Through Russia | Page 8

Maxim Gorky
rays of warm and kindly light as, licking her lips, she, with a
slow movement, smoothed the breast of the little one.
Then I arranged sticks for a fire, and also adjusted stones to support the
kettle.
"Soon I will have tea ready for you," I remarked.
"And thankful indeed I shall be," she responded, "for my breasts are
dried up."
"Why have your companions deserted you?" I said next.
"They have not deserted me. It was I that left them of my own accord.
How could I have exposed myself in their presence?"
And with a glance at me she raised a hand to her face as, spitting a gout
of blood, she smiled a sort of bashful smile.
"This is your first child, I take it?"
"It is. . . . And who are you?"
"A man."
"Yes, a man, of course; but, are you a MARRIED man? "
"No, I have never been able to marry."
"That cannot be true."
"Why not?"

With lowered eyes she sat awhile in thought.
"Because, if so, how do you come to know so much about women's
affairs?"
This time I DID lie, for I replied:
"Because they have been my study. In fact, I am a medical student."
"Ah! Our priest's son also was a student, but a student for the Church."
"Very well. Then you know what I am. Now I will go and fetch some
water."
Upon this she inclined her head towards her little son and listened for a
moment to his breathing. Then she said with a glance towards the sea:
"I too should like to have a wash, but I do not know what the water is
like. What is it? Brackish or salt?"
"No; quite good water--fit for you to wash in."
"Is it really?"
"Yes, really. Moreover, it is warmer than the water of the streams
hereabouts, which is as cold as ice."
"Ah! Well, you know best."
Here a shaggy-eared pony, all skin and bone, was seen approaching us
at a foot's pace. Trembling, and drooping its head, it scanned us, as it
drew level, with a round black eye, and snorted. Upon that, its rider
pushed back a ragged fur cap, glanced warily in our direction, and
again sank his head.
"The folk of these parts are ugly to look at," softly commented the
woman from Orlov.
Then I departed in quest of water. After I had washed my face and
hands I filled the kettle from a stream bright and lively as quicksilver (a
stream presenting, as the autumn leaves tossed in the eddies which
went leaping and singing over the stones, a truly enchanting spectacle),
and, returning, and peeping through the bushes, perceived the woman
to be crawling on hands and knees over the stones, and anxiously
peering about, as though in search of something.
"What is it? " I inquired, and thereupon, turning grey in the face with
confusion she hastened to conceal some article under her person,
although I had already guessed the nature of the article.
"Give it to me," was my only remark. "I will go and bury it."
"How so? For, as a matter of fact, it ought to be buried under the floor
in front of some stove."

"Are we to build a stove HERE? Build it in five minutes?" I retorted.
"Ah, I was jesting. But really, I would rather not have it buried here,
lest some wild beast should come and devour it. . . Yet it ought to be
committed only to the earth."
That said, she, with averted eyes, handed me a moist and heavy bundle;
and as she did so she said under her breath, with an air of confusion:
"I beg of you for Christ's sake to bury it as well, as deeply, as you can.
Out of pity for my son do as I bid you."
I did as she had requested; and, just as the task had been completed, I
perceived her returning from the margin of the sea with unsteady gait,
and an arm stretched out before her, and a petticoat soaked to the
middle with the sea water. Yet all her face was alight with inward fire,
and as I helped her to regain the spot where I had prepared some sticks
I could not help reflecting with some astonishment:
"How strong indeed she is!"
Next, as we drank a mixture of tea and honey, she inquired:
"Have you now ceased to be a student?"
"Yes."
"And why so? Through too much drink? "
"Even so, good mother."
"Dear me! Well, your face is familiar to me. Yes, I remember that I
noticed you in Sukhum when once you were arguing with the barraque
superintendent over the question of rations. As I did so the
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