Part 21 (1/2)

”Not I! I will not go there.”

”Idiot!”

”Ah, you have already learnt to snarl,” the old woman jibed. ”Ate your mash then! But perhaps you don't relish it after your Barin's pork.”

She was right, he had already eaten--pork, and she had guessed it.

Ivan began to puff. ”You are an idiot, I tell you,” he growled.

He had come home to have a business talk about their affairs, but he left without settling anything. The old woman's sharp tongue had stung him in a tender spot. It was true that all the respectable peasants had stood aside, and only those who had nothing to lose had joined the Committee.

Ivan pa.s.sed through the village. As he walked across the park, he saw a light burning in the stables and went over to discover the reason.

He found some lads had a.s.sembled there and were playing cards and smoking. He watched them awhile, frowningly.

”This is stupid! You will set the place alight,” he grumbled.

”What if we do?” the men answered sulkily. ”It is for you to defend other people's property?”

”Not other peoples'--ours!” he retorted, then turned away.

”Ivan!” they shouted after him; ”have you the wine-cellar key? There are spirits in there--if you don't give it to us, we shall break in....”

The house was dark and silent. The huge, s.p.a.cious apartments seemed strange, terrible. The Prince still occupied the drawing-room. Ivan entered his office--formerly the dining-room--and lighted a lamp. He went down on his knees and began to pick up the clods of earth that lay on the floor; he threw them out of the window, then fetched a brush and swept up. He could not understand why gentlemen's boots did not leave a trail of dirt behind them.

Then he went into the drawing-room and served the final notice on the Prince while the men were accommodating themselves in the kitchen.

Then he joined them, lying down on a form without undressing. After a long time he fell asleep.

He awoke the next morning while all were still sleeping, rose and walked round the manor. The lads were still playing cards in the stable.

”Why aren't you asleep?” one of them asked him.

”I have had all I want,” he replied. He called the cow-herd. The man came out, stood still, scratched his head, and swore angrily-- indignant at being aroused.

”Don't meddle in other people's affairs,” he grunted. ”I know when to wake.”

The dawn was fine, clear and chilly. A light appeared in the drawing- room, and Ivan saw the Prince go out, cross the terrace and depart into the Steppe.

At ten o'clock, the President entered the office, and set about what was, in his opinion, a torturous, useless business--the making out an inventory of the wheat and rye in each peasant's possession. It was useless because he knew, as did everyone in the village, how much each man had; it was torturous because it entailed such a great deal of writing.

Prince Prozorovsky had risen at daybreak. The sun glared fiercely over the bare autumn-swept park and into the drawing-room windows.

The wedding cry of the ravens echoed through the autumnal stillness that hung broodingly over the Steppe.

On such a dazzling golden day as this, the Prince's ancestors had set off with their blood-hounds in by-gone days. In this house a whole generation had lived--now the old family was forced to leave it--for ever!

A red notice--”The Bielokonsky Committee of the Poor”--had been affixed to the front door the previous evening, and the intruders had bustled all night arranging something in the hall. The drawing-room had not so far been touched; the gilt backs of books still glittered from behind gla.s.s cases in the study. Oh books! Will not your poison and your delights still abide?

Prince Prozorovsky went out into the fields; they were barren but for dead rye-stalks that stuck up starkly from the earth. Wolves were already on the trail. He wandered all day long, drank the last wine of autumn and listened to the ravens' wedding cries.

When he had beheld this bird's carnival as a child, he had clapped his hands, crying: ”Hurrah for my wedding! Hurrah for my wedding!” He had never had a wedding. Now his days were numbered. He had lived for love. He had known many affections, had felt bitter pangs. He had tasted the poison of the Moscow streets, of books and of women; had been touched by the autumnal sadness of Bielokonsky, where he always stayed in the autumn. Now he knew grief!