow. Here you have it all down on
paper," and he pushed a sheaf of sheets covered with
writing toward Salomyga.
The
latter scanned through the report, turning over the sheets
with his left hand.
When
he had finished, he looked at the Commandant.
"And
so you got nothing out of him?"
The
Commandant pulled nervously at the peak of his cap.
"I've
been at him for five days now, but all he says is, 'I don't
know anything and I didn't free him.' The young scoundrel! You
see, the escort recognised him—practically choked the life
out of him as soon as he saw him. I could hardly pull the
fellow off—no wonder, he'd good reason to be sore because
Omelchenko at the station had given him twenty-five strokes
with the cleaning rod for losing his prisoner. There's no
sense in keeping him any more, so I'm sending this off to
headquarters for permission to finish him off."
Salomyga
spat in disdain.
"If
I had him he'd speak up sure enough. You're not much at
conducting enquiries. Whoever heard of a theology student
making a Commandant! Did you try the rod?"
The
Commandant was furious.
"You're
going a bit too far. Keep your sneers to yourself. I'm the
Commandant here and I'll ask you not to interfere."
Salomyga
looked at the bristling Commandant and roared with laughter.
"Ha-ha-ha.
. . . Don't puff yourself up too much, priest's son, or you'll
burst. To hell with you and your problems. Better tell me
where a fellow can get a couple of bottles of samogon?"
The
Commandant grinned.
"That
s easy. "
"As
for this," Salomyga jabbed at the sheaf of papers with
his finger, "if you want to fix him properly put him down
as eighteen years instead of sixteen. Round the top of six off
like that. Otherwise they mightn't pass it."
There
were three of them in the storeroom. A bearded old man in a
threadbare coat lay on his side on the bunk, his spindle legs
in their wide linen trousers drawn up under him. He had been
arrested because the horse of the Petlyura men billeted with
him had been missing from the shed. An elderly woman with
small shifty eyes and a pointed chin was sitting on the floor.
She made her living by selling samogon and had been thrown in
here on a charge of stealing a watch and other valuables.
Korchagin lay semiconscious in the corner under the window,
his head resting on his crushed cap.
A
young woman, in a peasant kerchief, her eyes wide with terror,
was led into the storeroom.
She
stood for a moment or two and then sat down next to the
samogon woman.
"Got
caught, eh, wench?" the latter spoke rapidly, inspecting
the newcomer with curious eyes.
There
was no answer, but the samogon woman would not give up.
"Why'd
they pick you up, eh? Nothing to do with samogon by any
chance?" The peasant girl got up and looked at the
persistent
"No,
it's because of my brother," she replied quietly.
"And
who's he?" the old woman persisted.
The
old man spoke up.
"Why
don't you leave her alone? She's got enough to worry about
without your chattering."
The
woman turned quickly toward the bunk.
"Who
are you to tell me what to do? I'm not talking to you, am
I?"
The
old man spat.
"Leave
her alone, I tell you."
Silence
descended again on the storeroom. The peasant girl spread out
a big shawl and lay down, resting her head on her arm.
The
samogon woman began to eat. The old man sat up, lowered his
feet onto the floor, slowly rolled himself a cigarette and lit
it. Clouds of acrid smoke spread out.
"A
person can't eat in peace with that stink," the woman
grumbled, her jaws working busily. "You've smoked the
whole place up."
The
old man returned with a sneer:
"Afraid
of losing weight, eh? You won't be able to get through the
door soon. Why don't you give the boy something to eat instead
of stuffing it all into yourself?"
The
woman made an angry gesture.
"I
tried, but he doesn't want anything. And as for that you can
keep your mouth shut—it's not your food I'm eating."
The
girl turned to the samogon woman and, nodding toward
Korchagin, asked:
"What
is he in here for?"
The
woman brightened up at being addressed and readily replied:
"He's
a local lad—Korchagin's younger boy. His mother's a
cook."
Leaning
over to the girl, she whispered in her ear:
"He
freed a Bolshevik—a sailor we had hereabouts .who used to
lodge with my neighbour Zozulikha."
The
young woman remembered the words, she had overheard: "I'm
sending this off to headquarters for permission to finish him
off."
One
after the other troop trains pulled in at the junction, and
battalions of regulars poured out in a disorderly mob. The
armoured train Zaporozhets, four cars long, its steel sides
ribbed with rivets, crawled along a side track. Guns were
unloaded and horses were led out of closed box cars. The
horses were saddled on the spot and mounted men jostled their
way through the milling crowds of infantrymen to the station
yard where the cavalry unit was lining up.
Officers
ran up and down, calling the numbers of their units.
The
station buzzed like a wasps' nest. Gradually the regular
squares of platoons were hammered out of the shapeless mass of
vociferous, swirling humanity and soon a stream of armed men
was pouring into town. Until late in the evening carts creaked
and rattled and the stragglers bringing up the rear of the
rifle division trailed along the highway.
The
procession finally ended with the headquarters company
marching briskly by, bellowing from a hundred and twenty
throats:
What's
the shouting?
What's
the noise?
It's
Petlyura
And
his boys
Come
to town. . . . |
Pavel
Korchagin got up to look out of the window. Through the early
twilight he could hear the rumbling of wheels on the street,
the tramping of many feet, and the lusty singing.
Behind
him a soft voice said:
"The
troops have come to town."
Korchagin
turned round.
The
speaker was the girl who had been brought in the day before.
He
had already heard her story—the samogon woman had wormed it
out of her. She came from a village seven versts from the
town, where her elder brother, Gritsko, now a Red partisan,
had headed a poor peasants' committee when the Soviets were in
power.
When
the Reds left, Gritsko girded himself with a machine-gun belt
and went with them. Now the family was being hounded
incessantly. Their only horse had been taken away from them.
The father had been imprisoned for a while and had a rough
time of it. The village elder— one of those on whom Gritsko
had clamped down—was always billeting strangers in their
house, out of sheer spite. The family was destitute. And when
the Commandant had come to the village the day before to make
a search, the elder had brought him to the girl's place. She
struck his fancy and the next morning he brought her to town
with him "for interrogation".
Korchagin
could not fall asleep, try as he might he could not find rest,
and in his brain drilled one insistent thought which he could
not dispel: "What next?"
His
bruised body ached, for the guard had beaten him with bestial
fury.
To
escape the bitter thoughts crowding his mind he listened to
the whispering of the two women.
In
a barely audible voice the girl was telling how the Commandant
had pestered her, how he had threatened and coaxed, and when
she rebuffed him, turned on her in fury. "I'll lock you
up in a cellar and let you rot there," he had said.
Darkness
lurked in the corners of the cell. There was another night
ahead, a stifling, restless night. It was the seventh night in
captivity, but to Pavel it seemed that he had been there for
months. The floor was hard, and pain racked his body. There
were three of them now in the storeroom. The samogon woman had
been released by the Khorunzhy to procure some vodka. Grandpa
was snoring on the bunk as if he were at home on his Russian
stove; he bore his misfortune with stoic calm and slept
soundly through the night. Khristina and Pavel lay on the
floor, almost side by side. Yesterday Pavel had seen Sergei
through the window—he had stood for a long time out in the
street, looking sadly at the windows of the houses.
"He
knows I'm here," Pavel had thought.
For
three days running someone had brought sour black bread for
him—who it was the guards would not tell. And for two days
the Commandant had repeatedly questioned him.
What
could it all mean?
During
the questioning he had given nothing away; on the contrary he
had denied everything. Why he had kept silent, he did not know
himself. He wanted to be brave and strong, like those of whom
he had read in books, yet that night when he was being taken
to prison and one of his captors had said, "What's the
use of dragging him along, Pan Khorunzhy? A bullet in the back
will fix him", he had been afraid. Yes, the thought of
dying at sixteen was terrifying! Death was the end of
everything. Khristina was also thinking. She knew more than
the young man. Most likely he did not know yet what was in
store for him . . . what she had overheard.
He
tossed about restlessly at night unable to sleep. Khristina
pitied him, though the prospect she herself faced was hardly
better—she could not forget the menace of the Commandant's
words: "I'll fix you up tomorrow— if you won't have me
it's the guardhouse for you. The Cossacks will be glad to get
you. So take your choice." Oh, how hard it was, and no
mercy to be expected anywhere! Was it her fault that Gritsko
had joined the Reds? How cruel life was!
A
dull pain choked her and in the agony of helpless despair and
fear her body was racked by soundless sobs. A shadow moved in
the corner by the wall. "Why are you crying?"
In
a passionate whisper Khristina poured out her woes to her
silent cell mate. He did not speak, but laid his hand lightly
on hers.
"They'll
torture me to death, curse them," she whispered in
terror, gulping down her tears. "Nothing can save
me." What could Pavel say to this girl? There was nothing
to say. Life was crushing them both in an iron ring.
Perhaps
he ought to put up a fight when they came for her tomorrow?
They'd only beat him to death, or a sabre blow on the head
would end it all. Wishing to comfort the distraught girl
somehow, he stroked her hand tenderly. The sobbing ceased. At
intervals the sentry at the entrance could be heard
challenging a passer-by with the usual "Who goes
there?" and then everything was quiet again. Grandpa was
fast asleep. The interminable minutes crawled slowly by. Then,
to his utter surprise, Pavel felt the girl's arms go around
him and pull him toward her.
"Listen,"
hot lips were whispering, "there is no escape for me: if
it isn't the officer, it'll be those others. Take me, love, so
that dog won't be the first to have me."
"What
are you saying, Khristina!"
But
the strong arms did not release him. Full, burning lips
pressed down on his—they were hard to escape. The girl's
words were simple, tender—and he knew why she uttered them.
For
a moment everything receded—the bolted door, the red-headed
Cossack, the Commandant, the brutal beatings, the seven
stifling, sleepless nights—all were forgotten, and only the
burning lips and the face moist with tears existed.
Suddenly
he remembered Tonya.
How
could he forget her? Those dear, wonderful eyes.
He
mustered his strength and broke away from Khristina's embrace.
He staggered to his feet like a drunken man and seized hold of
the grill. Khristina's hands found him.
"Why,
what is the matter?"
All
her heart was in that question. He bent down to her and
pressing her hands said:
"I
can't, Khristina. You are so . . . good." He hardly knew
what he was saying.
He
stood up again in the intolerable silence and went over to the
bunk. Sitting down on the edge, he woke up the old man.
"Give
me a smoke, please, Granddad."
The
girl, huddled in her shawl, wept in the corner.
The
next day the Commandant came with some Cossacks and took
Khristina away. Her eyes sought Pavel's in farewell, and there
was reproach in them. And when the door slammed behind her his
soul was more desolate and dreary than ever.
All
day long the old man could not get a word out of Pavel. The
sentries and the Commandant's guard were changed. Toward
evening a new prisoner was brought in. Pavel recognised him:
it was Dolinnik, a joiner from the sugar refinery, a short
thickset man wearing a faded yellow shirt under a threadbare
jacket. He surveyed the storeroom with a keen eye.
Pavel
had seen him in February 1917, when the reverberation of the
revolution reached their town. He had heard only one Bolshevik
speak during the noisy demonstrations held then and that
Bolshevik was Dolinnik. He had climbed onto a roadside fence
and addressed the troops. Pavel remembered his closing words:
"Follow
the Bolsheviks, soldiers, they will not betray you!"
He
had not seen the joiner since.
Granddad
was glad to have a new cell mate, for he obviously found it
hard to sit silent all day long. Dolinnik settled down next to
him on the edge of the bunk, smoked a cigarette with him and
questioned him about everything.
Then
the newcomer moved over to Korchagin. "Well, young
man?" he asked Pavel. "And how did you get in
here?"
Pavel
replied in monosyllables and Dolinnik saw that it was caution
that kept the young man from speaking. When he learned of the
charge laid against Pavel his intelligent eyes widened with
amazement and he sat down beside the lad.
"So
you say you got Zhukhrai away? That's interesting. I didn't
know they'd nabbed you."
Pavel,
taken by surprise, raised himself on his elbow. "I don't
know any Zhukhrai. They can pin anything on you here."
Dolinnik,
smiling, moved closer to him. "That's all right, my boy.
You don't need to be cautious with me. I know more than you
do."
Quietly,
so that the old man should not overhear he continued:
"I
saw Zhukhrai off myself, he's probably reached his destination
by now. He told me all about what happened." After a
moment's pause, Dolinnik added: "I see you're made of the
right stuff, boy. Though, the fact that they caught you and
know everything is bad, Very bad, I should say."
He
took off his jacket and spreading it on the floor sat down on
it with his back against the wall, and began to roll another
cigarette.
Dolinnik's
last remark made everything clear to Pavel. There was no doubt
about it, Dolinnik was all right. Besides, he had seen
Zhukhrai off, and that meant. . . .
That
evening he learned that Dolinnik had been arrested for
agitation among Petlyura's Cossacks. Moreover, he had been
caught distributing an appeal issued by the gubernia
revolutionary committee calling on the troops to surrender and
go over to the Reds.
Dolinnik
was careful not to tell Pavel much.
"Who
knows," he thought to himself, "they may use the
ramrod on the boy. He's still too young."
Late
at night when they were settling themselves for sleep, he
voiced his apprehensions in the brief remark:
"Well,
Korchagin, we seem to be in a pretty bad fix. Let's see what
will come of it."
The
next day a new prisoner was brought in—the flop-eared,
scraggy-necked barber Shlyoma Zeltser.
"Fuchs,
Bluvstein and Trachtenberg are going to welcome him with bread
and salt," he told Dolinnik gesturing excitedly as he
spoke. "I said that if they want to do that, they can,
but will the rest of the Jewish population back them up? No,
they won't, you can take it from me. Of course they have their
own fish to fry. Fuchs has a store and Trachtenberg's got the
flour mill. But what've I got? And the rest of the hungry lot?
Nothing—paupers, that's what we are. Well, I've got a long
tongue, and today when I was shaving an officer—one of the
new ones who came recently—I said: 'Do you think Ataman
Petlyura knows about these pogroms or not? Will he see the
delegation?' Oi, how many times I've got into trouble through
this tongue of mine. So what do you think this officer did
when I had shaved him and powdered his face and done all in
fine style too? He gets up and instead of paying me arrests me
for agitating against the authorities." Zeltser struck
his chest with his fist. "Now what sort of agitation was
that? What did I say? I only asked the fellow. . . . And to
lock me up for that. . . ."
In
his excitement Zeltser twisted a button on Dolinnik's shirt
and tugged at his arms.
Dolinnik
smiled in spite of himself as he listened to the indignant
Shlyoma.
"Yes,
Shlyoma," he said gravely when the barber had finished,
"that was a stupid thing for a clever fellow like you to
do. You chose the wrong time to let your tongue run away with
you. I wouldn't have advised you to get in here."
Zeltser
nodded understandingly and made a gesture of despair with his
hand. Just then the door opened and the samogon woman was
pushed in. She staggered in, heaping foul curses on the
Cossack who brought her.
"You
and your Commandant ought to be roasted on a slow fire! I hope
he shrivels up and croaks from that booze of mine!"
The
guard slammed the door shut and they heard him locking it on
the outside.
As
the woman settled down on the edge of the bunk the old man
greeted her jocularly:
"So
you're back with us again, you old chatterbox? Sit down and
make yourself at home."
The
samogon woman darted a hostile glance at him and picking up
her bundle sat down on the floor next to Dolinnik.
It
turned out that she had been released just long enough for her
captors to get some bottles of samogon out of her.
Suddenly shouts
and the sound of running feet could be heard from the
guardroom next door. Somebody was barking out orders. The
prisoners stopped talking to listen.
Strange
things were happening on the square in front of the ungainly
church with the ancient belfry. On three sides the square was
lined with rectangles of troops— units of the division of
regular infantry mustered in full battle kit.
In
front, facing the entrance to the church, stood three
regiments of infantry in squares placed in checkerboard
fashion, their ranks buttressed against the school fence.
This
grey, rather dirty mass of Petlyura soldiers standing there
with rifles at rest, wearing absurd Russian helmets like
pumpkins cut in half, and heavily laden down with bandoliers,
was the best division the "Directorate" had.
Well-uniformed
and shod from the stores of the former tsarist army and
consisting mainly of kulaks who were consciously fighting the
Soviets, the division had been transferred here to defend this
strategically important railway junction. Five different
railway lines converged at Shepetovka, and for Petlyura the
loss of the junction would have meant the end of everything.
As it was, the "Directorate" had very little
territory left in its hands, and the small town of Vinnitsa
was now Petlyura's capital.
The
"Chief Ataman" himself had decided to inspect the
troops and now everything was in readiness for his arrival.
Back
in a far corner of the square where they were least likely to
be seen stood a regiment of new recruits— barefoot youths in
shabby civilian clothes of all descriptions. These were farm
lads picked up from their beds by midnight raiding parties or
seized on the streets, and none of them had the least
intention of doing any fighting.
"Let
them look for fools somewhere else," they said.
The
most the Petlyura officers could do was to bring the recruits
to town under escort, divide them into companies and
battalions and issue them arms. The very next day, however, a
third of the recruits thus herded together would disappear and
with each passing day their numbers dwindled.
It
would have been more than foolhardy to issue them boots,
particularly since the boot stocks were far from plentiful.
And so everyone was ordered to report for conscription shod.
The result was an astonishing collection of dilapidated
footwear tied on with bits of string and wire.
They
were marched out for parade barefoot.
Behind
the infantry stood Golub's cavalry regiment.
Mounted
men held back the dense crowds of curious townsfolk who had
come to see the parade.
After
all, the "Chief Ataman" himself was to be present!
Events like this were rare enough in town and no one wanted to
miss the free entertainment it promised.
On
the church steps were gathered the colonels and captains, the
priest's two daughters, a handful of Ukrainian schoolteachers,
a group of "free Cossacks", and the slightly
hunchbacked mayor—in a word, the elite representing the
"public", and among them the Inspector-General of
Infantry wearing a Caucasian cherkesska. It was he who was in
command of the parade.
Inside
the church Vasili, the priest, was garbing himself in his
Easter service vestments.
Petlyura
was to be received in grand style. For one thing, the
newly-mobilised recruits were to take the oath of allegiance,
and for this purpose a yellow-and-blue flag had been brought
out.
The
Division Commander set out for the station in a rickety old
Ford car to meet Petlyura.
When
he had gone, the Inspector of Infantry called over Colonel
Chernyak, a tall, well-built officer with a foppishly twirled
moustache.
"Take
someone along with you and see that the Commandant's office
and the rear services are in proper shape. If you find any
prisoners there look them over and get rid of the
riffraff."
Chernyak
clicked his heels, took along the first Cossack captain his
eye lighted on and galloped off.
The
Inspector turned politely to the priest's elder daughter.
"What
about the banquet, everything in order?"
"Oh,
yes. The Commandant's doing his best," she replied,
gazing avidly at the handsome Inspector.
Suddenly
a stir passed through the crowd: a rider was coming down the
road at a mad gallop, bending low over the neck of his horse.
He waved his hand and shouted:
"They're
coming!"
"Fall
in!" barked the Inspector.
The
officers ran to their places.
As
the Ford chugged up to the church the band struck up The
Ukraine Lives On.
Following
the Division Commander, the "Chief Ataman" heaved
himself laboriously out of the car. Petlyura was a man of
medium height, with a square head firmly planted on a red bull
neck; he wore a blue tunic of fine wool cloth girded tight
with a yellow belt to which a small Browning in a chamois
holster was attached. On his head was a peaked khaki uniform
cap with a cockade bearing the enamel trident.
There
was nothing especially warlike about the figure of Simon
Petlyura. As a matter of fact, he did not look like a military
man at all.
He
heard out the Inspector's report with an expression of
displeasure on his face. Then the mayor addressed him in
greeting.
Petlyura
listened absently, staring at the assembled regiments over the
mayor's head.
"Let
us begin," he nodded to the Inspector.
Mounting
the small platform next to the flag, Petlyura delivered a
ten-minute speech to the troops.
The
speech was unconvincing. Evidently tired from the journey, the
Ataman spoke without enthusiasm. He finished to the
accompaniment of the regulation shouts of "Slava!
Slava!" from the soldiers and climbed down from the
platform dabbing his perspiring forehead with a handkerchief.
Then, together with the Inspector and the Division Commander,
he inspected the units.
As
he passed the ranks of the newly-mobilised recruits his eyes
narrowed in a disdainful scowl and he bit his lips in
annoyance.
Toward
the end of the inspection, when the platoons of new recruits
marched in uneven ranks to the flag, where the priest Vasili
was standing, Bible in hand, and kissed first the Bible and
then the hem of the flag, an unforeseen incident occurred.
A
delegation which had contrived by some unknown means to reach
the square approached Petlyura. At the head of the group came
the wealthy timber merchant Bluvstein with an offering of
bread and salt, followed by Fuchs the draper, and three other
well-to-do businessmen.
With
a servile bow Bluvstein extended the tray to Petlyura. It was
taken by an officer standing alongside.
"The
Jewish population wishes to express its sincere gratitude and
respect for you, the head of the state. Please accept this
address of greeting."
"Good,"
muttered Petlyura, quickly scanning the sheet of paper.
Fuchs
stepped forward.
"We
most humbly beg you to allow us to open our enterprises and we
ask for protection against pogroms." Fuchs stumbled over
the last word.
An
angry scowl darkened Petlyura's features.
"My
army does not engage in pogroms. You had better remember
that."
Fuchs
spread out his arms in a gesture of resignation.
Petlyura's
shoulder twitched nervously. The untimely appearance of the
delegation irritated him. He turned to Golub, who was standing
behind chewing his black moustache.
"Here's
a complaint against your Cossacks, Pan Colonel. Investigate
the matter and take measures accordingly," said Petlyura.
Then, addressing the Inspector, he said dryly:
"You
may begin the parade."
The
ill-starred delegation had not expected to run up against
Golub and they hastened to withdraw.
The
attention of the spectators was now wholly absorbed by the
preparations for the ceremonial march-past. Sharp commands
were rapped out.
Golub,
his features outwardly calm, walked over to Bluvstein and said
in a loud whisper:
"Get
out of here, you rotten heathens, or I'll make mincemeat out
of you!"
The
band struck up and the first units marched through the square.
As they drew alongside Petlyura, the troops bellowed a
mechanical "Slava!" and then swung down the highway
to disappear into the sidestreets. At the head of the
companies, uniformed in brand-new khaki outfits, the officers
marched at an easy gait as if they were simply taking a
stroll, swinging their swagger sticks. The swagger stick mode,
like cleaning rods for the soldiers, had just been introduced
in the division.
The
new recruits brought up the rear of the parade. They came in a
disorderly mass, out of step and jostling one another.
There
was a low rustle of bare feet as the mobilised men shuffled
by, prodded on by the officers who worked hard but in vain to
bring about some semblance of order. When the second company
was passing a peasant lad in a linen shirt on the side nearest
the reviewing stand gaped in such wide-eyed amazement at the
"Chief" that he stepped into a hole in the road and
fell flat on the ground. His rifle slid over the cobblestones
with a loud clatter. He tried to get up but was knocked down
again by the men behind him.
Some
of the spectators burst out laughing. The company broke ranks
and passed through the square in complete disorder. The
luckless lad picked up his rifle and ran after the others.
Petlyura
turned away from this sorry spectacle and walked over to the
car without waiting for the end of the review. The Inspector,
who followed him, asked diffidently:
"Pan
the Ataman will not stay for dinner?"
"No,"
Petlyura flung back curtly.
Sergei
Bruzzhak, Valya and Klimka were watching the parade in the
crowd of spectators pressed against the high fence surrounding
the church. Sergei, gripping the bars of the grill, looked at
the faces of the people below him with hatred in his eyes.
"Let's
go, Valya, they've shut up shop," he said in a
deliberately loud defiant voice, and turned away from the
fence. People stared at him in astonishment.
Ignoring
everyone, he walked to the gate, followed by his sister and
Klimka.
Colonel
Chernyak and the Captain galloped up to the Commandant's
office and dismounted. Leaving the horses in the charge of a
dispatch rider they strode rapidly into the guardhouse.
"Where's
the Commandant?" Chernyak asked the dispatch rider
sharply.
"Dunno,"
the man stammered. "Gone off somewhere.''
Chernyak
looked around the filthy, untidy room, the unmade beds and the
Cossacks of the Commandant's guard who sprawled on them and
made no attempt to rise when the officers entered.
"What
sort of a pigsty is this?" Chernyak roared. "And who
gave you permission to wallow about like hogs?" he lashed
at the men lying flat on their backs.
One
of the Cossacks sat up, belched and growled:
"What're
you squawking for? We've got our own squawker here."
"What!"
Chernyak sprang toward the man. "Who do you think you're
talking to, you bastard? I'm Colonel Chernyak. D'you hear, you
swine! Up, all of you, or I'll have you flogged!" The
enraged Colonel dashed about the guardhouse. "I'll give
you one minute to sweep out the filth, straighten out the
bedding and make your filthy mugs presentable. You look like a
band of brigands, not Cossacks!"
Beside
himself with rage, the Colonel violently kicked at a slop pail
obstructing his path.
The
Captain was no less violent, and, adding emphasis to his
curses by wielding his three-thonged whip, drove the men out
of their bunks.
"The
Chief Ataman's reviewing the parade. He's liable to drop in
here any minute. Get a move on there!"
Seeing
that things were taking a serious turn and that they really
might be in for a flogging—they knew Chernyak's reputation
well enough—the Cossacks sprang into feverish activity.
In
no time work was in full swing.
"We
ought to have a look at the prisoners," the Captain
suggested. "There's no telling whom they've got locked up
here. Might be trouble if the Chief looks in."
"Who
has the key?" Chernyak asked the sentry. "Open the
door at once."
A
Sergeant jumped up and opened the lock.
"Where's
the Commandant? How long do you think I'm going to wait for
him? Find him at once and send him in here," Chernyak
ordered. "Muster the guard in the yard! Why are the
rifles without bayonets?"
"We
only took over yesterday," the Sergeant tried to explain,
and hurried off in search of the Commandant.
The
Captain kicked the storeroom door open. Several of the people
inside got up from the floor, the others remained motionless.
"Open
the door wider," Chernyak commanded. "Not enough
light here."
He
scrutinised the prisoners' faces.
"What
are you in for?" he snapped at the old man sitting on the
edge of the bunk.
The
old man half rose, hitched up his trousers and, frightened by
the sharp order, mumbled:
"Dunno
myself. They just locked me up and here I am. There was a
horse disappeared from the yard, but I've got nothing to do
with it."
"Whose
horse?" the Captain interrupted him.
"An
army horse, of course. My billets sold him and drank the
proceeds and now they're blaming me."
Chernyak
ran his eye swiftly over the old man and with an impatient
jerk of his shoulder shouted: "Pick up your things and
get out of here!" Then he turned to the samogon woman.
The
old man could not believe his ears. Blinking his shortsighted
eyes, he turned to the Captain:
"Does
that mean I can go?"
The
Cossack nodded as much as to say: the faster you get out the
better.
Hurriedly
the old man seized his bundle which hung over the edge of the
bunk and dashed through the door.
"And
what are you in for?" Chernyak was questioning the
samogon woman.
Swallowing
the mouthful of pie she had been chewing, the woman rattled
off a ready answer:
"It's
an injustice it is that I should be in here, Pan Chief. Just
think of it, to drink a poor widow's samogon and then lock her
up."
"You're
not in the samogon business, are you?" Chernyak asked.
"Business?
Nothing of the kind," said the woman with an injured air.
"The Commandant came and took four bottles and didn't pay
a kopek. That's how it is: they drink your booze and never
pay. You wouldn't call that business, would you?"
"Enough.
Now go to the devil!"
The
woman did not wait for the order to be repeated. She picked up
her basket and backed to the door, bowing in gratitude.
"May
God bless you with good health, your honours."
Dolinnik
watched the comedy with frank amazement.
None
of the prisoners could make out what it was all about. The
only thing that was clear was that the arrivals were chiefs of
some kind who had the power to dispose of them as they saw
fit.
"And
you there?" Chernyak spoke to Dolinnik.
"Stand
up when Pan the Colonel speaks to you!" barked the
Captain.
Slowly
Dolinnik raised himself to his feet from the floor.
"What
are you in for?" Chernyak repeated.
Dolinnik
looked at the Colonel's neatly twirled moustache, at his
clean-shaven face, looked at the peak of his new cap with the
enamel cockade, and a wild thought flashed through his mind:
Maybe it'll work!
"I
was arrested for being out on the streets after eight
o'clock," he said, blurting out the first thing that came
into his head.
He
awaited the answer in an agony of suspense.
"What
were you doing out at night?"
"It
wasn't night, only about eleven o'clock."
He
no longer believed that this shot in the dark would succeed.
His
knees trembled when he heard the brief command:
"Get
out."
Dolinnik
walked hurriedly out of the door, forgetting his jacket; the
Captain was already questioning the next prisoner.
Korchagin
was the last to be interrogated. He sat on the floor'
completely dumbfounded by the proceedings. At first he could
not believe that Dolinnik had been released. Why were they
letting everyone off like this? But Dolinnik . . . Dolinnik
had said that he had been arrested for breaking the curfew. .
. . Then it dawned upon him.
The
Colonel began questioning the scraggy Zeltser with the usual
"What are you in for?"
The
barber, pale with nervousness, blurted out:
"They
tell me I was agitating, but I don't know what they're talking
about."
Chernyak
pricked up his ears.
"What's
that? Agitation? What were you agitating about?"
Zeltser
spread out his arms in bewilderment.
"I
don't know myself, I only said that they were collecting
signatures to a petition to the Chief Ataman for the Jewish
population."
"What
sort of petition?" both Chernyak and the Captain moved
menacingly toward Zeltser.
"A
petition asking that pogroms be prohibited. You know, we had a
terrible pogrom. The whole population's afraid.
"That's
enough," Chernyak interrupted him. "We'll give you a
petition you won't forget, you dirty Jew." Turning to the
Captain, he snapped: "Put this one away properly. Have
him taken to headquarters—I'll talk to him there personally.
We'll see who's behind this petition business."
Zeltser
tried to protest but the Captain struck him sharply across the
back with his riding crop.
"Shut
up, you bastard!"
His
face twisted with pain, Zeltser staggered back into a corner.
His lips trembled and he barely restrained his sobs.
While
this was going on, Pavel rose to his feet. He was now the only
prisoner besides Zeltser in the storeroom.
Chernyak
stood in front of the boy and inspected him with his piercing
black eyes.
"Well,
what are you doing here?"
Pavel
had his answer ready.
"I
cut off a saddle skirt for soles," he said quickly.
("What
saddle?" the Colonel asked.
"We've
got two Cossacks billeted at our place and I cut off a bit of
an old saddle to sole my boots with. So the Cossacks hauled me
in here." Seized by a wild hope to regain his freedom, he
added: "I didn't know it wasn't allowed. . . ."
The
Colonel eyed Pavel with disgust.
"Of
all the things this Commandant thought of, blast him! Look at
the prisoners he picked up!" As he turned to the door, he
shouted: "You can go home, and tell your father to give
you the thrashing you deserve. Out with you!"
Still
unable to believe his ears, Pavel snatched up Dolinnik's
jacket from the floor and rushed for the door, his heart
pounding as if it would burst. He ran through the guardroom
and slipped outside behind the Colonel who was walking out
into the yard. In a moment Pavel was through the wicket gate
and in the street.
The
unlucky Zeltser remained alone in the storeroom. He looked
round with harassed eyes, instinctively took a few steps
towards the exit, but just then a sentry entered the
guardhouse, closed the door, inserted the padlock, and sat
down on a stool next to the door.
Out
on the porch Chernyak, much pleased with himself, said to the
Captain:
"It's
a good thing we looked in. Think of the rubbish we found
there—we'll have to lock up that Commandant for a couple of
weeks. Well, it's time we were going."
The
Sergeant had mustered his detail in the yard. When he saw the
Colonel, he ran over and reported:
"Everything's
in order, Pan Colonel."
Chernyak
inserted a boot into a stirrup and sprang lightly into the
saddle. The Captain was having some trouble with his restive
horse. Reining in his mount, the Colonel said to the Sergeant:
"Tell
the Commandant I cleared out all the rubbish he'd collected in
there. And tell him I'll give him two weeks in the guardhouse
for the way he ran things here. As for the fellow in there
now, transfer him to headquarters at once. Let the guard be in
readiness."
"Very
good, Pan Colonel," said the Sergeant and saluted.
Spurring
on their horses, the Colonel and the Captain galloped back to
the square where the parade was already coming to an end.
Pavel
swung himself over another fence and stopped exhausted. He
could go no farther. Those days cooped up in the stifling
storeroom without food had sapped his strength.
Where
should he go? Home was out of the question, and to go to the
Bruzzhaks might bring disaster upon the whole family if anyone
discovered him there.
He
did not know what to do, and ran on again blindly, leaving
behind the vegetable patches and back gardens at the edge of
the town. Colliding heavily with a fence, he came to himself
with a start and looked about him in amazement: there behind
the tall fence was the forest warden's garden. So this was
where his weary legs had brought him! He could have sworn that
he had had no thought of coming this way. How then did he
happen to be here? For that he could find no answer.
Yet
rest awhile he must; he had to consider the situation and
decide on the next step. He remembered that there was a
summerhouse at the end of the garden. No one would see him
there.
Hoisting
himself to the top of the fence, he clambered over and dropped
into the garden below. With a brief glance at the house,
barely visible among the trees, he made for the summerhouse.
To his dismay he found that it was open on nearly all sides.
The wild vine that had walled it in during the summer had
withered and now all was bare.
He
turned to go back, but it was too late. There was a furious
barking behind him. He wheeled round and saw a huge dog coming
straight at him down the leaf-strewn path leading from the
house. Its fierce growls rent the stillness of the garden.
Pavel
made ready to defend himself. The first attack he repulsed
with a heavy kick. But the animal crouched to spring a second
time. There is no saying how the encounter would have ended
had a familiar voice not called out: "Come here, Tresor!
Come here!"
Tonya
came running down the path. She dragged Tresor back by the
collar and turned to address the young man standing by the
fence.
"What
are you doing here? You might have been badly mauled by the
dog. It's lucky I. . . ."
She
stopped short and her eyes widened in surprise. How
extraordinarily like Korchagin was this stranger who had
wandered into her garden.
The
figure by the fence stirred.
"Tonya!"
said the young man softly. "Don't you recognise me?"
Tonya
cried out and rushed impulsively over to him.
"Pavel,
you?"
Tresor,
taking the cry as a signal for attack, sprang forward.
"Down,
Tresor, down!" A few cuffs from Tonya and he slunk back
with an injured air toward the house, his tail between his
legs.
"So
you're free?" said Tonya, clinging to Pavel's hands.
"You
knew then?"
"I
know everything," replied Tonya breathlessly. "Liza
told me. But however did you get here? Did they let you
go?"
"Yes,
but only by mistake," Pavel replied wearily. "I ran
away. I suppose they're looking for me now. I really don't
know how I got here. I thought I'd rest a bit in your
summerhouse. I'm awfully tired," he added apologetically.
She
gazed at him for a moment or two and a wave of pity and
tenderness swept over her.
"Pavel,
my darling Pavel," she murmured holding his hands fast in
hers. "I love you. . . . Do you hear me? My stubborn boy,
why did you go away that time? Now you're coming to us, to me.
I shan't let you go for anything. It's nice and quiet in our
house and you can stay as long as you like."
Pavel
shook his head.
"What
if they find me here? No, I can't stay in your place."
Her
hands squeezed his fingers and her eyes flashed.
"If
you refuse, I shall never speak to you again. Artem isn't
here, he was marched off under escort to the locomotive. All
the railwaymen are being mobilised. Where will you go?"
Pavel
shared her anxiety, and only his fear of bringing trouble to
this girl now grown so dear to him held him back. But at last,
worn out by his harrowing experiences, hungry and exhausted,
he gave in.
While
he sat on the sofa in Tonya's room, the following conversation
ensued between mother and daughter in the kitchen.
"Mama,
Korchagin is in my room. He was my pupil, you remember? I
don't want to hide anything from you. He was arrested for
helping a Bolshevik sailor to escape. Now he has run away from
prison, but he has nowhere to go." Her voice trembled.
"Mother dear, please let him stay here for a while."
The
mother looked into her daughter's pleading eyes.
"Very
well, I have no objection. But where do you intend to put
him?"
Tonya
flushed.
"He
can sleep in my room on the sofa," she said. "We
needn't tell Papa anything for the time being."
Her
mother looked straight into her eyes.
"Is
this what you have been fretting about so much lately?"
she asked.
"Yes."
"But
he is scarcely more than a boy."
"I
know," replied Tonya, nervously fingering the sleeve of
her blouse. "But if he hadn't escaped they would have
shot him just the same."
Yekaterina
Mikhailovna was alarmed by Korchagin's presence in her home.
His arrest and her daughter's obvious infatuation with a lad
she scarcely knew disturbed her.
But
Tonya, considering the matter settled, was already thinking of
attending to her guest's comfort.
"He
must have a bath, first thing, Mama. I'll see to it at once.
He is as dirty as a chimney sweep. It must be ages since he
had a wash."
And
she bustled off to heat the water for the bath and find some
clean linen for Pavel. When all was ready she rushed into the
room, seized Pavel by the arm and hurried him off to the
bathroom without more ado.
"You
must have a complete change of clothes. Here is a suit for you
to put on. Your things will have to be washed. You can wear
that in the meantime," she said pointing to the chair
where a blue sailor blouse with striped white collar and a
pair of bell-bottomed trousers were neatly laid out.
Pavel
looked surprised. Tonya smiled.
"I
wore it at a masquerade ball once," she explained.
"It will be just right for you. Now, hurry. While you're
washing, I'll get you something to eat."
She
went out and shut the door, leaving Pavel with no alternative
but to undress and climb into the tub.
An
hour later all three, mother, daughter and Pavel, were dining
in the kitchen.
Pavel,
who was ravenously hungry, consumed three helpings before he
was aware of it. He was rather shy of Yekaterina Mikhailovna
at first but soon thawed out when he saw how friendly she was.
After
dinner they retired to Tonya's room and at Yekaterina
Mikhailovna's request Pavel related his experiences.
"What
do you intend doing now?" Yekaterina Mikhailovna asked
when he had finished.
Pavel
pondered the question a moment. "I should like to see
Artem first, and then I shall have to get away from
here."
"But
where will you go?"
"I
think I could make my way to Uman or perhaps to Kiev. I don't
know myself yet, but I must get away from here as soon as
possible."
Pavel
could hardly believe that everything had changed so quickly.
Only that morning he had been in the filthy cell and now here
he was sitting beside Tonya, wearing clean clothes, and, what
was most important, he was free.
What
queer turns life can take, he thought: one moment the sky
seems black as night, and then the sun comes shining through
again. Had it not been for the danger of being arrested again
he would have been the happiest lad alive at this moment.
But
he knew that even in this large, silent house he was far from
safe. He must go away from here, it did not matter where. And
yet he did not at all welcome the idea of going away. How
thrilling it had been to read about the heroic Garibaldi! How
he had envied him! But now he realised that Garibaldi's must
have been a hard life, hounded as he was from place to place.
He, Pavel, had only lived through seven days of misery and
torment, yet it had seemed like a whole year.
No,
clearly he was not cut out to be a hero.
"What
are you thinking about?" Tonya asked, bending over toward
him. The deep blue of her eyes seemed fathomless.
"Tonya,
shall I tell you about Khristina?"
"Yes,
do," Tonya urged him.
He
told her the sad story of his fellow-captive.
The
clock ticked loudly in the silence as he ended his story:
".. .And that was the last we saw of her," his
words
came with difficulty. Tonya's head dropped and she had to bite
her lips to force back the tears.
Pavel
looked at her. "1 must go away tonight," he said
with finality.
"No,
no, 1 shan't let you go anywhere tonight."
She
stroked his bristly hair tenderly with her slim warm fingers.
. . .
"Tonya,
you must help me. Someone must go to the station and find out
what has happened to Artem and take a note to Seryozha. I have
a revolver hidden in a crow's nest. I daren't go for it, but
Seryozha can get it for me. Will you be able to do this for
me?"
Tonya
got up.
"I'll
go to Liza Sukharko right away. She and I will go to the
station together. Write your note and I'll take it to
Seryozha. Where does he live? Shall I tell him where you are
if he should want to see you?"
Pavel
considered for a moment before replying. "Tell him to
bring the gun to your garden this evening."
It
was very late when Tonya returned. Pavel was fast asleep. The
touch of her hand awoke him and he opened his eyes to find her
standing over him, smiling happily.
"Artem
is coming here soon. He has just come back. Liza's father has
agreed to vouch for him and they're letting him go for an
hour. The engine is standing at the station. I couldn't tell
him you are here. I just told him I had something very
important to tell him. There he is now!"
Tonya
ran to open the door. Artem stood in the doorway dumb with
amazement, unable to believe his eyes. Tonya closed the door
behind him so that her father, who was lying ill with typhus
in the study, might not overhear them.
Another
moment and Artem was giving Pavel a bear's hug that made his
bones crack, and crying: "Pavel! My little brother!"
And
so it was decided: Pavel was to leave the next day. Artem
would arrange for Bruzzhak to take him on a train bound for
Kazatin.
Artem,
usually grave and reserved, was now almost beside himself with
joy at having found his brother after so many days of anxiety
and uncertainty.
"Then
it's settled. Tomorrow morning at five you'll be at the
warehouse. While they're loading on fuel you can slip in. I
wish I could stay and have a chat with you but I must be
getting back. I'll see you off tomorrow. They're making up a
battalion of railwaymen. We go about under an armed escort
just like when the Germans were here."
Artem
said good-bye to his brother and left.
Dusk
gathered fast, Sergei would be arriving soon with the
revolver. While he waited, Pavel paced nervously up and down
the dark room. Tonya and her mother were with the forest
warden.
He
met Sergei in the darkness by the fence and the two friends
shook hands warmly. Sergei had brought Valya with him. They
conversed in low tones.
"I
haven't brought the gun," Sergei said. "That
backyard of yours is thick with Petlyura men. There are carts
standing all over the place and they had a bonfire going. So I
couldn't climb the tree to get the gun. It's a damn
shame." Sergei was much put out.
"Never
mind," Pavel consoled him. "Perhaps it's just as
well. It would be worse if I happened to be caught on the way
with the gun. But make sure you get hold of it."
Valya
moved closer to Pavel.
"When
are you leaving?"
"Tomorrow,
at daybreak."
"How
did you manage to get away? Tell us."
In
a rapid whisper Pavel told them his story. Then he took leave
of his comrades. The jolly Sergei was unusually silent.
"Good
luck, Pavel, don't forget us," Valya said in a choking
voice.
And
with that they left him, the darkness swallowing them up in an
instant.
Inside
the house all was quiet. The measured ticking of the clock was
the only sound in the stillness.
For
two of the house's inmates there was no thought of sleep that
night. How could they sleep when in six hours they were to
part, perhaps never to meet again. Was it possible in that
brief space of time to give utterance to the myriad of
unspoken thoughts that seethed within them?
Youth,
sublime youth, when passion, as yet unknown, is only dimly
felt in a quickening of the pulse; when your hand coming in
chance contact with your sweetheart's breast trembles as if
affrighted and falters, and when the sacred friendship of
youth guards you from the final step! What can be sweeter than
to feel her arm about your neck and her burning kiss on your
lips.
It
was the second kiss they had exchanged throughout their
friendship. Pavel, who had experienced many a beating but
never a caress except from his mother, was stirred to the
depths of his being. Hitherto life had shown him its most
brutal side, and he had not known it could be such a glorious
thing; now this girl had taught him what happiness could mean.
He
breathed the perfume of her hair and seemed to see her eyes in
the darkness.
"I
love you so, Tonya, I can't tell you how much, for I don't
know how to say it."
His
brain was in a whirl. How responsive her supple body. . . .
But youth's friendship is a sacred trust.
"Tonya,
when all this mess is over I'm bound to get a job as a
mechanic, and if you really want me, if you're really serious
and not just playing with me, I'll be a good husband to you.
I'll never beat you, never do anything to hurt you, I swear
it."
Fearing
to fall asleep in each other's arms—lest Tonya's mother find
them and think ill of them—they separated.
Day
was breaking when they fell asleep after having made a solemn
compact never to forget one another.
Yekaterina
Mikhailovna woke Pavel early. He jumped quickly out of bed.
While he was in the bathroom, putting on his own clothes and
boots, with Dolinnik's jacket on top, Yekaterina Mikhailovna
woke Tonya.
They
hurried through the grey morning mist to the station. When
they reached the timber yards by the back way they found Artem
waiting impatiently for them beside the loaded tender.
A
powerful engine moved up slowly, enveloped in clouds of
hissing steam. Bruzzhak looked out of the cab.
Pavel
bid Tonya and Artem a hasty farewell, then gripped the iron
rail and climbed up into the engine. Looking back he saw two
familiar figures at the crossing: the tall figure of Artem and
the small graceful form of Tonya beside him. The wind tore
angrily at the collar of her blouse and tossed her chestnut
hair. She waved to him.
Artem
glanced at Tonya out of the corner of his eye and noticing
that she was on the verge of tears, he sighed.
"I'll
be damned if there isn't something up between these two,"
he said to himself. "And me thinking Pavel is still a
little boy!"
When
the train disappeared behind the bend he turned to Tonya and
said: "Well, shall we be friends?" And Tonya's tiny
hand was lost in his huge paw.
From
the distance came the rumble of the train gathering speed.
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