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THE SPY

The Story of a Superfluous Man

by

MAXIM GORKY

Authorized translation by Thomas Seltzer







New York
B. W. Huebsch
1908

Copyright, 1908
By B. W. Huebsch




                                THE SPY




                               CHAPTER I


When Yevsey Klimkov was four years old, his father was shot dead by the
forester; and when he was seven years old, his mother died. She died
suddenly in the field at harvest time. And so strange was this that
Yevsey was not even frightened by the sight of her dead body.

Uncle Piotr, a blacksmith, put his hand on the boy's head, and said:

"What are we going to do now?"

Yevsey took a sidelong glance at the corner where his mother lay upon a
bench, and answered in a low voice:

"I don't know."

The blacksmith wiped the sweat from his face with his shirtsleeve, and
after a long silence gently shoved his nephew aside.

"You're going to live with me," he said. "We'll send you to school, I
suppose, so that you won't be in our way. Ah, you old man!"

From that day the boy was called Old Man. The nickname suited him very
well. He was too small for his age, his movements were sluggish, and his
voice thin. A little bird-like nose stuck out sadly from a bony face,
his round colorless eyes blinked timorously, his hair was sparse and
grew in tufts. The impression he made was of a puny, shriveled-up little
old fellow. The children in school laughed at him and beat him, his dull
oldish look and his owl-like face somehow irritating the healthier and
livelier among them. He held himself aloof, and lived alone, silently,
always in the shade, or in some corner or hole. Without winking his
round eyes he looked forth upon the people from his retirement,
cautiously contracted like a snail in its shell. When his eyes grew
tired, he closed them, and for a long time sat sightless, gently swaying
his thin body.

Yevsey endeavored to escape observation even in his uncle's home; but
here it was difficult. He had to dine and sup in the company of the
whole family, and when he sat at the table, Yakov, the uncle's youngest
son, a lusty, red-faced youngster, tried every trick to tease him or
make him laugh. He made faces, stuck out his tongue, kicked Yevsey's
legs under the table, and pinched him. He never succeeded, however, in
making the Old Man laugh, though he did succeed in producing quite the
opposite result, for often Yevsey would start with pain, his yellow face
would turn grey, his eyes open wide, and his spoon tremble in his hand.

"What is it?" his uncle Piotr sometimes asked.

"It's Yashka," the boy explained in an even voice, in which there was no
note of complaint.

If Uncle Piotr gave Yashka a box on the ear, or pulled his hair, Aunt
Agafya puckered up her lips and muttered angrily:

"Ugh, you telltale!"

And then Yashka found him somewhere, and pummeled him long and
assiduously upon back, sides, and stomach. Yevsey endured the drubbing
as something inevitable. It would not have been profitable to complain
of Yashka, because if Uncle Piotr beat his son, Aunt Agafya repaid the
punishment with interest upon her nephew, and her blows were more
painful than Yashka's. So when Yevsey saw that Yashka wanted to attack
him, he merely ran away, though he was always overtaken. Then the Old
Man dropped to the ground, and pressed his body to the soil with all his
might, pulling up his knees to his stomach, covering his face and his
head with his hands, and silently yielding his sides and back to his
cousin's fists. The more patiently he bore the buffeting, the angrier
grew Yashka. Sometimes Yashka even cried and shouted, while he kicked
his cousin's body:

"You nasty louse, you, scream!"

Once Yevsey found a horseshoe and gave it to the little pugilist,
because he knew Yashka would take it from him at any rate. Mollified by
the present, Yashka asked:

"Did I hurt you very much when I beat you the last time?"

"Very much," answered Yevsey.

Yashka thought a while, scratched his head, and said in embarrassment:

"It's nothing. It will pass away."

He left Yevsey, but somehow his words settled deep in the Old Man's
heart, and he repeated hopefully in an undertone:

"It will pass away."

Once Yevsey saw some women pilgrims rubbing their tired feet with
nettles. He followed their example, and applied the nettles to his
bruised sides. It seemed to him his pain was greatly assuaged. From that
time he religiously rubbed his wounds with the down of the noxious and
despised weed.

He was poor at his lessons, because he came to school full of dread of
beatings, and he left school swelling with a sense of insult. His
apparent apprehension of being wronged evoked in others the
unconquerable desire to ply the Old Man with blows.

It turned out that Yevsey had a counter-tenor, and the teacher took him
to the church choir. After this he had to be at home less, but to
compensate he met his schoolmates more frequently, at the rehearsals,
and they all fought no less than Yashka.

The old frame church pleased Yevsey. He was always strongly drawn to
peep into the snug warm quiet of its many dark corners, expecting to
find in one of them something uncommon and good, which would embrace
him, press him tenderly to itself, and speak to him the way his mother
used to. All the sacred images, black with many years of soot, with
their good yet stern expression, recalled the dark-bearded face of Uncle
Piotr.

At the church entrance was a picture, which depicted a saint who had
caught the devil and was beating him; the saint, a tall, dark, sinewy
fellow with long hands, the devil, a reddish, lean wizened creature of
stunted growth resembling a little goat. At first Yevsey did not look at
the devil; he had a desire to spit at him surreptitiously; but then he
began to pity the unfortunate little fiend, and when nobody was around
he tenderly stroked the goat-like little chin disfigured by dread and
pain. Thus, for the first time a sense of pity sprang up in the boy's
heart.

Yevsey liked the church for another reason: here all the people, even
the notorious ruffians, dropped their boisterousness, and conducted
themselves quietly and submissively. For loud talk frightened Yevsey. He
ran away from excited faces and shouts, and hid himself, owing to the
fact that once on a market-day he had seen a brawl between a number of
muzhiks, which began by their talking to one another in very loud
voices. Then they shouted and pushed; next someone seized a pole, waved
it about, and struck another man. A terrible howl ensued, many started
to run. They knocked the Old Man off his feet, and he fell face downward
in a puddle. When he jumped up he saw a huge muzhik coming toward him
waving his hands, with a quivering, gory blotch instead of a face. This
was so terrible that Yevsey yelled, and suddenly felt as if he were
being precipitated into a black pit. He had to be sprinkled with water
to bring him to his senses.

Yevsey was also afraid of drunken men. His mother had told him that a
demon takes up his abode in the body of a drunkard. The Old Man imagined
this demon prickly as a hedgehog and moist as a frog, with a reddish
body and green eyes, who settles in a man's stomach, stirs about there,
and turns the man into an evil fiend.

There were many other good things about the church. Besides the quiet
and tender twilight, Yevsey liked the singing. When he sang without
notes, he closed his eyes firmly, and letting his clear plaintive
soprano blend with the general chorus in order it should not be heard
above the others, he hid himself deliciously somewhere, as if overcome
by a sweet sleep. In this drowsy state it seemed to him he was drifting
away from life, approaching another gentle, peaceful existence.

A thought took shape in his mind, which he once expressed to his uncle
in these words:

"Can a person live so that he can go everywhere and see everything, but
be seen by nobody?"

"Invisibly?" asked the blacksmith, and thought a while. "I should
suppose it would be impossible." He turned his black face to his nephew,
and added seriously, "Yes, of course, it would be very nice if you could
do it, Orphan."

From the moment that all the villagers began to call Yevsey "Old Man,"
Uncle Piotr used "Orphan" instead. A peculiar man in every respect the
blacksmith was not terrible even when drunk. He would merely remove his
hat from his head and walk about the street waving it, singing in a high
doleful voice, smiling, and shaking his head. The tears would run down
his face even more copiously than when he was sober.

His uncle seemed to Yevsey the very wisest and best muzhik in the whole
village. He could talk with him about everything. Though he often smiled
he scarcely ever laughed; he spoke without haste, in a quiet, serious
tone. Either failing to notice his nephew, or forgetting about
him--which especially pleased Yevsey--he would talk to himself in his
shop, keeping up a constant dispute with some invisible opponent and
forever admonishing him.

"Confound you," he would mumble, but without anger. "Greedy maw! Don't I
work? There, I have scorched my eyes. I'll soon get blind. What else do
you want? A curse on this life! Hard luck! No beauty--no joy."

His interjections sounded as if he were composing psalms; and Yevsey had
the impression that his uncle was actually facing the man he was
addressing.

Once Yevsey asked:

"Whom are you talking to?"

"Whom am I talking to?" repeated the blacksmith without looking at the
boy. Then he smiled and answered. "I'm talking to my stupidity."

But it was a rare thing for Yevsey to be able to speak with his
guardian, for he was seldom alone. Yashka, round as a top, often spun
about the place, drowning the blows of the hammer and the crackling of
the coals in the furnace with his piercing shouts. In his presence
Yevsey did not dare even to look at his uncle.

The smithy stood at the edge of the shallow ravine, at the bottom of
which among the osier bushes, Yevsey passed all his leisure time in
spring, summer, and autumn. Here it was as peaceful as in the church.
The birds warbled, the bees and drones hummed, and a fine quiet song
quivered in the air. The boy sat there swaying his body and brooding
with tightly shut eyes. Or he roamed amid the bushes, listening to the
noise in the blacksmith shop. When he perceived his uncle was alone, he
crept out and went up to him.

"What, you, Orphan?" was the blacksmith's greeting, as he scrutinized
the boy with his little eyes wet with tears.

Once Yevsey asked:

"Is the evil power in the church at night?"

The smith thought a while, and answered:

"Why shouldn't it be? It gets everywhere. That's easy for it."

The boy raised his shoulders, and with his round eyes searchingly
examined the dark corners of the shop.

"Don't be afraid of the devils," the uncle advised.

Yevsey sighed, and answered quietly:

"I'm not afraid."

"They won't hurt you," the blacksmith explained with assurance, wiping
his eyes with his black fingers. Then Yevsey asked:

"And how about God?"

"What about Him?"

"Why does God let devils get into the church?"

"What's that to him? God isn't the keeper of the church."

"Doesn't he live there?"

"Who? God? Why should He? His place, Orphan, is everywhere. The churches
are for the people."

"And the people, what are they for?"

"The people--it seems they are--in general--for everything. You can't
get along without people."

"Are they for God?"

The blacksmith looked askance at his nephew, and answered after a pause:

"Of course." Wiping his hands on his apron and staring at the fire in
the furnace, he added, "I don't know about this business, Orphan. Why
don't you ask the teacher or the priest?"

Yevsey wiped his nose on his shirtsleeve.

"I'm afraid of them."

"It would be better for you not to talk of such things," the uncle
advised gravely. "You are a little boy. You should play out in the open
air, and store up health. If you want to live you must be a healthy man.
If you are not strong, you can't work. Then you can't live at all.
That's all we know, and what God needs is unknown to us." He grew
silent, and meditated without removing his eyes from the fire. After a
time he continued in a serious tone, speaking choppily: "On the one hand
I know nothing, on the other hand I don't understand. They say all
wisdom comes from Him. Yet it's evident that the thicker one's candle
before God the more wolfish the heart." He looked around the shop, and
his eyes fell on the boy in the corner. "Why are you squeezing yourself
into that crack? I told you to go out and play." As Yevsey crept out
timidly, the smith added, "A spark will fall into your eye, and then
you'll be one-eyed. Who wants a one-eyed fellow?"

His mother had told Yevsey several stories on winter nights when the
snowstorm knocking against the walls of the hut ran along the roof,
touched everything as if groping for something in anguish, crept down
the chimney, and whined there mournfully in different keys. The mother
recited the tales quietly, drowsily. Her speech sometimes grew confused;
often she repeated the same words several times. It seemed to the boy
she saw everything about which she spoke, but obscurely, as in the dark.

The neighbors reminded Yevsey of his mother's tales. The blacksmith,
too, it seemed, saw in the furnace-fire both devils and God, and all the
terrors of human life. That was why he continually wept. While Yevsey
listened to his talk, which set his heart aquiver with a dreadful tremor
of expectation, the hope insensibly formulated itself that some day he
would see something remarkable, not resembling the life in the village,
the drunken muzhiks, the cantankerous women, the boisterous
children--something quite different, without noise and confusion,
without malice and quarreling, something lovable and serious, like the
church service.

One of the neighbors was a blind girl, with whom Yevsey became intimate.
He took her to walk in the village; carefully helped her down the
ravine, and spoke to her in a low voice, opening wide his watery eyes in
fear. This friendship did not escape the notice of the villagers, all of
whom it pleased. But once the mother of the blind girl came to Uncle
Piotr with a complaint. She declared Yevsey had frightened Tanya with
his talk, and now she could not leave her daughter alone, because the
girl cried and slept poorly, had disturbed dreams, and started out of
her sleep screaming. What Yevsey had said to her it was impossible to
make out. She kept babbling about devils, about the sky being black and
having holes in it, about fires visible through the holes, and about
devils who made sport in there, and teased people. What does it mean?
How can anyone tell a little girl such stuff?

"Come here," said Uncle Piotr to his nephew.

When Yevsey quietly left his corner, the smith put his rough heavy hand
on his head and asked:

"Did you tell her all that?"

"I did."

"Why?"

"I don't know."

The blacksmith, without removing his hand, shoved back the boy's head,
and looking into his eyes asked gravely:

"Why, is the sky black?"

"What else is it if she can't see?" Yevsey muttered.

"Who?"

"Tanya."

"Yes," said the blacksmith. After a moment's reflection he asked, "And
how about the fire being black? Why did you invent that?"

The boy dropped his eyes and was silent.

"Well, speak. Nobody is beating you. Why did you tell her all that
nonsense, eh?"

"I was sorry for her," whispered Yevsey.

The blacksmith pushed him aside lightly.

"You shan't talk to her any more, do you hear? Never! Don't worry, Aunt
Praskovya, we'll put an end to this friendship."

"You ought to give him a whipping," said the mother. "My little girl
lived quietly, she wasn't a bit of a bother to anybody, and now someone
has to be with her all the time."

After Praskovya had left, the smith without saying anything led Yevsey
by the hand into the yard.

"Now talk sensibly. Why did you frighten the little girl?"

The uncle's voice was not loud, but it was stern. Yevsey became
frightened, and quickly began to justify himself, stuttering over his
words.

"I didn't frighten her--I did it just--just--she kept complaining--she
said I see only black, but for you everything--so I began to tell her
everything is black to keep her from being envious. I didn't mean to
frighten her at all."

Yevsey broke into sobs, feeling himself wronged. Uncle Piotr smiled.

"You fool! You should have remembered that she's been blind only three
years. She wasn't born blind. She lost her sight after she had the
smallpox. So she recollects what things are really bright. Oh, what a
stupid fellow!"

"I'm not stupid. She believed me," Yevsey retorted, wiping his eyes.

"Well, all right. Only don't go with her any more. Do you hear?"

"I won't."

"As to your crying; it's nothing. Let them think I gave you a beating."
The blacksmith tapped Yevsey on the shoulder, and continued with a
smile, "You and I, we're cheats, both of us."

The little fellow buried his head in his uncle's side, and asked
tremulously:

"Why is everybody down on me?"

"I don't know, Orphan," answered the uncle after a moment's reflection.

The wrongs to which he was subjected now began to yield the boy a sort
of bitter satisfaction. A dim conviction settled upon him that he was
not like everybody else, and this was why all were down on him. He
observed that all the people were malicious and worn out with ill-will.
They lived, each deceiving his neighbor, abusing one another, and
drinking. Everyone sought for mastery over his fellow, though over
himself he was not master. Yevsey saw no man who was not in constant
fear of something. The whole of life was filled with terror, and terror
divided the people into fragments.

The village stood upon a low hill. On the other side of the river
stretched a marsh. In the summer after a hot day it exhaled a stifling
lilac-colored mist, which breathed a putrid breath upon the village, and
sent upon the people a swarm of mosquitoes. The people, angry and
pitiful, scratched themselves until blood came. From behind the thin
woods in the distance climbed a lowering reddish moon. Huge and round it
looked through the haze like a dull sinister eye. Yevsey thought it was
threatening him with all kinds of misery and dread. He feared its dirty
reddish face. When he saw it over the marsh, he hid himself, and in his
sleep he was tormented by heavy dreams. At night bluish, trembling
lights strayed over the marsh, said to be the homeless spirits of
sinners. The villagers sighed over them sorrowfully, pitying them. But
for one another they had no pity.

It was possible for them, however, to have lived differently, in
friendship and joy. An incident Yevsey once witnessed proved this to
him.

One night the granary of the rich muzhik Veretennikov caught fire. The
little boy ran into the garden, and climbed up a willow tree to look at
the conflagration.

It seemed to him that the many-winged, supple body of a horrible
smoke-begrimed bird with a fiery jaw was circling in the sky. It
inclined its red blazing head to the ground, greedily tore the straw
with its sharp fiery teeth, gnawed at the wood, and licked it with its
hundred yellow tongues. Its smoky body playfully coiled in the black
sky, fell upon the village, crept along the roofs of the houses, and
again raised itself aloft majestically and lightly, without removing its
flaming red head from the ground. It snorted, scattering sheaves of
sparks, whistling with joy in its evil work, singing, puffing, and
spreading its raging jaw wider and wider, embracing the wood more and
more greedily with its red ribbons of flame.

In the presence of the fire the people turned small and black. They
sprinkled water into its jaws, thrust long poles at it, and tore flaming
sheaves from between its teeth. Then they trampled the sheaves. The
people, too, coughed, sniffed, and sneezed, gasping for breath in the
greasy smoke. They shouted and roared, their voices blending with the
crackling and roaring of the fire. They approached nearer and nearer to
the great bird, surrounding its red head with a black living ring, as if
tightening a noose about its body. Here and there the noose broke, but
they tied it again, and crowded about more firmly. The noose strangled
the fire, which lay there savagely. It jumped up, and its body swelled,
writhing like a snake, striving to free its head; but the people held it
fast to the ground. Finally, enfeebled, exhausted, and sullen it fell
upon the neighboring granaries, crept along the gardens, and dwindled
away, shattered and faint.

"All together!" shouted the villagers, encouraging one another.

"Water!" rang out the women's voices.

The women formed a chain from the fire to the river, strangers and
kinsmen, friends and enemies all in a row. And the buckets of water were
rapidly passed from hand to hand.

"Quick, women! Quick, good women!"

It was pleasant and cheerful to look upon this good, friendly life in
conflict with the fire. The people emboldened one another. They spoke
words of praise for displays of dexterity and disputed in kindly jest.
The shouts were free from malice. In the presence of the fire everybody
seemed to see his neighbor as good, and each grew pleasant to the other.
When at last the fire was vanquished, the villagers grew even jolly.
They sang songs, laughed, boasted of the work, and joked. The older
people got whiskey to drink away their exhaustion, while the young folk
remained in the streets amusing themselves almost until morning. And
everything was as good as in a dream.

Yevsey heard not a single malicious shout, nor noticed a single angry
face. During the entire time the fire was burning no one wept from pain
or abuse, no one roared with the beastly roar of savage malice, ready
for murder.

The next day Yevsey said to his uncle:

"How nice it was last night!"

"Yes, Orphan, it was nice. A little more, and the fire would have burned
away half the village."

"I mean about the people," explained the boy. "How they joined together
in a friendly way. If they would live like that all the time, if there
were a fire all the time!"

The blacksmith reflected for an instant, then asked in surprise:

"You mean there should be fires all the time?" He looked at Yevsey
sternly, and shook his finger. "You wiseacre, you, look out! Don't think
such sinful thoughts. Just see him! He finds pleasure in fires!"




                               CHAPTER II


When Yevsey completed the school course, the blacksmith said to him:

"What shall we do with you now? There's nothing for you here. You must
go to the city. I have to get bellows there, and I'll take you along,
Orphan."

"Will you yourself take me?"

"Yes. Are you sorry to leave the village?"

"No, but I am sorry on account of you."

The blacksmith put a piece of iron in the furnace and adjusting the
coals with the tongs, said thoughtfully:

"There's no reason to be sorry on account of me. I am grown up. I am the
muzhik I ought to be, like every other muzhik."

"You're better than everybody else," Yevsey said in a low voice.

It seemed that Uncle Piotr did not hear the last remark, for he did not
answer, but removed the glowing iron from the fire, screwed up his eyes,
and began to hammer, scattering the red sparks all about him. Then he
suddenly stopped, slowly dropped the hand in which he held the hammer,
and said smiling:

"I ought to give you some advice--how to live and all such things."

Yevsey waited to hear the advice. The blacksmith, however, apparently
forgetful of his nephew, put the iron back into the fire, wiped the
tears from his cheeks, and looked into the furnace. A muzhik entered,
bringing a cracked tire. Yevsey went out to go to the ravine, where he
crouched in the bushes until sunset, waiting for his uncle to be alone;
which did not happen.

The day of his departure from the village was effaced from the boy's
memory. He recalled only that when he rode out into the fields, it was
dark and the air strangely oppressive. The wagon jolted horribly, and on
both sides rose black motionless trees. The further they advanced the
wider the space became and the brighter the atmosphere. The uncle was
sullen the whole way, and reluctantly gave brief and unintelligible
answers to Yevsey's questions.

They rode an entire day, stopping over night in a little village. Yevsey
heard the fine and protracted playing of an accordion, a woman weeping,
and occasionally an angry voice crying out: "Shut up!" and swearing
abusively.

The travelers continued on their way the same night. Two dogs
accompanied them, running around the wagon and whining. As they left the
village a bittern boomed sullenly and plaintively in the forest to the
left of the road.

"God grant good luck!" mumbled the blacksmith.

Yevsey fell asleep, and awoke when his uncle lightly tapped him on his
legs with the butt end of the whip.

"Look, Orphan."

To the sleepy eyes of the boy the city appeared like a huge field of
buckwheat. Thick and varicolored, it stretched endlessly, with the
golden church steeples standing out like yellow pimpinellas, and the
dark bands of the streets looking like fences between the patches.

"Oh, how large!" said Yevsey. After another look, he asked his uncle
cautiously, "Will you come to see me?"

"Certainly, whenever I come to the city. You will begin to make money,
and I will ask you to give me some. 'Orphan,' I'll say, 'give your uncle
about three rubles.'"

"I'll give you all my money."

"You mustn't give me all. You should give only as much as you won't be
sorry to part with. To give less is shameful; to give more is unfair."

The city grew quickly and became more and more varied in coloring. It
glittered green, red, and golden, reflecting the rays of the sun from
the glass of the countless windows and from the gold of the church
steeples. It seemed to make promises, kindling in the heart a confused
curiosity, a dim expectation of something unusual. Kneeling in the wagon
with his hand on his uncle's shoulder, Yevsey looked before him while
the smith said:

"You live this way--do whatever is assigned to you, hold yourself aloof,
beware of the bold men. One bold man out of ten succeeds, and nine go to
pieces."

He spoke with indecision, as if he himself doubted whether he was saying
what he ought to say, and he searched his thoughts for something else
more important. Yevsey listened attentively and gravely, expecting to
hear a special warning against the terrors and dangers of the new life.
But the blacksmith drew a deep breath, and after a pause continued more
firmly and with more assurance, "Once they came near giving me a lashing
with switches in the district court. I was betrothed then. I had to get
married. Nevertheless they wanted to whip me. It's all the same to them.
They don't care about other people's affairs. I lodged a complaint with
the governor, and for three and a half months they kept me in prison,
not to speak of the blows. I got the worst beatings. I even spat blood.
It's from that time that tears are always in my eyes. One policeman, a
short reddish fellow, always went for my head."

"Uncle," said Yevsey quietly, "don't speak of it."

"What else shall I speak to you about?" cried Uncle Piotr with a smile.
"There is nothing else."

Yevsey's head drooped sadly.

One detached house after another seemed to step toward them, dirty and
wrapped in heavy odors, with chimneys sticking from their red and green
roofs, like warts. Bluish-grey smoke rose from them lazily. Some
chimneys, monstrously tall and dirty, jutted straight up from the
ground, and emitted thick black clouds of smoke. The ground was
compactly trodden, and seemed to be steeped in black grease. Everywhere
heavy alarming sounds penetrated the smoky atmosphere. Something
growled, hummed and whistled; iron clanged angrily, and some huge
creature breathed hoarsely and brokenly.

"When will we get to the place?" asked Yevsey.

Looking carefully in front of him the uncle said:

"This isn't the city yet. These are factories in the suburb."

Finally they pulled into a broad street lined with old squat frame
houses painted various colors, which had a peaceful, homelike
appearance. Especially fine were the clean cheerful houses with gardens,
which seemed to be tied about with green aprons.

"We'll soon be there," said the blacksmith, turning the horse into a
narrow side street. "Don't be afraid, Orphan."

He drew up at the open gate of a large house, jumped down, and walked
into the yard. The house was old and bent. The joists protruded from
under the small dim windows. In the large dirty yard there were a number
of carriages, and four muzhiks talking loudly stood about a white horse
tapping it with their hands. One of them, a round, bald-headed fellow
with a large yellow beard and a rosy face, waved his hands wildly on
seeing Piotr, and cried:

"Oh!"

They went to a narrow, dark room, where they sat down and drank tea.
Uncle Piotr spoke about the village. The bald fellow laughed and shouted
so that the dishes rattled on the table. It was close in the room and
smelled of hot bread. Yevsey wanted to sleep, and he kept looking into
the corner where behind dirty curtains he could see a wide bed with
several pillows. Large black flies buzzed about, knocking against his
forehead, crawling over his face, and tickling his perspiring skin; but
he restrained himself from driving them away.

"We'll find a place for you!" the bald man shouted to him, nodding his
head gaily. "In a minute! Natalya, did you call for Matveyevich?"

A full woman with dark lashes, a small mouth, and a high bust, answered
calmly and clearly:

"How many times have you asked me already?"

She held her head straight and proudly, and when she moved her hands the
rose-colored chintz of her new jacket rustled sumptuously. Her whole
being recalled some good dream or fairy tale.

"Piotr, my friend, look at Natalya. What a Natalya! Droppings from the
honey-comb!" shouted the bald man deafeningly.

Uncle Piotr laughed quietly, as if fearing to look at the woman, who
pushed a hot rye cake filled with curds toward Yevsey, and said:

"Eat, eat a lot. In the city people must eat a good deal."

A jar of preserves stood on the table, honey in a saucer, toasted
cracknels sprinkled with anise-seed, sausage, cucumber, and vodka. All
this filled the air with a strong odor. Yevsey grew faint from the
oppressive sensation of over-abundance, though he did not dare to
decline, and submissively chewed everything set before him.

"Eat!" cried the bald man, then continued his talk with Uncle Piotr. "I
tell you, it's luck. It's only a week since the horse crushed the little
boy. He went to the tavern for boiling water, when suddenly--"

Another man now made his entrance unnoticed by the others. He, too, was
bald, but small and thin, with dark eyeglasses on a large nose, and a
long tuft of grey hair on his chin.

"What is it, people?" he asked in a low, indistinct voice.

The master jumped up from his chair, uttered a cry, and laughed aloud.
Yevsey was suddenly seized with alarm.

The man addressed Piotr and his hosts as "People," by which he separated
himself from them. He sat down at some distance from the table, then
moved to one side away from the blacksmith, and looked around moving his
thin dry neck slowly. On his head, a little above his forehead, over his
right eye, was a large bump. His little pointed ears clung closely to
his skull, as if to hide themselves in the short fringe of his grey
hair. He produced the impression of a quiet, grey, seedy, person. Yevsey
unsuccessfully tried to get a surreptitious peep at his eyes under the
glasses. His failure disquieted him.

The host cried:

"Do you understand, Orphan?"

"This is a trump," remarked the man with the bump. He sat supporting his
thin dark hands on his sharp knees, and spoke little. Occasionally
Yevsey heard the men utter some peculiar words.

At last the newcomer said:

"And so it is settled."

Uncle Piotr moved heavily in his chair.

"Now, Orphan, you have a place. This is your master." He turned to the
master. "I want to tell you, sir, that the boy can read and write, and
is not at all a stupid fellow. I am not saying this because I can't find
a place for him, but because it is the truth. The boy is even very
curious--"

"I have no need for curiosity," said the master shaking his head.

"He's a quiet sort. They call him Old Man in the village--that's the
kind he is."

"We shall see," said the man with the bump on his forehead. He adjusted
his glasses, scrutinized Yevsey's face closely, and added, "My name is
Matvey Matveyevich."

Turning away, he took up a glass of tea, which he drank noiselessly.
Then he rose and with a silent nod walked out.

Yevsey and his uncle now went to the yard, where they seated themselves
in the shade near the stable. The blacksmith spoke to Yevsey cautiously,
as if groping with his words for something unintelligible to him.

"You'll surely have it good with him. He's a quiet little old man. He
has run his course and left all sorts of sins behind him. Now he lives
in order to eat a little bite, and he grumbles and purrs like a satiated
Tom-cat."

"But isn't he a sorcerer?" asked the boy.

"Why? I should think there are no sorcerers in the cities." After
reflecting a few moments, the blacksmith went on. "Anyway it's all the
same to you. A sorcerer is a man, too. But remember this, a city is a
dangerous place. This is how it spoils people: the wife of a man goes
away on a pilgrimage, and he immediately puts in her place some
housemaid or other, and indulges himself. But the old man can't show you
such an example. That's why I say you'll have it good with him. You will
live with him as behind a bush, sitting and looking."

"And when he dies?" Yevsey inquired warily.

"That probably won't be soon. Smear your head with oil to keep your hair
from sticking out."

About noon the uncle made Yevsey bid farewell to their hosts, and taking
him firmly by the hand led him to the city. They walked for a long time.
It was sultry. Often they asked the passersby how to get to the Circle.
Yevsey regarded everything with his owl-like eyes, pressing close up to
his uncle. The doors of shops slammed, pulleys squeaked, carriages
rattled, wagons rumbled heavily, traders shouted, and feet scraped and
tramped. All these sounds jumbled together were tangled up in the
stifling dusty atmosphere. The people walked quickly, and hurried across
the streets under the horses' noses as if afraid of being too late for
something. The bustle tired the boy's eyes. Now and then he closed them,
whereupon he would stumble and say to his uncle:

"Come, faster!"

Yevsey wanted to get to some place in a corner where it was not so
stirring, not so noisy and hot. Finally they reached a little open place
hemmed in by a narrow circle of old houses, which seemed to support one
another solidly and firmly. In the center of the Circle was a fountain
about which moist shadows hovered on the soil. It was more tranquil
here, and the noise was subdued.

"Look," said Yevsey, "there are only houses and no ground around them at
all."

The blacksmith answered with a sigh:

"It's pretty crowded. Read the signs. Where is Raspopov's shop?"

They walked to the center of the Circle, and stopped at the fountain.
There were many signs, which covered every house like the motley patches
of a beggar's coat. When Yevsey saw the name his uncle had mentioned, a
chill shiver ran through his body, and he examined it carefully without
saying anything. It was small and eaten by rust, and was placed on the
door of a dark basement. On either side the door there was an area
between the pavement and the house, which was fenced in by a low iron
railing. The house, a dirty yellow with peeling plaster, was narrow with
four stories and three windows to each floor. It looked blind as a mole,
crafty, and uncozy.

"Well," asked the smith, "can't you see the sign?"

"There it is," said the boy, indicating the place with a nod of his
head.

"Let's cross ourselves and go."

They descended to the door at the bottom of five stone steps. The
blacksmith raised his cap from his head, and looked cautiously into the
shop.

"Come in," said a clear voice.

The master, wearing a black silk cap without a visor, was sitting at a
table by the window drinking tea.

"Take a chair, peasant, and have some tea. Boy, fetch a glass from the
shelf."

The master pointed to the other end of the shop. Yevsey looked in the
same direction, but saw no boy there. The master turned toward him.

"Well, what's the matter? Aren't you the boy?"

"He's not used to it yet," said Uncle Piotr quietly.

The old man again waved his hand.

"The second shelf on the right. A master must be understood when he says
only half. That's the rule."

The blacksmith sighed. Yevsey groped for the glass in the dim light, and
stumbled over a pile of books on the floor in his haste to hand it to
the master.

"Put it on the table. And the saucer?"

"Oh, you!" exclaimed Uncle Piotr. "What's the matter with you? Get the
saucer."

"It will take a long time to teach him," said the old man with an
imposing look at the blacksmith. "Now, boy, go around the shop, and fix
the place where everything stands in your memory."

Yevsey felt as if something commanding had entered his body, which
impelled him powerfully to move as it pleased. He shrank together, drew
his head in his shoulders, and straining his eyes began to look around
the shop, all the time listening to the words of his master. It was
cool, dusky, and quiet. The noise of the city entered reluctantly, like
the muffled swashing of a stream. Narrow and long as a grave the shop
was closely lined with shelves holding books in compact rows. Large
piles of books cluttered the floor, and barricaded the rear wall, rising
almost to the ceiling. Besides the books Yevsey found only a ladder, an
umbrella, galoshes, and a white pot whose handle was broken off. There
was a great deal of dust, which probably accounted for the heavy odor.

"I'm a quiet man. I am all alone, and if he suits me, maybe I will make
him perfectly happy."

"Of course it lies with you," said Uncle Piotr.

"I am fifty-seven years old. I lived an honest and straightforward life,
and I will not excuse dishonesty. If I notice any such thing I'll hand
him over to the court. Nowadays they sentence minors, too. They have
founded a prison to frighten them called the Junior Colony of
Criminals--for little thieves, you know."

His colorless, drawling words enveloped Yevsey tightly, evoking a
timorous desire to soothe the old man and please him.

"Now, good-bye. The boy must get at the work."

Uncle Piotr rose and sighed.

"Well, Orphan, so you live here now. Obey your master. He won't want to
do you any harm. Why should he? He is going to buy you city clothes. Now
don't be downcast, will you?"

"No," said Yevsey.

"You ought to say 'No, sir,'" corrected the master.

"No, sir," repeated Yevsey.

"Well, good-bye," said the blacksmith putting his hand on the boy's
shoulder, and giving his nephew a little shake he walked out as if
suddenly grown alarmed.

Yevsey shivered, oppressed by a chill sorrow. He went to the door, and
fixed his round eyes questioningly on the yellow face of the master. The
old man twirling the grey tuft on his chin looked down upon the boy.
Yevsey thought he could discern large dim black eyes behind the glasses.
As the two stood thus for a few minutes apparently expecting something
from each other, the boy's breast began to beat with a vague terror; but
the old man merely took a book from a shelf, and pointed to the cover.

"What number is this?"

"1873," replied Yevsey lowering his head.

"That's it."

The master touched Yevsey's chin with his dry finger.

"Look at me."

The boy straightened his neck and quickly mumbled closing his eyes:

"Little uncle, I shall always obey you. I don't need beatings." His eyes
grew dim, his heart sank within him.

"Come here."

The old man seated himself resting his hands on his knees. He removed
his cap and wiped his bald spot with his handkerchief. His spectacles
slid to the end of his nose, and he looked over them at Yevsey. Now he
seemed to have two pairs of eyes. The real eyes were small, immobile,
and dark grey with red lids. Without the glasses the master's face
looked thinner, more wrinkled, and less stern. In fact it wore an
injured and downcast expression, and there was nothing in the least
formidable in his eyes. The bump over his forehead got larger.

"Have you been beaten often?"

"Yes, sir, often."

"Who beat you?"

"The boys."

"Oh!"

The master drew his glasses close to his eyes and mumbled his lips.

"The boys are scrappers here, too," he said. "Don't have anything to do
with them, do you hear?"

"Yes, sir."

"Be on your guard against them. They are impudent rascals and thieves. I
want you to know I am not going to teach you anything bad. Don't be
afraid of me. I am a good man. You ought to get to love me. You will
love me. You'll have it very good with me, you understand?"

"Yes, sir. I will."

The master's face assumed its former expression. He rose, and taking
Yevsey by the hand led him to the further end of the shop.

"Here's work for you. You see these books? On every book the date is
marked. There are twelve books to each year. Arrange them in order. How
are you going to do it?"

Yevsey thought a while, and answered timidly:

"I don't know."

"Well, I am not going to tell you. You can read and you ought to be able
to find out by yourself. Go, get to work."

The old man's dry even voice seemed to lash Yevsey, driving away the
melancholy feeling of separation from his uncle and replacing it with
the anxious desire to begin to work quickly. Restraining his tears the
boy rapidly and quietly untied the packages. Each time a book dropped to
the floor with a thud he started and looked around. The master was
sitting at the table writing with a pen that scratched slightly. As the
people hastened past the door, their feet flashed and their shadows
jerked across the shop. Tears rolled from Yevsey's eyes one after the
other. In fear lest they be detected he hurriedly wiped them from his
face with dusty hands, and full of a vague dread went tensely at his
work of sorting the books.

At first it was difficult for him, but in a few minutes he was already
immersed in that familiar state of thoughtlessness and emptiness which
took such powerful hold of him when, after beatings and insults, he sat
himself down alone in some corner. His eye caught the date and the name
of the month, his hand mechanically arranged the books in a row, while
he sat on the floor swinging his body regularly. He became more and
more deeply plunged in the tranquil state of half-conscious negation
of reality. As always at such times the dim hope glowed in him of
something different, unlike what he saw around him. Sometimes the
all-comprehending, capacious phrase uttered by Yashka dimly glimmered in
his memory:

"It will pass away."

The thought pressed his heart warmly and softly with a promise of
something unusual. The boy's hands involuntarily began to move more
quickly, and he ceased to notice the lapse of time.

"You see, you knew how to do it," said the master.

Yevsey, who had not heard the old man approach him, started from his
reverie. Glancing at his work, he asked:

"Is it all right?"

"Absolutely. Do you want tea?"

"No."

"You ought to say, 'No, thank you.' Well, keep on with your work."

He walked away. Yevsey looking after him saw a man carrying a cane enter
the door. He had neither a beard nor mustache, and wore a round hat
shoved back on the nape of his neck. He seated himself at the table, at
the same time putting upon it some small black and white objects. When
Yevsey again started to work, he every once in a while heard abrupt
sounds from his master and the newcomer.

"Castle."

"King."

"Soon."

The confused noise of the street penetrated the shop wearily, with
strange words quacking in it, like frogs in a marsh.

"What are they doing?" thought the boy, and sighed. He experienced a
soft sensation, that from all directions something unusual was coming
upon him, but not what he timidly awaited. The dust settled upon his
face, tickled his nose and eyes, and set his teeth on edge. He recalled
his uncle's words:

"You will live with him as behind a bush."

It grew dark.

"King and checkmate!" cried the guest in a thick voice. The master
clucking his tongue called out:

"Boy, close up the shop!"

The old man lived in two small rooms in the fourth story of the same
house. In the first room, which had one window, stood a large chest and
a wardrobe.

"This is where you will sleep."

The two windows in the second room gave upon the street, with a view
over an endless vista of uneven roofs and rosy sky. In the corner, in
front of the ikons, flickered a little light in a blue glass lamp. In
another corner stood a bed covered with a red blanket. On the walls hung
gaudy portraits of the Czar and various generals. The room was close and
smelt like a church, but it was clean.

Yevsey remained at the door looking at his elderly master, who said:

"Mark the arrangement of everything here. I want it always to be the
same as it is now."

Against the wall stood a broad black sofa, a round table, and about the
table chairs also black. This corner had a mournful, sinister aspect.

A tall, white-faced woman with eyes like a sheep's entered the room, and
asked in a low singing voice:

"Shall I serve supper?"

"Bring it in, Rayisa Petrovna."

"A new boy?"

"Yes, new. His name is Yevsey."

The woman walked out.

"Close the door," ordered the old man. Yevsey obeyed, and he continued
in a lower voice. "She is the landlady. I rent the rooms from her with
dinner and supper. You understand?"

"I understand."

"But you have one master--me. You understand?"

"Yes."

"That is to say, you must listen only to me. Open the door, and go into
the kitchen and wash yourself."

The master's voice echoed drily in the boy's bosom, causing his alarmed
heart to palpitate. The old man, it seemed to Yevsey, was hiding
something dangerous behind his words, something of which he himself was
afraid.

While washing in the kitchen he surreptitiously tried to look at the
mistress of the apartment. The woman was preparing the supper
noiselessly but briskly. As she arranged plates, knives, and bread on an
ample tray her large round face seemed kind. Her smoothly combed dark
hair; her unwinking eyes with thin lashes, and her broad nose made the
boy think, "She looks to be a gentle person."

Noticing that she, in her turn, was looking at him, the thin red lips of
her small mouth tightly compressed, he grew confused, and spilt some
water on the floor.

"Wipe it," she said without anger. "There's a cloth under the chair."

When he returned, the old man looked at him and asked:

"What did she tell you?"

But Yevsey had no time to answer before the woman brought in the tray.

"Well, I'll go," she said after setting it on the table.

"Very well," replied the master.

She raised her hand to smooth the hair over her temples--her fingers
were long--and left.

The old man and the boy sat down to their supper. The master ate slowly,
noisily munching his food and at times sighing wearily. When they began
to eat the finely chopped roast meat, he said:

"You see what good food? I always have only good food."

After supper he told Yevsey to carry the dishes into the kitchen, and
showed him how to light the lamp.

"Now, go to sleep. You will find a piece of padding in the wardrobe and
a pillow and a blanket. They belong to you. To-morrow I'll buy you new
clothes, good clothes. Go, now."

When he was half asleep the master came in to Yevsey.

"Are you comfortable?"

Though the chest made a hard bed, Yevsey answered:

"Yes."

"If it is too hot, open the window."

The boy at once opened the window, which looked out upon the roof of the
next house. He counted the chimneys. There were four, all alike. He
looked at the stars with the dim gaze of a timid animal in a cage. But
the stars said nothing to his heart. He flung himself on the chest
again, drew the blanket over his head, and closed his eyes tightly. He
began to feel stifled, thrust his head out, and without opening his eyes
listened. In his master's room something rustled monotonously, then
Yevsey heard a dry, distinct voice:

"Behold, God is mine helper; the Lord is with them that uphold--"

                  *       *       *       *       *

Yevsey realized that the old man was reciting the Psalter; and listening
attentively to the familiar words of King David, which, however, he did
not comprehend, the boy fell asleep.




                              CHAPTER III


Yevsey's life passed smoothly and evenly.

He wanted to please his master, even realized this would be of advantage
to him, and he felt he would succeed, though he behaved with watchful
circumspection and no warmth in his heart for the old man. The fear of
people engendered in him a desire to suit them, a readiness for all
kinds of services, in order to defend himself against the possibility of
attack. The constant expectation of danger developed a keen power of
observation, which still more deepened his mistrust.

He observed the strange life in the house without understanding it. From
basement to roof people lived close packed, and every day, from morning
until night, they crawled about in the tenement like crabs in a basket.
Here they worked more than in the village, and, it seemed, were imbued
with even keener bitterness. They lived restlessly, noisily, and
hurriedly, as if to get through all the work as soon as possible in
preparation of a holiday, which they wanted to meet as free people,
washed, clean, peaceful, and tranquilly joyous. The heart of the boy
sank within him, and the question constantly recurred:

"Will it pass away?"

But the holiday never came. The people spurred one another on, wrangled,
and sometimes fought. Scarcely a day passed on which they did not speak
ill of one another.

In the mornings the master went down to the shop, while Yevsey remained
in the apartment to put it in order. This accomplished, he washed
himself, went to the tavern for boiling water, and then returned to the
shop, where he drank the morning tea with his master. While breakfasting
the old man almost invariably asked him:

"Well, what now?"

"Nothing."

"Nothing is little."

Once, however, Yevsey had a different answer.

"To-day the watchmaker told the furrier's cook that you received stolen
articles."

Yevsey said this unexpectedly to himself, and was instantly seized with
a tremble of fear. He bowed his head. The old man laughed quietly, and
said in a drawling voice without sincerity:

"The scoundrel!" His dark, dry lips quivered. "Thank you for telling me.
Thank you! You see how the people don't love me."

From that time Yevsey began to pay close attention to the conversation
of the tenants, and promptly repeated everything he heard to his master,
speaking in a quiet, calm voice and looking straight into his face.
Several days later, while putting his master's room into order, he found
a crumpled paper ruble on the floor, and when at tea the old man asked
him, "Well, what now?" Yevsey replied, "Here I have found a ruble."

"You found a ruble, did you? I found a gold piece," said the master
laughing.

Another time Yevsey picked up a twenty-kopek piece in the entrance to
the shop, which he also gave to the master. The old man slid his glasses
to the end of his nose, and rubbing the coin with his fingers looked
into the boy's face for a few seconds without speaking.

"According to the law," he said thoughtfully, "a third of what you find,
six kopeks, belongs to you." He was silent, sighed, and stuck the coin
into his vest pocket. "But anyway you're a stupid boy." Yevsey did not
get the six kopeks.

Quiet, unnoticed, and when noticed, obliging, Yevsey Klimkov scarcely
ever drew the attention of the people to himself, though he stubbornly
followed them with the broad, empty gaze of his owl-like eyes, with the
look that did not abide in the memory of those who met it.

From the first days the reticent quiet Rayisa Petrovna interested him
strongly. Every evening she put on a dark, rustling dress and a black
hat, and sallied forth. In the morning when he put the rooms in order
she was still asleep. He saw her only in the evening before supper, and
that not every day. Her life seemed mysterious to him, and her entire
taciturn being, her white face and stationary eyes, roused in him vague
suggestions of something peculiar. He persuaded himself that she lived
better and knew more than everybody else. A kindly feeling which he did
not understand sprang up in his heart for this woman. Every day she
appeared to him more and more beautiful.

Once he awoke at daybreak, and walked into the kitchen for a drink.
Suddenly he heard someone entering the door of the vestibule. He rushed
to his room in fright, lay down, and covered himself with the blanket,
trying to press himself to the chest as closely as possible. In a few
minutes he stuck out his ear, and in the kitchen heard heavy steps, the
rustle of a dress, and the voice of Rayisa Petrovna.

"Oh, oh, you--" she was saying.

Yevsey rose, walked to the door on tiptoe, and looked into the kitchen.
The quiet woman was sitting at the window taking off her hat. Her face
seemed whiter than ever, and tears streamed from her eyes. Her large
body swayed, her hands moved slowly.

"I know you!" she said, shaking her head. She rose to her feet,
supporting herself on the window-sill.

The bed in the master's room creaked. Yevsey quickly jumped back on his
chest, lay down, and wrapped himself up.

"They've done something bad to her," he thought, full of keen pity. At
the same time, however, he was inwardly glad of her tears. They brought
this woman, who lived a secret nocturnal existence, nearer to him.

The next moment someone seemed to be passing by him with sly steps. He
raised his head, and suddenly jumped from the chest, as if burned by the
thin angry shout:

"Ugh! Go away!"

Then there was some hissing. The master in his nightgown hastily came
out of the kitchen, stopped, and said to Yevsey in a whistling voice:

"Sleep! Sleep! What's the matter? Sleep!"

The next morning in the shop the old man asked him:

"Were you frightened last night?"

"Yes."

"She was in her cups. It happens to her sometimes."

Though the question trembled on his lips, Yevsey did not dare to ask
what her occupation was. Some minutes later the old man asked:

"Do you like her?"

"I do."

"Well," said the master sternly, "even if you do, you ought to know that
she's an extremely shrewd woman. She is silent, but bad. She's a sinner.
Yes, that's what she is. Do you know what she does? She's a musician.
She plays the piano." The old man accurately described a piano, and
added didactically, "A person who plays the piano is called a pianist.
And do you know what a house of ill fame is?"

From the talk of the furriers and glaziers in the yard Yevsey already
knew something about disreputable resorts; but desiring to learn more he
answered:

"I don't know."

The old man gave him a lengthy explanation in words very intelligible to
Yevsey. He spoke with heat, occasionally spitting and wrinkling up his
face to express his disgust of the abomination. Yevsey regarded the old
man with his watery eyes, and for some reason did not believe in his
aversion.

"So you see, every evening she plays in a house like that, and depraved
women dance with drunken men to the accompaniment of her music. The men
are all crooks, some of them, maybe, even murderers." Raspopov sighed in
exhaustion, and wiped his perspiring face. "Don't trust her. You
understand? I tell you, she's a cunning woman, and she's mean."

The boy believed everything the master told him about the piano and the
house of ill fame, but failed to be impressed by a single word regarding
the woman. In fact, everything the old man said of her merely increased
the cautious, ever-watchful feeling of mistrust with which Yevsey
treated his master, and by coloring Rayisa Petrovna with a still deeper
tinge of the unusual, made her seem even more beautiful in his eyes.

Another object of Yevsey's curiosity besides Rayisa was Anatol,
apprentice to the glazier, Kuzin, a thin, flat-nosed boy with ragged
hair, dirty, always jolly, and always steeped in the odor of oil. He had
a high ringing voice, which Yevsey liked very much to hear when he
shouted:

"Wi-i-ndow pa-anes."

He spoke to Yevsey first. Yevsey was sweeping the stairway when he
suddenly heard from below the loud question:

"Say there, kid, what government are you from?"

"From this government," answered Yevsey.

"I am from the government of Kostrom. How old are you?"

"Thirteen."

"I am, too. Come along with me."

"Where to?"

"To the river to go in bathing."

"I have to stay in the shop."

"To-day is Sunday."

"That doesn't make any difference."

"Well, go to the devil."

The glazier boy disappeared. Yevsey was not offended by his oath.

Anatol was off the whole day carrying a box of glass about the city, and
usually returned home just as the shop was being closed. Then almost the
entire evening his indefatigable voice, his laughter, whistling, and
singing would rise from the yard. Everybody scolded him, yet all loved
to meddle with him and laugh at his pranks. Yevsey was surprised at the
boldness with which the ragged, snub-nosed boy behaved toward the
grown-up folk, and he experienced a sense of envy when he saw the
gold-embroidery girl run about the yard in chase of the jolly, insolent
fellow. He was powerfully drawn to the glazier boy, for whom he found a
place in his vague fancies of a clean and quiet life.

Once, after supper, Yevsey asked the master:

"May I go down in the yard?"

The old man consented reluctantly.

"Go, but don't stay long. Be sure not to stay long."

Another time when Yevsey put the same request the master added:

"No good will come of your being in the yard."

Yevsey ran down the stairway quickly, and seated himself in the shade to
observe Anatol. The yard was small and hemmed in on all sides by the
high houses. The tenants, workingmen and women, and servants, sat
resting on the rubbish heaps against the walls. In the center of the
ring Anatol was giving a performance.

"The furrier Zvorykin going to church!" he shouted.

To his astonishment Yevsey saw the little stout furrier with hanging
lower lip and eyes painfully screwed up. Thrusting out his abdomen and
leaning his head to one side, Anatol struggled toward the gate in short
steps, reluctance depicted in his walk. The people sitting around
laughed and shouted approval.

"Zvorykin returning from the saloon!"

Now Anatol swayed through the yard, his feet dragging along feebly, his
arms hanging limp, a dull look in his wide-open eyes, his mouth gaping
hideously yet comically. He stopped, tapped himself on the chest, and
said in a wheezy pitiful voice:

"God--how satisfied I am with everything and everybody! Lord, how good
and pleasant everything is to Thy servant, Yakov Ivanich. But the
glazier Kuzin is a blackguard--a scamp before God, a jackass before all
the people--that's true, God--"

The audience roared, but Yevsey did not laugh. He was oppressed by a
twofold feeling of astonishment and envy. The desire to see this boy
frightened and wronged mingled with the expectation of new pranks. He
felt vexed and unpleasant because the glazier boy did not show up men
who inflicted hurt, but merely funny men. Yevsey sat there with mouth
agape and a stupid expression on his face, his owlish eyes staring.

"Here goes glazier Kuzin!"

Before Yevsey appeared the gaunt red muzhik always half drunk, the
sleeves of his dirty shirt tucked up, his right hand thrust in the
breast of his apron, his left hand deliberately stroking his
beard--Kuzin had a reddish forked beard. He was frowning and surly and
moved slowly, like a heavy cart-load. Looking sidewise he screeched in a
cracked, hoarse voice:

"You are carrying on again, you heretic? Am I to listen to this nonsense
for long? You blasted, confounded--"

"Skinflint Raspopov!" announced Anatol.

The smooth, sharp little figure of Yevsey's master crept past him moving
his feet noiselessly. He worked his nose as if smelling something,
nodded his head quickly, and kept tugging at the tuft on his chin with
his little hand. In this characterization something loathsome, pitiful,
and laughable became quite apparent to Yevsey, whose vexation rose. He
felt sure his master was not such as the young glazier represented him
to be.

Next, Anatol took to mimicking members of the audience. Inexhaustible,
stimulated by the applause, he tinkled until late at night like a little
bell, evoking kindly, cheerful laughter. Sometimes the man who was
touched would rush to catch him, and a noisy chase about the yard would
ensue.

Yevsey sighed. Anatol noticed him, and pulled him by the hand into the
middle of the yard, where he introduced him to the audience.

"Here he is--sugar and soap. Skinflint Raspopov's cousin morel."

Turning the boy's little figure in all directions, he poured forth a
flowing stream of strange comic words about his master, about Rayisa
Petrovna, and about Yevsey himself.

"Let me go!" Yevsey quietly demanded, trying to tear his hand from
Anatol's strong grip, in the meantime listening attentively in the
endeavor to understand the hints, the filth of which he felt. Whenever
Yevsey struggled hard to tear himself away, the audience, usually the
women, said lazily to Anatol:

"Let him go."

For some reason their intercession was disagreeable to Yevsey. It
exasperated Anatol, too, who began to push and pinch his victim and
challenge him to a fight. Some of the men urged the boys on.

"Well--fight! See which will do the other up."

The women objected:

"A fight! Thanks, we're not interested. Don't."

Yevsey again felt something unpleasant in these words.

Finally Anatol scornfully pushed Yevsey aside.

"Oh, you kid!"

The next morning Yevsey met Anatol outside the house carrying his box of
glass, and suddenly, without desiring to do it, he said to him:

"Why do you make fun of me?"

The glazier boy looked at him.

"What of it?"

Yevsey was unable to reply.

"Do you want to fight?" asked Anatol again. "Come to our shed. I will
wait for you until evening."

He spoke calmly and in a business-like way.

"No, I don't want to fight," replied Yevsey quietly.

"Then you needn't! I'd lick you anyway," said the glazier, and added
with assurance, "I certainly would."

Yevsey sighed. He could not understand this boy, but he longed to
understand him. So he asked a second time:

"I say, why do you make fun of me?"

Anatol apparently felt awkward. He winked his lively eyes, smiled, and
suddenly shouted in anger:

"Go to the devil! What are you bothering me about? I'll give it to you
so--"

Yevsey quickly ran into the shop, and for a whole day felt the itching
of an undeserved insult. This did not put an end to his inclination for
Anatol, but it forced him to leave the yard whenever Anatol noticed him,
and he dismissed the glazier boy from the sphere of his dreams.




                               CHAPTER IV


Soon after this unsuccessful attempt to draw near to a human being
Yevsey was one evening awakened by talking in his master's room. He
listened and thought he distinguished Rayisa's voice. Desiring to
convince himself of her presence there he rose and quietly slipped over
to the tightly closed door, and put his eyes to the keyhole.

His sleepy glance first perceived the light of the candle, which blinded
him. Then he saw the large rotund body of the woman on the black sofa.
She lay face upward entirely naked. Her hair was spread over her breast,
and her long fingers slowly weaved it into a braid. The light quivered
on her fair body. Clean and bright, it seemed like a light cloud which
rocked and breathed. It was very beautiful. She was saying something.
Yevsey could not catch the words, but heard only the singing, tired,
plaintive voice. The master was sitting in his nightgown upon a chair by
the sofa, and was pouring wine into a glass with a trembling hand. The
tuft of grey hair on his chin also trembled. He had removed his glasses,
and his face was loathsome.

"Yes, yes, yes! Hm! What a woman you are!"

Yevsey moved away from the door, lay down on his bed, and thought:

"They have gotten married."

He pitied Rayisa Petrovna for having become the wife of a man who spoke
ill of her, and he pitied her because it must have been very cold for
her to lie naked on the leather sofa. An evil thought flashed through
his mind, which confirmed the words of the old man about her, but Yevsey
anxiously drove it away.

The evening of the next day Rayisa Petrovna brought in supper as always,
and said in her usual voice:

"I am going."

The master, too, spoke to her in his usual voice, dry and careless.

Several days passed by. The relation between the master and Rayisa did
not change, and Yevsey began to think he had seen the naked woman in a
dream. He was very reluctant to believe his master's words about her.

Once his Uncle Piotr appeared unexpectedly and, so it seemed to Yevsey,
needlessly. He had grown grey, wrinkled, and shorter.

"I am getting blind, Orphan," he said sipping tea from a saucer noisily
and smiling with his wet eyes. "I cannot work anymore, so I will have to
go begging. Yashka is unmanageable. He wants to go to the city, and if I
don't let him, he will run away. That's the kind of a chap he is."

Everything the blacksmith said was wearisome and difficult to listen to.
He seemed to have grown duller. He looked guilty, and Yevsey felt
awkward and ashamed for him in the presence of his master. When he got
ready to go, Yevsey quietly thrust three rubles into his hand, and saw
him out with pleasure.

Though Yevsey endeavored as before to please his master in every way, he
became afraid to agree with him. The bookshop after a time aroused a dim
suspicion by its resemblance to a tomb tightly packed with dead books.
They were all loose, chewed up, and sucked out, and emanated a mouldy,
putrid odor. Few were sold; which did not surprise Yevsey. What stirred
his curiosity was the attitude of the master to the purchasers and the
books.

The old man would take a book in his hand, carefully turn over its musty
pages, stroke the covers with his dark fingers, smile quietly, and nod
his head. He seemed to fondle the book as though it were alive, to play
with it as with a kitten or a puppy. While reading a book he carried on
with it a quiet, querulous conversation, like Uncle Piotr with the
furnace-fire. His lips moved in good-humored derision, his head kept
nodding, and now and then he mumbled and laughed.

"So, so--yes--hmm--see--what's that? Ha, ha! Ah, the impudence--I
understand, I understand--it'll never come about--no-o-o--ha, ha!"

These strange exclamations coming from the old man as if he were
disputing with somebody both astonished and frightened Yevsey, and
pointed to the secret duplicity in his master's life.

"You don't read books," said the master to him once. "That's good. Books
are always lechery, the child of a prostituted mind. They deal with
everything, they excite the imagination, and create useless agitation
and disturbance. Formerly we used to have good historical books, stories
of quiet people about the past. But now every book wants to inspire you
with hostility to life and to lay bare man, who ought always to be
covered up both in the flesh and in the spirit in order to defend him
from the devil, from curiosity, and from the imagination, which destroys
faith. It's only in old age that books do no harm to a man, when he is
guarded against their violence by his experience."

Though Yevsey did not understand these talks he remembered them well,
and though they met with no response in him, they confirmed his sense of
mystery--the mystery that invested all human life, as it were, in a
hostile envelope.

When he sold a book, the old man regarded it with regret, and fairly
smelled the purchaser, with whom he talked in an extremely loud and
rapid voice. Sometimes, however, he lowered his voice to a whisper, when
his dark glasses would fix themselves upon the face of the customer.
Often on seeing to the door a student who had bought a book, he followed
him with a smile, and nodded his head queerly. Once he shook his finger
at the back of a man who had just left, a short, handsome fellow with
fine black tendrils on a pale face. The largest number of customers were
students and people having a certain resemblance to them. Sometimes old
men came. These rummaged long among the books, and haggled sharply over
the prices.

An almost daily visitor was a man who wore a chimney-pot and on his
right hand a large gold ring set with a stone. He had a broad pimply
nose on a stout flat shaven face. When Dorimedont Lukin played chess
with the master, he snuffled loud and tugged at his ear with his left
hand. He often brought books and paper parcels, over which the master
nodded his head approvingly and smiled quietly. He would then hide them
in the table, or in a corner on a shelf in back of him. Yevsey did not
see his master pay for these books, but he did see him sell them.

One of the students began to visit the shop more frequently than the
others. He was a tall, blue-eyed young man with a carrot-colored
mustache and a cap stuck back on his neck, leaving bare a large white
forehead. He spoke in a thick voice, laughed aloud, and always bought
many old journals.

Once the master pointed out a book to him that Dorimedont had brought;
and while the student glanced through it, the old man told him something
in a quick whisper.

"Interesting!" exclaimed the student, smiling amiably. "Ah, you old
sinner, aren't you afraid, eh?"

The master sighed and answered:

"If you absolutely feel it's the truth, you ought to help it along in
whatever little ways you can."

They whispered a long time. Finally the student said aloud:

"Well, then, agreed! Remember my address."

The old man took the address down on a piece of paper, and when
Dorimedont came and asked, "Well, what's new, Matvey Matveyevich?" the
master handed him the address, and said with a smile:

"There's the new thing."

"S-so--Nikodim Arkhangelsky," read Dorimedont. "That's business. We'll
look up this Nikodim."

Sometime after, upon sitting down to play chess, he announced to the
master:

"That Nikodim turned out to be a fish with plenty of roe. We found
something of pretty nearly everything in his place."

"Return the books to me," said the master.

"Certainly," and Dorimedont snuffled.

The blue-eyed student never appeared again. The short young man with the
black mustache also vanished after the master had given Dorimedont his
address. All this was strange. It fed the boy's suspicions, and
indicated some mystery and enigma.

Once, when the master was absent from the shop, Yevsey, while dusting
the shelves, saw the books brought by Dorimedont. They were small,
soiled, and ragged. He carefully and quickly put them back in the same
order, scenting something dangerous in them. Books in general did not
arouse his interest. He tried to read, but never succeeded in
concentrating his mind, which, already burdened by a mass of
observation, dwelt upon minutiæ. His thoughts drifted apart, and finally
disappeared evaporating like a thin stream of water upon a stone on a
hot day. When he worked and stirred about he was altogether incapable of
thinking; the motion, as it were, tore the cobweb of his ideas. The boy
did his work slowly and accurately, like an automaton, without putting
anything of himself into it, and scarcely understanding its meaning.

When he was free and sat motionless he was carried away by a pleasant
sensation of flight in a transparent mist, which enveloped the whole of
life and softened everything, changing the boisterous reality into a
quiet, sweetly sounding half-slumber.

When Yevsey was in this mood the days passed rapidly, in a flight not to
be stayed. His external life was monotonous. Thought-stirring events
happened rarely, and his brain insensibly became clogged with the dust
of the work-day. He seldom went about in the city, for he did not like
it. The ceaseless motion tired his eyes, the noise filled his head with
heavy, dulling confusion. The endless city at first seemed like a
monster in a fairy-tale, displaying a hundred greedy mouths, bellowing
with hundreds of insatiable throats. But when Yevsey regarded the varied
tumult of the street life he saw in it merely painful and wearisome
monotony.

In the morning when he tidied his master's room, Yevsey put his head out
of the window for several minutes, and looked down to the bottom of the
deep, narrow street. Everywhere he saw the same people, and already knew
what each of them would be doing in an hour or the next day. The cabmen
drove in the same indolent fashion, and sat on the box each like the
other; the shop boys, all of whom he knew, were unpleasant. Their
insolence was a source of danger. Every man seemed chained to his
business like a dog to his kennel. Occasionally something new flashed
by, or whispered to him, but it was difficult for him to see and
understand it in the thick mass of all that was familiar, ordinary, and
unpleasant.

Even the churches in the city did not please him. They were not cosy,
nor bright, but close and penetrated by extremely powerful odors of
incense, oil, and sweat. Yevsey could not bear strong smells. They made
his head turn, and filled him with confused anxious desires.

Sometimes on a holiday the master closed the shop, and took Yevsey
through the city. They walked long and slowly. The old man pointed out
the houses of the rich and eminent people, and told of their lives. His
recitals were replete with accounts of women who ran away from their
husbands, of dead people, and of funerals. He talked about them in a dry
solemn voice, criticizing and condemning everything. He grew animated
only when telling how and from what this or that man died. In his
opinion, apparently, matters of disease and death were the most edifying
and interesting of earthly subjects.

At the end of every walk he treated Yevsey to tea in a tavern, where
musical machines played. Here everybody knew the old man, and behaved
toward him with timid respect. Yevsey grown tired, his brain dizzied by
the cloud of heavy odors, would fall into drowsy silence under the
rattle and din of the music.

Once, however, the master took him to a house which contained numerous
articles of gold and silver, marvellous weapons, and garments of silk
brocade. Suddenly the mother's forgotten tales began to beat in the
boy's breast, and a winged hope trembled in his heart. He walked
silently through the rooms for a long time, disconcertedly blinking his
eyes, which burned greedily.

When they returned home he asked the master:

"Whose are they?"

"They are public property--the Czar's," the old man explained
impressively.

The boy put more questions.

"Who wore such coats and sabres?"

"Czars, boyars, and various imperial persons."

"There are no such people to-day?"

"How so? Of course there are. It would be impossible to be without them.
Only now they dress differently."

"Why differently?"

"More cheaply. Formerly Russia was richer. But now it has been robbed by
various foreign people, Jews, Poles, and Germans."

Raspopov talked for a long time about how nobody loved Russia, how all
robbed it, and wished it every kind of harm. When he spoke much Yevsey
ceased to believe him or understand him. Nevertheless he asked:

"Am I an imperial person, too?"

"In a sense. In our country all are imperial people, all are subjects of
the Czar. The whole earth is God's, and the whole of Russia is the
Czar's."

Before Yevsey's eyes handsome, stately personages in glittering garb
circled in a bright, many-colored round dance. They belonged to another
fabulous life, which remained with him after he had lain down to sleep.
He saw himself in this life clad in a sky-blue robe embroidered with
gold, with red boots of Morocco leather on his feet. Rayisa was there,
too, in brocade and adorned with precious gems.

"So it will pass away," he thought.

To-day this thought gave rise not to hope in a different future but to
quiet regret for the past.

On the other side of the door he heard the dry even voice of his master:

"Except the Lord build the house, they labor in vain--"




                               CHAPTER V


One day after closing the shop Yevsey and his master went to the yard
where they were met by an anxious ringing shout. It came from Anatol.

"I won't do it again, dear uncle, never!"

Yevsey started, and instinctively exclaimed in quiet triumph:

"Aha!"

It was pleasant to hear the shouts of fear and pain coming from the
breast of the cheerful boy, who was everybody's favorite.

"May I stay here in the yard?" Yevsey asked the master.

"We must get our supper. But I'll stay here, too, and see how they
punish a rascally good-for-nothing."

The people had gathered at the door of the brick shed behind the
stairway. The sound of heavy blows and the wailing voice of Anatol
issued from the shed.

"Little uncle, I didn't do it. Oh, God! I won't do it, I won't! Stop,
for Christ's sake!"

"That's right! Give it to him!" said watchmaker Yakubov, lighting a
cigarette.

The squint-eyed embroiderer Zina upheld the tall, yellow-faced
watchmaker.

"Perhaps we shall have peace after this. You couldn't have a single
quiet moment in the yard."

Raspopov turned to Yevsey, and said:

"They say he's a wonder at imitating people."

"Of course," rejoined the furrier's cook. "Such a little devil! He makes
sport of everybody."

A dull scraping sound came from the shed, as if a sack filled with
something soft were being dragged over the old boards of the floor. At
the same time the people heard the panting, hoarse voice of Kuzin and
Anatol's cries, which now grew feebler and less frequent.

"Forgive me! Oh! Help me--I won't do it again--Oh, God!"

His words became indistinct and flowed together into a thick choking
groan. Yevsey trembled, remembering the pain of the beatings he used to
receive. The talk of the onlookers stirred a confused feeling in him. It
was fearful to stand among people who only the day before had willingly
and gaily taken delight in the lively little fellow, and who now looked
on with pleasure while he was being beaten. At this moment these
half-sick people, surly and worn out with work, seemed more
comprehensible to him. He believed that now none of them shammed, but
were sincere in the curiosity with which they witnessed the torture of a
human being. He felt a little sorry for Anatol, yet it was pleasant to
hear his groans. The thought passed through his mind that now he would
become quieter and more companionable.

Suddenly Nikolay the furrier appeared, a short black curly-headed man
with long arms. As always daring and respecting nobody, he thrust the
people aside, walked into the shed, and from there his coarse voice was
heard crying out twice:

"Stop! Get away!"

Everybody suddenly moved back from the door. Kuzin bolted out of the
shed, seated himself on the ground, clutched his head with both hands,
and opening his eyes wide, bawled hoarsely:

"Police!"

"Let's get away from evil, Yevsey," said the master withdrawing to one
side.

The boy retreated to a corner by the stairway, and stood there looking
on.

Nikolay came out of the shed with the little trampled body of the
glazier's boy hanging limply over his arm. The furrier laid him on the
ground then he straightened himself and shouted:

"Water, women, you rotten carrion!"

Zina and the cook ran off for water.

Kuzin lolling his head back snorted dully.

"Murder! Police!"

Nikolay turned to him, and gave him a kick on the breast which laid him
flat on his back.

"You dirty dogs!" he shouted, the whites of his black eyes flashing.
"You dirty dogs! A child is being killed, and it's a show to you! I'll
smash every one of your ugly mugs!"

Oaths from all sides answered him, but nobody dared to approach him.

"Let's go," said the master, taking Yevsey by the hand.

As they walked away they saw Kuzin run noiselessly in a stooping
position to the gates.

"To call the police," the master explained to Yevsey.

When Yevsey was alone he felt that his jealousy of Anatol had left him.
He strained his slow mind to explain to himself what he had seen. It
merely _seemed_ that the people liked Anatol, who amused them. In
reality it was not so. All people enjoyed fighting, enjoyed looking on
while others fought, enjoyed being cruel. Nikolay had interceded for
Anatol because he liked to beat Kuzin, and actually did beat him on
almost every holiday. Very bold and strong he could lick any man in the
house. In his turn he was beaten by the police. So to sum up, whether
you are quiet or daring, you'll be beaten and insulted all the same.

Several days passed. The tenants talking in the yard, said that the
glazier boy, who had been taken to the hospital, had gone insane. Then
Yevsey remembered how the boy's eyes had burned when he gave his
performances, how vehement his gestures and motions had been, and how
quickly the expression of his face had changed. He thought with dread
that perhaps Anatol had always been insane. He soon forgot the glazier
boy.




                               CHAPTER VI


In the rainy nights of autumn short broken sounds came from the roof
under Yevsey's window. They disquieted him and prevented him from
sleeping. On one such night he heard the angry exclamations of his
master:

"You vile woman!"

Rayisa Petrovna answered as always in a low singing voice:

"I cannot permit you, Matvey Matveyevich."

"You low creature! Look at the money I am paying you!"

The door to the master's room was open, and the voices came in clearly
to Yevsey. The fine rain sang a tearful song outside the window. The
wind crept over the roof, panting like a large homeless bird fatigued by
the bad weather and softly flapping its wet wings against the panes. The
boy sat up in bed, put his hands around his knees, and listened
shivering.

"Give me back the twenty-five rubles, you thief!"

"I do not deny it. Dorimedont Lukin gave me the money."

"Aha! You see, you hussy!"

"No, permit me--when you asked me to spy on the man--"

"Hush! What are you screaming for?"

Now the door was closed, but even through the wall Yevsey could hear
almost everything that was said.

"Remember, you vile woman, you, that you are in my hands," said the
master, rapping his fingers on the table. "And if I notice that you've
struck up relations with Dorimedont--"

The woman's voice was warm and flexible like the supple movements of a
kitten, and it stole in softly, coiled around the old man's malicious
words, wiping them from Yevsey's memory.

The woman must be right. Her composure and the master's entire relation
to her convinced the boy that she was. Yevsey was now in his fifteenth
year, and his inclination for this gentle and beautiful woman began to
be marked by a pleasant sense of agitation. Since he met Rayisa very
rarely and for only a minute at a time, he always looked into her face
with a secret feeling of bashful joy. Her kindly way of speaking to him
caused a grateful tumult in his breast, and drew him to her more and
more powerfully.

While still in the village he had learned the hard truth of the relation
between man and woman. The city bespattered this truth with mud, but it
did not sully the boy himself. His being a timid nature, he did not dare
to believe what was said about women, and such talk instead of exciting
any feeling of temptation aroused painful aversion. Now, as he was
sitting up in bed, Yevsey remembered Rayisa's amiable smile, her kind
words; and carried away by the thought of them he had no time to lie
down before the door to the master's room opened, and she stood before
him, half dressed, with loose hair, her hand pressed to her breast. He
grew frightened and faint. The woman wanted to open the door again to
the old man's room and had already put out her hand, but suddenly
smiling she withdrew it and shook a threatening finger at Yevsey. Then
she walked into her room. Yevsey fell asleep with a smile.

In the morning as he was sweeping the kitchen floor he saw Rayisa at the
door of her room. He straightened himself up before her with the broom
in his hands.

"Good morning," she said. "Will you take coffee with me?"

Rejoiced and embarrassed, the boy replied:

"I haven't washed yet. One minute."

In a few minutes he was sitting at the table in her room, seeing nothing
but the fair face with the dark brows, and the good, moist eyes with the
smile in them.

"Do you like me?" she asked.

"Yes."

"Why?"

"You are good and beautiful."

He answered as in a dream. It was strange to hear her questions. Her
eyes fixed upon him vanquished him. They must know everything that went
on in his soul.

"And do you like Matvey Matveyevich?" Rayisa asked in a slow undertone.

"No," Yevsey answered simply.

"Is that so? He loves you. He told me so himself."

"No," rejoined the boy.

Rayisa raised her brows, moved a little nearer to him, and asked:

"Don't you believe me?"

"I believe you, but I don't believe my master, not a bit."

"Why? Why?" she asked in a quick whisper, moving still nearer to him.
The warm gleam of her look penetrated the boy's heart, and stirred
within him little thoughts never yet expressed to anybody. He quickly
uttered them to this woman.

"I am afraid of him. I am afraid of everybody except you."

"Why are you afraid?"

"You know."

"What do I know?"

"You, too, are wronged, not by one master. I saw you cry. You were not
crying then because you had been drinking. I understand. I understand
much. Only I do not understand everything together. I see everything
separately in its tiniest details, but side by side with them something
different, not even resembling them. I understand this, too. But what is
it all for? One thing is at variance with the other, and they do not go
together. There is one kind of life and another besides."

"What are you talking about?" Rayisa asked in amazement.

"That's true."

For several moments they looked at each other in silence. The boy's
heart beat quickly. His cheeks grew red with embarrassment.

"Well, now, go," said Rayisa quietly arising. "Go, or else he will ask
you why you stayed away so long. Don't tell him you were with me. You
won't, will you?"

Yevsey walked away filled with the tender sound of the singing voice,
and warmed by the sympathetic look. The woman's words rang in his memory
enveloping his heart in quiet joy.

That day was strangely long. Over the roofs of the houses and the Circle
hung a grey cloud. The day, weary and dull, seemed to have become
entangled in its grey mass, and, like the cloud, to have halted over the
city. After dinner two customers entered the shop, one a stooping lean
man with a pretty, grizzled mustache, the other a man with a red beard
and spectacles. Both pottered about among the books long and minutely.
The lean man kept whistling softly through his quivering mustache, while
the red-bearded man spoke with the master.

Yevsey knew beforehand just what the master would say and how he would
say it. The boy was bored. He was impatient for the evening to come, and
he tried to relieve the tedium by listening to the words of the old man
Raspopov, and verifying his conjectures while he arranged in a row the
books the customers had selected.

"You are buying these books for a library?" the old man inquired
affably.

"For the library of the Teachers' Association," replied the red-bearded
man. "Why?"

"Now he'll praise them up," thought Yevsey, and he was not mistaken.

"You show extremely good judgment in your choice. It is pleasant to see
a correct estimate of books."

"Pleasant?"

"Now he'll smile," thought Yevsey.

"Yes, indeed," said the old man, smiling graciously. "You get used to
these books, so that you get to love them. You see they aren't dead
wood, but products of the mind. So when a customer also respects books,
it is pleasant. Our average customer is a comical fellow. He comes and
asks, 'Have you any interesting books?' It's all the same to him. He
seeks amusement, play, but no benefit. But occasionally someone will
suddenly ask for a prohibited book."

"How's that? Prohibited?" asked the man screwing up his small eyes.

"Prohibited from libraries--published abroad, or secretly in Russia."

"Are such books for sale?"

"Now he will speak real low." Again Yevsey was not mistaken.

Fixing his glasses upon the face of the red-bearded man, the master
lowered his voice almost to a whisper.

"Why not? Sometimes you buy a whole library, and you come across
everything there, everything."

"Have you such books now?"

"Several."

"Let me see them, please."

"Only I must ask you not to say anything about them. You see it's not
for the sake of profit, but as a courtesy. One likes to do favors now
and then."

The stooping man stopped whistling, adjusted his spectacles, and looked
attentively at the old man.

To-day the master was utterly loathsome to Yevsey, who kept looking at
him with cold, gloomy malice. And now when Raspopov went over to the
corner of the shop to show the red-bearded man some books there, the boy
suddenly and quite involuntarily said in a whisper to the stooping
customer:

"Don't buy those books."

Yevsey trembled with fright the moment he had spoken. The man raised his
glasses, and peered into the boy's face with his bright eyes.

"Why?"

With a great effort Yevsey answered after a pause:

"I don't know."

The customer readjusted his glasses, moved away from him, and began to
whistle louder, looking sidewise at the old man. Then he raised his
hand, which made him straighter and taller, stroked his grey mustache,
and without haste walked up to his companion, from whom he took the
book. He looked it over, and dropped it on the table. Yevsey followed
his movements expecting some calamity to befall himself. But the
stooping man merely touched his companion's arm, and said simply and
calmly:

"Well, let's go."

"But the books?" exclaimed the other.

"Let's go. I won't buy any books here."

The red-bearded man looked at him, then at the master, his small eyes
winking rapidly. Then he walked to the door, and out into the street.

"You don't want the books?" demanded Raspopov.

Yevsey realized by his tone that the old man was surprised.

"I don't," answered the customer, his eyes fixed upon the face of the
master.

Raspopov shrank. He went to his chair, and suddenly said with a wave of
his hand in an unnaturally loud voice, which was new to Yevsey:

"As you please, of course. Still--excuse me, I don't understand."

"What don't you understand?" asked the stooping man, smiling.

"You looked through the books for two hours or more, agreed on a price,
and suddenly--why?" cried the old man in excitement.

"Well, because I recollected your disgusting face. You haven't given up
the ghost yet? What a pity!"

The stooping man pronounced his words slowly, not loud, and precisely.
He left the shop deliberately, with a heavy tread.

For a minute the old man looked after him, then tore himself from where
he was standing, and advanced upon Yevsey with short steps.

"Follow him, find out where he lives," he said in a rapid whisper,
clutching the boy's shoulder. "Go! Don't let him see you! You
understand? Quick!"

Yevsey swayed from side to side, and would have fallen, had the old man
not held him firmly on his feet. He felt a void in his breast, and his
master's words crackled there drily like peas in a rattle.

"What are you trembling about, you donkey? I tell you--"

When Yevsey felt his master's hand release his shoulder, he ran to the
door.

"Stop, you fool!" Yevsey stood still. "Where are you going? Why, you
won't be able--oh, my God! Get out of my sight!"

Yevsey darted into a corner. It was the first time he had seen his
master so violent. He realized that his annoyance was tinged with much
fear, a feeling very familiar to himself; and notwithstanding the fact
that his own soul was desolate with fear, it pleased him to see
Raspopov's alarm.

The little dusty old man threw himself about in the shop like a rat in a
trap. He ran to the door, thrust his head into the street, stretched his
neck out, and again turned back into the shop. His hands groped over his
body impotently, and he mumbled and hissed, shaking his head till his
glasses jumped from his nose.

"Umm, well, well--the dirty blackguard--the idea! The dirty blackguard!
I'm alive--alive!" Several minutes later he shouted to Yevsey. "Close
the shop!"

On entering his room the old man crossed himself. He drew a deep breath,
and flung himself on the black sofa. Usually so sleek and smooth, he was
now all ruffled. His face had grown wrinkled, his clothes had suddenly
become too large for him, and hung in folds from his agitated body.

"Tell Rayisa to give me some peppered brandy, a large glassful." When
Yevsey brought the brandy the master rose, drank it down in one gulp,
and opening his mouth wide looked a long time into Yevsey's face.

"Do you understand that he insulted me?"

"Yes."

"And do you understand why?"

"No."

The old man raised his hand, and silently shook his finger.

"I know him--I know a great deal," he said in a broken voice.

Removing his black cap he rubbed his bare skull with his hands, looked
about the room, again touched his head with his hands, and lay down on
the sofa.

Rayisa Petrovna brought in supper.

"Are you tired?" she asked as she set the table.

"It seems I am a little under the weather. Fever, I think. Give me
another glass of brandy. Sit down with us. It's too early for you to
go."

He talked rapidly. Rayisa sat down, the old man raised his glasses, and
scanned her suspiciously from head to foot. At supper he suddenly lifted
his spoon and said:

"Impossible for me to eat. I'll tell you about something that happened."
Bending over the plate he was silent for some time as if considering
whether or not to speak of the incident. Then he began with a sigh.
"Suppose a man has a wife, his own house, not a large house, a garden,
and a vegetable garden, a cook, all acquired by hard labor without
sparing himself. Then comes a young man, sickly, consumptive, who rents
a room in the garret, and takes meals with the master and mistress."

Rayisa listened calmly and attentively. Yevsey felt bored. While looking
into the woman's face he stubbornly endeavored to comprehend what had
happened in the shop that day. He felt as if he had unexpectedly struck
a match and set fire to something old and long dried, which began to
burn alarmingly and almost consumed him in its sudden malicious blaze.

"I must keep quiet," he thought.

"Were you the man?" asked Rayisa.

Raspopov quickly raised his head.

"Why I?" he asked. He struck his breast, and exclaimed with angry heat,
"The question here is, not about the man but about the law. Ought a man
uphold the law? Yes, he ought. Without law it is impossible to live. You
people are stupid, because man is in every respect like a beast. He is
greedy, malicious, cruel."

The old man rose a little from his armchair, and shouted his words in
Rayisa's face. His bald pate reddened. Yevsey listened to his
exclamations without believing in their sincerity. He reflected on how
people are bound together and enmeshed by some unseen threads, and how
if one thread is accidentally pulled, they twist and turn, rage and cry
out. So he said to himself:

"I must be more careful."

The old man continued:

"Words bring no harm if you do not listen to them. But when the fellow
in the garret began to trouble her heart with his ideas, she, a stupid
young woman, and that friend of his who--who to-day--" The old man
suddenly came to a stop, and looked at Yevsey. "What are you thinking
about?" he asked in a low suspicious tone.

Yevsey rose and answered in embarrassment:

"I am not thinking."

"Well, then, go. You've had your supper. So go. Clear the table."

Desiring to vex his master Yevsey was intentionally slow in removing the
dishes from the table.

"Go, I tell you!" the old man screamed in a squeaking voice. "Oh, what a
fool you are!"

Yevsey went to his room, and seated himself on the chest. Having left
the door slightly ajar, he could hear his master's rapid talk.

"They came for him one night. She got frightened, began to shiver,
understood then on what road these people had put her. I told her--"

"So it was you?" Rayisa asked aloud.

The old man now began to speak in a low voice, almost a whisper. Then
Yevsey heard Rayisa's clear voice:

"Did he die?"

"Well, what of it?" the old man shouted excitedly. "You can't cure a man
of consumption. He would have died at any rate."

Yevsey sat upon the chest listening to the low rasping sound of his
talk.

"What are you sitting there for?"

The boy turned around, and saw the master's head thrust through the
door.

"Lie down and sleep."

The master withdrew his head, and the door was tightly closed.

"Who died?" Yevsey thought as he lay in bed.

The dry words of the old man came fluttering down and fluttering down,
like autumn leaves upon a grave. The boy felt more and more distinctly
that he lived in a circle of dread mystery. Sometimes the old man grew
angry, and shouted; which prevented the boy from thinking or sleeping.
He was sorry for Rayisa, who kept peacefully silent in answer to his
ejaculations. At last Yevsey heard her go to her own room. Perfect
stillness then prevailed in the master's room for several minutes, after
which Raspopov's voice sounded again, but now even as usual:

"Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor
standeth in the way of sinners, nor sit--"

With these reassuring words ringing in his ears Yevsey fell asleep.

The next morning Rayisa again called him to her.

"What happened in the shop yesterday?" she asked with a smile when he
had seated himself.

Yevsey told her everything in detail, and she laughed contentedly and
happily. She suddenly drew her brows together and asked in an undertone:

"Do you understand who he is?"

"No."

"A spy," she whispered, her eyes growing wide with fright.

Yevsey was silent. She rose and went to him.

"What a tragic fellow you are!" she said thoughtfully and kindly,
stroking his head. "You don't understand anything. You're so droll. What
was the stuff you told me the other day? What other life?"

The question animated him; he wanted very much to talk about it. Raising
his head and looking into her face with the fathomless stare of blind
eyes, he began to speak rapidly.

"Of course there's another life. From where else do the fairy-tales
come? And not only the fairy-tales, but--"

The woman smiled, and rumpled his hair with her warm fingers.

"You little stupid! They'll seize you," she added seriously, even
sternly, "they'll lead you wherever they want to, and do with you
whatever they want to. That will be your life."

Yevsey nodded his head, silently assenting to Rayisa's words.

She sighed and looked through the window upon the street. When she
turned to Yevsey, her face surprised him. It was red, and her eyes had
become smaller and darker.

"If you were smarter," she said in an indolent, hollow voice, "or more
alert, maybe I would tell you something. But you're such a queer chappie
there's no use telling you anything, and your master ought to be choked
to death. There, now, go tell him what I've said--you tell him
everything."

Yevsey rose from the table, feeling as if a cold stream of insult had
been poured over him. He inclined his head and mumbled:

"I'll never tell anything about you--to nobody. I love you very much,
and--even if you choked him, I wouldn't tell anybody. That's how I love
you."

He shuffled to the door, but the woman's hands caught him like warm
white wings, and turned him back.

"Did I insult you?" he heard. "Well, excuse me. If you knew what a devil
he is, how he tortures me, and how I hate him. Dear me!" She pressed his
face tightly to her breast, and kissed him twice. "So you love me?"

"Yes," whispered Yevsey, feeling himself turning around lightly in a hot
whirlpool of unknown bliss.

"How?"

"I don't know. I love you very much."

Laughing and fondling him, she said:

"You'll tell me about it. Ah, you little baby!"

Going down the stairs he heard her satisfied laugh, and smiled in
response. His head turned, his entire body was suffused with sweet
lassitude. He walked quietly and cautiously, as if afraid of spilling
the hot joy of his heart.

"Why have you been so long?" asked the master.

Yevsey looked at him, but saw only a confused, formless blur.

"I have a headache," he answered slowly.

"And I, too. What does it mean? Has Rayisa gotten up?"

"Yes."

"Did she speak to you?"

"Yes."

"What about?" the master asked hastily.

The question was like a slap in Yevsey's face. He recovered, however,
and answered indifferently:

"She said I hadn't swept the kitchen clean."

A few moments later Yevsey heard the old man's low dejected exclamation:

"That woman is a dangerous creature! Yes, yes! She tries to find
everything out, and makes you tell her whatever she wants."

Yevsey looked at him from a distance, and thought:

"I wish you were dead."

The days passed rapidly, fused in a jumbled mass, as if joy were lying
in wait ahead. But every day grew more and more exciting.




                              CHAPTER VII


The old man became sulky and taciturn. He peered around strangely,
suddenly burst into a passion, shouted, and howled dismally, like a sick
dog. He constantly complained of a pain in his head and nausea. At meals
he smelt of the food suspiciously, crumbled the bread into small pieces
with his shaking fingers, and held the tea and brandy up to the light.
His nightly scoldings of Rayisa, in which he threatened to bring ruin
upon her, became more and more frequent. But she answered all his
outcries with soft composure.

Yevsey's love for the woman waxed stronger, and his sad, embittered
heart was filled with hatred of his master.

"Don't I understand what you're up to, you low-down woman?" raged the
old man. "What does my sickness come from? What are you poisoning me
with?"

"What are you saying? What are you saying?" exclaimed the woman, her
calm voice quivering. "You are sick from old age."

"You lie! You lie!"

"And from fright besides."

"You miserable creature, keep quiet!"

"You suffer from the weight of years."

"You lie!"

"And it's time you thought of death."

"Aha! That's what you want! You lie! You hope in vain! I'm not the only
one to know all about you. I told Dorimedont Lukin about you." He burst
again into a loud tearful whine. "I know he's your paramour. It's he who
talked you over into poisoning me. You think you'll have it easier with
him, don't you? You won't, you won't!"

Once at night, during a similar scene, Rayisa left the old man's room
with a candle in her hand, half dressed, white and voluptuous. She
walked as in a dream, swaying from side to side and treading uncertainly
with her bare feet. Her eyes were half closed, the fingers of her
out-stretched right hand clawed the air convulsively. The little smoky
red tongue of the candle inclined toward her breast, almost touching her
shirt. It illuminated her lips parted in exhaustion and sickness, and
set her teeth agleam.

After she had passed Yevsey without noticing him, he instinctively
followed her to the door of the kitchen, where the sight that met his
gaze numbed him with horror. The woman was holding a large kitchen knife
in her hand, testing its sharp edge with her finger. She bent her head,
and put her hand to her full neck near the ear, where she sought
something with her long fingers. Then she drew a breath, and quietly
returned the knife to the table. Her hands fell at her sides.

Yevsey clutched the doorpost. At the sound the woman started and turned.

"What do you want?" she demanded in an angry whisper.

Yevsey answered breathlessly.

"He'll die soon. Why are you doing that to yourself? Please don't do it.
You mustn't."

"Hush!"

She put her hands on Yevsey as if for support, and walked back into the
old man's room.

Soon the master became unable to leave his bed. His voice grew feeble,
and frequently a rattle sounded in his throat. His face darkened, his
weak neck failed to sustain his head, and the grey tuft on his chin
stuck up oddly. The physician came every day. Each time Rayisa gave the
sick man medicine, he groaned hoarsely:

"With poison, eh? Oh, oh, you wicked thing!"

"If you don't take it, I'll throw it away."

"No, no! Leave it! and to-morrow I'll call the police. I'll ask them
what you are poisoning me with."

Yevsey stood at the door, sticking first his eye, then his ear to the
chink. He was ready to cry out in amazement at Rayisa's patience. His
pity for her rose in his breast more and more irrepressibly, and an ever
keener desire for the death of the old man. It was difficult for him to
breathe, as on a dry icy-cold day.

The bed creaked. Yevsey heard the thin sounds of a spoon knocking
against glass.

"Mix it, mix it! You carrion!" mumbled the master.

Once he ordered Rayisa to carry him to the sofa. She picked him up in
her arms as if he were a baby. His yellow head lay upon her rosy
shoulder, and his dark, shrivelled feet dangled limply in the folds of
her white skirt.

"God!" wailed the old man, lolling back on the broad sofa. "God, why
hast Thou given over Thy servant into the hands of the wicked? Are my
sins more grievous than their sins, O Lord? And can it be that the hour
of my death is come?" He lost breath and his throat rattled. "Get away!"
he went on in a wheezing voice. "You have poisoned one man--I saved you
from hard labor, and now you are poisoning me--ugh, ugh, you lie!"

Rayisa slowly moved aside. Yevsey now could see his master's little dry
body. His stomach rose and fell, his feet twitched, and his lips twisted
spasmodically, as he opened and closed them, greedily gasping for air,
and licked them with his thin tongue, at the same time displaying the
black hollow of his mouth. His forehead and cheeks glistened with sweat,
his little eyes, now looking large and deep, constantly followed Rayisa.

"And I have nobody, no one near me on earth, no true friend. Why, O
Lord?" The voice of the old man wheezed and broke. "You wanton, swear
before the ikon that you are not poisoning me."

Rayisa turned to the corner, and crossed herself.

"I don't believe you, I don't believe you," he muttered, clutching at
the underwear on his breast and at the back of the sofa, and digging his
nails into them.

"Drink your medicine. It will be better for you," Rayisa suddenly almost
shrieked.

"It will be better," the old man repeated. "My dear, my only one, I will
give you everything, my own Ray--"

He stretched his bony arm toward her and beckoned to her to draw near
him, shaking his black fingers.

"Ah, I am sick of you, you detestable creature," Rayisa cried in a
stifled voice; and snatching the pillow from under his head she flung it
over the old man's face, threw herself upon it, and held his thin arms,
which flashed in the air.

"You have made me sick of you," she cried again. "I can't stand you any
more. Go to the devil! Go, go!"

Yevsey dropped to the floor. He heard the stifled rattle, the low
squeak, the hollow blows; he understood that Rayisa was choking and
squeezing the old man, and that his master kept beating his feet upon
the sofa. He felt neither pity nor fear. He merely desired everything to
be accomplished more quickly. So he covered his eyes and ears with his
hands.

The pain of a blow caused by the opening of the door compelled him to
jump to his feet. Before him stood Rayisa arranging her hair, which hung
over her shoulders.

"Well, did you see it?" she asked gruffly. Her face was red, but now
more calm. Her hands did not tremble.

"I did," replied Yevsey, nodding his head. He moved closer to Rayisa.

"Well, if you want to, you can inform the police."

She turned and walked into the room leaving the door open. Yevsey
remained at the door, trying not to look at the sofa.

"Is he dead, quite dead?" he asked in a whisper.

"Yes," answered the woman distinctly.

Then Yevsey turned his head, and regarded the little body of his master
with indifferent eyes. Flat and dry it lay upon the sofa as if glued
there. He looked at the corpse, then at Rayisa, and breathed a sigh of
relief.

In the corner near the bed the clock on the wall softly and irresolutely
struck one and two. The woman started at each stroke. The last time she
went up to the clock, and stopped the halting pendulum with an uncertain
hand. Then she seated herself on the bed, putting her elbows on her
knees and pressing her head in her hands. Her hair falling down, covered
her face and hands as with a dense dark veil.

Scarcely touching the floor with his toes, so as not to break the stern
silence, Yevsey went over to Rayisa, and stationed himself at her side,
dully looking at her white round shoulder. The woman's posture roused
the desire to say something soothing to her.

"That's what he deserved," he uttered in a low grave voice.

The stillness round about was startled, but instantly settled down
again, listening, expecting.

"Open the window," said Rayisa sternly. But when Yevsey walked away from
her, she stopped him with a low question, "Are you afraid?"

"No."

"Why not? You are a timid boy."

"When you are around, I'm not afraid."

"Are you sorry for him?"

"No."

"Open the window."

The cold night air streamed into the room, and blew out the lamplight.
The shadows quickly flickered on the wall and disappeared. The woman
tossed her hair back and straightened herself to look at Yevsey with her
large eyes.

"Why am I going to ruin?" she asked in perplexity. "It has been this way
all my life. From one pit to another, each deeper than the one before."

Yevsey again stationed himself beside her; they were silent for a long
time. Finally she put her soft, but cool hand around his waist, and
pressing him to her asked softly:

"Listen, will you tell?"

"No," he answered, closing his eyes.

"You won't tell? To nobody? Never?" the woman asked in a mournful tone.

"Never!" he repeated quietly but firmly.

"Don't tell. I'll be helpful to you," she urged him, kindly stroking his
cheek.

She rose, looked around, and spoke to him in a businesslike way:

"Dress yourself. It's cold. And the room must be put in order a little.
Go, get dressed."

When Yevsey returned he saw the master's body completely covered with a
blanket. Rayisa remained as she had been, half dressed with bare
shoulders. This touched him. They set the room to rights, working
without haste and looking at each other now and then silently and
gravely.

The boy felt that this silent nocturnal activity in the close room bound
him more firmly to the woman, who was just as solitary as himself, and
like him, knew terror. He tried to remain as near her as possible, and
avoided looking at the master's body.

It began to dawn. Rayisa listened to the sound of the waking house and
city. She sighed, and beckoned to Yevsey.

"Now, go lie down and sleep. I will wake you soon, and send you with a
note to Dorimedont Lukin. Go!" She led him to the chest upon which he
slept and felt the bedding with her hand. "Oh, what a hard bed you
have!"

When he had lain down, she seated herself beside him, and stroked his
head and shoulders with her soft smooth hand, while she spoke in a
gentle chant.

"Give him the note. And if he asks you how it happened, tell him you
don't know. Tell him you were asleep and didn't see anything."

She was silent, and knit her brows. Overcome by exhaustion Yevsey,
warmed by the woman's body and lulled by her even speech, began to
drowse.

"No," she continued, "that's not right."

She gave her directions calmly and intelligently, and her caresses, warm
and sweet, awakened memories of his mother. He felt good. He smiled.

"Dorimedont Lukin is a spy, too," he heard her lulling, even voice. "Be
on your guard. Be careful. If he gets it out of you, I'll say you knew
everything and helped me. Then you'll be put in prison, too." Now she,
too, smiled, and repeated, "In prison, and then hard labor. Do you
understand?"

"Yes," Yevsey answered happily, looking into her face with half-closed
eyes.

"You are falling asleep. Well, sleep." Happy and grateful he heard the
words in his slumber. "Will you forget everything I told you? What a
weak, thin little fellow you are! Sleep!"

Yevsey fell asleep, but soon a stern voice awoke him.

"Boy, get up! Quick! Boy!"

He rose with a start of his whole body, and stretched out his hand. At
his bed stood Dorimedont Lukin holding a cane.

"Why are you sleeping? Your master died, yet you sleep."

"He's tired. We didn't sleep the whole night," said Rayisa, who was
looking in from the kitchen with her hat on and her umbrella in her
hand.

"Tired? On the day of your benefactor's death you must weep, not sleep.
Dress yourself."

The flat pimply face of the spy was stern. His words compelled Yevsey
imperiously, like reins steering a docile horse.

"Run to the police station. Here's a note. Don't lose it."

In a half fainting condition Yevsey dressed himself wearily, and went
out in the street. He forced his eyes open as he ran over the pavement
bumping into everyone he met.

"I wish he would be buried soon," he thought disconnectedly. "Dorimedont
will frighten her, and she'll tell him everything. Then I'll go to
prison, too. But if I am there with her, I won't be afraid. She went
after him herself, she didn't send me, she was sorry to wake me up--or
maybe she was afraid--how am I going to live now?"

When he returned he found a black-bearded policeman and a grey old man
in a long frock coat sitting in the room. Dorimedont was speaking to the
policeman in a commanding voice.

"Do you hear, Ivan Ivanovich, what the doctor says? So it was a cancer.
Aha, there's the boy. Hey, boy, go fetch half a dozen bottles of beer.
Quick!"

Rayisa was preparing coffee and an omelet in the kitchen. Her sleeves
were drawn up over her elbow, and her white hands darted about
dexterously.

"When you come back, I'll give you coffee," she promised Yevsey,
smiling.

Yevsey was kept running all day. He had no chance to observe what was
happening in the house, but felt that everything was going well with
Rayisa. She was more beautiful than ever. Everybody looked at her with
satisfaction.

At night when almost sick with exhaustion Yevsey lay down in bed with an
unpleasant sticky taste in his mouth, he heard Dorimedont say to Rayisa
in an emphatic, authoritative tone:

"We mustn't let that boy out of our sight, you understand? He's stupid."

Then he and Rayisa entered Yevsey's room. The spy put out his hand with
an important air, and said snuffling:

"Get up! Tell us how you're going to live now."

"I don't know."

"If you don't know, who is to know?" The spy's eyes bulged, his face and
nose grew purple. He breathed hotly and noisily, resembling an
overheated oven. "I know," he answered himself, raising the finger on
which was the ring.

"You will live with us, with me," said Rayisa kindly.

"Yes, you will live with us, and I will find a good place for you."

Yevsey was silent.

"Well, what's the matter with you?"

"Nothing," said Yevsey after a pause.

"You ought to thank me, you little fool," Dorimedont explained
condescendingly.

Yevsey felt that the little grey eyes held him fast to something as if
with nails.

"We'll be better to you than relatives," continued Dorimedont, walking
away, and leaving behind the heavy odor of beer, sweat, and grease.

Yevsey opened the window, and listened to the grumbling and stirring of
the dark, exhausted city sinking into sleep. A sharp aching pain stole
up from somewhere. Faintness seized the boy's body. A thin cord, as it
were, cut at his heart, and made breathing difficult. He lay down and
groaned and peered into the darkness with frightened eyes. Wardrobes and
trunks moved about in the obscurity, black dancing spots rocking to and
fro. Walls scarcely visible turned and twisted. All this oppressed
Yevsey with unconquerable fear, and pushed him into a stifling corner,
from which it was impossible to escape.

In Rayisa's room the spy guffawed.

"M-m-m-my! Ha, ha, ha! It's nothing--it will pass away--ha, ha! You'll
get used--"

Yevsey thrust his head under the pillow in order not to hear these
irritating exclamations. A minute later, unable to catch his breath, he
jumped from bed. The dry dark feet of his master flashed before him, his
little red sickly eyes lighted up. Yevsey uttered a short shriek, and
ran to Rayisa's door with outstretched hands. He pushed against it and
cried:

"I'm afraid."

Two large bodies in the room bounded to their feet. Someone bawled in a
startled angry voice: "Get out of there!"

Yevsey fell to his knees, and sank down on the floor at their feet like
a frightened lizard.

"I'm afraid! I'm afraid!" he squeaked.

The following days were taken up with preparations for the funeral and
with the removal of Rayisa to Dorimedont's quarters. Yevsey flung
himself about like a little bird in a cloud of dark fear. Only
occasionally did the timid thought flicker in his mind like a will o'
the wisp, "What will become of me?" It saddened his heart, and awoke the
desire to run away and hide himself. But everywhere he met the eagle
eyes of Dorimedont, and heard his dull voice:

"Boy, quick!"

The command resounded within Yevsey, and pushed him from side to side.
He ran about for whole days at a time. In the evening he fell asleep
empty and exhausted, and his sleep was heavy and black and full of
terrible dreams.




                              CHAPTER VIII


From this life Yevsey awoke in a dusky corner of a large room with a low
ceiling. He sat holding a pen in his hand at a table covered with dirty
green oilcloth, and before him lay a thick book in which there was
writing, and a few pages of blank ruled paper. He did not understand
what he had to do with all this apparatus, and looked around helplessly.

There were many tables in the room with two or four persons at each.
They sat there with a tired and vexed expression on their faces, moving
their pens rapidly, smoking much, and now and then casting curt words at
one another. The pungent blue smoke floated to the window casements,
where it met the deafening noise that entered importunately from the
street. Numberless flies buzzed about the occupants' heads, crawled over
the tables and notices on the walls, and knocked against the panes. They
resembled the people who filled this stifling filthy cage with their
bustle.

Gendarmes stood at the doors, officers came and went, various persons
entered, exchanged greetings, smiled obsequiously, and sighed. Their
rapid, plaintive talk, which kept up a constant see-saw, was broken and
drowned by the stern calls of the clerks.

Yevsey sat in his corner with his neck stretched over the table and his
transparent eyes wide open, scrutinizing the different clerks in an
attempt to remember their faces and figures. He wanted to find someone
among them who would help him. The instinct of self-protection, now
awakened in him, concentrated all his oppressed feelings, all his broken
thoughts, into one clear endeavor to adapt himself to this place and
these people, as soon as possible, in order to make himself unnoticed
among them.

All the clerks, young and old, had something in common, a certain seedy
and worn appearance. They were all equally dejected, but they easily
grew excited and shouted, gesticulating and showing their teeth. There
were many elderly and bald-headed men among them, of whom several had
red hair and two grey hair. Of the two, one was a tall man who wore his
hair long and had a large mustache, resembling a priest, whose beard has
been shaved off. The other was a red-faced man with a huge beard and a
bare skull. It was the last who had put Yevsey into a corner, set a book
before him, and, tapping his finger upon it, had told him to copy
certain parts of it.

Now an elderly woman all in black stood before this old man, and drawled
in a plaintive tone:

"Little father, gracious sir."

"You disturb me in my work," shouted the old man without looking at her.

And at the door sitting upon a bench a little thin young girl in a pink
dress was sobbing and wiping her face with her white apron.

"I am not guilty."

"Who is whining there?" asked a sharp voice.

The outsiders who came in did nothing but complain, make requests, and
justify themselves. They spoke while standing, humbly and tearfully. The
officials, on the other hand, remained seated and shouted at them, now
angrily, now in ridicule, and now wearily. Paper rustled, and pens
squeaked, and all this noise was penetrated by the steady weeping of the
girl.

"Aleksey," the man with the grey beard called aloud, "take this woman
away from here." His eyes were arrested by the sight of Klimkov. He
walked up to him hastily, and asked gruffly, in astonishment, "What's
the matter with you? Why aren't you writing?"

Yevsey dropped his head, and was silent.

"Hmm, another fool given a job," said the old man shrugging his
shoulders. "Hey, Zarubin!" he shouted as he walked away.

A dry thin boy with a low forehead and restless eyes and black curls on
a small head sat down beside Yevsey.

"What's the trouble?" he asked, nudging Yevsey's side with his elbow.

"I don't understand what to do," explained Klimkov in a frightened tone.

From somewhere within the youngster in the region of his stomach came a
hollow, broken sound, "Ugh!"

"I'll teach you," he said in a low voice, as if communicating some
important secret. "I'll teach you, and you'll give me half a ruble. Got
half a ruble?"

"No."

"When you get your pay? All right?"

"All right."

The boy seized the paper, and in the same mysterious tone continued:

"You see? The first names and the family names are marked in the book
with red dots. Well, you must copy them on this paper. When you are
done, call me, and I'll see whether you haven't put down a pack of lies.
My name is Yakov Zarubin."

Again a sound seemed to break inside the boy's body and drop softly,
"Ugh!" He glided nimbly between the tables, his elbows pressed to his
sides, his wrists to his breast. He turned his small black head in all
directions, and darted his narrow little eyes about the room. Yevsey
looked after him, then reverently dipped pen in ink, and began to write.
Soon he settled into that pleasant state of forgetfulness of his
surroundings which had grown customary with him. He became absorbed in
the work, which required no thought, and in it he lost his fear.

Yevsey quickly became accustomed to his new position. He did everything
mechanically, and was ready to serve anyone at any time. In order the
more immediately to get away from people, he subordinated himself
submissively to everybody, and cleverly took refuge in his work from the
cold curiosity and the cruel pranks of his fellow-clerks. Taciturn and
reserved, he created for himself an unperceived existence in his corner.
He lived like a nocturnal bird perched upon a dark post of observation
without understanding the meaning of the noisy, motley days that passed
before his round fathomless eyes.

Every hour he heard complaints, groans, ejaculations of fright, the
stern voices of the police officers, the irritated grumbling and angry
fun of the clerks. Often people were beaten on their faces, and dragged
out of the door by their necks. Not infrequently blood was drawn.
Sometimes policemen brought in persons bound with ropes, bruised and
bellowing with pain.

The thieves who were led in wore an embarrassed air, but smiled at
everybody as on a familiar. The street women also smiled ingratiatingly,
and always arranged their dress with one and the same gesture. Those who
had no passports observed a sullen or dejected silence, and looked
askance at all with a hopeless gaze. The political offenders under
police supervision came in proudly. They disputed and shouted, and never
greeted anybody connected with the place. They behaved toward all there
with tranquil contempt or pronounced hostility. This class of culprits
was talked of a great deal in the chancery, almost always in fun,
sometimes inimically. But under the ridicule and enmity Yevsey felt a
hidden interest and something like reverent awe of these people who
spoke so loudly and independently with everybody.

The greatest interest of the clerks was aroused by the political spies.
These were men with indeterminate physiognomies, taciturn and severe.
They were spoken of with keen envy. The clerks said they made huge sums
of money, and related with terror how everything was known to them,
everything open, and how immeasurable was their power over people's
lives. They could fix every person, so that no matter where he moved he
would inevitably land in prison.

The broad gaze of Klimkov lightly embraced everything moving about him.
He imperceptibly gathered up experience, which his weak, uninformed mind
was incapable of combining into a harmonious whole. But the numerous
impressions heaping up one upon the other were forced into unity by the
very weight of their mass, and aroused an unconscious greed for new
observations. They sharpened his curiosity, and unexpectedly pointed to
conclusions, secretly hinted at certain possibilities which sometimes
frightened Yevsey by their boldness.

No one about him pitied anybody else. Neither was Yevsey sorry for
people. It began to seem to him that all were feigning even when they
cried and groaned from beatings. In all eyes he saw something concealed,
something distrustful, and more than once his ear caught the cry,
threatening though not uttered aloud:

"Wait, our turn will come some day, too."

In the evening, during those hours when he sat almost alone in the large
room and recalled the impressions of the day, everything seemed
superfluous and unreal, everything was unintelligible, a hindrance to
people, and caused them perplexity and vexation. All seemed to know that
they ought to live quietly, without malice, but for some reason no one
wanted to tell the others his secret of a different life. No one trusted
his neighbor, everybody lied, and made others lie. The irritation caused
by this system of life was clearly apparent. All complained aloud of its
burdensomeness, each looked upon the other as upon a dangerous enemy,
and dissatisfaction in life waged war with mistrust, cutting the soul in
two.

Klimkov did not dare to think in this wise, but he felt more and more
clearly the lack of order and the oppressive weight of everything that
whirled around him. At times he was seized by a heavy, debilitating
sense of boredom. His fingers grew languid, he put the pen aside, and
rested his head on the table, looking long and motionlessly into the
murky twilight of the room. He painstakingly endeavored to find in the
depths of his soul that which was essential to him.

Then his chief, the long-nosed old man with the shaven face and grey
mustache would shout to him:

"Klimkov, are you asleep?"

Yevsey would seize the pen and say to himself with a sigh:

"It will pass away."

But Yevsey could not make out whether he still believed in the phrase,
or had already ceased to believe in it and was merely saying it to
himself for the sake of saying it.




                               CHAPTER IX


In the morning Rayisa half dressed, with a kneaded face and dim eyes,
gave Yevsey his coffee without speaking to him. Dorimedont coughed and
spat in her room. Now his dull voice began to sound even louder and more
authoritative than ever. At dinner and supper he munched noisily, licked
his lips, thrust his thick tongue far out, bellowed, and looked at the
food greedily before he began to eat. His red pimply face grew glossy,
and his little grey eyes glided over Yevsey's face like two cold bugs,
unpleasantly tickling his skin.

"I know how hard life is, brother," he said. "I know what's what. I know
what a pound of good and what a pound of bad is worth to a man, yes,
siree. And you had good luck to come to me at once. Here I have placed
you in a position, and I am going to push you farther and farther to the
highest point possible--if you aren't a fool, of course."

He swung his bulky body as he spoke, and the chair under him groaned.
Yevsey as he listened to his talk felt that this man could force him to
do everything he wanted.

Sometimes the spy announced boastfully in self-applause:

"I received thanks again to-day from my chief Filip Filippovich. He even
gave me his hand."

Once at supper Dorimedont pulled Yevsey's ear and began a recital.

"About two months ago I was sitting in a restaurant near a railroad
station, and I saw a man eating cutlets. He kept looking around and
consulting his watch. You must know, Yevsey, that an honest man with an
easy mind doesn't glance around in all directions. People do not
interest him, and he always knows the time. The only persons who look
about for people are the agents of the Department of Safety and
criminals. Of course, I kept my eye on the gentleman. The suburban train
pulled in, another little gentleman comes into the restaurant, a dark
fellow with a little beard, apparently a Jew. He wore two flowers in his
buttonhole, a red and a white one--a sign. I see them greet each other
with their eyes. 'Aha!' thinks I. The dark man ordered something to eat,
drank a glass of Selters, and walked out. The one who had been in the
restaurant first followed him leisurely, and I after them."

Dorimedont puffed up his cheeks, and then blew a stream of air steeped
with the odor of meat and beer into Yevsey's face. Yevsey ducked his
head, and the spy burst out laughing. Then he belched noisily, and
continued raising his thick finger.

"For a month and twenty-three days I tracked the two men. Finally I
reported them. I said I was on the track of suspicious people. They went
away, and came back again. Who are they? The fair-haired fellow who had
eaten the cutlet said, 'It's none of your business.' But the Jew gave
his real name, and on inquiry it turned out we needed the man. Along
with him we took a woman known to us--the third time she fell into our
hands. We went to various other places, picked the people up like
mushrooms. But we knew the whole gang. I was a good deal put out, when
suddenly yesterday the fair-haired man gave us his name. He turned out
to be an important fellow escaped from Siberia. Well, well, New Year I
am to expect a reward."

Rayisa listened looking over the spy's head, while she slowly chewed a
crust of bread and bit off little pieces at a time.

"You catch them, and catch them, but they're not exterminated," she said
lazily.

The spy smiled, and answered impressively:

"You don't understand politics. That's why you talk nonsense, my dear.
We don't want to exterminate these people altogether. They serve as
sparks to show us where the fire really begins. That's what Filip
Filippovich says, and he himself was once a political, moreover, a Jew.
Yes, yes. It's a very sharp game."

Yevsey's gaze wandered gloomily about the contracted room. The walls
papered in yellow were hung with portraits of Czars, generals, and naked
women. These motley, obtrusive spots fairly cut the eyes, recalling
sores and wounds on the body of a sick person. The furniture, smelling
of whiskey and warm, greasy food, pressed close against the walls, as if
to withdraw from the people. The lamp burned under a green shade, and
cast dead shadows upon the faces.

For some reason Yevsey recollected the old sickly flat-nosed beggar with
the restless eyes of a sharper, whom he met almost every day on his way
to the office. The beggar pretended to be a jolly fellow, and would
chant garrulously as he stretched out his hand for alms:

                   "Stout of body, red of nose,
                   Pining for the want of booze;
                   Prithee, help God's pilgrim true,
                   Charity to whom 'tis due!
                   Help my burning thirst to slake,
                   Rum, oh rum, for the Lord's sake!"

The spy put his hand across the table, and pulled Yevsey's hair.

"When I speak, you must listen."

Dorimedont often beat Klimkov. Though his blows were not painful, they
were particularly insulting, as if he struck not the face but the soul.
He was especially fond of hitting Yevsey on the head with the heavy ring
he wore on his finger, when he would knock the boy's skull so that a
strange dry cracking sound was emitted. Each time Yevsey was dealt a
blow Rayisa would say indifferently, moving her brows:

"Stop, Dorimedont Lukin. Don't."

"Well, well, he won't be chopped to pieces. He has to be taught."

Rayisa grew thinner, blue circles appeared under her eyes, her gaze
became still more immobile and dull. On evenings when the spy was away
from home she sent Yevsey for whiskey, which she gulped down in little
glassfuls at a time. Then she spoke to him in an even voice. What she
said was confused and unintelligible, and she frequently halted and
sighed. Her large body grew flabby, she undid one button after the
other, untied her ribbons, and half-dressed spread herself on the
armchair like sour dough.

"I am bored," she said shaking her head. "Bored! If you were handsomer,
or older, you might divert me in my gloom. Oh, how useless you are!"

Yevsey hung his head in silence. His heart was pricked with the burning
cold of insult.

"Well, why are you staring at the floor?" he heard her sad complaining.
"Others at your age would have started to love girls long ago; they live
a living life. While you--oh, how irresponsive you are!"

Sometimes, after she had drunk whiskey, she drew him to herself, and
toyed with him. This awoke a complex feeling of fear, shame, and sharp
yet not bold curiosity. He shut his eyes tightly, and yielded himself
silently, involuntarily, to the power of her shameless, coarse hands.
The weak, anæmic boy was oppressed by the debilitating premonition of
something terrible.

"Go to bed, go! Oh, my God!" she exclaimed, pushing him away,
dissatisfied and disgusted.

Yevsey left her to go to the anteroom in which he slept. Gradually
losing the undefined warm feeling he had for her, he withdrew into
himself more and more.

As he lay in bed filled with a sense of insult and sharp, disagreeable
excitement, he heard Rayisa singing in a thick cooing voice--always the
same song--and heard the clink of the bottle against the glass.

But once on a dark night when fine streams of autumn rain lashed the
window near his room with a howl, Rayisa succeeded in arousing in the
youngster the feeling she needed.

"There, now," she said, smiling a drunken smile. "Now you are my
paramour. You see how good it is? Eh?"

He stood at the bed also intoxicated of a sudden. His feet trembled, he
was out of breath. He looked at her large, soft body, at her broad face
spread in a smile. He was no longer ashamed, but his heart was seized
with the grief of loss, and it sank within him outraged. For some reason
he wanted to weep. But he was silent. This woman was a stranger to him,
unnecessary and unpleasant; all the good kind feelings he had cherished
for her were at one gulp swallowed up by her greedy body, and
disappeared into it without leaving a trace, like belated drops in a
muddy pool.

"We'll live together, and we'll give Dorimedont the go-by, the pig."

"But won't he find out?" inquired Yevsey quietly.

"Oh, you little coward, come here!"

He did not dare to refuse, but now the woman was no longer able to
overcome his enmity to her. She toyed with him a long time, and smiled
with an air of having been offended. Then she roughly pushed his bony
body from her, uttered an oath, and went away.

When Yevsey was left alone he thought in despair.

"Now she will ruin me. She'll store this up against me. I am lost."

He looked through the window. Something formless and frightened throbbed
in the darkness. It wept, lashed the window with a doleful howl, scraped
along the wall, jumped on the roof, and fell down into the street
moaning and wailing. A cautious seductive thought stole into his mind.

"Suppose I tell Kapiton Ivanovich to-morrow that she suffocated the old
man!"

The question frightened Yevsey, and for a long time he was unable to
push it away.

"She will ruin me, one way or the other," he answered himself. Yet the
question persistently stood before him beckoning to him.

In the morning, however, it seemed that Rayisa had forgotten about the
tragic, violent incident of the night before. She gave him his bread and
coffee lazily and with an indifferent air. As always, she was half sick
from the previous day's drinking. By neither word nor look did she hint
of her changed relation to him.

He left for the office somewhat calmed, and from that day he began to
remain in the office for night work. He would walk home very slowly so
as to arrive as late as possible, because it was difficult for him to
remain alone with the woman. He was afraid to speak to her, dreading
lest she remember that night when she had destroyed Yevsey's feeling for
her. Feeble though it had been, it had yet been dear to him.

Yakov Zarubin and Yevsey's chief, Kapiton Ivanovich, the man with the
grey mustache, whom everybody called Smokestack behind his back,
remained in the chancery with him for night work more frequently than
the others. The chief's shaven face was often covered with little red
stubble, which glistened golden from afar, and at close range resembled
tiny twigs. From under his grey lashes and the eyelids that drooped
wearily spiritless eyes gleamed angrily. He spoke in a grumbling growl,
and incessantly smoked thick yellow cigarettes. The clouds of bluish
smoke always hovering about his large white head distinguished him from
all the others workers, and won him the nickname, Smokestack.

"What a grave man he is," Yevsey once said to Zarubin.

"He's cracked in the upper story," Zarubin answered, pointing to his
head. "He spent almost a whole year in an insane asylum. But he's a
quiet man."

Yevsey saw that sometimes the Smokestack took a small black book from
the pocket of his long grey jacket, brought it close to his face, and
mumbled something through his mustache, which moved up and down.

"Is that a prayer-book?"

"I don't know."

Zarubin's swarthy face quivered spasmodically. His little eyes bulged,
he swung himself over toward Yevsey, and whispered hotly.

"Do you go to girls?"

"No."

"Why?"

Yevsey answered in embarrassment:

"I'm afraid."

"Ugh! Come with me. All right? We can get it for nothing. We need only
twenty-five kopeks for beer. If we say we are from the Department of
Police, they'll let us in, and give us girls for nothing. They are
afraid of police officers. Everybody is afraid of us." In a still lower
voice, but with more fire and appetite he continued. "And what girls
there _are_! Stout, warm, like down feather-beds! They're the best, by
golly! Some fondle you like your own mother, stroke your head, and so
you fall asleep. It's good!"

"Have you a mother?"

"Yes, only I live with my aunt. My mother is a sow. She's a lewd woman,
and lives with a butcher for her support. I don't go to her. The butcher
won't let me. Once I went there, and he kicked me on the back. Ugh!"

Zarubin's little mouse ears quivered, his narrow eyes rolled queerly, he
tugged at the black down on his upper lip with a convulsive movement of
his fingers, and throbbed all over with excitement.

"Why are you such a quiet fellow? You ought to be bolder, or else
they'll crush you with work. I was afraid at first, too, so they rode
all over me. Come, let's be friends for the rest of our lives!"

Though Yevsey did not like Zarubin and was intimidated by his extreme
agility, he replied:

"All right. Let's be friends."

"Your hand. There, it's done! So to-morrow we'll go to the girls?"

"No, I won't go."

They did not notice the Smokestack coming up to them.

"Well, Yakov, who will do whom?" he growled.

"We're not fighting," said Zarubin, sullenly and disrespectfully.

"You lie," said the Smokestack. "Say, Klimkov, don't give in to him, do
you hear?"

"I do," said Yevsey rising before him.

A feeling of reverent curiosity drew him to the man. Once, as usual
unexpectedly to himself, he took courage to speak to the Smokestack.

"Kapiton Ivanovich."

"What is it?"

"I want to ask you, if you please--"

Without looking at him, the Smokestack said:

"Get up some spunk! Get up some spunk!"

"Why do people live so badly?" Yevsey brought out with a great effort.

The old man raised his heavy brows.

"What business is it of yours?" he rejoined, looking into Klimkov's
face.

Yevsey was staggered. The old man's question was like a blow on the
chest. It stood before him in all the power of its inexplicable
simplicity.

"Aha!" said the old man quietly. Then he drew his brows together,
whipped a black book from his pocket, and tapping it with his finger
said, "The New Testament. Have you read it?"

"Yes."

"Did you understand it?"

"No," answered Yevsey timidly.

"Read it again. Well, anyway--" Moving his mustache the old man hid the
book in his pocket. "I've been reading this book for three years, yes,
three years. Nobody understands it. It's a book for children, for the
pure of heart. No one can understand it."

He grumbled kindly, and Yevsey felt a desire to ask more questions. They
did not formulate themselves, however. The old man lighted a cigarette,
the smoke enveloped him, and he apparently forgot about his
interlocutor. Klimkov glided off quietly. His attraction for the
Smokestack had grown stronger, and he thought:

"It would be good for me to sit nearer to him."

Henceforth this became his dream, which, however, came into direct
conflict with the dream of Yakov Zarubin.

"You know what?" Zarubin said in a hot whisper. "Let's try to get into
the Department of Safety, and become political spies. Then what a life
we'll lead! Ugh!"

Yevsey was silent. The political spies frightened him because of their
stern eyes and the mystery surrounding their dark business and dark
life.




                               CHAPTER X


An accident happened at home. Dorimedont appeared late at night in torn
clothes, without hat or cane, his face bruised and smeared with blood.
His bulky body shook, tears ran down his swollen cheeks. He sobbed, and
said in a hollow voice:

"It's all over! I must go away--to another city--the minute I can."

Rayisa silently, without haste, wiped his face with a towel dipped in
brandy and water. He started and groaned.

"Not so rough! Not so rough! The beasts! How they beat me--with clubs.
To beat a man with clubs! _Please_ be more careful. Don't you
understand?"

Yevsey handed the water, removed the spy's shoes, and listened to his
groans. He took secret satisfaction in his tears and blood. Accustomed
as he was to see people beaten until blood was drawn, their outcries did
not touch him even though he remembered the pain of the pummelings he
had received in his childhood.

"Who did it to you?" asked Rayisa when the spy was settled in bed.

"They trapped me, surrounded me, in a suburb near a thread factory. Now
I must go to another city. I will ask for a transfer."

When Yevsey lay down to sleep, the spy and Rayisa began to quarrel
aloud.

"I won't go," said the woman in a loud and unusually firm voice.

"Keep quiet! Don't excite a sick man!" the spy exclaimed with tears in
his voice.

"I won't go!"

"I will make you."

In the morning Yevsey understood by Rayisa's stony face and the spy's
angry excitement that the two did not agree. At supper they began to
quarrel again. The spy, who had grown stronger during the day, cursed
and swore. His swollen blue face was horrible to look upon, his right
hand was in a sling, and he shook his left hand menacingly. Rayisa, pale
and imperturbable, rolled her round eyes, and followed the swinging of
his red hand.

"Never, I'll never go," she stubbornly repeated, scarcely varying her
words.

"Why not?"

"I don't want to."

"But you know I can ruin you."

"I don't care."

"No, you'll go."

"I won't."

"We shall see. Who are you anyway? Have you forgotten?"

"It's all the same to me."

"All right."

After supper the spy wrapped his face in his scarf, and departed without
saying anything. Rayisa sent Yevsey for whiskey. When he had brought her
a bottle of table whiskey and another bottle of some dark liquid, she
poured a portion of the contents of each into a cup, sipped the entire
draught, and remained standing a long time with her eyes screwed up and
wiping her neck with the palm of her hand.

"Do you want some?" she asked, nodding over the bottle. "No? Take a
drink. You'll begin to drink some time or other anyway."

Yevsey looked at her high bosom, which had already begun to wither, at
her little mouth, into her round dimmed eyes, and remembering how she
had been before, he pitied her with a melancholy pity. He felt heavy and
gloomy in the presence of this woman.

"Ah, Yevsey," she said, "if one could only live his whole life with a
clean conscience."

Her lips twitched spasmodically. She filled a cup and offered it to him.

"Drink!"

He shook his head in declination.

"You little coward!" she laughed quietly. "Life is hard for you--I
understand. But why you live I don't understand. Why? Tell me."

"Just so," answered Yevsey gloomily. "I live. What else is one to do?"

Rayisa looked at him, and said tenderly:

"I think you are going to choke yourself."

Yevsey was aggrieved and sighed. He settled himself more firmly in his
chair.

Rayisa paced through the room, stepping lazily and inaudibly. She
stopped before a mirror, and looked at her face long without winking.
She felt her full white neck with her hands, her shoulders quivered, her
hands dropped heavily, and she began again to pace the room, her hips
moving up and down. She hummed without opening her mouth. Her voice was
stifled like the groan of one who suffers from toothache.

A lamp covered with a green shade was burning on the table. Through the
window the round disk of the moon could be seen in the vacant heavens.
The moon, too, looked green, as it hung there motionless like the
shadows in the room, and it augured ill.

"I am going to bed," said Yevsey rising from his chair.

Rayisa did not answer, and did not look at him. Then he stepped to the
door, and repeated in a lower voice:

"Good-night. I am going to sleep."

"Go, I'm not keeping you. Go."

Yevsey understood that Rayisa felt nauseated. He wanted to tell her
something.

"Can I do anything for you?" he inquired, stopping at the door.

She looked into his face with her weary sleepy eyes.

"No, nothing," she answered quietly after a pause.

She walked up and down in the room for a long time. Yevsey heard the
rustle of her skirt and the doleful sound of her song, and the clinking
of the bottles. Occasionally she coughed dully.

Rayisa's composed words stood motionless in Yevsey's heart, "I think you
are going to choke yourself." They lay upon him heavily, pressing like
stones.

In the middle of the night the spy awoke Klimkov rudely.

"Where is Rayisa?" he asked in a loud whisper. "Where did she go? Has
she been gone long? You don't know? You fool!"

Dorimedont left the room hastily, then thrust his head through the door,
and asked sternly:

"What was she doing?"

"Nothing."

"Was she drinking?"

"Yes."

"The pig!"

The spy pulled his ear, and disappeared.

"Why did he speak in a whisper?" Yevsey wondered.

The light in the lamp flickered and went out. The spy uttered an oath,
then began to strike matches, which flared up, frightening the darkness,
and went out. Finally a pale ray from the room reached Yevsey's bed. It
quivered timidly, and seemed to seek something in the narrow ante-room.
Dorimedont entered again. One of his eyes was closed from the swelling,
the other, light and restless, quickly looked about the walls, and
halted at Yevsey's face.

"Didn't Rayisa say anything to you?"

"No."

"Such a stupid woman!"

Yevsey felt awkward to be lying down in the presence of the spy, and he
raised himself.

"Stay where you are! Stay where you are!" said Dorimedont hastily, and
sat down on the bed at Yevsey's feet.

"If you were a year older," he began in an unusually kind, quiet, and
thoughtful tone, "I would get you into the Department of Safety as a
political agent. It's a very good position. The salary is not large, but
if you are successful, you get rewarded. And it's a free life. You can
go wherever you want, have a good time, yes, indeed. Rayisa is a
beautiful woman, isn't she?"

"Yes, beautiful," agreed Yevsey.

"Yes, ahem," said the spy, with a sigh and a strange smile. He kept
stroking the bandage on his head with his left hand, and pinching his
ear. "Woman you can never have enough of--the mother of temptation and
sin.--Where did she go? What do you think?"

"I don't know," answered Yevsey quietly, beginning to be afraid of
something.

"Of course. She has no paramour. No men came to her. Do you know what,
Yevsey? Don't be in a hurry with women. You have time enough for that.
They cost dear, brother. Here am I, who have made thousands and
thousands of rubles, and what's become of them?"

Heavy, cumbersome, bound with rags, he shook before Yevsey's eyes, and
seemed ready to fall to pieces. His dull voice sounded uneasy. His left
hand constantly felt of his head and his breast.

"Ah, I got mixed up with them a great deal!" he said peering
suspiciously around the dark corners of the room. "It's troublesome, but
you can't get along without them. Nothing better in the world. Some say
cards are better, but card-players can't get along without women either.
Nor does hunting make you proof against women. Nothing does."

In the morning Klimkov saw the spy sleeping on the sofa with his clothes
on. The room was filled with smoke and the smell of kerosene from the
lamp, which had not been extinguished. Dorimedont was snoring, his large
mouth wide open, his sound hand dangling over the floor. He was
repulsive and pitiful.

It grew light, and a pale square piece of sky peeped into the little
window. The flies awoke, and buzzed plaintively, darting about on the
grey background of the window. Besides the smell of kerosene the room
was penetrated with some other odor, thick and irritating.

After putting out the lamp Yevsey for some reason washed himself in a
great hurry, dressed, and started for the office.




                               CHAPTER XI


At about noon Zarubin called out to Yevsey.

"Hey there, Klimkov, you know Rayisa Petrovna Fialkovskaya, she's your
master Lukin's mistress, isn't she?"

"Yes."

"There now!"

"What's the matter?" asked Yevsey hastily.

"She cut her throat."

Yevsey rose to his feet, stung in the back by a sharp blow of terror.

"She was just found in a store-room. Let's go and look."

Zarubin ran off, announcing to the clerks on his way:

"I told you she was Dorimedont Lukin's mistress."

He shouted the word "mistress" with particular emphasis and zest.

Yevsey looked after him with wide-open eyes. Before him in the air hung
Rayisa's head, her heavy luxuriant hair flowed from it in streams, her
face was pale green, her lips were tightly compressed, and instead of
eyes there were deep dark stains. Everything round about him was hidden
behind the dead face, which Yevsey, numb with terror and pity, was
unable to remove from his vision.

"Why don't you go to lunch?" asked the Smokestack.

Scarcely anybody remained in the office. Yevsey sighed and answered:

"My mistress cut her throat."

"Oh, yes. Well, go to the café."

The Smokestack walked off carefully picking his steps. Yevsey jumped up
and seized his hand:

"Take me."

"Come."

"No, take me to stay with you altogether," Yevsey besought him.

The Smokestack bent toward him.

"What do you mean by 'altogether?'"

"To your rooms--to live with you--for all the time."

"Aha! Well, in the meantime let's get our lunch. Come on."

In the café a canary bird kept up a piercing song. The old man silently
ate fried potatoes. Yevsey was unable to eat, and looked into his
companion's face inquiringly.

"So you want to live with me? Well, come on."

When Yevsey heard these words, he instantly felt that they partitioned
him off from the terrible life. Encouraged he said gratefully:

"I will clean your shoes for you."

The Smokestack thrust his long foot shod in a torn boot from under the
table.

"You needn't clean this one. How about your mistress? Was she a good
woman?"

The old man's eyes looked directly and kindly, and seemed to say:

"Speak the truth."

"I don't know," said Yevsey, dropping his head, and for the first time
feeling that he used the phrase very often.

"So?" said the Smokestack. "So?"

"I don't know anything," said Yevsey, disappointed with himself.
Suddenly he grew bold. "I see this and that; but what it is, what for,
why, I cannot understand. And there must be another life."

"Another?" repeated the Smokestack, screwing up his eyes.

"Yes. It would be impossible otherwise."

The Smokestack smiled quietly. He hit his knife on the table, and
shouted to the waiter:

"A bottle of beer. So it can't be otherwise? That's curious. Yes--we'll
see who will do whom."

"Do, please, let me live with you," Yevsey repeated.

"Well, we'll live together. All right."

"I'll come to you to-day."

"Come on."

The Smokestack began to drink his beer in silence.

When they returned to the office, they found Dorimedont Lukin there, who
hastened up to Yevsey. His bandages had loosened, the one eye visible
was suffused with blood.

"Did you hear about Rayisa?" he inquired gravely.

"Yes, I did."

"She did it out of--it was drink that did it, upon my word," whispered
the spy, putting his uninjured hand to his breast.

"I won't go back there any more," said Yevsey.

"What then? Where will you go?"

"I am going to live with Kapiton Ivanovich."

"Um-m-m!"

Dorimedont suddenly became embarrassed, and looked around.

"Take care! He's not in his right senses. They keep him here from pity.
He's even a dangerous man. Be careful with him. Keep mum about all you
know."

Yevsey thought the spy would fly into a passion. He was surprised at his
whispering, and listened attentively to what he said.

"I am going to leave the city. Good-by. I am going to tell my chief
about you, and when he needs a new man, he will take you, rest assured.
Move your bed and whatever there is in my rooms to your new quarters.
Take the things to-day, do you hear? I'll go from there this evening to
a hotel. Here are five rubles for you. They'll be useful to you. Now,
keep quiet, do you understand?"

He continued to whisper long and rapidly, his eyes running about
suspiciously on all sides, and when the door opened he started from his
chair as if to run away. The smell of an ointment emanated from him. He
seemed to have grown less bulky and lower in stature, and to have lost
his importance.

"Good-by," he said, placing his hand on Yevsey's shoulder. "Live
carefully, don't trust people, especially women. Know the value of
money. Buy with silver, save the gold, don't scorn copper, defend
yourself with iron--a Cossack saying. I am a Cossack, you know."

It was hard and tiresome for Yevsey to listen to his softened voice. He
did not believe one word of the spy's, and, as always, feared him.
Klimkov felt relieved when he walked away, and went eagerly at his work,
trying to use it as a shield against the recollection of Rayisa and all
other troublesome thoughts. Something turned and bestirred itself within
him that day. He felt he was standing on the eve of another life, and
gazed after the Smokestack from the corners of his eyes. The old man
bent over his table in a cloud of grey smoke. Yevsey involuntarily
thought:

"How everything happens at once. There she cut her throat, and now maybe
I will--"

He could not picture to himself what might be; in fact, he did not
understand what he wanted, and impatiently awaited the evening, working
quickly in an endeavor to shorten the time.

In the evening as he walked along the street at the Smokestack's side,
he remarked that almost everybody noticed the old man, some even
stopping to look at him. He walked not rapidly but in long strides,
swinging his body and thrusting his head forward like a crane. He held
his hands behind his back, and his open jacket spreading wide flapped
against his sides like broken wings. In Klimkov's eyes the attention the
old man attracted seemed to sever him from the rest of the world.

"What is your name?"

"Yevsey."

"John is a good name," observed the old man, arranging his crumpled hat
with his long hand. "I had a son named John."

"Where is he?"

"That doesn't concern you," answered the old man calmly. After taking
several steps he added in the same tone, "If I say 'had,' that means I
have him no longer, no longer." He stuck out his lower lip, and pinched
it with his little finger. "We shall see who will do whom." Now he
inclined his head on one side, and looked into Klimkov's eyes. "To-day a
friend will come to me," he said solemnly, shaking his finger. "I have a
certain friend. What we speak about and what we do, does not concern
you. What you know I do not know, and what you do I do not want to know.
The same applies to you. Absolutely."

Yevsey nodded his head.

"You must make this a general rule. Apply it to everybody. No one knows
anything about you. That's the way it should be. And you do not know
anything about others. The path of human destruction is knowledge sown
by the devil. Happiness is ignorance. That's plain."

Yevsey listened attentively, looking into his face. The old man observed
his regard, and grumbled:

"There is something human in you. I noticed it." He stopped
unexpectedly, then went on, "But there's something human even in a dog."

They climbed a narrow wooden stairway with several windings to a
stifling garret, dark and smelling of dust. At the Smokestack's request
Yevsey held up burning matches while he fumbled a long time over opening
the door. As Yevsey held up the matches, which scorched his fingers, a
new hope flickered in his breast.

At last the old man opened the door, covered with torn oilcloth and
ragged felt, and they entered a long, narrow white room, with a ceiling
resembling the roof of a tomb. Opposite the door a wide window gleamed
dimly. In the corner to the right of the entrance stood a little stove,
which was scarcely noticeable. The bed extended along the left wall, and
opposite sprawled a sunken red sofa. The room smelled strongly of
camphor and dried herbs. The old man opened the window, and heaved a
noisy breath.

"It's good to have pure air. You will sleep on the sofa. What is your
name? I've forgotten. Aleksey?"

"Yevsey."

"Oh, yes." He raised the lamp, and pointed to the wall. "There's my son
John."

A portrait made in thin pencil strokes and set in a narrow white frame
hung inconspicuously upon the wall. It was a young but stern face, with
a large forehead, a sharp nose, and stubbornly compressed lips. The lamp
shook in the old man's hands, the shade knocked against the chimney,
filling the room with a gentle whining sound.

"John," he repeated, setting the lamp back on the table. "A man's name
means a great deal."

He thrust his head through the window, breathed in the cold air noisily,
and without turning to Yevsey asked him to prepare the samovar.

When Yevsey was busying himself around the oven, a hunch-backed man
entered, removed his straw hat in silence, and fanned his face with it.

"It's close, even though it's autumn already," he said in a beautiful
chest voice.

"Aha, you here!" said the Smokestack.

They began to converse in low tones while standing at the window. Yevsey
realizing that they were speaking about him strained his ears to catch
what they were saying. But he could not distinguish any words.

The three then seated themselves at the table, and the Smokestack began
to pour the tea. Yevsey from time to time stole a look at the guest. His
face, shaven like the Smokestack's, was bluish with a huge thin-lipped
mouth and dark eyes sunk in two hollows under a high smooth forehead.
His head, bald to the crown, was angular and large. He kept drumming
quietly on the table with his long fingers.

"Well, read," said the Smokestack.

"From the beginning?"

"Yes."

The hunch-back pulled out a package of papers from his coat-pocket and
opened it. "I'll skip the titles. This is the way I've done it." He
coughed, and half closing his eyes began to read. "'We people known to
nobody and already arrived at a ripe age now fall slavishly at your feet
with this distressing statement of grievances, which wells from the very
depths of our hearts, our hearts shattered by life but not robbed of
sacred faith in the grace and wisdom of Your Majesty.' Well, is it
good?"

"Continue," said the Smokestack.

"'For you are the father of the Russian people, the source of good
counsel, and the only power on earth capable--'"

"Better say, 'the only power on earth endowed with authority,'"
suggested the Smokestack.

"Wait, wait. 'The only power capable of restoring and maintaining order,
justice--' Here we must put in a third word for the sake of symmetry,
but I don't know what word."

"Be more careful in your choice of words," said the Smokestack, sternly
but not aloud. "Remember that they convey a different meaning to every
man."

The hunchback looked at him, and adjusted his glasses.

"Yes, that will come later. 'Great Russia is falling into ruin. Evil is
rampant in our country and horror prevails. People are oppressed by
want. The heart has become perverted with envy. The patient and gentle
Russian is perishing, and a heartless tribe ferocious with greed is
being born, a race of wolves, cruel animals of prey. Faith is dissolved,
and outside her fortress the people stand perturbed. Persons of depraved
minds aim at the defenseless, take them captive with satanic shrewdness,
and entice them onto the road of crime against all thy laws, Master of
our lives.'"

"'Master?' That's for a bishop," grumbled the Smokestack.

"Don't you like it?"

"No, we must make it different."

"How?"

"We must tell him directly that a general revolt against life is
stirring among the people, and that 'therefore Thou, who art called by
God--'"

The hunchback shook his head disapprovingly.

"We may point out. We have no right to advise."

"Who is our enemy, and what is his name? Atheist, Socialist, and
Revolutionist, a trinity. The destroyer of the family, the robber of our
children, the fore-runner of the anti-Christ."

"You and I don't believe in the anti-Christ," said the hunchback
quietly.

"That doesn't matter. We are speaking of the masses. They believe in the
anti-Christ. And we must point out the root of the main evil where we
see it. In the doctrine of destruction--"

"He knows it himself."

"How should he? Who would tell him the truth? Nobody cast the noose of
insanity around his children. And on what are their teachings based? On
general poverty and discontent with poverty. And we ought to say to him
straight out, 'Thou art the father, and thou art rich. Then give the
riches thou hast accumulated to thy people. Thus thou wilt cut off the
root of the evil, and everything will have been saved by thy hand.'"

The hunchback drew up his shoulders, and spread his mouth into a wide,
thin crack.

"They'll send us to the mines for that."

Then he looked into Yevsey's face and at the master.

Klimkov listened to the reading and the conversation as to a fairytale,
and felt that all the words entered his head and fixed themselves
forever in his memory. With parted lips and popping eyes he looked now
at one, now at the other, and did not drop his gaze even when the dark
look of the hunchback fastened upon his face. He was fascinated by the
proceedings.

"Anyway," said the hunchback, "this is inconvenient."

"What is it, Klimkov?" asked the Smokestack glumly.

Yevsey's throat grew dry, and he did not answer at once.

"I am listening."

Suddenly he realized by their faces that they did not believe him, that
they were afraid of him. He rose from the table, and said, getting his
words mixed:

"I won't say anything to a soul--I need it myself. Please let me
listen--why, I myself said to you, Kapiton Ivanovich, that things ought
to be different."

"You see?" said the Smokestack crossly, pointing at Yevsey. "You see,
Anton, what does it mean? Still a boy, a little boy, yet, he, too, says
things should be different. That's where they get their strength from."

"Yes, yes," said the hunchback.

Yevsey grew timid, and dropped back on his chair. The Smokestack, moving
his eyelids, bent toward him.

"I will tell you--we are writing a letter to the Czar. We ask him to
take more rigorous measures against those who are under supervision for
political infidelity. Do you understand?"

"I understand."

"Those people," the hunchback began to say clearly and slowly, "are
agents of foreign governments, chiefly of England. They receive huge
salaries for stirring up the Russian people to revolt and for weakening
the power of the government. The Englishmen do it so that we should not
take India from them."

They spoke to Yevsey by turns. When one had finished, the other took up
the word. He listened attentively trying to remember their strange,
eloquent flow of language. Finally, however, he tired from the unusual
exertion of his brain. It seemed to him he would soon understand
something huge, which would illuminate the whole of life and all people,
their entire misfortune and their malicious irritation. It was
inexpressibly pleasant for him to recognize that two wise men spoke to
him as to an adult, and he was powerfully gripped by a feeling of
gratitude and respect for these men, poorly dressed and so preoccupied
with deliberations upon the construction of a new life. But now, his
head grown heavy, as if filled with lead, he involuntarily closed his
eyes, oppressed by a painful sensation of fullness in his breast.

"Go, lie down and sleep," said the Smokestack.

Klimkov rose obediently, undressed, and lay down on the sofa.

The autumn night breathed warm fragrant moisture into the window.
Thousands and thousands of bright stars quivered in the dark sky, flying
up higher and higher. The fire of the lamp flickered, and likewise tore
itself upward. The two men bending toward each other read and spoke
gravely and quietly. Everything round about was mysterious,
awe-inspiring. It lifted Yevsey upward pleasantly, to something new, to
something good.




                              CHAPTER XII


When Yevsey had been living with Kapiton Ivanovich only a few days, he
began to feel he was of some consequence. Formerly he had talked quietly
and respectfully with the gendarmes who served in the chancery. Now,
however, he called the old man Butenko to him in a stern voice, in order
to administer a rebuke.

"Look, flies in my inkstand! How can I write with flies in my ink?"

The grey soldier covered with crosses and medals entered into his usual
nonchalant, many-worded explanation.

"There are all in all thirty-four inkstands here, and there are
thousands of flies. All the flies want to drink. That's why they crawl
into the inkstands. What are they to do?"

"Wash it, and put in fresh ink," ordered Klimkov. Then he walked into
the dressing-room, where he stationed himself before the looking-glass
and carefully regarded his thin face, grey and angular, with its sharp
little nose and narrow lips. He searched for signs of a mustache, looked
into his watery and uncertain eyes.

"I must get my hair cut," he decided after failing to smooth the thin,
light tufts of hair on his head. "And I ought to wear starched collars;
my neck is too thin."

The very same evening he got his hair cut, bought two collars, and felt
himself still more a man.

The Smokestack was attentive and kind in his behavior toward Yevsey, but
often a smile of derision gleamed in his eyes which somewhat
disconcerted and awed the young fellow. Whenever the hunchback came, the
old man's face assumed a preoccupied expression, and his voice sounded
stern. He cut short almost everything the other man said with an
objection:

"It's not that--it's not so--no, you're no wiser than I am--your brain
is like a poor gun, it scatters the thought on all sides. You ought to
shoot so that the whole charge goes in the same direction."

The hunchback shook his head sadly, and answered in a thick voice:

"Wait. Good work cannot be done in a day. You must keep at it."

"Time flies, the enemy grows."

"By the way, I noticed a man the other day," said the hunchback, "who
took lodgings not far from my place. He was tall, had a pointed beard
and screwed-up eyes, and walked quickly. I asked the dvornik where he
was working. He told me the man had come to look for a position. I
immediately wrote a letter to the Department of Safety. You see?"

The Smokestack interrupted his talk with a wide sweep of his arm.

"That's not important. The house is damp, that's why there are roaches
in it. You won't get rid of them that way. The house must be made dry."

Another time in the course of the evening the Smokestack said:

"I am a soldier. I commanded half a company, and I understand life. It
is necessary for everybody to be thoroughly familiar with the laws and
regulations. Such knowledge produces unanimity. What hinders knowledge
of the law? Poverty and stupidity; stupidity in itself being a result of
poverty. Why doesn't he fight poverty? In want is the root of human
folly and of hostility to him, the Czar."

Yevsey greedily swallowed the old man's words, and believed them. The
root of all human misfortune is poverty. That was clear and simple.
Hence come envy, malice, cruelty. Hence also greed and the fear of life
common to all people, the apprehension of one another. The Smokestack's
plan was also simple. The Czar was rich, the people poor; then let the
Czar give the people his riches, and all would be contented and good.

Yevsey's attitude toward people changed. He remained as obliging as
before, but became more self-assertive, and began to look upon others
condescendingly, with the eyes of a man who understands the secret of
life and can point out where the road lies to peace and calm.

He felt the need for boasting of his knowledge; so once, when lunching
in the café with Yakov Zarubin, he proudly expounded everything he had
heard from the old man and his hunchback friend.

Zarubin's narrow eyes flashed. He fidgetted in his seat, and for some
reason rumpled his hair by thrusting the fingers of both hands through
it.

"That's true, by golly!" he exclaimed in an undertone. "What the
devil--really! He has thousands of millions, and we are perishing here.
Who taught you all that?"

"Nobody," said Yevsey firmly. "I thought it out myself."

"No, tell me the truth. Where did you hear it?"

"I tell you, I came to the conclusion myself."

Yakov looked at him with satisfaction.

"If that's so," he said, "you haven't a bad head. But you're lying."

Yevsey felt affronted.

"It's all the same to me whether you believe me or not. It's the worse
for you if you don't."

"For me?" asked Yakov, and for some reason burst out laughing, merrily
and vigorously rubbing his hands.

Two days later the assistant captain Komov and a grey-eyed gentleman
with a round close-cropped head and a bored yellow face, came up to
Yevsey's table.

"Klimkov, betake yourself to the Department of Safety," said the captain
clearly and ominously. "Is your desk locked?"

"No."

Yevsey rose, but his legs trembled, and he dropped into his chair again.
The crop-haired man drew nearer.

"Permit me," he said drily, then pulled out the table drawer and took
out the papers.

Weak and uncomprehending Klimkov recovered his senses in a half dark
room at a desk covered with green felt. A wave of anguish rose and fell
in his breast. The floor heaved and billowed under his feet, and the
walls of the room, filled, as it were with green dusk, turned around
steadily. Over the table rose a man's white face framed in a thick black
beard and spotted by gleaming blue eye-glasses. Yevsey kept his eyes
fastened on the glass of the spectacles, on the blue bottomless
darkness, which drew him like a magnet and seemed to suck the blood from
his veins. Without waiting for a question Klimkov quietly told about the
Smokestack and his hunchback friend. He had understood their talks well,
and now spoke connectedly in great detail. He seemed to be removing a
thin layer of skin from his heart.

A high voice, which cut the ear, interrupted him.

"So? So these jackasses say the emperor the Czar is the fault of
everything?"

"Yes."

The man with the blue glasses slowly stretched out his hand, put the
telephone receiver to his ear, and asked in a sportive tone:

"Belkin, that you? Yes? See to it, old fellow, that search is made
to-night in the rooms of two scoundrels. Arrest them. Eh--eh--a clerk in
the chancery department, Kapiton Reüsov. Eh--eh--and a functionary of
the court of exchequer--Anton Driagin--what? Well, yes, of course."

Yevsey seized the edge of the table with his hand, feeling a dull pain
in his eyes.

"So, my friend," said the man with the black beard, throwing himself
back on the armchair. He smoothed his beard with both hands, played with
his pencil, flung it on the table, and thrust his hands into his
trousers' pockets. He was silent for a painfully long time, then he
asked sternly, emphasizing each word:

"What am I to do with you now?"

"Forgive me," came from Yevsey in a whisper.

"Klimkov?" mused the black-bearded man, ignoring Yevsey's reply. "Seems
to me I heard the name somewhere."

"Forgive me," repeated Yevsey.

"Do you feel yourself very guilty?"

"Very."

"That's good. What do you feel guilty of?"

Klimkov was silent. He felt as if the black-bearded man sitting so
comfortably and calmly in his chair would never let him leave the room.

"You don't know? Think!"

Klimkov drew more air into his lungs, and began to tell of Rayisa and
how she had suffocated the old man.

"Lukin?" the man with the blue goggles queried, yawning indifferently.
"Aha, that's why your name is familiar to me."

He walked over to Yevsey, lifted his chin with his finger, and looked
into his face for a few seconds. Then he rang.

A heavy tramp was heard, and a big pockmarked fellow with huge wrists
appeared at the door, and looked at Yevsey. He had a terrifying way of
spreading his red fingers like claws.

"Take him, Semyonov."

"To the corner cell?" asked the fellow in a hollow voice.

"Yes."

"Come," said Semyonov.

Klimkov wanted to drop on his knees. He was already bending his legs,
when the fellow seized him under the arm, and pulled him through the
long corridor, down the stone stairway.

"What's the matter, brat? Frightened?" he said, pushing Yevsey through a
small door. "Such a spider, no face, no skin, yet a rebel!"

His words completely crushed Yevsey. He walked forward with
out-stretched hands, and bumped against the wall. When he heard the
heavy clang of the iron door behind him, he squatted on the floor,
putting his hands about his knees and raising his knees to his drooping
head. A heavy silence descended upon him. It seemed to him he would die
instantly. Suddenly he jumped from the floor, and ran about the room
like a mouse. His groping hands felt the palette covered with a rough
blanket, a table, a chair. He ran to the door, touched it, noticed in
the wall opposite a little square window, and rushed toward the window.
It was below the level of the ground. The area between the ground and
the outer wall was laid over with horizontal bars through which the snow
sifted with a soft swish, creeping down the dirty panes. Klimkov turned
noiselessly toward the door, and leaned his forehead upon it.

"Forgive me. Let me out," he whispered in his anguish.

Then he dropped on the floor again, and lost consciousness, drowned in a
wave of despair.




                              CHAPTER XIII


The days and nights dragged along in black and grey stripes, slowly
poisoning Yevsey's soul, biting into it and enfeebling it. They crept by
in dumb stillness, filled with ominous threats and forebodings. They
said nothing of when they would end their slow racking course. In
Yevsey's soul everything grew silent and numb. He did not dare, was
unable to, think; and when he paced his cage, he tried to make his steps
inaudible.

On the tenth day he was again set before the man in the blue glasses.
The man who had brought him there the first time was also present.

"Not very pleasant, eh, Klimkov?" the dark man asked, smacking his thick
red lower lip. His high voice made an odd splashing sound as if he were
laughing inside himself. The reflection of the electric light upon the
blue glass of his spectacles sent strong rays into Yevsey's empty
breast, and filled him with slavish readiness to do everything necessary
to end these slimy days which sank into darkness and threatened madness.

"Let me go," he said quietly.

"Yes, I will, and more besides. I will take you into the service. Now
you will yourself put people into the place from which you have just
been taken--into the same place and into other cosy little rooms." He
laughed, smacking his lip. Klimkov bowed. "The late Lukin interceded for
you; and in memory of his honest service I will give you a position. You
will receive twenty-five rubles a month to begin with."

His words entered Yevsey's breast and memory, and disposed themselves in
a row, as if a commanding hand had written them there. He bowed again.

"This man, Piotr Petrovich, will be your chief and teacher. You must do
everything he tells you. Do you understand?" He turned to the other man.
"So it's decided--he will live with you."

"Very well," came the response with unexpected loudness. "That will be
more convenient for me."

"All right."

The dark man turning again to Yevsey began to speak to him in a softened
voice, telling him something soothing and promising. Yevsey tried to
take in his words, and followed the heavy movement of the red lip under
the mustache without winking.

"Remember, you will now guard the sacred person of the Czar from
attempts upon his life and upon his sacred power. You understand?"

"I thank you humbly," said Yevsey quietly.

Piotr Petrovich pushed his hat up on his forehead.

"I will explain everything to him," he interjected hastily. "It is time
for me to go."

"Go, go. Well, Klimkov, off with you. Serve well, brother, and you will
be satisfied. You will be happy. All the same don't forget that you took
part in the murder of the secondhand book-dealer Raspopov. You confessed
to it yourself, and I took your testimony down in writing. Do you
understand? Well, so long."

Filip Filippovich nodded his head, and his stiff beard, which seemed to
be cut from wood, moved in unison with it. Then he held out to Yevsey a
white bloated hand with a number of gold rings on the short fingers.

Yevsey closed his eyes, and started.

"What a scarey fellow you are, brother!" Filip Filippovich ejaculated in
a thin voice, and laughed a glassy laugh. "Now you have nothing and
nobody to fear. You are now the servant of the Czar, and ought to be
self-assured and bold. You stand on firm ground. Do you comprehend?"

When Yevsey walked out into the street, he could not catch his breath.
He staggered, and almost fell. Piotr, raising the collar of his
overcoat, looked around and waved to a cab.

"We will ride home--to my house," he said in a low tone.

Yevsey looked at him from the corners of his eyes, and almost uttered a
cry. Piotr's smooth-shaven face had suddenly grown a small light
mustache.

"Well, why are you gaping at me in that fashion?" he asked gruffly, in
annoyance.

Yevsey dropped his head, trying in spite of his wish to do so, not to
look into the face of the new master of his destiny. Piotr did not speak
to him throughout the ride, but kept counting something on his fingers,
bending them one after the other and knitting his brows and biting his
lips. Occasionally he called out angrily to the driver:

"Hurry!"

It was cold, sleet was falling, and splashing sounds floated in the air.
It seemed to Yevsey that the cab was quickly rolling down a steep
mountain into a black dirty ravine.

They stopped at a large three-storied house. Most of the windows in
three rows were dark and blind. Only a few gleamed a sickly yellow from
the illumination within. Streams of water poured from the roof sobbing.

"Go up the steps," commanded Piotr, who was now sans mustache.

They ascended the steps and walked through a long corridor past a number
of white doors. Yevsey thought the place was a prison, but the thick
odor of fried onion and blacking did not accord with his conception of a
prison. Piotr quickly opened one of the white doors, turned on two
electric lights, and carefully scrutinized all the corners of the room.

"If anybody asks you who you are," he said drily and quickly while
removing his hat and overcoat, "say you are my cousin. You came from the
Tzarskoe Selo to look for a position. Remember--don't make a break."

Piotr's face wore a preoccupied expression, his eyes were cheerless, his
speech abrupt, his thin lips twitched. He rang, and thrust his head out
of the door.

"Ivan, bring in the samovar," he called.

Yevsey standing in a corner of the room looked around dismally, in vague
expectation.

"Take off your coat, and sit down. You will have the next room to
yourself," said the spy, quickly unfolding a card table. He took from
his pocket a note-book and a pack of cards, which he laid out for four
hands.

"You understand, of course," he went on without looking at Klimkov, "you
understand that ours is a secret business. We must keep under cover, or
else they'll kill us as they killed Lukin."

"Was he killed?" asked Yevsey quietly.

"Yes," said Piotr unconcernedly. He wiped his forehead and examined the
cards. "Deal one thousand two hundred and fourteen--I have the ace,
seven of hearts, queen of clubs." He made a note in his book, and
without raising his head continued to speak to himself.

When he calculated the cards, he mumbled indistinctly with a preoccupied
air; but when he instructed Yevsey, he spoke drily, clearly, and
rapidly. "Revolutionists are enemies of the Czar and God--ten of
diamonds--three--Jack of spades--they are bought by the Germans in order
to bring ruin upon Russia. We Russians have begun to do everything
ourselves, and for the Germans--king, five and nine--the devil! The
sixteenth coincidence!"

Piotr Petrovich suddenly grew jolly, his eyes gleamed, and his face
assumed a sleek, satisfied expression.

"What was I saying?" he asked Yevsey looking up at him.

"The Germans."

"Oh, yes! The Germans are greedy, they are enemies of the Russian
people, they want to conquer us. They want us to buy all our goods from
them, and give them our bread. The Germans have no bread--queen of
diamonds--all right--two of hearts, ten of clubs, ten--" Screwing up his
eyes he looked up at the ceiling, sighed, and shuffled the cards. "In
general, all foreigners envious of the wealth and power of Russia--one
thousand two hundred and fifteenth deal--want to create a revolt in our
country, dethrone the Czar, and--three aces--hmm!--and place their own
officials everywhere, their own rulers over us in order to rob us and
ruin us. You don't want this to happen, do you?"

"I don't," said Yevsey, who understood nothing, and followed the quick
movements of the card-player's fingers with a dull look.

"Of course, nobody wants it," remarked Piotr pensively. He laid out the
cards again, and stroked his cheeks meditatively. "You are a Russian,
and you cannot want that--that--this should happen--therefore you ought
to fight the revolutionaries, agents of the foreigners, and defend the
liberty of Russia, the power and life of the Czar. That's all. Did you
understand?"

"I did."

"Afterward you will see the way it must be done. The only thing I'll
tell you beforehand is, don't dwaddle. Carry out all orders precisely.
We fellows ought to have eyes in back as well as in front. If you
haven't, you'll get it good and hard on all sides--ace of spades, seven
of diamonds, ten of clubs."

There was a knock at the door.

"Open the door."

A red, curly-haired man entered carrying a samovar on a tray.

"Ivan, this is my cousin. He will live here with me. Get the next room
ready for him."

"Yes, sir. Mr. Chizhov was here."

"Drunk?"

"A little. He wanted to come in."

"Make tea, Yevsey," said the spy after the servant had left the room.
"Get yourself a glass and drink some tea. What salary did you get in the
police department?"

"Nine rubles a month."

"You have no money now?"

"No."

"You've got to have some, and you must order a suit for yourself. One
suit won't do. You must notice everybody, but nobody must notice you."

He again mumbled calculations of the cards. Yevsey, while noiselessly
serving the tea, tried to straighten out the strange impressions of the
day. But he was not successful. He felt sick. He was chilled through and
through, and his hands shook. He wanted to stretch himself out in a
corner, close his eyes, and lie motionless for a long time. Words and
phrases repeated themselves disconnectedly in his head.

"What are you guilty of, then?" Filip Filippovich asked in a thin voice.

"They killed Dorimedont Lukin," the spy announced drily; then exclaimed
joyfully, "The sixteenth coincidence!"

"You will choke yourself," said Rayisa in an even voice.

There was a powerful rap on the door. Piotr raised his head.

"Is it you, Sasha?"

"Well, open the door," an angry voice answered.

When Yevsey opened the door, a tall man loomed before him, swaying on
long legs. The ends of his black mustache reached to the bottom of his
chin. The hairs of it must have been stiff and hard as a horse's, for
each one stuck out by itself. When he removed his hat, he displayed a
bald skull. He flung the hat on the bed, and rubbed his face vigorously
with both hands.

"Why are you throwing your wet hat on my bed?" observed Piotr.

"The devil take your bed!" said the guest through his nose.

"Yevsey, hang up the overcoat."

The visitor seated himself, stretching out his long legs and lighting a
cigarette.

"What's that--Yevsey?"

"My cousin. Will you have some tea?"

"We're all akin in our natural skin. Have you whiskey?"

Piotr told Klimkov to order a bottle of whiskey and some refreshments.
Yevsey obeyed, then seated himself at the table, putting the samovar
between his face and the visitor's, so as not to be seen by him.

"How's business, card sharper?" he asked, nodding his head at the cards.

Piotr suddenly half raised himself from the chair, and said animatedly:

"I have found out the secret! I have found out the secret!"

"You have found it out?" queried the visitor. "Fool!" he exclaimed,
drawling the word and shaking his head.

Piotr seized the note-book and rapping his fingers on it continued in a
hot whisper:

"Wait, Sasha. I have had the sixteenth coincidence already. You get the
significance of that? And I made only one one thousand two hundred and
fourteen deals. Now the cards keep repeating themselves oftener and
oftener. I must make two thousand seven hundred and four deals. You
understand? Fifty-two times fifty-two. Then make all the deals over
again thirteen times, according to the number of cards in each color.
Thirty-five thousand, one hundred and fifty-two times. And repeat these
deals four times according to the number of colors. One hundred and
forty thousand six hundred and eight times."

"Fool!" the visitor again drawled through his nose, shaking his head and
curling his lips in a sneer.

"Why, Sasha, why? Explain!" Piotr cried softly. "Why, then I'll know all
the deals possible in a game. Think of it! I'll look at my cards--" he
held the book nearer to his face and began to read quickly--"ace of
spades, seven of diamonds, ten of clubs. So of the other players one has
king of hearts, five and ten of diamonds, and the other, ace, seven of
hearts, queen of clubs, and the third has queen of diamonds, two of
hearts, and ten of clubs."

His hands trembled, sweat glistened on his temples, his face became
young, good, and kind.

Klimkov peering from behind the samovar saw on Sasha's face large dim
eyes with red veins on the whites, a coarse big nose, which seemed to be
swollen, and a net of pimples spread on the yellow skin of his forehead
from temple to temple like the band worn by the dead. He radiated an
acrid, unpleasant odor. The man recalled something painful to Yevsey.

Piotr pressed the book to his breast, and waved his hand in the air.

"I shall then be able to play without a single miss," he whispered
ecstatically. "Hundreds of thousands, millions, will be lost to me, and
there won't be any sharp practice, any jugglery in it, a matter of my
knowledge--that's all. Everything strictly within the law."

He struck his chest so severe a blow with his fist that he began to
cough. Then he dropped on his chair, and laughed quietly.

"Why don't they bring the whiskey?" growled Sasha, throwing the stump of
his cigarette on the floor.

"Yevsey, go tell--" Piotr began quickly, but at that instant there was a
knock at the door. "Are you drinking again?" Piotr asked smiling.

Sasha stretched out his hand for the bottle.

"Not yet, but I will be in a second."

"It's bad for you with your sickness."

"Whiskey is bad for healthy people, too. Whiskey and the imagination.
You, for instance, will soon be an idiot."

"I won't. Don't be uneasy."

"You will. I know mathematics. I see you are a blockhead."

"Everyone has his own mathematics," replied Piotr, disgruntled.

"Shut up!" said Sasha, slowly sipping the glass of whiskey and smelling
a piece of bread. Having drained the first glass, he immediately filled
another for himself.

"To-day," he began, bending his head and resting his hands on his knees,
"I spoke to the general again. I made a proposition to him. I said, 'Now
give me means, and I'll unearth people. I will open a literary club, and
trap the very best scamps for you, all of them.' He puffed his cheeks,
and stuck out his belly and said--the jackass!--'I know better what has
to be done, and how it has to be done.' He knows everything. But he
doesn't know that his mistress danced naked before Von Rutzen, or that
his daughter had an abortion performed." He drained the second glass of
whiskey, and filled the third. "Everybody's a blackguard and a skunk.
It's impossible to live! Once Moses ordered 23,000 syphilitics to be
killed. At that time there weren't many people, mark you. If I had the
power I would destroy a million."

"Yourself first?" suggested Piotr smiling.

Sasha sniffed without answering, as if in a delirium.

"All those liberals, generals, revolutionists, dissolute women--I'd make
a large pyre of them and burn them. I would drench the earth with blood,
manure it with the ashes of the corpses. There would be a rich crop.
Satiated muzhiks would elect satiated officials. Man is an animal, and
he needs rich pastures, fertile fields. The cities ought to be
destroyed, and everything superficial, everything that hinders me and
you from living simply as the sheep and roosters--to the devil with it
all!"

His viscid rank-smelling words fairly glued themselves to Yevsey's
heart. It was difficult and dangerous to listen to them.

"Suddenly they will summon me and ask me what he said. Maybe he's
speaking on purpose to trap me. Then they'll seize me." He trembled and
moved uneasily in his chair. "May I go?" he requested of Piotr quietly.

"Where?"

"To my room."

"Oh, yes, go on."

"Got frightened, the donkey!" remarked Sasha without lifting his head.

"Go on, go on," repeated Piotr.

Klimkov undressed noiselessly without making a light. He groped for the
bed in the dark, and rolled himself up closely in the cold, damp sheet.
He wanted to see nothing, to hear nothing, he wanted to squeeze himself
into a little unnoticeable lump. The snuffled words of Sasha clung in
his memory. Yevsey thought he smelt his odor and saw the red band on the
yellow forehead. As a matter of fact the irritated exclamations came in
to him through the door.

"I am a muzhik myself, I know what's necessary."

Without wishing to do so Yevsey listened intently. He racked his brain
to recall the person of whom this sick man so full of rancor reminded
him, though he actually dreaded lest he should remember.

It was dark and cold. Behind the black panes rocked the dull reflections
of the light, disappearing and reappearing. A thin scraping sound was
audible. The wind-swept rain knocked upon the panes in heavy drops.

"Shall I enter a monastery?" Klimkov mused mournfully, and suddenly he
remembered God, whose name he had seldom heard in his life in the city.
He had not thought of Him the whole time. In his heart always full of
fear and insult there had been no place for hope in the mercy of Heaven.
But now it unexpectedly appeared, and suffused his breast with warmth,
extinguishing his heavy, dull despair. He jumped from bed, kneeled on
the floor, and firmly pressed his hands to his bosom. He turned his face
to the dark corner of the room, closed his eyes, and waited without
uttering words, listening to the beating of his heart. But he was
exceedingly tired. The cold pricked his skin with thousands of sharp
needles. He shivered, and lay down again in bed, and fell asleep.




                              CHAPTER XIV


When Yevsey awoke he saw that in the corner to which he had directed his
mute prayer there were no ikons, but two pictures on the wall, one
representing a hunter with a green feather in his hat kissing a stout
girl, the other a fair-haired woman with naked bosom, holding a flower
in her hand.

He sighed as he looked around his room without interest. When he had
washed and dressed he seated himself at the window. The middle of the
street upon which he looked, the pavements, and the houses were all
dirty. The horses plodded along shaking their heads, damp drivers sat on
the box-seats, also shaking as if they had come unscrewed. The people as
always were hurrying somewhere. To-day, when splashed with mud, they
seemed less dangerous than usual.

Yevsey was hungry. But he did not know whether he had the right to ask
for tea and bread, and remained motionless as a stone until he heard a
knock on the wall, upon which he went to the door of Piotr's room.

"Have you had tea yet?" asked the spy, who was still lying in bed.

"No."

"Ask for it."

Piotr stuck his bare feet out of the bed, and looked at his fingers as
he stretched them.

"We'll drink tea, and then you'll go with me," he said yawning. "I'll
show you a man, and you will follow him. You must go wherever he goes,
you understand? Note the time he enters a house and how long he stays
there. If he leaves the house, or meets another man on the way, notice
the appearance of that man and then--well, you won't understand
everything at the very first." Piotr looked at Klimkov, whistled
quietly, and turning aside continued lazily, "Last night Sasha babbled
about various things here--he upbraided everybody--don't think of saying
anything about it. Take care. He's a sick man, and drinks, but he's a
power. _You_ can't hurt _him_, but _he'll_ eat _you_ up alive. Remember
that. Why, brother, he was a student once himself, and he knows their
business down to a 't.' He was even put in prison for political offence.
And now he gets a hundred rubles a month, and not only Filip Filippovich
but even the general calls on him for advice. Yes, indeed." Piotr drew
his flabby face, crumpled with sleep, in a frown, his grey eyes lowered
with dissatisfaction. He dressed while he spoke in a bored, grumbling
voice. "Our work is not a joke. If you catch people by their throats in
a trice, then of course--but first you must tramp about a hundred versts
for each one, and sometimes more. You must know where each man was at a
given time, with whom he was, in fact, you have to know
everything--everything."

The evening before, notwithstanding the agitations of the day; Klimkov
had found Piotr an interesting, clever person. Now, however, seeing that
he spoke with an effort, that he moved about reluctantly, and that
everything dropped from his hands, Yevsey felt bolder in his presence.

"Must we walk the streets the whole day long?" he plucked up the courage
to ask.

"Sometimes you have a night outing, too, in the cold, thirty degrees
Centigrade. A very evil demon invented our profession."

"And when they all will have been caught?"

"Who?"

"The unfaithful ones, the enemies."

"Say revolutionists, or political offenders. You and I won't catch
everyone of them. They all seem to be born twins."

At tea Piotr opened his book. On looking into it, he suddenly grew
animated. He jumped from his chair, quickly laid out the cards, and
began to calculate--"One thousand two hundred and sixteenth deal. I have
three of spades, seven of hearts, ace of diamonds."

Before leaving the house he put on a black overcoat and an imitation
sheepskin cap, and stuck a portfolio in his hand, making himself look
like an official.

"Don't walk alongside me on the street," he said sternly, "and don't
speak to me. I will enter a certain house; you go into the dvornik's
lodging, tell him you have to wait for Timofeyev. I'll soon--"

Fearing he would lose Piotr in the crowd Yevsey walked behind him
without removing his eyes from his figure. But all of a sudden Piotr
disappeared. Klimkov was at a loss. He rushed forward, then stopped, and
pressed himself against a lamp-post. Opposite him rose a large house
with gratings over the dark windows of the first story. Through the
narrow entrance he saw a bleak gloomy yard paved with large stones.
Klimkov was afraid to enter. He looked all around him uneasily shifting
from one foot to the other.

A man with a reddish little beard now walked out with hasty steps. He
wore a sort of sleeveless jacket and a cap with a visor pulled down on
his forehead. He winked his grey eyes at Yevsey, and said in a low tone:

"Come here. Why didn't you go to the dvornik?"

"I lost you," Yevsey admitted.

"Lost? Look out! You might get it in the neck for that. Listen. Three
doors away from here is the Zemstvo Board building. A man will soon
leave the place who works there. His name is Dmitry Ilyich Kurnosov.
Remember. You are to follow him. You understand? Come, and I will show
him to you."

Several minutes later Klimkov like a little dog was quickly following a
man in a worn overcoat and a crumpled black hat. The man was large and
strong. He walked rapidly, swung a cane, and rapped it on the asphalt
vigorously. Black hair with a sprinkling of grey fell from under his hat
on his ears and the back of his neck.

Yevsey was suddenly overcome by a feeling of pity, which was a rare
thing with him. It imperiously demanded action. Perspiring from
agitation he darted across the street in short steps, ran forward,
recrossed the street, and met the man breast to breast. Before him
flashed a dark-bearded face, with meeting brows, a smile reflected in
blue eyes, and a broad forehead seamed with wrinkles. The man's lips
moved. He was evidently singing or speaking to himself.

Klimkov stopped and wiped the perspiration from his face with his hands.
Then he followed the man with bent head and eyes cast to the ground,
raising them only now and then in order not to lose the object of his
observation from sight.

"Not young," he thought. "A poor man apparently. It all comes from
poverty and from fear, too."

He remembered the Smokestack, and trembled.

"He'll kill me," he thought. Then he grew sorry for the Smokestack.

The buildings looked down upon him with dim, tired eyes. The noise of
the street crept into his ears insistently, the cold liquid mud squirted
and splashed. Klimkov was overcome by a sense of gloomy monotony. He
recalled Rayisa, and was drawn to move aside, away from the street.

The man he was tracking stopped at the steps of a house, pushed the bell
button, raised his hat, fanned his face with it, and flung it back on
his head, leaving bare part of a bald skull. Yevsey stationed himself
five steps away at the curb. He looked pityingly into the man's face,
and felt the need to tell him something. The man observed him, frowned,
and turned away. Yevsey, disconcerted, dropped his head, and sat down on
the curb.

"If he only had insulted me," he thought. "But this way, without any
provocation, it's not good, it's not good."

"From the Department of Safety?" he heard a low hissing voice. The
question was asked by a tall reddish muzhik with a dirty apron and a
broom in his hands.

"Yes," responded Yevsey, and the very same instant thought, "I ought not
to have told him."

"A new one again?" remarked the janitor. "You are all after Kurnosov?"

"Yes."

"So? Tell the officers that this morning a guest came to him from the
railroad station with trunks, three trunks. He hasn't registered yet
with the police. He has twenty-four hours' time. A little sort of a
pretty fellow with a small mustache. He wears clean clothes." The
dvornik ran the broom over the pavement several times, and sprinkled
Yevsey's shoes and trousers with mud. Presently he stopped to remark,
"You can be seen here. They aren't fools either, they notice your kind.
You ought to stand at the gates."

Yevsey obediently stepped to the gates. Suddenly he noticed Yakov
Zarubin on the other side of the street wearing a new overcoat and
gloves and carrying a cane. The black derby hat was tilted on his head,
and as he walked along the pavement he smiled and ogled like a street
girl confident of her beauty.

"Good morning," he said, looking around. "I came to replace you. Go to
Somov's café on Lebed Street, ask for Nikolay Pavlov there."

"Are you in the Department of Safety, too?" asked Yevsey.

"I got there ten days before you. Why?"

Yevsey looked at him, at his beaming swart countenance.

"Was it you who told about me?"

"And didn't you betray the Smokestack?"

After thinking a while Yevsey answered glumly:

"I did it after you had betrayed me. You were the only one I told."

"And you were the only one the Smokestack told. Ugh!" Yakov laughed, and
gave Yevsey a poke on the shoulder. "Go quick, you crooked chicken!" He
walked by Yevsey's side swinging his cane. "This is a good position. I
understand so much. You can live like a lord, walk about, and look at
everything. You see this suit? Now the girls show me especial
attention."

Soon he took leave of Yevsey, and turned back quickly. Klimkov following
him with an inimical glance fell to thinking. He considered Yakov a
dissolute, empty fellow, whom he placed lower than himself, and it was
offensive to see him so well satisfied and so elegantly dressed.

"He informed against me. If I told about the Smokestack it was out of
fear. But why did he do it?" He made mental threats against Yakov.
"Wait, we will see who's the better man."

When he asked at the café for Nikolay Pavlov, he was shown a stairway,
which he ascended. At the top he heard Piotr's voice on the other side
of a door.

"There are fifty-two cards to a pack. In the city in my district there
are thousands of people, and I know a few hundred of them maybe. I know
who lives with whom, and what and where each of them works. People
change, but cards remain one and the same."

Besides Sasha there was another man in the room with Piotr, a tall,
well-built person, who stood at the window reading a paper, and did not
move when Yevsey entered.

"What a stupid mug!" were the words with which Sasha met Yevsey, fixing
an evil look upon his face. "It must be made over. Do you hear,
Maklakov?"

The man reading the paper turned his head, and looked at Yevsey with
large bright eyes.

"Yes," he said.

Piotr, who seemed to be excited and had dishevelled hair, asked Yevsey
what he had seen. The remnants of dinner stood on the table; the odor of
grease and sauer-kraut titillated Yevsey's nostrils, and gave him a keen
appetite. He stood before Piotr, who was cleaning his teeth with a
goose-quill, and in a dispassionate voice repeated the information the
janitor had given him. At the first words of the account Maklakov put
his hands and the paper behind his back, and inclined his head. He
listened attentively twirling his mustache, which like the hair on his
head was a peculiar light shade, a sort of silver with a tinge of
yellow. The clean, serious face with the knit brows and the calm eyes,
the confident pose of his powerful body clad in a close-fitting, well
made, sober suit, the strong bass voice--all this distinguished Maklakov
advantageously from Piotr and Sasha.

"Did the janitor himself carry the trunks in?" he asked Yevsey.

"He didn't say."

"That means he did not carry them in. He would have told you whether
they were heavy or light. They carried them in themselves. Evidently
that's the way it was."

"The printing office?" asked Sasha.

"Literature, the current number."

"Well, we must have a search made," said Sasha gruffly, and uttered an
ugly oath, shaking his fist.

"I must find the printing-press. Get me type, boys, and I'll fix up a
printing-press myself. I'll find the donkeys. We'll give them all that's
necessary. Then we'll arrest them, and we'll have lots of money."

"Not a bad scheme!" exclaimed Piotr.

Maklakov looked at Yevsey, and asked:

"Have you had your dinner yet?"

"No."

"Take your dinner," said Piotr with a nod toward the table. "Be quick
about it."

"Why treat him to remnants?" asked Maklakov calmly. Then he stepped to
the door, opened it, and called out, "Dinner, please."

"You try," Sasha snuffled to Piotr, "to persuade that idiot Afanasov to
give us the printing-press they seized last year."

"Very well, I'll try," Piotr assented meditatively.

Maklakov did not look at them, but silently twisted his mustache. Dinner
was served. A round pock-marked modest-looking man made his appearance
in the room at the same time as the waiter. He smiled at everyone
benevolently, and shook Yevsey's hand vigorously.

"My name is Solovyov," he said to him. "Have you heard the news,
friends? This evening there will be a banquet of the revolutionists at
Chistov's hall. Three of our fellows will go there as butlers, among
others you, Piotr."

"I again?" shouted Piotr, and his face became covered with red blotches.
His anger made him look older. "The third time in two months that I have
had to play lackey! Excuse me! I don't want to."

"Don't address me on the subject," said Solovyov affably.

"What does it mean? Why do they choose just me to be a servant?"

"You look like one," said Sasha, with a smile.

"There will be three," Solovyov repeated sighing. "What do you say to
having some beer? All right?"

Piotr opened the door, and shouted in an irritated voice:

"Half a dozen beer," and he went to the window clenching his fists and
cracking his knuckles.

"There, you see, Maklakov?" said Sasha. "Among us no one wants to work
seriously, with enthusiasm. But the revolutionists are pushing right
on--banquets, meetings, a shower of literature, open propaganda in the
factories!"

Maklakov maintained silence, and did not look at Sasha. Round Solovyov
then took up the word, smiling amiably.

"I caught a girl to-day at the railroad station with books. I had
already noticed her in a villa in the summer. 'Well,' thought I, 'amuse
yourself, my dear.' To-day, as I was walking in the station with no
people to track, I was looking about, and there I see her marching along
carrying a handbag. I went up to her, and respectfully proposed that she
have a couple of words with me. I noticed she started and paled, and hid
the bag behind her back. 'Ah,' thinks I, 'my dear little stupid, you've
gotten yourself into it.' Well, I immediately took her to the police
station, they opened her luggage, and there was the last issue of
'Emancipation' and a whole lot more of their noxious trash. I took the
girl to the Department of Safety. What else was I to do? If you can't
get Krushin pike, you must eat blinkers. In the carriage she kept her
little face turned away from me. I could see her cheeks burned and there
were tears in her eyes. But she kept mum. I asked her, 'Are you
comfortable, madam?' Not a word in reply."

Solovyov chuckled softly. Trembling rays of wrinkles covered his face.

"Who is she?" asked Maklakov.

"Dr. Melikhov's daughter."

"Ah," drawled Sasha, "I know him."

"A respectable man. He has the orders of Vladimir and Anna," remarked
Solovyov.

"I know him," repeated Sasha. "A charlatan, like all the rest. He tried
to cure me."

"God alone can cure you now," said Solovyov in his affable tone. "You
are ruining your health quickly."

"Go to the devil!" roared Sasha.

Maklakov asked without turning his gaze from the window:

"Did the girl cry?"

"No. But she didn't exactly rejoice. You know it's always unpleasant to
me to take girls, because in the first place I have a daughter myself."

"What are you waiting for, Maklakov?" demanded Sasha testily.

"Until he gets through eating his dinner. I have time."

"Say, you, chew faster!" Sasha bawled at Klimkov.

"Yes, yes, hurry," Piotr observed drily.

As he ate his dinner, Klimkov listened to the talk attentively, and
observed the people while he himself remained unnoticed. He noted with
satisfaction that all of them except Sasha did not seem bad, not worse
or more horrible than others. He was seized with a desire to ingratiate
himself with them, make himself useful to them. He put down the knife
and fork, and quickly wiped his lips with the soiled napkin.

"I am done."

The door was flung open, and a loose-limbed fellow, his dress in
disorder, his body bent and stooping, darted into the room, and hissed:

"Ssh! Ssh!"

He thrust his head into the corridor, listened, then carefully closed
the door. "Doesn't it lock? Where is the key?" He looked around, and
drew a deep breath. "Thank God!" he exclaimed.

"Eh, you dunce," sneered Sasha. "Well, what is it? Do they want to lick
you again?"

The man ran up to him. Panting and wiping the sweat from his face, he
began, to mutter in a low voice:

"They did, of course. They wanted to kill me with a hammer. Two followed
me from the prison. I was there on business. As I walked out, they were
standing at the gate, two of them, and one of them had a hammer in his
pocket."

"Maybe it was a revolver," suggested Solovyov stretching his neck.

"A hammer."

"Did you see it?" inquired Sasha sarcastically.

"Ah, don't I know? They agreed to do me up with a hammer, without making
any noise. One--"

He adjusted his necktie, buttoned his coat, searched for something in
his pockets, and smoothed his curly head, which was covered with sweat.
His hands incessantly flashed about his body; they seemed ready to break
off any moment. His bony grey face was dank with perspiration, his dark
eyes rolled from side to side, now screwed up, now opened wide. Suddenly
they became fixed. With unfeigned horror depicted in them they rested
upon Yevsey's face, as the man backed to the door.

"Who's that? Who's that?" he demanded hoarsely.

Maklakov went up to him, and took his hand.

"Calm yourself, Yelizar. He's one of our own, a new one."

"Do you know him?"

"Jackass!" came Sasha's exasperated voice. "You ought to see a
physician."

"Have you ever been pushed under a trolley car? Not yet? Then wait
before you call names."

"Just look, Maklakov," began Sasha, but the man continued in extreme
excitement:

"Have you ever been beaten at night by unknown people? Do you
understand? Unknown people! There are hundreds of thousands such people
unknown to me in the city, hundreds of thousands. They are everywhere,
and I am a single one. I am always among them, do you understand?"

Now Solovyov began to speak in his soft, reassuring voice, which was
drowned, however, by the new burst of words coming from the shattered
man, who carried in himself a whirlwind of fear. Klimkov immediately
grew dizzy, overwhelmed by the alarming whisper of his talk, blinded by
the motion of his broken body, and the darting of his cowardly hands. He
expected that now something huge and black would tear its way through
the door, would fill the room, and crush everybody.

"It's time for us to go," said Maklakov, touching his shoulder.

When they were sitting in the cab Yevsey sullenly remarked:

"I am not fit for this work."

"Why?" asked Maklakov.

"I am timid."

"That'll pass away."

"Nothing will pass away."

"Everything," rejoined Maklakov calmly.

It was cold and dark, and sleet was falling. The reflections of the
lights lay upon the mud in golden patches, which the people and horses
tramped upon and extinguished. The two men were silent for a long time.
Yevsey, his brain empty, looked into space, and felt that Maklakov was
watching his face, in wait for something.

"You'll get used to it," Maklakov went on, "but if you have another
position, leave it at once. Have you?"

"No."

"Is it long since you've been in the Department of Safety?"

"Yesterday."

"That accounts for it."

"Now where am I to go?" inquired Yevsey quietly.

Maklakov instead of replying to the question asked:

"Have you relatives?"

"No. I have no one."

The spy leaned over, though without saying anything. His eyes were half
shut. As he drew his breath through his nose, the thin hair of his
mustache quivered. The thick sounds of a bell floated in the air, soft
and warm, and the pensive song of copper crept mournfully over the roofs
of the houses without rising under the heavy cloud that covered the city
with a solid dark canopy.

"To-morrow is Sunday," said Maklakov in a low tone. "Do you go to
church?"

"No."

"Why not?"

"I don't know. Just so. It's close there."

"I do. I love the morning service. The choristers sing, and the sun
looks through the windows. That is always good."

Maklakov's simple words emboldened Yevsey. He felt a desire to speak of
himself.

"It is nice to sing," he began. "When I was a little boy I sang in the
church in our village. When I sang I didn't know where I was. It was
just the same as if I didn't exist."

"Here we are," said Maklakov.

Yevsey sighed, and looked sadly at the long structure of the railway
station, which all of a sudden loomed up before them and barred the way.

They went to the platform where a large public had already gathered, and
leaned up against the wall. Maklakov dropped his lids over his eyes, and
seemed to be falling into a doze. The spurs of the gendarmes began to
jingle, a well-shaped woman with dark eyes and a swarthy face laughed in
a resonant young voice.

"Remember the woman there who is laughing and the man beside her," said
Maklakov in a distinct whisper. "Her name is Sarah Lurye, an
accoucheure. She lives in the Sadovoy, No. 7. She was in prison and in
exile, a very clever woman. The old man is also a former exile, a
journalist."

Suddenly Maklakov seemed to become frightened. He pulled his hat down
over his face with a quick movement of his hand, and continued in a
still lower voice:

"The tall man in the black suit and the shaggy hat, red-haired, do you
see him?"

Yevsey nodded his head.

"He's the author Mironov. He has been in prison four times already, in
different cities. Do you read books?"

"No."

"A pity. He writes interestingly."

The black iron worm with a horn on its head and three fiery eyes uttered
a scream, and glided into the station, the metal of its huge body
rumbling. It stopped, and hissed spitefully, filling the air with its
thick white breath. The hot steamy odor knocked Yevsey in the face. The
black bustling figures of people quickly darted before his eyes, seeming
strangely small in contrast with the overwhelming size of the train.

It was the first time Yevsey had seen the mass of iron at such close
range. It seemed alive and endowed with feeling. It attracted his
attention powerfully, at the same time arousing a hostile, painful
premonition. The large red wheels turned, the steel lever glittered,
rising and falling like a gigantic knife. Maklakov utter a subdued
exclamation.

"What is it?" asked Yevsey.

"Nothing," answered the spy vexed. His cheeks reddened, and he bit his
lips. By his look Yevsey guessed that he was following the author, who
was walking along without haste, twirling his mustache. He was
accompanied by an elderly, thick-set man, with an unbuttoned coat and a
summer hat on a large head. This man laughed aloud, and exclaimed as he
raised his bearded red face:

"You understand? I rode and rode--"

The author lifted his head, and bowed to somebody. His head was smoothly
shorn, his forehead lofty. He had high cheek bones, a broad nose, and
narrow eyes. Klimkov found his face coarse and disagreeable. There was
something military and harsh in it, due to his large red mustache.

"Come," said Maklakov. "They will probably go together. You must be very
careful. The man who just arrived is an experienced man."

In the street they took a cab again.

"Follow that carriage," Maklakov said angrily to the driver. He was
silent for a long time, sitting with bent back and swaying body. "Last
year in the summer," he finally muttered, "I was in his house making a
search."

"The writer's house?" asked Yevsey.

"Yes. Drive on farther," Maklakov ordered quickly noticing that the cab
in front had stopped. "Quick!"

A minute later he jumped from the cab, and thrust some money into the
driver's hand.

"Wait," he said to Yevsey, and disappeared in the damp darkness. Yevsey
heard his voice. "Excuse me, is this Yakovlev's house?"

Someone answered in a hollow voice:

"This is Pertzev's."

"And which is Yakovlev's?"

"I don't know."

"Pardon me."

Yevsey leaned against the fence, counting Maklakov's tardy steps.

"It's a simple thing--just to follow people," he thought.

The spy came up to him, and said in a satisfied tone:

"We have nothing to do here. To-morrow morning you will put on a
different suit, and we'll keep an eye on this house."

They walked down the street. The sound of Maklakov's talk kept knocking
at Klimkov's ears like the rumble of a drum.

"Remember the faces, the dress, and the gait of the people that pass
this house. There are no two people alike. Each one has something
peculiar to himself. You must learn at once to seize upon this peculiar
something in a person--in his eyes, in his voice, in the way in which he
holds out his hands when he walks, in the manner in which he lifts his
hat in greeting. Our work above all demands a good memory."

Yevsey felt that the spy talked with concealed enmity toward him; which
aggrieved him.

"You have an exceedingly marked face, especially your eyes. That won't
do. You mustn't go about without a mask, without the dress peculiar to a
certain occupation. Your figure, you in general, resemble a hawker of
dry-goods. So you ought to carry about a box of stuffs, pins, needles,
tape, ribbon, and all sorts of trifles. I will see that you get such a
box. Then you can go into the kitchens and get acquainted with the
servants." Maklakov was silent, removed his beard, fixed his hat, and
began to walk more slowly. "Servants are always ready to do something
unpleasant for the masters. It's easy to get something out of them,
especially the women--cooks, nurses, chambermaids. They like to gossip.
However, I'm chilled through," he ended in a different voice. "Let's go
to a café."

"I have no money."

"That's all right."

In the café he said to the owner in a stern voice:

"Give me a glass of cognac, a large one, and two beers. Will you have
some cognac?"

"No, I don't drink," answered Yevsey, embarrassed.

"That's good."

The spy looked carefully into Klimkov's face, smoothed his mustache,
closed his eyes for a minute, and stretched his whole body, so that his
bones cracked. When he had drunk the cognac, he remarked in an
undertone:

"It's good you are such a taciturn fellow. What do you think about, eh?"

Yevsey dropped his head, and did not answer at once.

"About everything, about myself."

"But what in particular?"

Maklakov's eyes gleamed softly.

"I think perhaps it would be better for me to enter a monastery," Yevsey
answered sincerely.

"Why?"

"Just so."

"Do you believe in God?"

After a moment's thought Yevsey said as if excusing himself:

"I do. Only I am not for God, but for myself. What am I to God?"

"Well, let's drink."

Klimkov bravely gulped down a glass of beer. It was cold and bitter, and
sent a shiver through his body. He licked his lips with his tongue, and
suddenly asked:

"Do they beat you often?"

"Me? Who?" the spy exclaimed amazed and offended.

"Not you, but all the spies in general."

"You must say 'agents,' not 'spies,'" Maklakov corrected him smiling.
"They get beaten, yes, they get beaten. I have never been beaten."

He became lost in reflection. His shoulders drooped, and a shadow crept
over his white face.

"Ours is a dog's occupation. People look upon us in an ugly enough
light." Suddenly his face broke into a smile, and he bent toward Yevsey.
"Only once in five years did I see a man--human conduct toward me. It
was in Mironov's house. I came to him with gendarmes in the uniform of a
sergeant-inspector. I was not well at the time. I had fever, and was
scarcely able to stand on my feet. He received us civilly, with a smile.
He wore a slightly embarrassed air. Such a large man, with long hands
and a mustache like a cat's. He walked with us from room to room,
addressed us all with the respectful plural 'you,' and if he came in
contact with any of us, he excused himself. We all felt awkward in his
presence--the colonel, the procurator, and we small fry. Everybody knew
the man; his pictures appeared in the newspapers. They say he's even
known abroad. And here we were paying him a night visit! We felt sort of
abashed. I noticed him look at me. Then he walked up closer to me, and
said, 'You ought to sit down. You look as if you were feeling ill. Sit
down.' His words upset me. I sat down, and I thought to myself, 'Go away
from me.' And he said, 'Will you take a powder?' All of us were silent.
I saw that no one looked at me or him." Maklakov laughed quietly. "He
gave me quinine in a capsule, and I chewed it. I began to feel an
insufferable bitterness in my mouth and a turmoil in my soul. I felt I
would drop if I tried to stand. Here the colonel interfered, and ordered
me to be taken to the police office. The search just then happened to
end. The procurator excused himself to Mironov, and said, 'I must arrest
you.' 'Well, what of it?' he said. 'Arrest me. Everyone does what he
can.' He said it so simply with a smile."

Yevsey liked the story. It touched his heart softly, as if embracing it
with a caress. The desire awoke in him again to make himself useful to
Maklakov.

"He's a good man," he thought.

The spy sighed. He called for another glass of cognac, and sipped it
slowly. He seemed suddenly to grow thin, and he dropped his head on the
table.

Yevsey wanted to speak, to ask questions. Various words darted about in
disorder in his brain, for some reason failing to arrange themselves in
intelligible and clear language. Finally, after many efforts, Yevsey
found what he wanted to ask.

"He, too, is in the service of our enemies?"

"Who?" asked the spy, scarcely raising his head.

"The writer."

"What enemies? What do you mean?" The spy's face was mocking, and his
lips curled in aversion. Yevsey grew confused, and Maklakov without
awaiting his answer arose, and tossed a silver coin on the table.

"Charge it up," he said to someone.

He put on his hat, and without a word to Klimkov walked to the door.
Yevsey followed on tiptoe, not daring to put on his hat.

"Be at the place at nine o'clock to-morrow. You will be relieved at
twelve," said Maklakov in the street. He thrust his hands in his coat
pockets, and disappeared.

"He didn't say 'good-by,'" thought Yevsey aggrieved, walking along the
deserted street.

When he entered within the circles of light thrown by the street lamps,
he slackened his pace, and instinctively hastened over the parts
enveloped in obscurity. He felt ill. Darkness surrounded him on all
sides. It was cold. The gluey, bitter taste of beer penetrated from his
mouth into his chest, and his heart beat unevenly. Languid thoughts
stirred in his head like heavy flakes of autumn snow.

"There, I've served a day. How they all are--these different days. If
only somebody liked me."

At night Yevsey dreamed that his cousin Yashka seated himself on his
chest, seized him by the throat, and choked him. He awoke, and heard
Piotr's angry dry thin voice in the other room:

"I spit upon the Czar's empire and all this hum-buggery!"

A woman laughed, and someone's thin voice sounded:

"Hush, hush, don't bawl."

"I have no time to calculate who is right, and who is wrong. I am not a
fool, I am young, and I ought to live. This rapscallion reads me
lectures about autocracy, and I fuss about for three hours as a waiter,
near every sort of scamp. My feet ache, my back pains from the bows. If
the autocracy is dear to you, then don't be stingy with your money. But
I won't sell my pride to the autocracy for a mere penny. To the devil
with it!"

Yevsey looked drowsily through the window, his gaze losing itself in the
sleepy depth of the autumn morning. Blinded, he quietly flung himself
back in bed, and again fell asleep.

Several hours later he was sitting on the curb opposite Pertzev's house.
He walked back and forth a long time, counted the windows in the house,
measured its width with his steps, studied in all its details the grey
front flabby with old age, and finally grew tired. But he had not much
time to rest. The writer himself came out of the door with an overcoat
flung over his shoulders, no overshoes on his feet, his hat on one side
of his head. He walked across the street straight up to Yevsey.

"He will give me a slap in the face," thought Yevsey, looking at the
sullen face and the lowering red brows. He tried to rise and go away,
but was unable to move, chained to the spot by fear.

"Why are you sitting here?" he heard an angry voice.

"Nothing."

"Get away from here."

"I can't."

"Here's a letter. Go. Give it to him who sent you here."

"I can't."

"Why not?"

The large blue eyes commanded. Yevsey had not the power to disobey the
look. Turning his face aside he mumbled:

"I--I--I have no permission--to take anything from you--or to converse
with you. I am going away."

"Yes, go away," the author commanded, and for some reason smiled a
morose smile.

Klimkov took the grey envelope, and walked away, without asking himself
where he was going. He held the envelope in his right hand on a level
with his breast, as if it were something murderous, threatening unknown
misfortune. His fingers ached as from cold.

"What is going to happen to me?" knocked importunately at his brain.

Suddenly he noticed the envelope was not sealed. This amazed him. He
stopped, looked around, and quickly removed the letter.

"Take this dunce away from me. Mironov," he read.

He heaved a sigh of relief.

"I must give this to Maklakov. He will scold me. Maybe I ought to turn
back. But it's not necessary. Somebody else will come soon anyway."

Though his fear had disappeared, Yevsey felt sad from the realization of
his unfitness for the position, and he felt heavy at the thought that he
had again failed to suit the spy, whom he liked so much.

He found Maklakov at dinner in the company of a little squint-eyed man
dressed in black.

"Let me introduce you. Klimkov--Krasavin."

Yevsey put his hand in his pocket to get out the letter, and said in an
embarrassed tone:

"This is the way it happened--"

Maklakov held up his hand.

"You will tell me later. Sit down, and have your dinner."

His face was weary, his eyes dim, his light straight hair dishevelled.

"Evidently got drunk yesterday," thought Yevsey.

"No, Timofey Vasilyevich," the squint-eyed man said coldly and solemnly.
"You are not right. There's something pleasant in every line of work if
you love it."

Maklakov looked at him, and drank a large glass of whiskey in one gulp.

"They are people, we are people, that doesn't signify anything. One says
this, another says that, and I do just as I please."

The squint-eyed man noticed that Yevsey was looking at his eyeballs as
they rolled apart, and put on a pair of glasses with tortoise-shell
rims. His movements were soft and alert, like a black cat's. His teeth
were small and sharp, his nose straight and thin. When he spoke his rosy
ears moved. His crooked fingers kept quickly rolling a crumb of bread
into little pellets, which he placed on the edge of his plate.

"An assistant?" he asked, nodding his head toward Yevsey.

"Yes."

"How's business, young man?"

"I just began yesterday."

"Oh, oh!" Krasavin nodded his head. Pinching his thin dark mustache, he
began to speak fluently: "Of course, Timofey Vasilyevich, you can't step
on the trail of life's destiny. According to God's law, children grow
old, people die. Only all this doesn't concern you and me. We received
our appointed task. We are told to catch the people who infringe on law
and order. That's all. It's a hard business, it's a clever business. To
use a figure of speech, it is a kind of hunt."

Maklakov rose from the table, and walked into a corner, from where he
beckoned to Yevsey.

"Well, what is it?"

Yevsey gave him the note. The spy read it, looked into Klimkov's face in
astonishment, and read it again.

"From whom is this?" he asked in a low voice.

Yevsey answered in an embarrassed whisper.

"He himself gave it to me. He came out into the street."

In the expectation of a rebuke, or even a blow, he bent his neck. But
hearing a low laugh he cautiously raised his head, and saw the spy
looking at the envelope with a broad smile on his face and a merry gleam
in his eyes.

"Oh, you strange fellow," said Maklakov. "Now keep quiet about this, you
droll creature."

"Can I congratulate you on a successful piece of work?" asked Krasavin.

"You can. Yes." Maklakov said aloud, walking up to him.

"That's good, young man," remarked Krasavin encouragingly. His pupils
with green sparks flashing in them turned inward to the bridge of his
nose, and his nostrils quivered and expanded.

"But the Japs licked us after all, Gavrilo," Maklakov exclaimed merrily,
rubbing his hands.

"I cannot in the least comprehend your joy in this event," said Krasavin
wagging his ears. "Although it was instructive, as many say, still so
much Russian blood was shed and the insufficiency of our strength was
made so apparent."

"And who is to blame?"

"The Japs. What do they want? Every country ought to live within
itself."

They started a discussion, to which Yevsey, rejoiced over Maklakov's
attitude, did not pay any attention. He looked into the spy's face, and
thought it would be well to live with him instead of Piotr, who scolded
at the authorities, and maybe would be arrested as they had arrested the
Smokestack.

Krasavin left. Maklakov took out the letter, read it once more, and
burst into a laugh, looking at Yevsey.

"Now don't say a word about it to anybody. Do you understand? He came
out himself?"

"Yes. He came out, and said, 'Get away from here.'" Yevsey smiled
guiltily.

"You see another one in his place would have stroked you with a cat's
paw." Screwing up his eyes the spy looked through the window, and said
slowly, "Yes, you ought to take to peddling wares. I told you so. To-day
you are free. I have no more commissions for you. Be off with you. Have
a good time. I'll try one of these days to fix you up differently.
Good-by."

Maklakov held out his hand. Yevsey touched it gratefully, and walked
away happy.




                               CHAPTER XV


A few weeks later Klimkov began to feel freer and more at ease. Every
morning, warmly and comfortably dressed, with a box of small wares on
his breast, he went to receive orders either at one of the cafés where
the spies gathered, or at a police office, or at the lodging of one of
the spies. The directions given him were simple and distinct.

"Go to such and such a house. Get acquainted with the servants. Find out
how the masters live."

If he succeeded in penetrating to the kitchen of the given house, he
would first try to bribe the servants by the cheap price of the goods
and by little presents. Then he would carefully question them about what
he had been ordered to learn. When he felt that the information gathered
was insufficient, he filled up the deficiency from his own head,
thinking it out according to the plan draughted for him by the old, fat,
and sensual Solovyov.

"These men in whom we are interested," Solovyov once said in a smug,
honey-sweet voice, "all have the same habits. They do not believe in
God, they do not go to church, they dress poorly, but they are civil in
their manners. They read many books, sit up late at night, often have
gatherings of guests in their lodgings, but drink very little wine, and
do not play cards. They speak about foreign countries, about systems of
government, workingmen's socialism and full liberty for the people. Also
about the poor masses, declaring it is necessary to stir them up to
revolt against our Czar, to kill out the entire administration, take
possession of the highest offices, and by means of socialism again
introduce serfdom, in which they will have complete liberty." The warm
voice of the spy broke off. He coughed and heaved a sentimental sigh.
"Liberty--everybody likes and wants to have liberty. But if you give me
liberty, maybe I'll become the first villain in the world. That's it. It
is impossible to give even a child full liberty. The Church Fathers,
God's saints, even they were subject to temptations of the flesh, and
they sinned in the very highest. People's lives are held together, not
by liberty but by fear. Submission to law is essential to man. But the
revolutionists reject law. They form two parties. One wants to make
quick work with the ministers and the faithful subjects of the Czar by
means of bombs, etc. The other party is willing to wait a little; first
they'll have a general uprising, then they'll kill off everybody at
once." Solovyov raised his eyes pensively, and paused an instant. "It is
difficult for us to comprehend their politics. Maybe they really
understand something. But for us everything they propose is an obnoxious
delusion. We fulfil the will of the Czar, the anointed sovereign of God.
And he is responsible for us before God, so we ought to do what he bids
us. In order to gain the confidence of the revolutionists you must
complain, 'Life is very hard for the poor, the police insult them, and
there's no sort of law.' Although they are people of villainous intent,
yet they are credulous, and you can always catch them with that bait.
Behave cannily toward their servants; for their servants aren't stupid,
either. Whenever necessary, reduce the price of your goods, so that they
will get used to you and value you. But guard against exciting
suspicion. They will begin to think, 'What is it? He sells very cheap,
and asks prying questions.' The best thing for you to do is to strike up
friendships. Take a little dainty, hot, full-breasted thing, and you'll
get all sorts of good information from her. She will sew shirts for you,
and invite you to spend the night with her, and she will find out
whatever you order her to. You know--a tiny, soft little mouse. You can
stretch your arm a long distance through a woman."

This round man, hairy-handed, thick-lipped, and pock-marked, spoke about
women more frequently than the others. He would lower his soft voice to
a whisper, his neck would perspire, his feet would shuffle uneasily, and
his eyes, minus eyebrows and eyelashes, would fill with warm, oily
moisture. Yevsey with his sharp scent observed that Solovyov always
smelt of hot, greasy, decayed meat.

In the chancery the spies had been spoken of as people who know
everything, hold everything in their hands, and have friends and helpers
everywhere. Though they could seize all the dangerous people at once,
they were not doing so simply because they did not wish to deprive
themselves of a position. On entering the Department of Safety everyone
swore an oath to pity nobody, neither father, mother, nor brother, nor
to speak a word to one another about the sacred and awful business which
they vowed they would serve all their lives.

Consequently Yevsey had expected to find sullen personalities. He had
pictured them as speaking little in words unintelligible to simple
people, as possessing the miraculous perspicacity of a sorcerer, able to
read a man's thoughts and divine all the secrets of his life.

Now from his sharp observation of them he clearly saw they were not
unusual, nor for him either worse or more dangerous than others. In
fact, they seemed to live in a more comradely fashion than was common.
They frankly spoke of their mistakes and failures, even laughed over
them. All without exception were equally fervent in swearing at their
superiors, though with varying degrees of malice.

Conscious of a close bond uniting them they were solicitous for one
another. When it happened that someone was late for a meeting or failed
to appear at all, there was a general sense of uneasiness about the
absentee, and Yevsey, Zarubin, or someone of the numerous group of
"novices," or "assistants" was sent to look for the lost man at another
gathering place.

A stranger observing them would have been instantly struck by the lack
of greed for money among the majority and the readiness to share money
with comrades who had gambled it away or squandered it in some other
fashion. They all loved games of hazard, took a childish interest in
card tricks, and envied the cleverness of the card-sharper.

They spoke to one another with ecstasy and acute envy of the revelries
of the officials, described in detail the bodies of the lewd women known
to them, and hotly discussed the various processes of the sexual
relation. Most of them were unmarried, almost all were young, and for
everyone of them a woman was something in the nature of whiskey--to give
him ease and lull him to sleep. Women brought them relief from the
anxiety of their dog's work. Almost all kept indecent photographs in
their pockets, and looked at them with greed while talking obscenities.
Such discussion roused in Yevsey a sharp, intoxicating curiosity,
sometimes incredulity and nausea. He soon came to know that some of the
spies practised pederasty and sodomy, and that very many were infected
with secret diseases. All of them drank much, mixing wine with beer, and
beer with cognac, in an effort to get drunk as quickly as possible.

Only a few of them put hot enthusiasm, the passion of the hunter, into
their work. These boasted of their skill, swelling with pride as they
described themselves as heroes. The majority, however, did their work
wearily, with an air of being bored.

Their talks about the people whom they hunted down like beasts were
seldom marked by the fierce hatred that boiled in Sasha's conversation
like a seething hot-spring. One who was different from the rest was
Melnikov, a heavy, hairy man with a thick, bellowing voice, who walked
with oddly bent neck and spoke little. His dark eyes were always
straining, as if in constant search. The man seemed to Yevsey ever to be
thinking of something terrible. Krasavin and Solovyov also contrasted
with the others, the one by his cold malice, the other by the complacent
satisfaction with which he spoke about fights, blood-shed, and women.

Among the youth the most noticeable was Yakov Zarubin, who was
constantly fidgetting about and constantly running up to the others with
questions. When he listened to the conversations about the
revolutionists he knitted his brows in anger and jotted down notes in
his little note-book. He tried to be of service to all the important
spies, though it was evident that no one liked him and that his book was
regarded with suspicion.

The larger number spoke indifferently about the revolutionists,
sometimes denouncing them as incomprehensible men of whom they were
sick, sometimes referring to them in fun as to amusing cranks.
Occasionally, too, they spoke in anger as one speaks of a child who
deserves punishment for impudence. Yevsey began to imagine that all the
revolutionists were empty people who were not serious, and did not
themselves know what they wanted, but merely brought disturbance and
disorder into life.

Once Yevsey asked Piotr:

"There, you said the revolutionists are being bribed by the Germans, and
now they say differently."

"What do you mean by 'differently?'" Piotr demanded angrily.

"That they are poor and stupid, and nobody says anything about the
Germans."

"Go to the devil, brother! Isn't it all the same to you? Do what you are
told to do. Your color is the diamond, and you go with diamonds."

Matters of business were discussed in a lazy, unwilling way, and "You
don't understand anything, brother," was a common rejoinder of one spy
to another.

"And you?" would be the counter-retort.

"I keep quiet."

Klimkov tried to keep as far away as possible from Sasha. The ominous
face of the sick man frightened him, and the smell of iodoform and the
snuffling, cantankerous voice disgusted him.

"Villains!" cried Sasha swearing at the officials. "They are given
millions, and toss us pennies. They squander hundreds of thousands on
women and on various genteel folk, who, they want us to believe, work
for the good of society. But it's not the gentry that make
revolutions--you must know that, idiots,--the revolution grows
underneath, in the ground, among the people. Give me five millions, and
in one month I'll lift the revolution up above ground into the street.
I'll carry it out of the dark corners into the light of day. Then--choke
it!"

Sasha always contrived horrible schemes for the extermination of the
noxious people. While devising them he stamped his feet, extended his
trembling arms, and tore the air with his yellow fingers, while his face
turned leaden, his red eyes grew strangely dim, and the spittle spurted
from his mouth.

All, it was evident, looked upon him with aversion and feared him,
though they were anxious to conceal the repulsion produced by his
disease. Maklakov alone calmly avoided close intercourse with the sick
man. He did not even give him his hand in greeting. Sasha, in his turn,
who ridiculed everybody, who swore at all his comrades, setting them
down as fools, plainly put Maklakov in a category by himself. He was
always serious in his intercourse with the spy, and apparently spoke to
him with greater will than to the rest. He did not abuse him even behind
his back.

Once when Maklakov had walked out without, as usual, taking leave of
him, he cried:

"The nobleman is squeamish. He doesn't want to come near me. He has the
right to be, the devil take him! His ancestors lived in lofty rooms,
they breathed rarefied air, ate healthful food, wore clean
undergarments. He, too, for that matter. But I am a muzhik. I was born
and brought up like an animal, in filth, among lice, on coarse black
bread made of unbolted meal. His blood is better than mine, yes, indeed,
both the blood and the brain; and the brain is the soul." After a pause
he added in a lower voice, gloomily, without ridicule, "Idiots and
impostors speak of the equality of man. The aristocrat preaches equality
because he is an impudent scoundrel, and can't do anything himself. So
of course he says, 'you are just as good a man as I am. Act so that I
shall be able to live better.' This is the theory of equality."

Sasha's talks did not evoke a response from the other spies. They failed
to be moved by his excitement, and listened to his growling in
indifferent silence. He received sulky support, however, from one, the
large Melnikov, who acted as a detective among workingmen.

"Yes," Melnikov would say, "they are all deceivers," and nod his dark
unkempt head in confirmation while vigorously clenching his hairy fist.

"They ought to be killed, as the muzhiks kill horse thieves," screamed
Sasha.

"To kill may be a little too much, but sometimes it would be delicious
to give a gentleman a box on the ear," said Chashin, a celebrated
billiard player, curly-haired, thin, and sharp-nosed. "Let's take this
example. About a week ago I was playing in Kononov's hotel with a
gentleman. I saw his face was familiar to me, but all chickens have
feathers. He stared at me in his turn. 'Well,' thinks I, 'look. I don't
change color.' I fixed him for three rubles and half a dozen beers, and
while we were drinking he suddenly rose, and said, 'I recognize you. You
are a spy. When I was in the university,' he said, 'thanks to you,' he
said, 'I had to stick in prison four months. You are,' he said, 'a
scoundrel.' At first I was frightened, but soon the insult gnawed at my
heart. 'You sat in prison not at all thanks to me, but to your politics.
And your politics do not concern me personally. But let me tell you that
on your account I had to run about day and night hunting you in all
sorts of weather. I had to stick in the hospital thirteen days.' That's
the truth. The idea for him to jump on me! The pig, he ate himself fat
as a priest, wore a gold watch, and had a diamond pin stuck in his tie."

Akim Grokhotov, a handsome fellow, with a face mobile as an actor's
observed:

"I know men like that, too. When they are young, they walk on their
heads; when the serious years come, they stay at home peacefully with
their wives, and for the sake of a livelihood are even ready to enter
our Department of Safety. The law of nature."

"Among them are some who can't do anything besides revolutionary work.
Those are the most dangerous," said Melnikov.

"Yes, yes," shot from Krasavin, who greedily rolled his oblique eyes.

Once Piotr lost a great deal in cards. He asked in a wearied,
exasperated tone:

"When will this dog's life of ours end?"

Solovyov looked at him, and chewed his thick lips.

"We are not called upon to judge of such matters. Our business is
simple. All we have to do is to take note of a certain face pointed out
by the officials, or to find it ourselves, gather information, make
observations, give a report to the authorities, and let them do as they
please. For all we care they may flay people alive. Politics do not
concern us. Once there was an agent in our Department, Grisha Sokovnin,
who also thought about such things, and ended his life in a prison
hospital where he died of consumption."

Oftenest the conversation took some such course as the following:

Viekov, a wig-maker, always gaily and fashionably dressed, a modest,
quiet person, announced:

"Three fellows were arrested yesterday."

"Great news!" someone responded indifferently.

But Viekov whether or no would tell his comrades all he knew. A spark of
quiet stubbornness flared up in his small eyes as he continued in an
inquisitive tone:

"The gentlemen revolutionists, it seems, are again hatching plots on
Nikitskaya Street--great goings-on."

"Fools! All the janitors there are old hands in the service."

"Much help they are, the janitors!"

"Hmm, yes, indeed."

"However," said Viekov cautiously, "a janitor can be bribed."

"And you, too. Every man can be bribed--a mere matter of price."

"Did you hear, boys, Siekachev won seven hundred rubles in cards
yesterday."

"How he smuggles the cards!"

"Yes, yes. He's no sharper, but a young wizard."

Viekov looked around, smiled in embarrassment, then silently and
carefully smoothed his clothes.

"A new proclamation has appeared," he announced another time.

"There are lots of proclamations. The devil knows which of them is new."

"There's a great deal of evil in them."

"Did you read it?"

"No. Filip Filippovich says there's a new one, and he's mad."

"The authorities are always mad. Such is the law of nature," remarked
Grokhotov with a smile.

"Who reads those proclamations?"

"They're read all right--very much so."

"Well, what of it? I have read them, too, yet I didn't turn black. I
remained what I was, a red-haired fellow. It's not a matter of
proclamations, it's a matter of bombs."

"Of course."

"A proclamation doesn't explode."

Evidently, however, the spies did not like to speak of bombs, for each
time they were mentioned, all made a strenuous effort to change the
subject.

"Forty thousand dollars' worth of gold articles were stolen in Kazan."

"There's something for you!"

"Forty thousand! Whew!"

"Did they catch the thieves?" someone asked in great excitement.

"They'll get caught," prophesied another sorrowfully.

"Well, before that happens they'll have a good time."

A mist of envy enveloped the spies, who sank in dreams of revelries, of
big stakes, and costly women.

Melnikov was more interested than the others in the course of the war.
Often he asked Maklakov, who read the newspapers carefully:

"Are they still licking us?"

"They are."

"But what's the cause?" Melnikov exclaimed in perplexity, rolling his
eyes. "Aren't there people enough, or what?"

"Not enough sense," Maklakov retorted drily.

"The workingmen are dissatisfied. They do not understand. They say the
generals have been bribed."

"That's certainly true," Krasavin broke in. "None of them are
Russians,"--he uttered an ugly oath--"what's our blood to them?"

"Blood is cheap," said Solovyov, and smiled strangely.

As a rule the spies spoke of the war unwillingly, as if constrained in
one another's presence, and afraid of uttering some dangerous word. On
the day of a defeat they all drank more whiskey than usual, and having
gotten drunk quarreled over trifles.

On such days Yevsey trying to avoid possible brawls made his escape
unnoticed to his empty room, and there thought about the life of the
spies. All of them--and there were many, their numbers constantly
increasing--all of them seemed unhappy. They were all solitary, and he
pitied them with his colorless pity. Nevertheless he liked to be among
them and listen to their talk.

At the meetings Sasha boiled over and swore:

"Monstrosities! You understand nothing. You can't understand the
significance of the business. Monstrosities!"

In answer some smiled deprecatingly, others maintained sullen silence.

"For forty rubles a month you can't be expected to understand very
much," one would sometimes mutter.

"You ought to be wiped off the face of the earth," shrieked Sasha.

Klimkov began to dislike Sasha more and more, strengthened in his
ill-will by the fact that nobody else cared for the diseased man.

Many of the spies were actually sick from the constant dread of attacks
and death. Fear drove some, as it had Yelizar Titov, into an insane
asylum.

"I was playing in the club yesterday," said Piotr, in a disconcerted
tone, "when I felt something pressing on the nape of my neck and a cold
shiver running up and down my back-bone. I looked around. There in the
corner stood a tall man looking at me as if he were measuring me inch by
inch. I could not play. I rose from the table, and I saw him move. I
backed out, and ran down the stairs into the yard and out into the
street. I took a cab, sat in it sidewise, and looked back. Suddenly the
man appeared from somewhere in front of me, and crossed the street under
the horse's very nose. Maybe it wasn't he. But in such a case you can't
think. How I yelled! He stopped, and I jumped out of the cab, and off I
went at a gallop, the cabman after me. Well, how I did run, the devil
take it!"

"Such things happen," said Grokhotov, smiling. "I once hid myself for a
similar reason in the yard. But it was still more horrible there, so I
climbed up to a roof, and sat there behind the chimney until daybreak. A
man must guard himself against another man. Such is the law of nature."

Krasavin once entered pale and sweating with staring eyes.

"They were following me," he announced gloomily, pressing his temples.

"Who?"

"They."

Solovyov endeavored to calm him.

"Lots of people walk the streets, Gavrilo. What's that to you?"

"I could tell by the way they walked they were after me."

For more than two weeks Yevsey did not see Krasavin.

The spies treated Klimkov good-naturedly, and their occasional laughter
at his expense did not offend him, for when he was grieved over his
mistakes, they comforted him:

"You'll get used to the work."

He was puzzled as to when the spies did their work, and tried to
unriddle the problem. They seemed to pass the greater part of their time
in the cafés, sending novices and such insignificant fellows as himself
out for observations.

He knew that besides all the spies with whom he was acquainted there
were still others, desperate, fearless men, who mingled with the
revolutionists, and were known by the name of provocators. There were
only a few such men, but these few did most of the work, and directed it
entirely. The authorities prized them very highly, while the street
spies, envious of them, were unanimous in their dislike of the
provocators because of their haughtiness.

Once in the street Grokhotov pointed out a provocator to Yevsey.

"Look, Klimkov, quick!"

A tall sturdy man was walking along the pavement. His fair hair combed
back fell down beautifully from under his hat to his shoulders. His face
was large and handsome, his mustache luxuriant. His soberly clad person
produced the impression of that of an important, well-fed gentleman of
the nobility.

"You see what a fellow?" said Grokhotov with pride. "Fine, isn't he? Our
guard. He delivered up twenty men of the bomb. He helped them make the
bombs himself. They wanted to blow up a minister. He taught them, then
delivered them up. Clever piece of business, wasn't it?"

"Yes," said Yevsey, amazed at the man's stately appearance so unlike
that of the busy, bustling street spies.

"That's the kind they are, the real ones," said Grokhotov. "Why, he
would do for a minister; he has the face and figure for it. And we--what
are we? Poverty-stricken dependents upon a hungry nobleman."

Yevsey sighed. The magnificent spy aroused his envy.

Ready to serve anybody and everybody for a good look or a kind word, he
ran about the city obediently, searched, questioned, and informed. If he
succeeded in pleasing, he rejoiced sincerely, and grew in his own
estimation. He worked much, made himself very tired, and had no time to
think.

Maklakov, reserved and serious, seemed better and purer to Yevsey than
any person he had met up to that time. He always wanted to ask him about
something, and tell him about himself--such an attractive and engaging
face did this young spy have.

Once Yevsey actually put a question to him:

"Timofey Vesilyevich, how much do the revolutionists receive a month?"

A light shadow passed over Maklakov's bright eyes.

"You are talking nonsense," he answered, not in a loud voice, but
angrily.

The days passed quickly, in a constant stir, one just like the other. At
times Yevsey felt they would file on in the same way far into the
future--vari-colored, boisterous, filled with the talks now become
familiar to him and with the running about to which he had already grown
accustomed. This thought enfolded his heart in cold tedium, his body in
enfeebling languor. Everything within and without became empty. Klimkov
seemed to be sliding down into a bottomless pit.




                              CHAPTER XVI


In the middle of the winter everything suddenly trembled and shook.
People anxiously opened their eyes, gesticulated, disputed furiously,
and swore. As though severely wounded and blinded by a blow, they all
stampeded to one place.

It began in this way. One evening on reaching the Department of Safety
to hand in a hurried report of his investigations, Klimkov found
something unusual and incomprehensible in the place. The officials,
agents, and clerks appeared to have put on new faces. All seemed
strangely unlike themselves. They wore an air of astonishment and
rejoicing. They spoke now in very low tones and mysteriously, now aloud
and angrily. There was a senseless running from room to room, a
listening to one another's words, a suspicious screwing-up of anxious
eyes, a shaking of heads and sighing, a sudden cessation of talk, and an
equally sudden burst of disputing. A whirlwind of fear and perplexity
swept the room in broad circles. Playing with the people's impotence it
drove them about like dust, first blowing them into a pile, then
scattering them on all sides. Klimkov stationed in a corner looked with
vacant eyes upon this state of consternation, and listened to the
conversation with strained attention.

He saw Melnikov with his powerful neck bent and his head stuck forward
place his hairy hands on different persons' shoulders and demand in his
low hollow voice:

"Why did the people do it?"

"What of it? The people must live. Hundreds were killed, eh? Wounded!"
shouted Solovyov.

From somewhere came the repulsive voice of Sasha, cutting the ear.

"The priest ought to have been caught. That before everything else. The
idiots!"

Krasavin walked about with his hands folded behind his back, biting his
lips and rolling his eyes in every direction.

Quiet Viekov took up his stand beside Yevsey, and picked at the buttons
of his vest.

"So this is the point we've reached," he said. "My God! Bloodshed! What
do you think, eh?"

"What happened?" Yevsey asked.

Viekov looked around warily, took Klimkov by the hand, and whispered:

"This morning the people in St. Petersburg with a priest and sacred
banners marched to the Czar Emperor. You understand? But they were not
admitted. The soldiers were stationed about, and blood was spilled."

A handsome staid gentleman, Leontyev, ran past them, glanced back at
Viekov through his pince nez, and asked:

"Where is Filip Filippovich?"

But he disappeared without waiting for the information he wanted, and
Viekov ran after him.

Yevsey closed his eyes for a minute, in order to try in the darkness to
get at the meaning of what had been told him. He could easily represent
to himself a mass of people walking through the streets in a sacred
procession, but since he could not understand why the soldiers had shot
at them, he was skeptical about the affair. However, the general
agitation seized him, too, and he felt disturbed and ill at ease. He
wanted to bustle about with the spies, but unable to make up his mind to
approach those he knew, he merely retreated still farther into his
corner.

Many persons passed by him, all of whom, he fancied, were quickly
searching for a little cosy corner where they might stand to collect
their thoughts.

Maklakov appeared. He remained near the door with his hands thrust into
his pockets, and looked sidewise at everybody. Melnikov approached him.

"Did they do it on account of the war?"

"I don't know."

"For what else? If it was the people. But maybe it was simply some
mistake. Eh? What did they ask for, do you know?"

"A constitution," replied Maklakov.

The sullen spy shook his head.

"I don't believe it."

"As you please."

Then Melnikov turned heavily, like a bear, and walked away grumbling:

"No one understands anything. They stir about, make a big noise--"

Yevsey went up to Maklakov, who was looking at him.

"What is it?"

"I have a report."

Maklakov waved him aside.

"Who wants to bother about reports to-day."

Yevsey drew still nearer, and asked:

"Timofey Vasilyevich, what does 'constitution' mean?"

"A different order of life," answered the spy in a low voice.

Solovyov, perspiring and red, came running up.

"Have you heard whether they are going to send us to St. Petersburg?"

"No, I haven't."

"I think they probably will. Such an event! Why, it's a revolt, a real
revolt."

"To-morrow we will know."

"How much blood has been shed! What is it?"

Maklakov's eye ran about uneasily. To-day his shoulders seemed more
stooping than ever, and the ends of his mustache dropped downward.

Something seemed to be revolting in Yevsey's brain, and Maklakov's grim
words kept repeating themselves.

"A different order of life--different."

They gripped at his heart, arousing a sharp desire to extract their
meaning. But everything around him turned and darted hither and thither.
Melnikov's angry, resonant voice sounded sickeningly:

"The thing is, to know what people did it. The working-people are one
thing, simply residents another. This differentiation must be made."

And Krasavin spoke distinctly:

"If even the people begin to revolt against the Czar, then there are no
people any more, only rebels."

"Wait, and suppose there's deception here."

"Hey, you old devil," whispered Zarubin, hastening up to Yevsey. "I've
struck a vein of business. Come on, I'll tell you."

Klimkov followed him in silence for a space, then stopped.

"Where shall I go?"

"To a beer saloon. You understand? There's a girl there, Margarita. She
has an acquaintance, a milliner. At the milliner's lodging they read
books on Saturdays--students and various other people like that. So I'm
going to cut them up. Ugh!"

"I won't go," said Yevsey.

"Oh, you! Ugh!"

The long ribbon of strange impressions quickly enmeshed Yevsey's heart,
hindering him from an understanding of what was happening. He walked off
home unobserved, carrying away with him the premonition of impending
misfortune, a misfortune that already lay in hiding and was stretching
out irresistible arms to clutch him. It filled his heart with new fear
and grief. In expectation of this misfortune he endeavored to walk in
the obscurity close against the houses. He recalled the agitated faces
and excited voices, the disconnected talk about death, about blood,
about the huge graves, into which dozens of bodies had been flung like
rubbish.

At home he stood at the window a long time looking at the yellow light
of the street-lamp. The pedestrians quickly walked into the circle of
its light, then plunged into the darkness again. So in Yevsey's head a
faint timid light was casting a pale illumination upon a narrow circle,
into which ignorant, cautious grey thoughts, helplessly holding on to
one another like blind people, were slowly creeping. Small and lame they
gathered into a shy group driven into one place like a swarm of
mosquitoes. But suddenly, losing hold of the bond uniting them, they
disappeared without leaving a trace, and his soul devoid of them
remained like a desert illuminated by a solitary ray from a sorrowful
moon.

The days passed as in a delirium, filled with terrible tales of the
fierce destruction of people. For Yevsey these days crawled slowly over
the earth like black eyeless monsters, swollen with the blood they had
devoured. They crawled with their huge jaws wide open, poisoning the air
with their stifling, salty odor. People ran and fell, shouted and wept,
mingling their tears with their blood. And the blind monster destroyed
them, crushed old and young, women and children. They were pushed
forward to their destruction by the ruler of their life, fear,--fear
leaden-grey as a storm-cloud, powerful as the current of a broad stream.

Though the thing had happened far away, in a strange city, Yevsey knew
that fear was alive everywhere. He felt it all over, round about him.

No one understood the event, no one was able to explain it. It stood
before the people like a huge riddle and frightened them. The spies
stuck in their meeting places from morning until night, and did much
reading of newspapers and drinking of whiskey. They also crowded into
the Department of Safety, where they disputed, and pressed close against
one another. They were impatiently awaiting something.

"Can anybody explain the truth?" Melnikov kept asking.

One evening a few weeks after the event there was a meeting of the spies
in the Department of Safety at which Sasha delivered a speech.

"Stop this nonsensical talk," he said sharply. "It's a scheme of the
Japs. The Japs gave 18,000,000 rubles to Father Gapon to stir the people
up to revolt. You understand? The people were made drunk on the road to
the palace; the revolutionists had ordered a few wine shops to be broken
into. You understand?" He let his red eyes rove about the company as if
seeking those of his listeners who disagreed with him. "They thought the
Czar, loving the people, would come out to them. And at that time it was
decided to kill him. Is it clear to you?"

"Yes, it's clear," shouted Yakov Zarubin, and began to jot something
down in his note-book.

"Jackass!" shouted Sasha in a surly voice. "I'm not asking you.
Melnikov, do you understand?"

Melnikov was sitting in a corner, clutching his head with both hands and
swaying to and fro as if he had the toothache. Without changing his
position he answered:

"A deception!" His voice struck the floor dully, as if something soft
yet heavy had fallen.

"Yes, a deception," repeated Sasha, and began again to speak quickly and
fluently. Sometimes he carefully touched his forehead, then looked at
his fingers and wiped them on his knee. Yevsey had the sensation that
even his words reeked with a putrid odor. He listened wrinkling his
forehead painfully. He understood everything the spy said, but he felt
that his speech did not efface, in fact, could not efface, from his mind
the black picture of the bloody holiday.

All were silent, now and then shaking their heads, and refraining from
looking at one another. It was quiet and gloomy. Sasha's words floated a
long time over his auditors' heads touching nobody.

"If it was known that the people had been deceived, then why were they
killed?" the unexpected question suddenly burst from Melnikov.

"Fool!" screamed Sasha. "Suppose you had been told that I was your
wife's paramour, and you got drunk and came at me with a knife, what
should I do? Should I tell you 'Strike!' even though you had been duped,
and I was not guilty?"

Melnikov started to his feet, stretched himself, and bawled:

"Don't bark, you dog!"

A tremor ran through Yevsey at his words, and Viekov thin and nerveless,
who sat beside him, whispered in fright:

"Oh, God! Hold him!"

Sasha clenched his teeth, thrust one hand into his pocket, and drew
back. All the spies--there were many in the room--sat silent and
motionless, and waited watching Sasha's hand. Melnikov waved his hat and
walked slowly to the door.

"I'm not afraid of your pistol."

He slammed the door after him noisily. Viekov went to lock it, and said
as he returned to his place:

"What a dangerous man!"

"So," continued Sasha, pulling a revolver from his pocket and examining
it. "To-morrow morning you are each of you to get down to business, do
you hear? And bear in mind that now you will all have more to do than
before. Part of us will have to go to St. Petersburg. That's number one.
Secondly, this is the very time that you'll have to keep your eyes and
ears particularly wide open, because people will begin to babble all
sorts of nonsense in regard to this affair. The revolutionists will not
be so careful now, you understand?"

Handsome Grokhotov drew a loud breath and said:

"We understand, never mind! If it's true that the Japs gave such large
sums of money, that explains it, of course."

"Without any explanation it's very hard," said someone.

"Ye-e-e-s."

"People cry, 'What does it mean?' And they give you poisonous talk, and
you don't know how to answer back."

"The people are very much interested in this revolt."

All these remarks were made in an indolent, bloodless fashion and with
an air of constraint.

"Well, now you know what you are about, and how you should reply to the
fools," said Sasha angrily. "And if some donkey should begin to bray,
take him by the neck, whistle for a policeman, and off with him to the
police station. There they have instructions as to what's to be done
with such people. Ho, Viekov, or somebody, ring the bell and order some
Selters."

Yakov Zarubin rushed to the bell.

Sasha looked at him, and said showing his teeth:

"Say, puppy, don't be mad with me for having cut you off."

"I'm not mad, Aleksandr Nikitich."

"Ye-e-s," Grokhotov drawled pensively. "Still they are a power, after
all! Consider what they accomplished--raised a hundred thousand people."

"Stupidity is light, it's easy to raise," Sasha interrupted him. "They
had the means to raise a hundred thousand people; they had the money.
Just you give me such a sum of money, and I'll show you how to make
history." Sasha uttered an ugly oath, lifted himself slightly from the
sofa, stretched out the thin yellow hand which held the revolver,
screwed up his eyes, and aiming at the ceiling, cried through his teeth
in a yearning whine, "I would show you!"

All these things--Sasha's words and gestures, his eyes and his
smiles--were familiar to Yevsey, but now they seemed impotent, useless
as infrequent drops of rain in extinguishing a conflagration. They did
not extinguish fear, and were powerless to stop the quiet growth of a
premonition of misfortune.

At this time a new view of the life of the people unconsciously
developed in Yevsey's mind. He learned that on the one hand some people
might gather in the streets by the tens of thousands in order to go to
the rich and powerful Czar and ask him for help, while others might kill
these tens of thousands for doing so. He recalled everything the
Smokestack had said about the poverty of the people and the wealth of
the Czar, and was convinced that both sides acted in the manner they did
from fear.

Nevertheless the people astonished him by their desperate bravery, and
aroused in him a feeling with which he had hitherto been unfamiliar.

Now as before when walking the streets with the box of goods on his
breast, he carefully stepped aside for the passersby, either taking to
the middle of the street, or pressing against the walls of the houses.
However, he began to look into the people's faces more attentively, with
a feeling akin to respect, and his fear of them seemed to have
diminished slightly. Men's faces had suddenly changed, acquiring more
variety and significance of expression. All began to talk with one
another more willingly and simply, and to walk the streets more briskly,
with a firmer tread.




                              CHAPTER XVII


Yevsey often entered a house occupied by a physician and a journalist
upon whom he was assigned to spy. The physician employed a wet-nurse
named Masha, a full, round little woman with merry sky-blue eyes, who
was always neat and clean, and wore a white or blue sarafan with a
string of beads around her bare neck. Her full-breasted figure gave the
impression of a luscious, healthy creature, and won the fancy of Yevsey,
who imagined that a strong savory odor, as of hot rye-bread, emanated
from her. She was an affectionate little person. He loved to question
her about the village and hear her replies in a rapid sing-song. He soon
came to know all her relatives, where each one lived, what was the
occupation of each, and what the wages.

He paid her one of his visits five days later after Sasha had explained
the cause of the uprising. He found her sitting on the bed in the cook's
room adjoining the kitchen. Her face was swollen, her eyes were red, and
her lower lip stuck out comically.

"Good morning," she said sullenly. "We don't want anything. Go. We don't
want anything."

"Did the master insult you?" Yevsey asked. Though he knew the master had
not insulted her, he regarded it as his professional duty to ask just
such questions. His next duty was to sigh and add, "That's the way they
always are. You've got to work for them your whole life long."

Anfisa Petrovna, the cook, a thin, ill-tempered body, suddenly cried
out:

"Her brother-in-law was killed, and her sister was knouted. She had to
be taken to the hospital."

"In St. Petersburg?" Yevsey inquired quietly.

"Yes."

Masha drew in a full breast of air, and groaned, holding her head in her
hands.

"What for?" asked Yevsey.

"Who knows them? A curse upon them!" shrieked the cook, rattling the
dishes in her exasperation. "Why did they kill all those people? That's
what I would like to know."

"It wasn't his fault," Masha sobbed. "I know him. Oh, God! He was a
book-binder, a peaceful fellow. He didn't drink. He made forty rubles a
month. Oh, God! They beat Tania, and she's soon to have a child. It will
be her second child. 'If it's a boy,' she said, 'I'll christen him Foma
in honor of my husband's friend.' And she wanted the friend to be the
child's god-father, too. But they put a bullet through his leg, and
broke his head open, the cursed monsters! May they have neither sleep
nor rest! May they be torn with anguish and with shame! May they choke
in blood, the infernal devils!"

Her words and tears flowed in tempestuous streams. Dishevelled and
pitiful she screamed in desperate rage and scratched her shoulders and
her breast with her nails. Then she flung herself on the bed and buried
her head in the pillow, moaning and trembling convulsively.

"Her uncle sent her a letter from there," said the cook, running about
in the kitchen from the table to the stove and back again. "You ought to
see what he writes! The whole street is reading the letter. Nobody can
understand it. The people marched with ikons, with their holy man, they
had priests--everything was done in a Christian fashion. They went to
the Czar to tell him: 'Father, our Emperor, reduce the number of
officials a little. We cannot live with so many officers and such
burdensome taxes on our shoulders, we haven't enough to pay their
salaries, and they take such liberties with us--the very extreme of
liberties. They squeeze everything out of us they want.' Everything was
honest and open. They had been preparing for this a long time, a whole
month. The police knew of it, yet no one interfered. They went out and
marched along the streets, when suddenly off the soldiers go shooting at
them! The soldiers surrounded them on all sides and shot at them! Hacked
them and trampled them down with their horses--everybody, even the
little children! They kept up the massacre for two days. Think of it!
What does it mean? That the people are not wanted any more? That they
have decided to exterminate them?"

Anfisa's cutting, unpleasant voice sank into a whisper, above which
could now be heard the sputtering of the butter on the stove, the angry
gurgle of the boiling water in the kettle, the dull roaring of the fire,
and Masha's groans. Yevsey felt obliged to answer the sharp questions of
the cook, and he wanted to soothe Masha. He coughed carefully, and said
without looking at anybody:

"They say the Japs arranged the affair."

"S-s-s-o?" the cook cried ironically. "The Japs, the Japs, of course! We
know the Japs. They keep to themselves, they stick in their own home.
Our master explained to us who they are. You just tell my brother about
the Japs. He knows all about them, too. It was scoundrels, not Japs!"

From what Melnikov had said Yevsey knew that the cook's brother Matvey
Zimin worked in a furniture factory, and read prohibited books. Now, all
of a sudden, he was seized with the desire to tell her that the police
knew about Zimin's infidelity to the Czar. But at that minute Masha
jumped down from the bed, and cried out while arranging her hair:

"Of course, they have no way of justifying themselves, so they hit upon
the Japs as an excuse."

"The blackguards!" drawled the cook. "Yesterday in the market somebody
also made a speech about the Japs. Evidently he had been bribed to
justify the officials. One old man was listening, and then you should
have heard what he said about the generals, about the ministers, and
even about the Czar himself. How he could do it without putting the
least check upon himself--no, you can't fool the people. They'll catch
the truth, no matter into what corner you drive it."

Klimkov looked at the floor, and was silent. The desire to tell the cook
that watch was being kept upon her brother now left him. He
involuntarily thought that every person killed had relatives, who were
now just as puzzled as Masha and Anfisa, and asked one another "Why?" He
realized that they were crying and grieving in dark perplexity, with
hatred secretly springing up in their hearts, hatred of the murderers
and of those who endeavored to justify the crime. He sighed and said:

"A horrible deed has been done." At the same time he thought: "But I,
too, am compelled to protect the officials."

Masha giving the door to the kitchen a push with her foot, Yevsey
remained alone with the cook, who looked at the door sidewise, and
grumbled:

"The woman is killing herself. Even her milk is spoiled. This is the
third day she hasn't given nourishment. See here, Thursday next week is
her birthday, and I'll celebrate my birthday then, too. Suppose you come
here as a guest, and make her a present, say, of a good string of beads.
You must comfort a person some way or other."

"Very well. I'll come."

"All right."

Klimkov walked off slowly, revolving in his mind what the women had said
to him. The cook's talk was too noisy, too forward, instantly creating
the impression that she did not speak her own sentiments, but echoed
those of another. As for Masha, her grief did not touch him. He had no
relatives, moreover he rarely experienced pity for people. Nevertheless
he felt that the general revolt everywhere noticeable was reflected in
the outcries of these women, and--the main thing--that such talk was
unusual, inhumanly brave. Yevsey had his own explanation of the event:
fear pushed people one against the other. Then those who were armed and
had lost their senses exterminated those who were unarmed and foolish.
But this explanation did not stand firm in Yevsey's mind, and failed to
calm his soul. He clearly realized from what he had seen and heard that
the people were beginning to free themselves from the thralldom of fear,
and were insistently and fearlessly seeking the guilty, whom they found
and judged. Everywhere large quantities of leaflets appeared, in which
the revolutionists described the bloody days in St. Petersburg, and
cursed the Czar, and urged the people not to believe in the
administration. Yevsey read a few such leaflets. Though their language
was unintelligible to him, he sensed something dangerous in them,
something that irresistibly made its way into his heart, and filled him
with fresh alarm. He resolved not to read any leaflets again.

Strict orders were given to find the printing office in which the
leaflets were printed, and to catch the persons who distributed them.
Sasha swore, and even gave Viekov a slap in the face for something he
had done. Filip Filippovich invited the agents to come to him in the
evenings, in order to deliver speeches to them. He usually sat in the
middle of the room behind his desk, resting the lower half of his arms
upon it, and keeping his long fingers engaged in quietly toying with the
pencils, pens, and papers. The various gems on his hands sparkled in
different colors. From under his black beard gleamed a large yellow
medal. He moved his short neck slowly, and his blue spectacles rested in
turn upon the faces of all present, who meekly and silently sat against
the wall. He scarcely ever rose from his armchair. Nothing but his
fingers and his neck moved. His heavy face, bloated and white, looked
like a face in a portrait; the hairs of his beard seemed glued together.
When silent, he was calm and staid, but the instant he spoke in his thin
voice, which screeched like an iron saw while being filed, everything
about him, the black frockcoat and the order, the gems, and the beard,
seemed to be stuck upon somebody else. Sometimes Yevsey fancied that an
artificial puppet sat in front of him, inside of which was hidden a
little shrivelled-up fellow, resembling a little red devil. If someone
were to shout at the puppet, he imagined, the little devil would be
frightened, and would jump out with a squeak, and leap through the
window.

Nevertheless Yevsey was afraid of Filip Filippovich. In order not to
attract to himself the gobbling look of his blue glasses, he sat as far
as possible from him, trying the entire time not to move.

"Gentlemen," the thin voice trembled in the air. It drove against
Yevsey's breast unpleasantly and coldly, like a gleaming steel rod.
"Gentlemen, you must listen to me carefully. You must remember my words.
In these days everyone of you should put your entire mind, your entire
soul, into the war with the secret and cunning enemy. You should listen
to your orders and fulfil them strictly, though you may act on your own
initiative, too. In the secret war for the life of your mother Russia,
you must know, all means are permissible. The revolutionists are not
squeamish as to the means they employ; they do not stop at murder.
Remember how many of your comrades have perished at their hands. I do
not tell you to kill. No, of course not. I cannot advise such measures.
To kill a man requires no cleverness. Every fool can kill. Yet the law
is with you. You go against the lawless. It would be criminal to be
merciful toward them. They must be rooted out like noxious weeds. I say,
you must for yourselves find out what is the best way to stifle the
rising revolution. It isn't I who demand this of you; it is the Czar and
the country." After a pause during which he examined his rings, he went
on. "You, gentlemen, have too little energy, too little love for your
honest calling. For instance, you have let the old revolutionist
Saydakov slip. I now know that he lived in our city for three and a half
months. Secondly, up to this time you have failed to find the printing
office."

"Without provocators it is hard," someone ventured in an offended tone.

"Don't interrupt, if you please. I myself know what is hard, and what is
easy. Up to this time you have not been able to gather serious evidence
against a whole lot of people known for their seditious tendencies, and
you cannot give me any grounds for their arrest."

"Arrest them without grounds," said Piotr with a laugh.

"What is the object of your facetiousness? I am speaking seriously. If
you were to arrest them without grounds, we should simply have to let
them go again. That's all. And to you personally, Piotr Petrovich, I
want to remark that you promised something a long time ago. Do you
remember? You likewise, Krasavin. You said you had succeeded in becoming
acquainted with a man who might lead you to the Terrorists. Well, and
what has come of it?"

"He turned out to be a cheat. You just wait. I'll do my business,"
Krasavin answered calmly.

"I have no doubt of it whatsoever, but I beg all of you to understand
that we must work more energetically, we must hurry matters up."

Filip Filippovich discoursed a long time, sometimes a whole hour,
without taking breath, calmly, in the same level tone. The only words
that varied the monotonous flow were "You must." The "you" came out
resonantly like a long-drawn hammer-blow, the "must," in a drawled hiss.
He embraced everybody in his glassy blue look. His words fairly choked
Yevsey.

Once at the end of a meeting, when Sasha and Yevsey were the only ones
who remained with Filip Filippovich, Yevsey heard the following
colloquy:

Filip Filippovich (glumly, dejectedly): What idiots they are, though!

Sasha (snuffling): Aha!

Filip Filippovich: Yes, yes, what _can_ they do?

Sasha: It seems that now you are going to learn the value of decent
people.

Filip Filippovich: Well, give them to me. Give them to me.

Sasha: Ah, they cost dear!

Klimkov was neither surprised nor offended. This was not the first time
he had heard the authorities swear at their subordinates. He counted it
in the regular order of life.

The spies after the meetings spoke to one another thus:

"Um, yes, a converted Jew, and just look at him!"

"They say he got a raise of 600 rubles the first of the year."

"The value of our labor is growing."

Sometimes a handsome, richly dressed gentleman by the name of Leontyev
addressed the spies in place of Filip Filippovich. He did not remain
seated, but walked up and down the room holding his hands in his
pockets, politely stepping out of everybody's way. His smooth face,
always drawn in a frown, was cold and repellant, his thin lips moved
reluctantly, and his eyes were veiled.

Another man named Yasnogursky came from St. Petersburg for the same
purpose. He was a low, broad-shouldered, bald man with an order on his
breast. He had a large mouth, a wizened face, heavy eyes, like two
little stones, and long hands. He spoke in a loud voice, smacking his
lips, and pouring out streams of strong oaths. One sentence of his
particularly impressed itself on Yevsey's memory:

"They say to the people, 'You can arrange another, an easy life for
yourselves.' They lie, my children. The Emperor our Czar and our Holy
Church arrange life, while the people can change nothing, nothing."

All the speakers said the same thing: the political agents must serve
more zealously, must work more, must be cleverer, because the
revolutionists were growing more and more powerful. Sometimes they told
about the Czars, how good and wise they were, how the foreigners feared
them and envied them because they had liberated various nations from the
foreign yoke. They had freed the Bulgarians and the Servians from the
oppression of the Turkish Sultan, the Khivans, the Bokharans, and the
Turkomans from the Persian Shah, and the Manchurians from the Chinese
Emperor. As a result, the Germans and the English along with the
Japanese, who were bribed by them, were dissatisfied. They would like to
get the nations Russia had liberated into their own power. But they knew
the Czar would not permit this, and that was why they hated him, why
they wished him all evil, and endeavored to bring about the revolution
in Russia.

Yevsey listened to these speeches with interest, waiting for the moment
when the speakers would begin to tell about the Russian people, and
explain why all of them were unpleasant and cruel, why they loved to
torture one another, and lived such a restless, uncomfortable life. He
wanted to hear what the cause was of such poverty, of the universal
fear, and the angry groans heard on all sides. But of such things no one
spoke.

After one of the meetings Viekov said to Yevsey as the two were walking
in the street:

"So it means that they are getting into power. Did you hear? It's
impossible to understand what it signifies. Just see--here you have
secret people who live hidden, and suddenly they cause general alarm,
and shake everything up. It's very hard to comprehend. From where, I'd
like to know, do they get their power?"

Melnikov, now even more morose and taciturn, grown thin and all
dishevelled, once hit his fist on his knee, and shouted:

"I want to know where the truth is!"

"What's the matter?" asked Maklakov angrily.

"What's the matter? This is the matter: I understand it this way: One
class of officials has grown weak, our class. Now another class gets the
power over the people, that's all."

"And the result is--fiddlesticks!" said Maklakov, laughing.

Melnikov looked at him, and sighed:

"Don't lie, Timofey Vasilyevich. You lie out and out. You are a wise
man, and you lie. I understand."

Thoughts instinctively arose in the dark depths of Yevsey's soul. He did
not realize how they formed themselves, did not feel their secret
growth. They appeared suddenly, in perfect array, and frightened him by
their unexpected apparition. He endeavored to hide them, to extinguish
them for a time, but unsuccessfully. They quietly flashed up again, and
shone more clearly, though their light only cast life into still greater
obscurity. The frequent conversations about the revolutionists blocked
themselves up in his head, creating an insensible sediment in his mind,
a thin strata of fresh soil for the growth of puny thoughts. These
thoughts disquieted him, and drew him gently to something unknown.




                             CHAPTER XVIII


While on his way to Masha to take part in her birthday celebration, the
thought occurred to Yevsey:

"I am going to get acquainted with the joiner to-day. He's a
revolutionist."

Yevsey was the first guest to arrive. He gave Masha a string of blue
beads, and Anfisa a shell comb. In return for the gifts, with which both
were greatly pleased, they treated him to tea and nalivka (a sort of
wine made of berries with whiskey or water). Masha prettily arching her
full white neck looked into his face with a kind smile. Her glance
softly caressed his heart, enlivened and emboldened him. Anfisa poured
the tea and said winking her eyes:

"Well, merchant, you are our generous donor. When will we celebrate your
wedding?"

Yevsey trying not to show his embarrassment, said quietly and
confidingly:

"I cannot decide to get married. It's very hard."

"Hard? Oh, you modest man! Marya, do you hear? He says it's hard to get
married."

Masha smiled in answer to the cook's loud laugh, looking at Klimkov from
the corner of her eyes.

"Maybe he has his own meaning of hard."

"Yes, I have my own meaning," said Yevsey, raising his head. "You see I
am thinking of the fact that it is hard to find a person with whom you
can live soul to soul, so that the one would not fear the other. It is
hard to find a person whom you could believe."

Masha sat beside him. He glanced sidewise at her neck and breast, and
sighed.

"Suppose I were to tell them where I work."

He started, frightened by the desire, and with a quick effort he
suppressed it.

"If a man does not understand life," he continued, raising his voice,
"it's better for him to remain alone."

"For one person to live all alone is hard, too," said Masha, pouring out
another glass of nalivka for him. "Drink."

Yevsey longed to speak much and openly. He observed that the women
listened to him willingly; and this in conjunction with the two glasses
of wine aroused him. But the journalist's servant girl Liza, who came in
at that moment also excited, at once usurped the attention of Anfisa and
Masha. She was bony and had a cast in one eye. Her hair was handsomely
dressed, and she was cleverly gowned. With her sprightly manner she
seemed a good forward little girl.

"My good people invited guests for to-day, and did not want to let me
go," she said sitting down. "'Well,' said I, 'you can do as you please.'
And I went off. Let them bother themselves."

"Many guests?" Klimkov asked wearily, remembering his duty.

"A good many. But what sort of guests! Not one of them ever sticks a
dime into your hand. On New Year's all I got was two rubles and thirty
kopeks."

"So they're not rich?" asked Yevsey.

"Oh, rich! No! Not one of them has a whole overshoe."

"Who are they? What's their business?"

"Different things. Some write for the newspapers, another is simply a
student. Oh, what a good fellow one of them is! He has black eyebrows,
and curly hair, and a cute little mustache, white, even teeth--a lively,
jolly fellow. He came from Siberia not long ago. He keeps talking about
hunting."

Yevsey looked at Liza, and bent his head. He wanted to say "Stop!" to
her. Instead he apathetically asked, "I suppose he must have been
exiled."

"Who can tell? Maybe. My master and mistress were exiles, too. The
sergeant told me so."

"Yes, who nowadays hasn't been an exile?" exclaimed the cook. "I lived
at Popov's, an engineer, a rich man. He had his own house and horses and
was getting ready to marry. Suddenly the gendarmes came at night, seized
him, and broke up everything, and then he was sent off to Siberia."

"I don't condemn my people," Liza interrupted, "not a bit of it. They
are good folks. They don't scold. They're not grasping. Altogether
they're not like other people. And they're very interesting. They know
everything and speak about everything."

Yevsey looked at Masha's ruddy face, and thought:

"I'd better go; I'll ask her about her master next time. But I can't
make up my mind to go. If only she kept quiet, the silly!"

"Our people understand everything, too," Masha announced with pride.

"When that affair happened, that revolt in St. Petersburg," Liza began
with animation, "they stayed up nights at a time talking."

"Why our people were in your house then," observed the nurse.

"Yes, indeed, there were lots of people at the house. They talked, and
wrote complaints. One of them even began to cry. Upon my word!"

"There's enough to cry about," sighed the cook.

"He clutched his head, and sobbed. 'Unhappy Russia!' he said, 'Unhappy
people that we are!' They gave him water, and even I got sorry for
everybody, and began to cry."

Masha looked around frightened.

"God, when I think of my sister!" She rose and went into the cook's
room. The women looked after her sympathetically. Klimkov sighed with
relief. Against his will he asked Liza wearily and with an effort:

"To whom did they write complaints?"

"I don't know," answered Liza.

"Marya went off to cry," remarked the cook.

The door opened, and the cook's brother entered coughing.

"It's chilly," he said, untwisting the scarf from his neck.

"Here, take a drink, quick!"

"Yes, indeed. And here's health to you."

He was a thin person, who moved about freely and deliberately. The
gravity of his voice did not accord very well with his small light beard
and his sharp, somewhat bald skull. His face was small, thin,
insignificant, his eyes, large and hazel.

"A revolutionist," was Yevsey's mental observation, as he silently
pressed the joiner's hand.

"Time for me to be going," he announced unexpectedly to everybody.

"Where to?" cried Anfisa, unceremoniously seizing his hand. "Say, you
merchant, don't break up our company. Look, Matvey, what a present he
gave me."

Zimin looked at Yevsey, and said thoughtfully:

"Yesterday they got another order in our factory for fifteen thousand
rubles. A drawing-room, a cabinet, a bed-room, and a salon--four rooms.
All the orders come from the military. They stole a whole lot of money,
and now they want to live after the latest fashion."

"There you are!" Yevsey exclaimed mentally, vexed and heated. "Begins
the minute he comes in! Oh, Lord!"

He felt a painful ache in his chest, as if something inside him had been
torn. Without thinking of what his question would lead to, he quickly
asked the joiner:

"Are there any revolutionists in the factory?"

As if touched to the quick, Zimin quickly turned to him, and looked into
his eyes. The cook frowned, and said in a voice dissatisfied but not
loud:

"They say revolutionists are everywhere nowadays."

"From smartness or stupidity?" asked Liza.

Unable to withstand the hard searching look of the joiner, Klimkov
slowly bowed his head, though he followed the workingman with a sidelong
glance.

"Why does that interest you?" Zimin inquired politely but sternly.

"I have no interest in it," Yevsey answered lazily.

"Ah! Then why do you ask?"

"Just so," said Yevsey; and in a few seconds added, "Out of politeness."

The joiner smiled.

It seemed to Yevsey that three pairs of eyes were looking at him
suspiciously and severely. He felt awkward, and something bitter nipped
his throat. Masha came out of the cook's room, smiling guiltily. When
she looked at the others' faces, the smile disappeared.

"What's the matter?"

"It's the wine," flashed through Yevsey's mind. He rose to his feet,
shook himself, and said. "Don't think I asked for no reason at all. I
asked because I wanted to tell her long ago--your sister--about you."

Zimin also rose. His face gathered in wrinkles, and turned yellow.

"What can you tell her about me?" he asked with calm dignity.

Masha's quiet whisper reached Yevsey's ear. "What's up between them?"

"Wait," said Anfisa.

"I know," said Yevsey. He had the sensation that he was being swung from
the floor into the air light as a feather. He seemed to see everything,
observe everything with marvellous plainness. "I know you're being
followed--followed by the agents of the Department of Safety, I know
you're a revolutionist."

The cook shook in her chair, crying out in astonishment and fright:

"Matvey, what does this mean?"

"Excuse me," said Zimin, passing his hand reassuringly before her face.
"This is a serious matter." Then he said to Yevsey in a decided stern
tone, "Young man, put your overcoat on. You must go home. And I, too,
must go. Put your overcoat on."

Yevsey smiled. He still felt empty and light. It was a pleasant
sensation, but his eyes were dim, and the caustic tickling taste in his
mouth came back again. He scarcely realized how he walked away, but he
did not forget that all were silent, and no one said good-by to him.

In the street Zimin nudged his shoulder, and said not aloud but
emphatically:

"I beg you not to come to my sister any more."

"Why? Did I offend you?" asked Yevsey.

"No, not in the least."

"Why, then?"

"Who are you?"

"A peddler."

"Then how do you know what I am, and that I am being followed?"

"An acquaintance told me."

"A spy?"

"Yes."

"So? And you are a spy, too?"

"No," said Yevsey. But looking into Zimin's lean, pale face, he
remembered the calm and dull sound of his voice, and without an effort
corrected himself. "Yes, I, too."

They walked a few steps in silence.

"Well, go," said Zimin, suddenly halting. His voice sounded subdued and
sorrowful. He shook his head strangely. "Go away."

Yevsey leaned his back against the enclosure, and gazed at the man,
blinking his eyes. Zimin, too, looked at Yevsey, shaking his right hand.

"Why?" said Yevsey, in perplexity. "Didn't I tell you the truth? That
you are being tracked?"

"Well?"

"And you are angry?"

Zimin bent toward him, and poured a wave of hissing words upon Klimkov.

"Yes, go to the devil! I know without you that they are tracking me.
What's the matter? Is business going badly among you? Did you think
you'd buy me? And betray people behind my back? Or did you want to throw
a sop to your conscience? Go to hell! I say, go, or else I'll give you a
black eye."

Yevsey started from his leaning posture, and walked off.

"Vermin!" he heard breathed behind him contemptuously.

Klimkov stopped, turned around, and for the first time swore at anybody
with the whole power of his voice:

"Vermin yourself! You ---- ---- cur!"

Zimin did not rejoin. His steps were inaudible. Somewhere Yevsey heard
the snow crunching under the runners of a cab and the grinding of iron
on stone.

"He went back there," thought Klimkov, walking slowly along the
pavement. "He will tell. Masha will curse me." He spat out, then hummed:

"Oh, garden, garden mine!" He stopped at a lamp-post, feeling he had to
calm himself.

"Here I am, and I can sing if I want to. If a policeman hears it and
asks, 'What are you bawling there?' I'll show him my ticket from the
Department of Safety. 'Oh, excuse me!' he'll say. But if the joiner
should sing, he'll be hustled off to the station-house, and they'll give
him a cudgelling. 'Don't disturb the peace!'" Klimkov smiled, and peered
into the darkness. "Well, brother, won't you strike up a song?"

However this failed to calm him as he had expected. His heart was sad,
and a bitter soapy saliva seemed to be glued in his mouth, making tears
well up in his eyes.

    "O Ga-a-a-arden, ga-a-a-arden mine!
    Green is this garden of mine."

He sang with the full power of his lungs, shutting his eyes tight. This
did not help either. The dry, prickly tears trickled through his lids,
and chilled his cheeks.

"Ky-a-b!" Klimkov called in a low voice, still trying to put on a bold
front. But when he had seated himself in the sleigh, his body grew
faint, as if a great many tightly drawn fibres had suddenly burst within
him. His head drooped, and swaying from side to side in his seat he
mumbled:

"A fine insult--very strong--thank you! Oh, you good people, wise
people--"

This complaining was pleasant. It filled his heart with drunken
sweetness. Yevsey had often felt this sweetness in his childhood. It set
him in a martyr-like attitude toward people, and made him more
significant to himself.




                              CHAPTER XIX


In the morning Yevsey lay in bed frowning up at the ceiling.

"Put my foot into it!" he thought dismally, as the recollection of what
had happened the day before came back to him. "No, I oughtn't to track
people, but track myself." The idea seemed strange to him. "How's that,
though? Am I rascally toward myself?"

He remembered the melancholy hazel eyes of the joiner, the expression of
dignity on his thin face, and his assured voice as he said, "It's
chilly." Suddenly Yevsey was perplexed to feel within himself something
alien, something ready to struggle with him. He rose to his feet, took
in as much air as he could, and for a long time stood without emitting
breath, as if to stifle inside himself that which was alien and which
hindered him.

"I must stop all this. What do I want it for?" he urged himself.
Nevertheless ease did not return. He began to dress lazily, compelling
himself to think about the task of the day.

Now he seldom went about with goods, because there was much other work
to be done. This day, for instance, he was to go to a factory suburb to
observe the workingmen, with the object of discovering the persons who
distributed proclamations.

He smeared his hands with soot and oil, then washed them with soap,
after which an oily film was left, such as on the hands of metal
workers. This was not essential. But Klimkov liked to dye his tufty
hair, and color his brows and mustache. Such proceedings made his work
more interesting, and heightened its gravity.

The handsome Grokhotov had been very assiduous in teaching Yevsey the
art of disguising his face and figure. Grokhotov was sincerely attracted
by the work. He possessed a large supply of beards, mustaches, and wigs
of all colors, and could paste scars and warts on the face. Sometimes he
would display his mimic arts to his comrades. Suddenly, right in
everybody's presence, he would give his face, voice, and figure a
striking resemblance to one of the officials. Or he would cackle like a
goose, roar like a lion, bark like a dog, or meow like a cat. His
astonished audience praised him generously, and held their sides with
laughter, while he, smiling sedately, declared modestly:

"Just the A B C's. Wait until I've been at it a year. Then I'll go on
the stage. I'll hit off all the celebrities, and I'll imitate every
animal on earth."

Melnikov would look at him with contempt, and spit out. Once he even
shouted:

"Hey, you clown, show us a louse."

"The louse is a mute insect," remarked the spy.

"Well, then, profit by its example. Eat and keep quiet."

While dressing Klimkov remembered this interchange of words, which in
turn recalled Anatol.

"There," he thought, "Anatol would have made a good spy. But Zimin
wouldn't do at all. His eyes are in the way. You can recognize him by
the eyes at once. He certainly wants to take Masha as his mistress."

Yevsey stopped at the door, his heart unpleasantly gripped by this
conjecture. But the next instant he waved his hand carelessly.

"To the devil with all of them! What do I care?"

This thought, which had calmed him before, now irritated a sore spot in
his feelings.

The sun was shining, water flowed from the roofs babbling and washing
away the dirty reddish snow. The people walked quickly and merrily. The
good chimes of the Lenten bells floated lengthily in the warm moist
atmosphere, mingling in a broad ribbon of soft sounds, which waved in
the air, and floated from the city into the pale bluish distance.

"Now to go off somewhere, to walk in the fields, in the deserts,"
thought Yevsey, as he entered the narrow streets of the factory suburb.

Round about him rose the red filthy walls, supporting themselves one
against the other. The sky over them was besmirched with smoke, the air
was steeped in the stifling odor of warm oil. White teeth gleamed
angrily in the dirty faces of the workingmen. All the surroundings were
unlovely, and the eyes quickly wearied in looking upon the smoked stone
cages in which the men worked.

At noon Klimkov, exhausted and feeling insulted by everything he saw,
entered a tavern, where he ordered dinner to be brought to him at a
small table next to a window. He reluctantly listened to the people's
conversation. There were not many, but all were workingmen, who lazily
cast short words at one another as they ate and drank. The only lively
sound was of a young incessant voice which reached him from a corner.

"No, think, where does wealth come from?"

The person who spoke was a broad-shouldered, curly-haired fellow. Yevsey
looked at him in vexation, and turned away. He frequently heard talks
about wealth, which always inspired him with a sense of bored
perplexity. He felt they were dictated only by envy and greed. He knew
that just such talks were accounted noxious, and he forcibly compelled
himself to listen to them, though to-day he wanted to traverse the broad
light streets of the city.

"You work cheaply, and you buy dearly. Isn't it so?" cried the
curly-headed fellow. "All wealth is accumulated from the money by which
we are underpaid for our work. Let's take an example."

"Everybody's greedy," thought Yevsey. "How Masha snatched the beads
yesterday! All are scoundrels. And the reason Zimin did not strike me
was because he was afraid I would call the police. Ha! They drove me
out, but they kept my presents. If they thought me a dirty fellow, they
should have returned my presents, the skunks!"

Filling himself with the pleasant bitterness that comes from censuring
people, he was carried away by it, and no longer heard or saw anything.
Suddenly, however, a merry voice fell upon his ear.

"What, Yevsey Klimkov?"

He raised his head hastily, and wanted to rise, but was unable to do so.
He saw standing before him the curly-headed orator, whom, however, he
did not recognize.

"You don't know me? Yakov, your cousin."

He laughed, held out his hand to Yevsey, and seated himself opposite him
at the table. His laughter enveloped Klimkov in a warm cloud of
reminiscences--of the church, the quiet ravine, the fire, and the talks
of the blacksmith. Silent, smiling in embarrassment, he carefully
pressed his cousin's hand.

"I didn't recognize you."

"Of course!" exclaimed Yakov. "Your memory gets weak in the city.
Various things creep upon you from all sides, so no place is left for
the old. How are you getting along?"

"So, so."

"Out of work?"

"Yes."

Klimkov answered unwillingly. He wanted to know whereby this meeting
might be dangerous for him. But Yakov spoke for both. He rapidly gave an
account of the village, as if it were absolutely necessary for him to
get through with it as quickly as possible. In two minutes he had told
Yevsey that his father had gotten blind, that his mother was always
sick, and that he had been living in the city three years working in the
factory.

"There, you've got the whole story."

Yakov was even more thickly besmudged with soot and oil than most of the
men. Though his clothes were torn he seemed to be rich. He was outspoken
and free in his demeanor. Klimkov looked at him with pleasure, and
recalled without malice how this strong fellow had beaten him.

"Is he a revolutionist, too?" he asked himself timidly.

"Well, how are you getting along?" said Yakov. His broad round face,
glossy and smiling good-naturedly, called for frankness in return, which
Klimkov, however, did not want to give. He felt the new and alien thing
that he had found in his soul in the morning growing in him. In the
desire to evade Yakov's questions, he himself began to interrogate.

"And how are you?"

"Work is hard, and life is easy. I like the city very much. It's a smart
thing, the city is. And how simple, how intelligible things are here.
It's true that work for us fellows is, you may say, humiliating. There's
so much work, and so little time to live. Your whole day, your whole
life goes to your employer. You can keep only minutes for yourself.
There's no time to read a book. I'd like to go to theatre, but when will
I sleep? Do you read books?"

"No."

"Well, yes, you have no time. Isn't it so? Though I manage to read after
all. Such books as you get here! You start one, and you just sink away,
as if a dear girl and you were embracing. Honest! How do you get along
with girls? Lucky?"

"So, so," said Yevsey.

"They love me! The girls here, too--ah, God, what a life! Do you go to
the theatre?"

"I've been."

"I love theatre. I snatch up everything, as if I were going to leave
to-morrow, or die. Really! I like to hear music, everything--the
zoological garden--that's a nice place, too."

The red of excitement broke through the black layer of dirt of Yakov's
cheeks. His eyes burned eagerly. He smacked his lips, as if he were
sucking in something refreshing and vivifying.

Quiet envy stirred in Yevsey, envy of this healthy body with its keen
appetites. He stubbornly recalled how Yakov had pummeled his sides with
his powerful fists; and something sad softly hindered him from doing
violence to himself. Quick, joyous speech came from Yakov without cease;
the ringing exulting words and exclamations fluttered around Yevsey like
swallows. He drank in the live spring-talk, involuntarily smiling. He
seemed to himself to be splitting in two, torn by the desire to listen,
and the awkward, almost shameful feeling that possessed him. Though he
wished to speak in his turn, he feared he might betray himself. His
shirt collar pressed his neck. He turned his head around, and suddenly
saw Grokhotov on the street at the window. Over the spy's left shoulder
and arm hung torn breeches, dirty shirts, and jackets. He gave Yevsey a
scarcely perceptible wink as he shouted in a sour voice:

"I sell and buy old clothes."

"It's time for me to be going," said Yevsey, jumping to his feet.

"You are free on Sundays, aren't you? Oh, yes, you're out of work. Well,
then, let's go to the zoological gardens. Come to me. No, I'd better go
to you. Where do you live?"

Yevsey was silent. He did not want to tell him where he lodged.

"What's the matter? Do you live with a girl? That doesn't matter. You'll
introduce me to her. That's all. What are you ashamed of? Is that it?"

"You see I don't live alone."

"Well, yes."

"But I don't live with a girl. I live with an old man."

Yakov guffawed.

"How funny you are! The devil knows how you speak. Well, we don't want
an old man, of course. I live with two comrades. It's not convenient for
anyone to call on me either. Come, let's agree on a place where we can
meet."

They decided on a meeting-place, and left the café. Yakov on taking
leave gave his cousin an affectionate and vigorous handshake, and Yevsey
left him in precipitate haste as if he feared his cousin would return to
take it back. On his way he reflected dismally:

"I cannot go on the side of the city where the railway station is,
because I'll meet Zimin there, and they'll beat me. Here, the toughest
place, the place they call a hot-bed of revolutionists, Yakov will be in
my way. I can't do a thing. I can't turn anywhere."

A feeling of spiteful irritation glided over his soul like a grey
shadow.

"I sell old clothes," sang Grokhotov behind his back, then whispered,
"Buy a shirt from me, Klimkov."

Yevsey turned around, took some rag in his hand, and examined it
silently, while the spy praising the wares aloud, managed to get in a
whisper, "See here, you just hit it. That curly-headed fellow, I had my
eyes on him. He's a Socialist. Hold on to him. You can hook a great many
with him. He's a young fellow, a simple sort of fellow, do you hear?" He
tore the rag from Yevsey's hand, and shouted in an offended tone, "Five
kopeks for such a garment as this? You're making sport of me, friend.
Why should you insult me? Go your way, go." And shouting his wares,
Grokhotov strode down the street.

"There, I myself am going to be under surveillance," thought Yevsey,
looking at Grokhotov's back.

When a spy with little experience became acquainted with a workingman,
he was obliged to report the fact immediately to the spy above him. The
latter either gave him as an assistant a spy with more experience, or he
himself went among the workingmen; upon which the other spies would say
of him enviously:

"He 'noosed' himself into the provocatorship."

The role of provocator was considered dangerous, so by way of
compensation the officers at once gave money rewards for the handing
over of a group of people. All the spies not only gladly "noosed"
themselves, but sometimes also even tripped one another up in the
endeavor to snatch away the lucky chance. In this way the entire
business was not infrequently spoiled. More than once it happened that a
spy had already gotten inside a circle of workingmen, when suddenly in
some secret manner they learned of his profession; whereupon they would
beat him if he had not succeeded in time in slipping away from the
circle. This was called "snapping the noose."

It was hard for Klimkov to believe that Yakov was a Socialist, though at
the same time he wanted to believe it. The envy his cousin aroused was
transformed again into irritation against him for having put himself in
his way. Yevsey now also recalled the blows his cousin had bestowed upon
him.

In the evening, with eyes turned aside, he informed Piotr of his
acquaintance.

"Well, what of it?" asked Piotr angrily.

"Nothing."

"You don't know what you must do? Then what the devil is the use of
teaching you fellows?" Piotr hastened off, crumpled, lean, with dark
stains under his eyes.

"Evidently lost again at cards," thought Yevsey gloomily.




                               CHAPTER XX


The next day Sasha learned of Yevsey's success. He questioned him in
detail. After reflecting awhile he smiled his putrid smile, and gave
Klimkov instructions.

"Wait a little. Then you'll tell him in a careful way that you have
gotten a position as clerk in a printing office, do you hear? Ask as few
questions as possible, let them speak for themselves. Very likely
they'll ask you whether you can't get them type. Tell them you can, but
learn to say it simply, so that they should see it's all the same to you
whether you get it or don't get it. Don't ask what for, behave like a
little fool, as you actually are. Only I want you to know that if you
botch this matter, it will be bad for you. After every meeting report to
me what you have heard."

In intercourse with Sasha Yevsey felt like a little dog on a strap. He
looked at the spy's pimply yellow face, and thought of nothing but the
moment when he would be permitted to depart from the cloud of disgusting
odors, which nauseated him and ate into the skin of his face and hands.

He went to meet Yakov as empty as a pipe. But when he saw his cousin
with a cigarette between his teeth and his hat cocked to one side, he
gave him a pleasant smile, while something unpleasant stirred within
him.

"How's business?" shouted Yakov merrily.

"So, so."

"Gotten a job?"

"Yes." The next instant Yevsey thought, "I said it too soon."

"What?"

"Clerk in a printing office."

Yakov whistled.

"Capital! What do you get?"

"Twenty-five."

"In a printing office? Indeed!" said Yakov thoughtfully, then suddenly
became animated. "What do you say--I'll take you to pay a visit this
evening. Good company, coz. Two girls, one a milliner, the other a spool
girl in a thread factory. There'll be a locksmith there, too, a young
fellow. He sings and plays the guitar. Two more, also good people. All
people are good, only they have no time to pay attention to themselves."

Yakov spoke quickly, and his eyes smiled joyously at everything he saw.
He stopped in front of the shop-windows, and examined their contents
with the gaze of a man to whom all articles are pleasant, and everything
is interesting.

"Look, what a dress! Ha! If you were to put such a thing on our Olya,
she'd get tangled up in it. Books--that little one there, yellow, you
see it? I've read it. 'Primitive Man.' Interesting. Read it, and you'll
see how people grew up. Books are very interesting. They at once open up
to you all the cunning of life. Those thick books are awkward to read.
By the time you get to the middle you forget what happened at the
beginning, and at the end you forget the beginning also. The devil take
them! Why don't they write shorter books?"

The next minute he pointed out a gun, and cried ecstatically:

"Revolvers, eh? Just like toys."

Giving himself over to Yakov's mood, Yevsey looked at the various
articles with the wandering look of empty eyes, and smiled, astounded,
as if for the first time seeing the pretty, alluring multitude of
brilliant materials and vari-colored books, the blinding gleam of colors
and metals. He was pleased to hear the young voice still in the state of
change; the rapid talk steeped in the joy of life was agreeable to him.
It lightly penetrated the dark void of Klimkov's soul, and allowed him
to forget himself for a moment.

"You're a jolly fellow," he said approvingly.

"Very. I learned to dance from the Cossacks. A score of Cossacks are
stationed in our factory. Did you hear that the men in our factory
wanted to rise? You didn't? How's that? The newspapers wrote about it.
Yes, so I learned to dance from the Cossacks. Wait, you'll see. Nobody
can beat me."

"Why did they want to rise?" asked Yevsey, provoked by the simplicity
with which Yakov spoke of a revolt.

"Why? They wrong us workingmen. What, then, are we to do?"

"And you would have done it, too?"

"What? Rebel? Of course. What else? Our people are good, they're solid."

"And how about the Cossacks?"

"The Cossacks? So, so. They are people, too. At first they thought they
would officer it over us, but then they said, 'Comrades, give us
leaflets.'"

Yakov suddenly broke off and looked into Yevsey's face. For a minute he
walked in silence with knit brows.

The mention of the leaflets recalled his duty to Yevsey. He wrinkled his
forehead painfully. Wishing to push something away from himself and his
cousin, he said quietly:

"I read those leaflets."

"Well?" asked Yakov, slackening his gait.

"I don't understand them. What are they for?"

"You read some more."

"I don't want to."

"Why not?"

"Just so."

"They're not interesting to you?"

"No, they're not."

For a while they walked in silence. Yakov sniffed meditatively, and gave
a hasty look into his cousin's face. Yevsey felt he had not succeeded in
shoving away the unpleasant and dangerous theme.

"These leaflets are a precious matter. It's necessary for us to read
them. All the slaves of labor ought to read them," Yakov began heartily,
but in a modulated voice. "We, cousin, are slaves, chained to
everlasting work. They have made us captives of capitalists, and we live
poor in body and in soul. Isn't it so? Now the leaflets eat at our
chains, the way rust eats iron, and they liberate our human minds."

Klimkov walked more quickly. He did not want to hear the smooth talk.
The desire even darted through his mind to say:

"Don't speak to me about such things, please."

But Yakov himself interrupted his speech.

"There's the zoo!"

They drank a bottle of beer in the bar-room, and listened to the playing
of a military band.

"Good?" Yakov asked, nudging Yevsey's side with his elbow. On the
cessation of the playing Yakov sighed. "That was Faust they played. An
opera. I saw it three times. Beautiful, very! The story is stupid, but
the music is good. And the songs, too. Come, let's look at the monkeys."

On the way to the monkey-house he told Yevsey the story of Faust and the
devil Mephistopheles. He even attempted to sing something, but not
succeeding he burst out laughing. "I can't," he declared. "It's hard.
Besides I've forgotten it. Do you know--the singer who plays the devil
gets a thousand rubles every time he sings. The devil take him, let him
get ten thousand rubles, because it's good. When it's good, I don't
grudge anybody anything. I'd give my life,--there, take it, eat! Isn't
it so?"

"Yes," replied Yevsey, looking around.

Yakov's account of the opera, the pretty women's faces, the laughter and
talk of the crowds of people in holiday attire, and over all the spring
sky bathed in sunlight--all this intoxicated Klimkov and expanded his
heart.

"What a young fellow he is!" he thought in amazement, as he looked at
Yakov. "So brave! And he knows everything. Yet he's the same age I am."

Now it seemed to Yevsey that his cousin was leading him somewhere far
off, and was quickly opening up before him a long row of little doors,
behind each of which the sound and the light grew pleasanter and
pleasanter. He looked around, absorbing the new impressions, and at
times opening his eyes wide in anxiety. It seemed to him that the
familiar face of a spy was darting about in the crowd.

The two youths stood before the monkey cage. Yakov with a kind smile in
his eyes said:

"I love these wise animals. In fact I love every living thing. Just
look! Wherein are they less than human beings? Isn't it so? Eyes, chins,
how bright all their features are, eh? Their hands--" He suddenly broke
off to listen to something. "Wait a minute, there go our folks." He
disappeared, and in a minute returned leading a girl and a young man up
to Yevsey. The young man wore a sleeveless jacket. Yakov cried out
joyously:

"You said you weren't coming here, you deceivers. Well, all right. This
is my cousin Yevsey Klimkov. I told you about him. This is Olya--Olga
Konstantinova, and this is Aleksey Stepanovich Makarov."

Klimkov bowed clumsily and silently pressed the hands of his new
acquaintances.

"There, he's going to 'noose' me in," he thought. "It's better for me to
go away."

But he did not go away, though he looked around again, fearful lest he
see one of the spies. He saw none, however.

"He's not a very free sort of a fellow," said Yakov to the girl. "He's
not a pair to me, sinner that I am. He's a quiet fellow."

"You needn't feel constrained with us. We are simple people," said Olga.

She was taller than Yevsey by an entire head, and her size was
heightened by her luxuriant glossy hair, which she wore combed high. Her
grey-blue eyes smiled serenely in a pale oval face.

The expression of the man in the sleeveless jacket was intelligent and
kind. His eyes were screwed up and his ears large. His motions were
slow. In walking he moved his apparently powerful body with a peculiar
sort of unconcern.

"Are we going to wander about here long, like unrepentant sinners?" he
asked in a soft bass.

"What else should we do?" asked Yakov.

"Let's sit down somewhere."

Olga bent her head to look into Klimkov's face.

"Have you ever been here before?"

"No. This is the first time."

"Do you find it interesting?"

"Yes, I like it."

He walked to her side trying for some reason to lift his feet higher; by
which walking became awkward. They sat down at a table, and called for
beer. Yakov made jokes, while Makarov whistled softly and regarded the
public with his screwed-up eyes.

"Have you any companions?" asked Olga.

"No, not one."

"That's what I thought at once. I thought you were a solitary person,"
she said smiling. "Lonely people have a peculiar gait. Altogether
there's something noticeable about them. How old are you?"

"I'll soon be nineteen."

"Look, there's a spy!" Makarov exclaimed quietly.

Yevsey jumped to his feet, but quickly resumed his seat, and looked at
Olga to see if she had observed his involuntary movement of alarm. He
could not make out, however. She was silently and attentively examining
Melnikov's dark figure, which slowly moved through the passageway
between the tables as if with an effort. Melnikov walked with bent neck
and eyes fastened on the ground. His arms hung at his side as if
dislocated.

"He walks like Judas to the aspen tree," said Yakov in a subdued voice.

"He must be drunk," observed Makarov.

"No, he's always like that," was on the tip of Yevsey's tongue. He
fidgetted in his chair.

Melnikov pushed himself through the crowd like a black stone, and was
soon lost in its gaily colored stream.

"Did you notice how he walked?" Olga asked Klimkov.

Yevsey nodded his head.

"Of course he's a mean man, but he must be unhappy and lonely."

Yevsey raised his head, and looked at her attentively, with expectation.

"Do you know I think that for a weak man loneliness is the most horrible
thing. It can drive him to anything."

"Yes," said Klimkov in a whisper, comprehending something. He looked
into the girl's face gratefully, and repeated in a louder tone, "Yes."

"I knew him four years ago," Makarov recounted. Makarov's face seemed
suddenly to have lengthened and dried up. His bones became visible, his
eyes opened and darkened and looked firmly into the distance. "He
delivered over one student, who gave us books to read, and a workingman,
Tikhonov. The student was exiled, Tikhonov stayed in prison about a
year, then died of typhus."

"Are you afraid of spies?" Olga suddenly asked Klimkov.

"Why?" Yevsey returned dully.

"You started so when you saw him."

Yevsey rubbing his throat vigorously answered without looking at her:

"That was--because I know him, too."

"Aha!" Makarov drawled, smiling.

"Ah, and such a quiet fellow!" exclaimed Yakov.

All now moved more closely around Klimkov as if desiring to hide him
from somebody's eyes. He did not understand their exclamations, nor
their movements and kind looks. He endeavored to keep quiet, fearing
that against his will he would say words that would at once destroy the
anxious yet pleasant half-dream of these minutes.

The fresh spring evening approached quietly and benignly, softening
sounds and colors. There was a red flush in the sky, and the brass
instruments sang a soft pensive strain.

"Well," said Makarov, "are we going to stay here, or are we going home?"

"What will they give here?" asked Olga.

"Chorus singing, tight-rope dancing, and all sorts of similar nonsense."

They decided to go home. On the way Olga asked Klimkov:

"Have you ever been in prison?"

"Yes," he answered, but in an instant added, "Not for long."

They took the tramway to their place of destination. Yevsey found
himself in a little room with blue paper on the walls. It was close and
stifling, now merry, now gloomy. Makarov played the guitar and sang
songs which Yevsey had never before heard. Yakov boldly discussed
everything in the world, laughing at the rich and swearing at the
officials. Then he danced, filling the whole room with the tread of his
feet and the cries and the whistling that accompany the dances. The
guitar tinkled the measure of the dance, and Makarov encouraged Yakov
with popular sayings and shouts.

"Go ahead, Yasha! Heigho! Who with merriment is blessed, Frightens
sorrow from his breast."

Olga looked on serenely and contentedly.

"Good, isn't it?" she asked Klimkov occasionally, smiling at him.

Drunk with a quiet joy unknown to him Klimkov smiled in response. He
forgot about himself, and felt the obstinate pricks within him only
rarely, for a few seconds at a time. Before his consciousness was able
to transform them into clear thought, they disappeared, without
recalling his life to him.

It was not until he had reached his home that he remembered his work,
his obligation to deliver these merry people into the hands of the
gendarmes. On recalling this duty he was seized with cold anguish. He
stopped in the middle of the room, his brain a void. Breathing became
difficult, and he passed his dry tongue over his lips. He drew off his
clothes quickly, and clad in nothing but his underwear seated himself at
the window. After several minutes of numbness he thought:

"I will tell them--her--Olga."

But that very minute he heard in his memory the angry and contemptuous
shouts of the joiner, "Vermin!" Klimkov shook his head in repudiation of
the idea. "I'll write to her. 'Take care,' I'll say--and I'll write
about myself."

This thought cheered him. The next minute, however, he reasoned:

"They'll find my letter when they make the search. They'll recognize my
handwriting, and then I'm ruined."

Someone within him commanded imperiously:

"You can't do anything of yourself. Do that which you have been bidden
to do."

He sat at the window almost until daybreak. It seemed to him that his
entire body shrivelled up and collapsed within him like a rubber ball
from which the air is expelled. Within grief relentlessly sucked at his
heart; without the darkness pressed upon him, full of faces lying in
wait. Amid them, like a red ball, lowered the sinister face of Sasha.
Klimkov crouched on his seat unable to think. Finally he rose
cautiously, and quietly hid himself under the blanket of the bed.




                              CHAPTER XXI


Life, like a horse that has stood idle too long, began to caper
strangely, refusing to surrender to the will of those who wanted to
control it--who wanted to control it just as senselessly, just as
cruelly as before.

Every evening the people connected with the Department of Safety, who
were utterly at a loss, spoke more and more alarmingly of the increasing
signs of universal excitement, of the secret league of peasants, who had
resolved to take the land by force from the landowners, of the
gatherings of workingmen who began to censure the administration openly,
of the power of the revolutionists, which clearly was growing from day
to day. Filip Filippovich, without abating, continued to scratch the
agents of the Department of Safety with his sharp-edged, irritating
voice. He overwhelmed everybody with reproaches for inactivity. And
Yasnogursky, smacking his lips, made tragic appeals to the agents while
pressing his hands to his bosom.

"My children, exert yourselves. Remember that service in behalf of the
Czar is not wasted."

But when Krasavin inquired gloomily, "What are we to do?" he merely
waved his hand, and stood for a long time with his deep black mouth
gaping strangely, unable to find a reply.

"Catch them!" he finally shouted.

Yevsey, who listened to everything, heard the dapper Leontyev cough
drily, and say to Sasha:

"Apparently our old methods of war upon the rebels are no good in these
days of universal madness."

"Ye-e-e-es, you can't put out fire with spittle," hissed Sasha, a smile
distorting his face.

Everybody was vexed and complained and shouted. Sasha drew up his long
legs, and cried in mocking derision:

"Aha! The gentlemen revolutionists are getting the better of us, eh?"

He laughed, and his laugh irritated everybody. Yevsey felt that this man
was not afraid of anything, and he endeavored not to hear his talk.

The spies tossed about the streets day and night, and every evening
brought long reports of their observations. They spoke to one another
mournfully:

"Is this the way to work nowadays? Dear me!"

Apparently no one knew a means by which the elemental growth of the
popular revolt could be restrained.

"They will comb our curls," said Piotr, cracking his knuckles.

"They'll take us off the list if we remain alive," Solovyov chimed in
dismally.

"If they would give us a pension at least! But they won't."

"A noose around our necks, not a pension," said Melnikov sombrely.

The spies were all exhausted and confused; all trembled in fear of the
morrow. Both they and the officials seemed to have faded. The people who
but a short time ago had been terrible in Yevsey's eyes, who had
appeared to him to be the powerful and invincible masters of life, now
ran from one corner of the Department of Safety to another, and
fluttered about in the streets like last year's dried leaves.

He observed with amazement that there were other people, cheerful,
simple, and trusting, who were able to walk into the future, carelessly
stepping over every obstacle and snare in their way, everyone of whom
was good in his own fashion, and everyone of whom clearly hinted at the
possibility of something better than himself. Yevsey compared them with
the spies, who, unwillingly with clandestine tread, crept along the
streets and into houses, and secretly spirited away these people at
night, in order to seclude them in prisons. He clearly realized that the
spies did not understand the aim of their work, did not believe that it
was needful for life, and did not think or reason when, instinctively,
according to their habit, they went about half-sick, half-drunk, driven
by different fears.

He liked the tranquil talk of Olga, her greyish blue eyes, and that live
strong pity for people which sounded in the girl's every word. He liked
the noisy, jesting, somewhat boastful talker Yakov, the careless
Aleksey, good-naturedly ready to give away his last shirt and penny to
anyone who asked for them. He met an increasing number of people new to
him, in each of whom he perceived faith in the victory of his dream. And
Yevsey involuntarily, insensibly, yielded to this faith.

Observing the quick crumbling of that power which he had hitherto
submissively served, Yevsey began to seek a way by which it would be
possible for him to circumvent and escape the necessity of betrayal. He
reasoned thus:

"If I go to them, then it will be impossible for me not to deliver them
up. To hand them over to another agent is still worse. I must tell them.
Now that they are becoming more powerful, it will be better for me to be
with them."

So, yielding to the attraction exerted upon him by persons new to him,
he visited Yakov more frequently, and became more insistent in
endeavoring to meet Olga. After each visit he reported in a quiet voice
to Sasha every detail of his intercourse with them--what they said, what
they read, and what they wanted to do. He enjoyed telling of them, in
fact, repeated their talk with secret satisfaction.

"Oh, a funeral," snuffled Sasha, angrily and sarcastically fixing
Klimkov with his dim eyes. "You must push them on yourself, if they are
inattentive. You must get in a hint that you can furnish them with type,
fix up a printing office. Is it possible you can't do that?"

Yevsey was silent.

"I am asking you, idiot, can you do it? Well?"

"I can."

"Why don't you speak out? Suggest it to them to-morrow, do you hear?"

"Very well."

It was easy for Klimkov to fulfil Sasha's order. In reporting about his
cousin's circle, he had not ventured to tell Sasha that both Olga and
Yakov had already asked him twice, whether he could obtain type for
them. Each time he had managed to get away without answering.

The next evening he went to Olga, carrying in his breast the dark
feeling of emptiness he always experienced in moments of nervous
tension. The resolution to fulfil the task was put into him by a
stranger's will; he did not have to think about it himself. This
resolution spread within him, and crowded out all fear, all inconvenient
sympathy.

But when the tall figure of Olga stood before him in the small dimly
lighted room, and behind her he saw her large shadow on the wall, which
moved to meet him, Klimkov lost courage, grew confused, and stood in the
doorway without speaking.

"I've just returned from the factory," said Olga pressing his hand. "We
had another meeting today. What's the matter with you? Are you tired?
Are you sick? Come in, sit down. Let's have some tea, yes?"

She turned the light in the lamp higher, and looked at Klimkov with a
smile. While getting the dishes ready she continued.

"I like to drink tea with you alone. I myself and all the comrades, we
talk a great deal. We must talk so much, we scarcely have time to think.
That's absurd, and bad, but it's true. So it's pleasant to see a
taciturn, thinking man. Will you have a glass of milk? It will do you
good. You are growing very thin, it seems to me."

Klimkov took the glass she offered him, and slowly sipped the watery
unsavory milk. He wanted to get through with the business at once.

"This is it. You said you need type."

"I did. I know you'll give it to us."

She said these words simply, with a confidence not to be shaken. They
were like a blow to Yevsey. He flung himself on the back of the chair
astonished.

"Why do you know?" he asked dully after a pause.

"When I asked you, you said neither yes nor no. So I thought you would
certainly say yes."

Yevsey did not understand. He tried not to meet her look.

"Why?" he queried again.

"It must be because I consider you a good man. I trust you."

"You mustn't trust," said Yevsey.

"Well, enough nonsense, you must."

"And suppose you've been mistaken?"

She shrugged her shoulders.

"Well, what of it?" After a pause she added calmly, "Not to believe a
man means not to respect him. It means to think him beforehand a liar,
an ugly person. Is that possible?"

"That's what is necessary," mumbled Yevsey.

"What?"

"I can furnish the type." He sighed. The task was accomplished. He was
silent for several minutes, sitting with his head bowed, his hands
pressed tight between his knees, while he listened suspiciously to the
rapid beating of his heart.

Olga leaned her elbows on the table, and in a low voice told him when
and where the promised type must be brought. He made a mental note of
her words, and repeated them to himself, desiring by this repetition to
hinder the growth of the painful feeling in his empty breast. Now that
he had fulfilled his duty a stifling nausea slowly arose from the depths
of his soul; and that feeling of an alien inside himself, of a
constantly widening cleft in his being, came over him in a tormenting
wave.

"You noticed," the girl said quietly, "how rapidly the people are
changing, how faith in other persons is growing, how quickly one gets to
know the other, how everybody seeks friends and finds them. All have
become simpler, more trusting, more willing to open up their souls. See
how good it is."

Her words trembled before him like moths, each with its own character.
Simple, kind, joyous, they all seemed fairly to smile. Unable to make up
his mind to look Olga in the face, Klimkov took to watching her shadow
on the wall over his shoulders, and drew upon it her blue eyes, the
medium-sized mouth with the pale lips, her face somewhat weary and
serious, but soft and kind.

"Shall I tell her now that all this is a hocus-pocus? That she will be
ruined?"

He answered himself:

"They'll drive me out. They'll swear at me, and drive me out."

"Do you know Zimin the joiner?" he suddenly asked.

"No, why?"

Yevsey sighed painfully.

"Just so. He's a good man, too, a Socialist."

"We are many," observed Olga with assurance.

"If she knew the joiner," Klimkov thought slowly, "I would tell her to
ask him about me. Then--"

The chair seemed to be giving way beneath him, the nausea, he thought,
would immediately gush into his throat. He coughed, and examined the
clean little room, which small and poor though it was, once more gripped
at his heart. The moon looked into the room round as Yakov's face, and
the light in the lamp seemed irritatingly superfluous.

"More and more people come into being who realize that they are called
upon by destiny to order life differently--upon truth and intellect,"
said Olga dreamily and simply.

Yevsey, yielding more and more to the power of the triumphant feeling
the girl and the quiet contracted room inspired in him, thought:

"I'll put out the light, fall on my knees before her, embrace her feet,
and tell her everything--and she will give me a kick."

But the fear of ill treatment did not deter him. He raised himself
heavily from his chair, and put out his hand to the lamp. Then his hand
dropped lazily, drowsily, his legs shook. He started.

"What are you doing?" demanded Olga.

He tried to answer, but a soft gurgle came instead of words. He dropped
to his knees, and seized her dress with trembling hands. She pressed one
hot hand against his forehead, and with the other grasped his shoulder,
at the same time hiding her legs under the table with a powerful
movement.

"No, no, get up!" she exclaimed sternly. "Oh my, how dreadful this is!
My dear, I understand, you are worn out, I am sorry for you, you are an
honorable man--I cannot--why, you don't ask for charity--then get up."

The warmth of her strong body roused in him a sharp sensual desire, and
he took the pushing of her hand as an encouraging caress.

"She's not a saint," darted through his mind, and he embraced the girl's
knees more vigorously.

"I tell you, get up!" she exclaimed in a muffled voice, no longer
persuasively, but in a tone of command.

He rose without having succeeded in saying anything. The girl had
confused his desires, his words, and feelings. She had put into his
breast something insulting and stinging.

"Understand--" he mumbled, spreading out his hands.

"Yes, yes, I understand--my God, always this on the road!" she
exclaimed. Looking into his face she went on harshly, "I am sick of it.
I am insulted. I can't be only a woman to everybody. Oh, God! How
pitiful you all are, after all."

She went to the window, and the table now separated her from Yevsey. A
dim, cold perplexity took hold of his heart; an insulting shame quietly
burned him.

"I tell you what--don't come to me--I beg of you. I'll feel awkward in
your presence, and you, too--please."

Yevsey took up his hat, flung his coat over his shoulders, and walked
away with bowed head. Several minutes later he was sitting on a bench at
the gate of a house, mumbling as if drunk:

"The baggage!" But he had to strain himself to bring out the epithet. It
was not genuine. He ransacked all the shameful names for a woman, all
ugly oaths, and poured them over the tall, shapely figure of Olga,
desiring to sully every bit of her with mud, to darken her from head to
foot, in order not to see her face and eyes. But oaths did not cling to
her. She stood before his eyes, stretching out her hands, pushing him
away, serene and white. Her image robbed his oaths of their force, and
though Yevsey persistently roused anger within himself, he felt only
shame.

He looked for a long time at the round solitary ball of the moon, which
moved in the sky in bounds, as if leaping like a large bright rubber
ball; and he heard the quiet sound of its motion, resembling the
beatings of a heart.

He did not love this pale melancholy disk, which always seemed to watch
him with cold obstinacy in the heavy movements of his life. It was late,
but the city was not yet asleep. From all sides floated sounds.

"Formerly the nights were quieter," thought Klimkov. He rose, and walked
away, without putting his arms into the sleeves of his coat, his hat
pushed back on his neck.

"Well, all right, wait," he thought, doing violence to himself. Finally
he decided, "I'll deliver them over, and as a reward I'll ask to be
transferred to another city. That's all."

He reluctantly surrendered himself to the desires to revenge himself
upon Olga, and strengthened the feeling with a supreme effort.
Nevertheless it continued to cover his heart with a thin scale, and was
constantly breaking down so that he had to fortify it again. Beneath
this desire unexpectedly appeared another, not strong, but restless. He
wanted to see the girl once more, wanted to listen in silence to her
talk, to sit with her in her room. He quenched the longing with thoughts
that designedly lowered Olga.

"If I had a lot of money, you would dance naked before me. I know your
lewd set." But to himself he said obdurately, "You won't sully her, you
won't attain it."

He wanted this or the other, but neither this nor the other was
attainable. In calmer moments he realized this truth, which fairly
crushed him, and plunged him into a heavy sleep troubled by nightmares.




                              CHAPTER XXII


But Yevsey pursued his work precisely. He gave Makarov a few heavy
bundles of type in three instalments, and cleverly found out from him
where the printing-press would be established. This elicited public
commendation from Sasha.

"Good boy! Now we have six in our hands--that's not so bad, Klimkov. You
will receive a reward."

Yevsey treated his praise indifferently. When Sasha was gone, the sharp
face of Maklakov, which had grown thin, leaped into his eyes. The spy,
sitting in a dark corner of the room on a sofa, looked into Yevsey's
face, twirling his mustache, frowning, and vexed. Something in his look
provoked Yevsey, who turned aside.

"Klimkov, come here," the spy called out.

Klimkov turned back, and seated himself next to Maklakov.

"Is it true that you delivered up your brother?" asked Maklakov in a low
voice.

"My cousin."

"You're not sorry?"

"No." Yevsey quietly and angrily repeated the phrase that the officials
often uttered. "For us, as for soldiers, there is neither mother, nor
father, nor brother, only enemies of the Czar and our country."

"Well, of course," said Maklakov, and smiled. After a pause he added,
"Really you are a 'good boy.'"

By his voice and smile Klimkov understood that the spy was making sport
of him. He felt offended.

"Maybe I am sorry."

"Yes?"

"But if I have to serve honestly and faithfully--"

"Of course. I'm not disputing with you, you queer fellow."

Then Maklakov lighted a cigarette, and asked Yevsey:

"Why are you sitting here?"

"Oh, for no reason. I have nothing to do."

Maklakov slapped him on his knee, and suddenly said:

"You're a poor unfortunate, brother, little man."

Yevsey rose.

"Timofey Vasilyevich," he began in a trembling voice.

"Well, what is it?"

"Tell me--"

"Tell you what?"

"I don't know."

"Well, I don't either."

Klimkov mumbled:

"I am sorry for my cousin--and there's a girl there, too. They are all
better than we, by God they are! Really and truly they're better."

Maklakov also rose to his feet, stretched himself, and stepping to the
door remarked coldly:

"Go to the devil!"

Yevsey remained alone.

"Well, there," thought he, "there's another fellow--all alike. First
they draw me on, then they push me away."

The vengeful feeling toward Olga awoke in him, and blended with his
sense of ill-will toward all people, which found ample nourishment in
his soul powerless to resist because of the poison of many insults.
Yevsey vigorously set to work to enmeshing himself in a net of new
moods, and he served now with a dull zeal hitherto unknown to him.

Gradually the night came upon which it had been decided to arrest Olga,
Yakov, and all implicated in the affair of the printing-press whom
Yevsey had succeeded in tracking. He knew that the printing-office was
located in the wing of a house set in a garden and occupied by a large
red-bearded man named Kostya and his wife, a stout, pock-marked woman.
He also knew that Olga was the servant of these two people. Kostya's
head was close cropped, and his wife had a grey face and roaming eyes.
Upon Yevsey both produced the impression of witless persons, or persons
who have lain in a hospital a long time.

"What fearful people they are!" he remarked to Yakov when he pointed
them out one evening during a party at Makarov's lodging.

Yakov loved to boast of his acquaintances. He proudly shook his curly
head, and explained with an air of importance:

"It's from their hard life. They work in cellars at night, where it is
damp, and the air is close. They get their rest in prison. Both of them
are fugitives, who live on other people's passports. Such a life turns
everybody inside out and upside down. They're jolly people, too. When
Kostya begins to tell about his life, you would think it is nothing but
tears, but he talks so that when he is done, your sides ache from
laughing. You can't trap such people very easily."

Klimkov decided to get a last look at Olga. He learned through what
street the prisoners would be led, and went to meet them, trying to
persuade himself that all this did not touch him. All the time he was
thinking about the girl.

"She'll certainly be frightened. She'll cry."

He walked, as always, keeping in the shade. He tried once or twice to
whistle carelessly, but never succeeded in checking the steady stream of
recollections about Olga. He saw her calm face, her trusting eyes,
listened to her somewhat broken voice, and remembered her words:

"It's no use for you to talk so badly about people, Klimkov. Why, have
you nothing to reproach yourself with? Suppose everybody were to say
what you say, 'It's hard for me to live, because everybody is so mean,'
why, that would be ridiculous. Can't you see? Value yourself highly, but
do not lower others. What right have you to do that?"

When listening to Olga Yevsey had always felt that she spoke the truth.
Now, too, he had no cause to doubt it. But he was filled with the sheer
desire to see her frightened, pitiful, and in tears.

From afar the wheels of an equipage began to rumble, the horses' shoes
clattered. Klimkov pressed himself against the gate of a house, and
waited. The carriage rolled by him. He looked at it unconcernedly, saw
two gloomy faces, the grey beard of the driver, and the large mustache
of the sergeant at his side.

"That's all," thought he, "and I didn't get a chance to see her."

But another carriage came rolling from the end of the street, and passed
him quickly. Yevsey listened to the cut of the whip on the horse's body,
and its tired snorting. The sounds seemed to hang motionless in the air.
He thought they would hang there forever.

Olga with her head wrapped in a kerchief was sitting at the side of a
young gendarme. On the coach box beside the driver rose the figure of
the policeman. A familiar face darted by, white and good. Yevsey
understood more than saw that Olga was perfectly calm, was not in the
least frightened. For some reason he suddenly grew glad, and said to
himself as if retorting to an unpleasant interlocutor:

"She won't cry, not she!"

Closing his eyes and smiling he stood a while longer. Then he heard
steps and the jingling of spurs, and he comprehended that the men
prisoners were being led along the street. He tore himself from the
place, and trying to make his footsteps inaudible, quickly ran down the
street, and turned the first corner. He kept up the same rapid pace
almost the entire way to his home at which he arrived exhausted and
covered with sweat.

The evening of the next day Filip Filippovich casting his blue rays upon
Yevsey said ceremoniously in a thinner voice than usual:

"I congratulate you, Klimkov, on your fine achievement. I hope it will
be the first link in a long chain of successes."

Klimkov shifted from one foot to the other, and quietly spread out his
arms, as if desiring to free himself from the invisible chain.

There were a few spies in the room. They listened in silence to the
sound of the saw, and looked at Yevsey, who without seeing them felt
their glances upon his skin. He felt awkward and annoyed.

When Filip Filippovich had finished talking, Yevsey quietly asked him
for a transfer to another city.

"That's nonsense, brother," said Filip Filippovich drily. "It's a shame
to be a coward, especially at this time. What's the matter? Your first
success, yet you want to be running off. I myself know when a transfer
is necessary. Go."

"There, they've rewarded me," thought Klimkov, dismally and with a sense
of hurt. But he was in error. The reward came from Sasha.

"Hey, you morel, you," he called to him, "there, take this."

Touching Yevsey's hand with his dank yellow hand, he thrust a piece of
paper into his grasp, and walked away.

Yakov Zarubin leaped up to Yevsey.

"How much?"

"Twenty-five rubles," said Klimkov, unfolding the bill with reluctant
fingers.

"How many people were there?"

"Seven."

"Seven? Ugh!"

Zarubin raised his eyes to the ceiling, and mumbled:

"Twice, no three times, seven is twenty-one. Four into seven--three and
a half per person."

He whistled softly, and looking around announced:

"Sasha got a hundred and fifty, and his bill of expenses in the affair
was sixty-three rubles. They do us fools. Well, what now, Yevsey? Give
us a treat. For joy!"

"Come," said Klimkov, looking askance at the money. He could not make up
his mind to put it in his pocket.




                             CHAPTER XXIII


On the way Zarubin said in a business-like way:

"After all your people seem to have been trash."

"Why?" asked Klimkov offended. He sighed, and said in a lower voice.
"Not trash a bit."

"They gave little for them, very little. Ugh! I know how such things are
done. You can't fool me, no, indeed. Krasavin once caught a single
revolutionist, and he got a hundred rubles. Do you hear? And they sent
him another hundred from St. Petersburg. Solovyov got seventy-five for
an illegal lady. You see? And Maklakov, Ugh! Of course he catches
advocates, professors, writers, who have a special price. They are not
dangerous, but I suppose it must be hard to catch them."

Zarubin spoke without cease. Klimkov was satisfied with his tattle,
which kept him from thinking of the oppressive something that lay in his
breast like a cold stone.

The two youths entered a public house. Zarubin in the confident voice of
a habitué asked the tall, thin, one-eyed housekeeper:

"Is Lydia well? And Kapa? There, Yevsey, you will get acquainted with
Kapa. She's a girl, I tell you, a monster! She'll teach you what you
wouldn't learn in a hundred years without her. Well, give us lemonade
and cognac. First of all, Yevsey, we must take a bit of cognac with
lemonade. That's a sort of champagne. It lifts you up into the air at
once. All right?"

"All the same to me."

The house, apparently, was an expensive one. The windows were hung with
sumptuous curtains. The furniture seemed unusual to Yevsey, the prettily
dressed girls, proud and inaccessible. All this distracted him. He
squeezed himself into a corner, stepping aside to let the girls pass,
who went by him as if they did not notice him. Their clothes grazed his
legs. The half-dressed bodies, painted and already sweaty, lazily
floated by in oppressive heaps. Their eyes set in pencilled lids turned
in their orbits. The eyes were all large, though dead and uniform,
notwithstanding their various colors.

"Students?" asked a reddish girl of her companion, a stout brunette with
a high bare bosom and a blue ribbon about her neck. The one who
whispered in her ear made a grimace at Yevsey. He turned away from her,
and asked Zarubin in annoyance:

"Do they know who we are?"

"Yes, of course. That's why they take only half the price for entrance,
and discount twenty-five per cent. from the bill."

Yevsey emptied two beakers of the sparkling beverage. Though it did not
make him merrier, everything around him, nevertheless, assumed a more
uniform, less irritating aspect. Two girls seated themselves at their
table, Lydia and Kapitolina, the one tall and strong, the other broad
and heavy. Lydia's head was absurdly small in proportion to her body;
her forehead, too, was small, her chin was sharp and prominent, her
mouth round, her teeth, little and fine, like those of a fish, and her
eyes dark and cunning. Kapitolina seemed put together from a number of
balls of various sizes. Her protruding eyes were also like balls, and
dull as a blind person's.

Little black Zarubin was restless as a fly. He smelt of everything,
turned his head from side to side, moved his legs up and down, back and
forth, sent his thin dark hands flying over the table to seize
everything and feel everything. Yevsey suddenly began to feel a heavy
dull irritation rising in him against Zarubin.

"The skunk!" he thought. "He brought me a monster for my money, and
chose a pretty one for himself."

But Yevsey knew that his annoyance at Zarubin had a deeper-seated cause
than this. He filled a large glass of cognac, swallowed it, and opened
his burned mouth and rolled his eyes.

"Capital!" shouted Yakov.

The girls laughed, and for a minute Yevsey was deaf and blind, as if he
had fallen fast asleep.

"This Lydia, Yevsey, my true friend, is a wise girl, oh, so wise!"
Zarubin pulled Yevsey's sleeve to rouse him. "Whenever I merit the
attention of the officials, I will take her away from here, will marry
her, and will establish her in my business. Yes, Lydia darling? Ugh!"

"We'll see," replied the girl, languidly, looking sidewise at his oily
eyes.

"Why are you silent, friend Yevsey?" asked Kapitolina, slapping Yevsey's
shoulder with her heavy hand.

"She addresses everybody by the first name," Yakov remarked.

"All the same to me," said Yevsey, without looking at the girl, and
moving away from her. "Only tell her that I don't like her, and she
should go away."

For a few seconds all kept silence.

"To the devil with you!" said Kapitolina, thickly and calmly. Propping
herself on the table with her hands, she slowly lifted her heavy body
from the chair. Yevsey was annoyed because she was not offended. He
looked at her, and said:

"A species of elephant."

"How impolite!" shouted Lydia compassionately.

"Ugh! Yes, Yevsey. That's impolite, brother. Kapitolina Nikolayevna is
an excellent girl. All connoisseurs value her."

"To me it's all the same," said Yevsey. "I want beer."

"Hey, there, beer!" shouted Zarubin. "Kapa dear, be so kind as to see we
get beer."

The stout girl turned, and left scraping her feet. Zarubin bending over
to Yevsey began insinuatingly and didactically:

"You see, Yevsey, of course this is an establishment of such a kind, and
so on, but still the girls are human beings like you and me. Why should
you insult them uselessly? Ugh! They're not all here of their own
accord."

"Stop!" said Klimkov.

He wanted everything around him to be quiet. He wanted the girls to
cease floating in the air, like melancholy drifts of spring clouds torn
by the wind. He wanted the shaven pianist with the dark blue face, like
that of a drowned person, to stop rapping his fingers on the yellow
teeth of the piano, which resembled the jaw of a huge monster, a monster
that roared and shrieked loud laughter. He wanted the curtains of the
windows to cease flapping so strangely, as if someone's unseen and
spiteful hand were pulling at them from the street. Olga dressed in
white should station herself at the door. Then he would rise, walk
around the room, and would strike everybody in the face with all his
might. Let Olga see that they were all repulsive to him, and that she
wasn't right, and understood nothing.

The complaining words of Zarubin settled themselves obstinately in his
ears:

"We came here to make merry, but you at once begin a scandal."

Yevsey, his whole body swaying, gave a dull glance into Yakov's face,
and suddenly said to himself with cold precision:

"On account of that--sneak, I fell into this pit of an infernal life.
All on account of him!"

He took a full bottle of beer into his hands, filled a glass for
himself, drank it out, and without letting go of the bottle, rose from
his seat.

"The money is mine, not yours, you skunk!"

"What of it? We are comrades!"

Zarubin's black head, cropped and prickly, fell back. Yevsey saw the
sharp gleaming little eyes on the swarthy face, saw the set teeth.

"You wait. Sit down."

Klimkov waved the bottle, and hit him in the face, aiming at his eyes.
The ruddy blood gleamed oily and moist, awakening a ferocious joy in
Klimkov. He swung his hand once again, pouring the beer over himself.
Everybody began to cry "Oh, oh!" to scream, and rock. Somebody's nails
drove themselves into Klimkov's face. He was seized by the arms and
legs, lifted from the floor, and carried off. Somebody spat warm sticky
saliva into his face, squeezed his throat, and tore his hair.

He came to his senses in the police station, all in tatters, scratched,
and wet. He at once remembered everything.

"What will happen now?" was his first thought, though unaccompanied by
alarm.

A police officer whom he knew advised him to wash his face and ride
home.

"Are they going to try me?"

"I don't know," said the police officer, who sighed, and added
enviously, "Hardly. Your department is a power. It is permitted
everything. So they'll take care of you."

Yevsey smiled.

After several days of a sort of even indistinct life without impressions
and excitement, Yevsey was summoned to the presence of Filip
Filippovich, who shouted shrilly a long time.

"You, idiot, you ought to set other people an example of good conduct.
You ought not to make scandals. Please remember that. If I learn
anything of the same kind about you, I'll place you under arrest for a
month. Do you hear?"

Klimkov was frightened. He shrank within himself, and began to live
quietly, silently, unobserved, trying to exhaust himself as much as
possible, in order to escape thought.

When he met Yakov Zarubin, he saw a small red scar over his right eye;
which new feature on the mobile face was pleasant to him. The
consciousness that he had found the courage and the power to strike a
person raised him in his own eyes.

"Why did you do it to me?" asked Yakov.

"So," said Yevsey. "I was drunk."

"Oh, you devil! You know what a face means in our service. We can't
afford to spoil it."

Zarubin demanded a treat for a good dinner from Yevsey.




                              CHAPTER XXIV


Klimkov did not succeed in hiding himself from the power of hostile
thoughts. They appeared again.

The news spread among the spies that some of the ministers had also been
bribed by the enemies of the Czar and Russia. They had formed a cabal to
take his power from him, and replace the existing good Russian order of
life by another order borrowed from foreign governments, which of course
would be pernicious to the Russian people. Now these ministers issued a
manifesto in which they claimed that with the will and consent of the
Czar they announced that soon freedom would be given to the people to
assemble wherever they pleased, to speak about whatever interested them,
and to write and publish everything they needed to in newspapers.
Moreover, they would even be granted the liberty not to believe in God.

The authorities, dismal and demoralized, again began to rush about
anxiously. They again spoke kindly to the spies; and though they did not
demand anything of the agents, nor advise them what to do, it was
apparent that preparations were being made for the disclosure of
something significant and important. For whole hours Filip Filippovich
would consult secretly with Krasavin, Sasha, Solovyov, and other
experienced agents; after which they all went about gloomy and
preoccupied, and gave brief, unintelligible responses to the questions
of their comrades.

Once the voice of Sasha, virulent and breaking with excitement leaked
through the door standing slightly ajar between the outer office and the
cabinet of Filip Filippovich.

"It's not about the constitution, not about politics that we ought to
speak to them. We must tell them that the new order would destroy
them--the quiet among them would die of starvation, the more forward
would rot in prison. What sort of men have we in our service? Hybrids,
degenerates, the psychically sick, stupid animals."

"You talk God knows what," Filip Filippovich piped aloud.

The mournful voice of Yasnogursky was heard next.

"What a scheme you have! My good man, I can't understand what you're
driving at."

Piotr, Grokhotov, Yevsey, and two new spies were sitting in the office.
One of the novices was a reddish, hook-nosed man with large freckles on
his face and gold glasses; the other shaven, bald, and red-cheeked with
a broad nose and a purple birthmark on his neck near his left ear. They
listened attentively to Sasha's talk, glancing at each other sidewise.
All kept silent. Piotr rose a number of times, and walked to the door.
Finally he coughed aloud near it, upon which an invisible hand
immediately closed it. The bald spy carefully felt his nose with his
thick fingers, and asked quietly:

"Who was it he called hybrids?"

At first nobody responded, then Grokhotov sighing humbly said:

"He calls everybody hybrid."

"A smart beast!" exclaimed Piotr smiling dreamily. "Rotten to the core,
but just see how his power keeps rising! That's what education will do
for you."

The bald-headed spy looked at everybody with his mole eyes, and again
asked hesitatingly:

"What does he mean--eh, eh--does he mean us?"

"Politics," said Grokhotov. "Politics is a wise business. It's not
squeamish."

"If I had received an education, I too, would have turned up trumps,"
declared Piotr.

The red-headed spy carelessly swung himself on his chair, his mouth
frequently gaping in a wide yawn.

Sasha emerged from the cabinet, livid and dishevelled. He stopped at the
door, and looked at everybody.

"Eavesdropping, eh?" he asked sarcastically.

The rest of the spies dropped into the office one by one, wearily and
dismally, flinging various remarks at one another. Maklakov came in an
ill humor. The look in his eyes was sharp and insulting. He passed
quickly into the cabinet, and banged the door behind him.

"Tables are going to be turned," Sasha said to Piotr. "We'll be the
secret society, and they'll remain patent fools. That's what's going to
happen. Hey," he shouted, "no one is to leave the office. There's going
to be a meeting."

All grew still. Yasnogursky came out from the cabinet with a broad smile
widening his large mouth. His protuberant fleshy ears reached to the
back of his neck. All sleek and slippery, he produced the impression of
a large piece of soap. He walked among the crowd of spies pressing their
hands and kindly and humbly nodding his head. Suddenly he walked off
into a corner, and began to address the agents in a lachrymose voice:

"Good servants of the Czar, it is with a heart penetrated by grief that
I address myself to you--to you, men without fear, men without reproach,
true children of the Czar, your father, and of the true Orthodox Church,
your mother,--to you I speak."

"Look at him howling!" somebody whispered near Yevsey, who thought he
heard Yasnogursky utter an ugly oath.

"You already know of the fresh cunning of the enemy, of the new and
baneful plot. You read the proclamation of Minister Bulygin, in which it
is said that our Czar wishes to renounce the power entrusted to him by
our Lord God over Russia and the Russian people. All this, dear comrades
and brothers, is the infernal game of people who have delivered over
their souls to foreign capitalists. It is a new attempt to ruin our
sacred Russia. What do they want to attain with the Duma they have
promised? What do they want to attain by this very constitution and
liberty?"

The spies moved closer together.

"In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, let us examine the
snares of the devils in the light of truth. Let us look at them with our
simple Russian mind, and we'll see how they scatter like dust before our
eyes. Just look! They want to deprive the Czar of his divine power, his
liberty to rule the country according to the dictates from on High. They
want to arrange popular elections, so that the people should send to the
Czar their representatives, who would promulgate laws abridging his
power. They hope that our people, ignorant and drunk, will permit
themselves to be bought with wine and money, and will bring into the
Czar's palace those who are pointed out to them by the traitors,
liberals and revolutionists. And whom will they point out? Jews, Poles,
Armenians, Germans, and other strangers, enemies of Russia."

Klimkov observed that Sasha standing in back of Yasnogursky, smiled
sardonically like the devil. He inclined his head, to keep the sick spy
from noticing him.

"This band of venal swindlers will surround the bright throne of our
Czar and will close his wise eyes to the destiny of our country. They
will deliver Russia over into the hands of strangers and foreigners. The
Jews will establish their government in Russia, the Poles their
government, the Armenians and the Georgians theirs, the Letts theirs,
and other paupers whom Russia took under the shelter of her powerful
hand, theirs. They will establish their governments, and when we
Russians remain alone--then--then--it means--"

Sasha standing at Yasnogursky's side, began to whisper into his ear. The
old man waved him off in annoyance, and said aloud:

"Then the Germans, and the English will rush upon us, and will clutch us
in their greedy paws. The destruction of Russia is threatening us, dear
comrades, my friends. Have a care!"

The last words of his speech were uttered in a shout, then he lapsed
into silence lasting about a minute, after which he raised his hand over
his head and resumed:

"But our Czar has friends. They watch over his power and over his glory
like faithful dogs unbought. They have organized a society for war upon
the dastardly conspiracies of the revolutionists, upon the constitution,
and every abomination destructive to us, the true Russian people. Counts
and princes celebrated for their services to the Czar in Russia are
entering this organization, governors submissive to the will of the Czar
and faithful to the covenant of our sacred past. Perhaps even the very
highest--"

Sasha again stopped Yasnogursky. The old man listened to him, grew red,
waved his hands, and suddenly shouted:

"Well, speak yourself. What does it mean? What right have you--I don't
want to--"

He gave an odd little leap, and pushing the crowd of spies apart, walked
away. Sasha now took his place, and stood there tall and stooping with
head thrust forward. Looking around with his red eyes, and rubbing his
hands, he asked sharply:

"Well, did you understand?"

"We did--we did," several voices sounded sullenly and half-heartedly.

"Of course!" exclaimed Sasha in derision. Then he began to speak,
pronouncing every word with the precision of a hammer-blow. His voice
rang with malice.

"Let those also listen who are wiser. Let them explain my words to the
fools. The revolutionists, the liberals, our Russian gentry in general,
have conquered. Do you understand? The administration has resolved to
yield to their demands, it wants to give them a constitution. What does
a constitution mean to you? Starvation, death, because you are idlers
and do-nothings, you are no good for any sort of work. It means prison
for the most of you, because most of you have merited it; for a few
others it means the hospital, the insane asylum, because there are a
whole lot of half-witted men, psychically sick, among you. The new order
of life, if established, will make quick work of you all. The police
department will be destroyed, the Department of Safety will be shut
down, you will be turned out into the street. Do you understand?"

All were silent, as if turned to stone.

"Then I would go away somewhere," Klimkov thought.

"I think it's plain," said Sasha, after a period of silence. As he again
embraced his audience in his look, the red band on his forehead seemed
to have spread over his whole face, and his face to become covered with
a leaden blue.

"You ought to realize that this change is not advantageous to you, that
you don't want it. Therefore you must fight against it now. Isn't that
so? For whom, in whose interest, are you going to fight? For your own
selves, for your interests, for your right to live as you have lived up
to this time. Is what I say clear? What can we do? Let everyone think
about this question."

A heavy noise suddenly arose in the close room, as if a huge sick breast
were sighing and rattling. Some of the spies walked away silently and
sullenly, with drooping heads. One man grumbled in vexation:

"They tell us this and they tell us that. Why don't they increase our
salaries instead?"

"They keep frightening us, always frightening us."

In the corner near Sasha about a dozen men had gathered. Yevsey quietly
moved up to the group, and heard the enraptured voice of Piotr:

"That's the way to speak! Twice two are four, and all are aces."

"No, I'm not satisfied," said Solovyov sweetly with a prying note in his
voice. "Think! What does it mean to think? Everyone may think in his own
way. You should tell me what to do."

"You _have_ been told!" put in Krasavin roughly and sharply.

"_I_ don't understand," Maklakov declared calmly.

"You?" shouted Sasha. "You lie! You do understand!"

"No."

"And I say you do, but you're a coward, you're a nobleman--and--and--and
I know you."

"Maybe," said Maklakov. "But do you know what you want?" He spoke in so
cold a tone, and put so much significance into his voice, that Yevsey
trembled and thought:

"Will Sasha strike him?"

Sasha, however, merely repeated the question in a screeching voice:

"I? Do I know what I want?"

"Yes."

"I will tell you." Sasha raised his voice threateningly. "I am soon
going to die. I have nobody to fear. I am a stranger to life. I live
with hatred of good people before whom you in your thoughts crouch on
your knees. Don't you know? You lie. You are a slave, a slave in your
soul. A lackey, though you are a nobleman, and I am a muzhik, a
perspicacious muzhik. Even though I attended the university, nothing has
corrupted me."

Yevsey felt that Sasha's words crawled in his heart like spiders,
enmeshing him in gluey threads, squeezing him, tying him up, and drawing
him to Sasha. He pressed through to the front, and stood alongside the
combatants trying to see the faces of both at the same time.

"I know my enemy. It's you, the gentry. You are gentlemen, even as
spies. You are abhorrent everywhere, everywhere execrable, men and
women, writers and spies. But I know a means for having done with you
gentlemen, the gentry. I know a way. I see what ought to be done with
you, how to destroy you."

"That's the very point that's interesting, not your hysterics," said
Maklakov thrusting his hands in his pockets.

"Yes, it's interesting to you? Very well. I'll tell you."

Sasha evidently wanted to sit down, for he vacillated like a pendulum.
He looked around as he spoke without pause, breathless from quick
utterance.

"Who orders life? The gentry. Who spoiled the pretty animal man? Who
made him a dirty beast, a sick beast? You, the gentry. Hence all this,
the whole of life, ought to be turned against you. So we must open all
the ulcers of life, and drown you in the stream of abomination that will
flow from them, in the vomit of the people you have poisoned. A curse on
you! The time of your execution and destruction has come. All those who
have been mutilated by you are rising against you, and they'll choke
you, crush you, you understand? Yes, that's how it will be. Nay, it
already is. In some cities they have already tried to find out how
firmly the heads of the gentlemen are fixed on their shoulders. You know
that, don't you?"

Sasha staggered back, and leaned against the wall, stretching his arms
forward, and choking and gasping over a broken laugh. Maklakov glanced
at the men standing around him, and asked also with a laugh:

"Did you understand what he said?"

"One can say whatever he pleases," replied Solovyov, but the next
instant added hastily, "In one's own company. The most interesting thing
would be to find out for certain whether a secret society has actually
been organized in St. Petersburg and for what purpose."

"That's what we want to know," said Krasavin in a tone of demand. "And
what sort of people are in it, too."

"In reality, brothers, the revolution has been transferred to other
quarters," exclaimed Piotr, merrily and animatedly.

"If there really are princes in that society," Solovyov meditated
dreamily, "then our business ought to improve."

"You have twenty thousand in the bank anyway, old devil."

"And maybe thirty. Count again," said Solovyov in an offended tone, and
stepped aside.

Sasha coughed dully and hoarsely; while Maklakov regarded him with a
scowl. Yevsey gradually freed himself from the thin shackles of the
attraction that the sick spy had unexpectedly begun to exert upon him.
His talk, which at first had seized Klimkov, now dissolved and
disappeared from his soul like dust under rain.

"What are you looking at me for?" shouted Sasha at Maklakov.

Maklakov turned and walked away without answering. Yevsey involuntarily
followed him.

"Did you understand anything?" Maklakov suddenly inquired of Yevsey.

"I don't like it."

"No? Why?"

"He's always rancorous, and there's rancor enough without him."

"Yes, so there is," said Maklakov, nodding his head. "There's rancor
enough."

"And it's impossible to understand anything," Klimkov continued, looking
around cautiously. "Everybody speaks differently--"

The words had scarcely left his mouth when he grew alarmed, and glanced
sidewise at Maklakov's face. The spy pensively brushed the dust from his
hat with his handkerchief, apparently oblivious of the dangerous words.

"Well, good-by," he said, holding out his hand to Yevsey. Yevsey wanted
to accompany him, but the spy put on his hat, and twirling his mustache,
walked out without so much as looking at him.




                              CHAPTER XXV


Something strange, like a dream, grew in the city, rushing onward with
irresistible rapidity. People lost their fear completely. On the faces
which only a short time ago had been flat and humble, an expression of
conscious power and preoccupation now appeared sharply and clearly. All
recalled builders preparing to pull down an old structure, and busily
considering the best way of beginning the work.

Almost every day the workingmen in the factory suburb openly arranged
meetings, at which known revolutionists appeared, who in the very
presence of the police and officials of the Department of Safety sharply
censured the order of life, and pointed out that the manifesto of the
minister convoking the Duma was an attempt of the administration to
pacify the people, who were stirred up by misfortune, in order to
deceive them in the end, as always. The speakers urged their listeners
not to believe anybody except their own reason.

Once when a rebel orator shouted, "The people alone are the true and
legal masters of life; to them belong the whole earth and all freedom,"
a triumphant roar came in reply, "True, brother!"

Yevsey deafened by the shouts turned away, and met Melnikov who had been
standing in back of him. His eyes burned, he was black and dishevelled.
He flapped his arms, as a crow flaps its wings, and bawled:

"Tr-r-r-ue!"

Klimkov pulled the skirt of his coat in amazement, and whispered in a
low voice:

"What ails you? The speaker is a Socialist. He's under surveillance."

Melnikov blinked his eyes, and asked:

"He?" Without awaiting a reply, he shouted again, "Hurray! True!" Then
to Yevsey very angrily, "Get out! It's all the same who speaks the
truth."

Yevsey smiled timidly at the new speeches. He looked around helplessly
for some person in the crowd with whom he might speak openly; but on
finding a pleasant face that inspired confidence, he sighed and thought:

"I'll begin to talk with him, and he'll at once understand that I'm a
spy."

He frequently heard the revolutionists speak of the necessity of
arranging another life upon earth. Dreams of his childhood returned,
broadened and filled with a clear content. He believed in the hot
fearless words. But the faith grew feebly and lazily upon the shaky,
slimy soil of his soul, choked with impressions, poisoned by fear, and
exhausted by violence. His faith was like a child suffering with
rachitis, bow-legged, with large eyes always gazing into the distance.

Yevsey admired the beautiful growth of the rebellion. But he lacked the
power to fall in love with it. He believed words. He did not believe
people. The dreams stirring his heart died the instant they touched it.
A timorous spectator he walked along the shore of a stream without the
desire to plunge into its soul-refreshing waves. At the same time he
longed wistfully for someone to triumph, for someone to make life calm
and pleasing, and point out a comfortable place in it where he might
find repose.

At first he could not comprehend why both the revolutionists and the
officers of the spies censured the administration, why both asserted
that someone wanted to deceive the people. When the people themselves,
however, came out into the street, and began to speak, Yevsey stopped to
think about this question.

The spies walked about slowly, indolently; they all grew strange to one
another, maintaining sullen silence, and looking into the eyes of their
comrades suspiciously, as if expecting something dangerous from one
another. The officials ceased to talk, and sank into the background.
They gave out no plans of action, and said nothing new.

"Has nothing been heard in regard to this St. Petersburg league of
princes?" Krasavin asked almost every day.

Once Piotr joyously announced:

"Boys, Sasha has been summoned to St. Petersburg. He'll fix up a game
there, you'll see."

Viakhirev, the hook-nosed, reddish spy, remarked lazily:

"The League of Russian People has been permitted to organize fighting
bands to kill the revolutionists. I'll go there, I'm a good shot."

"A pistol is a fine thing," said someone. "You shoot, and then run
away."

"How simply they speak about everything," thought Yevsey. He
involuntarily recalled other conversations--Olga and Makarov--which he
impatiently pushed away from himself.

Sasha returned from St. Petersburg, as it were stronger. Concentrated
green sparks gleamed in his dim eyes. His voice had become deeper, his
entire body seemed to have straightened and grown sounder.

"What are we going to do?" asked Piotr.

"You'll soon find out," answered Sasha, showing his teeth.

Autumn came as always quiet and melancholy. But the people did not
remark its advent. Yesterday bold and noisy, to-day they came out into
the streets still bolder, still more confident, and upheld Yevsey's
faith in their victory, in the nearness, of a calm, peaceful,
comfortable life.

Then came the fabulously terrible and marvellous days, when all the
people ceased to work, and the customary life that for so long had held
oppressive sway, oppressive in its cruelty and aimless play, suddenly
ceased, as if crushed by a giant embrace. The people refused the city,
their ruler, bread, fire, and water. And for a number of nights it stood
in darkness, hungry, thirsty, sullen, and affronted. During those dark,
insulting nights, the working-people walked through the streets with
song, childish joy shining in their eyes. For the first time they
clearly saw their power, and themselves were amazed at its significance.
They understood their might over life, and good-naturedly exulted,
looking at the blinded houses, the motionless dead machines, the
dumbfounded police, the closed, ever-hungry jaws of the shops and
restaurants, the frightened faces, the humble figures of those persons
who had never learned to work, but only to eat much, and who therefore
considered themselves the best blood in the city. Their power over
people had been torn from their impotent hands in these days, yet their
cruelty and cunning remained. Klimkov looked at the men accustomed to
command now silently submitting to the will of the hungry, poor, and
unwashed. He understood that it had become a shame for the lords to
live. So trying to cover up their shame, they smiled approvingly upon
the working-people, and lied to them. They were afraid of the workers.
In spite of the lords, however, it seemed to Yevsey that the past would
not return. He felt that new masters had arisen, and if they had been
able all of a sudden to stop the course of life, then they would now be
able to arrange it differently, more freely, and more easily for
themselves and for all.

The old, the cruel, and the malicious abandoned the city. It melted away
in the darkness. The people perceptibly grew better, and though the city
remained without illumination, yet the nights were stirring, merry as
the days.

Everywhere crowds of people gathered and spoke animatedly, in free,
bold, human speech, of the approaching days of the triumph of truth.
They believed in it hotly. The unbelievers were silent, but looked into
the new faces, impressing the new speech upon their minds.

Often Klimkov observed the spies in the crowds. Not wishing to be seen
by them, he walked away. He met Melnikov more frequently than the
others. This man roused his particular interest. A dense crowd always
gathered around him, and his thick voice flowed from the centre of the
group like a dark stream.

"There, you see! The people wanted it, and everything is up. If the
people want it, they will take everything into their own hands. They're
a power, the people are. Remember this--don't let what you have obtained
slip from your grasp. Take care! More than everything, guard against the
cunning of various gentlemen. Away with them. Drive them off! If they
dispute, beat them to death."

When Klimkov heard this, he thought:

"For such talk people used to be put in prison. What numbers have been
put in prison! And now they speak that way themselves."

He wandered about in the crowd alone from morning until late at night.
Sometimes he had an irresistible yearning to speak; but as soon as he
felt the desire coming upon him, he immediately walked off into empty
by-streets and dark corners.

"If I speak, they'll recognize me," he thought with importunate dread.
And he comforted himself by reflecting, "No hurry. I'll have time enough
yet to speak."

One night while walking along the street, he saw Maklakov hidden in a
gateway, looking up to a lighted window on the opposite side of the
street like a hungry dog waiting for a sop.

"Keeps at his work," thought Yevsey, then said to Maklakov: "Do you want
me to take your place, Timofey Vasilyevich?"

"You, me, Yevsey?" exclaimed the spy in a subdued voice, and Klimkov
felt that something was wrong, for it was the first time that the spy
had ever addressed him by the first name. Moreover Maklakov's voice was
not his own. "No, go," he said.

The spy always so smooth and decorous now had a shabby appearance. His
hair, as a rule carefully and prettily combed behind his ears, lay in
disorder over his forehead and temples. He smelt of whiskey.

"Good-by," said Yevsey raising his hat and walking off slowly. He had
taken only a few steps, however, when he heard a call behind him.

"Listen!"

Yevsey turned back noiselessly, and stood beside Maklakov.

"Let's walk together."

"He must be very drunk," thought Yevsey.

"Do you know who lives in that house?" asked Maklakov, looking back.

"No."

"Mironov, the writer. Do you remember him?"

"I do."

"Well, I should think you would. He made you out a fool so simply."

"Yes," agreed Yevsey.

They walked slowly with noiseless tread. The narrow street was quiet,
deserted, and cold.

"Let's go back," continued Maklakov. Then he adjusted his hat on his
head, buttoned his overcoat, and declared thoughtfully, "Brother, I am
going away--to Argentine. That's in America."

Klimkov heard something hopeless, dismal in his words, and he, too,
began to feel gloomy and awkward.

"Why--so far?"

"I must."

Maklakov again stopped opposite the illuminated window, and looked up to
it silently. Like a huge, solitary eye on the black face of the house,
it cast a peaceful beam of light into the darkness--a small island amid
black and heavy waters.

"That's his window, Mironov's," said Maklakov quietly. "That's the way
he sits at night all by himself and writes. Come."

Some people advanced toward them singing softly:

"It comes, it comes, the last decisive fight!"

"We ought to cross to the other side," Yevsey proposed in a whisper.

"Are you afraid?" asked Maklakov, though he was the first to step from
the pavement to cross the frozen dirt of the middle of the street. "No
reason to be afraid. These fellows with their songs of war and all such
things are peaceful people. The wild beasts are not among _them_, no. It
would be good to sit down now in some warm place, in a café, but
everything is closed, everything is suspended, brother."

"Come home," Klimkov suggested.

"Home? No thank you. You can go if you want to."

Yevsey remained, submissively yielding to the sad expectation of
something inevitable. From the other side of the street came the sound
of the people's talk.

"Misha, is it possible you don't believe?" one asked in a ringing,
joyous voice.

A soft bass answered:

"I do believe, but I say it won't happen so soon."

"Listen! What the devil of a spy are you, eh?" Maklakov suddenly
demanded nudging Yevsey with his elbow. "I've been watching you a long
time. Your face always looks as if you had just taken an emetic."

Yevsey grew glad at the possibility of speaking about himself openly.

"I am going away, Timofey Vasilyevich," he quickly mumbled. "Just as
soon as everything is arranged, I am going away. I'll gradually settle
myself in business, and I'm going to live quietly by myself--"

"As soon as what is arranged?"

"Why, all this about the new life. When the people start out all for
themselves."

"Eh, eh," drawled the spy, waving his hand and smiling. His smile robbed
Yevsey of the desire to speak about himself.

They walked in silence again, and turned again. Both were gloomy.

"There, now," Maklakov exclaimed with unexpected roughness and acerbity
as they once more approached the author's house. "I'm really going away,
forever, entirely from Russia. Do you understand? And I must hand over
some papers to this--this author. You see this package?"

He waved a white parcel before Yevsey's face, and continued quickly, in
a low growl. "I won't go to him myself. This is the second day I've been
on the watch for him, waiting for him to come out. But he's sick, and he
won't come out. I would have given it to him in the street. I can't send
it by mail. His letters are opened and stolen in the Post Office and
given over to the Department of Safety. And it's absolutely impossible
for me to go to him myself. Do you understand?"

The spy pressing the package to his breast bent his head to look into
Yevsey's eyes.

"My life is in this package. I have written about myself--my story--who
I am, and why. I want him to read it--he loves people."

Taking Yevsey's shoulder in a vigorous clutch the spy shook him, and
commanded:

"You go and give it to him, into his own hands--go, tell him that one--"
Maklakov broke off, and continued after a pause--"tell him that a
certain agent of the Department of Safety sent him these papers, and
begs him most humbly--tell him that way, 'begs him most humbly' to read
them. I'll wait here for you, on the street. Go. But look out, don't
tell him I'm here. If he asks, say I've escaped, went to Argentine.
Repeat what I've told you."

"Went to Argentine."

"And don't forget, 'begs most humbly.'"

"No, I won't."

"Go on, quick!"

Giving Klimkov a gentle shove on the back he escorted him to the door of
the house, walked away, and stopped to observe him.

Yevsey agitated and seized with a fine tremor, lost consciousness of his
own personality crushed by the commanding words of Maklakov. He pushed
the electric button, and felt ready to crawl through the door in the
desire to hide himself from the spy as quickly as possible. He struck it
with his knee, and it opened. A dark figure loomed in the light, a voice
asked testily:

"What do you want?"

"The writer, Mr. Mironov--him personally. I have been told to deliver a
package into his own hands. Please, quick!" said Yevsey, involuntarily
imitating the rapid and incoherent talk of Maklakov. Everything became
confused in his brain. But the words of the spy lay there, white and
cold as dead bones. And when a somewhat dull voice reached him, "What
can I do for you, young man?" Yevsey said in an apathetic voice, like an
automaton, "A certain agent of the Department of Safety sent you these
papers, and begs you most humbly to read them. He has gone off to
Argentine." The strange name embarrassed Yevsey, and he added in a lower
voice, "Argentine, which is in America."

"Yes, but where are the papers?"

The voice sounded kind. Yevsey raised his head, and recognized the
soldierly face with the reddish mustache. He pulled the package from his
pocket, and handed it to him.

"Sit down."

Klimkov seated himself, keeping his head bowed. The sound of the tearing
of the wrapping made him start. Without raising his head, he looked at
the writer warily from under lowered lids. Mironov stood before him
regarding the package, his mustache quivering.

"You say he's gone off?"

"Yes."

"And you yourself are also an agent?"

"Yes," said Yevsey quietly, and thought, "Now, he'll scold me."

"Your face seems familiar to me."

Yevsey tried not to look at him. But he felt the writer was smiling.

"Yes, I suppose it is familiar to you," said Yevsey sighing.

"Have you, too, been tracking me?"

"Once. You saw me from the window. You came out into the street, and
gave me a letter."

"Yes, yes. I remember. The devil! So that was you? Well, excuse me, my
dear man. I think I must have offended you, eh?"

Yevsey rose from the chair, looked into his laughing face incredulously,
and glanced around.

"That's nothing," he said.

He felt unbearably awkward as he listened to the somewhat rude yet
kindly voice. He was afraid that after all the writer would abuse him
and drive him out.

"There, you see how strangely we meet this time, eh?"

"Nothing else?" asked Yevsey confused.

"Nothing else. But I believe you are tired. Sit down. Rest."

"I must be going."

"Very well. As you please. Well, thank you. Good-by."

He extended his large hand with reddish wool on the fingers. Yevsey
touched it cautiously.

"Permit me also to tell you my life," he requested unexpectedly to
himself. The instant he had distinctly uttered these words, he thought,
"This is the very man to whom I ought to speak, if Timofey Vasilyevich
himself, such a wise person and better than everybody, respects him."
Recalling Maklakov, Yevsey looked at the window, and for a moment grew
anxious.

"No matter," he said to himself. "It's not the first time he's had to
freeze."

"Well, why not? Tell me, if you want to. Won't you take off your
overcoat? And perhaps you will have a glass of tea. It's cold."

Yevsey wanted to smile, but he restrained himself. In a few minutes, his
eyes half closed, he told the writer monotonously and minutely about the
village, about Yakov, and about the blacksmith. He spoke in the same
voice in which he reported his observations in the Department of Safety.

The writer, whom Yevsey observed from under his lashes, was sitting on a
broad, heavy taborette, his elbows on the table, over which he bent,
twirling his mustache with a quick movement of his fingers. His eyes
gazed sharply and seriously into the distance above Klimkov's head.

"He doesn't hear me," thought Yevsey, and raised his voice a little,
continuing to examine the room without himself being observed, and
jealously watching the face of the author.

The room was dark and gloomy. The shelves crammed with books, which
increased the thickness of the walls, apparently kept out the sounds of
the street. Between the shelves the glass of the windows glistened
dully, pasted over with the cold darkness of the night, and the white
narrow stain of the door obtruded itself on the eye. In the middle of
the room was a table, whose covering of grey cloth seemed to lend a dark
grey tone to everything around it.

Yevsey was ensconced in a corner of a chair covered with a smooth skin.
For some reason he propped his head hard against its high back, then
slid down a little. The flames of the candles disturbed him; the yellow
tongues slowly inclining toward each other, seemed to be holding a
conversation. They trembled, and straightened themselves out, struggling
upward. Back of the author over the sofa, hung a large portrait, from
which a yellow face with a sharp little beard looked out sternly.

The author began to twirl his mustache more slowly, but his look as
before travelled beyond the confines of the room. All this disturbed
Yevsey, breaking the thread of his recollections. He be-thought himself
of closing his eyes. When he did so, and darkness closely enveloped him,
he sighed lightly. Suddenly he beheld himself divided in two--the man
who had lived, and the other being who was able to tell about the first
as about a stranger. His speech flowed on more easily, his voice grew
stronger, and the events of his life drew themselves connectedly one
after the other, unrolling easily like a ball of grey thread. They freed
the little feeble soul from the dirty and cumbersome rags of its
experiences. It was pleasant to Yevsey to tell about himself. He
listened to his own voice with quiet astonishment. He spoke truthfully,
and clearly saw that he had not been guilty of anything, for he had
lived all his days not as he had wanted to, but as he had been compelled
to do; and he had been compelled to do what was unpleasant and
unnecessary to him. Filled with a sense of sincere self-pity, he was
almost ready to weep and to fall in love with himself.

Whenever the author asked him a question, which Yevsey did not
understand, he would say without opening his eyes, sternly and quietly:

"Wait, I'm telling it in order."

He spoke without wearying, but when he came to the moment of his meeting
with Maklakov, he suddenly stopped as before a pit. He opened his eyes,
and saw at the window the dull look of the autumn morning, the cold grey
depth of the sky. Heaving a deep sigh, he straightened himself up. He
felt washed within, unusually light, unpleasantly empty. His heart was
ready submissively to receive new orders, fresh violence.

The author rose noisily from his seat, tall and strong. He pressed his
hands together, cracking his fingers disagreeably.

"What do you think of doing now?" he asked, as he turned to the window
without looking at Klimkov.

Yevsey also rose, and repeated with assurance what he had told Maklakov.

"As soon as the new life is arranged, I'll quietly go into some
business--I'll go to another city--I've saved about one hundred and
fifty rubles."

The author turned to him slowly.

"So?" he said. "You have no other desire whatsoever?"

Klimkov thought, and answered:

"No."

"And you believe in the new life? You think it will arrange itself?"

"Of course. How else? If all the people want it. Why won't it arrange
itself?"

"I'm not saying anything."

Mironov keeping silent turned to the window again, and straightened out
his mustache with both hands. Yevsey stood motionless, awaiting
something and listening to the emptiness in his breast.

"Tell me," said the writer softly and slowly, "aren't you sorry for
those people, that girl, your cousin, and his comrade?"

Klimkov bowed his head, and drew the skirts of his coat together.

"You found out that they were right, didn't you?"

"At first I was sorry for them. I must have been ashamed, I suppose. But
now I'm not sorry any more."

"No? Why not?"

Klimkov did not answer at once. At the end of a few moments he said:

"Well, they are good people, and they attained to what they wanted."

"And didn't it occur to you that you were in a bad business?"

Yevsey sighed.

"Why, I don't like it. I do what I'm told to do."

The author stepped up to him, then turned aside. Klimkov saw the door
through which he had entered, saw it because the author's glance was
turned to it.

"I ought to go," he thought.

"Do you want to ask me anything?" inquired the author.

"No, I am going."

"Good-by." And the host moved to let him pass. Yevsey walking on tip-toe
went into the ante-chamber, where he began to put on his overcoat. From
the door of the room he heard a question:

"Listen, why did you tell me about yourself?"

Squeezing his hat in his hands Yevsey thought, and answered:

"Just so. Timofey Vasilyevich respects you very much, the one who sent
me."

The writer smiled.

"Aha! Is that all?"

"Why _did_ I tell him?" Klimkov suddenly wondered. Blinking his eyes, he
looked fixedly into the author's face.

"Well, good-by," said the host, rubbing his hands. He moved away from
his visitor.

Yevsey nodded to him politely.

"Good-by."

When he came out of the house, he looked around, and immediately
observed the black figure of a man at the end of the street in the grey
twilight of the morning. The man was quietly striding along the pavement
holding his head bent.

"He's waiting," Klimkov thought. He shrank back. "He'll scold me. He'll
say it was too long."

The spy must have heard the resonant sound of steps on the frozen paving
in the stillness of the morning. He raised his head, and fairly ran to
meet Yevsey.

"Did you give it to him? Yes?"

"I did."

"Why were you so long? Did he speak to you? What did he ask?"

Maklakov shivered. His cheeks were blue, his nose red. He seized the
lapels of Yevsey's overcoat, and instantly released him, blew on his
fingers, as if he had burned them, and began to tramp his feet on the
ground. Thus, chilled through and through, and pitiful, he was not
awe-inspiring.

"I, too, told him all my life," Yevsey declared aloud. It was pleasant
to tell Maklakov about it.

"Well, didn't he ask about me?"

"He asked whether you had gone away."

"What did you say?"

"I said you had."

"Yes. Nothing else?"

"Nothing."

"Well, let's go. I'm frozen, brother." Maklakov darted forward,
thrusting his hands in his overcoat pockets, and hunching his back. "So
you told him your life?"

"The whole of it, completely, to the very moment of my last meeting with
you," answered Yevsey, again experiencing a pleasant sensation, which
raised him to the same level as the spy whom he respected.

"What did he say to you then?"

For some reason confused and embarrassed Klimkov waited before he
replied.

"He didn't say anything."

Maklakov stopped, seized him by the sleeve, and asked in a stern though
quiet tone:

"Did you give him my papers?"

"Search me, Timofey Vasilyevich," Yevsey cried sincerely.

"I won't," said Maklakov, after reflecting. "Well, now good-by. I'll
disappear this very day. Take my advice. I'm giving it, because I pity
you. Get out of this service and be quick about it. It's not for you,
you know it yourself. Go away now. Now is the time to leave. You see
what days these are. The dead are coming to life, people trust one
another, they can forgive much in a period like this; they can forgive
everything, I think. And above all, avoid Sasha. He's sick and insane.
He's made you deliver up your cousin, he--he ought to be killed, like a
mangy dog. Well, good-by, brother." He seized Yevsey's hand in his cold
fingers, and pressed it firmly. "So you gave him my papers?" he asked
once more. "You're sure of it, are you?"

"I did--by God! The moment I caught sight of him I at once remembered
him."

"All right. I believe you. Don't speak about me there for a few days, I
beg you."

"I'm not going there. On the twentieth I'll call for my salary."

"Tell them then. By that time I'll be far away. Good-by."

He turned the corner quickly. Yevsey looked after him, thinking
suspiciously:

"He's going off. Probably he did something against the authorities, and
got frightened. How he looks, just as if he had gotten a beating."

He grew sorry for himself at the thought that he would never again see
Maklakov. Nevertheless, it was agreeable to recall how weak, chilled
through, and troubled the spy had looked, the spy who had always borne
himself so calmly and firmly.

"He spoke boldly even with the officers of the Department of Safety,
spoke to them as if he were their equal. But apparently he was all the
time afraid of the author who was under surveillance. And here am I, a
little man," thought Yevsey, as he strode down the street, "a little
man, afraid of everybody, yet the author didn't frighten me. I was
drinking tea at his house, while Maklakov was shivering on the street."
Klimkov content with himself smiled. "He couldn't say anything, the
author couldn't." Yevsey was suddenly seized with a mingled feeling of
sadness and insult. He slackened his pace, and sank into reflections as
to why this was. He sought the cause of the grief that unexpectedly rose
within him.

"Why did I speak to him?" he thought again on the way. "Instead, I
should have told it that time to Olga."

The city awoke, and Yevsey wanted to sleep. He felt uneasiness,
discomfort in his breast again. His heart was like a little room from
which all the furniture has been removed, and which is left bare and
empty, with green stains of dampness on the torn wall-paper, showing the
dumb patterns made by the chinks in the plastering.

He wanted to sleep, but it was pleasant to stroll the streets, and he
walked homeward with reluctant steps.




                              CHAPTER XXVI


About midday Yevsey was awakened by Viekov dressed in an overcoat and
hat. He looked downcast. He shook the back of the bed, and said in a
muffled voice, monotonously:

"Hey, Klimkov, get up. They are summoning everybody to the office. Hey,
Klimkov--they have proclaimed the constitution. They are summoning all
the agents from their lodgings. Filip Filippovich gave the order. Do you
hear, Klimkov?"

His words fell like large drops of rain, full of sadness. His face was
drawn, as with the toothache. His eyes blinked frequently, as if he were
about to cry.

"What is it?" asked Yevsey jumping from bed.

Viekov pursed his lips dismally.

"Is it possible to understand? They said yesterday the Czar would give a
full constitution, and to-day here's the manifesto, he's actually giving
it. Our Department has become like an insane asylum--that Sasha is such
a coarse creature, astonishing. He keeps shouting, 'Strike, slash,' and
so forth. Why, look here, I wouldn't make up my mind to kill a man even
for five hundred rubles. Yet he proposes we should kill for forty rubles
a month. Why, it's savagery even to listen to such talk." Viekov puffed
his cheeks, and sighed in weariness of spirit, as he paced up and down
the room. "It's horrible. Dress quickly. We must go."

Pulling on his trousers Klimkov asked musingly:

"Whom do they want us to kill?"

"The revolutionists. Although what revolutionists are there now?
According to the Czar's ukase, you'd suppose the revolution was ended.
They tell us we should gather the people in the streets, march with
flags, and sing, 'God Save the Czar.' Well, why not sing, if liberty has
been granted? But then they say that while doing this, we should shout
'Down with the constitution,' and so forth. I can't for the life of me
understand. That's going against the manifesto and the will of the Czar
Emperor. There are many besides me who don't understand it. I'm not the
only one."

His voice sounded protesting, insulted, his legs clapped together. He
seemed as soft as if his bones had been removed from his body.

"I'm not going there," said Klimkov.

"What do you mean?"

"Just so. First I'll walk the streets, and see what they're going to
do."

Viekov sighed again, and whistled.

"Yes, of course. You're a single man. But when you have a family, that
is, a woman who demands this, that, the fifth thing, and the tenth
thing, then you'll go where you don't want to, yes, you will. The need
for a living compels a man to dance a tightrope. When I see tricks on a
tightrope, my head begins to turn, and I feel a pain in the lower part
of my chest. But I think to myself, 'If it would be necessary for your
livelihood, then you, too, Ivan Petrovich Viekov, would dance a
tightrope.' Yes, indeed. A poor man must live by doing things that wring
his heart, and whether he wants to or not. Such is the law of nature, as
Grokhotov says."

Viekov tossed himself about the room, knocking against the table and the
chairs, mumbling and swelling his rosy cheeks. His little face was
puffed like a bladder. His insignificant eyes disappeared, and the
little red nose hid itself between his cheeks. His sorrowful voice, his
dejected figure, his hopeless words annoyed Klimkov, who said unamiably:

"Soon everything will be arranged differently. So there's no use
complaining now."

"But in our place they don't _want_ a different arrangement," exclaimed
Viekov, gesticulating, and stopping in front of Yevsey. "You
understand?"

Yevsey disturbed turned on the chair, desiring to express a thought in
his mind, but he was unable to find words, and began to lace his shoes
sniffling.

"Sasha shouts, 'Beat them. Show them what liberty is. So that they may,'
he says, 'get afraid of it.' Viakhirev displays revolvers. 'I'll shoot,'
he says, 'straight into the eyes.' Krasavin is gathering a gang of some
sort of people, and also speaks about knives, and hacking people down,
and all such things. Chasin is preparing to kill a certain student,
because he took his mistress from him. Some other new fellow has come.
He's one-eyed, and smiles all over, and his teeth are knocked out in
front. A very terrible face. Sheer savagery, all this."

Viekov lowered his voice to a whisper, and said mysteriously,

"Everyone ought to protect his means of a livelihood. That's
understood--but preferably without murder. Because if we start to kill,
then we in turn will be killed, too."

Viekov shuddered. He turned his head toward the window, and listened to
something. Then he raised his hand, and his face turned pale.

"What's the matter?" asked Yevsey.

A resonant noise hit against the windows in soft uneven blows, as if to
open them cautiously and pour itself into the room. Yevsey rose to his
feet with a look of inquiry and alarm at Viekov; while Viekov standing
at some distance from the window stretched his hand out in order to open
it, apparently taking care not to be seen from the street. At the same
moment a broad stream of sounds broke in, surrounded the spies, pushed
against the door, opened it, and floated into the corridor, powerful,
exulting, sturdy.

"They are rejoicing," said Viekov quietly, starting.

"Look out and see what it is," said Yevsey, hurriedly throwing an
overcoat on.

But Viekov was already looking out, and he began to report what he saw,
every minute quickly turning his head from the window to Yevsey. He
spoke rapidly and brokenly.

"The people are marching--red flags--a great many people--countless--of
various stations--all mixed up in one crowd--an officer even--and Father
Uspensky--without hats--Melnikov with a flag--our Melnikov--look!"

Yevsey ran to the casement, looked down, and there saw a thick mass of
people filling the entire street. In his eyes gleamed a compact mass of
faces, which shone like the stars in the Milky Way. Over the heads of
the throng waved flags resembling red birds. Klimkov was deafened by the
seething noise. In the first row he saw the tall, bearded figure of
Melnikov, who held the short pole of the standard in both hands, and
waved it. At times the cloth of the flag enveloped his head like a red
turban. From under his hat escaped dark strands of hair, which fell on
his forehead and cheeks, and mingled with his beard. He was shaggy as a
beast. Evidently he was shouting, for his mouth stood wide open.

"Where are they going?" mumbled Klimkov, turning to his comrade.

"They are rejoicing," Viekov repeated, and looked out into the street,
leaning his forehead against the glass.

Both men were silent, attentively watching the motley stream of people.
With acute hearing they caught the loud splashings of different
exclamations in the deep sea of the din.

Viekov shook his head.

"What a power, eh? The people lived each by himself and now suddenly
they all move together--what a phenomenon!"

"They've grown wise, it means. They are becoming masters of life," said
Yevsey with a smile. At that moment he actually believed so.

"And our Melnikov, did you see him?"

"He always stood up for the people," Yevsey explained didactically. He
left the window, feeling himself near his aim, bold and new.

"Now everything will go well. No one wants another to order him about.
Everyone wants to live according to his needs, quietly, peacefully, with
things arranged in a good system," he said gravely, examining his sharp
face in the mirror. He liked his face to-day. It was calm, almost
cheerful. Wishing to strengthen the new and pleasant feeling of
satisfaction with himself, he reflected on how he might raise himself in
the eyes of his comrade. So he announced with an air of mystery, "Do you
know, Maklakov has escaped to America?"

"So?" the spy rejoined indifferently. "What of it? He's a single man."

"Why did I tell him?" Yevsey reproached himself. A feeling of slight
alarm and enmity came over him.

"Don't speak of this to anybody, please," he begged Viekov.

"About Maklakov? Very well--I have to go to the office. Aren't you
going?"

"No, but we can go out together."

On the street Viekov remarked in dismal irritation, speaking in a
subdued voice:

"Stupid people, after all. They ought not to be going about with flags
and songs. Now they have once begun to feel themselves in power they
ought to ask the authorities straightway to abolish all sorts of
politics, to transform everybody into people, both us and the
revolutionists, to distribute awards to whom they are due, both on our
side and theirs, and to make a strict announcement, 'All politics
strictly prohibited.' We've had enough of hide and seek!"

Viekov suddenly disappeared around the corner without taking leave of
Klimkov. Yevsey walked like a man who to-day has no reason to hasten.

"I have one hundred and fifty rubles," he thought. "I have an
inclination for business, and I know about it to some extent. In
business a man is free. Soon I'll receive twenty-five rubles more."

The people moved about in the street excitedly, all spoke loud, all
faces smiled joyously, and the gloomy autumn evening recalled a bright
Easter day. Songs started up, now nearby, now at the end of the street
curtained by a grey cloud. Loud shouts quenched the singing.

"Long live liberty!"

From everywhere came laughter and the sound of kindly voices. This
pleased Klimkov. He politely stepped aside for those who came his way,
looking at them approvingly with a light smile of satisfaction, and
continued to picture his future in warm colors.

Two people darted from around the corner, laughing quietly. One of them
jostled Yevsey, but immediately pulled off his hat, and exclaimed:

"Oh, I beg your pardon."

"Don't mention it," answered Klimkov affably.

Before Yevsey stood Grokhotov, cleanly shaven, looking as if he had been
smeared with ointment. He beamed all over, and his small soft eyes
frolicked, running from side to side.

"Well, Yevsey, I nearly got myself into a mess. If it hadn't been for my
talent--are you acquainted? This is Panteleyev, one of our men."
Grokhotov lost his breath, and spoke in a quick whisper, hurriedly
wiping the sweat from his face. "You know I was walking along the
Boulevard, when I saw a crowd, with an orator in the center. Well, I
went up, and listened. He spoke so--you know--without any restraint at
all. So I thought I'd ask who that wise fellow was. I inquired of the
man standing next to me. 'His face is familiar to me,' says I. 'Do you
know his name?' 'His name is Zimin.' The words were scarcely out of his
mouth when two fellows grabbed hold of me under my arm. 'People, he's a
spy!' I couldn't get in a word before I found myself in the middle of
the crowd, and such a press around me--and everybody's eyes like awls.
'I'm done for,' thinks I."

"Zimin?" asked Yevsey, disturbed, looking back of him and beginning to
walk more rapidly.

Grokhotov raised his head to the sky, crossed himself, and continued
still more hurriedly.

"Well, the Lord inspired me with an idea. I recovered my presence of
mind at once, and shouted out, 'People, it's a mistake, absolutely. I'm
no spy, but a well-known mimic of celebrated personages and of animal
sounds. Wouldn't you please give me a trial?' The men who had seized me
shouted, 'No, he lies; we know him!' But I had already made a face like
the Chief of Police, and called out in his voice, 'Who gave you
per-r-r-mission to hold this meeting?' And Lord! I hear them laughing
already. Well, then I began, I tell you, to imitate everything I
know--the governor, the Archpresbyter Izverzhensky, a saw, a little pig,
a fly. They roared with laughter. They roared so that the earth trembled
under my feet, so help me God. Even the men holding me had to laugh--a
curse on them!--and let me go. They began to clap and applaud. Upon my
word, here is Pantaleyev, he can testify, he saw everything."

"True," said Pantaleyev in a hoarse voice. He was a dumpy person with
eye-glasses, and wore a sleeveless jacket.

"Yes, brother, they applauded," exclaimed Grokhotov in ecstasy. "Now, of
course, I know myself; an artist, that's me. No doubt of it now. I may
say I owe my life to my art. What else? It's very simple. A crowd can't
be taken in by a mere joke."

"The people have begun to be trusting," remarked Pantaleyev pensively
and strangely. "Their hearts have greatly softened."

"That's true. See what they're doing, eh?" Grokhotov exclaimed quietly.
Then he added in a whisper. "Everything is above-board now. Everywhere
the persons under surveillance, our old acquaintances, are in the very
first rank. What does it mean, eh?"

"Is the joiner's name Zimin?" Yevsey asked again.

"Matvey Zimin, case of propaganda work in the furniture factory of
Knop," replied Pantaleyev with stern emphasis.

"He ought to be in prison," said Yevsey, dissatisfied.

Grokhotov whistled merrily.

"In prison? Don't you know they let everybody out of prison?"

"Who?"

"The people."

Yevsey walked a few steps in silence.

"Did they permit them?"

"Why, yes."

"Why did they do it?"

"That's what I say, too. They oughtn't to have permitted them," said
Pantaleyev. His glasses moved on his broad nose. "What a situation! The
authorities do not think about the people at all."

"Did they release everybody?" asked Klimkov.

"Everybody." Pantaleyev's hoarse voice was stern, his nostrils dilated.
"And there have already been a number of unpleasant encounters. Chasin,
for instance, had to threaten to shoot off his revolver, because he was
hit in the eye. He was quietly standing off on one side, when suddenly a
lady comes up, and cries out, 'Here's a spy!' Inasmuch as Chasin cannot
imitate animals, he had to defend himself with a weapon; which isn't
possible for everybody either. Not everybody carries a revolver about
with him."

"It's been decided to give all of us revolvers."

"Even so no good will come of it. I know positively that a revolver begs
of itself to be used. It sets your hand itching."

"Good-by," said Yevsey. "I'm going home."

He walked through small by-streets. When he saw people coming his way,
he crossed to the other side, and tried to hide in the shade. The
premonition rose and stubbornly grew that he would meet Yakov, Olga, or
somebody else of that company.

"The city is large, there are many people," he comforted himself.
Nevertheless each time he heard steps in front, his heart sank
painfully, and his legs trembled, losing their strength.

"They let them go," he thought in dismal annoyance. "They didn't say
anything, and let them go. And how about me? It isn't a matter of
indifference to me where they are. Of course not!"

It was already dark. A solitary lamp was burning in front of the gates
of the police station. Just as Yevsey approached it, he heard someone
say in a muffled voice:

"Here, this way, then to the back courtyard."

Yevsey stopped, and peered in alarm into the darkness. The gates were
closed, but a dark man stood at the wicket set in one of the heavy
swinging doors, apparently awaiting him.

"Hurry!" The man commanded in a dissatisfied tone.

Klimkov stopped, crept through the wicket, and went along the dark
vaulted corridor under the building to a light feebly flickering, in the
depths of the court, where he heard the scraping of feet on the stone,
subdued voices, and the familiar repulsive snuffling. Klimkov stopped,
listened, turned quietly, and walked back to the gate, raising his
shoulders, so as to conceal his face in the collar of his overcoat. He
had already reached the wicket, and was about to push it, when it opened
of itself, and a man darted through, stumbling and clutching at Yevsey.

"The devil! Who's that?"

"I."

"Who?"

"Yevsey Klimkov."

"Aha! Well, show me the way. Why are you standing there? Don't you
recognize me?"

Yevsey looked at the hooked nose, the curls behind the ears, the
protruding narrow forehead.

"I do. Viakhirev," he said with a sigh.

"Yes. Come on."

Klimkov returned in silence to the courtyard, where his eyes now
distinguished many obscure figures looming in the darkness in uneven
hillocks, slowly shifting from place to place, like large black fish in
dark, cold water. The satiated voice of Solovyov resounded sweetishly:

"That doesn't suit me. But catch a girl for me, a little girl, a dainty
little girl. I'll knout her for you."

"Always joking, the old devil," mumbled Viakhirev. "A fitting time for
it."

"I can't give beatings, but I like to give lashings. I remember how I
used to flog my nephew, gee!"

From a corner flowed the voice of Sasha, falling incessantly like water
dripping from roofs on a rainy day, monotonous as the sound of chants
recited in church.

"Every time you meet those fellows with red flags beat them. First beat
the men carrying the flags, the rest will take to flight."

"And if they don't?"

"You will have revolvers. So that if you see people known to you by
their participation in secret societies--those people upon whom you
spied in your time--who were released from the prisons to-day by the
insubordination of the unbridled mob--kill them outright!"

"That's reasonable," said somebody, whose voice resembled Pantaleyev's.
"Either we, or they."

"Of course. How else?"

"The people have gotten their liberty, but what are we to do?" replied
Viakhirev sharply.

Yevsey walked into a corner, where he leaned against a pile of wood, and
looked and listened in perplexity.

"A body, a little body, a tiny, wee little calf, meat!" the senseless
words of Solovyov spread out like a thick, oily spot.

Dark, heavy walls of unequal height surrounded the court sternly.
Overhead slowly floated the clouds. On the walls gleamed the square
windows, scattered and dim. Klimkov saw a low porch in one corner of the
court, upon which Sasha was standing, his overcoat buttoned to the top,
his collar raised, and a low cap thrust on the back of his head. Above
him swung a small lamp, whose feeble flame trembled and smoked, as if
endeavoring to consume itself as quickly as possible. Behind Sasha's
back was the black stain of the door. A few dark people sat on the steps
of the porch at his feet. One, a tall grey person, stood in the doorway.

"You must understand that you are given the liberty to make war upon the
revolutionists," said Sasha, putting his hands behind his back.

The air hummed with the scraping of soles on the flagging, with dry
metallic raps, and, at times, with subdued voices uttering exclamations
and officious advice.

"Look out! Be more careful!"

"We're not allowed to load the revolvers."

The vaguely outlined figures in the dark strangely resembled one
another--quiet black people scattered over the yard. They stood in
compact groups, and listened to the viscid voice of Sasha, rocking and
swinging on their feet, as if swayed by powerful puffs of wind. Sasha's
talk drowned all sounds, filling Klimkov's breast with a dreary cold and
acute hatred of the spy.

"You are given the right to proceed against the rebels in an open fight.
Upon you lies the duty to defend the deceived Czar with all possible
means. And know that generous rewards await you. Who has not yet
received a revolver? Come up here."

Several muffled voices called out:

"I--me--I."

Some persons moved to the porch. Sasha stepped aside, and the grey man
squatted down on his heels.

"Mayn't I have two?" asked a lugubrious voice.

"What for?"

"For a comrade."

"Go 'long!"

The voices of the spies whom Yevsey knew sounded louder, braver, and
jollier than before.

"I'm not going to do any beating."

"We've heard that," the hoarse voice of Pantaleyev sounded rudely.

"Silence!"

Someone smacking his lips greedily, complained:

"I haven't enough cartridge. We ought to get a whole boxful."

"I set things going in two station-houses to-day," said Sasha. "I'm
tired."

"It'll be interesting to-morrow."

"Well, yes."

The words and the sounds flashed up before Yevsey's mind like large
sparks illuminating the morrow. They slowly dried up and consumed the
hope of a placid life soon to come. He felt with his whole being that
out of the darkness surrounding him, from these people about him,
advanced a power inimical to his dreams and aims. This power would seize
him again, would put him on the old road, would bring him back to the
old terror. Hatred of Sasha seethed in his heart, the live, tenacious,
yet pliant hatred of the weak, the implacable, sharp, revengeful feeling
of a slave who has once been tortured by hope for liberty. He stood
there thinking of nothing, in the quick realization that his hopes must
inevitably die. He looked at Sasha half closing his eyes, and strained
his ears to catch the spy's every word.

The men hurriedly departed from the yard in twos and threes,
disappearing under the broad archway that yawned in the wall. The light
over the head of the spy trembled, turned blue, and went out. Sasha
seemed to jump from the porch into a pit, from which he snuffled
angrily:

"To-day seven men of my division of the Safety Department did not show
up. Why? Many seem to think it's a holiday. I won't tolerate stupidity.
Nor laziness either. I want you to know it. I am now going to introduce
strict regulations. I am not Filip Filippovich. Who said that Melnikov
is going about with a red flag? Who?"

"I saw him."

"With a flag?"

"Yes. Marching and bawling 'Liberty!'"

"Is it you talking, Viakhirev?"

"Yes, I."

Now that the tall body of Sasha had disappeared and mingled with the
dark mass of people at the platform, it seemed to Yevsey that he grew in
size and spread over the court like a stifling cloud, which
imperceptibly floated toward him in the darkness. Yevsey came out of his
leaning posture, and walked toward the exit, stepping as on ice, as if
fearing he would sink through a hole. But the adhesive voice of Sasha
overtook him, pouring a painful cold on the back of his neck.

"Well, that fool will be the first to slash. I know him." Sasha laughed
a thin howling laugh. "I have a slogan for him, 'Strike in behalf of the
people.' And who said that Maklakov dropped the service?"

"He knows everything, the vile skunk," Yevsey said to himself with a
calm that surprised him.

"I said it. I heard it from Viekov, and he got it from Klimkov."

"Viekov, Klimkov, Grokhotov--all trash. I'll step on the tails of all of
them. Parasites, hybrids, lazy good-for-nothings. Is anyone of them
here?"

"Klimkov must be here," answered Viakhirev.

Sasha shouted:

"Klimkov!"

Yevsey extended his arm before him, and walked faster. His legs bent
under him. He heard Krasavin say:

"Gone, apparently. You ought not to shout family names."

"I beg you not to teach me. I'll soon destroy all family names and
similar stupidities."

"It's you that I'm going to destroy," Yevsey made the mental threat,
gnashing his teeth until they pained him.

But when he had left the gate behind him, he was seized by the
debilitating consciousness of his impotence and nothingness. It was a
long time since he had experienced these feelings with such crushing
distinctness. He was frightened by their load, and succumbed to their
pressure.

"Maybe it will still be warded off," he tried to embolden himself.
"Maybe he won't succeed."

But Yevsey did not believe his own thoughts. Without a will of his own
he regarded everybody else as equally devoid of will, and he knew that
Sasha could easily compel all whom he wanted to compel to submit to his
domination.




                             CHAPTER XXVII


The next day Yevsey resolved not to leave the house for a long time. He
lay in bed looking at the ceiling. The leaden face of Sasha with the dim
eyes and the band of red pimples on the forehead floated before him.
To-day this face recalled his childhood and the sinister disk of the
moon in the mist over the marsh.

As he lay there, empty, languid, and cold, he gave himself over to grief
at his shattered dreams, the dreams that Sasha so easily crushed. His
hatred of the spy deepening, he felt himself capable of biting him with
his teeth, of gouging out his eyes.

It occurred to him that some of his comrades might come to fetch him,
and he hurriedly left the house, and ran down several streets. Tiring
almost immediately he stopped and waited for a car. People passed by in
a continuous stream. He scented something new in them to-day, and did
violence to himself in examining them closely. Soon he realized that
this new thing was the old fear so well known to him. It was the old
dread and perplexity. People looked around distrustfully, suspiciously,
no longer with the kind expression their eyes had recently worn. Their
voices sounded lower, and betrayed anger, resentment, sorrow. Their talk
was of the horrible.

Two persons stationed themselves near Yevsey. One of them, a stout
shaven man, asked of the other, who had a large black beard:

"How many were killed?"

"Five. Sixteen wounded."

"Did the Cossacks shoot?"

"Yes. A boy was killed, a student at the high school." Yevsey looked at
them, and inquired drily:

"What for?"

The man with the black beard shrugged his shoulders, and answered
reluctantly in a low voice:

"They say the Cossacks were drunk."

"Sasha arranged that," thought Yevsey.

"And on the Spassky Bridge the mob beat a student, and threw him into
the river," announced the shaven man, drawing a deep breath.

"What for?" Yevsey asked again.

"I don't know. Some sort of patriots."

The black-bearded man explained:

"Since this morning tramps waving tri-colored flags and carrying
portraits of the Czar have been marching the streets and beating the
decently clad people."

"Sasha!" Yevsey repeated to himself.

"They say it was organized by the police and the Department of Safety."

"Of course!" burst from Klimkov. But the next instant he compressed his
lips tightly, and glanced sidewise at the black-bearded man. He resolved
to go away. But just then the car came along, and as the two men
prepared to board it, he thought:

"I must get on, too, or else they'll guess I'm a spy. What would they
think of a man who waited for a car with them, and then didn't take it?"

The passengers in the car seemed calmer to Yevsey than the pedestrians
on the street.

"After all it's some sort of concealment, though only behind glass," was
his explanation of the difference, as he listened to the animated
conversation in the car.

A tall man with a bony face said plaintively, spreading his hands:

"I, too, love and respect the Czar; I'm heartily thankful to him for the
manifesto. I'm ready to shout 'Hurrah' as much as you please; and offer
up prayers of gratitude. But to smash windows from patriotism and break
bones--what's that?"

"Such barbarism, beastliness in our age!" said a stout lady. "Oh, those
people, how horribly cruel they are!"

From a corner came a firm assured voice:

"All the work of the police, no doubt of it!"

"But what for?"

All were silent for a minute.

"I know," thought Klimkov.

From the corner came the same assured voice:

"They're preparing a counter-revolution in Russian fashion. You
just take a close look at those in command of the patriotic
demonstrators--disguised police, agents of the Department of
Safety."

Yevsey heard these words with joy, and furtively regarded the young
face. It was dry and clean, with a cartilaginous nose, a small mustache,
and a tuft of light hair on a determined chin. The youth sat leaning
against the back of his seat in a corner of the car, one leg crossed
over the other. He looked at the passengers in the car with a wise
glance from his blue eyes, and spoke like a man who masters his words
and thoughts and believes in their effectiveness.

Dressed in a short warm jacket and tall boots, he resembled a
workingman, but his white hands and the thin horizontal lines on his
forehead betrayed him.

"Disguised," thought Yevsey. "Well, let him be disguised. What
difference does it make to me?"

He began to follow the loud firm talk of the fair-haired youth with the
greatest attention, looking at his wise, transparent blue eyes and
agreeing with him. But suddenly he shuddered, seized with a sharp
premonition. On the platform of the car, at the conductor's side, he saw
through the window a pair of narrow drooping shoulders, and the back of
a black protruding head. The car jolted, and the familiar figure swayed.

"Yakov Zarubin!"

Klimkov utterly dismayed turned his look again upon the blue-eyed youth.
He had removed his hat, and he smoothed his wavy hair as he said:

"As long as our administration has the soldiers in its hands, the
police, and the spies, it will not yield the people and society their
rights without a fight, without bloodshed. We must remember that."

"It isn't true, my dear sir," cried the bony-faced man. "The Czar
granted a full constitution. He granted it, yes, so how dare you--?"

"But who is arranging the street massacres? And who's shouting 'Down
with the constitution?'" the young man asked coldly. "You had better
take a look at the defenders of the old system. There they go!"

At that instant the car came to a standstill with a creak, and when the
irritating noise of its movement had subsided, the passengers could hear
loud turbulent shouts:

"God save the Czar!"

"Rrrra-a-h!"

A pack of boys came running from around the corner in front of the car,
and noisily scattered over the street, as if dropped from above. A crowd
of people waving three-colored flags over their heads pushed after them
like a black wedge in hurried disorder. Alarming shouts filled the air:

"Hurrah!"

"Stop, boys!"

"Down with the constitution!"

"We don't want--"

"God save the Czar!"

"Hurrah!"

The people shoved past one another, gesticulated wildly, and threw their
hats in the air. In front of all with his head hanging low like a bull,
walked Melnikov, holding a heavy pole from which the national flag
floated. His eyes were fastened on the ground. He lifted his feet high,
and apparently must have tramped the ground with great force, for at
each step his body quivered, and his head shook. His heavy bellow could
be heard above the chaos of thinner shouts.

"We don't want deception--"

Behind, a crowd of ragged people, dark and grey, pushed down the street,
jumping and twisting their necks. They raised their heads, hands, and
arms, looked up to the windows of the houses, jumped on the pavements to
knock off the hats of passersby, ran up to Melnikov again, shouted and
whistled and seized one another, rolling into a heap. Melnikov waving
the flag clanged like a huge bell:

"Down with the mutinee-e! Down with the impostors! Stop!"

"Drunk, or what?" thought Klimkov, coldly.

"Halt!" Raising his head and the flag on high, the spy commanded:
"Sing!"

From his broad mouth gushed a savage mournful note:

"Go-o-od--"

But at that moment excited shouts splashed in the air, disordered and
rapacious, like a flock of hungry birds. They clawed the voice of the
spy, and covered it with their hasty, greedy mass.

"Hurrah for the Emperor! Hats off! True Orthodox people--we want the
old! Down with treachery!"

It was quiet in the car. All stood with their hats off, silent, pale,
observing the crowd that encircled them like a wavy, dirty ring. But the
disguised man did not remove his hat. Yevsey looked at his stern face,
and thought:

"Putting on airs." And he turned his eyes on the street with a wry smile
on his face. He felt very distinctly the nothingness of these restless
jumping people. He clearly understood that dark terror was whipping them
from within, was pushing and carrying them from side to side. They were
fighting, intoxicating themselves with loud shouts, in the desire to
prove to themselves that they were afraid of nothing. They ran around
the car like a pack of hounds just released from the leash, full of
senseless joy, without having had time to free themselves from the
customary fear. Apparently they could not make up their minds to
traverse the broad bright street. They were unable to gather themselves
into one body. They tossed about, roared, and glared around alarmingly,
waiting for something.

Near the car stood a little thin, sharp-bearded muzhik in a torn hat and
short fur coat. He held his eyes closed and his face raised on high. His
hungry mouth gaped displaying his yellow teeth as he shouted in a thin
voice:

"D-o-o-wn! We don't want--"

Tears of fear and excitement ran down his cheeks. His forehead glistened
with sweat. Ceasing to shout, he bent his neck and looked around
distrustfully. Then he raised his shoulders, and closing his eyes again,
yelled once more as if he were being beaten:

"E-e-enough!"

"That's the way I would have become, too," thought Yevsey to himself.
Though the muzhik cut a droll figure, Yevsey was sorry for him and for
himself.

He saw the familiar faces of the janitors, always grim, the
large-whiskered visage of the church watchman Klimych, pious and sullen,
the hungry eyes of the young hooligans, the astonished expression of
timorous muzhiks, and a few creatures who pushed everyone, gave everyone
orders, and filled the will-less blind bodies with their will, with
their sick ferocity. Yevsey well understood that all these petty people
like himself lived in the close captivity of fear, with no strength to
tear themselves from its clutches. A powerful person might gain mastery
over them; in obedience to the will of a still more powerful person they
would overthrow the old receptacle of fear in exchange for a new one.
Now, separated by the windows from the mob, he looked at it from aside
and above, and his eyes were able to embrace much. Everything was clear
to him _ad nauseam_. Anguish and wrath sucked at his heart.

Little Yakov Zarubin was twisting and turning in the middle of the crowd
like an eel. Now he ran up to Melnikov, pulled his sleeve, and said
something to him, nodding his head in the direction of the car.

Klimkov quickly glanced around at the man in the hat, who had already
risen, and was walking to the door, his head lifted high and a frown on
his brow. Yevsey stepped after him, but Melnikov jumped to the platform,
and blocked the doorway with his large body.

"Hat off!" he bawled.

The man faced about abruptly, and walked to the other exit. There he was
met by Zarubin, who shouted in a loud voice:

"Here, this man in a hat! I know him! He makes bombs! Take care, boys!"

A revolver gleamed in Zarubin's hand. He swung it as if it were a stone,
and thrust it forward. People from the street clambered to the platform,
and the passengers pressing to the exits met them face to face. The lady
screeched:

"Take off your hat! Why, man!"

All screamed, roared, and pressed one another. Their eyes staring
insanely, fastened upon the man in the hat.

"I'm going to shoot! Get away!" the man shouted aloud, advancing upon
Zarubin. The spy retreated, but he was pushed in back, and fell to his
knees. Supporting himself on the floor with one hand, he stretched out
the other. A shot rang out, then another. The windows rattled. For a
second all the cries congealed. Then the firm voice said contemptuously:

"Vile curs!"

The air and the windows quivered with a third shot, and Zarubin uttered
a loud cry:

"Ugh!" His head struck the floor, as if he were making an obeisance at
somebody's feet. The car became emptier and quieter. Klimkov ensconced
in a corner, shrivelled up on his seat, and thought listlessly:

"I might have been killed."

The thought darted by, and disappeared without rousing in the darkness
of his soul either fear or joy. He looked around wearily. The man in the
hat stood on the platform of the car. Melnikov advanced toward him past
Yevsey, and Zarubin lay motionless face downward.

"I will shoot you down--everyone of you! Get away from here!" the loud,
dry cry was heard from the platform.

But Melnikov stepped across the body of Yakov, seized the fair-haired
youth by the waist, and threw him into the street.

"Beat him down--!" he shouted bluntly in a savage voice.

Three revolver shots followed in quick succession. The deaf blows
clapped. Someone howled in a long-drawn plaintive cry like an infant.

"Oh, oh, my leg!"

Another man shouted hoarsely with an effort:

"Ah, ah! Hit him on the head! Hey, hey!"

And a thin hysterical voice pealed in ecstasy:

"Tear him to pieces, my dear people. Choke him! Enough! Their time is
past! Now we'll give it to them. Now our turn has come--"

All the cries were suddenly covered by a loud ejaculation full of
mournful disdain:

"Idiots!"

Yevsey reeled from weakness in his legs. He walked to the platform, from
which he saw a dark heap of people. With bent backs, swinging their arms
and legs, groaning with the strain of excitement, uttering tired hoarse
articulations, they stirred busily on the street, like large shaggy
worms, as they dragged over the stones the body of the fair-haired
youth, already crushed and torn. They kicked at it, tramped on its face
and chest, pulled its hair, its legs and arms, and simultaneously tore
him in different directions. Half bare, covered with blood, it flapped
against the stones, soft as dough, with each blow losing more and more
semblance of a human figure. These people worked over him industriously.
The little lean muzhik trying to crush his skull, stepped on it with one
foot, and sang out:

"Aha! Our time has come, too."

The work was accomplished. One after the other they left the middle of
the street for the pavement. A pockmarked fellow wiped his hands on his
short sheepskin overcoat, and asked with the air of a manager, or
superintendent:

"Who took his pistol?"

Now the voices sounded weary, reluctant. But on the pavement a laugh was
heard coming from a small group of people standing next to the
lamp-post. An offended voice was discussing hotly:

"You lie! I was the first. The second he fell I gave him one on the jaw
with my boot."

"Cabman Mikhailov pounced on him first, then I."

"Mikhailov got a bullet in his leg."

"If it didn't hit the bone, it's all right."

These people after tasting blood had apparently grown bolder. They
looked around on all sides with unsatiated eyes, with greed, and assured
expectation.

In the middle of the street lay a formless dark heap, from which blood
was oozing into the hollows between the stones.

"That's the way--" Yevsey thought, looking at the red designs on the
paving. In the dark red mist trembling before his eyes appeared the
hairy face of Melnikov. His voice was tired and muffled.

"There, they've killed him!"

"Yes, how quickly!"

"They killed another one this morning."

"What for?"

"He was speaking. He was standing on the curb addressing the people.
Chasin fired into his stomach."

"What for?" Yevsey repeated.

"Those speakers are deceivers--a spurious manifesto--there's no such
thing--all a bluff!"

"Sasha thought that all out," said Yevsey quietly, with conviction.

Melnikov shook his head, and looked at his large hands.

"Somebody always deceives," he mumbled in a drunken voice.

He entered the car, and raised Zarubin lightly, placing him on the bench
face up.

"He's dead. There's where it hit him--"

Yevsey sought the scar on Zarubin's face that the blow of the bottle had
left. He did not find it. Now over the right eye was a little red hole
from which Klimkov could not tear his eyes. It absorbed his entire
attention, and aroused sharp pity for Yakov.

"Have you a pistol?" asked Melnikov.

"No."

"There, take Yakov's."

"I don't want to. I don't need it."

"Now everybody needs a pistol," said Melnikov simply, and slipped the
revolver into Yevsey's overcoat pocket. "Yes, there was a Yakov, now
there is no Yakov."

"It was I who marked him for death," thought Yevsey, looking at his
comrade's face.

Zarubin's brows were sternly drawn. A look of serious preoccupation
gleamed and died away in his dim eyes. His little black mustache
bristled on his raised lip. He appeared to be annoyed. His half-open
mouth seemed ready to pour forth a rapid torrent of irritated talk.

"Come," said Melnikov.

"And he--how about them?" asked Yevsey, tearing his eyes from Zarubin.

"The police will take them away. It's against the law to remove the
killed. Let's go somewhere, and shake ourselves up. I haven't eaten
to-day. I can't eat--the third day without food. No sleep either." He
sighed painfully, and concluded with somber _sang froid_. "I should have
been killed in Yakov's place."

"Sasha will ruin all," said Yevsey, through his teeth. "He'll ruin us
all."

"Blindness of the soul."

They walked along the street without observing anything, and each spoke
that with which his own mind was occupied. Both were like drunken men.

"Where's the truth?" asked Melnikov, putting his hand forward, as if to
test the air.

"There, you see, two have been killed," said Yevsey, making an effort to
catch an elusive thought.

"Many people have been killed to-day, I should think. All are blind."

"Why did Sasha arrange this?"

"I don't love him either."

"He's the one who ought to be killed," exclaimed Yevsey, with bitter
vengefulness.

Melnikov was silent for a long time. Then he suddenly shook his fist in
the air, and said resolutely:

"Enough! I've taken sins enough upon myself. On the other side of the
Volga I have an uncle, a very old man. He is all I have in this world.
I'll go to him. He keeps an apiary--when he was young he was tried for
forgery." After another pause of silence the spy laughed quietly.

"What's the matter?" asked Yevsey, annoyed.

"I'm forgetting everything. My uncle has now been dead for three years."

They reached a café known to them. Yevsey stopped at the door, and
looked meditatively at the illuminated windows.

"People again," he muttered, dissatisfied. "I don't want to go in
there."

"Let's go in. It's all the same," said Melnikov, taking him by the arm,
and leading him after himself. "It will be tiresome for me to be here
alone. Besides I've become fearsome. I'm not afraid of being killed if
I'm recognized as a spy. It's just a general feeling of dread."

The two men did not enter the room in which their comrades were wont to
gather, but took seats in a corner of the common hall, where there were
a number of persons, of whom none were drunk, though the talk was noisy
and evinced unusual excitement. Klimkov by habit began to listen to the
conversations, while the thought of Sasha clung to him, and quietly
unfolded itself in his head, stupefied by the impressions of the last
days, but freshened by the constant influx of poignant hatred and fear
of the spy.

He recalled the sullen face of the dead Zarubin, the mauled body of the
fair-haired man. He looked in perplexity at the noisy public, blinking
as if half asleep. All was incoherent, as in a nightmare. Melnikov drank
tea with no appetite, keeping silent and from time to time stretching
himself.

Not far from them at a table sat three men, apparently clerks with the
characteristic speech of the class. They were young and fashionably
dressed, with a display of gay necktie. One of them, a curly-headed
youth with a tanned face spoke excitedly, his dark eyes flashing.

"They utilize the ferocity of hungry ragged rowdies, by which they want
to prove to us that liberty is impossible because of the many barbarians
such as these. However--permit me--savages did not show themselves for
the first time yesterday. There have always been such, and justice has
always been able to cope with them; they could be held under fear of the
law. Then why are they permitted to perpetrate every sort of outrage and
bestiality to-day?" He looked around the hall with the air of a victor,
and answered his question with hot conviction. "Because they want to
point out to us, 'You are for freedom, ladies and gentlemen, well here
you have it. Freedom for you means murder, robbery, and all kinds of mob
violence.'"

"Do you hear?" demanded Yevsey, triumphantly. "Isn't that Sasha's
scheme?" The hot voice of the orator roused in his soul the quiet
smouldering hope. "Maybe Sasha won't conquer."

Melnikov looked at him sullenly, without replying.

The curly-headed man rose from the chair, and continued waving a glass
of wine in his hand.

"It's not true, and I protest. Honest people want liberty, not in order
to crush one another, but in order for each to be protected against the
prevailing violence of our lawless life. Liberty is the goddess of
reason. They have drunk enough of our blood. I protest. Long live
liberty!"

The public raised a cheer, and sprang to their feet.

Melnikov looked at the curly-headed orator, and muttered:

"What a fool!"

"He speaks truly," rejoined Yevsey, angrily.

"How do you know?" asked the spy indifferently, and began to drink the
beer in slow gulps.

Yevsey wanted to tell this heavy man that he himself was a fool, a blind
beast, whom the cunning and cruel masters of his life had taught to hunt
people down. But Melnikov raised his head, and looking into Klimkov's
face with dark eyes terribly widened, said in a sounding whisper:

"I'm afraid for this reason: when I was in prison an incident happened
there--"

"Hold on," said Yevsey, "I want to listen."

A thin voice which drilled the ear, pierced triumphantly through the
soft mass of sounds.

"Did you hear? He says a goddess, yet we Russian people have only one
goddess, the Holy Mother of God, the Virgin Mary. That's how those
curly-headed youngsters speak!"

"Out with him!"

"Silence!"

"No, if you please. If there's liberty, everyone has a right--"

"You see? The curly-headed youngsters walk the streets, beat the people
who rise up to maintain the Czar's truth against treachery, while we
Russians, the True Orthodox, don't dare even to speak. Is this liberty?"

"They'll fight," said Klimkov, starting to tremble. "Somebody will be
killed. I'm going."

"What a peculiar fellow you are! Well, let's go. The devil take them!
What are they to you?"

Melnikov flung the money on the table, and moved toward the exit, his
head bowed low, as if to conceal his conspicuous face. On the street in
the dark and the cold, he began to speak in a subdued voice:

"When I was in prison--it was on account of a certain foreman, who was
strangled in our factory--I was hauled up, too. They told me I would get
hard labor. Everybody said it, first the coroner, then the gendarmes
joined in. I got frightened. I was still young, and I didn't take to the
idea of hard labor. I used to cry." He coughed a clapping cough, and
slackened his pace. "Once the assistant overseer of the prison, Aleksey
Maksimych, a good little old man, came in to me. He loved me. He grieved
for me all the time. 'Ah,' says he, 'Liapin,'--my real name is
Liapin--'Ah,' says he, 'brother, I'm sorry for you. You are such an
unfortunate fellow--'"

Melnikov's speech unfolded itself like a soft band upon which Klimkov
quietly let himself down, as upon a narrow path leading down into the
darkness, into something terrible and awesomely interesting.

"He comes and says he, 'Liapin, I want to save you for a good life.
Yours is a hard-labor case, but you can escape it. The only thing you
need to do is to execute a man. He was sentenced for political
assassination. He will be hanged according to law in the presence of a
priest, will be given a cross to kiss, so that you needn't be uneasy
about it.' I say, 'Why not? If with the consent of the authorities, and
if I'm to be pardoned, I'll hang him. Only I can't.'--. 'We'll teach
you,' says he. 'We have a man who knows how, but he's stricken with
paralysis, and can't do it himself.' Well for a whole evening they
taught me. It was in a deep dungeon. We stuffed a sack with rags, tied
it with a string, so as to make a neck. Then I pulled it up on a hook. I
learned how to do the business. Early in the morning they gave me half a
bottle to drink, led me out into the yard with soldiers carrying guns. I
see a gallows has been erected, and various officers before it. They are
all muffled up and shrivelled. It was autumn then, too, November. I
ascended the scaffolding, and the boards shook, creaked under my feet
like teeth. This made me feel uncomfortable, and I said 'Give me more
whiskey. I'm afraid.' Then they brought him--"

Melnikov again began to cough dully, and clutched at his throat. Yevsey
pressed up to him, trying to keep step with him. He kept his eyes
fastened on the ground, not daring to look either to the front or the
side.

"I see a young powerful fellow. He stands firm, and all the time keeps
stroking his head from his forehead back to his neck. I began to put the
face-cloth on him. I must have pulled or pinched him in some way, and he
tells me quietly without anger, 'Be more careful, brother.' Yes. The
priest gave him the cross, and he says, 'Don't disturb yourself. I'm not
a believer.' His face was so--as if he knew everything that would be
after death, and now and to-morrow and always, knew it for certain.
Somehow I strangled him, shaking all over. My hands grew numb, my legs
would not hold me. I felt horrible on account of him--he was so calm
about it all--a master over death."

Melnikov was silent, looked around, and began to walk more quickly.

"Well?" asked Yevsey in a whisper.

"Well, I strangled him. That's all. Only ever since, when I see or hear
that a man has been killed, I recollect him--always. In my opinion he
was the only man who knew the truth. That was why he was not afraid. And
the main thing is, he knew what would be to-morrow--which no one knows.
I tell you what, Yevsey, come to me to sleep, eh? Come, please."

"All right," said Yevsey quietly.

He was glad of the offer. He could not walk to his room alone--along the
streets in the darkness. He felt a tightness in his breast and a heavy
pressure on his bones, as if he were creeping under ground, and the
earth were squeezing his back, his chest, his sides, and his head: while
in front of him gaped a deep pit, which he could not escape, into which
he must soon descend--a silent bottomless abyss down which he would drop
endlessly.

"That's good," said Melnikov. "I would feel bored alone."

"If you would kill Sasha--" Yevsey advised him sadly.

"There you are!" Melnikov fended off the idea. "What do you think--that
I love to kill? They asked me twice again to hang people, a woman and a
student. I declined. I might have had two to remember instead of one.
The killed appear again. They come back."

"Often?"

"Sometimes, sometimes not. When often, it's every night. How can you
defend yourself against them? I can't pray to God. I've forgotten my
prayers. Have you?"

"I remember mine."

They entered a court, and were long in penetrating to its depths,
stumbling as they walked over boards, stones, and rubbish. Then they
descended a flight of steps, which Klimkov, feeling the walls with his
hands, thought would never come to an end. When he found himself at last
in the lodging of the spy, and had examined it in the light of the lamp,
he was amazed to see the mass of gay pictures and paper flowers with
which the walls were almost entirely covered. Melnikov at once became a
stranger in this comfortable little room, with a broad bed in a corner
behind white curtains.

"All this was contrived by the woman with whom I lived," said Melnikov,
starting to undress. "She ran away, the hussy! A gendarme, a
quartermaster, decoyed her. I can't understand it. He's a grey-haired
widower, while she's young and greedy for a male. Nevertheless she went
away. The third one that's left me already. Come, let's go to bed."

They lay side by side in the same bed, which rocked under Yevsey like a
tossing sea, and all the time descended lower and lower. His heart sank
with it. The spy's words laid themselves heavily upon his breast.

"One was Olga."

"What!"

"Olga. Why?"

"Nothing."

"A little one, thin and jolly. She used to hide my hat, or something
else, and I would say, 'Olga, where's my hat?' And she would say, 'Look
for it. You're a spy.' She liked to joke, but she was a loose woman. I
hardly had my head turned, before she was with somebody else. I was
afraid to beat her. She was frail. Still I pulled her hair. You've got
to do something."

"Lord!" quietly exclaimed Klimkov. "What am I going to do?"

His comrade was silent for a while, then said dully and slowly:

"That's the way I howl, too, sometimes."

Klimkov buried his head in the pillow, compressing his lips tightly, to
restrain the stubborn need to utter cries and complaints.




                             CHAPTER XXVIII


Yevsey awoke with a certain secret resolution, which held his bosom as
with a broad invisible belt. It stifled him. The ends of this band, he
felt, were held by some insistent being, who obstinately led him on to
an inescapable something. He harkened to this desire and tested it
carefully with an awkward, timorous thought. At the same time he did not
want it to define itself.

Melnikov dressed and washed, but uncombed, was sitting at the table next
to the samovar, munching his bread lazily like an ox.

"You sleep well," he said. "I drowsed a little, then awoke, while it was
still night, and suddenly saw a body beside me. I remembered that Tania
wasn't here, but I had forgotten about you. Then it seemed to me that
that person was lying there. He came and lay down--wanted to warm
himself." Melnikov laughed a stupid laugh, which, apparently,
embarrassed him the next instant. "However, it's not a joke. I lighted a
match and looked at you. It's my idea you're not well. Your face is blue
like--" He broke off with a cough, but Yevsey guessed the unspoken word,
and thought gloomily:

"Rayisa, too, said I would choke myself."

The thought frightened him, clearly alluding to something he did not
want to remember. Then he tried insistently to evoke some desire which
might help him to befool himself, to conceal the unavoidable, that which
had already been determined.

"What time is it?" he asked.

"Eleven."

"Early still."

"Early," confirmed the host, and both were silent. Then Melnikov
proposed:

"Let's live together, eh?"

"I don't know."

"What?"

"What will happen," said Yevsey, after reflecting a moment.

"Nothing will happen. You're a quiet fellow. You speak little, neither
do I like to speak always. If it's tiresome I speak, or else I keep
quiet all the time. When you ask about something, one says one thing,
another says another thing, and a third still another. Well, the devil
take you, think I. You have a whole lot of words, but none that are
true."

"Yes," said Yevsey for the sake of answering.

"Something must be done," he thought in self-defense. Suddenly he
resolved, "At first I will--Sasha--" But he did not wish to represent to
himself what would be afterward. "Where are we going to go?" he inquired
of Melnikov.

"To the office," Melnikov replied with unconcern.

"I don't want to," declared Yevsey drily and firmly.

Melnikov combed his beard for a time in silence. Then he shoved the
dishes from him, and placing his elbows on the table, said meditatively
in a subdued voice:

"Our service has become hard. All have begun to rebel, but who are the
real rebels here? Make it out, if you can."

"I know who's the first scoundrel and skunk," muttered Klimkov.

"Sasha you mean?" inquired Melnikov.

Yevsey gave no reply. He was quietly beginning to devise a plan of
action. Melnikov started to dress, sniffing loudly.

"So we're going to live together?"

"Yes."

"Are you going to bring your things to-day?"

"I don't know."

"Will you sleep here tonight?"

After some reflection Yevsey said:

"Yes."

When the spy had gone, Klimkov jumped to his feet, and looked around
frightened, quivering under the stinging blows of suspicion.

"He locked me in, and went to tell Sasha. They'll come soon to seize me.
I must escape through the window."

He rushed to the door. It was not locked. He calmed himself, and said
with heat, as if convincing somebody:

"Well, is it possible to live this way? You don't believe anybody--there
is nobody--"

He sat long behind the table without moving, straining his mind,
employing all his cunning to lay a snare for the enemy without
endangering himself. Finally he hit upon a plan. He must in some way
lure Sasha from the office to the street, and walk with him. When they
would meet a large crowd of people, he would shout:

"This is a spy, beat him!" And probably the same thing would happen as
had happened to Zarubin and the fair-haired young man. If the people
would not turn upon Sasha as seriously as they had yesterday upon the
disguised revolutionist, Yevsey would set them an example. He would fire
first, as Zarubin had. But _he_ would _hit_ Sasha. He would aim at his
stomach.

Klimkov felt himself strong and brave, and made haste to leave. He
wanted to do the thing at once. But the recollection of Zarubin hindered
him, knotting up the poverty-stricken simplicity of his contrivance. He
involuntarily repeated his notion. "It was I who marked him for death."

He did not reproach, he did not blame, himself. Yet he felt that a
certain thread bound him to the little black spy, and he must do
something to break the thread.

"I didn't say good-by to him--and where will I find him now?"

On putting on his overcoat, he was gladdened to feel the revolver in his
pocket. Responding to a fresh influx of power and resolution, he walked
out into the street with a firm tread.

But the nearer he got to the Department of Safety the more did his bold
mood melt and fade away. The feeling of power became dissipated, and
when he saw the narrow dull alley at the end of which was the dusky,
three-storied building, he suddenly felt an invincible desire to find
Zarubin, and take leave of him.

"I insulted him," he explained his desire to himself, embarrassed and
quickly turning aside from his aim. "I must find him."

At the same time he vaguely felt he could not escape from that which
seized his heart and pressed him, drew him on after itself, and silently
indicated the one issue from the terrible entanglement.

The problem of the day, the resolve to destroy Sasha, did not hinder the
growth of the dark and evil power which filled his heart, while the
sudden wish to find the body of the little spy instantly became an
insurmountable obstacle to the carrying out of his plan.

He fed this desire artificially, in the fear that it, too, would
disappear. He rode about in cabs to police stations for a number of
hours, taking the utmost pains in his inquiries regarding Zarubin. When
at last he found out where the body was, it was too late to visit it,
and he returned home secretly pleased that the day had come to an end.

Melnikov did not put in appearance at his lodging. Yevsey lay alone the
whole night, trying not to stir. At each movement of his the canopy over
the bed rocked. An odor of dampness was wafted in his face, the bed
creaked a tune; he felt stifled, nauseated, and timorous. Taking
advantage of the stillness the vile mice ran about, and the rustling
sounds they made tore the thin net of Yevsey's thoughts of Zarubin and
Sasha. The interruptions displayed to him the dead, calm, expectant
emptiness of his environment, with which the emptiness of his soul
insistently desired to blend.




                              CHAPTER XXIX


Early in the morning he was already standing in the corner of a large
yard at a yellow hovel with a cross over the roof. A grey humpbacked
watchman said as he opened the door:

"There are two of them here. One was recognized, the other not. The
unidentified one will soon be taken to the grave."

Then Yevsey saw the sullen face of Zarubin. The only change it had
undergone was that it had grown a little blue. The small wound in place
of the scar had been washed, and had turned black. The little alert body
was naked and clean. It lay face upward, stretched like a cord, with the
tanned hands folded over the bosom, as if Zarubin were sullenly asking:

"Well, what?"

Beside him lay the other dark body, all rent, swollen, with red, blue,
and yellow stains. Someone had covered its face with blue and white
flowers. But under them Yevsey could see the bones of the skull, a tuft
of hair glued together with blood, and the torn shell of the ear.

Leaning his hump against the wall, the old man said:

"This one cannot be recognized. He has almost no head. Yet he was
identified. Two ladies came yesterday with these flowers and covered up
human outrage. As for the other one, he's remained unidentified."

"I know who he is," said Yevsey firmly. "He's Yakov Zarubin. He served
in the Department of Safety."

The watchman looked at him, and shook his head in negation.

"No, it's not he. The police told us he was Zarubin, and our office
inquired of the Department of Safety, but it appeared it wasn't he."

"But I know," Yevsey exclaimed quietly, in an offended tone.

"In the Department of Safety they said, 'We don't know such a person. A
man by that name never served here.'"

"It's not true," exclaimed Yevsey, grieved and dumfounded.

Two young fellows came in from the court, one of whom asked the
watchman:

"Which is the unidentified man?"

The humpback pointed his finger at Zarubin, and said to Yevsey:

"You see?"

Klimkov walked out into the court, thrust a coin into the watchman's
hand, and repeated with impotent stubbornness:

"It's Zarubin, I tell you."

"As you please," said the old man, shrugging his hump. "But if it is so,
others would have recognized him. An agent came here yesterday in search
of someone who had been killed. He didn't recognize your man either,
though why shouldn't he admit it if he did?"

"What agent?"

"A stout man, bald, with an amiable voice."

"Solovyov," guessed Yevsey, observing dully that Zarubin's body was
being laid in a white unpainted coffin.

"It doesn't go in," mumbled one of the fellows.

"Bend his legs, the devil!"

"The lid won't close."

"Sidewise, lay him in sidewise, eh?"

"Don't make such a fuss, boys," said the old man calmly.

The fellow who held the head of the body snuffled, and said:

"It's a spy, Uncle Fiodor."

"A dead man is nobody," observed the humpback didactically, walking up
to them. The fellows grew silent, continuing to squeeze the springy
tawny body into the narrow short coffin.

"You fools, get another coffin," said the humpback, angrily.

"It's all the same," said one, and the other added grimly, "He's not a
great gentleman."

Yevsey left the court carrying in his soul a bitter humiliating feeling
of insult in behalf of Zarubin. Behind him he clearly heard the
hump-back say to the men as they bore off the body:

"Something wrong there, too. He came here, and says 'I know him.' Maybe
he knows all about this affair."

The two men answered almost simultaneously:

"Seems to be a spy, too."

"What's the difference to us?"

Klimkov quickly jumped into a cab, and shouted to the driver:

"Hurry!"

"Where to?"

Yevsey answered quietly and not at once:

"Straight ahead."

The insulting thoughts dully knocked in his head.

"They bury him like a dog--no one wants him--and me, too--"

The streets came to meet him. The houses rocked and swayed, the windows
gleamed. People walked noisily, and everything was alien.

"To-day I'm going to make an end of Sasha. I'll go there at once and
shoot him." In a moment he was already compelled to persuade himself:
"It's got to be done. As for me, nothing matters to me any more."

Dismissing the cabman he walked into a restaurant, to which Sasha came
less frequently than to the others. He stopped in front of the door of
the room where the spies gathered.

"The instant I see him, I'll shoot him," he said to himself.

He knocked at the door tremulously, and felt the revolver in his hand.
His soul was congealed in cold expectation.

"Who's there?" asked someone on the other side of the door.

"I."

The door was opened a little. In the chink flashed the eyes and reddish
little nose of Solovyov.

"Ah-h-h!" he drawled in amazement. "There was a rumor that you had been
killed."

"No, I have not been killed," Klimkov responded sullenly, removing his
coat.

"I see. Lock the door. They say you went with Melnikov--"

Solovyov was thoroughly masticating a piece of ham; which interfered
with his articulation. His greasy lips smacked slowly and let out the
unconcerned words, "So, it isn't true that you went with Melnikov?"

"Why isn't it true?"

"Why, here you are alive, and he's in bad shape. I saw him yesterday."

"Where?"

The spy named the hospital from which Yevsey had just come.

"Why is he there?" Klimkov inquired apathetically.

"That is it: a Cossack struck him a sabre blow on the head, and the
horses trampled him. It's not known how it happened, or why. He's
unconscious. The physicians say he won't recover."

Solovyov poured some sort of green whiskey into a glass, held it up to
the light, and examined it with screwed-up eyes. After which he drank
it, and asked:

"Where are you hiding yourself?"

"I'm not hiding."

"You _have_ been hiding all the same."

A plate fell to the floor in the corridor. Yevsey started. He remembered
he had forgotten to remove the revolver from his overcoat pocket. He
rose to his feet.

"Sasha is fuming at you."

Before Yevsey's eyes swam the sinister red disk of the moon surrounded
by a cloud of ill-smelling lilac-colored mist. He recalled the
snuffling, ever-commanding voice, the yellow fingers of the bony hands.

"Won't he come here?"

"I don't know. Why?"

Solovyov's face wore a sleek expression. Apparently he was very well
satisfied with something. In his voice sounded the careless affability
of an aristocrat. All this was repulsive to Yevsey. Incoherent thoughts
tossed about in his mind, one breaking the other off.

"You are all rascals--sorry for Melnikov--so this obese fellow didn't
want to recognize Yakov--why?"

"Did you see Zarubin?"

"That's who?" asked Solovyov, raising his brows.

"You know. He lay in the hospital there. You saw him."

"Yes, yes, yes. Of course I saw him."

"Why didn't you say there that you knew him?" Yevsey demanded sternly.

The old spy reared his bald head, and exclaimed in astonishment with a
sarcastic expression:

"W-w-w-hat?"

Yevsey repeated the question, but this time in a milder tone.

"That's not your business, my dear fellow. I want you to know that. But
I'm sorry for your stupidity, so I'll tell you, we have no need for
fools, we don't know them, we don't comprehend them, we don't recognize
them. You are to understand that, now and forever, for all your life.
Remember what I say, and tie your tongue with a string."

The little eyes of Solovyov sparkled cold as two silver coins, his voice
bespoke evil and cruelty. He shook his short thick fingers at Yevsey.
His greedy bluish lips were drawn sullenly. But he was not horrible.

"It's all the same," thought Yevsey. "They are all one gang--they all
ought to be--"

He darted to his overcoat, snatched the revolver from the pocket, aimed
at Solovyov, and shouted dully:

"Well!"

The old man crawled from his chair, and grovelled on the floor, looking
like a large heap of dirt. He seized the leg of the table with one hand,
and stretched the other toward Yevsey.

"Don't--you mustn't," he muttered in a loud whisper. "My dear sir, don't
touch me."

Klimkov pressed the trigger more tightly, more tightly. His head chilled
with the effort, his hair shook.

"I will go away--I'm going to get married to-morrow--I'll go away--for
always--I'll never--" His heavy cowardly words rustled and crept in the
air. Grease glistened on his chin, and the napkin over his bosom
quivered.

The revolver did not shoot. Yevsey's finger pained, and horror took
powerful possession of him from head to foot, impeding his breath.

"I can give you money," Solovyov whispered more quickly. "I will tell
nothing--I will keep quiet--always--I understand--"

Klimkov raised his hand and flung the revolver at the spy. Then he
caught up his overcoat, and ran off. Two feeble shouts overtook him:

"Ow, ow!"




                              CHAPTER XXX


The shrieks stuck to Yevsey, to the back of his neck, like leeches. They
filled him with insane horror, and drove him on, on, and on. Behind him
a crowd of people were gathering, it seemed to him, noiselessly, their
feet never touching the ground. They ran after him stretching out scores
of long clutching hands, which reached his neck, and touched his hair.
They played with him, mocked him, disappearing and reappearing. He took
cabs, rode for a while, jumped out, ran along the streets, and rode
again. For the crowd was near him all the time unseen, yet so much the
more horrible.

He felt more at ease when he saw before him the dark patterned wall of
bare boughs, which stretched to meet him. He dived into the thicket of
trees, and walked in between them, strangely moving his hands behind his
back, as if to draw the trees together more compactly behind him. He
descended into a ravine, seated himself on the cold soil, and rose
again. Then he walked the length of the ravine, breathing heavily,
perspiring, drunk with fear. Soon he saw an opening between the trees.
He listened carefully, noiselessly advanced a few steps further, and
looked. In front of him stretched the earthwork of a railroad, beyond
which rose more trees. These were small and far-between. Through the
network of their branches shone the grey roof of a building.

He walked back quickly up the channel of the ravine, to where the woods
were thicker and darker.

"They'll catch me," the cold assurance pushed him on. "They'll catch
me--they must be looking for me already--they're running."

A soft ringing sound strayed through the woods. It came from anear, and
shook the thin branches, which swayed in the dusk of the ravine, filling
the air with their rustle. Under his feet crackled thin ice, which
covered the grey dried-out little pits of the bed of a stream with white
skin.

Klimkov sat down, bent over, and put a piece of ice in his mouth. The
next instant he jumped to his feet, and clambered up the steep slope of
the ravine. Here he removed his belt and suspenders, and began to tie
them together, at the same time carefully examining the branches over
his head.

"I don't have to take my overcoat off," he reflected without self-pity.
"The heavier, the quicker."

He was in a hurry, his fingers trembled, and his shoulders involuntarily
rose, as if to conceal his neck. In his head a timorous thought kept
knocking.

"I won't have time. I'll be too late."

A train passed along the edge of the woods. The trees hummed in
displeasure, and the ground quivered. The white vapor threaded its way
between the branches. It stole through the air, and melted away, as
though to get a look at this man, and then disappear from his eyes.

Titmice came flying and whistling boldly. They gleamed in the dark nets
of the branches, and their quick bustle hastened the movements of
Yevsey's cold and disobedient fingers.

He made a slipknot in the strap, threw it over a branch, and tugged at
it. It was firm. Then, just as hurriedly, he began to make a slipknot in
his suspenders, which he had twisted into a braid. When everything was
ready, he heaved a sigh.

"Now I ought to say my prayers."

But no prayer came to him. He thought for a few seconds. The words
flashed up, but were instantly extinguished, without forming themselves
into a prayer.

"Rayisa knew my fate," he recalled unexpectedly.

Thrusting his head into the noose, he said quietly, simply, and without
a quiver in his breast:

"In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost--"

He pushed the ground with his feet, and jumped into the air, doubling
his legs under him. There was a painful tug at his ears, a strange
inward blow hit his head, and stunned him. He fell. His entire body
struck the hard earth, turned over, and rolled down the declivity. His
arms caught in the roots of trees, his head knocked against trunks. He
lost consciousness.

When he recovered his senses, he found himself sitting at the bottom of
the ravine, the torn suspenders dangling over his breast. His trousers
were burst, his scratched, blood-stained knees looked through the cloth
pitifully. His body was a mass of pain, especially his neck; and the
cold seemed to be flaying his skin. Throwing himself on his back Yevsey
looked up the incline. There under a white birch branch the strap swung
in the air like a thin serpent, and lured him to itself.

"I can't," he said to himself in despair. "I can't--nothing--I don't
know how."

He began to cry fine tears of impotence and insult. He lay with his back
on the ground, and through his tears saw over him the one-toned dim sky,
streaked by the dry designs of the dark branches.

He lay for a long time muffled in his overcoat, suffering from cold and
pain. Without his willing it, his strange senseless life passed before
him like a chain of smoke-dark rings. It passed by him impetuously. It
trampled pitilessly upon his half-dead soul, crushing it finally with
heavy blows, which prevented one spark of hope from glimmering in his
heart. It pressed him to the ground.

A dismal chord hummed and trembled brokenly in his breast. Its
lugubrious song spread through his bones. His little dry body, quivering
with a sickly tremor, shrivelled up in the cold of the twilight into a
shelterless heap, pressed itself more and more closely to the ground, so
firm and so powerful.

Trains passed the woods several times, filling it with a creaking and
rumbling, with clouds of steam and rays of light. The rays glided by the
trunks of the trees, as if feeling them, as if in search of somebody
there. Then they hastily disappeared, quick, trembling, and cold.

When they found Yevsey and touched him, he raised himself to his feet
with difficulty, and plunged into the obscurity of the woods in pursuit
of them. He stopped at the edge, and leaned against a tree, waiting and
listening to the distant angry hum of the city. It was already evening,
the sky had grown purple. Over the city quietly flared a dim red. The
lights were being kindled to meet the night.

From a distance sprang up a howling noise and a drone. The rails began
to sing and ring. A train was passing over them, its red eyes twinkling
in the twilight. And the dusk quickly sailed after it, growing ever
thicker and darker. Yevsey went to the roadbed as fast as he could, sank
on his knees, then laid his side across the road, with his back to the
train, and his neck upon the rail. He enveloped his head closely in the
skirts of his overcoat.

For some seconds it was pleasant to feel the burning contact of the
iron. It appeased the pain in his neck, but the rail trembled and sang
louder, more alarmingly. It filled his whole body with an aching groan.
The earth, too, now quivered with a fine tremor, as if swimming away
from under his body and pushing him from itself.

The train rolled heavily and slowly, but the clang of its couplings, the
even raps of the wheels upon the joinings of the rails were already
deafening. Its snorting breath pushed Klimkov in the back. Everything
round about him and with him shook in tempestuous agitation, and tore
him from the ground.

He could wait no longer. He jumped to his feet, ran along the rails, and
shouted in a high screech:

"I am guilty--I will--everything--I will, I will!"

Along the smoothly polished metal of the rails darted reddish rays of
light, outstripping Klimkov. They glared more and more fiercely. Now
glowing strips to each side of him ran impetuously into the distance,
directing his course.

"I will--" he yelled, waving his hands.

Something hard and wide struck his back. He fell across the sleepers
between the red cords of rail, and the harsh iron rumble crushed his
feeble screams.


The design on the cover is taken from Gorky's book-plate, drawn by
Ephraim Mose Lilien. It is reproduced from an illustration in "The New
Art of an Ancient People," by M. S. Levussove, New York, 1906.




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Transcriber's note:

Punctuation has been made consistent.

Variations in spelling and hyphenation were retained.