This extreme impressionability, sensitiveness, and lack of resisting power may have been developed by sohtude, or this impulsiveness of heart may have been evolved in the exhausting, suffocating and hopeless silence of long, sleepless nights, in the midst of unconscious yearnings and impatient stirrings of spirit, till it was ready at last to explode and find an outlet, or it may have been simply that the time for that solemn moment had suddenly arrived and it was as inevitable as when on a sullen, stifling day the whole sky grows suddenly black and a storm pours rain and fire on the parched earth, hangs pearly drops on the emerald twigs, beats down the grass, the crops, crushes to the earth the tender cups of the flowers, in order that afterwards, at the first rays of the sun, everything, reviving again, may shine and rise to meet it, and triumphantly hft to the sky its sweet, luxuriant incense, glad and rejoicing in its new life ...
But Ord3niov could not think now what was the matter with him. He was scarcely conscious.
He hardly noticed how the service ended, and only recovered his senses as he threaded his way after his unknown lady through the crowd that thronged the entrance. At times he met her clear and wondering eyes. Stopped every minute byf the people passing out, she turned round to him more than^ once; he could see that her surprise grew greater and greater, and all at once she flushed a fiery red. At that minute the same old man came forward again out of the crowd and took her by the arm. Ordjmov met his morose and sarcastic stare again, and a strange anger suddenly gripped his heart. At last he lost sight of them in the darkness; then, with a superhuman efiort, he pushed forward and got out of the church. But the fresh evening air could not restore him; his breathing felt oppressed and stifled, and his heart began throbbing slowly and violently as though it would have burst his breast. At last he saw that he really had lost his strangers—^they were neither in the main street nor in the alley. But already a thought had come to Ordynov, and in his mind was forming one of those strange, decisive projects, which almost always succeed when they are carried out, in spite of their wildness. At eight o'clock next morning he went to the house from the side of the alley and walked into a narrow, filthy, and unclean backyard which was like an open cesspool in a house. The porter, who was doing something in the yard, stood still, leaned with his chin on the handle of his spade, looked Ord3mov up arid down and asked him what he wanted. The porter was a little fellow about five and twenty, a Tatar with an extremely old-looking face, covered with wrinkles.
"I'm looking for a lodging," Ordynov answered impatiently.
"Which?" asked the porter, with a grin. He looked at Ordynov as if he knew all about him.
"I want a furnished room in a flat," answered Ordynov.
"There's none in that yard," the porter answered enigmatically.
"And here?"
"None here, either." The porter took up his spade again.
"Perhaps they will let me have one," said Ord5mov, giving the porter ten kopecks.
The Tatar glanced at Ord3mov, took the ten kopecks, then took up his spade again, and after a brief silence announced that: "No, there was no lodging." But the young man did not hear him; he walked along the rotten, shaking planks that
lay in the pool towards the one entrance from that yard into the lodge of the house, a black, filthy, muddy entrance that looked as though it were drowning in the pool. In the lower storey lived a poor coffin-maker. Passing by his cheering workshop, Ordynov clambered by a half-broken, shppeiy, spiral staircase to the upper storey, felt in the darkness a heavy, clumsy door covered with rags of sacking, found the latch and opened it. He was not mistaken. Before him stood the same old man, looking at him intently with extreme surprise.
"What do you want?" he asked abruptly and almost in a whisper.
"Is there a room to let?" asked Ordjmov, almost forgetting everything he had meant to say. He saw over the old man's shoidder the young woman.
The old man began silently closing the door, shutting Ordynov out.
"We have a lodging to let," the young woman's friendly voice said suddenly.
The old man let go of the door.
"I want a comer," said Ordynov, hurriedly entering the room and addressing himself to the beautiful woman.
But he stopped in amazement as though petrified, looking at his future landlord and landlady; before his eyes a mute and amazing scene was taking place. The old man was as pale as death, as though on the point of losing consciousness. He looked at the woman with a leaden, fixed, searching gaze. She too grew pale at first; then blood rushed to her face and her eyes flashed strangely. She led Ord5mov into another little room.
The whole flat consisted of one rather large room, divided into three by two partitions. From the outer room they went straight into a narrow dark passage; directly opposite was the door, evidently leading to a bedroom the other side of the partition. On the right, the other side of the passage, they went into the room which was to let; it was narrow and pokey, squeezed in between the partition and two low windows; it was blocked up with the objects necessary for daily Ufe; it was poor and cramped but passably clean. The furniture consisted of a plain white table, two plain chairs and a locker that ran both sides of the wall. A big, old-fashioned ikon in a gilt wreath stood over a shelf in a comer and a lamp was burning before it. There was a huge, clumsy Russian stove partiy in
'this room and partly in the passage. It was clear that it was impossible for three people to live in such a flat.
They began discussing terms, but incoherently and hardly understanding one another. Two paces away from her, Ordynov could hear the beating of her heart; he saw she was trembling with emotion and, it seemed, with fear. At last they came to an agreement of some sort. The young man announced that he should move in at once and glanced at his landlord. The old man was standing at the door, still peile, but a quiet, even dreamy smile had stolen on to his lips. Meeting Ordynov's eyes he frowned agedn.
"Have you a passport?" he asked suddenly, in a loud and abrupt voice, opening the door into the passage for him.
"Yes," answered Ordynov, suddenly taken aback.
"Who are you?"
"Vassily Ordynov, nobleman, not in the service, engaged in private work," he answered, falling into the old man's tone.
"So am I," answered the old man. "I'm Ilya Murin, artisan. Is that enough for you? You can go . . ."
An hour later Ordynov was in his new lodging, to the surprise of himself and of his German, who, together with his dutiful Tinchen, was beginning to suspect that his new lodger had deceived hhn.
Ordynov did not understand how it had all happened, and he did not want to understand. . . .
CHAPTER II
HIS heart was beating so violently that he was giddy, and everything was green before his eyes; mechanically he busied himself arranging his scanty belongings in his new lodgings: he undid the bag containing various necessary possessions, opened the box containing his books and began laying them out on the table; but soon all this work dropped from his hands. Every minute there rose before his eyes the image of the woman, the meeting with whom had so troubled and disturbed his whole existence, who had filled his heart with such irresistible, violent ecstasy—and such happiness seemed at once flooding his starved life that his thou^ts grew dizzy and his soul swooned in anguish and perplexity. He took his passport and carried it to the landlord in the