It was five in the morning. Vanyusha
was in the porch heating the samovar, and using the
leg of a long boot instead of bellows. Olenin
had already ridden off to bathe in the Terek. (He had
recently invented a new amusement: to swim his
horse in the river.) His landlady was in her outhouse,
and the dense smoke of the kindling fire rose from
the chimney. The girl was milking the buffalo
cow in the shed. ’Can’t keep quiet,
the damned thing!’ came her impatient voice,
followed by the rhythmical sound of milking.
From the street in front of the house
horses’ hoofs were heard clattering briskly,
and Olenin, riding bareback on a handsome dark-grey
horse which was still wet and shining, rode up to the
gate. Maryanka’s handsome head, tied round
with a red kerchief, appeared from the shed and again
disappeared. Olenin was wearing a red silk shirt,
a white Circassian coat girdled with a strap which
carried a dagger, and a tall cap. He sat his
well-fed wet horse with a slightly conscious elegance
and, holding his gun at his back, stooped to open the
gate.
His hair was still wet, and his face
shone with youth and health. He thought himself
handsome, agile, and like a brave; but he was mistaken.
To any experienced Caucasian he was still only a soldier.
When he noticed that the girl had
put out her head he stooped with particular
[Updater’s note: a page,
possibly two, appears to be missing at this point.]
rested on the ground without altering
their shape; how her strong arms with the sleeves
rolled up, exerting the muscles, used the spade almost
as if in anger, and how her deep dark eyes sometimes
glanced at him. Though the delicate brows frowned,
yet her eyes expressed pleasure and a knowledge of
her own beauty.
‘I say, Olenin, have you been
up long?’ said Beletski as he entered the yard
dressed in the coat of a Caucasian officer.
‘Ah, Beletski,’ replied
Olenin, holding out his hand. ’How is it
you are out so early?’
’I had to. I was driven
out; we are having a ball tonight. Maryanka, of
course you’ll come to Ustenka’s?’
he added, turning to the girl.
Olenin felt surprised that Beletski
could address this woman so easily. But Maryanka,
as though she had not heard him, bent her head, and
throwing the spade across her shoulder went with her
firm masculine tread towards the outhouse.
‘She’s shy, the wench
is shy,’ Beletski called after her. ‘Shy
of you,’ he added as, smiling gaily, he ran
up the steps of the porch.
‘How is it you are having a
ball and have been driven out?’
’It’s at Ustenka’s,
at my landlady’s, that the ball is, and you two
are invited. A ball consists of a pie and a gathering
of girls.’
‘What should we do there?’
Beletski smiled knowingly and winked,
jerking his head in the direction of the outhouse
into which Maryanka had disappeared.
Olenin shrugged his shoulders and blushed.
‘Well, really you are a strange fellow!’
said he.
‘Come now, don’t pretend’
Olenin frowned, and Beletski noticing
this smiled insinuatingly. ’Oh, come, what
do you mean?’ he said, ’living in the same
house and such a fine girl, a splendid
girl, a perfect beauty.’
‘Wonderfully beautiful!
I never saw such a woman before,’ replied Olenin.
‘Well then?’ said Beletski,
quite unable to understand the situation.
‘It may be strange,’ replied
Olenin, ’but why should I not say what is true?
Since I have lived here women don’t seem to exist
for me. And it is so good, really! Now what
can there be in common between us and women like these?
Eroshka that’s a different matter!
He and I have a passion in common sport.’
’There now! In common!
And what have I in common with Amalia Ivanovna?
It’s the same thing! You may say they’re
not very clean that’s another matter...
A la guerre, comme a la guerre!
...’
’But I have never known any
Amalia Ivanovas, and have never known how to behave
with women of that sort,’ replied Olenin.
’One cannot respect them, but these I do respect.’
‘Well go on respecting them! Who wants
to prevent you?’
Olenin did not reply. He evidently
wanted to complete what he had begun to say.
It was very near his heart.
‘I know I am an exception...’
He was visibly confused. ’But my life has
so shaped itself that I not only see no necessity to
renounce my rules, but I could not live here, let
alone live as happily as I am doing, were I to live
as you do. Therefore I look for something quite
different from what you look for.’
Beletski raised his eyebrows incredulously.
’Anyhow, come to me this evening; Maryanka will
be there and I will make you acquainted. Do come,
please! If you feel dull you can go away.
Will you come?’
‘I would come, but to speak
frankly I am afraid of being’ seriously carried
away.’
‘Oh, oh, oh!’ shouted
Beletski. ’Only come, and I’ll see
that you aren’t. Will you? On your
word?’
’I would come, but really I
don’t understand what we shall do; what part
we shall play!’
‘Please, I beg of you. You will come?’
‘Yes, perhaps I’ll come,’ said Olenin.
’Really now! Charming women
such as one sees nowhere else, and to live like a
monk! What an idea! Why spoil your life and
not make use of what is at hand? Have you heard
that our company is ordered to Vozdvizhensk?’
‘Hardly. I was told the 8th Company would
be sent there,’ said Olenin.
’No. I have had a letter
from the adjutant there. He writes that the Prince
himself will take part in the campaign. I am very
glad I shall see something of him. I’m
beginning to get tired of this place.’
‘I hear we shall start on a raid soon.’
’I have not heard of it; but
I have heard that Krinovitsin has received the Order
of St. Anna for a raid. He expected a lieutenancy,’
said Beletski laughing. ‘He was let in!
He has set off for headquarters.’
It was growing dusk and Olenin began
thinking about the party. The invitation he had
received worried him. He felt inclined to go,
but what might take place there seemed strange, absurd,
and even rather alarming. He knew that neither
Cossack men nor older women, nor anyone besides the
girls, were to be there. What was going to happen?
How was he to behave? What would they talk about?
What connexion was there between him and those wild
Cossack girls? Beletski had told him of such
curious, cynical, and yet rigid relations. It
seemed strange to think that he would be there in
the same hut with Maryanka and perhaps might have
to talk to her. It seemed to him impossible when
he remembered her majestic bearing. But Beletski
spoke of it as if it were all perfectly simple.
’Is it possible that Beletski will treat Maryanka
in the same way? That is interesting,’
thought he. ’No, better not go. It’s
all so horrid, so vulgar, and above all it
leads to nothing!’ But again he was worried
by the question of what would take place; and besides
he felt as if bound by a promise. He went out
without having made up his mind one way or the other,
but he walked as far as Beletski’s, and went
in there.
The hut in which Beletski lived was
like Olenin’s. It was raised nearly five
feet from the ground on wooden piles, and had two rooms.
In the first (which Olenin entered by the steep flight
of steps) feather beds, rugs, blankets, and cushions
were tastefully and handsomely arranged, Cossack fashion,
along the main wall. On the side wall hung brass
basins and weapons, while on the floor, under a bench,
lay watermelons and pumpkins. In the second room
there was a big brick oven, a table, and sectarian
icons. It was here that Beletski was quartered,
with his camp-bed and his pack and trunks. His
weapons hung on the wall with a little rug behind
them, and on the table were his toilet appliances and
some portraits. A silk dressing-gown had been
thrown on the bench. Beletski himself, clean
and good-looking, lay on the bed in his underclothing,
reading Les Trois Mousquetaires.
He jumped up.
’There, you see how I have arranged
things. Fine! Well, it’s good that
you have come. They are working furiously.
Do you know what the pie is made of? Dough with
a stuffing of pork and grapes. But that’s
not the point. You just look at the commotion
out there!’
And really, on looking out of the
window they saw an unusual bustle going on in the
hut. Girls ran in and out, now for one thing and
now for another.
‘Will it soon be ready?’ cried Beletski.
‘Very soon! Why? Is
Grandad hungry?’ and from the hut came the sound
of ringing laughter.
Ustenka, plump, small, rosy, and pretty,
with her sleeves turned up, ran into Beletski’s
hut to fetch some plates.
‘Get away or I shall smash the
plates!’ she squeaked, escaping from Beletski.
‘You’d better come and help,’ she
shouted to Olenin, laughing. ‘And don’t
forget to get some refreshments for the girls.’
(’Refreshments’ meaning spicebread and
sweets.)
‘And has Maryanka come?’
‘Of course! She brought some dough.’
‘Do you know,’ said Beletski,
’if one were to dress Ustenka up and clean and
polish her up a bit, she’d be better than all
our beauties. Have you ever seen that Cossack
woman who married a colonel; she was charming!
Borsheva? What dignity! Where do they get
it...’
’I have not seen Borsheva, but
I think nothing could be better than the costume they
wear here.’
‘Ah, I’m first-rate at
fitting into any kind of life,’ said Beletski
with a sigh of pleasure. ‘I’ll go
and see what they are up to.’
He threw his dressing-gown over his
shoulders and ran out, shouting, ‘And you look
after the “refreshments".’
Olenin sent Beletski’s orderly
to buy spice-bread and honey; but it suddenly seemed
to him so disgusting to give money (as if he were
bribing someone) that he gave no definite reply to
the orderly’s question: ’How much
spice-bread with peppermint, and how much with honey?’
‘Just as you please.’
‘Shall I spend all the money,’
asked the old soldier impressively. ’The
peppermint is dearer. It’s sixteen kopeks.’
‘Yes, yes, spend it all,’
answered Olenin and sat down by the window, surprised
that his heart was thumping as if he were preparing
himself for something serious and wicked.
He heard screaming and shrieking in
the girls’ hut when Beletski went there, and
a few moments later saw how he jumped out and ran down
the steps, accompanied by shrieks, bustle, and laughter.
‘Turned out,’ he said.
A little later Ustenka entered and
solemnly invited her visitors to come in: announcing
that all was ready.
When they came into the room they
saw that everything was really ready. Ustenka
was rearranging the cushions along the wall. On
the table, which was covered by a disproportionately
small cloth, was a decanter of chikhir and some dried
fish. The room smelt of dough and grapes.
Some half dozen girls in smart tunics, with their heads
not covered as usual with kerchiefs, were huddled
together in a corner behind the oven, whispering,
giggling, and spluttering with laughter.
‘I humbly beg you to do honour
to my patron saint,’ said Ustenka, inviting
her guests to the table.
Olenin noticed Maryanka among the
group of girls, who without exception were all handsome,
and he felt vexed and hurt that he met her in such
vulgar and awkward circumstances. He felt stupid
and awkward, and made up his mind to do what Beletski
did. Beletski stepped to the table somewhat solemnly
yet with confidence and ease, drank a glass of wine
to Ustenka’s health, and invited the others to
do the same. Ustenka announced that girls don’t
drink. ‘We might with a little honey,’
exclaimed a voice from among the group of girls.
The orderly, who had just returned with the honey
and spice-cakes, was called in. He looked askance
(whether with envy or with contempt) at the gentlemen,
who in his opinion were on the spree; and carefully
and conscientiously handed over to them a piece of
honeycomb and the cakes wrapped up in a piece of greyish
paper, and began explaining circumstantially all about
the price and the change, but Beletski sent him away.
Having mixed honey with wine in the glasses, and having
lavishly scattered the three pounds of spice-cakes
on the table, Beletski dragged the girls from their
corners by force, made them sit down at the table,
and began distributing the cakes among them.
Olenin involuntarily noticed how Maryanka’s
sunburnt but small hand closed on two round peppermint
nuts and one brown one, and that she did not know
what to do with them. The conversation was halting
and constrained, in spite of Ustenka’s and Beletski’s
free and easy manner and their wish to enliven the
company. Olenin faltered, and tried to think
of something to say, feeling that he was exciting
curiosity and perhaps provoking ridicule and infecting
the others with his shyness. He blushed, and it
seemed to him that Maryanka in particular was feeling
uncomfortable. ’Most likely they are expecting
us to give them some money,’ thought he.
’How are we to do it? And how can we manage
quickest to give it and get away?’