Выбрать главу

course, with pleasure. And tell him, in fact, that I will make it up

to him. Thank you, Kirillovna. I see he is a good-hearted man. Stay,"

she added, "give him this from me," and she took a three-rouble note

out of her work-table drawer, "Here, take this, give it to him."

"Certainly, madam," answered Kirillovna, and going calmly back to her

room she locked the note in an iron-cased box which stood at the head

of her bed; she kept in it all her spare cash, and there was a

considerable amount of it.

Kirillovna had reassured her mistress by her report but the

conversation between herself and Akim had not been quite what she

represented. She had sent for him to the maid's room. At first he had

not come, declaring that he did not want to see Kirillovna but

Lizaveta Prohorovna herself; he had, however, at last obeyed and gone

by the back door to see Kirillovna. He found her alone. He stopped at

once on getting into the room and leaned against the wall by the door;

he would have spoken but he could not.

Kirillovna looked at him intently.

"You want to see the mistress, Akim Semyonitch?" she began.

He simply nodded.

"It's impossible, Akim Semyonitch. And what's the use? What's done

can't be undone, and you will only worry the mistress. She can't see

you now, Akim Semyonitch."

"She cannot," he repeated and paused. "Well, then," he brought out at

last, "so then my house is lost?"

"Listen, Akim Semyonitch. I know you have always been a sensible man.

Such is the mistress's will and there is no changing it. You can't

alter that. Whatever you and I might say about it would make no

difference, would it?"

Akim put his arm behind his back.

"You'd better think," Kirillovna went on, "shouldn't you ask the

mistress to let you off your yearly payment or something?"

"So my house is lost?" repeated Akim in the same voice.

"Akim Semyonitch, I tell you, it's no use. You know that better than

I do."

"Yes. Anyway, you might tell me what the house went for?"

"I don't know, Akim Semyonitch, I can't tell you.... But why are you

standing?" she added. "Sit down."

"I'd rather stand, I am a peasant. I thank you humbly."

"You a peasant, Akim Semyonitch? You are as good as a merchant, let

alone a house-serf! What do you mean? Don't distress yourself for

nothing. Won't you have some tea?"

"No, thank you, I don't want it. So you have got hold of my house

between you," he added, moving away from the wall. "Thank you for

that. I wish you good-bye, my lady."

And he turned and went out. Kirillovna straightened her apron and went

to her mistress.

"So I am a merchant, it seems," Akim said to himself, standing before

the gate in hesitation. "A nice merchant!" He waved his hand and

laughed bitterly. "Well, I suppose I had better go home."

And entirely forgetting Naum's horse with which he had come, he

trudged along the road to the inn. Before he had gone the first mile

he suddenly heard the rattle of a cart beside him.

"Akim, Akim Semyonitch," someone called to him.

He raised his eyes and saw a friend of his, the parish clerk, Yefrem,

nicknamed the Mole, a little, bent man with a sharp nose and

dim-sighted eyes. He was sitting on a bundle of straw in a wretched

little cart, and leaning forward against the box.

"Are you going home?" he asked Akim.

Akim stopped

"Yes."

"Shall I give you a lift?"

"Please do."

Yefrem moved to one side and Akim climbed into the cart. Yefrem, who

seemed to be somewhat exhilarated, began lashing at his wretched

little horse with the ends of his cord reins; it set off at a weary

trot continually tossing its unbridled head.

They drove for nearly a mile without saying one word to each other.

Akim sat with his head bent while Yefrem muttered to himself,

alternately urging on and holding back his horse.

"Where have you been without your cap, Semyonitch?" he asked Akim

suddenly and, without waiting for an answer, went on, "You've left it

at some tavern, that's what you've done. You are a drinking man; I

know you and I like you for it, that you are a drinker; you are not a

murderer, not a rowdy, not one to make trouble; you are a good

manager, but you are a drinker and such a drinker, you ought to have

been pulled up for it long ago, yes, indeed; for it's, a nasty

habit.... Hurrah!" he shouted suddenly at the top of his voice,

"Hurrah! Hurrah!"

"Stop! Stop!" a woman's voice sounded close by, "Stop!"

Akim looked round. A woman so pale and dishevelled that at first he

did not recognise her, was running across the field towards the cart.

"Stop! Stop!" she moaned again, gasping for breath and waving her

arms.

Akim started: it was his wife.

He snatched up the reins.

"What's the good of stopping?" muttered Yefrem. "Stopping for a woman?

Gee-up!"

But Akim pulled the horse up sharply. At that instant Avdotya ran up

to the road and flung herself down with her face straight in the dust.

"Akim Semyonitch," she wailed, "he has turned me out, too!"

Akim looked at her and did not stir; he only gripped the reins

tighter.

"Hurrah!" Yefrem shouted again.

"So he has turned you out?" said Akim.

"He has turned me out, Akim Semyonitch, dear," Avdotya answered,

sobbing. "He has turned me out. The house is mine, he said, so you can

go."

"Capital! That's a fine thing ... capital," observed Yefrem.

"So I suppose you thought to stay on?" Akim brought out bitterly,

still sitting in the cart.

"How could I! But, Akim Semyonitch," went on Avdotya, who had raised

her head but let it sink to the earth again, "you don't know, I ...

kill me, Akim Semyonitch, kill me here on the spot."

"Why should I kill you, Arefyevna?" said Akim dejectedly, "you've been

your own ruin. What's the use?"

"But do you know what, Akim Semyonitch, the money ... your money ...

your money's gone.... Wretched sinner as I am, I took it from under

the floor, I gave it all to him, to that villain Naum.... Why did you

tell me where you hid your money, wretched sinner as I am? ... It's

with your money he has bought the house, the villain."

Sobs choked her voice.